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                    <text>74,h Y ear. No. 1 4 -M o n d ay . S ep te m b er?. 19 8 1 -S an fo rd , F lo rid a 32771

E vening H e ra ld -(U S P S 481-280)— P rice 20 Cents

St. Johns W ater District Proposing Tax Rate Increase
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
The St. Johns
R iver W ater
Management District Board of Gover­
nors is proposing an 111.4 million
operating budget for the fiscal year
beginning Oct. 1 with a property tax rate
of 12.1 cents per 11,000 assessed value.
The tax rate represents a .17.5 percent
increase over the current year's 8.8 cents
[ter $1,000.
The St. Johns D istrict includes
Seminole County and many other Central
Florida counties.

St. Johns River Water Management
D istrict E xecutive D irector Sonny
Vergara said $4.9 million of the district’s
operating budget will come from
property taxes. The balance will come
from: state funds from the “Save Our
Rivers" bill for flood plain acquisition,
$3.9 riullion; state aquatic weed control
program , $564,140; in te rest bearing
accounts, $450,000; and miscellaneous
sources.
Vergara said major goals reflected in
the budget include;
—IntemUicaUon of data collection

and hydrologic investigations to assist
local governments and fill in regional
water resource information gaps.
— Review soils conservation service
runoff information.
— Howell Branch Basin surface water
management study.
-Econlochatchee River Basin surface
water management study.
— Quality and quantity dynamics of
Turkey Creek in Brevard County.
— Flood profiles for selected streams
and lakes.

Reagan Not Included
In Labor Day Parade
NEW YORK (U P II - "Come as you work," members of the striking Professional Air
urged the invitations for today's l^ibor Day Traffic Controllers Organization.
parade, the first in 13 years to honor New
Because the parade celebrates the AFI&lt;York's union workers. But one name con­ CIO's 100th anniversary, union President l-ane
spicuously missing from the invitation list was Kirkland was picked as parade marshal.
Ronald Reagan.
Reagan was scheduled to visit New York's
I^ocal labor officials described the parade up
G
rade
Mansion to present Mayor Edward
Fifth Avenue as a demonstration of labor
strength and solidarity in the face of what they Koch with a sy mbolic check of $85 million for
perceive as a uniform policy of hostility Manhattan’s Westway superhighway project,
toward labor by the Reagan administration — but union leaders refused to invite the
president to march in the I^bor Day parade.
specifically over the air traffic controllers
Nor did the White House seek an invitation.
strike.
Organizers expected 200,000 workers to
A major point of friction between Reagan
march, from plumbers shouldering plungers and organizwl labor has been the administra­
like drill rifles to printers in regulation aprons tion's decision to fire 12,000 striking air traffic
and folded paper hats, as well as some 2,500 controllers.

Discrimination Claimed

Waitresses To Picket

Several waitresses, fired last week from
l» rd Chumley's Pub, 600 E. Altamonte Drive,
Altamonte Springs, said they will picket the
restaurant Tuesday to protest their firings,
according to former waitress l&lt;ee Capolla.
Ms. Capolla and five other waitresses were
fired last week by restaurant manager Tom
Galusha for "incompetence and inefficiency,"
Galusha said.
Galusha said (nitrons of the restaurant were
not receiving prompt service from the
waitresses. When food was ready for serving

the waitress would stand around smoking
cigarettes, lie said.
Ms. Capolla said the firings are clearly
discriminatory and she and four of the other
terminated waitresses have filed or will file a
complaint against the restaurant with the
E qual Em ploym ent O pportunities Com­
mission (EEOC). She said Galusha fired the
waitresses to hire additional waiters.
Galusha said Capolla's complaint is un­
founded.

THELABO R
A N D THE LEISURE

— Annual water use survey.
— District observation well network.
— Determination of ground and sur­
— Middle St. Johns hydrologic study
face water budgets.
The district also plans to enlarge its
— District wide determination of floor cooperative program with the United
States Geological Survey of which 50
and low-flows.
— Upper Palatlakaha River Basin percent is funded by the federal govern­
study.
ment, Vergara said. The district in the
—Shallow aquifer recharge in Brevard new budget year will be expanding its
regulation of surface water projects,
County.
consumption of water, water well con­
— Aerial mapping in Little Wekiva
struction and underground injection
Basin.
control.
— Urban stormwater modeling.
Vergara said the board of governors
— Plugging of free-flowing wells.
for the district, which encompasses

l* a b o r Day means d if f e r e n t th in g s to d if f e r e n t
p e o p le . It w a s
l a b o r " as usual fo r c o n ­
s tr u c t io n w o rk e rs b u ild in g th e C e n tr a l F lo r id a
R e g io n a l H o s p ita l on I ’.S. H ig h w a y 17-92 a n d
M a n g o u s lin e A v e. in S a n f o rd . F o r m a n y , it

By DARLENEJENNINGS
Herald Staff Writer
l»ngwtK&gt;d residents may soon be
paying an additional 10 cents per 1,000
gallons of water over u 5,000 gallon
minimum if the Dmgwood City Commissinners pass an agreed upon water
rate ordinance September 14
City C om m issioners decided last
Friday, during a work session to raise the
water rates, to set a base rate of $4 per
5.000 gallons of water used, plus 60 cents
for each additional 1,000 gallons. Con­
sumers are presently paying 50 cents per
1.000 gallons used after the 5.000
minimum
The board has had one public hearing
on the water rates and established a
lower 4,(WO gallon minimum for water
consumption with a 60 cent increasing
charge l-ast week's public hearing was
continued for passing the newly proposed
water ordinance until Monday , Sept. 14 at

7 p.m. in the Longwrood City Hall.
A new rale schedule was also
developed during the work session.
Now, consumers that use between five
thousand to 30 thousand gallons of water
will [lay 60 cents after the initial five
thousand gallon minimum, and a flat
rate of 70 cents per 1,000 gallons will be
charged to water users of 30,000 gallons
of water or more.
City Com m issioner Steve Uskert
pushed for the proposed rate schedule
rather than 5,000 gallons proposed by
City A dm inistrator Dave Chacey.
“ Under that 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
water," Uskert added.
However, City Commission Chairman
John Hepp said he did not want to see
business "condemned" with higher rates

Special tu The Herald
If you haven't been to the Central
Florida Zoo lately, now is an excellent
time to do so. Zoo babies are the
reason. Those lovable little offspring
of the Zoo's animals are highly visible
at this tune of year and they provide
the zoo visitor with a bonus
Among the newborns that you may
see are a baby Squirrel Monkey and a
baby Spider Monkey. As do most
monkeys, these primate infants cling
to their mother's undersides during
the first two or three months of their
life. I^ ter, they ride around on her
back, so as to better observe life
within the colony.
During their first year of life, the
mother teaches litem how to be a
monkey... the proper foods to eat,
social etiquette and how to safely get
around in the branches. Among the
Spider Monkeys, the other females
function as "aunties" and assist the
mother in caring (or tier young.
You trill also see baby deer at the
Zoo. Both Fallow Deer and the
Whitetail Deer have recently become
parents. If the doe feels her young
may be threatened, she leaves them in
a sheltered place where they in­
stinctively "freeze", relying on their

J j l |v 4 .

T

h
\

- Salt water intrusion resulting from
concentrated over production.
- Degradation of surface waters
caused by flood plain loss and un­
controlled discharges or withdrawals.
- Future ground water contamination
from drainage wells, unknown bacterial
infestation and hazardous w aste
leachates.

H t r a M P fw to t t r Tam V h k w o

w as
le is u r e d a y " a s h u n d r e d s h e a d e d to
L a k e .M onroe fo r o n e la s t d a y of s u m m e r
b o a tin g . T h e S a n f o rd M a rin a w a s r e p o r te d ly
c r o w d e d w ith b o a ts w a itin g to h e la u n c h e d
th is m o r n in g .

Longwood Eyes Water Rate Hike
for big users. "Big business is not
wasting water because business is trying
to keep their costs down. 1 don't think we
should condemn a business man for being
successful in business Most of our water
is being used by homeowners," said
Hepp on Friday.

\\

A doe and baby fawn at The Central Florida Zoo.

^ ^ f.

&lt;

The com m issioners also see the
proposed water rate schedule as a
positive change because the computer
tliat is programmed for water usage
billing will not have to lie re­
programmed to accept the change,
Uskert said.
Under Chacey's original proposal to
the com m ission, the city 's w ater
department fee for re-programming the
computer would have been around $700
dollars.

spots to camouflage them from a
predator. The doe attem pts to distract
the intruder by leading it away from
the hidden fawn. But, as the zoo
keepers will tell you, if the- fawn is
approached too closely, the mother
dashes to its defense, placing herself
between her baby and the source of
(xissible danger. Sfie will use tier
sh a rp hoofs and, if necessary,
sacrifice her own life to protect tier
young.
Perhaps the most interesting Zoo
baby is a joey, or baby Wallaby, just
emerging from its mother’s pouch.
Wallabies, small relatives of the
Kangaroo, produce an offspring no
larger than a honey bee at birth. It
continues to develop inside the pouch
and is not noticeable to zoo keepers for
three or four months. The joey is nowexploring its surroundings, but at the
slightest hint of trouble, scrambles
back into its mother's pouch.
The natural behavior of zoo animals
is often altered by their captive
condition. But th e ir m atern al
behavior, in most cases, is very
similar to that exhibited in the wild.
Another reason not to miss the zoo
mothers and their young now playing
at the Central Florida Zoo.

i

-

Montgomery
Road To Be
Closed For
Track Repair
M ontgom ery

Chacey agreed with Hepp say ing that
80 percent of water users in the
Dmgwood area are residential con­
sumers.

Lovable Little Offspring Enhance Visits To The Zoo

J \

12.400 square miles, is committed to
protecting the drinking water supply by
prolonging the available potable water
supply and protecting it against

R oad,

Altamonte Springs, will be

closed beginning Tuesday
due to repairs being made
of Hie railroad tracks by
the Seaboard Coastline
Railroad, said Altamonte
S p r in g s
C o m m u n ity
Affairs Officer Charlotte
Richter.
M otorists
are
en­
couraged to avoid this area
until rep a irs are com ­
pleted, she said. No
timetable for completion
was announced

T0DAY
T h e S a n f o rd .la y c o e s a r e h o s tin g a b lo c k p a r ty
th r o u g h o u t th e d ay to r a i s e fu n d s fo r th e fig h t
a g a in s t M u s c u la r D y s tr o p h y . R e f r e s h m e n ts ,
g a m e s a n d m u s ic hy th e W o o d en N ic k e l H an d a r e
b e in g o f fe re d a t th e J a y i c e s ’ P a r k on I ’.S. H ig h ­
w ay 17-112 b e tw e e n F o u r th a n d F ifth S tr e e t s .
Action KrporU
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Drinks On The House
RENO, New i UPI | - The MGM Grand Holel-Reno lias
agreed to give half-price cocktail show tickets or two free
drinks to patrons given a watered-down or recycled drink in
the Ziegfeld Room between August 1978 and September 1979.
Tlie agreement, announced Friday, was worked out by at­
torneys for the MGM Grand and Terry Friedman, a lawyer
who filed a class-action suit claiming 800,000 customers were
victims of the fraud.
The tentative settlement, filed in District Court, requires the
MGM Grand Hotel to advertise nationally in flight magazines
and newspapers as notification to those who feel they are
eligible for the rebate.
The MGM Grand admitted the liquor violations.

�lA - l v a t i t e i Iterate, h n U ra , FI.

M nd*v,M eS. M te l

Reagan Predicts
wei
U S Purchasing Power

WORLD

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan
predicts his economic recovery program will
generate aeveral million more Jofaa fay 1906 and
give wage earners added purchasing power.
In a Labor Day radio address aired Sunday,
Reagan said of hia program to stimulate the
nation's private sector: "Let me make our
goal in fills program very clear: Jobs, Jobs,
Jobs and more Jobs.
"I see an era in which wage earners will be
taking home more money in real dollars and
an era In which (ewer of us will be looking for
work," he said.
He predicted "the creation of 3 million more
Jobe by 1966, in addition to the 10 million
already expected."

IN BRIEF
U.S. Blamed As Iran Buries
Latest Assassination Victims
United Press Internatlou]
Ayatollah RuhoUah Khomeini accused the United
States of launching an “onslaught" against his Islamic
regime and thousands of Iranians shouting their hatred
of America marched through Tehran to the funerals of
the two latest assassination victims.
Khomeini, the aging patriarch who is the key man in
the battered Islamic regime, hailed the assassinated
prosecutor-general and police chief in a Tehran Radio
broadcast as m artyrs and role models to the people.
"Today the criminal hands of America and other
plundering powers have emerged from the sleeves of
their hirelings and with arm s and pens," Khomeini
said. "They have launched an onslaught from inside
and outside on this Islamic revolution and dear Islam ."
Shirai Radio said a member of the Mojahldeen
Khalq guerrillas was killed in a government raid on six
rebel hideouts in the city of Fasa, 500 miles south of
Tehran.
Thousands of demonstrators, chanting “Death to
America,” marched through the streets of the capital
for the funeral of the two officials. Tehran Radio said
the turnout showed the nation's "resolution Increases
the stronger the blows and the higher the casualties it
receives."

Hunger Striker Breaks Fast
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UP1) — Another in­
mate Joined the IRA hunger strike today but the grim
protest appeared to be weakening with the decision of
one faction to reduce Its role and the announcement
that a fifth striker had brokeA his fast.
Irish Republican Army Inmate John Pickering, 25,
ate his last meal Sunday night after he was named to
continue the hunger strike abandoned by Laurence
McKeown. Pickering, who la unmarried, la serving »
years for a bombing and for killing a part-time soldier.
The announcement of a new sixth hunger striker
came after the outlawed Irish National Liberation
Army said it was scaling down its Involvement because
at the current rate all Jailed members would be dead in
six months.
The mother of McKeown authorised medical
treatment for her son on his 70th day without food. He
was the fifth hunger striker to break the fast since the
protest began March 1.
Meanwhile in Armagh, 35 miles southwest of Belfast,
gunmen pumped at least four shots into the head and
chest of an off-duty policeman outside the church
where he had attended mass, Injuring him seriously.

Russian War Games Increase
GDANSK, Poland (UP1) - Soviet farces held
massive sea and land maneuvers around Poland today
while Solidarity’s first national convention debated
policies for a "revolution" to reshape the communist
nation.
Solidarity, which decided to extend its meeting
beyond today, aaid Sunday it could not ignore the
economic deterioration in the year since the East
Bloc's first Independent labor organisation was formed
and now must develop "active policy" In guiding the
economy.
"A revolution is taking place in Poland and Its main
force is Solidarity," said the report to the convention
by the union's national coordinating commission.
"We know that there are still groups of people in the
country who are looking for the possibility to return to
the situation existing before August 1960," It said.
"They are scared by the gale of freedom our
movement has brought."
The Soviet Union, after earlier reporting "extremely
limited" military maneuvers around Poland, abruptly
revealed Sunday they involved about 100,000 men —
more than twice the number in any other Russian war
games during the years of East-West detente.

Governor Proclaims
Cystic Fibrosis Week

SfRTOMA FORMS
SANFORD CLUB

Sertoma District Governor Tom Siegfried w a s the
speaker at an organizational meeting of the new
Sanford Sertoma Club held Thursday noon at the
Cavalier Motor Inn. To his right is I.arry Hughes,
organizer of the new club. Sertoma stands for
service to mankind.

Rowdy
Dealing with bad guya is not always the toughest part of a
cop's Job. Sometimes, Just getting to where the bsd guys are Is
dangerous enough.
A Friday evening incident Involving two Sanford police
officers demonstrates both sides of the coin.
It all started about 6 p.m. when patrolman D. H. Whitmire
went to an abandoned railroad bed in the 800 block of Rosalia
Drive to Investigate a call about a boisterous drinking party.
Sure encugh, when he got to the scene he found five young
men drinking beer and railing caln. According to Whitmire's
report, the men became rowdy and refused to disburse and be,
along with fellow officer Gordon Reid, had to arrest them.
The revelers wouldn't go peacefully, however, and a fight
ensued. During the struggle, Whitmire sustained a broken nose
from a hard right hand thrown by Wade Eugene McClure, 19,
of 810 Rosalia Drive. McClure was arrested for disorderly
Intoxication, resisting arrest, and battery on a police officer.
Four other Sanford men were also arrested on charges of
disorderly intoxication and resisting arrest. They are: Ronald
D. Mason, 22,2001 Adams Ave.; Jeffery E. Fakess, 19, of 677
Escambia Drive; and William Thomas Jordan, 24, of 813
Rosalia Drive; and a 17-year-old Juvenile whose name was not
released.
While all this was going on, Sgt. Joe Dillard heard a call on
hia police radio about the fight and went to the aid of his men.

CALENDAR
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER I
Florida HotpItaHMando offers six-part seminar on
understanding children. For information call 897-1929.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
Saafwd AA Begtaners, 8:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Starlight P ro n e aa d en , 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shall Road.
O vereaten Asreymaua, 7:30 p.m., Altamonte Mali,
Sears.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m., Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Road 436 at Hermits Trail.
Dosed.
Bora to Win AA group, 8 p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Road, Sanford. Dosed.
Casselberry AA, 0 p.m., Ascension Lutheran Church,
Overbrook Drive, Casselberry. Closed except second
and last Wednesdays when open.
Rebos and Live Oak Reboa D ub AA, 220 Uve Oak
Center, Casselberry, noon and 8 p.m.
Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m., Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Dosed.
Sanford8erenadersseniorrlUiensdance, 2:30 p.m.,
Dvlc Center.'
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11
Snliie Harrison ChsptcL DAR, 2:30 p.m., at home o(
Dr. Sara Irrgang, 135 Aldean Drive, Sanford. Cdr. Guy
Strickland will speak on "Reflections on the Con­
stitution."

AREA DEATHS

Michael Smllnak, President of the Florida Chapter of the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, hailed the proclamation as "an
important step in broadening public understanding of the
disease that ranks as the country's number one genetic
killer of young people.

MRS. FRANCES FAIRCLOTH
Mrs. Frances J. Faircloth,
80, of M anhattan Con­
valescent C enter, T am pa,
died there Saturday. Born in
Fairbanks, Fla. on June 5,
1901, ihe came to Sanford in
1921 and moved to Tampa in
1971. She la survived by a son,
Robert C. Faircloth, Orlando;
two sisters, Mra. Ruby
Corrlggio and Mrs. Ellen
Hodler, both of Mango, Fla.;
one brother, Henry Walts,
Gainesville; one grandson.
Brtaaon Funeral Home-PA
la in charge of arrangements.
MRS. MARY M. PROVENCHER
Mrs. Mary M. Provencher,
81, of 1104 Bram Towers,
Sanford, died Saturday at
Seminole Memorial Hospital

Graham, In his proclamation, emphasises "public un­
derstanding... to allow detection and treatment, a greater
awareness leading to Increased research," and "care
programs," to aid the patients and their families.
"Major improvements have been made through
research," Smiinak states. "Not more than 15 years ago, it
was rare far a child to live long enough to enter school.
Thanks to improved medical treatment, however, nearly
half of the CF children born today will live past the age of
21. One key element in ensuring a longer and better life la
early diagnosis and trea tm e n t”
Local cystic fibrosis care and treatment centers, sup­
ported by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, are still sear­
ching for a cure, and meantime, Improving medical
treatment to prolong and enhance the quality of the Uvea of
CF patients. Cystic fibrosis centers are located In
Jacksonville, Orlando, Miami, Gainesville, Pensacola and
St. Petersburg.
During CF Week, the Florida Chapter of the Foundation
will conduct a community-wide public education campaign.

E vptiiitg HrmJd

(u ses esi-MSi

Monday, September 7, t f l l —Voi. 74, No. 14
reemaes Party a s M t y . tacapi tatareav ev
MaraM, IM , MSN. a re a * a**- Sealsri. Sis. SOTI.

tw

Born Ju n e 8, 1900 In
Wllkeabarre, Pa., she moved
to Sanford from Orlando in
1980. She was a licensed
practical nurae.

s s v a 'is ’s toi.'jsrr,

M M V oae, W N __________________________

. « p • ,- w -

died F rid a y at Halifax
Hospital, Daytona Beach.
Born in Yonkers, N.Y., she
moved to Deltona from there
In 1976. She was a housewife.
Survivors Include a father,
George Cullen, DeBary; son,
John
R ivera,
D eltona,
b ro th ers, Dennis Cullen,
D eBary; George Cullen,
California.
David ta n g Funeral Home,
DeBary is In charge of
arrangements.
MISS KATHERINE
A.
HENNINGER
Miss Katherine A. Hennlnger, 90, of 131 Valencia
Road, DeBary, died Saturday
at
Seminole
M em orial
Hospital. Born in New York
D ty, on Feb. 26, 1891, she
moved to DeBary from there
in 1941. She was a retired
teacher from New York City
schools and a c h a rte r
member of the First Baptist
Church, DeBary. Site was also
a charier member and first
president of llw DeBary Civic
Association.

S urvivors Include ions,
John E a rl J r ., LaVerne,
Calif.; Robert J., Sanford;
atven grandchildren; three
great-grandchildren.

She is survived by a cousin,
M rs. L illian E . H eppner,
DeBary.

Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford la In ch arg e of
arrangements.

David Lang F unfral Home,
D eBary, is in ch a rg e of
amuigenienU.

fats st Saalsret flartes u r n

DOROTHY RIVERA
Mrs. Dorothy A. Rivera, 42,
of 134 Flower Drive, Deltona,

Celebrating the national holiday, Reagan
was to fly to New York to present an (85
million federal check to Mayor Edward Koch

Reagan faced a possible confrontation with
labor anyway.
A group calling itself the "Coalition to
Defend the Air Traffic Controllers" planned to
hold a rally outside G rade Mansion, the
mayor's offidal home.
In his Labor Day address, Reagan said:
"Today, I hope will be a new age of the
American worker, an age in which all of us
again are free to prosper."

PartyBad Luck For Sanford

Governor Bob Graham has proclaimed September 20-31
as Cystic Fibrosis (CF) Week in Florida, urging dtlxens to
"... Join me in fighting this disease..."

Cystic fibrosis is an Inherited and degenerative disease
that attacks the lungs and digestive system by producing a
thick, glue-like mucus which impairs normal breathing
and digestion. Every day, five children are born with this

Still, the president was keeping his distance
from disenchanted union leaders this Labor
Day.

for construction of Westway, a Manhattan
highway project.
Not far away, AFL-CIO President Lane
Kirkland was scheduled to lead a parade of
thousands of workers down Fifth Avenue to
celebrate the organisation's 100th anniver­
sary.
Labor leaders, Irate at Reagan for firing
11,400 air traffic controllers who went on strike
in defiance of federal law, did not invite him to
participate In the parade, nor did the White
House seek an invitation.

GEORGE D. WEHR
George D. Wehr, 87, of 44f
E. Ridgewood St., Altamonte
S prings, died F rid a y at

The patrol car was totalled while Bagga' truck sustained an
estimated 12,000 damage.
No criminal charges were filed a t a result of the crash.

broke out about 11 a.m. in the grill and chimney area. The
restaurant's automatic extinguisher failed to put out the blaze
and county firefighters were called to douse the flames.
A dollar estimate of damage was not available, but
manager’! aariitant Alan Montesdcoca Saturday said repairs
would take two days to complete.
SANFORD BURGLARY
A Sanford home was broken Into Friday and an estimated
1800 worth of property taken.
Semmle ta e Long, 46, of 1001 Maple Ave., told police that the
burglary occurred sometime while he was at work Friday.
Taken was two stereos, a clock radio, and a camera
GAS GUZZLER
For the second time in two weeks, Hope Durham, 911 Ballard
Street, Altamonte Springs, has been the victim of a gas guz­
zler.
According to Altamonte Springs police, thieves syphoned
gasoline from Durhams car with a hose twice in the last two
weeks, the latest theft totaling approximately $10 worth of gas.
No arrests have been made, police said.

RESTAURANT FIRE
The White Marlin restaurant at 1811 State Road 431 in
tangwood was expected to reopen Tuesday following a
Saturday morning fire which damaged the kitchen area.
According to a Seminole County sheriff’s report, the fire

BARRICADES DIDN’T STOP ’EM
Three barricades with Hashers and two signs reading,
"Construction Ahead" were stolen from Airport Boulevard
east of ta k e Mary Boulevard Tuesday.
The equipment was valued at (295.

Action Reports
* Flros
* Courts

* Police
He never got there. En route, he had a wreck.
Dillard was eastbound on 20th Street with his blue lights and
siren on when he entered the Intersection at Park Avenue
against the light and struck a 1960 Ford pickup truck driven by
Stephen Baggs, Rt. 4, Sanford. Neither Bagga nor a passenger,
Alfred Finely of 801 Magnolia Avr., were hurt. Dillard bruised
his knee.

SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER U
Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra final audition,
Bob Carr Auditorium Rehearsal HalL For musicians
elementary through high school. Call 862-7434 for
appointment.
Lupus Foundation of Florida, LEA, 2 p.m., 1215 E.
Nebraska Ave., Orlando (Boy Scout building) SpeakerKaren McKenxie, teacher a t Valencia Community
College, on "Relaxation Techniques."
SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 13
Sunbelt HemeroeaDls Chapter, 3 p.m„ F irst Federal
Savings k Loan, DeBary. Plant auction and sltdo show.
MONDAY, SEPT. 14
We Care loc. orientation for volunteers, 7 p.m., 112
Pasadena Place, Orlando. Monday and Thursday
nights through Oct. 15.
Central Florida Teleremm adcatiou for the Deaf
meets a t 7:30 p.m., at the Municipal Justice Building,
Orlando.
Hospice of Central Florida Information meeting,
7:30-9 p.m., Hospice office, 356 E. Fairbanks Ave.,
Winter Park, General information on home care far
terminally ill people and their families and the Hoopic*
paru-profeaalonai volunteer training program. Call
047-2523 for details.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 11
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation course, 6 p.m.,
Seminole Community College. Second aearion Sept. 22.
Call Office of Community Services 323-1450, ext. 304.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER U
Golden Y ean Fellowship, noon, Community United
Methodist Church, Casselberry. Musical program. Cali
church for reservations.

Orlando Regional Medical
Center. Bom July 7, 1914, in
Hamilton, Ohio, he moved to
A ltam onte Springs from
Apopka in 1977. He was a
retired general contractor, a
m em ber of the F irs t
P re sb y teria n Church of
Apopka, and a former deacon
and elder. He was an Army
veteran of World War II; a
member o( Ihe Orange Lodge
36 F k AM, Apopka; a 32nddegree Scottish Rite Mason,
Valley of Orlando; a member
of the Sons of Confederate
V eterans, O rlando Cam p
1265; and the General Society
of the Military Order of the
Stare and Bare, Gen. Joseph
Finegan Chapter. He was
aw arded the SCV-MOSB
Military Service Croea far
service In World War II.

ta k e M ary. She w as a
member of the All Souls
Catholic Church, Sanford, and
the Seminole County Women's
Bowling Association and
C entral F lo rid a F lo rlat
Association.
S urvivors include her
husband,
C harlea
J .;
daughter, Mrs. Elya* Isom,
Sanford; sisters, Mra. Ruth
K llpplnger, M ra. V irginia
Dickman, both of California,
Mrs. Edna Mae Gorman,
ta k a M ary; brothers Robert
Kesaen, C incinnati, Ohio,
Jack Kaaaan, Sanford; two
g ran d c h ittin .
Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, la In ch arg a of
arrangements.
■ ----------« M - H ----

irw m ro

iw n v f

Survivors include his wife, v FAIRCLOTH, M il. IRAN CIS
Komllda H.; ion, Donald Lae i. - Funeral sarvkat ter Mrs.
France* J. FalrtMh, Ml at
Wehr, A ltam onte S prings;
M anhattan
Canvalaicant
sister, Mrs. Helm Sherlock, Ceniar.
Tampa, who dial
Hamilton, Ohio.
Saturday, will to at X p.m..
Tuesday at the gravaalto In
Garden Chapel Home (or
Everfreen CamUary with the
Funerals is In cfaarga of Ray. Billy J. Dkkarean at
arrangements.
tklallne B'tuon Funeral Home
FA in diarga.
MRS.
HELEN
JU N E
•AMMAN, M il. Nll.CN
GASSMAN
4UNC - Funeral Mae* ter Mrs.
Natan June Oaaaman, SX at 104
Mrs. Helen June O s e tia n ,
Wiltaw Are . Santera, *ha died
63, of 2428 Willow A ve.,
Saturday win la cat Mrated at f
Sanford, died Saturday a t bar
a.m. Wadnaaday M M* AN SeuN
residence. B ora in Cin­ Clturcn with Faltwr William
■mis attkiatma- Buriat M AN
cinnati, Ohio, Ju n e 1 t t l i ,
Saute Cateaik Cemetery. The
she moved to Sanford from
Reaary will b# racltad at r p.m..
Tuesday to tee Oramapw
th e re In 1IM.. She w as
Funeral
Heme
CMpel.
associated with her daughter
Oramhaw Funeral
in the Elyse Flower Shop,
Santoro. In charge

’ • j

* ? j :

Democrats Plan Picnic
A family-style picnic for members of the Seminole County
Democratic Executive Committee will be discussed at (he 7:30
p jn . Thursday meeting of the organization to be held at the
Winter Springs City Hall.
Winter Springs Mayor Troy Piland, chairman of the com­
mittee, said the family-style picnic Is to be held from 10 a.m. to
3 p.m., Oct, 3, at Red Bug Park. Committee members, their
families and other* interested in working with the committee
are being Invited.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: The ratn-eoaked West Texas town of
Amarillo was under a slate of emergency today and Gov. Bill
Clements activated the National Guard to protect damaged
homes and businesses In the area. Weekend rains forced
hundreds of residents to seek higher ground, authorities said.
Potter County sheriffs spokesmen said officers used lifeboats
to rescue two men from the Canadian River Sunday, and were
checking out reports that two other boaters were missing on
the river. The storms, which left more than 4 inches of water
standing in some southwest Amarillo businesses, damaged 200
to 300 houses and forced several hundred people, including
about 50 nursing home residents, to seek shelter on higher
ground, Sergeant H.R. Kelly said. Hurricane Floyd churned
northward In the Atlantic today, menacing Bermuda with 95
mile an hour winds that forecasters said could get stronger
before it arrives in the vicinity of the British island sometime
Tuesday. Forecasters at the National Hurricane Center in
Miami alio were busy plotting the movements of Hurricane
Emily, which was falling apart in cold north Atlantic waters
south of Newfoundland, and a threatening tropical depression
that showed signs of becoming the season's seventh tropical
storm. The depression was bearing down on islands fringing
the eastern Caribbean Sea. At 6 a.m. EDT, Floyd was centered
about 375 miles southwest of Bermuda, near latitude 26.0
north, longitude 69.0 west. It was moving northward at 10 mph,
but forecasters predicted a gradual turn toward the northeast.
“Further strengthening is possible today," forecaster Joe
Peliaater said.
AREA READINGS (I Am.): temperature: 76; overnight
low:7t; Sunday's high: 93; barometric pressure: 30.00;
relative humidity: 94 percent; winds: southeast a t 4 mph.
MONDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 3:47 a.m.,
4 : » p.m.; Iowa, 9 :0 a.m., 10:46 p m .; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 3:39 a m , 4:21 p.m., 9:34 a.m., 10:37 p.m.; BAYPORT:
highs, 1:57 a.m ., 11:47 p.m.; Iowa, 3:12 a m , 4:47 p.m.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Tuesday. A
chance of mainly afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Highs
near 00 or low 00a. ta w s tonight mostly mid 70a Winds
variable 10 mph or l e a but strong and lu s ty near thundaratorma. Rain probability 40 percent, today, 20 percent
tonight and 40 percent Tuesday.
EXTENDED FORECAST — Partly cloudy with chance oj
afternoon and evralng thunderstor ms, more numerous over
the north on Wednesday and Thursday, Lows averaging near
70in th* north to the mid and upper 70s south. Highs mainly in
the uppsr H a to low 00a.
•OATINO FORECAST: SL Aagwttee to J i t t e r W et, O *
■ W a s: Winds variable 10 knots or lass through TtMeday
mostly easterly today. 8eaa leaa than 3 feet. Widely scattered
showers or thunderstorm*.

HOSPITAL NOTES,
SwilitiMllGJA0l!SOin|(j)|
ADMISSIONS
Grace B. Hall, I
Mrran F. Iw a rt, Daltana
DltCNARORt
SANFORD:
tuner A. RMwall
Glaeyt I . EMar
Walter NMI Grttfin
Tanya L. Parhlre
Yotanpa AA Parkins
I A toby Bkl
Arena A.
Mary l . Patlomy. Oranga City
fVtrU T fh M IB S r OflANA Pi*W

ADMISSIONS
SANFORD:
Daisy E Downer
Monro* Smith
Irena* L Eyane, Ovkdo
■IRTNI
kbit A Oaky E. Downr a
bey, Untore
M SCM ARNII

SANFORD:
Aren# L. aiackuwar
le ek a. Nuntar
EOvlna E. MitchUI
Daera A. Yeung
Dora GoMUain, Daltona
»**'— 6* f.Naa haHaug

✓

�Evi'lrtg Hirjkt, Sanford, F|.

Monday, Sept. 7, tf« -* A

NATION
IN BRIEF
Begin M etis With Advisors
Preparing For U.S. Visif
NEW YORK t UPI) - Opening a llWay U.S. visit, Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin is huddling with his top
aides and Jewish leaders at a plush New York hotel to
prepare (or his first venture to Ihe Reagan White House.
Begln’s trip to Washington starts Tuesday and is com­
plicated by conflicting goals.
The Israeli leader hopes to warm relations with the new
administration. But he also is trying to muster enough
congressional support to block Reagan’s proposed 18.5billion sale to Saudi Arabia of Airborne Warning and
Control System planes, known as AWACS, and other ad­
vanced military equipment.
Congress has until Oct. 30 to vote on the proposal.
On his arrival Sunday, Begin stood firm on his opposition
to the AWACS: “ We can only repeat our position that it will
endanger very seriously the security of Israel."
Asked if his meetings in Washington meant a new stage in
lsraeli-U.S. relations, he said, “Well, it's a new ad­
ministration in the United States, it is a re-elected govern­
ment in Israel, and so perhaps it will be a new era."

Boat Yanks Girl's Scalp
WILDWOOD, N.J. (UPI) — A 7-year-old girl’s pigtails
were caught in a boat's motor and her scalp was yanked off,
authorities say.
Officials said the girl's hair was caught in the motor of a
small dinghy on a ride called "Jungleboat" at Hunt's
Theater and Entertainment Center, an amusement park.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
19 Die On Florida Roads
During Labor Day Holiday
By United Press International
At least 19 people have died on Florida's roadways since
the start of the long U b o r Day holiday weekend, including
a pedestrian who may have been hitchhiking, the Florida
Highway Patrol reported.
The Highway Patrol has estimated that 35 persona would
die in traffic during the weekend which began at 6 p.m.
Friday and ends at midnight Monday.
A North Carolina man, Mark Lee Hine, 27, of WinstonSalem, died early Sunday in Volusia County. Hine, a
pedestrian, was struck by a car that ran off the road onto
the shoulder of State Road 9 eight miles south of State Road
442 in Daytona Beach.
Florida Highway Patrol troopers said Hine may have
been attempting to hitchhike.
Two deaths occurred Sunday morning in Brevard County.
Mark William Belcher, 31, of Daytona Beach, was killed in
Titusville when his car ran off the shoulder of State Road 50
into a ditch. Mike John Golfello, 21, Hubert, N.C., died at
Cape Canaveral when his car swerved off State Road A1A
and struck a road sign.
Vernon George Naylor, 6), of St. Petersburg, was killed
Sunday morning when his car was struck by another auto
while attempting to make a left turn in Pinellas P a r t in
Pinellas County.

£
"It pulled her scalp off," William Clark, Assistant
Commissioner of Labor Relations and Workplace Stan­
dards, said Sunday.
Police said the girl, whose identity was not released, was
reported in serious condition at Children's Hospital in
Philadelphia, the nearest facility for youngsters to the
amusement nark.

Fortune Fish Not Caught
SEATTLE (UPI) — They used the fanciest lures or Just a
hook and worm, but none of the estimated 25,000 fishermen
who participated in the Million Dollar Fish Derby could
land what would have been the biggest catch of their life —
a coho salmon worth f 1 million.
Sponsors of the derby, staged for the benefit of Children's
Orthopedic Hospital In Seattle, said they had hoped
somebody would hook the tagged fish because the money
would have been paid by an Insurance company.
“Everybody here was disappointed except the insurance
man, and he breathed a sigh of relief when the clock hit fl
p.m .," said Dan McConnell, derby promoter for Sclmck’s
Auto Supply, which staged the event. Eight o'clock was the
last moment somebody could have claimed the money.

Skywalk Metal Too Thin
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (U PI) — A steel company president
says It was "idiotic" for Hyatt Regency builders and
designers to construct the hotel's skywalks out of the
thinnest steel available, as charged by the Kansas City
Star.
Declining to be named for tear of retribution by the
community’s construction companies, the Kansas City
executive said he considered the lightweight material used
to support the 32-ton aerial walkways too thin for comfort.
In a copyright story published Sunday, the Star quoted
the company president as saying it was “ idiotic" to use
"the lig h test... channel (a rolled metal bar shaped like a
squared-off gutter) they make" to suspend skywalks of the
sort used in the Hyatt.
The Star said local experts agreed the support beams that
kept the skywalks aloft were made of the thinnest steel
commonly manufactured in the United States.

S13I.3S0
Equity Really. Inc. lo David R
Wigle, tgl . Wm. G. Ruth. tgl. t
David R McCoy, tgl , Un 14E,
Detllny Spring*. *34.*00
Samuel Jell etc to Equity
Realty Inc., Un. Ilf , Sandy Cov*.
1100
Equity Realty Inc. to David E.
Achllll * wt Pau'atta A., Un. lit,
Sandy Cova, *33.513
Equity Realty Inc to Wetley O
Tindal l wt Kathlyn S . Un. 34E,
Seitlny Spring*, *41,100
FI. Homacrattm. Inc. to Ktvln
H Ormerod. tgl . Lot S, Blk JL
Country Club Htt. Un. Ona.
*90.*00
Fl Homecratlart, Inc. to Prltr
L Cor In o t wt Barbara A., Lot 13.
Blk A, Wett Branllty Lakt Road
Heigh*t, ita.ooo
Watlar J, Muchowtkl L wt Joyce
to Chrtttlne Talilian, tgl., Lol 7lt,
Weklva Hunt Club Fck Hunt Sac. 3,
**1.300

MIRAMAR, Fla. (UPI) — Police arrested a 21-year-old
man Sunday night and charged him with murdering his
third cousin, a Jogger who did not return from her Saturday
night run, a police spokesman said.
Daniel Lee Doyle, 21, a pipe fitter from Miramar, was
booked into the Broward County Jail without bond and
charged with first degree murder in the killing of his 15year-old cousin, Pamela Kipp.
Doyle told police he suffers from blackouts but would not
give a motive for killing his cousin, the spokesman said.
Miss Kipp, a Jogger had gone out Saturday night to run In
a subdivision of Miramar called Country Club Ranches, Just
north of the Dade-Broward county line. Her seven-monthold doberman pinscher pup, Babette, was with her.

MIAMI (UPI) — Several hundred Haitians chanting and
carrying picket signs came nose-to-nose with a squad of
riot-equipped Border Patrol officers Sunday during a
demonstration outside the Krome Avenue refugee center.
The crowd of Haitians, which Included relatives of
refugees Inside the camp, marched for hours during the hot
afternoon in protest of the treatment being given to the
more than 800 inmates of the refugee camp.
Twice, the demonstrators surged past barricades in an
attempt to reach the camp. The first time, they voluntarily
retreated after coming within inches of border patrolmen
carrying batons.
During the second incident, several protesters were
pushed back by guards and demonstration leaders asked
the crowd to move behind the barricades.
The Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste, director of the Haitian
Refugee Center, Inc., said the demonstration was held to
draw attention to conditions inside the camp.
“We want the brutalities, the cruelties to stop against the
blade boat people," Jean-Juste said. "We Bre not slaves."

Crott County Comtr to John
Paylor 1 wt Sally, Lot * Markham
Point*. *71.000
Ernetl L. Maddy 1 wt Berber*
lo Charlat a Henk.nt (marr.l,
W'v ol Lot i. Mecca Hammock,
131.000
Lewi* Glatt A wt Charlotte to
Kevin C. William* i wt Debbie A ,
Lot 13, Foa wood, Ph I, l i t ,*00
Larry L. Knight A wt Karen to
OevIdL Wall*, (minor child). Lot
33, Lot 74 A S 3S' vacated Cherry
Av., Blk 77. Suburban Hornet.
141.300
Greater Conttr. Corp to Lrcn A.
Hyman A wt Pearl, Lot 193. Rivtr
Run Sac Four. SSt.fOO
Margaret G Lent. tgl. to Robert
L. Brown A wt Mildred A Waller
R. Brown A wt Marjorie, Lot 13,
Blk A. Sweetwater Oak*. Sec. 1.
ttS.N0.
Donn J Hill A wt Calhelrln* L
10 Gey M. Tornl**, tgl., Un. S. Bl 9,
Cher rywood Garden*, 913,000
JOhnG. Millar, tgl. A Beverly A
•oLyal A. Davit A wl tan* E , N 7‘

of Lot 19, allot I* A S i r Ol 17. Blk
II. Sec 1, Suburban Home*.
*40.790
Homer Gleaton A Lena B lo
Ellie J Keogh, Lott 13 3a. Blk It.
Cryttal Lake Winter Hornet td ,
III* e tt, 1 100
Ronald E Event A wt Patricia
to Andrew R Heitey A wt Sutan
J . Lol II. Blk B. Druid HUH Park,
*40.000
(GCOI Jamet E Schlender, tgl
lo Judy A Schlender, tgl., Lot 71
Blk C. Sweetwater Oakt. *100
(QCD) Solid Builder* Inc to
Crottbow Conttr Corp corrective
- N&gt;« ol N 'j of N E'i of SW'«
I let* E 7*3 7 1 Sec 717110 lett
part etc.. SI04
Kelly Jo trimmer, Repr E tl
Geraldine J to Sarlene H Woll*.
Lot til. Lake Searcy Shore*.
*51.400
Walter Judge A wt Mari* to
Stephen H Judge A wt Karen A ,
Lot 70. Blk B, Sweetwater Oakt,
Sac Five, f 197 4}*

DON'T OAJWBLI
w ith y o u rin su ra n c a l
- call-

.U N * I
IW M in fM !

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC

312-OlBS
M O B ILE

IN SU R A N C E

Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of His
LAKE MARY OFFICE
For FAMILY PRACTICE

Heritage COOKBOOK
★ NINTH WEEK’S CONTEST ★
Recipes for...

m iC R O W A V E

loot lVeeh...£mt CJwnceJ
\ Y 7n r a
1st - 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
Weekly winners are eligible for the GRAND PRIZE
NO LIMIT TO NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED
YOU MAY ENTER AS MANY WEEKS AS YOU LIKE

So send

inthat special recipe your family and

friends like so w e ll...it could be a winnerI
RULES:
No lim it to n u m b e r of rac ip es su b m itted but each
racip a m u st Include your n am e, ad d ress and
telephone.
T Y P E o r P R lK T your rac ip a giving full In­
stru c tio n s fo r p re p a ra tio n , cooking tim e an d
te m p e ra tu re . (A p p ro x im ate n u m b e r of se rv in g s
also helpful.)
Anyone can e n te r ex cep t Evening H erald e m ­
ployees an d th e ir Im m e d iate fam ily.

Mall Entriat to: EVENING HERALD
c-a COOKBOOK
P.O. BOX 1457
SANFORO, FLA. 22771

F irst, Second a n d T hird p rize s will be a w a rd e d In
ea ch of Ihe nine food ca te g o rie s. You m ay en te r
as m an y of the w eekly c a te g o rie s a s you like.
A panttl ol th ree ex p e rt Judges will review all
e n trie s an d w inners will b e notified at th e en d of
the contest In S ep tem b er for a ta s te o ff" to
select th e G ran d P r lie w in n er. D ecision of th e
Judges Is final.
All rec ip as receiv ed will b e p ublished In O ctober
for th e E vening H erald 's first an n u a l cookbook
co n test.

Or Drop OH At Our Office:
2MN. FRENCH AVE.
(By the lakefront in downtown Sanford)
MON.-FRi. 1:20-5:30 - SAT. O:20-NOON

By Appointment Only

LAKE MARY 321-0085
lit N. COUNTRY CLUB ROAD
ACROSS FROMTHI NEW
LA K I MARY CITY HALL

323-5763

:.vv ~

H O M E

ROBERT L. BEVIER, M*D.

^ I '*mfc * ra AL70*1 * Ctets PlfldMuf U "Kw fl

---- - ‘

Special Edition of the

Don’t Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

TO N Y O U SSI

7. Lmr fate Nx. Dp Ns. Pits I m Lap
Why F R C It Thousands of area raaidanti have spina
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
cart.
This Is our way of tncouraglno you to find out If you havo a
prototem that could ba hatpod by chiropractic care. It is
bteo our way of acquainting you with our staff and
factflttes.
Examine! Ion Includw a minimum of 10 standard taste for
avawetlng tha spina and a contour analysis photo as
■hawn abova.
WNto wa are areepting naw pattento. no ana naad faai any
obligation.
Most inayrancas Accaptod

for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual

Refugees Battle Police

FREE SPINAL
EXAMINATION

l Mil

C o n te s t

Cousfn Arrested In Murder

REALTY TRANSFERS
(QCO) Sharon A McLaown 10
Mark A Sager). Lol I. Btk A. W
Brentley Lake Rd H ll, &gt;1100
Lrwfltld Apu., Inc. toCatherine
A. Btiland, tgl., Un. to 3*41.
CtdAfwood VII. Cond I, **3.000
(QCO) John C. Sarvlt lo Carolyn
Ann Sercit. Lott I S 1. Blk 41.
Sanlando Tha Suburt) Baautllul,
Palm Spring* Sac., *100
Law (laid Aptt, Inc lo John
Clapham. Un 13 344*. Cadarwood
VII Co O I, 140.100
(QCO) John Clapham to John
Clapham t Son|a Mucharal, Jt.
T*n. u n i at above. 1100
Melvin I Laaman 1 wt Joan M
to Earl W Uphoute 1 wt Shirley
M , Lot S. Blk B. Hillcratt, Sac.
One. 140. S00
Jett M William*, to' 5 Patricia
A.toW m P R it ley t wt Deborah
F . Lot 40. Carolyn Ettt., 1*1.013
Jeffrey A Gerber l wt Jo Ann to
Robert J Scrotlint 1 wl Nancy W.,
Lot 111. Winter Spring* Un. Four,

RECIPE

—-

DEADLINE FOR
MICROWAVE...

Entriat mutt ba pastmarkad by midnight

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER

LAST DATE FOR DESSERTS...SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6

• •• -

• I

-

.

�Evening Herald
iu sps

The Council ot Local Governments In Seminole
County held Its first meeting after the summer
recess Thursday night without ta k e Mary’s
delegate present.
The Important thing about that is not that la k e
Mary Mayor Walter Sorenson, his community's
delegate for many years, had a unbroken perfect
attendance reconi previously. Sorenson had
missed some meeUngs in the past because of
other commitments.

a i ) k»

300 N. FHENC1IAVE., SANFORD. F U . 32771
Area Code 30W22-2611 or 831-9993
AAonday, S eptem b er 7. 1981—4A
»

l
;

I
;
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Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
John Toenjes. Advertising Director

But Thursday night Sorenson had no choice. It
was the appointed time for a regularly scheduled
city council meeUng. The problem was that
Casselberry Mayor Owen Sheppard changed the
regular meeUng night from Wednesday, the only
night of (he week when no city council In
Seminole meets.

Home Deliver)-. Week, 11.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months. $24.00;
Year, $45.00. By Mail: Week. $1.25; Month. $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

I A Century
m

\ O f Change
:
?
:
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;
I
•
l
•
;
\
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I
I

It is approaching a century that this nation has
been observing the first Monday in September in
honor of the American worker.
The nation and its workers have seen a great
many changes in that period, as the headlined
labor event of this particular Labor Day has made
dramatically apparent. Back then technically
skilled individuals earning up to $50,000 a year
would not have been considered part of the labor
movement. Yet today the air traffic controllers
are, demonstrating how broad that movement has
become.
Labor is still firmly rooted in its blue-collar
origins, but organizationally it also has advanced
far into white-collar ranks.

[
In the process, however, organized labor has
f been losing some ground. The political clout it
acquired during the New Deal and in ensuing
decades has dissipated to a considerable extent in
• recent administrations. It has suffered some
. significant setbacks on Capitol Hill and its
leadership has not enjoyed the entree to the White
House or the intimate relationship with the
Democratic Party's standard bearers that once
were such powerful assets.

Union m embership has been essentially
stagnant in recent years, left behind by the ex­
plosive growth in the total work force and slow to
make itself felt among the new industries created
by an increasingly technological economy and the
new workers — particularly women — entering
the force in great numbers.
In many ways, the union movement is a victim
of its own spectaculnr success of the earlier years.
If the labor vote" no longer commands the at­
tention and respect it once did in Washington, it
may in large part be because the great, easily
comprehended causes labor fought for were long
ago won. The new issues are more complex and
often, as the traffic controllers have demon­
strated, more narrowly focused.
•
.
I
•

And the conditions of work have changed
greatly. It workers are declining union
representation in this plant or that office, it may
mean that management has learned the lesson
that the union movement itself taught — that a
satisfied worker is the best worker.
In short, if the union movement is a diminished
force in the nation's life, it may be because oldtime militant unionism no longer has a major role
to play. This does not mean that the decline and
fall of organized labor may be imminent. Very
much to the contrary. It may Ik * about to embark
upon one of the most momentous periods of
change in its history to adjust its goals and the
realities of its existence to those of the
economically, socially and politically changed
nation.
It would be rash at this point to predict precisely
what changes lalx&gt;r may see in the next century.
But they will come, and labor will continue to
havb its day.

Amtrak Gains Vigor
Although Amtrak President Alan S. Boyd has
accused Congress and the Hcngan administration
of taking a salami approach to rail service, slicing
a little off at each opportunity, the national
passenger system has been strengthened rather
than weakened by budget cuts ordered this year.
It has gained vigor by abandoning its failures
and improving upon its successes — just the steps
the administration wanted when it called for
sharp cuts in the Amtrak subsidy in 1982. With a
leaner $735 million budget, compared to the $993
million proposed by the Carter administration,
Amtrak has had to eliminate 1,116 miles of its
24,000-milc system. The reduction, although less
thun the administration wanted, has left Amtrak
smaller than when it started 10 years ago, leading
to Boyd's complaint that it was being killed
piecemeal.

BERRYS WORLD

By DONNA ESTES

Sheppard said he made the change at
tangwood Deputy Mayor June |y)rmann's
request because officials of her city were
especially interested in attending a public
hearing of the Health Systems Agency ( HSA) on

ROBERTWAGMAN

Wednesday night Unless the meeUng time was
changed she would have to choose between the
Copncil of Governments and HSA.
It apparently never occurred to Sheppard to
delay the meeUng unUl another Wednesday.
Sorenson took the rescheduling, which had the
effect of leaving out ta k e Mary for the con­
venience of Longwood, in stride. “It's no big
deal," he said. “ I would have like to be there. But
it’s all right."

All will be traveling to the conference daily by
city car and all will be returning to their homes
at night.
Also in ta k e Mary, Sorenson has proclaimed
the week of Sept. 17-23 U.S. Constitution Week,
marking the 194th anniversary of the adopUon of
the Constitution.

Speaking of Sorenson, he will be at his city's
official delegate for the upteenth Ume to the
Florida League of Cities conference in Orlando
Oct. 22-24. Other city councilmen attending from
ta k e Mary will be Vic Olvera, Gene McDonald
and Ken King. None will be spending the nights
there.

A representative from U.S. Rep. Bill
McCollum's Altamonte Springs district office
will be at the conference room In the Seminole
County Courthouse in Sanford from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m., Wednesday, to meet with area residents
who are having problems with agencies or
departments of the federal government.
McCollum, R-Altamonte Springs, is com­
pleting his first year in office.

In I/xigwood, City Administrator David
Chacey says, all five city commissioners will be
participating in the League of Cities conference.

Persons wishing to meet with McCollum's
representative are encouraged to stop by
anytime during the designated hours. No ap­
pointments are necessary.

r

bON GRAFF

Light
That's
Failing

Being
Number
Two Man

The way in which the cliches pour out of the
D'Souza Machine Is truly marvelous.
Thus, you can have a "profound dialectical
relationship." Or "meaningful communal
oneness." You can have "genuine contextual
linkage." or "sophisticated humane con­
sensus." Or "genuine humane dialog."
The Machine Isn't just fun. It captures the
spirit of a genuinely decadent liberalbureaucratic culture. This language is not
really about anything very concrete. It is
composed of buzz-words that signal mem­
bership in an interest group, the Interest
group of the liberal bureaucrat, and often the
liberal academic.

The lights are going out in El Salvador.
Uterally. Opening a new front against that
country's U.S.-backed, military-dominated
Junta, guerrillas are sabotaging vital ser­
vices. Whole districts have been blacked out.
Even the capital has had its current cut.
U.S. A m bassador Deane Hinton and
Salvadoran business leaders recently con­
ferred in shirt-sleeves and dim lights. A string
of transmission towers on the city's outskirts
had been dynamited and the elegant Camino
Real’s emergency generator was not up to
providing both illumination and air con­
ditioning as usual for the high-powered
discussion of the Impact of the civil war on the
Salvadoran economy.
It is devastating. Gross national product, by
Hinton’s reckoning, is off 16 percent in three
years, capital is fleeing the country by the
hundreds of millions of dollars, exports and
imports are down and American aid is up
from $10 million to $136 million annually.
Meanwhile, Salvadoran troops, unable to
nail the guerrillas in any significant numbers,
continue to slaughter villagers, the fewer and
fewer opposition politicians still at liberty and
anyone else who has the bad luck to be around
when reg u lars or moonlighting "d eath
squads" drawn from their ranks are at their
murderous work.
The weekly, even daily, death counts
continue to number in the dozens. But no
longer necessarily as totals for the entire
country. More and more frequently victims
are being dispatched In batches, the bodies
found In mass graves or with no effort at
burial. More often than not mutilated —
headless, hands and legs chopped off, genitals
severed.
More than 20,000 are known to have died in
less than two years of open civil war — in
terms of the relative sizes of the Salvadoran
and U.S. populations, that is the equivalent of
a million Americans dead.
The slaughter has not stopped but spurred
the rebellion. Assaults on security forces are
increasingly w idespread and frequent,
demonstrating that the failure of an overly
ambitious offensive in January did not put the
guerrillas out of business militarily as ad­
vertised in San Salvador and Washington.

In case you are filling out an application for
a grant from the Ford Foundation, or the
Rockefeller Foundation, the D'Souza
Machine will come in very handy. If you want
o Job on the 1984 research staff of Walter
Mondale, use the D'Souza Machine.

Economic first aid Isn't all that Washington
is providing. Military assistance Is now at a
level of $35 million a year and Hinton
reiterates that the administration will raise
the ante to meet the guerrilla challenge as
needed.

I mentioned the fact that D'Souza is editor
in chief ot The Dartmouth Review. This
weekly newspaper, published by Dartmouth
undergraduates, started up with a roar last
year and has received a lot of national notice,
including stories in Newsweek, The Saturday
Evening Post, and The New York Times. It Is
not the favorite reading materia! of liberals
on the Dartmouth campus.

It will be. The 10 helicopters dispatched
earlier this year, along with assorted other
hardware and a team of U.S. military ad­
visers and considerable publicity, are now
mostly Inoperable. Thanks to Increasingly
accurate guerrilla groundflre. More are
already enroute, a replacement move the
Pentagon has chosen not to give the same
publicity treatment as the original package.

By Robert J. Wagmaa
PHIUDELPHIA (NEA) - They are like
players In baseball's minor leagues. Some are
youngsters on the way up. Others are
distinguished veterans playing out their
careers. Still others have Just missed out on
making die big time.
They are the nation's lieutenant governors,
who gathered here recently to discuss issues
of mutual interest: water and their lack
thereof, the effects on their states of the
Reagan tax and budget cuts and the problems
of being No. 2.
A few states manage to get along without a
lieutenant governor. In some states the post is
largely ceremonial while in others it carries
with it some limited responsibilities, usually
legislative. A few — a very few — lieutenant
governors have real power, whether because
of their official duties or their own political
clout or their relationship with their gover­
nor.
Perhaps the most powerful of them is Bill
Hobby, the Democrat who is serving his third
term as lieutenant governor of Texas. His
father was governor of the state, his mother
was U.S. secretary of health, education and
welfare under President Eisenhower and his
family owns the Houston Post. Hobby
presides over the Texas Senate with an iron
Iland. In many ways he has more Influence in
state politics than does the governor.
At the other extreme was Illinois' David
O’Neal, who did not attend the Philadelphia
m eeting. O 'N eal resigned from office
recently, saying that it was "almost a crime
to take taxpayers' money (his salary was
$45,000 a year) for doing nothing."
Minnesota's Lt. Gov. l&gt;ou Wangberg and
Gov. Albert Quie may enjoy the most unusual
relationship between the No. 1 and No. 2 of­
ficials in state government. They ran for
office as a team and have since grown very
close — so close, in fact, that Wangberg
serves as Qule's chief of staff in addition to
presiding over the Slate Senate.
"This works for us because we are close
and have a great deal of respect for one
another," said Wangberg. "But it could never
work in the situation where the governor and
his lieutenant are not exactly on the best of
term s."
And that is all too common. In some states,
candidates for governor and lieutenant
governor run together as do candidates fur
president and vice president. In other states,
the two offices are voted upon separately;
this more often than not seems to produce a
governor and a lieutenant governor from
different political parties. And then the
sparks can fly.

JEFFREY HART

The Dartmouth Review
ta s t year at Dartmouth College a group of
enterprising undergraduates raised some
money and started a new conservative
weekly, The Dartmouth Review. It addressed
both campus and national issues and brought
the local liberal establishment to the brink of
apoplexy, meanwhile preserving its own good
humor and sense of fun.
On the night of the election last November,
The Review rented a hotel suite on the
campus and threw a Reagan party. Aa the 44
stales toppled, and as the McGoverns and
Churches and Rayhs tumbled, a couple of
hundred Dartmouth students drank toasts
and sang songs.
In its first year, The Review attracted some
students of great talent:
Steve Kelley, (hen a senior, is now the
editorial puge cartoonist for the San Diego
Union, not bad for a 22-year-old.
Greg Fossedal, a founding editor, is now in
the White House.
Another founder is finishing a book about
(lie past year at Dartmouth, and a Junior from
Bombay, India, named Dinesh D'Souza lias
taken over as editor. Dinesh has finished
writing a novel and is now writing a play.
Tills summer, while working at The
Reader's Digest, Dinesh invented the In-game
for the summer of 1981. It’s called
"Feelings," and it's both amusing and
illuminating.
“Feelings" teaches you how to conduct a
liberal conversation or write a liberal
political speech — in the unlikely event that
you want to do either.
The idea is that you pick one word from
each of live three columns below, any three
words, and string them together in a phrase.
Wliat vnu get is perfect liberal music. Try it!

COLUMN X
Profound
Diverse
Genuine
Subjective
Complex
Objective
Sophisticated
Realistic
Meaningful
Mutual

COLUMN Y
Interpersonal
Emotional
Dialectical
Harmonious
Communal
Contextual
Humane
Interactive
Collective
Societal

COLUMN Z
Awareness
Oneness
Relationship
Network
Correspondence
Linkage
Consensus
Communication
Dialog
Forum

JACK ANDERSON

Solidarity Must Be Number One Union
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - The most significant
labor union in the world today is Solidarity,
the Polish workers' movement that has ex­
posed the spurious image of International
communism as the workingman's champion
— and in the process has won a degree of
freedom for all Poles that other captive
nations in the Soviet bloc hardly dare dream
of achieving.
It has been Just over a year since the Polish
workers at the huge Ijenln shipyard in Gdansk
walked off their Jobs and demanded, among
other things, the right to organize their own
union to replace the sham organizations set
up by Communist authorities. I sent my
associate Bob Sherman to Poland to find out
how the Polish workers' movement has fared
since then.
He was In Gdansk on the first anniversary
of the historic day when 16,000 shipyard
workers defied the Communist government
and went on strike — the kind of spontaneous
action that has been forbidden in the suppoeed
Polish worker's paradise since It was
established by the Red Army more than 36
years ago.
The upstart strikers not only got away with
their anti-Marxist blasphemy; the movement
they founded — Solidarity — now numbers
more than 10 million members in a nation of
35 million. In pathetic contrast, the Com­
munist Party can d aim a membership of only
I t million.

4 . $i . i r j * V 4

The anniversary celebration of that first
dramatic walkout highlighted what has been
one of Solidarity’s most effective moves: Its
alliance with the Catholic Church. So far at
least, the combination of church and workers
in an overwhelmingly Catholic country has
been more than the Communist government
can withstand.

everything It has won in the p u t year, by
provoking an armed occupation by the Soviet
Union.

Thousands of workers and their families
stood solemnly in ankle-deep mud under a
light rain while a Catholic bishop offered
Mass to celebrate Solidarity's first year of
precarious, but succefsful, existence. In the
background, the giant shipyard cranes stood
motionless against the pale gray sky — steel
dinosaurs of an era when obedience to
Conununist doctrine was the unquestioned
rule, machines that would only be brought
back to life when the men who worked them
agreed to go back to the controls.

And this puts virtually the whole weight of
Poland's future on Lech Walesa, the head of
Solidarity. He is a moderate, trying to pull off
a tricky balancing act between the Com­
munist Party leaders and his own radical
followers.
There is no doubt that Walesa is a celebrity,
and to most Poles a hero. After the an­
niversary Mass in Gdansk, he moved quickly
to his white Polish-made Flat after pausing
briefly to give autographs. As he w u driven
away, the crowd parted respectfully to let
him pass.
Walesa must persuade the Polish people to
go back to work and endure the lardahips that
their own fight for freedom h u exacerbated;
he must also persuade the Polish Communist
Party - and particularly the puppeteers In
the Kremlin — that Solidarity dees not
threaten the entire Soviet system. It's asking
o lot of someone who was an unemployed
electrician a little over a year ago.
ABORTION BATTLE: There's another
union story on this ta b o r Dey. U involves the
700,0ttmember American Federation of

That is the real triumph of Solidarity: It is a
victory of men over machines, not just the
cold, metallic machines of steel mills and
auto fattfories, but the equally cold, rigid
machinery of the Conununist Party. And it is
this last, shaky victory that is also Poland's
greatest danger.
Solidarity has made the Polish Communist
Party — and Its masters in the Kremlin —
bend to a surprising degree over the past
year. But If the workers’ movement pushes
the party to the breaking point, it could lose

r * ftruj: /r * v? *v i t -

Western diplomatic observers believe the
Soviets will suffer Solidarity’s slings and
arrows up to a point — but will resort to force
if they conclude that the Polish cancer will
metastasize throughout the Soviet bloc.

§

Government Employees and the determined
anti-abortion forces in Congress.
The so-called right-to-llfers have been
unable so far to outlaw abortions for all
American women. But they have succeeded
In barring direct subsidy of abortions by the
government through Medicaid. And now they
are trying to eliminate Indirect government
payment for abortions through the Federal
Employees Health Benefits Program.
Language that prohibits health-insurance
plans from coverage of federal employees for
abortion - except when the mother's Ufa is in
danger - has passed the House. The Senate is
considering even stricter langusge: Its
provision would permit no abortion-connected
services to be performed under federal health
plans. This means that federal employees
enrolled in prepaid health maintenance
organizations could not have their doctor
perform an abortion even if they were willing
to pay for the operation themselves.
But the Office of Personnel Management is
taking no chances on final passage of the
tough anti-abortion plan. It has already laid
down the exclusionary rule by executive fiat,
and h u sent the language of the provision to
the printer (or use in 125 of the 127 govern­
ment health plan brochures. (The two o tter
plans already have stricter language.)
The AFGE is considering takii* the OPM to
court in an effort to thwart the ad­
ministration's end run around Congress.

�SPORTS
Seminole County ScorecardSept. 11

Home

Sanford

Astronaut

Sept. 18

Away

Sanford

Lk. Howell

Sept. 25

Away

Sanford

Edpcwater

Oct.

9

Away

Sanford

Apopka

Oct. 16

Away

Sanford

DeLand

Oct. 23

Home

Sanford

Kathleen

Oct. 30

Home

Sanford

Lk. Brantley

Nov. 6

Home

Sanford

Lyman

Nov. 13

Away

Sanford

Mainland

Nov. 20

Home

Sanford

Sp. Creek

Somlnolo§

JKKKY POSEY

Greyhounds
* r T»m vh K M t

PROWLING

( rooms Coach Hill Klein (with Ihe whistle) prowls through a Panther ballhan­
dling drill during a recent practice. The Sanford ninth grade school opens the
season by hosting the Lake Brantley frosh Sept. 29 at Seminole High School.

PANTHER

Gray-Haired Stabler,
Morton Lead Victories
Pro Pootball

I

By United Press International
Their hair Is streaked with gray and
wrinkles are starting to show on their
faces. Neither was supposed to be Miami. Hart will have his knee examined
playing this season but the two oldest Monday and Is expected to mlsa at least
quarterbacks In the American Football 10 days.
Conference proved Sunday they can still
In other openers, it was Baltimore 29
do the Job.
New England 28; Dallas 26 Washington
Craig Morton, who al age 39 Is a year
10; Kansas City 37 Pittsburgh 33; Atlanta
older than his new coach, Dan Reeves,
27 New Orleans 0; Philadelphia 24 the
threw a 44-yard touchdown pass to Rick
New York Giants 10; Detroit 24 San
Upchurch to spark the Denver Broncoaito
F randsco 17; Cincinnati 27 Seattle 21;
a 9-7 opening day upset of the Super Bowl
Green Bay 16 Chicago 9; and Buffalo 31
champion Oakland Raiders.
the New York Jets 0; On Saturday,
And Ken Stabler, who will be 36 on Tampa Bay beat Minnesota 21-13. San
Christinas Day and only reported to
Diego is at Cleveland tonight.
camp lesa than three weeks ago, threw
two TD passes to lead the Houston Oilers
a ite fi 37, Steelera 33
to a 27-20 upset of the Los Angeles Rams.
Thomas Howard picked up Terry
Morton's TD pass to Upchurch In the
Bradshaw's fumble and ran 65 yards for
; first quarter and a 29-yard field goal by
a score with 1:59 left, lifting Kansas City
‘ Fred Stelnfort — his only successful kick
to Its upset of Pittsburgh. Safety Garry
In five attem pts — In the second period
Barbara stopped a final drive by In­
was all the offense the Broncos needed to
tercepting Bradshaw aeconds later. The
upset Oakland.
Steelera had gone ahead 33-30 on Brad­
In the decisive fourth quarter, Morton
shaw's 41-yard pass to JUn Smith with
guided a ball control offense and the
7:12 left and were on the Chiefs' 26 when
Denver defense produced several big
Bradshaw was sacked and fumbled.
plays — the Broncos held the Raiders on Howard grabbed Ihe ball and outraced
a fourlh-and-1 on the Oakland 39, Franco Harris to the end zone.
linebacker Larry Evans Intercepted
Plunkett on Oakland’s nest possession
Falcons 27, Saints 9
Steve Bartkowskl Ignored a Jammed
and defensive tackle Don L atim er
snapped up a fumble on the Oakland 14. thumb on his throwing hand and a touch
"We controlled the football and that's of (he flu to ()irow three TD passes and
very Important," said Morton, “The lead Atlanta over New Orleans. Baroffensive line did a good Job and Tin tkowski threw TD paaaes of 10 and 19
yards to Wallace Francis and a 25-yarder
proud of them."
’ Stabler, who had Just seven practice to Alfred Jenkins. The shutout spoiled the
sessions this year, had announced his New Orleans coaching debut of Bum
retirement earlier tills summer but came Phillips and pro debut of Helsman
back after an Injury to quarterback Trophy winner George Rogers, who
Gifford Nielsen. Stabler, who played Just gained 61 yards on 13 carries.
two aeries In last week's pre-season
Colts 29, Patriots 21
finale and has had to contend with all
Rookie fullback Randy McMillan
sorts of personal problems this past
week, completed 13 of 20 passes for 192 rushed for 147 yards and capped two long
yards and two touchdowns. He hit eight fourth period scoring drives with TD
in a row at one polnl to rally Houston runs, leading Baltimore to an upaet of
New England. Mike Wood added three
from a 17-6 deficit Into the lead.
Stabler marched the Oilers 72 yards for field goals for the Colts. McMillan, the
a score on the opening series of the Colts' No. I draft choice from the
second half, throwing a 33-yard TD paw University of Pittsburgh, scored on a 39to Rob Carpenter to cut the Ram s' lead to yard run In the final period and later
bulled over from the 2.
17-13. He completed all six of his passes
In the drive.
Cowboys 26, Redskins 19
After an Interception gave Houston the
Danny White threw two TD passes,
ball on the Rams' 20, Stabler drilled his Tony Dorset! rushed for 132 yards and
eighth straight completion, a 20-yarder to Hafael Septlen kicked four field goals,
a streaking Ken Burrough In the end zone carrying Dallas past Washington. White
that gave the Oilers a 20-17 lead midway passed 33 yards to Billy Joe DuPree and
through the third period.
42 yarda to Drew Pearson in the second
Frank Corral tied the game for Los period and Septlen kicked field goals
Ahgtles with 99 seconds to go but rookie from 29, 42, 23, and II yards as the
Willie Tullls made Stabler and new Cowboys ruined the head coaching debut
Coach Ed Biles winners by returning the of Redskin Coach Joe Gibbs.
kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown.
The other "old tim er" among NFL
Bengali 27, Seahawfcs 21
quarterbacks wasn't so fortunate. Jim
T hird-string
q u arte rb a ck
Turk
Hart, the S7-year-old St. Louis quar­ Schonert, playing his first NFL regular
terback, suffered a knee Injury In the season game, rallied Cincinnati from a
first period of the Cardinals’ 20-7 loss to 21-point deficit to a victory over Seattle.

Pele Johnson went over from the 2 with
5:04 left for the go-ahead score. Schonerl,
a second-year pro from Stanford,
replaced Ineffective Ken Anderson at Ihe
end of the first quarter with Seattle
leading 21-0 and directed the Bengali on
five scoring drives — three touchdowns
and two field goals.
Eagles 24, Giants II
Wilbert Montgomery accounted for 117
yards In total offense and Ron Jaworskl
fired a 59-yard TD paaa to Rodney Parker
In Philadelphia's rout of New York.
Montgomery iced the game with a 1-yard
scoring run 33 seconds Into the last period
as Coach Dick Vermeil ran his record
against the Giants to 11-0 and the Eagles
recorded their 12th straight victory
against New York.
Lions 24, 4*en 17
Billy Sims, pro football’s leading TD
producer last year, vaulted a yard into
the end zone with 19 seconds left to play
to push Detroit past San Franclso. San
Francisco twice rallied from touchdown
deficits to tie In the second half. Sims,
who scored 16 TDs a year ago, scored
twice, had 66 yards on five catches and 93
yards on 20 rushes.
Bills 31, Jets 0
Joe Ferguson threw lor two TDs, In­
cluding on( to Joe Cribbs, and Cribbs ran
for another score as Buffalo routed the
Jets. With the Bills leading 90 In the
second period, Ferguson threw a 29-yard
TD pass to Clribbs. Ferguson hit Jerry
Butler (or a 19-yard TD pass at the start
of the Second half and Cribbs broke open
the game with a 14-yard TD run that
produced a 24-0 lead.
Dolphin 29, Cardinals 7
David Woodley threw TD passes uf 23
and 47 yards to Jimmy Cefalo and Uwe
von Schamann kicked two field goals,
lifting Miami over St. Loui*. Miami’s
defense held St. I jouIs star Ottis
Anderson to 52 yards on 20 carries.
Greea Bay II, Chtrago I
Eddie Lee Ivery and Gerry EUis scored
on short runs in the first half and Jan
Stenerud added a fourth quarter, leading
Green Bay over Chicago. Die- Packer
defense recovered Matt Suhey's fumble
on their 1-yard line with 23 seconds left in
the game to thwart a potential tying
touchdown by the Bears.

8atarday
B u rraacen 21, Viktagi 12
Doug Williams threw a 99-yard TD
pass to Kevin House and ran 10 yards for
another score, leading Tampa Bay past
Minnesota. Comerback Neal Coble put
the game out of reach with 21 seconds left
to go when he Intercepted Steve Dlls'
pais and raced 62 yards for a touchdown.

Notional Football League Roundup
N PL it*using*
By U*it*d P rvu lnttm*ti*n*l
America* Contoronct
f a it
W L
1
Miami
Baltimore
1
1
Suttato
0
New Engla nd
0
NY Jett
Central
1
Cincinnati
t
MovMen
0
Cleveland
0
PitHDurqh

T Pet.
0 0 1000
0 0 1 000
0 0 1 000
1 0 000
1 0 000
0
0
0
1

0 1000
0 1.000
0 ooo
0 oor

Control

Wetl
•Cental City
Denver
Sen Diego
Qeklend
Seattle

1
1
0
0
0

0
0
0
t
1

0 1 000
0 1 000
0 000
0 000
0 000

Netlenel Conference
f a it
W L T Pet.
I 0 0 1 000
Oeiiat
1 0 0 t 000
Phiie
Wmhinpon
0 1 0 000
0 t 0 .000
Si Louit
0 1 0 ono
wv fjientt

Tampa Bay
Detroit
Green Bey
Chicago
Minnetoie

1 0 0 1 000
1 0 0 1 000
1 • 0 IJOO
0 t 0 000
0 t 0 .000

Wetl
Atlanta
t 0 0 1 000
Lot Angelet
0 1 0 000
San Francitc
0 1 0 ooo
New Orlttftft
0 1 0 000
Sttvrtoy'ft Retell
Tampa Bay 11. Mionetota I)
. Iv n d e y t I m r
Baltimore If. New England
7i

DnllM 34. WtWiington 10
K i n w City 13, Pittsburgh ))
Miami » . St. Lou it 7 .
Atlanta 17, New Orlaant 0

Sept. 11

Away

Lyman

Boone

Sept. 18

Away

Lyman

Mainland

Sept. 25

Away

Lyman

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BILL SCOTT

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Oct.

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KOCiKK HKATHAHI)

'Bama, Georgia Strut Stuff;
Miami Miracle Traps Gators
By United Press International
A labam a and G eorgia showed
Saturday lliat they do, indeed, belong
ranked among Ihe best college football
learns in the country. Miami of Florida,
using same unexpected mettle, showed
lliat maybe it belongs up (here, loo.
Ken Coley and Ken Simon triggered a
first-half ground explosion that carried
No, 3 Alabama to a 24-7 victory over
Louisiana Slate and No. 6 Georgia got 161
yards rushing from All-America Herschel Walker to crush Tennessee 44-0.
But unranked Miami, using a late field
goal by Danny Milter, earned some
respect by defeating No. 16 Florida 21-20.
Miller's winning kick, a 55-yarder with
40 seconds remaining, was his second of
the gamebnd capped a furious comeback
by the Hurricanes, who began Uic second
half trailing 14-3.
Backup q u arte rb a ck M ark Klchl
zipped a 59-yard touchdown pass to
speedy receiver Rocky Belk to bring Ihe
Hurricanes to within two points, and
after the Hurricanes’ final drive stalled
on the Florida 39, Miller kicked his windaided winner.
Meanwhile, Alabama overcame two
early mistakes to run up a 17-potnt
half time lead and then turned things over
to. Its defense in shutting out IJ5U until
only 13 seconds remained In the game.
Alabama beat l£U (or the 11th con­
secutive season and brought Paul
"B ear" Bryant his 307th career victory.
Bryan l, beginning his 37Ih year as a head

College Pootball
coach, needs only eight more victories to
surpass the record of 314 held by the late
Amos Alonzo Stagg.
Coley, a Junior and one of three
quarterbacks used by Bryant, directed
the Tide's wishbone attack to 270 ground
yards in the first half.
The 44-0 drubbing Georgia tianded
Tennessee was the worst loss ever for the
Vols in the Southeastern Conference and
tied a 51-7 defeat at the hands of Van­
derbilt In 1923.
Quarterback Buck Belue, who com­
pleted 10 of 15 (tasses for 140 yards, hit
Lindsay Scott with the first of (wo touch­
down tosses from IS yards out late In the
second quarter. Then, after freshman
Kevin Butler's 36-yard field goal to start
llie third period, Belue teamed with Scott
again for a 23-yard scoring toss.
In other games Involving the top 20, No.
9 Pittsburgh trimmed Illinois 26-6, No. 13
Florida State beat fjauixvllle 17-0, No. 15
mlssixsippl State topped Memphis State
20-3, No. 19 Brigham Young whipped
I&gt;ong Beach State 31-9 and No. 20 Baylor
was upset by U m a r 19-17.
At Pittsburgh, Junior Dan Marino
shook off a bad first half to pass for 204
yards and two touchdowns and lead Ihe
Panthers to victory over Illinois. Marino,
had completed !4-o(-33 passes with no
interceptions, hit Dwight Collins with a
19-yard TD pasa and connected wilh

9 » -a ^

I

j

Julius Dawkins on a 23-yard scoring toss.
Al Tallahassee, Fla., rookie tailback
Billy Alien scored on a 50-yard touch­
down run and Hick Stockstill hit wide
receiver Jesse Hester with an 11-yard
scoring |uis3 to lead Florida State. Mike
Hcndina'added a 24-yard field goal as
Florida State had (rouble against a
strong Cardinal defense, which held Ihe
Seminotes scoreless for the middle lwo
quarters.
At Jackson, Miss., sophomore quar­
terback John Bond directed two touch­
down drives and Dana Moore kicked u
pair of field goals to guide 15lh-rankcd
Mississippi Stale lo victory. Die triumph
spoiled the debut of Tigers' head coach
Hex Dockery.
At Houston, sophomore quarterback
Aulrey McMillian’s two touchdown runs
carried the lBth-ranki.il Cougars. McMil­
lian’s two short dives came after the
heavily-favored Cougars inarched on
nearly identical drives of 70 and 74 yards
in the first half. The U bos kept close to
Ihe Cougars through tlie scrambling and
passing of Kobln Gabriel, son of former
NFL great Roman Gabriel.
At Waco, Texas, Mike Marlow kicked a
42-yard field with three seconds left to
give U m a r its upset over the defending
Southwest Conference cham plona.
Marlow's gamewinning kick upstaged
the 41-yard field goal by freshman Marty
Jinunerson that had given the Bears a 1715 lead with 2:53.

Connors Whips Gomez In Marathon Match

NEW YORK (UPI) - More than an
hour after he had finished hix match,
Philadelphia al Nap York Jim my Connors found it more comfort­
Tennis Championships.
Clantt
'
able to stand than to sit.
Detroit 11 San Francisco 17
"I'd hate to make a living off m atdies
Cincinnati 17. Seattia It
SUB,
there
la
less
pain
in
victory,
and
like
that, but these are the kind of mat­
Green fe y I I Chicago f
Connors had a lot to smile about after a 4- ches that produce everything," Connors
Houston 17. Los Angeles 10
tvttelo 11. New York Jett 0
hour, 22-mlnute marathon Sunday in ■aid. "It shows me I’m In good shape.
Denver *, Oakland 7
which won a fifth aet tiebreaker 7-9 to The pressure was on. To win a m aid) like
T iir r a w * ! ( a m
San Diego at Cleveland. » defeat Andrea Gomez of Ecuador and that i s ... I’d hate to have to tell you what
p m EOT
gain the fourth round of the U S. Open it feels like to lose a match like that."

- «

Roms

Pro Toaah

^ r. e.OKJSfw

£.-9- T-.-9 jr*r,r*% *

Connors, a three-lime Open uuuiip
who once was the idol of Goinez, aulfe
cramps In both legs during the m atch i
at 5-2 in Ihe decisive Uebreak
developed a cramp in his racket ha
After serving a double fault — only
third of the long day — Connors aoal
his hand in an Ice bucket at courtaide i
returned to complete a 9-7,9-3,8-1,44,
victory, serving an ace for the final po

�Monday, Sept. 1. it n

4 A -E v *n ln fl Htrald, Sanford, FI.

Valenzuela Decks Cards
For Seventh Shutout, 5-0

Michael Out, Lemon In

By George... H e
Fires A n d Rehires
AL Ba$iball

H* I'nllrd P m * liitt riinUniial
Everyone talks about the way George
Steinbrenncr lire* managers Hut, Itey.
he hires them back, too.
" I ’ve never been accused c&gt;( being very
bright," said Bob t&lt;cnmn, the latest
manager &lt;&gt;f the New York Yankees. "He
iSteinbrenncr) has been awfully good to
me. The last time he replaced me it was
probably for my own Rood. Hut you Ret
away from it and you want to Ret track
You Ret a little Itch."
U ’lnon is now about to scratch his itch
by resuminR his position as Yanks’
skipper. Steinbrenncr fired Gene Micha­
el Sunday and replaced him with Ix-mon,
who won the pennant w ith the Yankees in
1978 and was fired midway into 1979
Since buyinR the team in 1974, Stem*
brenner has fired Hilly Martin twice. Hill
Virdon, tam on, Dick Houser, and now
Michael.
In lemon's second debut. Hob Wat­
son’s two-run triple hiRhliRhted a six-run
first inninR that allowed the Yankees to
extend their winntnR streak to three
Rames with a 6-1 decision.
Brewer* 8. Twin* 7
At HloominRlon. Minn., Hen UrIivIc
sluRf’ed a leadolf homer off reliever
Dour (,'orbelt in the lOih ORlivie lined a
2-2 pilch by Corbett, 2-4, Just inside the
riRht-field foul pole for his ninth homer.
Itrd Sox 6, Mariner* I

At Boston, Carl Yastrzemski’s two-run
siorIc keyed a sixrun sixth. The Red Sox
i olloded five sinRles and a triple by Hick
Miller in the inninR to hand Glenn Abbott
l lie loss.
Oriole* 8. A s 4
At Haltimore, l&gt;enn Sakata blasted a
Rrand slam to hiRhliRht a six-run
seventh. Dennis Martinez, 11-4, Rave up
12 hits but Ihuir on as the Orioles erupted
aRainsi Dave Heard after relievers Jeff
Jones and Hob Owchinko. 4-3, walked the
liases loaded with two out in the seventh.
Indians 2. Angels 0
At Cleveland, John Denny tossed a
th ree-h itter for his fourth straight
triumph and third consecutive shutout.
Denny, 7-4, ran his scoreless inning
streak to 27 by striking out seven and
walking three.
Blue Jay* 3, White So* 2
At Chicago, rookie Jesse Barfield hit
his first major league homer and George
Hell hit his fifth homer as the Blue Jays
handed the White Sox their ninth loss in
their last 10 games.
Tigers 4, Hangers 3
At Arlington, Texas, I«ance Parrish hit
a two-run immer in the eighth. Texas led
3-2 entering the inning but Kirk Gibson
opened with a triple off starter Danny
Darwin.

S e n s a tio n a l L os A n g e le s r o o k ie F e r n a n d o V a le n z u e la h u rle d
s e v e n th s h u to u t to tie a N a tio n a l L e a g u e ro o k ie r e c o r d .

By fo iled Press International
Fernando Valenzuela's best pitch is yet
to come.
It will be the one the 20-year-old left­
hander makes after this season when he
negotiates a new contract with the l»s
Angeles Dodgers.
There’s little doubt the 20-year-old left­
hander will get a lucrative, long-term
deal with the Dodgers. After all, he’s
been the team ’s No. 1 drawing card and
is largely responsible for the club's firsthalf pennant and strong second lialf
showing.
One could even argue that Valenzuela
is a leading candidate for the triple
crown of post-season awards — Cy
Young, Bookie of the Year and Most
Valuable Player.
Valenzuela continued his outstanding
pitching Sunday by blanking the St. l-nuis
Cardinals, 5-0, on a four-hitter for his
seventh shutout ol the season, tying the
National league record for most by a
rookie pitcher.
Given three standing ovations by a
sellout crowd of 46,780, Valenzuela also
contributed with his bat by stroking a
bases-lnadcd triple in the seventh.
Valenzuela, raising his record 12-4 and
lowering his ERA to 2,37, pitched even
better than he hit. He allowed only two
runners as far as second base.
Valenzuela's agent, Antonio Demarco,
said his client would wait until the end of
the season before negotiating a new
contract.
"I am relishing the prospect of
negotiating with the Dodgers," Demarco
said. "I am hoping for more days like
this. When the tinie comes, we’ll be
ready."

ML Baseball
Giant* 3. Cub* 0
A' San Francisco. Vida Blue allowed
just one hit over seven innings ami drove
m a run to lead the Giants to victory. Blue
had a no-hitter until Hill Buckner hit a
one-out single in the seventh.
Astros 4. Expos 3
At Montreal, newly acquired I'inI
Garner singled home Dickie Thnn with
one out in the 12th inning to give the
Astros their victory. After Montreal had
squandered s c o r in g opportunities in both
the 10th and 11th innings, Tlmn lilt a oneout single off loser Elias Sosa. 1-2, moved
to second on a single by Tony Scott and
scored on G arner’s single.
Braves 5, Mets 2
At New York, Dale Murphy slammed a
three-run firstinning home run to lift the
Braves to victory. Murphy’s homer came
off Bandy Jones, 1-8. who was making his
first start since the ended the strike.
Krds 5. Phillies 4
At Philadelphia. Bay Knight hit a tw o .
out. two-run double in the ninth inning to
break a tie and lend the B ids tn victory
Dave Concepcion singled with one out off
loser Sparky Lyle, 7-5, ami moved to
second as George Foster bounced out.
Dan Driessen was hit by a pitch and
Knight followed with a double to rightcenter, scoring Concepcion and Driessen,
Pirate* 9, Padre* 5
At San Diego, Jason Thompson
collected four hits, including a two-run
homer in the first inning, drove in four
runs and scored three others lead the
Pirates to victory.

Major-League Roundup
Btandlngt
M Jior L ra g u r H anding*
By U nilrd P ry** In tr r n itio n il
National leagueI Second H a lil
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inning*
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(AlMrSon. Mil
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Qu-venberry. KC 14, Lauclef.
Del I) T Martinet Bal II

• Brake llutd

• Battery cables

• Po*et Sleeting fluid

• Air filter

• transmission liuid

• Belti and hose*

Four-cylinder car* equipped rnith electronic ignition Electronic
aniiyw ol lurtmg charging and engine lyttnm, p u t . in*tau new
fotoy r&gt;ew kbArk pit g» • 5#t timing to rgcommerxJed tDocilirjBoAi
• LubncAtt and adiutt chok# • Adjutt carburtto*
ecn cars w e n ; r o r u m -o i cars « g v j a i m

• Battery ysaloi level
• Differential level
• T ite pressure and condition
|

Indudgt many imports and light truck* Ptoata cab lot oppomlmonl

G o o d y e ar fle ro N ing

Chaitjo Account

C a n with it.ndaid ignition M d LB 00 lor requited pomii con(Jenttf. «n*1 a&lt;kS«1&gt;on4ii liibof

Otter Ends October 3rd.

Oder Ends October 3rd.

Just Say 'Charge It'

431

R EG . $42
IMPORT AND DOMESTIC CARS &amp; LIGHT TRUCKS

Include* chassis mot; up lu live uuails uiaiui
tvarsd motof oil. oil Mtet and our ft-POINT mairv
tenance check

Sink tout i
N * li« n ,l

uni, oil *
auMGumru 9

U*e any of the&amp;e other way* to buv Our Own Customer Credit Plan • MasterCard
• Visa • American E spies* • Carte Blanche • Diners Club • Cash

G O O D Y E A R SERVICE STORE

R. w aite r, Menafer

M*W. First Street
M ea.-Frt. ZiM-a, tet.7iM -S

�OURSELVES
Miss Young, Dr. Anthony

TONIGHT S TV

Wed In South Carolina
Miss lziSandru l&gt;ee Young
became the bride of Dr.
Charles Ronald Anthony at
6:00 p.m., Sept. 5, in Main
S tre et United M ethodist
Church, Columbia, S.C. The
Rev. Edwin W. Rogers of­
ficiated at the double rung
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Eley
of Tampa, and Richard W
Young of Columbia. The
bridegroom is the son of Mr
and Mrs. fxster I,. Wojctk of
Deltona,
Wedding
m usic
was
presented
by
N orm an
MeCorkle, orgimst and lather
of the bride, soloist.
The bride, escorted by her
father, wore a formal gown
with a cathedral length train
of Duchess satin accented
with hand-embroidered lace
medallions and seed pears
around the V-effecl illusion
yoke and the high neckline.
The A-line skirt extended into
a cathedral length train and
was embellished with lace
medallions and seed |&gt;earls
flowing to and bordering the
hem line. The long fitted
sleeves of illusion ended at the
wrists willi lace appliques and
pearls. Tiny satin buttons

were used at the wrists and on
the back of the fitted bodice.
The bride wore a cathedral
length veil of bridal illusion,
outlined with scalloped lace
border and enhanced with
hand-embroidered lace ap­
pliques. The veil was held by a
Camelot headpiece of lace
and pearls. She carried a
bouquet of white roses ac­
cented with baby's breath.
Miss Deborrah Y. Koehler,
sister of the bride, was maid
of honor, and Mrs. 11. Stephen
Snyder was matron of honor.
Other bridal attendants were
Miss Pamela M. Baldwin,
Miss Alyce G. Boatwright and
Mrs. Ronnie Crapps, all of
Columbia. Miss Susan Jen­
nings, cousin of the bride,
served ns flower girl.
The bridal attendants wore
long gowns of teal blue with
organ pleated skirts. The
bodice was gathered as it rose
to cover one shoulder with
three tiny strap s. P etal
chiffon capelets were worn
over the slim gowns. Each
carried u bouquet of peach
roses, yellow and white
daisies, accented with baby's
breath . The flower girl
carried a lace basket of rose
petals.

Master Michael Freeman
served as ring bearer.
Dr. Doug Sorenson of
Savannah, Ga„ attended the
bridegroom as best man.
Usher-groomsmen were Ixm
B. Nichols of Opelika, Ala.,
uncle of the bridegroom, and
H. Stephen Snyder of
Columbia.
The bride’s mother wore a
flowing, floor-length dress of
emerald green chiffon ac­
cented with Jewel brocade
covering the fitted bodice.
The mother of the bridegroom
chose a long dress of beige
crepe chiffon with a scooped
neckline accented by a wide
cum m erbund. This was
com plem ented by a long
sleeved pink Jacket with
subtle embroidery, sequins
and ruffles on the sleeves.
Immediately following the
ceremony, a formal dinner
reception was held in the
Assembly Ballroom of the
Carolina Inn. Attending the
register was Mrs David Rish
The bride graduated with
honors from the University of
South Carolina with a B S.
degree in accounting. She was
recognized by Outstanding
Young Women of America
and is currently employed us

t i t d f Ch

&amp;
v W U tN T

Hour* 6-1 and 2-4 Mon -Fri

W here Weight Control le Mere Then A Diet!

Larry Wright

ftTftN 'S HANb&amp;aofc
Ne/e*- dUow ybov- humaYi -to
sleep -too 6o0ndlty.
could

6:00
LEWIS TELETHON

3 n d b e l a t e (ov- u k * l;

6:30

6'35

an internal auditor with Palm
Beach. Inc. in Cincinnati,
Ohio.
The bridegroom graduated
with honors from the
University of Florida where
he received a U S degree in
chemistry. He later received
his Doctor of Medicine from
the U niversity of South

I I (1 7 ) OOMER PYLE

Florida. After completing an
internship
in
internal
medicine at the University of
South
C arolina,
the
bridegroom is now a resident
in radioing) at the University
of Cincinnati.
Alter a wedding trip to
Hilton Head Island, the couple
will reside in Cincinnati, Ohio.

7:00
0

4 THEMUPPCTS

1 O P M MAGAZINE An intervi#w with linger Tom Jones meet
Michael Iceberg
a one-man
orchestra, Linda Harris tours the*
Alaskan countrywide Chet Teh on
an unusual frurt the k,h*i

Or even worse, &lt;&amp;e could be late
-ft*- y b i &gt; b b e a k - f t ' i t

It (3 5 ) BARNEY MILLER
0
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

TUESDAY.

James YVolcolt Clive Jam** |f*art t

of

AFTERNOON

7 :3 4
B A SEB A LL Houston

41 LITTLE HOUSF ON THE

PRAIRIE Charles tries to find a
home tor two orphaned children
|Part

O

w krp

mCin c in n a t i

or

Johnny Fever moonftghti as a tele
vision draco boat

(J) O

THAT’S

MARCUS W ELBY. MO
(TUE-THU)
I I 117| MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
(WED)

CD (1 0 ) GREAT PERFORMANCES
Tannhauter From Bayreuth
Spas Wenkott and Gwyneth Jones
are featured in Wagner s opera
about a minstrel fcnight « conflict
between hit lo*e tor a young and
innocent girl end hit passion tor
Venus the goddest of love Cohn
Davis conducts from the Tetftpeil
haul of the annual Wagner summer
feslntal *n Bayreuth, Germany (R)

If you lutve any "I-ongwood" news , . special
events, special anythings i personal, business,
organization liappenings, etc. i please call me at 3319001

search for someone to help
with the children a few days ii
week, we were fortunate to
find "l.ucy " (My daughter
works lull time. I
Lucy luul been with us for
three weeks when a neighbor,
who is also a friend of mine
arid a fellow Women's Club
member, visited my home in
my absence one afternoon and
asked Lucy if she laid a
"friend" who would Ik- in­
terested m doing housework
for her one day a week
Ixicy took the job herself.
Hut the day she works for this
neighbor is the day I need her
most. She continues to work
for us, but don't you think this
neighbor
should
have
discussed the m atter with me
before approaching l-ucy?

9:30
()
a
HOUSE CALLS Com ad
F’fickMw o tlw i lha u h ol h't moon
l*.n tabin to louf cMlfff.nl (Mm(tla
&lt;R&gt;

10:00
} O LOU GRANT A Tub fctxmaf
allam pii •

(King • m*d l-l*
ili.ttic . . . out 110

1) ( 3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
1 0 :0 5
to (1 7 ) NEWS

11:00
O

&lt; f " i J O NEWS
11 (3 5 ) BENNY HILL

1 1 :0 5
to ( 17) ALL IN THE FAMILY
1130
0
4 THE BEST OF CARSON
C m aill Angw DfClmlon Owl
Corny Sydn#r Ooidwnilh )R|

J O u s OPEN HOHUOHTS
HigMfghll ol Of. day • action in
in . U S Opan Tomtit Champion
»h*pi iltom Fluahtng Maadowt
NY|

it). (3 5 ) STR EETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO
0 ( 1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

11:35
Murder
(If) 70*
Santa Berger

To Commrt A
l Quit

Jour dan

11:45
(7 JQ N C W 8

12:00
(1 j Q U * A * S * h

12:15
f f l O ABC NEWS NKWTUNE

,7 0 DAILYWORD
to (1 7 ) WORLD AT L A M E (THU)

6:00
o &lt;41 JER R Y LEWIS TELETHON
(MON)

o (41 TOOAY M FLORIDA (TUE*
FRO

J ) O THE LAW ANO YOU (MON|
i l i a SPECTRUM (TUE)
( } ) O BLACK AWARENESS (WED)
I H O THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
m f i HEALTH FIELO(FRI)
l7 6 SUNRISE
ill ( 3 5 ) JIM BA K KER
to (1 7 ) WORLO AT L A M E (W tDl

605
to (1 7| HOLLYWOOD REPORT

( f j TOMORROW G u am lha
Tayloi la m jj lormw Bo Hon Caf1&lt;

Bin RuitaM |R|

(J J o

ST ARSKY ANO HUTCH

(? ) O MOVIE
Amgnmant To
KN (C || IM S) P alm * ONaN Joan
Macaafl

O

1:30
NEWS

1:35

6:30
6:45
O H IO ) A M WEATHER
7 ) O QOOO MORNING FLORIDA

7:00
0 4 TODAY
m O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT

7 0 QOOOMORNINOAMER,CA
I I (3 5 ) TOM AND JERRY

ED (10) VILLA ALEORE

•

(1) OAKY DEVOTIONAL

(L O

2:30
mcws

1 1 (3 5 ) THE WORLO OF P tO P lE

12:05
U l 17) FREEMAN REPORTS

12:30
® ( r N c w a rrm -rw i
S O U S OPEN TEMMQ (MON)
) O THE YOUNO ANO THE
R ESTLESS (TUE-FRII
&gt;
Q RYAN S HOPE
11 (3 5 ) FAMILY AFFAIR

1:00
O |4 I DAYS OF OUR LIVES (TUEFRI1
( 7 0 ALL MY CHILDREN
11 (351 MOVIE

1:05
,1 1 (1 7 ) MOVIE

1:30
(S

O

AS THE WORLD TURNS

2:00
0 (4) JER R Y LEWIS TELETHON
(CONTDl(MON)
O
4 ANOTHER WORLD (TUEFRII
m o ONE LIFE TO UVE

2:30

S O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
(TUE-FRI)

3:00
0 i 4 TEXAS (TUE -FBI)
S O OUIDINO LIGHT (TUE-THU)
&lt; 1 - 0 U S OPEN TENNIS(FRI)
&lt;7l O QENERAL HOSPITAL
(It &lt;351 BUGS SUNNY ANO
FRIENDS
0
|1 0 ) FROM JUMPSTHCET
(MON)
0 ( 1 0 ) FEELING FREE (TUE)
f f i (1 0 ) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
UaHTJW EO)
0 ( id ) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
OUE PASA1 (FRI)

7:05
7:25
0 ' 4 . TOOAY IN FLORIDA
(D O QOOO MORNING FLORIDA

3:30
lit. 4351 SCOOBY DOO
0 ( 1 0 ) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

7:30
0 141TOOAY
7 : 0 QOOO MORNINO AMERICA
,11 (36) WOOOY WOODPECKER
ED f 10) SESAME STREET (R ig

6:00
IS O CAPTAIN KANGAROO
ill (3 5 ) CASPER

6:05
to (1 7 11 DREAM O f JEANNtE
0 1 TODAY IN FLORIDA
T O QOOO MORNING FLORIDA

3'35
H I (1 7 ) THE FLINT8TONC8

4:00
0 &lt;4&lt; JER R Y LEWIS TELETHON
|CONTO)|MON|
0 * 4 MOVIE (TUE.FRI|
1 SI O HOGAN S HEROES (TUE)
111 O JOHN DAVIDSON (WED.
THU)
&lt;7 O M C R V ORIFFIN
11 (3 5 ) WOOOY WOOOPf CKER
0 110) SESAME STREET |R )g

405
to (!7 )T H E M U N S T E R S

8:30
Q ' 4 TODAY
&lt; 7 0 QOOO MORNING AMERICA
&lt;11 (3 5 ) GREAT SPACE COASTER
ED 110) MISTER ROGERS (R|

8:35
to (1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

900
0
( i JER R Y LEWIS TELETHON
(MON)
0 &lt; HOUR MAGAZINE (TUE-FRI|

5 O DONAHUE
(7 )0 MOVIE
HI (35)GOMERPYLE
0 1 10) SESAME STREET (R) g
9:05
I I (1 7 ) HAZEL

4:30

a CHILDREN'S MYSTERY
THEATER (TUE)
•It (3 5 ) TOM ANO JERRY
m

4:35
t o 117) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
. } C J HUUAN3 MtHOtS (WtL&gt;
FRI)

tt i ? a u r s ? » i % s m i R ,
5:05
t o (1 7 ) THE BRADY BUNCH

6:30
O &lt;4- QIUKJAN * ISLAND (TUE
FRI)
l } ) 0 M‘ A ’ S*H(TUC-FRI)

9:30
a i (36) ANDY G4BFFTTH
9:35

m 0N m s
0 ( 1 0 ) posT B cnm

to (1 7 | GREEN ACRES

12 1171BEVERL Y H ILLBILLIES

5:35

10:00
0 41JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
(COafT'D) (MON)
0 4 B U U S E Y E (TUC-FRI)
(J i Q

RICHARD SIM M O N S

I I I (3 5 ) I LOVE LUCY
0 ( 1 0 ) MATH PATROL (TUC-FRI)

10:05
t o (i7 |u o v e

10:15
0 (1 0 ) MATH PATROL (TUC-FRI)
10:30

f U IA M

P

I ) D O VAN DYKE
0) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R)
(TUE-FRII

I N ONLY

CMBIITOPHBB B S S V B I

BLO CKBUSTERS (TUE-TRI)
ALICE (R)

SUratMAN II p.
1

plaza

II1 '

• ILL MUBBAV

B

11:00
WHEEL OF FORTUNE (TUE-

(J JO THE PWC4 e RK4MT
7 J0 THREE'S COMPANY (R)
H! (351 BUDBREWER
0 ( 1 0 ) THINKABOUT (TUE-FRI)

3.00
01 o M o ve
Tha Pm&gt; P ip *
(B/W) (IS 4 J) Manly Wjo in t Anna
Bailor

T O d 'O i w i

I I I (1 7 ) FUNTIME

t o (1 7 ) B A S E B A LL Hooalon
Aalroa al Atlanta P a m

200

4 JERRY LEW IS TELETHON
(MON)
• f l 1CARO SHARKS (TUt#NQ

( S I O ED ALLEN

12:30

0

(J)

5:55
O 4 DAILY DEVOTIONAL (TUEFRO

6 25

1 0 :3 0
&lt;11 (3 6 ) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

t o (1 7 ) MOVK

11 (17) WORLD AT L A M E (MON,
TUE)

6:55

0:00
f ) 4 MOVIE
The B e il Place To
He" (Par! 1) (t979| Donna Reed
them Zimbaltsf Jr An attractive
widow s efforts lo make a new life
lor herself are complicated by her
hippie daughter and her retieliious
teen age son jB i
(Jt O M *A* 8 *H Cof Potter turns
the 4077th upside down in search
of whatever it tt that is causing
Hawseye s non stop meeting (Ml
7 O NFL FOOTBALL San [fcego
Chargers at Cleveland Browns

12:00

a

5:30
&lt;)• O SUMMER SEM ESTER

INCREDIBLE

Featured a blonde beauty who
has been dead for 40 years a man
hunt, a robot security force. • mar­
ital arts •■pert (R)
I I (3 5 ) MOVIE
The Neptune
Disaster &lt;C| (t973| Ben Qaiaara.
Yvette Mtrmeui A rescue teem rec
*s to save three men trapped
underwater .near Nova Scotia

Mr and Mrs Wilson (Beryl) are Just plain "good
lieople", M 's make this their day.

0

11:15

(1 0 ) m a t h e m a t ic a l r e l a TXJNBNIPi (TUE-FRI)

0

I

5:00

|7J O

5:45

8:00

And, now about Bill Wilson. Today isn't his bir­
thday, lie hasn't recently won any awards, but lie
sure is a special person to everyone w ho knows him.
Bill is "Dio Candy Man” to all the neighborhood
children and is cuptum of Crime Watch in his
Woigw nod area.

Jazzercise classes will be offered starting Sept. 15 ut the
Sanford National Guard Armory in Sanford. Classes will be on
Tuesday and Diursday at 7 p.m.
Instructor will be Claudia Almand of Eustii certified Jaxzerctse instructor with background in ballet, tap dancing and
gynuiastlcs.
Registration is 15 minutes before class. Participants should
wear tights with stirrup feet or no feet and a leotard or loosely
fitting clothes. A mat is needed for floor routines. Call 90t-3574065 for information

U (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
(THU)

Astros at Atlanta Braves

Q

l

t (351 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

4:55
I O CELEBRITY REVUE |FRI)

4 TIC T AC DOUGH
i} O WILDLIFE IN CRISIS
7O FAMILY FEUO
I I (3 5 ) RHOOA
0
(1 0 ) DICK CAVETT B m i I i

(1 7 )

. &gt; O THREE 8 COMPANY &lt;R)

MORNING

7:05

I

2 "You'll gel over it. I had
th re e
m is c a rria g e s .”
i Perhaps your grief was deep,
hui this is no time to play
oneupmanship i
3 "You're lucky you didn't
have him long enough to get
attached to him." (Don't you
count as im portant the
months we nurtured him,
marveled at his growth, felt
Ins strong little legs kick, and
anticipated Ins joining our
family'’ i
1 "You’re young. , , there
will be other babies.” ( May be*
we will never again la* blessed
with an o th er pregnancy.
Ilcsides, there will never t&gt;e
another exactly like the one
we lost.)
5 "You should be grateful
lor the two sons you already
W O N D E R IN G have." i We are, but our third
son would have given us so
DEAR WONDERING: (full much more in be thankful
wondering. Die answer is yes. for.)
DEAR ABBY: My husband
Abby, please print this to
and I recently lost a beautiful remind your readers tu avoid
son He was prem ature and such unintentionally cruel
still born. We are slowly rem arks in an effort to con­
getting over our heartbreak sole friends who may ex­
and disappointment
perience a similar loss.
Here are a few of Lbu soUS OUT WEST
called "comforting" remarks
Everybody needs friends.
we have received from wellFur some practical tips on
meaning friends:
1. “ I didn't calf or send a how to be popular, get Abby's
note because I didn’t want to Popularity booklet. Send t l
make you cry." &lt;We need to plus a lung, self-addressed
cry to wash aw ay our sadness. stumped 135 cents) envelope
When we don’t hear from to Abby, Popularity, 12M0
tliuse we know, we assume Hawthorne Hlvd., Suite 5000,
Hawthorne, Calif. 90250.
they don’t can*, i

*■

70 JO KER S WILD

Chapter 250 of Parents Without Partners is
celebrating l-ilxir Day at Wekivn Springs. A day of
lots of fu n . lots of food and lots of friends is planned.

Jazzeroise Classes
H E A L T H Clinic

by

1 HE

12:45

e-e '*&gt; 4 e it» 4 *m*9*

Iten SA*e^(tsip

KIT N1CARLYLt

C M ' NEWS
() Q CBS NEWS
J O ABC NEWS
IT (35) CARTER COONTRr
O) (10) OCEAKUS

Also on the little people scene. Jinjer Comiskcy
celebrated her sixth birthday Sept. 5 Jinjer is the
daughter of Jon Comlskey of l/ongwood.

Call us today!

I

6:05

Five-year-old Amanda Motty recently had a
special treat — tier first ride In an airplane. Didn't
go far, but it was a thrill to fly over her l/ingwood
home and Disney World. "Mandy” accompanied
Daddy Bob and brothers Robbie, S, and Timothy , 7

But when a man enters the
military, he is expectrd to
conform to the rules and dress
code, and if he doesn’t con­
form, hr should expert to be
penalized.
DEAR
ABBY
Our
d au g h ter and h er three
children (ages 4, 3, and 1**)
are living with us while site is
going through a very' trying
divorce. A fter a difficult

Orlando Public
Broadcasting System

to (1 7 ) ANOV OR1FF1TH

331-9001

Take Control over Hie rest of your H e ..

323-ISOS

( 10) ©

pb,
i5- Q l O n e w s
t j (3 5 ) ANOV GRIFFITH
ED 1 tOl 0CEANU3

Dmgwood
Correspondent

«

(NBC) Daytona Beach
Or Undo

O

An annuli l[)*Cial liy« (tom L al
V agit in d olhw locti-oni iMIu-ni
• long Ini ol cMtKitHH .nd II hold
(Of thn Nfnnlil of M uK ul.f DyltfO*

Motty

• S a fe , • E ffective

212-4666

independent
Atlanta. Ga

7:30

I Mo co n tra c ts
• Proven su c ce ssfu l fo r 40 y o ars
• F r e t co n sultation • S upervised By F ie. p fiy e id M

S ite IwMNn
sal (ie*M
m -« n
• e# *Nie»

tra ( 17 )

O

We specialize in Individual w eight loss p ro g ra m s ...
E v ery b o d y 's weigh) problem is d ifferent We can
help you lose w eight in Ihe right places an d
m a in ta in your d esired w eight w ithout im possible
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Most im p o rtan tly
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63r9-144

K B S ) O rlando

U (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

LOSE 15 Pounds
In Just 4 Weeks.

IN *44I B«M 1
19Kbee- j u n i

© O

* je r r y

0

Earring Not In Army Dress Code

««

independent
Orlando

EVENING

Kitty M.

DEAR ABBY: I am in the disobeying a lawful order,
U.S. Air Force and have a fluke was reduced in grade,
good friend ( I'll call him fined and sentenced to six
Duke), also in the same months' hard labor. He will be
branch of the service. Duke returned to active duty when
decided to wear an earring in his time is up
his left ear. Duke was in line
Abby, why would a man
tor an honorable discharge want to wear an earring1 I
shortly. Anyway, he got his Hunk it looks feminine. What
ear pierced About a week do you think of this whole
later he came to work in bus1ness of Duke and the
uniform wearing the earring earring?
(stud type) in his left ear. He P. AT YOKATO AIR BASE,
was ordered by his supervisor JAPAN
to remove It as it was not in
DEAR P.i 1 am Informed
accordance with m ilitary that some men wear an
d ress code. He refused. earring as a signal to other
A dm inistrative action was men, but nut all men agree on
taken, and after a long battle, what the "signal" it. If a male
Duke was sent up for court- civilian wants to wear an
m artial and found guilty of earring, it's all light with me.

(ED (35 )

.M O N D AY

to

Can’t forget our birthday people of the week.
Special wishes to llhelda Brewster, Bobbie Goff,
Anise Slaman, Pearl Daugherty, Mary Ellen
Peterson and Dons Goodkind

CD O

In addition to tha (hannali litlad. cibltvmon lubicnban mar luna in lo mdapandant thjnnal 44,
SI Palartburg. br tuning lo channall: tuning lothannal tl. which carnal iporti ind lha Chrntian
Broadcailing Nalwon (CBN)

Church Marks 90th Anniversary
RSVP (Retired Senior Volunteer Program) is
proud to announce they received a Certificate of
Recognition from Ihe Office of the Governor of
Florida, "In honor of outstanding voluntary service
to the citizens of your community with the ap­
preciation of the People of Florida..." Now, that
really is on honor!

Cable Ch

(ABC) Orlando

©

In And Around Longwood

Die First Baptist Church of Dmgwood celebrated
its 90th anniversary with special observances
Saturday and Sunday. Emphasizing the theme,
"Our 90 Years," events began with a covered dish
dinner at 6 p.m. Saturday, followed by a special
music program.

#

11:30
&lt;4- PASSWORD PLUS

I I I M ., if u s

Ml

LOCKER ROOM OIRLS
FUN OIRLS
■

�J» —Iv o n ln t Iterate, tontortl, FI.

Mm *V ,S«FU , INI

Legal Notice

legol Notice"

FICTITIOUS K A M I
Net let Is hereby given that I am
engaged in bin Innt at ISO North
17-fl Highway C a sse lb e rry ,
Florida 11707 Seminole County,
Florida under me Iklitlout name
ot SEMINOLE AUTO SALES, and
that I Intend to regltter utd name
with the Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In ac
cordante with the provision* el the
Flet Itlout Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section las 0* Florida Statutn
lest
Slg. Sutam Pepper
Publish: Augutt SI 4 September 7,
It, SI, m i
D EL is;

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I am
engaged In business at 10*0
Nursery Rd Longwood F L
Seminole County, Florida under
the fictitious name ot SUN RISE
AUTO BOOY, and that I Inland to
regisler said name with the Clerk
of the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida In eccordaNte
with Ihe provisions of the Fic­
titious Name Statutes, ToWII:
Section IAS.Of Florida Statute*
IPS).
Slg. Robert T. Coyle
Publish: August 11. September 7,
i*. it . m i
d e l is *

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. ll-m -C A Sg-B
la the Matter *1 the Adoption ot
CALVIN ANTNONY CAIN.
A Minor.
NOTICE OF ACTION
To: CALVIN COPELAND
SSIS S. Summerlin Ave.
Sanford, FI. 11771
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that a
Petition to adopt the minor child,
CALVIN ANTHONY COPELANO,
JR ., a resident ot Seminole
County, Florida, has been tiled In
this Court entitled: IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF
CALVIN ANTHONY CAIN ( by
petition ot KEITH CAIN). You aro
hereby required to file your
written defenses or objections. If
any, lo It, on JAMES E.C.
PERRY, ESQUIRE. Petitioner's
attorney, whose address I* P.O.
Box SIM. Sanford, Florida, M77 1,
on or before Sept. II, 1HI, and tile
the original with the Clerk ot this
Court either betore service on
Petitioner's attorney or Im­
mediately thereafter j otherwise a
default will be entered against you
tor the relief demanded In the
Petition.
WITNESS my hand and I he tael
el this Court on August 1], m i.
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR.
Clerk of the Circuit Court

FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* I* hereby given that we
are engaged m business at MO
Darwin Drive Altamonte Springs,
FI. M70I Seminole County, Florida
under the llcllllov* name of RAM
SYSTEMS, and that we Intend lo
register **M name with tha Clerk
of the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florid* In accordance
with the provisions ot ih* Fietlltous Nam* Statutes. TbWIt:
Section 1*5.Of Florida Slatufa*
ITS).
Slg. Robert E . Seay, Jr.
Robert M. Creighton
Publish: August 17, la, II, Sep
tember 7, Iff)
D EL (J

By: Carrie E. Buettner
A* Deputy Clerk
James E. C. Perry, Esquire
WOOLFORK A P E R R Y , PA.
P.O. Boa MM
Sanford. FI. 117)1

oosi i n rirs
Publish: August I), 14, 11, A
September 7, m i
DEL-101

Th* World Almanac

1. According to 1070 figures,
w hit is the most densely pop­
ulated state? (a) New York (b)
New Jersey (c) Rhode Island
1. True or false: When the
Brooklyn Dodgers became the
Los Angeles Dodgers In 1051.
they experienced a Bistable
drop in attendance during
their first season in LA.
3. Whit is the official fan-

STATE OP FLORIDA
FLORIDA PUBLIC
SERV ICE COMMISSION
NOTICE OPHEARINO
REi
SOUTHERN
STA TES
U TILITIES, INC., Petitioner v
P U B L IC
S E R V IC E
COM
MISSION, Respondent end OP.
FIC E OF PUBLIC COUNSEL
7*07*0—WS
7*07*1—WS
■001*1_ws
FPSC DOCKET NO.: WC147-W
1001*1—WS
I I —*70
SI—*71
•1—*71
DOAH CASE NO:
|1—*71
«1-(74
NOTICE ls hereby given thet an
Enm iner designated by the Stete
ot Florida, Olvlslon ot Ad
mlnislrallve Hearings, will hold a
hearing in this cast In the Grand
Jury Room (Room SSI) of Ih*
Orange County Courthouse, *1 E.
Central Boultvard. Orlando,
Florida al 10:*! AM . ( S t a ll
only), or as soon Iheraatter as can
be heard, on September t a i l m i.
ISSUES: What is th* effect ot
petitioner's l.*7 million dollar loan
to Its parent compeny on
petitioner's capital structure, rate
ot return and income fixes)
A U T H O R IT Y :
S e ctio n *
11*57(11, and Ch M7 Florid*
Slalutes; Chapter 15—10 and IS—
S. 105., Florida Administrative
Code.
A verbatim transcript ot this
proceeding will be prepared by a
qualified hearings reporter and
will be available al a reasonable
cost, through Ihe office of the
Commission Clerk. 101 E. Gelnet
Street, Tallahassee. Florida.
Sleva Tribble
COMMISSION C LER K
Publish; August II, September 7,
INI
D EL 14*

Phil Pastoret

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THE IVMMG HERAU) t HERALD
' Ft

dto

ADVERTISER
CLASSIFIED SECTION

Logoi jjttjc*
C ITY OP ALTAMONTE
SPEINOS, P LOR I DA
NOTICE OP PUBLIC HBARINO
TO:
ALL
IN T E R E S T E D
PERSONS
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
N OTIFIED that th* City Com
m 1*1km of the City of Altamonf#
Springs, Florida, pursuant te
Chapter 170, Florid* Stetutes, he*,
by resolution, euthbrlted th*
Improvement of construction ot
Sonltery Sewer ter Lott n through
1* tn Town 1 Country Eitotes
Replet, « dlttenc* of ap
proxlmettly ISO feet on Robin
Court and a distanc* of apprexlmataly 100 feet on Robin
Road
and providing tor astastmaht
against lots and lands adlolnlng
and contiguous or bounding and
abutting upon such Improvements.
THAT A PUBLIC HEARINO
W ILL be held on Tuetdey, Sep­
tember 11, m i , at 7:00 P.M., or at
soon thereafter at petalbit, at th*
City Hall or th* City ot Altamonte
Springs. Florida, MS Newburyport
Avenue, Altamonte springs.
Florid*, whereby th*owners of th*
property to be assessed or any
other interested persons therein
may appear betore th* City
Commission at an equalling
board and be heard at to th*
proprlaty and advisability of
making such Improvements. •* to
the coif thereof, at to th* manner
ot payment therefor, end at to th*
amount to be at let led against
each property so Improved.
That an assessment roll has
been prepared by th* city clerk
and tiled with the City Commits ten
of" the City of Altamonte Springs,
Florida, showing Ih* toft and lands
to be attested, tha amount of Ih*
benefit to and th* eeaeument
against each let or parcel of land
and th* manner ot payment.
That th* description of eedt
property to be assessed and th*
amount to be attested to each
piece or percel of prtperty may be
ascertained al th* office of Ih* City
Clerk ot th* City of Allemont*
Springs, Florid*. All interested
persons
may
Inspect
th*
assessment roll now on III* with
the sold City Clerk during normal
business hour* ot said office.
Deled this 4th dayot September,
A D IN I.
Phyllis Jordahl, CMC
City Clerk of the City
of Altamonte Springs, Florida
Publish: September 7, m t
OEM 14
IH THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLOEIOA
PROBATE DIVISION
Fite Number 11-4*7 CP
Division
IN RE i ESTATE OF
MARK CHRISTOPHER MALTBY,
D ttfiin f
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO A L L PERSO NS HAVINO
CLAIM S
OR
DEMANDS
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND A LL OTHER PERSONS
IN TERESTED IN THE ESTA TE:
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
Ih *
Od.
ministration of Ih* ettet* ot
MARK CHRISTOPHER MALTBY .dec a* ted, Fit* Number 11-407
CP, It pending In th* Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida,
Prebelt Dlvtelen, th* oddreea at
which Is Seminole County Cour
thou**. North Perk Avenue,
Sanford, FL 11771.
The personal representative of
Ih*
ttfa l*
II
RAYMONO
MALT BY, JR., whoa* addret* It
144 Abbott Av*., Lake Mary, F L
11741. Th* name and addrata ot tha
personal representative's attorney
•re tel forth below.
All persons having claims or
demands against th* estate are
required,
WITHIN
TH R EE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to III* with th*
clerk of th* above court a written
slatamant ot any claim or damand
they may have. Each claim muat
be in writing end mutt indicate th*
bests for the claim, the name and
address o il he creditor or his agent
or attorney, and th* amount
claimed. It th* claim It net yet
due. th* date when It will become
due shall be stated it th* claim It
contingent or unliquidated, th*
nature of tha uncertainty shall b*
staled It th* claim It securbd, th*
security shall be described Th*
claimant shell deliver sufficient
copies ot the claim te the clerk te
enable th* clerk to mall on* copy
te tech personal represented**.
All persons Interested In Ih*
ttiatt to whom a copy of this
Notice of Administration he* been
mailed era required, WITHIN
TH R EE MONTHS FROM THE
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
PUBLICA TIO N
OF
THIS
NOTICE, to tile any obiaetton*
ttiey may hav* that challeng* th*
validity ot th* decadant's will, th*
qualifications of tha personal
representative, or the venue or
jurisdiction ot th* court.
ALL CLAIMS, OEMANOS, AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E O
WILL BE FO REVER BARRED.
Oal* ot the ttrtl publication of
this Notice of Administration*.
August It, 1MI
s Raymond Maitby Jr.
Al Personal Rapratanlally*
of ih* Etlal* of
M ARK
C H R IS T O P H E R
MALTEY
DiCHMd
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
R EP R ESEN TA TIV E:
OOUOLAS STENSTROM
IT E N S T R O M ,
M d N TO S H ,
JULIAN,
COLBERT A WHIOHAM. P.A.
P.O. Boi ISIS
Sanford, F L 11711
Taftphano: MS-1MJI7I
Publish: Augutt l i , September f,
IN I
OEL-U4

NOTICE UNDER FICTITNUS
NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Netk* N hereby * te * »hbt « •
undersigned puftuoM t i IM
‘■FIcIHIeu* Nam* BtotlrtB” ,
Chapter M O*. FNrM* Uetvte*.
will register with the Clerk bMM
Circuit Cowl in and Nr Bemlnata
County, Florid*, upon recefW a*
proof af ih* puiilcgINn af IM
italic*, Ihe HdltlNN m »m .
BACK TO EDEN undw sNtkR W*
art engaged In builngM al SIS B.
Altamonte Orlv*. Alternant*
Spring*. F it . W EI.
That the pertles mtonalsd In
laid buainesa wdergriM are **
Rupert Ryan

IK M N O L I

ORLANDO-W INTIIM RK

322-2*11 Call today! UI-tttD

Upcri Nofict
C IT T
OF
ALTAM ONTE
SFRINOS, FLORIDA NOTICE OF
PUBLIC NBAEINO TO CONS IO E E T H E ADOPTION OF
PROPOSED ORDINANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE It H E R E B Y GIVEN
by ih* City of Altamonte Springs,
Florida, that the Commission will
hold a public hairing lo consider
metmant ot Ordinance No. 401I I
wit Hied:
ANORDINANCEOF THE CITY
OF ALTAM ONTE SPRIN GS,
FLO RID A ,
ADOPTING
A
BUOOET FOR THE CITY OF
A LTAM O N TE
S P R IN G S .
FLORIDA, FOR THE FISCAL
YEA R BEOINNING OCTOBER I.
IN I, ND EN DIN G
SEP.
TEM BER X , i m . AND AP
PROPRIATING
AND
ALLO CA TIN G R E V E N U E OF
THE CITY FOR THE FISCAL
YEA R ;
PROVIDING
SEPA R A BILITY,
CONFLICTS
AND E F F E C T IV E OATE.
Th* City Commission will
consider same lor final passage
and adoption attar the public
hearing which will be held In th*
City Hall of Altamonte Springs, on
Tuesday, the »nd day of Sep
tember, m i . el 7 00 p m . or as
soon thereafter as possible. At the
meeting interested parties may
•PPear and be heard with respect
te th* proposed ordinance This
hearing may be continued from
time to time until final action Is
taken by the City Commission. It
anyone decides to appeal any
dtcitlon on this ordinance, he will
need and will need to insure thet a
verbatim
record
of
Ih*
proceedings which Includes Ihe
testimony and evidence upon
which the appeal is te be based is
A copy of tha proposed or­
dinance Is posted al the City Hell.
Altamonte Springs. Florida, and
copies era on Ilia with Ih# Clerk ot
th* City and same may be in
spected by Ih* public.
Dated this 111 day ot September,
A.D. Itel,
Phyllis Jaordahl, CMC
City Clerk of the City
ot Altamonte Springs. Florida
Publish: September 7, IN I
DEM »
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FIN Number 11-tiS-CP
DivltNn
IN E E t ESTATE OF
WILLIAM LLOYD PRICE
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
TO A L L PERSO NS HAVINO
CLAIM S OR DEMANDS AOAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND A LL OTHER PERSONS
IN TER ESTED IN THE ESTA TE:
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
ministration ot Ihe estate ot
W ILLIAM
L LO Y D
P R IC E ,
deceased. File Number IM IS CP,
Is pending In Ih* Circuit Court lor
SEM IN O LE County. Florida,
Probata Division, the address ol
which Is Seminole Courthouse,
Sanford, Florida 11771 Th* per
lonal represent at Ive ol the estate
IS JUANITA J. P RICE, whose
address is 114 Lakevlew Avenue,
Sanford, Florida M77I. The name
and address ot tha personal
representative's attorney are set
All persons having claims or ot
mands againsi ih# estate are
required,
WITHIN
TH R EE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, lo III* wllh Ih*
clerk ot th* above court a written
statement ol ony claim nr demand
they may hava. Each claim must
b* In writing and must Indicate Ih*
basis for the claim, Ihe name and
address ot the creditor or his agent
or attorney, and th* amount
claimed. II Ih* claim is not yet
due, the date when II will become
due shall b* Haled. II th* clefm Is
continganl or unliquidated. Ih*
nature ol Ih* uncertainty shall be
stated. It tha claim Is secured, the
security shall be described Th*
claimant shall dailvar sufficient
copies ol the claim to Ih* clerk to
enable the clerk lo mall on* copy
lo each personal representative.
All persons Interested in Ih*
eslal* lo whom a copy ol this
iNotice el Administration has been
mailed are required. WITHIN
TH REE MONTHS FROM THE
OATE
OF
THE
FIR ST
PUBLICATION
OF
THIS
NOTICE, lo Ilia any oblections
they may hava that challeng* the
validity of th* decadent’s will, Ih*
qualifications ol Ih* personal
representative, or Ih* venue or
jurisdiction of th* court.
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS, AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
WILL BE FO R EV ER BARRED
Oat* of the first publication ol
this Nolle* ol Administration:
August II, If ll
S JUANITA J. PRICE
As Partonal Representative of
th* Estate of
W ILLIA M LLO Y D P R IC E
ATTO RN EY FOR PERSO N A L
REPRESEN TA TIV E
ABBOTT M. HERRINO
IIS Was) First Street
Sanford. Florida 11771
Tttephona: (MS) H I S '00
Publish: Augutl 11 4 September 7,
Ml
DEL 1SS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE BIOMTEBNTH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT
IN
ANO
POE
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLOEIOA
CASE NO. IMBtf-CA-M-l
IN E l : TR* Adapttoa *1
MICHAEL OAVIO CAM PBELL
A Child.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: LEONARD VARVEL
YOU ARE N OTIFIED that a
Petition for Adoption has been
filed by Maryann* and Malvtn E.
Campbell, for ih* purpose ot
odeptlna th* minor child.
MICHAEL DAVID CAM PBELL,
and that you are required to fit*
any abjection you may have la said
Patlllan an W A LLA CE
f .
S T A L N A K IR , J R ., E S Q U IR E .
Pet Itloners attorney, whoa* ad
dree* is 4S0 Maitland Avenue,
Altamonte Springe, Florid*, M701
on or betore Sept 14. M l, end HI*
th* original with the Clark of Hut
Court olttwr before service an
Petitioners' attorney or Im
mediately thereafter.
WITNESS my hand and seal of
this court o r this Xth day of
August. M l.
(SEAL!
ARTHUR H. B EC K W ITH .
JR.
Clark of the Circuit Court
By: CyretvL* Procter
Deputy Clerk

Dated st F*f» « City,
candy, Flsr tea. Augwi t M l . PuBUib: August U
i August 17, M, « . M * tember *. I, M l
7 ,M l
OEL-to! DEL-1»

II, A Sag

legal Notice
RESOLUTION NO. 4Sf
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY
OF ALTAM ONTE SPRIN GS.
FLO R ID A . PRO VID IN G FOR
THE
IN STA LLATIO N
OF
SANITARY SEW ER SERVING
LOTS » TO I*. IN TOWN ANO
COUNTRY ESTATES REPLA T. A
DISTA N CE
OF
APPROXI
M ATELY 100 F E E T ON ROBIN
ROAO AND APPROXIM ATELY
ISO F E E T ON ROBIN COURT, IN
THE CITY OF ALTAMONTE
SPRINGS, FLORIDA, AND PRO
VICING FOR THE ASSESSMENT
OF THE COSTS T H E R E O F
AGAINST TH E A B U T T I N G
PRO PERTY OWNERS SPECI
A LLY B EN EFITIN G BY SUCH
IMPROVEMENTS.
W H ER EA S. Ih* City Com
mission ot th* City ol Altamonte
Springs, Florid*, deems It ad
vlsabl* to Install unitary sewer In
Lots n to If, in Town and Country
Estates Replet. a distance ot
approximately 100 leet on Robin
Road and approximately IH leet
on Robin Court.
WHEREAS, all improvements
shall be don* In compliance with
the plans, specifications and
estimates on III* with the City
Clerk ol th* City ol Altamonte
Springs. Florida, which said plans,
specifications and estimates
constitute th* plans, specifications
and estimates Ior all said im
provemenls.
NOW. T H E R E FO R E . BE IT
R E S O LV E D BY THE C IT Y
COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
ALTAM O N TE
S P R IN G S .
FLORIDA, AS FOLLOWS:
That the City Commission ot th*
City ot Altamonte Springs,
Florida, deems II advluble as a
necesury public Improvement lo
Install unitary sewer in Lois 11 to
If, In Town and Country Estates
Replat, a distance ol ap
proximately 104 leet on Robin
Road and approximately ISO feel
on Robin Court.
Thai all u ld improvements
shall be done in strict compliance
with ih* plans end specifications
and estimates of the cost of u ld
Improvements now on llle in the
office ol th* City Clerk ol th* City
ot Altamonte Springs, Florid*,
which u ld plans, specifications
and estimates are hereby «p
proved by Ih* Cily Commission
and constitutes ih* plans,
specifications and esllmales -it
cost lor said proposed Im
provemenls. and Ih* City Com
mission of th* City of Altamonle
Springs, Florid*, does hereby
declare th* necessity tor the In
st*ll*lion ol sanitary sewer as
described eloreuid is a necessary
public Improvement
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVEO
That the total cost of said Im
provemenls. including cosl ot all
labor and maltrials, is estimated
lo be BIO. I SO00 and the sum ol
TEN THOUSAND ONE HUN
OREO AND F IF T Y DOLLARS
($10,150 00) shall be assessed
against all of the lots and lands
adjoining and conllguous or
bounding and abutting upon such
improvements
or .specially
benefited thereby and further
designated by Ihe assessment plat
row on file in the office ot the City
Clerk ol Ih* City ol Allemont*
Springs. Florida, which said
assessment plat is hereby ap
proved by th* City Commission ot
th* City ol Altamonte Springs.
Florida
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:
That it Is Ihe determination ol
th* Cily Commission that all lots
and lands adlolnlng and con
llguout. or bounding and abutting
upon the said Improvements will
be especially benefited by'lhe u ld
Improvements provided tor in this
Resolution, end that the special
assessments lo be made and en
fared against all lots and lands
located on Lots 11 to If In Town
end Country Estates Replat, a
distance ol appropriately XX) leet
on Robin Road and approximately
IWieet on Robm Court, atoreuid
adlolnlng and contiguous or
bounding and abutting upon such
contemplated Improvements shell
be made upon an equal basis, that
is lo u y , that In the preparation ot
th* special assessment roll
covering th* contemplated Im
provements, such special benefits
shall be determined and prorated
according lo an equal bails ot Ihe
respective properl ies adjoining
and conllguous or bounding and
abutting upon such improvements
especially benefited by u ld Im
provements
That the City Clerk ol Ih* Cily of
Altamonte Springs, Florid*, in
accordance wllh th* provisions ol
law, shall proceed lo make and
prepare * special assessment roll,
assessing the special benefits to be
receivrd as the result ol u ld
improvements egelnst Ihe lots and
lands, adjoining and contiguous or
bounding and abutting u ld im
provemenls. basing said special
assessment against th* respective
properties lo be especially
assessed upon TEN THOUSAND
ONE HUNDRED ANO F IF T Y
DOLLARS ItlO.lUOOl ol th* coil
ot such improvements as deter
mined by this Resolution and Ihe
amounl determined by this
Resolution lo be assessed against
th* UKI properly
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED
That the special asussmenii
provided by Ihis Resolution shall
be payable *1 th* option ot th*
property owners at follows
In cash, within thirty (10) days
of Ih* confirmation ol tha u ld
special atuttmenl roll or in on*
annual installment, utd deferred
payment to bear Interest at Ih*
rale ot eight percent (I percent)
par annum. Ih* deterred payment,
plus interest lob* due and payable
on* 111 year from Ih* date ot
confirmation ol u ld assessment
roll
BE IT FURTH ER RESO LVED;
That mis Resolution shall be
published one* a week for a period
of two (!) weeks in th* Evening
Herald, a newspaper ot general
circulation in Seminole County,
Florida.
BE IT FURTH ER RESOLVEO:
That this Resolution shall b* and
become effective Immediately
from and alter its p ssug* and
adoption
Publish September 7, IS, m i
D EM IS

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlondo- Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES
Itlm g ...................... 50c a ling
3 coitMcutivt tlm tt JOca ling

HOURS

tandtot. Thay
oukdity and kaan tha
and brisk.

Experienced Cooks all shifts,
needed Foxllr* Restiurant.
Hwy 17 (7 Santord____________

A.M. - 5:10 P M. 7 consecutive tim es ............ t ic
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 10 comaeutlva tlm a i. 17c a tin*
SATURDAY f Noon
sj.M Minimum

RN Full Time 7 1 Shift. Apply at
Lakevlew Nursing Center, fit
E. Ind S t, Santord.

'1 Linos Minimum

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looking lor enthusiastic people
lor telephone work Contact B
Tinsley Days Inn I t and S.R
*4______________________________

1:04

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday

1 C aid -jf D u n k s

5-L o t t A F o u n d

I wish to thank our friends end
neighbors lor th* many
wonderful expressions ot
sympathy and deeds ol kind
ness shown lo us during our
recent bereavement. The
recent death ol Thomas Clark
Signed Mildred Clark

Gef lull exposure — take lha,
"Fot Sale" sign down 4 run a
classified ad Call 1171411 or
111 Iff)
LOST Brown and Black mixed
Breed, dog Resembles Fox
Terrier Tan collar answers lo
Hobo Vic ot Bahama Joe'S
Ml IU I or 1)14110 Ext Ilf

+—P erso n als
WHY BE LONbLY t Writ* ' Get
A Mate" Dating Service. All
ages P.O. Box 4071. Cleorw«ier, FI 11511_______________

KM* gone,-but Ihe swing set in
thebick yard Isn't? Sell it with
a wart ad CaM Ml 1411.

Lonklyi Write "Bringing People
Together Dating Strvlcal" All
ages 4 Senior Citlrwts. P.O.
tail, WlntaMtaven, Fla. UNO

Legal Notice
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
THE 11th JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. IN
ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. I1144I-CC-II-H
SAMUEL WILLIAMS and
CATHERINE L. WILLIAMS, hll
wilf.
Plaint ills,
vs.
B FRANK ROBISON
Defendant.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: B FRANK ROBISON
Residence Unknown
Last known address:
))S Mill Run Drive
Lake Mary, Florid*
YOU
ARE
H EREBY
NOTIFIED mat an action lor
Breach ol a Ltas* Agreement and
praying lor Damaging Mowing
thereirom has been tiled against
you in th* County Court lor
Seminole County, Florida.
You are hereby required lo til*
your written defenses with the
Clerk ol u id Court and serve a
copy Ihereof upon Plaintiffs at
torney, whoa* address it amtxed
heralo, on or before September II,
lilt , or a Default will be entered
against you.
WITNESS my hand and teal as
Clerk of th* County Court, in end
for Seminole County, Florida, this
14th &lt;Uy of August. IN I.
(SEAL)
Arthur Beckwith, Jr.
Clerk of Ih* County Court
Seminole County,
Florid*
By: Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
R MICHAEL UNDERWOOD
Mallhias 4 Matthias
501 N Magnolia Avenue, Sull* A
Post Ofllc* Box 411
Orlando, Florid* 17(01
Telephone (105) 4111411
Publish August 17, 14. 11 4 Sep
tember 7, IN )
D EL 101

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE EIGH TEEN TH JUDICIAL
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FOR
IUMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA.
CASE NO. II-4H-CF
IN R E : The E lt lt * at
WILLIAM HALL M IK ELL. JR..
Deceased.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
The administration ol Ih* estate
ot WILLIAM HALL M IK ELL, JR.,
deceased. File Number I I 414 CP.
is pending in Iht Circuit Court lor
SrmlnoleCounty, Florida, Probjl*
Division, Ihe address ot which is
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanford. Florida. The name and
address
ol
Ih*
Personal
Representative and ol the Per
tonal Represent alive's attorney
are set forth below.
All interested persons ere
required lo III* wllh Ih* court
WITHIN
TH R EE
MONTHS
f ROM THE DATE OF THE
FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS
NOTICE II) all claims against
ihe m a le and (11 any objection by
an interested person lo whom no
lice was mailed that challengts
Ihe qualifications ot th* Personal
Rtprasenlatlva.
venue
or
jurisdiction ol Ih* court.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL BE
FO REVER BARRED
Oal* of th* first publication ol
this Notice of Administration
August 11, INI
S WILLIAM HALL M IK ELL.
SR
Personal Represamaliv*
Ml First Street
Chuiuloa, Florida M744
Attorney
lor
• Personal
Representative:
DONNA W ILHELM HUDSON
P 0 Box 1171
Ovlado. Florid* M74S
X S U S 71(3
Publish: August 11 4 September 1,
INI
DEL IM
NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS
NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Notice h herby given that the
undersigned pursuant lo the
"Fictitious
Name Statute” .
Chapter sal Of, Florida Statutes,
will rogisttr with the Clark of tho
Circuit Court, in and tor Seminole
County. Florida upon receipt of
proof of tho publication of this
nolle*. Ih* fictitious Nomo, to wit.
C O N S T R U C T I O N • EN
T E R P R IS C S OF C E N T R A L
FLO R IO A , INC. S t * CON­
STRUCTION EN T E R P R ISE S OF
FLORIDA under which I am
mgsgad *n bustnoos at P. 0 . 4oa

SPLIT Rate holder
HAPPY LABOR DAY

SPUR OF THE MOMENT
BASVSITTING
M l (344

Great Boss Good benefits

♦

Will keep thildren in my home
day. hr. or week Monday thru
Friday 7 am 4 pm Hot
lunches. 1 snacks 1114MB
Babysit any hour
in my home
____________ 111 4741______________
By Mature Ledy in my home,
excellint references deys
only 1111151

175 Recipe Book lor urouna a eel
only. SendtJ (Slo Recipes SMI
Indian Hills Rd Orlando. Fla
17801
Bananas
1LBS II Od
Cukes
10 FOR I DO
Peppers
tOFOR 100
Ice Cold Watermelons
100
Western Lopes
EACH 7f
Green Onions
IF O R 7f
Jonathan Apples
JLB S 100
Jumbo Beet Stake
Tomatoes
4f LB
Peaches
41 Ld
Jonthan apples
JLB S I OC
Red Delicious Apples
4 LB
s i oo
MutruAppIrs
1LBS 100
SOLB Boi Ge Swt PotoloesaSO
Swl Polalues
4LBS 100
Blue Ridge Apples. IS LB Box
All Kinds
EACH ISO

We T ik a Food Stamps
LER O Y FARM S
SR 44
Watson'* Old Farm
Have a room to rent? Let a
classified ed find a tenant tor
you'

U—In stru ctio n s
Tennis instruct ion — U S P.T.A.
Certified Croup or Privet*
lessons. Children a specialty
Dtvg Malicstwtkl. H U N T.
WHY SAVE IT
SE LL IT
QUICKLY with a Fast Acting,
Low Cosl Classified Ad

i H pEdalNpHcai

*

*

¥

¥

*

¥

*

OAK HAVEN REST
HOME DELAND
Small home like ACLF facility
situated very pleasant location
Short distance from city. If
hour supervision meals,
laundry, assistance with bath
4 personal grooming Large
fenced In yard, air con
ditlonmg Private 4 semi
prlval* rooms Call 71*4451
*

*

*

★

★

*

★

AAA EMPLOYM ENT
LO W EST FEE-T ER M S
1(17 French Av*.
M*lt74

RN OR LPN
4 1} and 111 Shift. Full time
Apply in person Sanlord
Nursing Convalescent Center,
(SO Mellonvlll* Ave.
Experienced R.N. Executive
position usual hours I lo 4
weekends off. Apply In person
Santord Nursing Convalascen'i
Center, (SO Mellonvlll* Ave,
Sanlord See Mrs Hollenbeck

AAA EMPLOYM ENT
LOWEST F E E - T 1 RMI
1(17 French Ave.
MI-1171
H A IR S T Y L IS T wanted
w ithfollowlng Im m ed
C all Delores 1)17510

R E iilS T E R E D N U R s i
Two positions available with
leading home health agency as
stall nurse. Home health
experience helpful excellent
u lery end benefits For ap
point men) Ml 0400 or S141707
EOE
♦

*

W-tfclpWWrtEd

'#

c a s h ie r s

Start work today
AAA EMPLOYM ENT
LOWEST F E E - T E R M S
1117 French Av*
M1SI74
Security Officer
Phone 1)1(10
Seminole County Area
SECRETA RIA L
C LER IC A L 4
RECO R D K EEP IN G
SKILLS
For growing lirm in Sanlord.
Must be able to type SS words
per minute. Write Box 11] C 0
Evening Herald P.O. Box I4S7
Sanlord. FI*. 11771.
A-l MECH., honest, bondable,
sober, family man Exp In
Imports, domestic luneups.
brakes, air cond,, carb,
capable mglng shop. Aufo
Elec exp helpful, salary 4
bonus to right man Need help
to gef shop in operation in So
Sanlord laf Sdll Geneva
every

To whom It may Concern
Effective July t. IN I. Gerald b
Alexander and Richard L.
Reed are no longer doing
business as J R.'t Diner In
Sanford. Florida Therefore,
these patties will no longer be
responsible for any debts or
obligations Incurred by any
oihe/ parties under that
fictitious name after 7 t il.
Signed G B Alexander
R .L . Reed
¥

sec r et a r y

^ BO O KKEEPER ^
Super Opportunity

9-Good Things
to Eat

day

is

b a r g a in

OAY IN THE WANT ADS. Ml
H ll or ID f m

O p p o r t u n ity
Two questions: Will you be
financially independanl In 1 lo
S years? Are you paid what
you are worth? If not call M l
4*04
PLUM BIN G O IY. Hardware
and Ele ctrica l retail and
repair Businas* WWO Real
Estate Best Terms. 1)04100.
Wm Malictowskl REALTOR
Ml 7N1 Eves Ml 111?

To Start
Sanlord - Female wants ti
share her home with maturi
working temalo M l S K I
SANFORD — Condo 1 bd. Uy
bin, wash dryer, to shore
immediate occupancy, no
leas* 1100 mo Ml 15*0

29—Room*

AVON R EPRESEN TA TIV ES
Th* Part Time Career
4441071- Collect US 1701
LRN 11 7 part lime. M l pgyt
tins* Apply Lakevlew Nurtlrn
Cmlsr, tlf E. ind SI., tenford
★ FACTORY ★
Immediate Opening
AAA EMPLOYMENT
LOWEST F E E - TERMS
ttt? French Ave.
S1U 74

SANFORD - Reas wUy.
monthly rales Util Inc. K
ICO Oak, Adults 14) 7(11

tja ^ p rW iy
1 or 1 bdrm. apart mants, clean
and quiet. No children or pots.
Coll M l S4H alter 4 p.m.

coNvnma
STOtf

AAA IMPlOYMBfT
1917 FUNOI AVI.
CAU 323-S174

lh *t th* party intaresfad m u id
bus Inass anterfrite It at follows:
R 0 4 E R T E. ICHUMAKER
Dotsd at Semlnol* County,
Florida, August II, m i .

Publish; August 11. 14. 11, Sop1amber 7, IN I
DEL S?

Registered Nurses Charge
position lor 1 II and ti 7 Shills
Casual Slatting available
Excellent Benefit Plan Apply
Americana Healthcare Center
1414 Bedford R d , Orlando
ECE.
DISTRIBUTORSHIP Available
Reliable, ambitious, person lo
represent respected Company
locally. Excellent earnings
good tulurel Call lor ap
poinlmenl al S74 7054_________

Oat time Babysitting in
my home No Weekends
Have references. I l l 0*11

WANT ADS ARE BLACK 4
WHITE AND R EA D A LL
OVER
____________________

★

RIGHT now we need a lew good
u le s people who have Ihe
ambition and dedication lo
succeed It thal'S you, then
we're prepared lo otier you
real rewards and Ihe methods
lo get Ihem For tnltrview,
pleese call Century 11, Hayes
Realty Services, Inc , Santord
Ml 1050
_________

C b m M i* P lit e r l* ot Santord
W aitresses w anted apply In
person

&lt;-ChlldCErt

1471, Longwood, Florida.

A different flavoring for hot
I n : instead o f u p r , add •
ooopto o f lamoN drops or

P M Ceshier Hostess must have
pleasant personality. Monday
Thursday S p.m to M p m.
Apply In person Monday
Friday I n p m lo I pm
Deltona Inn S74 44(1

HAPPY LABOR DAY
CORNER OF UN
ANDFRENCH

VavrMarawri
*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Goad u le ry , hespiioitioitan, 1
week paid vocation every 4
months.
Eip o rlo nc*
not
necessary. For interview
phono th* manager at
AffporlBlyg.
CessatOerry
Caftry Ave.
Lake Mary

MJ-41S1

uf-ins
main
H I -044

4»aA*.es w * 04 (, g A-.4. aw, | \ J F |
&gt; x 4 x O WOW - A * ■» ■

■ # **»»

�jA A p o rtrm n ti
U n fu m h lw d

37—B usiness P ro p erty

■kt*Y tMMry llvlnaf 1 Mrm
A rI i . Olympic l l . Peel.
IIMMMMK Vlllppp. Op«i 7 1
111 1 W .
Santoro — I Mrm + g«n.
ceramic
balh, furniture
available. m ulti t i n mo. I

______________
1 BDRM, I Bath, Largo Living
Rm , corner |th and Elm tUO
mo * 1350 dep . U7 74)0 day*
or 111 MU overlingi
1 BOR V . 1 bth cen A c. W W
carpel, wain dryer, pool IJ10
No pelt 111 m i
Bamboo Cove F rom lltO
1 Bedroom Apti Available
Shown by Appt Only ])) 1)40

ORANGE CITY - tl 17, 1000 sq
tt business condo
New.
beautllul, in Whispering pines
Ideal tor professional offices
Or__rettsurant. [X51 7tl ISM

37-B—R enta I Offices
SANFORD
7000 sq tt. II Industrial or
Commercial Building on tTM,
1.000 tt, in office space Call
H I 5510 or 114 414)

Morinori vniaorio LakTAda'i
bdrm from 1750. 7 bdrm from
1710 Located 17 t l |utt South
ot Airport Btvd In Sanford All
Adultt. 373 1170
Mallonvlllt
Trace
Apti 1
Spacious, modern 1 Bdrm, t
Bath apt. Carpeted, kit
equipped,
CHBA.
Near
tntpllal 1 lake. Adults, no
jje t s 1770 177 t i n
t BDRM Wall to wall carpet.
Cent HA Convenient to
downtown t i l l mo 37} 7717 or
113 14*1

Office Space
For Lease
130 771)

40—Condom inium s
Condo lor rent 3 bdr, t' i bath
in Sanlord
__________ Call 171 0115
Condo 1 bdrm. t 'j bth wisher
dryer. 1400 mo 4 month lease
min immediate occupancy
Call 1715sao a m or after 5

1 Bdrm with Balcony New
lurniture. Cent HA, Wall to
Wall carpel convenient to
Downtown t i l l mo 1717717
or 313 1113_____________________
Furnished apartments for Senior
Cititens 111 Palmetto Ave , J.
Cowan No phone calls.
I BDRM Wall to Wall carpet.
Cent HA. New lurniture.
fireplace, screened balcony,
convenient to downtown 1750
mo Call 371 7717 or J U 164)

PARK AVE.
1 bdr. kids. 1150 dn. 1745 mo
SEMINOLE
Orlando

1171IM
111 5101

31A—D uplexes
1 bdrm, 1 B 1511 Ridgewood
Ave . Sanlord Kit. turn . 1115
mo 4 dep No pets 111 1711
eves. 1S5 0071 days. Call
Cofltcl.

1 ROOMS l&lt;s Baths WWC Cent. A C. Furn. or un
furnished — Walk to shopping
center — schools and but
1175 00 Unturn , 111 7111
Winter Springs 11, Fim lly Rm ,
inside utility, wooded tot 1475
Ml 0017.
For rent — nlcarafirarnwrl home,
with enclosed girage in
delightful DeBary Alio 1
bdrm. 1 B mobile* home In
Maadowiei By the River. Four
Townes Realty Inc. Broker.
1 bdrm, IB . with
double car girage, in
Del Iona Call 174 t ill.
SANFORD - Idyllwilde School
— Newly painted in A out. 1
BR, I B. lam rm, CH4A, Ig
fenced yd. no pets. U75 mo. 4
sec 17)111) or 171 1147.
CA SSELBERRY - 1 br. new
paint, clean. CHA, fans, no
pets, vacant, 1140. mo ad
vance 1710101 or 111 1541
1 bdrm. 1 bth mcloied girage,
cent, heal air, carpal, all
appliances 1150 mo. firtt and
last mo, plus deposit, ret.
required, no pets 111 1104
CLEAN 1 bdr new carpet,
central heal air, privacy
lance, no per* 1150 ptus
deposit 171 Pinecrest Dr
Santord________________________
7 BR. In Ground Pool Country
Cluk Manor. Sanford Fenced.
1150 mo 1st. last and ItOO
Deposit 147 MOO_______________
LA K E MARY
1 bdr. kids. pets, air 1150
CA SSELBERRY
4 bdr, kids. pels, air 11S5
LONOWOOD
1 bdr., kids, pets, air, 1150

SAV-ON'RENTALS
lemmata
Orlande

11711*#

SIMMS

» — H o u so s F u rn is h e d
DELTONA — 1 bdr, carport, tool
Iliad, wall air conditioner.
Newly decorated No Pets.
’ U K mo

REALTY, INC.

R EA LTO R

C O M P L E T E L Y rtmadtlad 1
unit apt house w-larg* rooms,
paddle lens, imeke alerms +
positive cosh Howl 117,74111
E V ER Y PARENT’S DREAM A separata guest house lor
your teenager comet w this
l 111 sq tt 1 bdrm home w eat-in
kitchen, Dining Rm. large
bdrms. 4 lovely fenced yard
for only S47.SOOII
EASY ASSUMPTION on this 1
I ' l CB split plan w Cen H A.
w w cpt, Drapes. Rge,
Disposal, ter porch 7- lenced
cornor toll Bast price In areal
Call quick at 144,70011
C LEA N ,
C LEA N .
CLEAN
describes this easy living
hem* and Iti neighborhood!
Panelled Fam Rm, eat in kit
w Rge 4- Rat. big bdrms. 1
utility bldgs t It i I I I land
scaped lot lor 117,SCSI I
N EED PRIME EXPO SU R EI
We hove two teparoto parcels
with excellent Ironlage.
RMOI toned 1 bdrm on 111 ■
1«* parcel w-pettibl* owner
financing at SiO.IM end a RC l
toned 1 toned 1 bdrm w # i
IIS let lor IM.TOlIt
C A L L 115*5774

A L L FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

P—Business Property
SANFORD
■ sq tl it. tndgiirlat or
Ammarcial Build Mg Ml
j a ft . m ott lea spaca Call
11 S i l l «r EM1111

FANTASTIC 3 Bdrm I Bath
FR P L in FI* Rm . Panelling
' w-w carpet. Equip. Ki t .
Utility, workshop, Fenced
Yard!
Attumable
Mtg.
S47.100

MAYFAIR V IL L A il 1 A J
Bdrm . 1 Bath Condo Villas,
next to Mayfair Country Club
Select your lot, floor plan B
Interior decarl Duality con.
itructed by Shoemaker tar
547.300 B upt

C A LL A N YTIM E
IMS
Part

322-2420
l\J S ||

i;i

\ I

I v i

\ 11

i:
321*0041

M LS,

DEBARY 1 Br, I B. Ig. reams,
lovely lot tome furn, washer
and dryer &gt;17,700
OWNER MOTIVATED S Br, 1 B
Lg. kltcls Owner financing
147,too

321-0041
realto r
AHerbrs. 111-475) on* 3)3 7154
Osceola B El Portal ] br. 3 ba
cent air heal, eat In Hit.
147.500 Owner will carry mtg
with 510.000 down at 11 % In
terect tor 1) mo or FHA. VA
Michael R Capko
Lie Real Estate Broker
147 1714 11) MSS
LOOKING FOR ACREAGE Wc
have it From I to S Acres
Easy Terms Priced from
57.000
ATTENTION IN VESTO RS 1
Story Block Building Toned
GC1 Upstairs IS Rented
apartment Downstairs h*s
enclosed 1 car garage stall
Owner will assist. 1)0.000

U S lE E N Small 1 Bdrm nome
Newly remodeled, new ap
ptiances Fenced lot llxtSf.S
111 500 33* a m . 347 MSI

MOBILE HOME with Guest
cottage 1 Bdrm 7 Bath Fur
mshed Mobile Home with I
Bdrm I Bath Furnished cot
tage Located on S lots E i
cellenl location IU.000

11.000 BELOW FHA Appraisal. 1
bdr. t's bth, brick, carport,
lenced yard
Completely
renovated, new root. At
tractive financing 11.000 dn
U1S mo Open Sun I 4 117
Bethune Crl., Santord
H ) 4411________________
CUSTOM
built
homes,
remodeling B additions.
Johnny Walker Const LTO
17)1417

STEMPEIt AGENCY
REALTOR 1714771 P aro r Night
CTBOR DAY SPECIALS
I Acre I O C ) Sewer and water
Priced lor quick sale Terms
117.500
7 7 Acre* I A 17 Br Home. 1 Br
Mobile Root cellar. Fish tank,
700 FI Waterfront, Terms
ITI.SOO

Large Irame home in Lake Mary
on beautllul wooded ter*. 1
bdrm, Fla rm or 4th bdrm, IVy
B. CHA, carpel, drapaa.
garage, carport 147,700 ail
1114

Like New 4 7 C A H, Carpeted,
screen
porch.
Enclosed
garage Owner financing.
Good Terms Asking 151.500

HAL C O L tE R T REALTY

L k . Real Estate Broker
74*0 Santord Ave

lb*.
323-7132
E v tl. 37) M il
101 E.lSIhSt

¥

o u tran S a le *

4 Bdrm , IS, la t h 00 V. act *, in
ground pool. 10% remodelad
Sio.uoo Down b asium t
daymen's ot B119 par mo, No
qualifying Total 11)400
_____________111 PM7_____________
- No q Ml Hying
14 % )nd mtg can bt held by
owner 545.000 1 br, I ba, tat In
kit, family room B reading

a ssu m a b le

Michael R Capfco
Broker Owner

Mt 17l4ur»7M51

THIS IS NO MISPRINT
New 74 1 40 Royal Oaks 1 bdrm, 7
B, fireplace, cathedral ceiling,
great room, garden lub,
completely turn,shed B many
more extras, only S71.750
delivered B le t’up within 150
mlies VA no money down,
conventional 10 \ down Shop
Uncle Roy’s Mobile Home
Sales in Leesburg, on 441
South (704 ) 717 0 74 Open
weeknlghts 'tit 7 X . Sundays
17 * pm
1 bdrm. I bth, living dining
room, kitchen equip! Drapes
and air included Screened
porch, located Carriage Cove
Park Alter 5 p m 17) 1441
See our beautllul new BROAO
MORE, front B rear B R *
GREGORY MOBtLEHOMES
3I0J Orlando Dr
H I 5700
VA B FHA Financing

43—L ots-A creage
5 ACRES. TALL PINES. SOME
pa stu r e
a g e

BATEMANTtEALTY
321*0759

322*7443
ASSUM ABLE 7
mortgage
Good starter home with touch
ot country 4 bdrm t ', gilt
with carpet and a c 1*000
mortgage 7 , stoo Pi sale
price 114,700

Cal IBart
R EA L ESTATE
^ H A lT O R .M lIa ft

.

,

road

r iv e r

fro n t

a ccess

,

g en

EVA STS,000
10 ACRES WOODED ROLLING
HILLS IN GENEVA AREA
13500 PER ACRE, SE LLE R
f in a n c in g

,

m ay

d iv id e

1' , a c r e s , t a l l p i n e s .
GENEVA. 113.500. LOW IN
TEREST
AS S UMABL E
m ortgage

111

King Hie bed (Ho frame) MO
Good Condition
ID T tl* .

52—A ppliances
Kenmore parts, service, used
wathert MOONEY APPL I
ANCES 11)0*77.
The "Good Ola Days" hava
never left the Classified Ad
t . .The Buys arc still The
Best!
17 t Harvest Gold Side by side
Whirlpool Cost 1650 I 10 Wilt
take 1375 Receipts available
313 1013

53—TV -R adio-Stereo
Good Used TV’s, S15B up
M ILLERS
7417 Orlando Fr
Ph 11)0)31

5 4 - G a ra g e Sales
MOVING Everythino goes,
make otter Baby clothes B
turn, etc Call JI3 *7)7 Hidden
Laket
Classified ads serve the buying B
selling community every day
Read B use them often

m m aaiiera

47—R eal E sta te W anted
CASH FOR EQUITY
Wecancioaeinjghri.
faliBgrt Real Estate 171747*
We buy equity in Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage LUCKY INVEST
MENTS. p D Box 7500. San
lord. Fla 17771 177 4741.

47-A—Mortgages Bought
ASold
Wt pay cash tor 1st B 1ho
mortgages Ray Lrgg. Lie.
Mortgage Broker 117 7747

SO—M tscellaiw ous fo r Sale
I

HP Riding Mower sioo
Mexican Bar end a Bar Chairs
5 I» Steel Fite Cabinet. 1
Drawer S30 111 171*

HEW FATIG UE PANTS tl I 77
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
11* Santord Ave
1)1 5171
4 STRING ban|o l5). Irumpfl
1)0. new elec guitar 150. new
swing sel 150 Will bargain
13) 7777
Ceramic Molds
And Kiln
_________ Allae 5,131 44*7.
On* wedding gown til* 11 IT.
Southern Belle style, never
worn Patterns and notarial
tor veil Complete wedding in
silk llowert Call alter S p m.
and weekends i n 0*47.

MATTRESS and box springs rut
matched Mattress new Bis
sat 17) 74IS
GAS heatar wall unit
good con* It Ion.
3717*17

% \

/

GOATS F O R SALE

17?- 'AT3IILAC Coupe DeVille
Full power. A C, low mileage
A MF M leather interior
31) 0178

371 5641

68—W anted to Buy

J^lAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 71, I mile welt ot Speed
way. Daytona Brach. will hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday at I p m It'S
theonly one In Florida You set
th* reserved price Call 704
135 1)11 tor further details

75—R ecrea tio n a l V ehicles

Lawn Mower Sales and Service
We Sell me Best and Service
the Rest Bob Ball Western
Auto XU W 1st SI.

30 FT TRAVEL traUeT good
condition and furnished
random axle 377 770]

Don't Despair Or Pull Your Hair
— Use A Want Ad 177 7411 or
*31 777)

76—Auto P a rts

Classified Ads will always give
you more
Much . Much
More than you expect

★ BAH A u to S a l e s *
*339-7989*
1778Olds Regency
13477
1774 BuickLaSabreCustom 13788
‘80 Bonneville
Brougham.
Diesel, loaded. 1*777
'll Ponliac Sunblrd. Like new,
13178
-47 Pontiac Firebird, a clastic,
t in t
Bank financing available
SSN Hwy i l l !
Casselberry

Used Car Parts all makes and
models 177 7477 We buy Used
Cars and Trucks

6S—P ets-Supplies

CASH POR CARS
Running or not
137 1741

German Shepherd Male 1 Yrs
Super with children exc.
Watch dog 5300 171 S ill
PUPPIES — Alaskan Malamule
mom B mystery lather S wkt
old, black B tan alto black B
while SIS TLC 1)7 0017

■74 CUTLASS PS. PB, PW. AT.
air. S l) » or best otter or ac
cept trade 111 17)0

77—Ju n k C ars R em oved

1767 CAMARO 4)7 4 Spd .
headers. Holly carburetor,
candy apple red. runs strong
Price SI8S0 Days 147 5587,
eve B weekends 111 4574

BUY JUNK CANS A TRUCK)
From SlOlotlO or more

catmnaia. 1374440

Two Pomeranian Puppies,
Registered Male and Female
Had Shots Ph. 11)0104
tt x easy to place* Classlllrd Ad
We'll even help you word
it Can i n la il.

Top Dollar Paid tor Junk „ Jird
cars, trucks B heavy equip
men! 377 5770

67FORD Galaxierunkgood 1673
177 17)5. I l l 4577. I l l 3771
9 14 Hr wrecker Se rv ice d
Highest prices peid lor lunk or
used can B trucks

^ - M o t o r c y c le s
Animal Haven Kennel* boarding
B orooming Needed Lhaia
Apso B small silver poodle lor
stud Male owners call 111
STS)

4*

Honda 1777 CB450. 4 cyl 3500
Mites Looks, runs like new 51
mpq SIS00 177 7113

74 VW Rabbit - 4 dr,, 4 spd. air.
stereo, good cond. asking
11*00 111 0700. rv*7 » ) ait)

Moving to a newer home,
apartment? Sell "don't needs"
fast with a want ad

66—H orses
Having trouble selling your
horse? Call Bob Slaighl 704
141 1403

11114*4-9

7) T BIRD Loaded. New Tires.
Blue with While Top or Ta
Cutlass Supreme No money
down *75 mo 1)7 7100. 114 4403
Dealer

XL 75 Honda
S27S
17) 171* alter a

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Air Conditioning

Electrical

. Mini-U*Lock

Pressure Owning

Chrla will service AC’*, rafrlo,
tr*ei*ri, watte coolers, mlsc.
Cell 1)1 *717.

ELECTRICIA N 10 yrs * ip All
types of dtctrial work at fair
prices )))M )4

NEW Concrete Buildings, all
sites S70B up At 1 4 B SR 4* 1
4 Industrial Park, 173 0041.

Vacation time l* here get what
you need lor a happy lima with
a Classified Ad

BooutyCaro

Quality electrical work tl yrs
(■parlance.Minor repair* to
complete wiring 11)0)14

TOWER’S BEAUTY SALON
FORM ERLY Harriett * Beauty
Hook SI* E 1st St., Ml STM

Paddle Ians installed,
residential electrical work,
call 1)1*14)

Boarding A Grooming
Animal Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kenntla. Shady,
insulated, screened, tty proof
inside, outside runt Fans
Also AC cages We cater to
your pets
Starting stud
registry Ph 177)7)7
Snow Hill Kennel otters Cal B
Dog Flta Baths BS up 74
Hour. Full Servica 1*4 5711

Building Contractor
Bill Corio. State Certified
Bui l di ng
Contr act or .
Residential or Comm«rcl*l,
New or Remodeled H10**4

Cora tide Tilt
Campiele Ceramic Tilt Itry.
walla. Doors, countertops, re
model, repair. Fr. est. I l l 0111
M EINTZER t i l e
Newur rrpa-r. leaky Showers our
specialty, is yrs Exp t a t e a i

Handyman
Painting, carpentry, all types ot
home repairs Call tor Ira*
estimate 111 1*73
PLUMBING.PAINTING,
HAULING
17)73)5

Hauling A
Yard Work
Little wonl ads bring big. big
results Just fry ono 111 141!
or 1)1 m i

Remodeling

Nursing Center

Remodeling Specialist

OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Laktvltw Nursing Center
717 E Second SI., Santord
i l l *707
N EED A SERVICEM AN? You’ll
tind him listed in our Business
Directory

Odd Jobs
J B B Home Improvement —
Carpentry work ol any type
Root repair*, gutter work,
painting (interior or exteriorl,
plumbing, speclallit in mobile
home repairs B root coaling,
and wood patio decks Fre*
estimate 1)3 4031

Painting

W* handle the
Whole Ball of Wax

B. E . Link Const.
322*7029
.

Financing Available_______

R a il Hamas
• Oak Haven Rest Home e
•DeLanda
Small bom* like ACLF facility
situated very pleasant location
short distance from city 14
hour supervision, meals,
laundry, assistance with bath
B personal grooming Large
lenced In yard, air con
dllloning Private B semi
private rooms Call 714S4SS

Rooting

Homo atoning
RENTAL CLEANOUTS
From Ml
C a ll))) 7)1)

Homt Improvtmttrf
It you *r* having difficulty
finding a place to live, car to
drive, a lob, or some service
you hava need of. read all our
want ads every day
ClasaHltd Ads ar* the smallest
big news Items you will llnd
anywhere.

Heilman Painting B Repairs
Duality work Fra* Est, Disc.
10 Sentors *14 B470 Refir.

HOOPS, laaks rtpairad. Reptaca
rattan aaves and shuttle werk.
licensed, t*t*r*d . bonded.
Mike 111-4171-

TER R Y ’S INTE RIORS
wallpapering, Rilnllng Lew
prices Ouar. work 11104)4

Christian Roofing IT yrs asp.
147 4730. Ire# est Rerootlng,
speciality in repair work B
new rooting______________ _ _ _ _ _

Painting A or
Prasaura Cleaning
No |ob too large or small
Quality a mutt Call 1110071
Relevance* Fr Est

SOUTHERN ROOFING IS yr*
exp . re rooting, leak special
ISl Dependable B honest
price D*y or night i l l lM l

Sandblasting

Clock Repair
Home Repairs
cwaltney jeweler
104 S Park Ay*.

ill

J*

*!C7

M
.

Did Tabby have a mil* of kit
tens? Sell them with a last
action ClatsINed Ad Call 111
1*11 or 111 fat]

Loncrot* n o r*
Landscaping
Concrete Work, footers, ll*ort 4
pools Landscaping &amp; sod
work Frew est Ml no)
»y H Making f*r y*ur
bargain Otter it ttday In th#
Classified Ads

Sot* Bad, plaid. Ilk* new.
Firs) S ill otter can haven.
Call DO 701)

7) BUICK Air, tilt
wheel.clean ST30
_____________1114340____________

BUSINESS SERVICE USTING

51—H ousehold Goods
STEREO — Combination, lolagt
extras. 30 gal. aquarium, with
ail accessories, desk chair, 1
pc vinyl living rm. *«t, dining
table chairs
Sac to ap
precla'e Santord Crt. Apt tail
apt tar rear ot complex t t
Sat . Sun B Mon »71 S.
Sanford Ave Apt *4

Wile* Salas HUTREHA Feeds
HwyUW . — I l l 517*
Hog Finlsher Pellets
5345
Layer C
5570
CallleFallener Pellets
55 10
Beet Kwik
5475

RILL D IRTB TO P SO IL
YELLOW SAND
Call Clark B Hlrt 11) 15*0

* t ACRES WOODED L IK E A
PARK. ON TOP OF A HILL IN
G EN EV A 140.000. TERM S
AVAILABLE.

S E lO L ER REALTY BROKER
111-tMB

67—Livestock- Poultry

For Estate, Commercial or
I Residential Auctions B Ap
praisals. Call Dell's Auction
11) S470__________________

62—Lawn G arden

4 HOM ESITE! IN ORANGE
GROVE AT UMATILLA 17500
EACH, CRAZY TERMS

5 ACRES WOODED JACKSON
BAY
A R EA .
O STEEN
Ita.SOO. S E L L E R FINAN
CING

Are you a lull tins* driver wlib a '
part time car? Our classifieds
are loaded with good buy lor
you

CONSULT OUR

700 ON 17 77. NEAR NEW
WINN D IX IE CEN TER COM
ING AT LA K E MARY BLVD
TO N ED
C O M M E R C IA L ,
SI3I.00

I ' i ACRES WOQOET3. ROAD
FRON TAG E IN O STEEN
117.500

, I W l- J d

1771 MOTOBECANE Hop Ot the
line) 30CC Recently rrbuilt
engine Very oood cond. in
eludes saddle baskets Asking
1400 All a P m 17) 453;

Appaloosa registered stud, black
with white blanket Also 17
month old titty, same color
11)1715 alter 4

Aluminum, cans, copper, lead,
brass, silver, gold. Weekdays
*4 10. Sat 7 1. KoKoMo Tool
Co 71* W 1st St. 1311100

50 trusses.
50' long

sail

NICE Twin Dbl recondition
bedding SI0 Sel. Sanlord
Auction lit) A French 111
7140

5C LEA R ED DUPLEX LOTS IN
sa n fo ro
s i t .soo e a c h ,
TONED FOR QUADS OR OF
FIC ES

42—Mnbib Homw
11 Tamarack 17x40 1 bdrm, I b .
cent A H. 110 Exeter Crl,
Carriage Cove 47.500 tinan
clno possible for right buyer
by owner | ] | )fj)

SlA-Fumltoro

1

TSA-Mopodi

M-Hones

Anliques Diamonds Oil
Paintings Oriental Rugs
Bridget Antiques
17) 7*01

61—B uilding f ta te r ia ls

3 ACRES C L iA R E O LAND IN
PAOLA 135 000

BEL-AIR I Br. I B. remodeled
New appl. B carpet! FPL.
Lovelr^vard I l l s .000

Excellent Business opportunity
in good location Complete
stock included in this price ot
17*00
IMS t. French 111*111
Alter Naurs: M* 70##, 1)11777

SANFORD coiy cotlag*. air.
kldl. M l dn t i l l mo 111 7)00
SAV-ON RENTALS REALTOR

* Smyrna Belch Luxurious 1
drm 1 Bath Townhouse. Pool,
annis. Swndack. Color TV.
ow ott season rafts 1*1 X U

323-5774

WE h a v e b u y e r s
W up to 110.000 Cash down
MR. INVESTOR —
Check tlsese avt I

5 7 4 * 1 0 4 0 __________

34—Resort Property

BEAUTIFUL 7 Bdrm 1 Bath
Home on Landtcaped Lot. with
cont HA. Om Rm . Eat in Kit..
Largo Utility Wash Dry W W
Carpel Many Extras? 54).700

JUST FOR YOUI Custom Built 3
Bdrm 1 Bain homo in Loch
Arbor, on wooded Lott Energy
Saving Feature, Stone FRPL.
and loll morel SI7.700

1ANFORO
I bdr, ull. 110 dn, I K mo.

S A V .O N .R E N T A L S

EXTRAS GALORE 1 Br. 1 Bath
Home Eat In Kit., Dining Rm.,
Cent Air. Hew Carpet Large
screened porch wash Dry
Fenced and Morel S17.70II

* *

WILSON MAIER TURNITURE
lit U S E FIRST ST

REALTORS

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFORD AREA

Eve IIMTM

SANFORD
I bdr. kids. ull. 140 wk

HE JURY RETURNS ITS V E K P IC T y ,
____________C «**»«■*— l&gt;N iit&gt;R*,»»

42-Mobile Home*

Each office is independently
owned and operated

REALTY -

Harold Hall

m o T h o m a s Playmate
organ with bench
11) 3)14

H ayes Real E sta te
Services. Inc
135 W 75th St
Sanford

S a n f o r d 's S a le s L e a d e r

I BDRM. t Bth AC
W W carpet,nlcetllB
Nopets l l l t s l l

Like Nrw Musette Player Plano
Can be played manual,
Electric, or Pump 115 Rolls
included SI300
Yamaha E S Concert Organ with
1 Large Leslie Speakers S140O
3)310*3_________________________

THE CENTURY 71 SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy and sell
more real estate than anyone
else m America Call today
and let it work tor you Call
173 1050

STENSTROM

ATTENTION G OLFERS! It you
want to live close to the
Beautllul
Maytair
Colt
Course, this 1 Bdrm. 1 Bath
Spacious home is the location
toe you Large fenced yard.
Family Rm. Cent HA are
some ot the features Add the
assumable mortgage and
Idyllwilde Elementary lor the
children and you've got a
Super buy at 151.700 HAA
buyers warranty

Plano tor sale Lindman B Sons
upright with bench, clr. 1730
good condition 17S0 Call 17)
1701 alter S p m

1 BR.. Pool 104 Country Club
Drive VA, FHA Cony S3* 000
New Root 147 MW Broker
Owner

41—Houses

Lake Mary Clean Furn Apt
Rellabled Man only
No
children, pets 117 1110

* 59-M usical In stru m en ts

DON’T STORE IT. S E L L IT With
a low cost Classified Ad

NEWLY turn I Bdrm, Full
equip Kit, Pool. 1st. last 1150
Security I yr tease 574 )153

« *•
lit I1TI

Looking For a New Home? Check the wan' Ads for houses
ot every il l* and prlc*

24 HOUR [B 322-9283

7 BR. 7 BA 1300. I Br. I Ba 1770
Pool 4 club house All eppl
ptus wash dryer 1st, last mo
S04 717 7187 704 157 1M1

Fam ily B Adults sact*
ctW r
PoorsIde i Bdrms. Master's
Cove Apts 111m o . Open on

roily ad
lustable trainer 5150 7D5
Bradshaw Ave 171137*_______

REALTOR, MLS
1101 S. French
Suite 4
Sanlord

Monday, U p t .

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

S$-Bo«ti A Accessories
14’ fiberglass boat

ROBBIE'S
M A LT Y

Commercial Building lor rent
1500 sq It 1400 mo .
1st Blast 1)3 till

Ridgewood Armt } Bdrm
Apti from 177S 3 Bdrm alto
avail Pool, lennit court 331
*410
Beautiful large 7 Bdrm In city,
quiet area SI45 mo
*
Security. I 1111171

41—H ouses

For rent or lease - 10.110 sq It
industrial or warehouse 111
W 1st SI., Santord 1111100.

w ith M ajor H oople

OUR BOARDING HO USE

LAROB T R E E IN STA LLER
Lfiw u p lftp . Old Lawns «p
fkaced. IBS SMI.

Plumbing
Freddie Robinson Plumbing.
R ap tirt.' faucets. W C.
Sprinklers 171*510, 11)4704
PONSCCA PLUMBING Can
atruction. Repairs. E marpan
cy. L k . Bonded. Ins » ) 4073

Londdaoring
Acreage 4 k&gt;1cleat ing.
Fill dirt topso'l
lor sal* 17114)1

Tree Service
MARPEN’S T R IE SERVICE

Trimming, removing 4 Land
scaping Free Est D l O a i

Plumbing repair —ail types
water healers 4 pumps
S I) 0*7)
ADS a r e f u n
ADS. R EA D 4 USE THEM
OFTEN YOU'LL L IK E THE
RESULTS.

c l a s s if ie d

1 MAN QUALITY OPERATION
* yrs *ap Patios, Driveways,
etc W*yn# Beal 111 |))|

IANDBLAITINO
DAVIS WILOINO
nt-am .SANPORD

It you a rt h*ytng difficulty
finding a pipe*, to ||y*, car to
drly*. • lob, or some service
you have need of, read all pgr
want ads *v*ry day.

�Wf

W in %

• tfW ity

30

M L ItU M

jn„n ooui

i

2

3

12
15

by Art Sansom

TH E BORN LO SER

18

NbU JUST PUT
Your &amp; Li-fanr(
OITTIUYOUR
ASHTRAY.

28

29

32

_

35
38

39

41

44

by Bob Montana

A RCH IE

50

51

52

u

i n i lU
t
I
T O
M c fi
U Cl
□ 1
n
m
i

BG

L I TI
□ □ □
f ld t in

□ □ □ □

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
63 years old and h aw what
my doctor has diagnosed as
intrinsic asthma. Cigarette
smoke, perfumes and strong
detergents seem to trigger my
22 Tristram
39 Noiseless
coughing spasms. I can sleep
40 Lawyer's
through the night but with my
24 Strictness
customer
25 Scene of the 43 Colorado park first contact with irritants my
crime
lungs will partially close and 1
45 Give out
26 Eiplode
will have a wheezing rattle in
sparingly
27 Incarcerates
my throat, which will also
47 Pairs
28 German
affect my speech.
48 Epochs
submarine
(comp wd)
49 Relai
My doctor is a specialist in
29 Ignorant
50 Indefimta in
allergies and has put me
31 Exist
order
through all the tests. He says
33 One of 3
51 Be beholden
there Is nothing more that can
Stooges
to
be done for me and my best
36 Of cenam
52 By way of
areas
bet is to avoid the irritants
37 Boss of ship 53 Aftarnoon
that bother me. Of course that
party
(abbr)
is impossible to do entirely.
Is there a place I could go
4
6
5
7
6
9
10 11
that may have newer medical
treatments? My doctor is
13
14
competent but if there is a
16
17
chance other trea tm e n ts
would help I would appreciate
knowing about it.
DEAR READER - The
24 25 26
chances are that your doctor
1,3
_
has done all that can be done.
30 31
However, it is quite natural
that you would want to seek
33
out anything th at might
enable you to do better. The
36
solution for patients with this
3’
situation is to have a con­
40
sultation. The Am erican
Medical Association actively
°
encourages physicians to use
47 46 49
consultations as a means of
“
ensuring that patients get the
53
54
best and the latest in medical
management.
56
57
A good way to do this is to
ask
your doctor to refer you to
59
60
a major clinic or medical
— I
center. That way their studies
will be returned to him for
your future care.

□□□gang

55
58

ppaaD

HOROSCOPE

Now, your story is not quite
typical. Intrinsic asthma is
usually not associated with
specific factors that you are
allergic to, but rather it is
triggered by some internal
mechanism in your own body.

By BERNICE BEDEOSOL

For Tuesday, September 8, 1981
YOl'H BIKTHDAY
Scptcmbei-8,1981
This coming year should be
an active social one, but you
might have to guard against
trying to keep up with the
Joneses. You’ll quickly
discover that it w asn't
necessary anyway.
VIRGO I Auk. 23-Sept. 221
There is u strong possibility
you may not have the
wherewithal to make the most
of m a teria l opportunities
today. Don't fret. You'll gel u
second chance. Find out more
of what lies ahead for you in
Ilie year following your bir­
thday by sending for your
copy of stro-Graph. Mail tl
for each to Astro-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station. N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
LIBRA l Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Chances are, today you'll feel
the control of Im portant
issues completely out of your
hands. Be patient. You’ll Ret
your opportunity to regain tike
reins.

b y S to ffel &amp; H e im d a h l

BUGS BUNNY

LOOK! THEY HAVE ELECTRONIC GAMES
WAY UP HERE !
-

H rJ

PAPBURN IT.' I PUT IN * WCWER WHY
THOSE EARTHLINGS
A QUARTER ANO
NOTHINO HAPPENEP.' ATTEMPTEPTDS7ZJFF
AfiXJNPMETAL
PI6K IN MY SILLS ?&gt;

SCORPIO i Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
This is one of those days when
you prefer to be anchored in
one place doing a lot of little
tasks that you feel need
tending to.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) If you expect more
from situations than con­
ditions w a rra n t, you can
count on being disappointed.
Bank only on hard, cold facts.
CAPRICORN ( Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Guard against being too
dom ineering or d ic tato ria l
today. Instead of others

by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND E R N E S T

complying with your wishes,
they'll do all they can to trip
you up.
AtJUAHlUS t Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Tlie confusion about you
today needs time to unravel
itself. Time is your ally. The
muddied waters will settle if
they're not stirred up more.
PISCES l Feb. 20-March 20)
The best rule to follow today:
Mind your own business, even
when another tries to drag
you into his or her affairs. It's
a good way to avoid being
blamed in the end.
ARIES l March 21-April 19)
II at all possible, avoid
bringing others into any
decision-making today. About
all you'd realize would be a
big, fat headache and more
confusion to be worked out
later.

by T. K. Ryan

Hi

NORTH
1-7-11
♦ KJ
O AQ4
♦ QI0I4
OKQS7
WEST
EAST
0 )2
OAT
OtTS
0)0142
0JIJ
*712
0114)2
O AJ 10 5
SOUTH
OQJI4IM4
O KJ 2
OAKI
Vulnerable Neither
Dealer: South
Wrtl Nxrtk East
Pus
Pass
Pau

CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Your mate may be o little
hard to please today. Ease the
situation. Bend over back­
ward to pacify him or her.
One day, your spouse will do
the same for you.

•• *

% •

• •

Pass
Pass

Suit
to
SO
Pau

Opening lead

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It's
to your benefit to be extra­
tolerant of co-workers today,
even if they tax your patience
to tl&gt;e limit. One's ship comes
in over a calm sea.

By Oswald Jacoby
ta d Alma Soo tag
Alan: “We have finally
played on the same team in
a tournament."

DEAR HEADER - Iodine
com bines with su bstances
including food in the stomach
to produce iodides, a salt.
Small amounts are used to
loosen secretions and aid as
an expectorant. And If n
person is iodine deficient,
causing low thyroid (unction,
it helps resto re norm al
thyroid function. Otherwise, it
lias no role in enabling people
to lose weight, unless they
take enough to irritate the
digestive system and cause
diarrhea.
In small amounts it is not
likely to cause a problem but
there is such a thing as
chronic iodide toxicity, and
some people are sensitive to
iodine. Stopping the iodine or
iodide usually solves the
problem . Your daughter
probably lost weight because
her program lim ited her
calories, not because of the
iodine, unless she really did
have a thyroid disorder that
benefited.

Oiwald: “It was only a
regional, but we won and
winning is always a plea­
sure. You and Peter Weichset certainly played well
throughout.”
Alan: "You and Bob Hamman also did the expected
lob and Jim Chew was more
than adequate. In fact he
seemed always to be in the
right contract when it was
important. How did you bid
that slam in the finals when
our opponents, two of the
beat players in the world,
failed to get there?"
Oswald: "It was easy. I try
to keep th ln p u simple as
possible and with a book
three notrump response to
Jim's opening bid. I just bid
It. Then Jim made the key
bid of five spades. Thu
made it easy for me to bid
ala. My king of spades was
the key card to get me
there."
Alan: "Jim'a five-spade
bid was the key all right, but
your sis bid was excellent.
Our young, expert opponents
stopped at four spades after
several scientific and ago­
nizing approach bids and
then commented to each
other that the slam was
Impossible to bid."
(NXWSPAPDI ENTOUHBX AKN I

by Leonard Starr
-0*010 WE JUST
PROBABLY JUST SORE
SCKAPE SOMETHIN’, FL0T5AM, ANNIE/ MARK? I CAN’T f— THESE DAYS TUU EVEN
SEE ANYTHING I FIND QARBME FLOATING
IN THIS FOS// J AROUND IN THE MIDDLE
i OF THE O C EM 'f-

DON’T (JANf
T0TM.IC.
( J it H

-NOTHING TO* \
WORRY ABOUT
THOUGH-KC’RE
miles from

LAND/

by Dauflai Coffin
-JClLPJi. (OV4KT L L ) I DON'T
X SAW'S
- C A R L .t m

Y itS L .

W T T H IN ^ .

n r\

« 9

2 NT
14

FLETCHER S LANDING

SOO.

a f ^A X r

of asthma. Some people have
mixed forms. To give you a
better understanding of asth­
ma I am sending you The
Health Letter number M ,
Asthma. Others who want this
issue can send 75 cents with a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it to me, in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Incidentally, be careful not
to use aspirin or any products
that contain aspirin as these
can cause asthma attacks in
many asthmatics. There are
some new medications that
a re helpful in prevenjlng
attacks. Your doctor may
have already tried them.
DEAR DR. I-AMB - What
role does Iodine play in a
reducing diet? My daughter
has lost a lot of weight and
this iodine pill is part of her
diet plan. Can this be in­
jurious?

ANNIE

lf‘5 MRS.
RlDLfcV f t *

.

Dr.
Lamb

WIN AT BRIDGE

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Keep In mind today: The risk
must be in proportion to the
potential gain. Don't bet a
dollar just to win back a dime.

IHTEK V066tH!!(

TU M B L EW EED S

External asthma is (lie more
common
type
and
is
associated with allerg ic
reactions. Your doctor is quite
right that the best way to
control asthma caused by
specific allergies is to avoid
those substances.
And there are several types

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Co-workers may have a lot of
little bones to pick today and
you might feel you're the
carcass. Keep your head,
even if they're losing theirs.

^VOUOEM ^

[Ju

monoiy, kept. /, isat

r i.

Doc Has Given
His Best Shot

1

&amp;

m m im ii,

■L
■
■
H
■
e
J■
■
1
■
F\■
19

21

27

n o — e v e n in g r t e r e w ,

Answer to freviout rotate

54 Sorrow
1 Bsitatball
55 Double
league (ebbr) 56 Adolescent
4 Only (prefix) 57 Ones (Fr)
J _____ luil
56 Warmth
12 Author
59 Direction
Fleming
60 Swift aircraft
13 Above
(abbr)
14 Infirmities
15 Beveiage
DOWN
containei
16 Garden pen
1 Lamp part
18 Horn
2 Babylonian
20 Alley ____
deity
21 Make untidy
3 Actress
23 Gumption
Magnani
27 One ol the
4 Slimy
Twelve
5 Stans
30 Furrier
business
32 Lincoln and
6 French
Fortat
negative
33 Brandy type
34 South African 7 Aware of (2
wds)
antelope
8 Garment
35 Atomic
fastener
particle
9 Plata cheer
36 Region
37 Matter ttroke 10 Antique
11 M ao_____
38 Roped
tung
40 Printer's mark
17 Form of
41 Tankard
architecture
42 Kennel sound
44 Escape
19 Christ's
46 Child watcher
binhday

-C-

r

.i

MRS RJDLfcN? SOO
HN/b TVCfOGONG
N U M &amp; fc fc .

'C L IC K S

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                    <text>73rd Y ear, No. 311—Thursday. August 20.1911—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening H e r a ld -(U S P S 411-T N I -P r ic e 70 Cents

Parent Protests Net Workshop On Humanistic Teaching
tty BARBARA FEARS

Herald Stall Writer
A workshop has been planned by the
Seminole County School Board to study
the value and lar reaching effect of a
guidance class that allegedly teaches
hum anistic b eliefs to grade school
children. Sem inole County Superin­
tendent of Schools Bob Hughes called it
an emotional issue.
Planned for Sept. 23, the workshop
will include a debate on whether or not
humanism and its tenets belong in
Wekiva Elementary where it is being

taught In kindergarten through sixth
grade. The class has been taught for the
past three years.
lamonda Bussey, parent of a student
at Wekiva, doesn't believe there is a need
far the class.
“ It chaiggrs the thought patterns of
students," she said, speaking for many
parents at the meeting. "The issues of
morality and values should be dealt with
in the home — not in the schools."
Different books are used throughout
the grade levels, all of which have
definite humanistic overtones, she said.

The book being used in the upper
grades, TAD, was written by Dr. Henry
DuPont. DuPont has said that in a later
edition of the book the word democracy
will be substituted for humanism. Bussey
said she believes this la just a cover-up of
the humanistic beliefs. Another book is
used in the class called Humanistic
Education by Alfred Alschuler. The book
deals with moral reasoning. Bussey is
afraid that kind of teaching will only
confuse and upset children.
“The children are put into groups and
given a situation and they are expected to

deal with the situation, but teachers offer
no solutions nor do they prefer one
solution over another,” she said
In humanism, there are no absolutes. It
is commonly called situational ethics. It
stresses there are no rights or wrongs,
each situation is different and requires
its own mural code. Humanists have no
code of ethics nor do they believe in the
sell-importance of man.
Bussey approximates the number of
humanists to be about 10 percent of
Americans.
"As a Christian, I think they should

House Financing
Assistance Eyed
Assistance to low and moderate income families in finding
affordable housing may be available from Seminole County if
county staff can work out details before Sept. 1.
County commissioners voted 3-2 Tuesday to instruct County
Administrator Roger Neiswender to gather information before
the commission's action next Tuesday on a sU te proposal to
float a 1200 million bond issue to provide funding for counties to
sponsor mortgage interest relief.
The proposal would provide financing far homes up to 160.000
and for certain types of apartment complexes.
The proposal calls (or the county to create a housing finance
agency which would administer a program of providing
mortgages at a lower interest rate — from 2 percent to 4
percent lower than the current market — to persons wishing to
buy homes or to builders wishing to build rental apartments.
Voting for the concept were Commission Chairman Bob
Sturm and Commissioners Sandra Glenn and Barbara
Christensen. Voting against were Commissioners Bill Kirchhoff and Robert Feather.
At a workshop Monday Kirchhoff said such a statewide bond
issue would further deplete the bond issue money available to
government for public purposes such as roads.
"I'm not Interested in getting into a situation of cutting the
public's throat to help a special segment.” Kirchhoff, a stock­
broker said.
Sturm said today, however, the bonds are going to be Hosted
by the state regardless of the action taken in Seminole County.
“I'm also concerned about the bond market and depleting it
so that there is less money for government projects,” Sturm
said. "But a large element of the public in the low to moderate
income level Is searching for affordable housing. If we ran
help them to obtain low interest money for quality housing. I
think n r should.
' We all can't afford 1100,000 homes in Seminole County.
There is definitely a shortage of rental housing and affordable
homes hete. This may be our way of assisting that element of
the community."
Sturm added the county commission must adopt either a
resolution tr ordinance stating its intent to become Involved in
the program by Sept. I.
"There would sUD be no guarantee that a dime would be
coming to Seminole County." he said. "Whether Seminole
County has a housing finance agency or not the bond market
will be depleted by the statewide bond issue.” he said.
Kirchhoff said he doesn't believe the county should art based
on the assumption "if we don’t do it, someone else will'
Gary Akers of the Southeast Municipal Bond Corp. told
commisalaners Monday the program would be limited to those
seeking mortgages on homes valued at up to (63,000.
According to the county’s bond consultant, Stewart llxrtman, builders of apartment complexes gaining financing
through a county agency If it were created, would be required
to rent 20 percent of the apartment units to lowincome
families for a period of 20 y ea n or as long as the families
stayed in the low-income category.
The security behind the debt would be the mortgages and the
savings on the interest rale would be brought about by the fact
the bands sold would be tax exempt, Hartman said.
— DONNA ESTES

lake humanism away. I think it steps on
parental rights,” she said. “The class
will have a far reaching effect on the
morals of our children."
The main thrust of Bussey's argument
is that humanism was declared a religion
by the Supreme Court in 1901.
Other parents are Just as worried about
the cla n . Bussey said. She said after her
mothers' group was formed to abolish the
class, other mothers came to her telling
her stories about their children and how
they have changed. One mother said her
children are less secure now because

they were in the class.
“Another mother said her child came
home very upset after seeing a movie
that discussed the death of a grand­
mother. It wasn't dealt with in a
Christian manner that she’s gone to
heaven," Bussey said.
"Children are also getting confused
about the role of parents because a
section of the class and even a song deals
with parents being wrong sometimes.
That has made my own daughter
challenge whether she should do
something I tell her to if I'm wrong."

County M ay Nix
All Funding For
Poverty Agency

school age children, providing dental,
By DONNA ESTES
m edical,
educational.
nutritional,
Herald SUff Writer
recreational, and social services since 1966
Seminole Community Action (SCA), which
— Outreach with information and referral,
has been serving the black community In the
income tax return filing assistance, consumer
county for toe past 13 years with a variety of
education, housing counseling and assistance,
anti-poverty programs, may not receive any
employment counseling and assistance and
funding from the county commission in the
community needs assessment.
1961-83 fiscal year.
— Community cannery which trains persons
County Comminioner Bill Kirchhoff holds
in food processing and canning, baking and
the deciding vote, but he told Amos Jones,
preserve making and provides assistance in
SCAs executive director, this week that the
locating lields for public harvesting and
agency's programs may not be cost effective.
"I've looked at the (SCA) audits and I purchasing of vegetables i t nominal coat and
also Is providing assistance in developing a
couldn't tell how the money was being ipent,"
community food cooperative.
Kirchhoff Hid. He sold he did notice that the
— Food Coop with its corporate structure
program to help poor families with energy
and strategy whereby a membership is
needs appeared to cast (30,000 to administer
established to cany out bulk wholesale pur­
while recipients received only 0,000 worth of
chasing of food for pick-up and distribution to
assistance
participating members and explores the
During county commission workshops an the
feasibility of auuming servlet Initiated by
budget earlier in the summer, commissioners
SCA while generating sell-sufficiency.
deadlock*! 3-1 on whether to grant binding to
— W e a U w r t u U o n to e r a l o p e n in g * in
SCA tat Ida aew decal year. Klrrtihott did aid
ceilings, floors and walls and replaces win­
vote on the uuut.
dows and exterior doors, installs attic In­
While SCA requested (17416 from the county
sulation to conserve energy and reduce energy
in the new fiscal year, Commissioner Sandrs
coats In substandard housing.
Glenn voted to grant the agency (6,000 and
— Home repair to provide renovation and
Commissioner Robert Feather voted to give
(6.300. Commissioners Bob Sturm and Bar­ additions to substandard housing with iD
material costs borne by the homeowners.
bara Christensen voted to deny any funding
E nergy crisis intervention to provide
During the current fiscal year, the com­
missioners allocated (17,000 to SCA. Sturm assistance in the payment of utility bills on a
one tune basis and the purchase of heating and
told Janes if programs are not coat effective he
cooling apparatus baaed on severity of need
it not going to vote to spend money on them
snd availability of funds.
Sturm noted that while the county commission
Met ale eiwM t r Tam VMKeal during ear her budget workshops, hod requests
Jones u id SCA has substantially achieved
its objectives of aiding the poor and those with
for funding totaling (400,000 from various
low incomes on a consistent basis and is
community service agencies, there is only
deserving of continued county support
(111,000
available
in
toe
new
year
for
N a n c y H a th a w a y of S a n fo r d Is a ll s m ile s a s s h e r e c e i v e s th e gran d p r iz e in
It was the energy crisis intervention
distribution to the various groups.
t h e 7 t h A n n u al S u m m e r K id d le S h o w s D r a w in g — a J .C . P e n n e y C ou n try S ta r
Kirchhoff is the only member of the com­ program of which Kirchhoff was particularly
2 4 -in c h Id -Sp eed B i c y c l e . J .C . P e n n e y s to r e m a n a g e r K dw ard l le m a n n
critical. Hying the administration cost of the
mission who did not vote to allocate any funds
program was too high in relation to the help
p r e s e n t e d th e bik e. B u t » -y e a r -o ld N a n c y w a s to o e x c it e d for w ords a t th e
to any of the service groups.
given the poor. Jones u id Kirchhoff's in­
m o m e n t but later s h e s a id s h e w a s h op in g fo r a b ik e an d is now e n jo y in g
pointing to the official designation of SCA by
formation about the program is not correct.
r id in g it. N a n cy is th e d a u g h t e r o f R ic h a r d a n d S h a r o n H a th a w a y o f 3510
toe county in 19(6 as the agency to serve lowJones u id SCA received (594.999 in federal
income families in Seminole, Jones Hid none
S o u th P a r k A v e . T h e d r a w in g w a s h e ld d u r in g th e P l a t a T w in H ock in g C h a ir
funding during the current fiscal year. To
of the other agencies seeking county support
T h e a t r e S u m m e r C h ild r e n 's S h o w s , s p o n s o r e d b y t h e K ven ln g H e r a ld .
show local support, as required by federal
have ever been so designated.
C o n te s t ru nn ers-u p r e c e iv e d p r iz e s p r e s e n te d b y K c k e r d D ru gs.
regulations the agency pants to its building
He called “unprofemional and dangerously
space, leased at no coat from the school board,
close to being Irresponsible," the com­
volunteer donations of Ume worth (111,863 and
mission's naming one third (seven) of the
county funds.
agency's board of directors on toe one hand
In the new fiscal year beginning Oct. 1,
while "arbitrarily” abandoning support of the
Jones said SCA experts to receive (6(7,216 in
agency on the other hand.
federal money, partially matching thoae funds
mayor of l,ongwood, was recently
He said the new plant is to be con­ engineering plans and drawings far
Jones Hid SCA baa “marshaled fedcrsl
with services valued at (124,183. He said SCA
appointed to toe board by toe county dollars to toe extent that far every dollar
U»
facility
within
the
next
week
to
10
structed and ready to open fer
needs (17421 (mm the county to get the federal
commission.
days and will be seeking financing (or
received from toe county $15 is obtained hrotn landing approvrd.
business early in 1K2.
The port to operated by an in­
the
venture
He
said
he
to
also
Dolgner said Fcnnlte* located a
federal sources."
When Kirchhoff continued saying he could
dependent board appointed by the
plant at the port originally In 1M0, preparing the land and building leases
“A considerable portion of the SCA clientele
not see how the federal and local lax money
county
commission.
U
is
the
site
of
for Fonnitex to sign.
leasn g 4.000 square feet of space
allocated to SCA has been spent, Janes u i d an
many water-related business and consists of minority group persons. The county
Earlier this year, Us operations ex­
The Port Authority will be building
independent audit of the SCA activities Is
can hardly abandon its support of SCA without
m
anufacturing
facilities
in
the
panded to 1,000 square feet and by toe structure and leasing U to Forsubstantially abandoning needed services to conducted annually.
county.
Its
operation
is
subsidized
by
early 1912 tt will need the 20.000 mUei.
“No charge of abuse or misappropriation of
the county commission from a special minority resid en ts of Sem inole County.
square feel
Heturns from the leases will pay the
funds has been made in any of the audita,” he
Whether Intended or not, withdraws! of county
tax.
Originally the firm was sole sup­ coats of the construction, Dolgner
The port of Sanford was created by support to SCA would result in undue hardship u id .
plier of cabinetry for Cardinal
Kirchhoff asked that Jones provide a
an act of the Legislature In 19(3. It in s discriminatory fashion upon the minority
Industries. Dolgner said, noting now
detailed breakdown of how the SCA money to
population of toe county," Jones said.
actually
went
into
operation
in
1971.
In
other
action
at
toe
meeting
of
the
the firm has also entered the con­
Without county support, program services used. And Sturm told Jones that he could
Its annual budget far the new fiscal
struction market in cabinetry, ac­ Port Authority Board of Directors
could be tost to county residents, he said. Ha appear at the county commission't public
year will be (33.100, (13,000 of that
Wednesday
evening,
newly
appointed
cepting orders from other building
healing on the budget for the m w year on Sept.
amount will come from la s money. — incladed among these services.
member, June Lnrmann, attended her
f i r m s f t ! W ill.
-H ea d S ta r t which serves about 2JOO pre­ 1.
DONNA ESTES
Dolgner said be will be re leasing first meeting. Mr*. Lormann, deputy

TO O EXCITED FOR WORDS

Cabinet Company Plans Major Expansion
The Sem inole County
Port
Authority e sp ects to begin contlroction about Nov. 13 on a (230,009to-1240.000 pre-engineered steel
structure for F o r m ilex Inc., s cabinet
manufacturing concern, at the Port of
Sanford
Dennis Dolgner, part idmlnutrator,
said today Fonnitex. already leasing
1,000 square feet of office ipece at the
port, plans to make • major ex­
pansion He said the firm has
requested the poet to construct a
building with 20.000 square feet of
space for Us expanded operation.
Farmilrx currently employs 10.
When the new fsdltty is constructed U
will employ 33 persons, Dolgner said.

Prw n t Pay Scale P r o fit e d

TO D A Y

School Workers Air Gripes

School Bus Schodulos,
Pago 2B— 3B
2A
Artioa Reports
4A
Around The Clock
IB
Bridge
3B
IB
Calendar
7B
....... 4B7B
Classified Ads
«4B
Comics
. U
4U
IB
..............IB
Dear Akty
IA
. . . 2A
Deaths
4A
Editorial ............. ...........4A

.

Florida
Hospital
Nation

Ourselves
People . . .
Sports
Television
Weather .
W«W

.. 3A
IB
... JA
.. JA
.. IB
...... IA
IA-7A
... 5B
U
...... IA

Somlnolo Broncos ready 4 ^ o lltllo
Loaguo World Sorias, tho tforSd ghros
on account ol tholr anticipation In
Friday's LEISURE magaslno.
As

.— ** ft* W

Zoning Com m issioners

Asking "Is this fair?"--------------------of the Non-Instructional Personnel Union
of Seminole County cam* to air Ihrir
grievances over both salaries and toe
reopening of negotiations at Weikwsday
night's school board meeting.
Calling the present pay scale a "gross
injustice” union negotiator Bill Moore
called far mare equal treatment of
N1PSCO I-"*™ members. The school
board had offered s 8.49 percent salary
increase. However, the union la asking
for M percent Negotiations broke down
■fltr union members refused • new
contract.
•
"la It lair (hat aa elementary school
principal with six y e a n experience will,
in 1983-82, have his salary increased 18

^ ( ^ ■ 4 » -&lt;e.a

percent’ ” Moore askad. "And is It fair
that a cafeteria manager with six yean
experience in 1981-82 will have a salary
increase of nine percent?"
Moore w u referring to an analyds
done by the Sem inole Education
Association, of which ha Is executive
director, that lists toe salaries of ad­
ministrative and N1PSCO workers. The
II percent salary htka for tor grade
school principal win mean (4473 more
per year. The cafeteria manager would
abo receive the 8.49 percent raise, (873
more per year. Moore calls this "unfair
treatment."
Superintendent
Robert Haghes
responded to Moore’s sOegstkm by
Hying that "everyone knows" 148

percent of (38J08 n more than (.49
percent of (10.IW.
Moore also triad to encourage board
members to negotiate with NIPSGO on
the wane of retroactive pay. Moore said
they (NIPSOO) have been penalized
because toe union did not immediately
accept the board's contract offer. An
impasse was declared recently. The
board Wetoieedey approved Ihe "A" base
t-iwrfnto (or county school system em ­
ployees, dedaring administrators pay
retroactive to July L Aa increase in
salary lor NIPSCO workers will not be
retroactive to July 1.

The salary schedule dbpute effects
— BARBARA KEARN

'

to**

To Consider Site Plans
The Sanford Planning and Zoning ConuniHion at a 7:30
p m. meeting today will consider site plana far a produce
market snd greenhouse and lor four office buildings to be
constructed off U S . 17-82.
John Carii will ask the commission to approve a site plan
for a produce market and 439squarofoot greenhouse ad­
dition and a refrigeration unit In the rear of the fanner
Wuv's restaurant, east of U 5 . 17-92.
Beer, wine, soft drinks, milk, eggs, plants and produce
will be sold through a drive-in window at the office, ac­
cording to Carii’s plan. The greenhouse addition to to be
constructed on the front of the building.
The cotninuuun will also ernsider a sits plan from
American Development and Land Inc. (or lour additional
&gt;«ii»4tn(« on the mint-warehouse property at 2803 Orlando
Drive (U.S. 17-82).
Already located In the complex arc 132 mini-warehouses
built by American Development and Land Inc. — DONNA
ESTES

M

l

«P

-

�1 A — E y w i a y H f i W . S a n fo rd , H .

I h u r iD a y . A u g . J J , t i l l

Motel Murder Case Has Ironic Twist

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
U.5., Libya Swap Charges
Over A erial Dog-Fight
U nited Pre»» Inlrrnational
The Reagan administration says the attack by two
lib y a n planes on a pair o l Navy Jet* was not entirely.
unexpected, but Insists it was unprovoked and that U S
pilots were justified tn blasting the U byans out o( the
sky.
In what became a war ol words alter Wednesday's
dogfight over disputed Mediterranean waters, Libya
accused the U nited States ol invading its a ir space like
a gun-fighting "cow boy" and "endangering world
peace."

By BRITT SM ITH
Herald SUM W riter
Jam es C . Bullock, the lt-year-old man fa ta lly shot in a Fem
Park m otel last winter, might be alive today bad the teenage
boy identified as the triggerman gone home on that fateful
night when he wanted.
Homer le e Poole, 17, of Altamonte Springs, testified in
Circuit Court-Sanford today that he thought about leaving the
Oak Ridge M otel where Bullock was shot only minutes prior to
ihe shooting.
Why he did n't rem ains a mystery. Neither Assistant State
Attorney A lan Robinson nor Irvin Gussow — defense lawyer
for Colum bus "Sonny Boy” Edw ards who is charged with
m urder In connection with Bullock’s death — asked Poole why
he didn't follow his inclination to go home.
Regardless, Poole stayed and Bullock was shot. Homer and
his younger brother Jackie le e Poole, IS, ended up pleading
gudty to m urder charges last month, and E dw ards is standing
tria l for his life.
Edw ards, 32, ol 868 Darwin Court, Altam onte Springs, is
accused of the Feb. 7 shooting death of B ullo ck in what was
then E dw ards’ room at the Oak Ridge M o te l If convicted, he

AREA DEATHS
member
of
St.
M a ry
EMM A M ATTH EW S
Mrs. Em m a Matthews, 79, Magdalen Catholic Church ol
of 602
E lls w o r t h
S i., Altam onte S p rin g s and •
Altam onte S p rin g s , died homemaker.
Tuesday at F lo rid a llospitalSurvivors include two sons,
Orlando.
Eugene l-apura of Atlanta,
Mrs. Matthews was bom Ga., C h a rle s It. Udo, of
Sept. 27, 1901 u l Asheville, Cocoa; six daughters, Mrs.
N.C., and moved to Altamonte B arb ara H o lw lc k , Chevy
Springs from P o rtsm o u th , Chase. M d ., M rs . Shirle y
Vs.. in I960.
Worden and M rs
Audrey
She was a retired school Hughes, both of luike Tahoe,
; dietitian and a m em ber of the Nev., M rs. C a ro l Dimouro,
Colllngswood F re e w ill Baptist Waldorf, Md., M rs. Victoria
Church of Portsm outh, Va. Kurek. Altam onte Springs,
Mrs. Antoinette Dickinson,
Survivors in c lu d e three
11 grand­
sons,Luther II. J r ., Charlotte, C a tie lb e r ry ;
N.C., Jim m y and M att, both children.
j of Chesapeake, V a ,; two
Senior an Fu n e ra l Home,
daughters, M rs. M artha A.
Altamonte Springs, In charge
L u ll, A lta m o n te S p rin g s, ol arrangements.
. M n . Betty Sullivan, WoodFR A N K a S lt lL E A B E E R
bridge, Va.; three sisters,
Mr. Fra nk S. ShJIlabeer, 13,
, Mrs. Elolse G rim e s and Mrs. of &lt;30 E . Packwood Ave.,
Kathleen G ilm e r , both of Maitland, died Tuesday.
Portsm outh,
V a .,
Mr&gt;.
Mr. Shlltabeer was bom in
• Pauline Green, Asheville; II Indianapolis, Ind., and moved
grandchildren, fo u r g re a t­ to Maitland from Syracuse,
grandchildren.
N Y , in I9&lt;1. He was a m ilk­
Baldwin-Falrchtld Funeral man, i Baptist and member
; Home, Altamonte Springs, in o| the Redmans Club of
charge of arrangements.
Syracuse.
Survivors include his wife,
M R &amp; M A R Y J. H AN ES
Mrs. Mary' J- Hanes, 58, of Inis, K. Shtllabeer; sisters,
1656 Peruvian lam e. Winter Mrs. Beatrice Muhl, Miss
Park, died Tuesday at home. l/rolse Shtllabeer, both of
Mrs. Hanes was born M arch Syracuse; M rs . D orothea
1, 1923 at Allegheny, Va., and Doubleday, M anlius, N.Y.
moved to Winter P a rk in 1963.
Woodlawn F u n e ra l Home In
She was a Itomc m aker and Orlando Is In charge ol
t a member M the First United arrangements.
1 Methodist C h u rc h , W in te r
M R S . I . K I A B . B t . V T k lE
j P a rt
Mrs. le la B. Illy the, 71, of
j
Survivor i in c lu d e
her 111 Summerlin Ave., Sanford,
sister, Mrs Betty Volker, M l. died Wednesday at Seminole
Vernon, Wash.; two brothers, Memorial H ospital following
Jam es
E.
Hughes, a short illness.
, Forestriville, M d., Harold, R.
Mrs. Blythe was bom In Mt.
Hughes, Daytona, Beach;
Airy, N.C., June 13. 1906 and
Cox-I'arker Fune ra l Home, moved to Sanlord In 1916 from
Winter Park, In charge of Charleston, S.C.
arrangements.
She was a Baptist and a
AMANDA S U E B Y R D
Infant Amanda Sue B yrd , of
M3 Country C lu b C ir c le ,
Sanford,
d ie d
Tuesday
following birth at Seminole
1 Memorial Hospital.
Survivora in c lu d e
her
parents, Mr, and M rs. Je rry
ByTd, Sanford; brother Je rry
Shane Byrd; grandparents,
Mr. snd Mrs. Kenneth lly r d of
Sanford; and M r. and Mrs.
John Ritchie, Geneva; greatgrandpartnla, M r. and Mrs.
G. D. Byrd, Ulackshenr. Qa.;
' Mrs. Nancy K irkla n d , Abun,
Ga.; and Mr. and M rs. Roy
Hall, Jacksonville
Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, i t in c h a rg e of
1 arrangements.
MRS. J E A N N E T T E F .U D O
Mrs. Jeannette F . Udo, 62,
of 301 Colonnades Cove,
Casselberry, died Tuesday at
Arlington, Va., while vislling
; relatives.
Mra. Udo was born Ju ly 6,
1919 al B a lt lm ,* , Md., and
moved to Casselberry in 1976
from Alexandria, Va.
She was Catholic and a

member of a variety of civic
organizations.
S u rv iv o rs in c lu d e
her
husband, Jam es M. Blythe of
Sanford; one son, Jam es L
Blythe of la k e M ary; tlx
sisters, and one brother; lour
g ra n d ch '.Jre n ; one g re at­
grandchild.
M ra. B ly th e 's husband,
James, Is a longtim e Sanford
businessman and owner of
Seminole C o in C e n te r in
downtown Sanford.
B ris io n F u n e ra l Home,
Sanlord, is in c h a rg e of
arrangements.
MIL M ILT O N C. C A R M A N
Mr. M ilton C . C am ian, 61,
ol 1106 Tim b crlane T rail,
Casselberry, died Wednesday
al
F lo r id a
H ospitalAltamonte, following a short
illness.
Mr. Carm an was born July
9,1117 atCanaxtota, N .Y., and
moved to Caaaelberry from
Chittenango, N .Y ., in 1972.
He was a m aster toolmaker
with Slromberg-Carlson.
Survivors include hti wife,
Alice G.; three sons, Kenneth,

Chittenango, Daniel, Tampa,
and F r a n c is , B ridg ep ort,
N.Y.; seven grandchildren;
one great-grandchild.
Semoran Funeral Home,
A ltam o n te S p rin g s , Is In
charge of arrangements.
M R.
THOM AS
LERO Y
WILSON
M r. Thom as Ijeroy Wilson,
39, ol 113 Sheridan Ave.,
I/mg wood, died Tuesday at
home.
Mr. Wilson was born April
29. 1922 at Greensboro, Pa.,
and moved to Longwootl from
Euclid, Ohio In 1972. He was
an insurance agent and a
member of 'the Church of
A n n u n cia tio n and Moose
l/slge 766 of Orlando.
Survivors include his wile,
L illia n ; son, D ouglas of
l/&gt;ngwoud; brother. Merle,
Mentor, Ohio; sister, Leila
Palter, Rices Lunding, Pa.
B aldw in-Falrchild Funeral
Home, Altam onte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangements.
M RS.
IIA L U E
M AE
W EAKLEY
Mrs. H allle Mae Weakley,
17. of 1317 Clemaon Drive,
Altamonte Springs, died this
morning I Thursday) a l home
M rs. Weakley was bom
Aug. 24, 1891 at West Virginia
and m oved to Altam onte
Springs in 1978 from Cum­
berland, Md. She was a
Methodise.
Survivors Include two sons,
Charles M. of Indiana polls,
Ind , C a rl V., Frederick, Md.;
two daughters, Mrs. Mildred
Freeman, Altam onte Springs,
Mra. G e r a ld in e
S tatler,
U m a r , Colo.; one sister, Mrs.
E a rl Skidm ore, Columbus,
Ohio; seven grandchildren

and
seven
g re at­
grandchildren.
Semoran Funeral Home,
A lta m o n te S p rin g s, la in
charge of arrangements.

Action Reports
* Fire s
it C o u rlt
w Police
could be sent to the electric chair. The Poole brothers are
aw aiting sentencing.
The bulk of the older Poole’s testimony came Wednesday
afternoon when he described a night of drinking, m arijuana
sm oking, and senseless beatings which finally ended with
Bullock, on his knees in a corner of the motel room, being shot
once in the head w ilh Edw ards' 23-caliber plsloL
Hom er's version of the Incident was almost a carbon copy of
the story told earlier by his brother.
Homer Poole said he, Ills brother, and Edwards had been
drinking beer, gin, and rum for at least two hours prior to
B u llo ck's a rriv a l at Edw ards' motel room. "We weren’t drunk,
but we were getting high,” he said.
They got even higher later when they smoked some
m arijuana. While partying, Poole said, Bullock looked nervous
anti at one point pleaded with Homer, "D on't let them do it to
me. Don’t let them do it."
" t didn't know what he was talking about and told him to be
cool," Poole said.
But Bullock apparently "lost his coo!” and later made a
move as if to hit Homer Poole. Poole said he began to punch
Bullock, a melee Jackie and Edw ards also Joined.
Another fight erupted minutes later with Homer Poole
strikin g Bullock in the head with an aerosol spray can. During
the scuffle, Poole said Edw ards began punching Bullock In the
head and yelling, "Why you lie to me? Why didn’t you do what

MR. L IN Z Y G IL B E R T
M r. L im y Gilbert, 80. of
1011 I/roust Ave., Sanford,
died Monday at Seminole
M em orial Hospital.
M r. G ilb e rt was born Dec.
12, 1901 at Bartlesville, Ga.,
and was a longtime Sanlord
resident.
S u rv iv o rs Include sons,
Thomas B. Gilbert, Apopka.
W ASHINGTON I U P !) - The second
A lvin H all, Tacoma, Wash ;
quarter of the year lived up to the
daughters, M rs. Dossle L
p e s s im is tic expectations o l m ost
Jam es of Ortando, and Mrs.
economists, but analysts still don't know
Ernestine G . Hogan of San­
if It set the stage for a recession
ford; grandchildren, Mr. and
In its latest measurement of the
M rs. Jessie M artin of Sanford
nation's gross national product — the
and 12 other grandchildren;
value of a ll goods and services produced
num erous
nieces
and
— the Commerce Department reported
nephews.
the G N P dropped 2.1 percent from A p ril
W lls o n - E ic h e lb c r g e r
through June. It was substantially more
M o rtu a ry , San ford, is in
deterioration than the 1.9 percent decline
charge of arrangements
first reported.
But senior Commerce Department
Funeral Notices
economist Theodore Tor da commented,
" I t 's too early to aay whether w e'll have
G IL B E R T , M R
L IN Z Y F iln t f * ) k t v i c m lo r M r. L ln t y
a plus or m inus G N P " in Ihe current July

GNP Drops More Than Expected

GUDert. ML o l 1011 I t X lA I A y r .
L o n lo n t. W v a&lt;ta M onday w ill
ho S a tu rd ay a l I t a m
at St.
LU St
M is s io n a r y
B a p tis t
C h u r c h . S a n lo r d . w ith S t v
R o o s t v t ll G r t t n , pastor, ot
M c la llrs o
B u r ia l m ill b a 'f n
R t s lla w n C a m a t t ry . L in fo rd
W ilson E it h t lh t f o » r M ortu a ry,
t i l * P in a A v a , Sanford, is Its
c it a t t it o l or r a n p tm tn ls

OLVSM6, MRS. L O LA 'S .

—

lu n t r a l s t r y i c t s t o r M r s ir r a B
B ly th r. I t . o t III Sw m m trlm
A r t , S a n fo rd , w ho d ltd W td
n tsd a y . w ill O t t l II 10 t m
F r t d a r a l B r is s o n F u n t r a l
M o n t . M S L a u r t l A * t , Sanlord.
« tn f l t v A A A lm a n d . r ttira d .
o t t k lil m q
B u r ia t w ill b t &lt;n
E y t r g i t r n C t m r t t f y . Sanford
B risso n F v n a r a l Homo. P A..
S a n lo r d .
Is in c h a r y a o l
a rr a n g t m t n t s

through September quarter. "1 think it
w ill be very close," he added.
At least two back-to-back quarterly
declines in gross national product are
necessary for an economic downturn to
be categorized as a recession. "M any of
the weaknesses that were In train during
Ihe second quarter w ill sp ill over into the
third quarter," Torda said.

dealers have more than a three-momf.
supply. The backlog is almost as g ri a: &gt;&gt;
that Just prior lo last year’s n ee
i
"T h a t's why they are in the p r es i
now of cutting back production” t.-v s j
levels necessary t v a change in uicdeJ
year, he said.

The biggest weakness apparently is a
large oversupply of autos, followed by
the slumping construction industry. The
strongest element continues to be con­
sumers' willingness to spend.

The second quarter did see th4
autom akers post their first profits in
almost two years. But " it ’s s mewhat ol
an a rtific ia l number,” Torda said;
because among the cart automaker^
counted as sold were those sold t j
dealers.

The automakers overproduced In the
Second quarter, Torda said, and now

With dealers unable to handle further
deliveries, factories arc cutting k ic k ;

1100 S. FRENCH AV. SANFORD

AUGUST
IT'S DUAL-PURPOSE MONTH AT STERCHI'S...
EVERY SOFA/SLEEPER IN STOCK REDUCED!

7 huz\/a£wL
HARDWARE ST O R E S!^

BARGAIN
O F THE M ONTH
QUANTITIES LIMITED

SRARTUS
A. Z -P C . S E C T IO N A L S O FA /S LE E P E R
WITH Q U EEN SIZE M A T T R E S S
B y day A s ■ b tn d a o m s s a c u o n a l s a lt , and «t mgr* b a e w ra -o a
tag quean u i a s i n g e r F « « u m todso pifioift b a ck
m *S c u s ls o n s m d b o ts ta r s Covsrw d r ( o f r m i v e s trip e
H s r t U o n K t t h e co n ta rn to re ry b iy ot to * y , „ r '

a. SAVE t l outfit size c o l o n i a l
■or ajs m pi rp•.-*)t,ui

A R E A H E A D IN G S l&gt; a.m.); temperature; 80; overnight
low; 73; Wednesday’s high: 10; barometric pressure: 29 ft;
relative hum idity: M percent; winds; west southwest at 7
. mph.
FR ID A Y 'S T ID E S : D A Y TO N A BEACH : highs. 12 :« a m.,
12:23 p.m.; lows, (LM a .rn ., 7:29 p.m.; PO R T C A N A V E R A L :
hlght, 13:41 a m ., 1:17 p.m.; lows, 8:33 a.m., 7:20 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 5:61 a.m., 6:39 p in.; lows, 12:34 a m. p.m.
A R E A F O R E C A S T : Variable cloudiness through Friday
with showers and thundentorms, most likely during the af­
ternoon and evenings. Highs today upper 80s and F rid a y near
10. Lows tn the 70s. Wind west or southwest 10 to 13 mph but
strong and gusty near thunderstorms. R ain probability 70
percent today, 20 percent tonight and 60 percent Friday.

•pact roui s m &lt;
ir&gt;&lt;»*x/ui
•utA/tMpar Ccrmrod n long w n y IOQ%

Ntton *AIii4/ic&gt;iUf*)*inca u p m i n i
. usekr m

ELECTRONIC
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Sparius Comat n L E D . atsim clock laaturas latgs, aaryto
read digital display 24 hour alarm sstting can ba rasat
inatantly lor nasi day—or daiayad with "Snoortr" lor
an antra nine minulat sleep Also features convenient
controls end power interruption indicator Sleek rose
wood-look hnuh with brushed aluminum trim
1172C4

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size

TRADITIONAL ■ O F A m if P I R RV
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RAILROAD CROSS TIES $ 9 «
QUANTITIES LIMITED

IUSM MI-MI

VmVdm,

Thursday, August 70. I H I —Vol. 73. No. I l l

HI

OPEN 9 TO 5:30
W0N.-SAT.

FREE DELIVERY WITHIN 100 MILES!

Buy on Starchi'e Credit
with e Personal Touch!

FsMHBai Daily and Sunday, I K t r l Saturday l| Tkt laniard
Hk :M. lat , MSN. Franc* Art .laniard Fla H ill.

3227953

Sacand Class Fdtlasa Fat# al lansar*. Sianda HIM
Hama Dali&lt;ary: Wtak. I I M i Maal*. u . t t i * Manias. l i t M i
Tyar, I li a
l y Mall: waa* l l t l i Mania. It l l r I Manias.
s m M i vaar. m i «a___________________________________

' w- A

C A S S E L B E R R Y H O M E S B U R G L A R IZ E D
Approximately 11,000 in merchandise was stolen at t
Casselberry residence Saturday at 2:30 p.m. fuick of p r;
m arks indicate the suspect entered through the slidim gl i
door, police said.
The victim , Cynthia Glassford of 796 Sandpiper U r ,
Casselberry, reported a m issing driver's license, a rat gl j
set and pitcher valued at 6200, a 6600 television set, and a f. j
A M -F M eight-track stereo w ilh speakers
A burglary at 17 Plaza O val, Casselberry, occurred S alu rtk
with 6330 In traveler's checks, 6300 in cash and an unknou ,|
amount of change stolen. V ictim s Gertrude Christen.'* n, ,
owner of the house and Joan Gibcrson, 601 Highway 17-02, Fern
Park, entered the home and found her rear sliding gla
broken. The drawers in every room were open.

Stage For Recession Set?

WEATHER

E v r n tn g Ik iu ld

you say?"
Poole said he wasn't sure, but he thought Edw ards w aj
referring to promises Bullock had made lo get Edw ards a c j
a Job and an apartment.
A s he started to leave the room , Poole said he told E dw ard j
to give him his gun. During the exchange, the gun went o fi ant
Bullock slumped to the floor, a single bullet hole tn hi
forehead.
Poole said he didn’t rem em ber pulling the trigger. I Jus
heard a POWI, saw the gun in m y hand, and Jim laying on the
floor." Poole, who had twice e a rlie r placed the gun to Bullock':!
forehead, said he thought the pistol wasn’ t loaded.
At Edwards' suggestion, the police weren’t called until Uni
gun, a box of ammunition, some Jewelry, clothing, and bedr
sheets which had betn stained by Bullock's blood during this
beatings, were hidden, Poole said.
Poole later led police to the damning evidence
Robert Kopec, a forensic scientist with the Seminole Count}
sheriff’s office, testified today that blood on the recover^
item s matched Bullock's blood type.

i'A

••►
.«# g • %

, l. - . V

TV**' -*T*-

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Thursday, Aug. )t, m i - J A

NATION

girls’qeai; 20% o

IN BRIEF

Gear her up in plaid shirts and fashion jeans, a country western show!
sale 6.40

Heart Attack Risk Greater
For Longtime 'Pill' Users

12A. Reg $8. Long-sleeve sh u t in
assorted yarn-dyed plaids o l p o ly ­
ester cotton Guts s ire s 7 to i4
Snort sleeve style. Reg 7 50 Sale $6

BOSTON i U P II — Women who use oral con­
traceptives lo r more than 10 years run a far higher risk
o{ heart attack than other women — even alter they’ve
stopped taking the pill, m edical researchers said
today. m
The new study - the first of Its kind - found that
women who used birth control p ills for more than 10
years, then stopped, were two to three times more
likely to suffer heart attack than non-pill users.
The Food and Drug Adm inistration immediately
announced It would examine the study to determine
whether changes should be made in federal labeling
regulations on birth control pills, used by up to 8
m illio n Am erican women and as m any as 50 million
women worldwide.
The research was conducted by Boston University
and H arva rd School of Public Health and the
U niversity of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and
published in live New England Journal of Medicine.
The study showed the highest ris k of heart attack
among past users was found in women between the
ages 45 and 49. For past p ill users, 40 to 49, the
likelihood of heart attack increased with duration of
p ill use.

Feds To Appeal Court Order
AT1.AN TA (U P I) — The Justice Department says
there may be “ a number of crim in a ls" among die M l
Cuban refugees a federal Judge ordered released from
the A tlanta penitentiary and intends to appeal the
ruling.

sale 1Z80
12B. Reg. $18. Body L in g o ’* The
le a n s that speak her lan g u ag e ' Five
p ocket western style w ith straight leg
Rivet trim Choose navy cotton
denim ? or poly/cotton tw ills in great
c o lo rs Both sporting the B o d y
Lingo'* logo Girls' s u e s 7 lo 14

sale 5.60
12C Reg $7 L illie g irls yarn-dyed
poly/cotton plaid shirt in c h o ice ot c o l­
lar styles Shorl sleeves S ire s 4 to 6«

sale 9.60
12D. Reg $12. These great little
w esterns come with their ow n b e ll1
Straighi-leg pants with contrast tops lilc h in g B rushedcotton/polydenim
Navy Sire s 4 to 6&lt;

sale 95c
12E. Reg. 1.19. K itle n -so fl knee
high s ol Orion* a c rylic/S lre lch
nylon, spun nylon Frosted c o lo rs

sale 8T
12F. Reg 109. C o lo rlu l c a b le knee
h ig h s ol Orion* acrylic/stre tch nylon

sale 3 for 3.43
12Q. Reg. 1 lor 4 29. Sleeveless
vest or panty In pretty rosebud
print Polyester and com b ed
cotton For guts' sire s 4 to 14

U S. D istrict Court Judge Marv in Shoob Wednesday
tem porarily barred the government from deporting
any of the refugees until another hearing is held Aug.
28.
An attorney for the refugees said he was confident
the firs t contingent of 50 to 90 refugees would be freed
as planned Friday despite the government's ob­
jections.
Hours after Shoob issued his order. Justice Deport­
ment spokesman A rt B rill said from Washington,
"W e re going to appeal the court order. We feel there
could be a number of crim inals In that group."
Government attorneys in Atlanta could not be
re a die d for comment Wednesday night, but offldals
said they expected the request for a delay In the
release to be filed with the 5th U.S. C ircu it Court of
Appeals today,

Pilots Urge 'Compassion'
W ASH ING TON ( U P I I - While the A ir lin e Pilots
Association is urging President Keagan to show mercy
for strikin g a ir traffic controllers, the government is
im plementing guidelines that severely restrict their
rehiring.
D eclaring the skies unquestionably safe for air
travel, J.J. O'Donnell, president of the J3,000-member
com m ercial pilots' union, pleaded Wednesday f ir
Heagan to resolve the bitter labor dispute with
“ com passion" for the 12,000 fired controllers.
“ I don't think anybody disputes the fact (lie strike is
ille g a l," O'Donnell said. "B ut I would hope President
Reagan could find compassion to respond to the needs
of a great m ajority of controllers who are fam ily men
... to try to take those steps to get the system going
again."
Speaking at a news conference, he added, "I can say
without equivocation the a ir tra ffic control system in
ttys country' is safe."

sale 7.20
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sale 8.99
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sale 8.80
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c o llo n or poly/cotton in d ig o -d y ed
denim S ires 4 to 7. reg ular and slim
S ire s 8 lo 16. regular and slim ,
Reg 13 50 Sale 10.80

CORE Chairman Arrested
N E W Y O R K (U PI) — Roy Im iis, chairm an of the
Congress of R acial Equality, was held without ball
today in the beating of a suspected thief in Harlem an action that would have m erited him a medal if he
were head of a white organization, one C O R E official

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said.
Innis, 46, was arrested Wednesday and charged with
assault for his part in the beating of a man who
allegedly tried to steal a radio from a c a r on a Harlem
stree t

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W hile Boys' 2 lo 7
B o ys' su es 8 lo 20.
Reg 3 lor 4 99 Sale 3 lo r 3.99

Police said they are looking for four or five other
men who may have taken part in the alleged beating
In a late-night court session in Manhattan Criminal
Court, Innes' arraignment was postponed until today
because Judge Jerome Horn Mass said authorities had
not given him legal papers in the case.

HOSPITAL NOTES
S t n i M l t M t m t m l H # i*u *i
*»•«&lt;• It
A D M IS S IO N S
SAN FO RD
i n * B Bi*«ha
Neurton H B a llin g **
• W h it le y 0 * n t
C h a r m W Kean**
L o u e 'i* Se*gr«*»»
W illia m T a ll*
E rn e s t C 0»**v D e B t r r
E m ily C e r a M ille r , D * B * ry
F r e e M C a n t . D elian*
D a n iil A C o « n * n d . D eltona

D o re th y M Skates. Delten*
V e n i l t f i o N M I M *itm «n l e t *

Monroe
o is c m a r o e s

SAN FO RO
R e y n a ld o N M I B e n o n d e t
T illm a n l G re e n
W illa r d S e t t w n t
A d e n * A v a n P o lle n
S u san D W olkan
E la m * ja n o t. D e B a ry
J a m e s N B o n e r i l l . D e licn e
P e a r l B E rn e s t. O e iia n a
R o b e rt A l* it o n . M u t e ill*

ROBERT L. BEVIER, M.D.

Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of His
LAKE MARY OFFICE
For FAMILY PRACTICE

SANFORD PLAZA

By Appointm ent O n ly

Lake Mery 321-OOW Altamonte SJ4-3093

OPEN 10i m Ip m
MON. THRU SAT.

1S»N. COUNTRY C L U B ROAD
ACROSS FROM T H E NEW

e«f|i j C

C

m

OPEN SUNDAY
12:30 TO 5:30

‘

L A K E M A R Y C IT Y H A L L

&lt;»

, •* **-\, f , « * * » « -

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�Evening Herald

Rem em ber when you could order a "Genuine
Tennessee Coon Dog" through the m ail?
F ra n k ly , 1 don't. But a baliff at the Seminole
County Courthouse (he's bashful and didn't want
me to use his name | does. He explained how once
upon a time magazines like Field and Stream
c a r rie d ad v e rtise m e n ts o ffe rin g "G e n u in e
Tennessee Coon Dogs" for sale.
And these dogs, should you order one, were
guaranteed not to rip, ravel, run down at the
heels, o r suffer from several other m aladies
common to the canine personality.
And. like most guarantees, this one was
practically useless. The only thing the dogs were
really guaranteed to do was tree coons.

(U tP i Ml IN)
300 N. F R E N C H A V E ..S A N F O R D . F L A . 3T71
Area Code J0W22-2611 of 631 -9993
T h u rs d a y , A ugust 10, 1981— SA
Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation D irector
Home Delivery: Week, t l 00; Month, 84 23; 6 Months, 124 00;
Y ea r, 815 (10 By M ail: Week, 11.8; Month, 13.8; 6 Months,
830.00; Year. 87.00.

Just Another
Failed Experiment
The Reagan administration just passed the
litmus test of its commitment to letting a free
market solve the nation’s energy problems:
Deputy Energy Secretary W. Kenneth Davis
has informed Congress that the administration
doesn’t want the authority to allocate gasoline in
the event of a future shortage.
It is, of course, almost unheard of for the
executive branch to surrender voluntarily powers
conferred upon it by Congress.
But then, we already know the Reagan ad­
ministration resembles no other in recent
memory. Mr. Davis' remarkable testimony is
one more measure of just how different these
Reqganites arc.
Congress reacted to the first Arab oil embargo
in 1073 by giving the executive branch the power
to aTlocatc the nation's supply of gasoline.
Concurrently, Congress opposed any move to
lift gasoline price controls, an act that would have
stimulated domestic petroleum production and, in
time, ended the shortage.
In other words, the federal government opted to
ration the scarcity rather than eliminate it.
Bad as that policy was, it was made even worse
by Washington’s subsequent bungling.
It is a matter of record that the gasoline shor­
tages of 1978 and 1979 were greatly exacerbated
by the Energy Department’s grossly inept efforts
to ration gasoline to states and regions based on
outdated census figures.
Thus the upper Midwest was awash in gasoline
even as huge lines formed at filling stations in
Southern California.
Mr. Reagan's policy is to dispense with the need
for rationing by decontrolling domestic oil prices
and those for gasoline as well.
Hint will not only Increase domestic oil and
gasoline production, but also diminish depen­
dence on foreign suppliers who might impose
another embargo.
Should a future gasoline shortage nevertheless
develop, ihi^udnunislrutioii favors letting a selfa d j iu lin t t t r e e m a r k e t a llo c a t e n c u r c c g a s o lin e b y

price and demand.
I The dismal record of most government
rationing efforts makes a compelling case for the
Reagan administration’s policy of relying on the
day-to-day efficiency of the marketplace.
In the event of a catastrophic shortage—one
caused by war, for exam ple-the executive
branch has ample emergency powers to allocate
scarce resources of all kinds, including oil and
gasoline.
The 1973 allocation legislation Is due to expire
Sept. 30. Inasmuch as the Reagan administration
doesn’t want it renewed and wouldn't use it if it
were, Congress ought to write an end to this failed
experiment by letting the allocation authority die
an unlamented death.

Step Toward Peace
Recognition of Israel's right to exist behind
secure borders is a necessary first step on the
road to peace in the Mideast.
So we welcome the statement by Saudi Arabia's
Crown Prince Fahd guaranteeing the right of all
states in the area to live in peace" under certain
conditions.
The conditions set forth in the crown prince’s
eight-point program include establishment of an
independent Palestinian state with the Arab
sector of Jerusalem as its capital, recognition of
the right of 2 million Palestinian refugees to
repatriation and compensation for those who do
not wish to return, and a U.N. trusteeship over the
West Bank of llie Jordon River and the Gaza strip
during a transition period.
These conditions are presently unacceptable to
Israel. But for the Saudis to say for the first time
that they are willing to recognize the Jewish state
is a step forward.

B ER R Y S WORLD

"Mind you, I don't *A# the way our todety
tarutt to quantify and rank avarythlng. But I
agnte — inert IS a 10."

V.

J* - * —ai «

\

C lO ^
By BRITTSMITH

Should an or defer be unlucky enough to
receive a dog that would not tree coons, the seller
— when confronted with a demand for a refund
— would sim ply say, "That dog Is a genuine,
bona fled, bark-your-ears-off Tennessee Coon
Dog. He w ill certainly tree Tennessee coons. It is
Just unfortunate that there aren't any Tennessee
coons in your hunting area."
Anyw ay, according to my baliff friend, a fells
here In Seminole County bought one of these
genuine Tennessee coon dogs m any years ago
and commenced to sic him on coons.

This dog w as not picky. Boy, would he tree
coons. . . any coon. If there was a coon in the
woods, It did n't m atter if it was (torn Tennessee
or Seminole County, that dog would tree him .
Soon, that dog earned a reputation as the best
dang coon dog In central Florida. Then tragedy
struck. Somebody snatched him.
But soon after the dog vanished he reappeared
The owner d id n 't tell anyone where the dog had
been or how he got h im back. It was a m ystery he
took to h is grave.
The m an’s son was in the receiving line at the
mortuary when up w alks this fella he had never
seen before. The stranger came over, shook
hands, and paid his respects.
The son, s till not realizing who the man was,
muttered something about not knowing the man
was a friend of his father's.
The m an sm iled and replied, "W ell, we
weren't exactly friends. But 1 respected him .
your father was the only man in Seminole County
to ever w hip m e."
The son's Jaw dropped. "W hy?" he stam ­
mered.
"I whitewashed h is dog," the visitor said with
a grin. "B u t this isn't the time or place to te ll you
about It. Come over to my house mmetime and
I ’ll give you the whole story."

It wasn't long afterw ards that the son gave in
to his curiosity and drove over to see the fella.
• Remember y o u r daddy’s genuine Tennessee
coon dog?" the m an asked. "Remem ber when he
disappeared? W ell, 1 stole him . He was the best
coon dog in the are a and I just had to have him . I
knew I couldn't Just keep him without trying to
hide him or your father would find him. So, 1
whitewashed him.
"One day, your father cam e looking for him .
But not expecting to see a white dog. he didn't
recognize him ," the m an explained.
"1 was real cocky, figured I had gotten aw ay
with it, so 1 told your father that since somebody
had stolen his dog, he was welcome to go hunting
with me and we'd use m y dogs."
So they did. T here was only one problem.
During the hunt, it started to rain.
"When my dog treed a coon," the man went on
with his tale, " it tam ed out to be his dog. The
rain had washed m ost of the whitewash off and
your father recognized his dog.
"We fought a ll over those woods and your
father whipped m e fa ir and square. He was the
only man to whip m e in years," the man said,
"and he never told anybody I stole his dog.
"That's why I felt I should pay my respects
when he died."

ROBERT WAITERS

DON GRAFF

Gambling
Atlantic
City Style
AT1JINTIC C IT Y , N.J. Financially
stripped d U e i and states from New Y o rk to
California have become intrigued bhrecent
y e a n with the concept of Introducing casino
gambling as a potential panacea for I V tr
fiscal woes.
But this c ity ’s recent ezperiment with
governm ent-sanctioned casino be ttin g
suggests, notwithstanding (he claim s ad­
vanced by its most zealous advocates, that It
offers Utile promise of providing an Instant
financial benanza.
On the other hand, legalized gambling la not
Ukely to fu lfill Ihr worst fears of Its most
strident critics. Indeed, the risky venture
here holds the potential for long-range suc­
cess If a num ber of short-term difficulties —
some of them severe — can be surmounted.
Moat current analyses of gambling's im ­
pact on this once fashionable but now
decaying seaside community tend lo stress
the casino's failure to Immediately generate
adequate revenues to promptly resolve a ll of
the city's assorted problems.
One m a jo r new spaper, for e ia m p le ,
recently reported that "much of Atlantic C ity
re m ain s an u rb an w astela nd"
and

prematurely concluded that "this dilapidated
resort town m ay never reaUze the renewal...
(it) hoped gam bling would spawn."
The city does continue to display m any of
the symptoms of advanced urban blight —
they are the product of years of economic
decline that proceded the November 1171
state-wide referendum that authorized casino
gambling here.
The first casino did not open for business
until May 1978 — only three year* and three
months ago. W ith eight casinos now operating
and a ninth soon to open, the city Is in the
initial phase of what could well be an Impresaivt economic revival.
Item: Atlantic C ity was host to ap­
proximately If m illion tourists last year,
compared w ith 115 million visitors to la u
Vegas bi I960. Although this city counted only
1 m illion annual visitors as recently as 1971,
the number is expected to exceed 11.8 m illion
this year.
Rem: Although the dty'a population la a
relatively modest 40,100, at least 30,000 new
Jobs have been created by the catinoa already
in operation and that figure doesn't include
indirect employment opportunities.
Item: Wages paid lo employees of the city 's
hospitality Industry have soared from 113
million in 1978 lo more than 8300 m illion in
19(0 and a r t expected to reach 8300 m illion by
the end of this year.

Item; The total investment on the part of
the casino industry Is approaching 813
billion. In addition, tourist spending is
estimated to total almost 83 billion annually.

How To
Learn From
Politics

SCIENCE WORLD

Seal s Talk Puzzles Experts
BOSTON (U P I ) — Hoover, a plump harbor
seal, has the unnerving ability to clearly say
"H ello there," or "Com e over here,"
whenever he feels like it — often lo the shock
of visitors at the New England Aquarium.
Specialists in anim al behavior are baffled.
Zoologists »ay he m ay be the first non­
human manunal to successfully m im ic man's
voice, in a guttural but clea rly distinct bass.
H oover's
lim ite d
but
rem arkable
vocabulary also includes "G e t out of there,"
"How ore you?" "H e y ," and his own name.
In addition, he occasionally sneaks in a
dirty old man laugh that sounds amazingly
sim ilar to Arte Johnson's park bench chortle
on T V 'i old "Row an and M a rtin 's laugh-In."
"H e's been m im ickin g sporadically for the
last two to three years,” said Patricia
Flo relli, who coordinates the aquarium's
marine mammal stranding program. "A lot
of people think (here'a a little man down there
trying to hoodwink them ."
Kathenne R alls, a research zoologist s i the
National Zoo In Washington, h a i made some
highquality tape recordings of Hoover and is
analyzing thtm w ith sophisticated sound
equipment norm ally used (or bird songs.
Hoover's m im icry is "m uch better than
parrots," she ssid. " H e sounds like some old
w ln o ... W t're going to compare them with a
human voice model, and thinking of using the
same kind of analysis the F B I uses [or voice
prints."
Ms. R alls said human m im icry was
previously unknown in other mammals, and
no hard scientific evidence exists ol any as
adept aa Hoover'*.
"We've been through a ll the literature an
mammals and It's m ostly anecdotal," she,
said. Gibbons and elephant te als have been
reported to m im ic each other, but never the
human voice.
Hoover “ talk*" only when he want* to,
often without prompting. When people try to

coach him , he more often than not floats on
his back near the pool bottom or suns him self,
oblivious lo all the commotion.
M any seals vocalize with grunts and barks,
but they apparently don't [eel com pelled to
fashion human sounds. Ms. F io re lli said none
of the other aqusriums she's contacted "have
never heard anything like it."
H oover was an orphan, along w ith most of
his harbor and grey seal companions at the
aquarium . Rescued off the M aine coast as a
pup, he spent a few days in a bathtub before
the aquarium picked him up.
T h e v o c a liza tio n s have o n ly re c e n tly
become distinct Ms. F lo re lli firs t began lo
notice Hoover's progression four years ago,
when she penciled In her notebook: " I s he
saying som ething?"
H e w as then encouraged lo repeat words,
and rewarded with a herring. Now he doesn't
even w ait (or the herring.
"Som etim es he'll sit for hours, and talk up a
sto rm ," she said. Other days, especially
during the breeding season, he won't utter a
sound.
"W e'd sort of taken his vocalizations for
granted. Now we realize It'* something
sp e cia l." she said.
The seal pool Is constantly lined with
human visitors, and all the attention and
am ateur coaching over the past few year*
probably helps keep Hoover's diction sharp.
A t age 10, he ia a young adult. Seals In
cap tivity often live more than 30 years, with
the help of a daily diet of 10-13 pounds of Rah.
H arb o r seals are generally about half as
large as aea lions, and Hoover weighs about
300 pounds.
They also have smaller e a rs and their
flippers are not aa adaptable to land. In the
w ild, they are numerous on the Northeast and
Northwest U S . coast*, and in other tem­
perate clim ates around the world.

You can learn a lot from politics.
Such as how ra pid ly the fruits of a victory
can go to seed.
Today’s lesson concerns the United Stales
D e pa rtm e nt of E d u catio n , the newest;
Cabinet-level agency and, If its chief has his;
way, the one Ukely to have the briefest;
history.
E d u c a tio n S e c re ta ry T e rre l B e ll Is
re co m m e nding that the departm ent be
demoted to a less-exalted level, thereby
fulfilling the pledge exacted from him at the
time of h is appointment by President Reagan.
To wit: to c a rry out candidate Reagan's
campaign prom ise to downgrade the federal
government's role In education.
Politics, you see. But this Is not the
beginning of our lesson.
The Education Department has been
politically tainted from the very start. It was
spun off fro m the old Department of Health,
F.ducation and W elfare and pushed through
Congress by President Carter as a payoff for
the endorsement of candidate Carter in the
1978 election by the National Education
Association, llte largest teachers' union.
And push the White House resUy had to.
The enabling legislation barely cleared
Congress.
And
alm ost Im m e d ia tely
thereafter proposals to reverse the vote were
being dropped into the hopper. Education
may have been the first Cabinet department
to have been threatened with aboUtion before
it had had tim e to begin operations.
The p rim a ry objections were that the
consolidation of federal education program s
that ihc departm ent represented was a
questionable step toward greater federal
control over education on a national K a le .
Further, It was less in the Interest! of
education itse lf than of the education
establishm ent The authority of professional
educators, w orking through a centralized
federal agency with a mulU-bUliocvdallar
budget, would be greatly enhanced. The voice
of the public, as traditionally expressed
through Its comm unity school boards, in
determining educational policies and stan­
dards would be correspondingly dim inished
Critics viewed the new department as
essentially the elevation of a lobby to Cabinet
status and awarded It "The Special Interest
Memorial P rize of 1979." They were to be
found not only in Congress but also In the
profession Itself. The N E A 'a major riv a l, the
Am erican Federation of Teachers, opposed
the department. What has turned out to be
even more im portant, so did Ronald Reagan,
who described It during the 1960 cam paign as
“ a first step toward federalizing education In
this land.”
Never m ind that it was far from being the
first step in that direction, It made a good
campaign issue and he is now in a post lion to
take that step bock. How far back Is the
question.

JA C K ANDERSON

Time For Probers To Probe Probers?
WASHINGTON The Senile Ethics
Committee Is currently Investigating a
veteran colleague, Sen. Harrison Williams, DN J . The greater need is for a full, evidentiary
hearing into the tactics that the FBI used to
mare a United State* senator.

They went back to the llimsy evidence,
therefore, that their own memos named was
insuflicienty. They accused him of seeking a
insufficient. They accused him of seeking a
tltious sheik for a titanium mine owned by hi*
political cronies.

Essentially, William* was convicted of
trying lo pull a few wires for his political pats.
Yet favors are part of a politician's stock In
trade. He Is expected to produce government
Jobs, contracts and projects (or the people he
represents.

The second memo, written by Robert C.
Stewart, chief of ABSCAM'a Newark strike
force, accuses chief ABSCAM prosecutor
Thomas Puccio of misleading him into
believing Williams had a hidden interest in
the titanium mine.

It la sometimes t clumsy system, a
throwback to the less artful days of govern­
ment, but U aetm s to work.
In earlier co.umns, I cited a telltale FBI
memo that shows the prosecutors had serious
doubts about their evidence against the
senator. But this was not the only goremmenl
document that Judge George Pratt hid from
(he defense.
A second withheld memo has now been
reviewed by my associate Indy Badtnrar. It
w u dated January. 1910 - the same month
that FBI undercover agents, lacking the
evidence to make a case against Williams,
tried to induce him to take a bribe. As their
hidden cam eras show, he turned down the
money, protesting “No, no, no, no,"

- •

------t l h , , , v .

_ --------------- .

"Many months later, when we obtained the
tapes, the situation proved to be quite dif­
ferent," wrote Stewart. "William*did notary
he had an interest, hidden or otherw ise-only
that he was Interested."
Stewart also criticized the FBI's un­
dercover tactics, particularly those of the
bureau's chief informant, convicted con man
Mel Weinberg. Stewart was concerned about
Weinberg's overly active role In the scam.
As Stewart phrased it, Weinberg "persisted
in suggesting the nature of the criminal un­
dertaking, rather than allowing the suspects
to relate what they proposed."
In other words, Stewart felt that WeMberg,
the con artist, w u coaching Williams into
making incriminatory statements. Weinberg

w u . in effect, supplying the script for the
senator's appearances before the hidden
cameras.
Stewart wasn't the only one to express
concern over Weinberg's tactics. Similar
criticism came from two assistant U. S. at­
torneys, Ed Plaza and Robert Weier. They
(suited Weinberg for telling William* what to
u y before luring him to a meeting with the
phony sheik on Jan. a , 1879. Plaza and Weier
called Weinberg's coaching “unpardonable."
But the videotape of that meeting w u one
of the most damaging pieces of government
evidence at Williams' trial. He w u shown
boasting of his contacts and influence — but
the Jury was not properly impressed with the
fact that the senator's essentially harmless
braggadocio w u entirely the product of
coaching by the FBI's underworld hireling.
At Uw trial, Williams explained that he had
followed Weinberg's instructions because he
wanted to help his friend gel the 8100 million
investment that the phony sheik w u dangling
u b ait
There is more evidence of government
misconduct that the Ethics Conunittee should
con sid er. For example, p rosecu tors at
Williams' trial made much of his allegedly
improper pressure on (he New Jersey state
gambling ccx omission to give a renovation

contract for the Ritx Casino in Atlantic Ctty to
i firm supposedly favored by the senator.
Yet the government's own files state?
"Evidence ... indicates that (he Ritx proposal
w u decided without any undue influence or
pressure by Williams."
In another questionable government action,
Camden Mayor Angelo Erichettl actually
helped forge a letter bearing Williams'
signature — in the presence of tne F B I’s
undercover ABSCAM agents. Weinberg had
asked Enchetti (or a letter that would con­
firm the senator’s support for the titanium
mine deal; when they agreed that Williams
would not sign such i letter, they simply
forged one.
Despite the lack of solid evidence, the
Justice Department went ahead with the
prosecution of WMlams. This raises some
questions that warrant a fu ll-scale
congressional investigation.
Who wanted to nail Williams so badly, and
Why? At least this much can be ihown:
Junmy Carter's Justice Department tended
lo take Its political signals from the White
House. Williams, a power In New Jersey
politics, supported Sen. Ted Kennedy, DM a u , In the crucial New Jersey primary.
Indeed, Carter loat the primary to Kennedy.

�t f

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

MVI Program To End Sept. 30

FLORIDA

S e m in o le County C o m m issio n e rs
made a fin a l decision this week to stop
the m otor vehicle inspection (M V I)
program on Sept. 30 and instructed
C o u n ty
A d m in istra to r
Roger
Nctswender to notify the 15 employees
involved that their Jobs are being
abolished.
The vote was 3-2 with Commissioners
B ill g irch h o ff, Sandra Glenn and
B a r b a r a C h ristensen voting fo r
abolishm ent and Commissioners Bob
S tu n n and Robert Feather voting to
c o n tin u e a voluntary Inspection

IN BRIEF
Aerial Assault On M edfly
Continues In Tampa Area
T A M P A ( U P I) — The second round o l arris!
spraying of m a Lathi on on a 14-square-mile area of
Tampa infested by the voracious M editerranean fruit
fly was to be completed today, with no M edflies having
been found since last Friday.
The a e ria l assault on the Medfly resum ed Wed­
nesday w ith a Huey helicopter covering about twothirds of the spray zone before risin g ground heat
terminated the mission.
The pilo t m anaged to disperse four tanks of the
malathion poisoned bait - a tola! of 800 gallons - over
»D of a seven-square-mile area where the fifth Medfly
was found last F rid a y and over a good portion of the
other 17-square-mile section where the other Medflies
were found.
Spraying had been scheduled for Tuesday but was
delayed because of weather associated w ith tropical
storm Dennis.
Some lig h t ra in (ell on the sprayed area Wednesday
afternoon but agriculture officials said the spray had
been on the trees and ground long enough to keep the
rain from having much effect.

program after Sept. 30.
The Florida le g is la tu re during its
session earlier this y e a r repealed the
law requiring motor vehicle Inspections
in the stale. The repeal takes effect Oct. 1.
A decision on rejecting a voluntary
program was based on a report from
M VI director, Don Mattoon, that the
program in its first few months of
operation would probably lose money.
Commissioners e a rlie r agreed that
an y voluntary in s p e c tio n program
would have to be self-supporting and
require no subsidy from taxpayers.

Th» L e is u r e T im e P ro g ra m e l S e m in o le C o m
m u m ty C o lle g e w ill olter Ihe fo D o w -ng c la s s e s
b e g in n in g th e n e e Vs o l August I t a n d S e p te m b e r T.
I»1I
J A Z Z D A N C E — (m o rn n g and e v e n in g c la s s e s ) A to ta l fo r m o l d a n c e and e . e r c lt t m w » m n you a re
t a u g h t p r o p e r b o d y a lig n m e n t, c o o r d in a t io n ,
d is c ip lin e , lie a lb illt y and rhythm Y o u a c c o m p lis h
m u s c le to n in g , sta m ina , p o ne and c o n fid e n c a in
y o u rs e lf, a lo n g m lh appreciation lo r m u s ic a n d to ta l
«n to ym e n !
S L IM
N T H IM Im orning. a lle r n o o n . and
e v e n in g d e s s e s l - A n e ie rc iS e p ro g r a m in v o lv in g
a ll ty p e s o l e . e r c it e
caieslhem cs. s lo w stre tc h e s ,
b a rre e a e r d s e s and others
d e sig n e d to in c re a s e
lie m D ility , e n d u ra n ce , m e rg y . to b e c o m e m o re
a n a r e o l p ro p e r d ie t, lo ipse inch es a n d im p ro v e
p o stu re D ie ts , n u tr ilio n and r I f f c i s e in fo r m a tio n
p ro v id e d by in s tru c to r
A E R O B I C D A N C E E X E R C I S E — I m o r n in g and
e v e n in g c la s s e s ! — A p hysica l M n e s s c o u n t in
• g iv in g v ig o ro u s e .e rc is e lo m u s ic
D iffe re n t
ro u tin e s a re ta u g h t w ith the em p hasis on d a n c in g fo r
m o v e m e n t a n d e te rc is a
M O D E R N O A N C E — (evening c la s s )
in
s tr u c tio n in tu n d a m y n ta l modern d a n c e te c h n iq u e s
E m p h a s is is p la c e d on developing s k ills in e i
p re s s in g e le m e n ts ot rhythm , design a n d m o v e m e n t
B A L L E T — (evenin g class) — I n s tru c tio n th ro u g h
m o v e m e n t to m u s ic Students w ill I t e m lo c a r r y
th e m s e lv e s w ith corre ct posture, d e v e lo p i h t i r
p h y s ic a l M n e s s , stam ina, con tro l. I lc n b it ily and
c o o r d in a l on th ro u g h c la ssica l balle t te ch n iq u e s
C O M M U N I T Y C H O R U S - fv v e n .n g c la s s ) O tte rs a w id e v a rie ty or types and p e rio d s or c h o ro l
lite r a tu r e
D e sig n e d p rim a rily as a fo rm o l
re c r e a tio n a n d c u ltu ra l enrichm en t lo r co lle g e
s tu d e n ts a n d m e m b e rs or Ihe c o m m u n ity
C O M M U N I T Y B A N D - (evening c la s s )
An
o rg a n is a tio n open to adults in the c o m m u n it y In
le r e s te o us p e rfo rm in g o il styles ot c o n c e rt bond
lit e r a t u r e N a a u d itio n is n e c rs io ry A n y b a n d in
s lru m a rit w ill be accep tab le
C O N D I T I O N I N G — (e v lfi ng CIOISI
M o d e r n day
c o n d itio n in g u sin g the N a utilus e q u ip m e n t Jogg-ng
and c a Iis then ic i a r a a Iso a part ot I he p ro g r a m
F IT N E S S A N D F IG U R E C O N T R O L (e v e n in g
c la s s l - I n s tru c tio n In na y s of Im p ro vin g fitn e s s and
a p p e a ra n c e th ro u g h d -rl and e .e r c is e E a c h stud e nt
p a r tic ip a te s in endurance a c tiv itie s . I le . lb lllt y
e ie r c ls e s a n d m u s c le strengthening a c t iv it ie s
A E R O R IC S C A R D IO V A S C U L A R F IT N E S S —
(a fte rn o o n c la s s l
Designed lo a c q u a in t Ihe
s tu d e n ts w ith the b asic functioning or the h u m a n
c a r d io v a s c u ia r s y s le m a n d a is is le a c h s t u d e n l in Ihe
d e v e lo p m e n t o l a personal aerobic I lln e s s p ro g ra m ,
w h ic h m a y in c lu d e logging, rope lu m p in g , c y c lin g
and s w im m in g
K A R A T E — (e v e n in g d e s il - D evon**! lo te a c h the
fu n d a m e n ta ls ot the
s ty le C h .to fy u —
tu s tc * w r o t e * . k ic k s punches and b lo c k ! T h e d a n
it o p e n lo b e g in n e r %. a t w ell a t e d v e n c e d stu d e n ts
W U S H U K U N O F U - ( e v e n in g c la s t ) - On# ©l in *

More Refugees Transferred
M IA M I ( U P I) — The U.S. Im m igration and
Naturalization Service flew 99 more H aitian refugees
from M ia m i’s Krom e Avenue detention center to
Puerto R ico Wednesday in continuing efforts to reduce
the cam p's population.
The transfer left 771 refugees at the Miami
center, w hich w as designed to hold 500. The F o rt Allen
population passed the 400 mark Wednesday. It can hold
BOO refugees.
U.S. D is tric t Judge Joe F.aton has set a hearing date
of S e p t 3 on the state of F lo rid a's request for a
prelim inary injunction to lim it the num ber of Haitians
housed at K ro m e to around 500.
Eaton set the date after ruling the state can sue the
federal governm ent over pollution allegedly caused try
crowding at the camp. The suit nam es U.S. Attorney
General W illia m French Smith.

Tourism Outlook Debated
M IA M I ( U P I ) — Researchers say tourism in south
Florida is starting to surge, but hotel and motel
operators are skeptical at best.
The Dade County researchers predict tourism will
jump 3 percent In the third quarter of this yea r in Dade
County — not a significant increase but s till an im­
provement.
The o ptim ism was based on an an alysis of lax
figures, hotel occupancy rates and a irlin e travel
statistics for the first half of the sum m er. What they
show is a sm a ll increase in domestic v isito rs and a
large Jump in international travelers.

Funds For Book Service Sought
Seminole County Com m issioners have not only approved an
application seeking 110,000 in federal-state funding for a bookaby-mail program for shut-ins, they also have added 18,300 in
county money to assure success of the program.
The commission voted unanimously Thursday lo seek the
federal-state money and to provide additional county funding
for the service to begin In March.
The books would be loaned by the county lib ra ry system bym ail to persons p h y sica lly w mentally handicapped and the
elderly, all of whom are confined permanently or tem porarily
tcHhetr homes or in institutions.
County lib r a r ia n Jean Rhein said she expects the books-bym ail program to serve between 7,000 and 12,000 shut-ins
monthly. - D ONN A E S T E S

A m ajo r reason for considering
voluntary' Inspections was because it
was reported to commissioners that
several Insurance companies were
offering to reduce vehicle insurance
rates if an inspection program were
available.
B u t c o m m iss io n e rs found S tate
Insurance Commissioner B ill G u n te r’s
office has not received any requests
from insurance companies for per­
mission to reduce Insurance rates for
those m otorists who voluntarily have
their vehicles inspected DONNA E S T E S

Leisure Time Courses Offered
A t Seminole Community College

Thursday. Aug, it. 1t«t— 5A

Jorge Gomez M .D .P .A .
ANNOUNCES

oldest t flown m artial arts The purpose of itung F o il
nol only ta ff d e fe nse . but a lt o physical and m e n ta l

the relocation of his office

discipline
O i l F A I N T I N G — (morrvrvg c la t t l - A se rie s Of
le tton t w h ich w ill te e th the beg inner tteg b y t le p
approaches to o il p a in tin g The advanced t lu d e n lt
w ill learn v a rio u s o il te ch niq ue s
Q U IL T IN G B E G I N N E R S
TH RO UGH
AD
V A N C E D — (e v e n in g c l a t t l — The fo llo w ing p a l
term w ill be ta u g h t C a th e d ra l Window, Log C a b in .
G randm other t F lo w er G a rd e n . Sun bonnet Sue p lu t
many m ore, fr o m p illo w sh a m s, w all hang in g! to lu l l

for the practice of Cardiology
and Internal Medicine

tde gums

L0NGW00D MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.

C O L L E G I U M M U S I C U M — (even ng c la t t l - A n
instructional p e rfo r m a n c e m u s ic a l ensemble w h ic h
studies and p e r f o r m ! m u s ic on antique s t y le n
sfrv m cn ft of the R e n a is s a n c e and1 'Baroque E r a
Vocal m u sic of th e p er io d is a lso included E m p h a s is
Is placed upon le a r n in g to p la y the old in s tru m e n ts In
the a p p ro p ria te s t y le of th e ir o rg tn t and lite ra tu re
CLA SS O U I T A R I — I evening c la t t l — B e g in n in g
guitar co u rse to r stu d e n ts w ith m ile or no e i p e r le n t e
on the in s tru m e n t
The cou rse w ill cove r Ihe
necessary th e o ry , c h o rd s and progressions, re a d ng .
duet p la yin g a n d a c c o m p a n im e n t tor tin g in g
B E C O M E I N T I M A T E W IT H Y O U R C A R —
( ru m mg c la s s l - B a s ic in s tru c t ion In the c a re a n d
m aintenance of y o u r c a r The students w ilt le a rn th e
language of the te c h n ic ia n s and w ill get in v o lv e d w ith
some hand s o n " e t p e r ie n c e
G O L F I — (e v e n in g c la s s and Saturday m o rn in g
d a is )1 - D e sig n e d to te ach the student the b a s ic
techniques of p la y in g g o lf — how lo hold the c lu b ,
stance, and s w in g Stud ents w ill need an e ight or a
nine iron
T E N N IS I — (S a tu rd a y m orning class) — In
struct ion In the fu n d a m e n ta ls of tennis such as g rip ,
stance, fo re h a n d , b a ck h a n d and service S c o rin g
rules and r e g u la tio n s w ill a lso be taught
T E N N IS It — (S a tu rd a y morning cla ss) — A
follow up to T ennuis t D e sig n e d for I hose who p o sse ss
some I now ledge of te n n is but need help In d e ve lo p in g
s o ld ground s tro k e s and m o re ban control
SE N IO R A D U L T T H E A T R E - (afternoon c la s s )
O H trs stu d e n ts an understanding ot the a r t of
theatre S tud e nts w ill g a in knowledge ot fe c tm Jd u e i
through e x p e rie n c e a n d w ill Study the in flu e n c e of
laughter i m
te a r s A p p re c ia tio n com es th ro u g h
domg
a n* the stu d e n ts can eaped to do s o m e
w arm u p i, so m e a c tin g , to m e voice w ork, and so m e
technical w o rk — a s w e ll as m a k in g c ritic a l decIstona
for their p a rtn e rs

1385 WEST HWY. 434
SUITE 206 LO N G W O O D , FL.,
For A p p o in tm en t Call 831*2222 or 323-5360

U N T IL
A U G 1!

HONESTLY FOLKS
Our everyday prices are so tow we can't afford to give you
30%, 40% or 50% off like oil the others claim to do —
But what we can do is offer you...

THESE 3 BIG D A Y S !!!
A U G . 2 0 th

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A U G . 2 1st

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21 % O FF

A U G . 2 2 nd The leftovers are

22% O FF

P O N T BE A LEFTOVER S H O P P E R III_________

C E L E S T I A L N A V I G A T I O N — (evening c la s s )
Designed to g iv e th e stud ent the knowledge e n d a
command o t the te c h n iq u e s necessary lo n a v ig a te In
the open s e a t a n d d e te r m in e an accurate p o sitio n o f
the ship
T o p ic s to b e covered n a v ig a tio n in
strum ents, c e le s t ia l and te rre stria l c o o rd in a te
system s. use of th e s e it a n l and star tm d e r; tim e end
relation b e tw e e n e r e end tim e , the N a u tic a l
Aim anac. sig h t re d u c tio n by altitude in t e r c e p t j
Pub lica tio n 279; a n d lin e ot position and the th re e
star i n

U n it e d U u r n it u r e

H a le s .

850 N. Hwy. 17 A 02 Longwood
JUST NORTH 01 S R &lt;34

G E E S m

3 3 1 -7 2 8 8

MON.-FRI 9-9

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SUN. 12-5

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• 7 0 7 Fashionable Colors
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CO UPO N............:
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tim d'
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higher inflation roll cam r and uh I t t i gat
than our non ru jia li at dead* h ig h .jv »[xid*

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A-100 Sale ends September 2 6 1All Other Products — Sale ends August 2 9

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�SPORTS
*A— E vtnlnfl Htrsld, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Aug. 10, l t l i

Sem inole All Eyes As World
Series O pens At Lafayette
tty S A M COOK
H erald Sporti Editor
Sem inole's Broncos are stilt one night
■way from competition, but Manager
Richard C offey's crew will be all eyes
tonight when the Bronco World Series
opens w ith two games at lafayette, l a .
The 5 p.m. encounter between Oak
Park, III. and St. Bernard Parish La. w ill
be the eye-catcher (or the locals since
Seminole w ill play the winner o( that
contest F rid a y at 8 p.m Puerto R ico
plays host team I-afayette tn Thursday's
second gam e at 8 p.m.
The lafa ye U e-Ih jrrto Rico winner
meets Richm ond, Cal. in Friday's 5 p in .
game. Richm ond battled bac.t through
the losers’ bracket and nipped Hawaii, 41 to w in the Coast representative spot.

O ak Park, III.
-

World Series Pairings

5 p.m.

St. Barnard, La.

Friday
8 p.m.

4

Seminole
Puerto Rico
O

Thursday
8 p.m.

Lafayette, La.

Friday
5 p.m.

o
0

Richmond, C al.

('•CV'1

Colfey w ill open the sir-day tour­
nament w ith ace right-hander T e rry
"The C a t" M ille r. The Sanford-lakeview
Middle School product has Iwo victories
under his belt from the Southern Zone
Tournament won by Seminole.
MtrtM flwl* b» T«m V incnl
"Those were the two best games T e rry
S e m in o le f ir s t b a s e m a n .Mark C o f f e y s tr e tc h e s for a th r o w from has pitched a ll year," pointed out Coffey,
p itcher T e r r y M ille r lo nip M ia m i* * O sc a r F er n a n d e z in S a t u r d a y ’s who is assisted by D ick Waring and G reg
tM c h a m p io n s h ip n am e. F r id a y n ig h t th e lir o n c o s o p e n p la y in the Ebberl. " T e rr y has really matured into a
fine p itch e r the past Iwo weeks."
World S e r i e s a g a in s t the w in n e r o f to n ig h t's O ak P a r k , III. — St.
Behind the plate and batting in the
H ernard P a r i s h , La. c la s h . S e e F r i d a y ’s l e i s u r e m a g a i i n e for a clean up spot w ill be Eddie Taubensce.
d e ta ile d r u n d o w n o f M a n a g e r R ic h a r d C o ffey 's t e a m .
The left-handed swinger hit .1 8 In the

Palm er Late Entry

TIME BALM ...

32«&gt; p*y

MV WM/CH
s ro trs

fAHS MAP
ro g e t h e

Z U R IC H , S w itz e rla n d ( U P I ) B ritain's Sebastian Coe set a world
record In the m ile and Rena Ido
Nthem U h at Uw U nited States became
the first hurdler In history to crack the
1J-second barrier in the UO-meter event
Wednesday night at an Internationa!
track meet,

F O R P /A N O N P

" 9 P £ a t r •• ineteap
o r " A C T , - a r A M 't v H t

FIGURE APPEAKEP
//V 7ME MEAPi/NEG.

ARNOLD
PA LM ER
WAG THE PLATOfF
W INNER O f 7M£
a m tec? s t m s shook
OPEN G O IP 7 /7 Z S .
A M P THE FIRST
O NE W fTM TME
QUAL/EY/NG AGE
LOWEREP TO S O .
/ T A IG O 6AVS HIM
UGGA CHAMAm SAJPG
2 7 YEA** APART,
NAY/NG NON TME
AM ATEUR /M
/9 5 7 , f N t TEAK

However this year the tournament was restored to fullfledged re g u la r status on the PG A Tour and the purse boosted
accordingly.

S ffO A E ME w im T

II S . Open champion David G raham , who also won the 1978
PGA cham pionship s i Oakland H ills In the Detroit suburb of
Birm ingham , signed on to play the course.
U r r y Nelson, winner ol the G fe ste r Greensboro Open and
this yea r's P G A , also is playing.
Other tour-event winners In the field Include Craig Stsdler,
who won the Kem per Open; Bing Crosby National Pro-Am
winner John Cook; Tom Kite, Hon S treck, E d Fiort and Dave
Eichelberger,

S em inole’ s h o ttest h itle r, Sean
Flaherty, w ill bat fifth behind laubensce. Flaherty is batting at a torrid S6S6

M ille r w ill hold down the t ilt h spot in
the erder w ith the Broncos second-best
hitter — Sanford's "Steady E d d ie "
Evans — batting seventh. The smoothfielding second baseman had five hits in
10 st b ats in the sone series.
Third sacker D ale Stevens w ill bat
eight. Stevens was Wor-9 in the tone
competition and scored four big runs.
Coffey is undecided on his left fielder, but

seems to be leaning tow ard Jason Bray.
"Jason would have been starting all
along, but his hitting was off a little."
said Coffey. In Saturday's championship
v icto ry over Miami, however, B ra y rifled
a two-run double to le ft center to cap an
eight-run seventh inning and finish off
A van ti 8-1.
" It wtU either be B ra y , K e lly H ysell or
T ra cy Turner in left," sa id Coffey. Other
team members Indude M ickey Helms,
K e ith Dial, Scott Bow ers and Greg
Ebbert.

Coe Kicks To 3:48.53 Mile,
Nehemiah Hurdles Under 13

ON
THE

Jacobsen won last year when the B u ic k was still a satellite
event, overcom ing ■ four-stroke deficit to defeat Res Caldwell,
who lead the first three rounds.

Shortstop Kirk Rozek w ill bat lead off
for Coffey's crew and w ill be followed in
the order by center fielder JimmyWaring. Mark Coffey, son of the coach,
bats third and plays th ird base. Coffey
w ill be the first-line re lie v e r if M iller
falters.

clip and p la ys right field. He would be
Coffey’s th ird choice for a pitcher.

W orld Records

For Enticing Buick
G R A N D B L A N C , Mich. (UPI) - G o lfe rs awaiting today’s
opening round o l the revived Buick Open, worth 5330,000 and
the last stop on the PG A 's summer tour, said they were im­
pressed by the 7,001-yard Warwick H ills G o lf and Country D ub
course.
"It’s super, 1 love It," said Ben Crenshaw, who was a 8-yearold toddler tn 1M8 when the pros t in t teed up on the old War­
wick tUtts, Uwn a I.M ftynril c m t n .
"1 tike It a tot," u M l army Wadklna, another ttnt-Umcr at
Warwick. " I t's a fun course, a lot of fun holes on It. No bad
holes — no funky or weird holes. The fairw a y s and greens s i r
tremendous."
Hubert Green, last week's Hartford Open winner, also was
impressed, but Wednesday said the course, redesigned in the
late 1860s, required "some finesse.”
"1 don't m ind a couple of holes that c a ll for brute strength,"
he said, "b u t I thought finesse was what the game of golf was
all (bout.”
Besides Green, Crenshsw and Wodklns, the Held Includes
defending cham pion Peter Jacobsen and nine (our winners this
season.

tone series, but drove tn three runs and
scored three times.

N( \ 5

ALSO
TME
PGA'9
HSIGNING
SEN IO R
C H A M P.
H AVIN G
W ON
Th£!R
m e

CAST
ttc e m e e .

ON TME TOUA.

Coe, running h is firs t m ile since he
set the then wcrkl best of 9:49.0 In Oslo
In 1979, clocked 3:48 S3 lo take back Ibe
w orld mile record fro m compatriot
Steve Ovett, who recorded 3:48.8 in
Oslo, July, 1980.
Nehemiah clocked a record 12.93 In
the HO meters hurdles to break his own
previous record of 13.00 that he had set
in lets Angeles, M a y 8, 1979. Greg
Foster of U C LA finished second In
13.03.
"Y ou wouldn't believe how e id te d I
am. 1 knew all along I could break 13,"
Nehemiah told A B C Radio Sports.
"T h is proves a lot o l things to me and to

m y coach M r. Ross and most im ­
portantly to the American public. T h is
is the fifth race since my Injury (a
broken bona In rig ht fool) and 1 knew I
was com ing along well enough to set a
new w orld record.
"The ra ce started out like It alw ays
does between Greg and myself, but I
think the difference was technique.nl
did the things I had to and gave It m y a ll
and the results were tremendous.
There's no doubt that my old attitude of
com placency is done with. My thoughts
now a re on 118 and 1 really believe 1
can do It. T h is means the world to me
alter having a couple of disappointing
years w here I doubted my ability and
honestly wondered If I was washed up.
But, I know how good I am and there's
no question now as to how good I can
be."
Coe, the O ly m p ic 1,500 m e te r
cham pion and world record holder a t
800 m eters (1:41.71) and 1,000 metera
( 3 : 1 . 18 1 , hoped lo capture Ovett's 1,300

Obese Ali Plans Comeback
F o rm e r Buick Open w inners Bobby Cole (1977) and M ike
Souchak (1180) also are on hand.
Arnold Palmer, who won the U 5 . .Senior Open this year at
O akU nd H ills, was ■ Ute addition to the field and 89-year-old
Sam Snead alto consented to p U y.

COLUMBIA, S.C. ( U P I) - Three­
time world heavyw eight boxing
champion M uham m ad A li says his
planned comeback bout Nov. 1 at

world I'm not finished.”
" E v e r y b o d y thought I was
finished," A li said. "I'm going to
■how the w orld that I'm not finished.
I can't q u it It's too easy to q u it ”

Carolina Coliseum “ w ill show the

m eter record of 3:31.36 in the same
race, but he was outside 3:33.00 when
that Intermediate time was taken.
Ovw tt'i l.soo meter m a rk probably
survived because Coe w a s forced to run
most of the last two U p s from the front
after the early pacemaker, A m erican
Tom Byers, dropped out after setting
Just too slow ■ pace.
B ye rs covered the firs t 400 m eters in
58.13 and 800 meters in 1:53.58, slower
than the split times in both O vett’s and
Coe’s fastest 1,500 runs, and slower
than Ovett’s intermediate tim es when
he set the previous w orld best.
But Coe, urged on b y the crowd of
25,000 stamping its feet in rhythm with
the
B rito n 's
p a ce s,
d is p la y e d
rem arkable sprinting stam ina to pick
up 0.26 seconds on O vett's previous
record, and drag second pU ced M ike
B o lt o l Kenya to an A fric a n record of
3:49.74. Britain's Sieve C ra m w as third
in 3:19.85.

Ha! Hal Ha!

Jo k e Of
The Day

SEC Football Report

Disciplined Dye Straightens Up Auburn
A U B U R N , A U . (U P I) - Discipline
is the tra d e m a rk of the new football
regime a t Auburn.
It's not e xactly a Marine boot c im p ,
but some of the veterans insist it's
pretty close.
"Coach ( P a t) Dye let us know how It
would be rig h t off the bat," laid senior
Keith U e ck e r, only returning starter
on A uburn's offensive unit. "He le i us
hum he w as concerned about the
little things as w ell u (he big one.
"They even check our lockers.
Everything is eipected to be in its
assigned place. E very hook U for
something. It's ridiculous, no not
ridiculous. If you break s rule, you
run, It's a s sim ple u that. I guess they
call It m a tu rity , but I don’t know I'm
ready lo r th a t."
Uecker sa id any doubt that Dye
might be kiddin g w u dispelled when
Marshall R ile y , ■ starting defensive
U cU e w ho would have been s fiflh; year senior this fall, w u dropped
(rum tbs squad lo r refusing to run up
‘ and down the stadium step* a lte r
breaking one of D ye's rules
-W e a ll learned reel quick." sa id

.

Uecker.
U tc k e r an d td m o n d Nelson, senior
defensive end, both said the
toughened d is c ip lin e has m ade
Auburn a better football l*tm .‘

"O u r problem l u l y e a r (when the
Tigers slumped to 56, without win­
n in g a Southeastern C onfere nce
game, after going 8-3 the previous
season) w u we had too much talent,
to many star seniors," said Uecker.
"Everyone wanted to do their own
thing. If we had been a better
disciplined team, we'd have won a lot
more games."
B u i Uecker and Nelson both noted
that discipline might have been better
U It hadn't been obvious by midseaaon
that coach Doug B arfield and h is staff
were on their way out.
“ It w u hard to get your enthusiasm
up when you knew your coaches
wouldn't be back," u l d Nelson.
'•There's ■ big difference this year.
"A nytim e you have a coaching
change, youte going to have a lot of
enthusiasm. Everything ts m ore In­
tense now. We're better organised and
everything is going a little more
smoothly. It's hard to e xp la in ."
“ It w u obvious by the seventh or
eighth game last year that we had lost
it," said Uecker. “ You don't lik e to
blam e anyone, but It lifte d down from
the top."
U ecker says the T ige rs "seem to
have reacquired a w inning attitude.
You can feel It during our workouts.
O ut coaches really tike that rah-rah

i
- ^

.

5 —,

— V i

-

—i

^

»

*■» !'_■a

a*

m

stuff. It helps you stay more intense."
Dye, com ing to Auburn after six
years u head coach al East Carolina
and one u head coach at Wyoming,
insists he's m ore Interested tn altitude
than in this com ing season's won-lost
record.
"If our people play as well u they
ran, 1 won't w o rry about the record,"
said Dye. " I w ouldn’t care U we win
two games o r II. The thing is, if we
g lvt it our a ll, it w ill pay off In future
seasons. It w ill m ake (hose who return
next year better players and help with
our recruiting.
"R ecruiting Is where our future Iks.
The thing people have to realize is that
our season doesn’t end In November,
but In F e b ru a ry ."
Dye contends the Tigers can be ■
pretty good football team and still
have trouble w inning in (be SEC,
"b ecause we p la y the toughest
conference schedule of anyone In the
league. We p la y the six tqp teams tn
the conference. When you art playing
A lab am a,
G e o rg ia ,
F lo rid a ,
Mississippi State, Tennessee and LSU
It isn't enough to Just be pretty good 11
you hop* to win.
"1 Just hope we w ill be the kind of
football team that plays Us best each
Saturday,” said Dye. ' i f we do that,
we ll win the ones we're suppose to
, ■ I|I
.
0 * V—
-t*
- l.
.b .

and m aybe some we're not."
Dye has spent the past eight m onths
since taking over at Auburn te llin g ths
alu m ni not to expect too m uch too
fast. A lte r all, he tells them , the
T ig e rs have only five starters (fo u r on
defense) back (ra n their 1980 taam;
lost one of the finest running b a ck s In
the n a tio n when Ja m e s B ro o k s
completed his eligibility; and w ill be
depending more heavily on freshm en
than In the past.
The Tigers also have to fin d a
q u a rte rb a c k . Charles T h o m a s, a
senior, is likely to get the job bu t Dye
also is taking ■ close look at two bluechip freshmen - Clayton B e a u fo rt of
P a ls Iks, Fla., and Ken Hobby of
TUton, G a. Beaufort ia a wishbone
quarterback and with Dye going with
that offense this season the 185pounder, who rushed for 1,400 y ards
and passed for 1,100 yards his senior
y e a r in high school, looks lik e a
n a tu r a l

D O N ’T BECOM E
SHIFTLESS
T r a n s m is s io n S e r v ic e

$

35

• Replace trans­
mission fluid
• Install new pan
oasket • Replace transmission
filter, if your car has one
• Adjust linkage and bands,

as applicable
• For most U.S.
and some Import
cars • Additional parts and
labor extra, if needed.

Ju s t S a y ‘ C h a r g e It'

G O O D YEA R

D ye says the main thing for th is fa ll
is far Auburn’s p tiy c n to find out that
football can be fun.
lb* ■*! i J

" A s fa r as predicting how w e ll w e ll
do ," he said, "1 bund out a long time
ago that what you say In A ugust and
Septem ber doesn't m ein a da rn about
how w ell you've don* when Decem ber
ro lls around."

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S E R V d r STORES

vCMs • CiM

JIM H I M P H I U , M anag er

SANFORD

322-2821

�Grich Hits
Orioles, 6-3

Players Expect To Approve New Form ula

Bobby G rich ’* hits these days have a
rin ging sound - almost Like a cash
register.
A t Anaheim, Calif., Wednesday night,
the second-baseman belted a hom er and
two singles to extend his batting streak to
21 games In helping the Angels snap a
four-game losing streak with a 6-3 victory
over the Baltim ore Orioles.
O rich , who Is in the option y e a r of his
contract with the California Angels and
appears eager to create a dem and for his
services nest winter, has posted the
(longest streak in the A L this y e a r — the
{longest of Ills career. He has collected J3
h its In 76 al-bats and has six hom e runs in
the eight games since the second season
started.
••I’ve come back pretty stro ng," G rich
' admitted. "M y timing couldn't bo better,
j M y stock is definitely going u p ."

Major League Roundup

B y Called Press International

I

, White Sox 6. Yankees S
In New York, Mike Squires drove in
j two runs, including the tic-breaker on a
s ix th -in n in g s a c rifice fly , an d con­
tributed a sparkling defensive play to
lead tiie White Sox.
T ige rs I, Twins 0
A t Detroit, Stan Papi, a laslm inutc
lineup insertion replacing K ir k Gibson
who had a sore instep, slam m ed a tworu n homer to cop a three-run fourth in­
ning that carried the Tigers to their sixth
stra ig h t victory and handed the Twins
their sixth straight loss.
B lue Jays 9, Royals I
IJoyd Moseby knocked in six runs with
three singles and a field er's choice to
carry the Blue Jays, in K ansas City.
Ila n g rrs 1, Brewers 1
At Arlington, Texas, Buddy B e ll drove
in two runs with a single and a double and
D oc Medlch, W , allowed five h its in * 2-J

Standings

Bobby G r i c h e x t e n d e d h is b a t t in g to 21 g a m e s w ith a h o m e r u n a n d
Iw o s in g le s a s C a lif o r n ia b e a t B a lt im o r e .
innings In leailm g the Rangers to victory.
A 'l 4, Red Sox 2
At Oakland, C a lif., M att Keough pit­
ched an eight-hitter and C liff Johnson hit
his 10th hom er as the A 's ran their
winning streak to five games.

Indlam 4, Mariners 3
A w ild throw by shurtstop Je rry
Dy brinks! in the 10th inning, in Seattle,
allowed Joe Simpson to score from
second and gave the M a rin e rs their
victory.

Ry United Presi biterniU o nal
Tommy lasorda tried in v ain to recall
a time in his 30 years in baseball when he
disagreed more with an um pire.
"W e were the victim s o f one of the
worst calls ever made in a m a jo r league
b a se b a ll gam e." the L o s A n g e le s’
m anager said Wednesday after the
Chicago Cubs edged the Lo s Angeles
Dodgers, 4-3. D ie Dodgers had the
potential tying run nullified w ith two out
in the ninth because of a disputed run­
n e r’s interference call by second-base
um pire Jim Quick.
"Y ea, the Cubs won, 4-3," he said.
"T h e y got a great gift and I honeetiy
hove never seen such a cull sin ce I have
been in this game."
1
Bobby Bondi had three h its and drove
in two runs but things got interesting in
the ninth. Following Ken I^ndreaux'a
tea doff homer, the Dodgers loaded the
bases with one out off re lie v e r Randy
M .irtr,
P in c h hitter Reggie S m ith then
grounded sharply to second baseman
M ike Tyson, who threw to Ivan Dejesus

to force Pedro Guerrero. Bui Guerrero
ran out of the basepath and although the
return throw to first was wild, the tying
run was disallow ed by Quick when
Guerrero was called for Interference.
“ Guerrero ra n out of the baseline,"
Quick said. “ A nd the rule states that
when a runner does this, the batter also
must be called out and while there was a
brief discussion of the umpires, it was not
because of m y decision but because
Lasorda disagreed."
Guerrero also disagreed.

homers to help rookie Odell Jones to his
first victory since being recalled from
Portland last week.
Braves 6, M rts 2
In A tla n ta , p in ch -h itte r
B ria n
Assclstine cracked a two-out, three-run
homer in the seventh inning, to lift
Atlanta.
Reds I, Phillies 3
Joe Nolan drove in four runs with a
single and a pair of doubles to lead
Cincinnati over Philadelphia, at home.
Astros 9, Expos 1

"Sore t was trying to break up the
double play," he said, "and 1 went to the
bag and during m y slide, Dejesus' glove
even hit me in the mouth. But I did not
push him as was charged by some
players.”

T e rry Puhl's two-run double capped a
tour-run third inning and backed the
combined ftvrtiit pitching of Notan Ryan
and Dave Smith, in Houston. Ryan, 73,
left the game for a pinch h itter in the
sixth after lowering his lesgue-leading
E R A to 1.29.

Mike Krukow, 4-6, pitched 713 innings,
and M arti recorded the final three outs
lor his second save.

Pirates 7, Giants 1
At Pittsburgh, B ill Madlock went 3-for4 and drove In two runs and rookie Tony
Pena and te e L acy each smacked solo

Cards 7, Padres I
In St. Louis, pinch-hitter Gene Tenace
tingled home Mike Ramsey with two out
in the ninth inning to give St. lo u is the
win. Bruce Sutter, 33, picked up the
victory In relief.

E » lt
w L Pet
OS
Detroit
7 3 700
Toronto
8 4 400
1
M iI*A u *C
7 3 S«3
1
(U lt
3 4 334 H9
New Y o rk
4 8 400 3
Bo it on
3 * 31)
V i
Cleveind
3 1 77) 4 'j
We*t
Oj it lend
A 7 730
Se«tii«
7 3 700 _
O niuigo
8 4 400
T rsn
S 4 334
1
K«f» C it y
9 * 494 3
M«f*nt
3 1 7?)
4
4
cun
i
* no
W r d n t t d a y 't R t w i t t
C M c io o * N r * Y o rk 1
D etroit 4, M inn**&amp;t# 0
Toronto t, K *n*«* C ity 4
T e ifti 4, M ilw a u k e e \
C a lifo rn ia a, B a ltim o re 3
O aklan d t Bottom 7
Seattle 4. C le v e 1, 19 imn%
Today * P ro b a b le p itch e r*
( A ll T im e * F O T l
H a ifim ore ( D M e r t in e i 8 ) at
C a lifo rn ia
t?* h n
7 a ).
to 30
P n

t’Miom

t lc h e r ilf i

SI)

at

O akland
I M c C a fty 8 4).
1 0 )0
p m
C leveland
(W a it*
S t)
at
Seattle (A b b ott 7 4). 10 35 p m

Mater League Standing*
By U n ite d P r e i t In te rn a tio n a l
(Se co nd H a lt)
N a tio n a l Leag u e
E a ii
w L Pel
GB
SI Lou l*
4 ) 730
New Y o rk
4 J 447
1*
CM tAgo
9 3 300 7
4 4 900 7
Mont r eo I
P it ti burgh
3 7 300 4
PM l i
7 7 77? 4&lt;»
W r it
Moulton
7 3 700
A t«*nt*
4 3 447
1*
C tnti
1 4 394 IV i
Van F r » n
ft ft *00 |
Lo* An q
S s 300 7
3*99 D iego
7 • 700 3
W i i M a a r ' i R e m it*
C M ceg a 4, L 04 Ang*)** 1

Atlanta S, New York 7
C ncmnati a, Philadelphia J
St Loui* f, San Diego l
Moiitfon •* Montreal I
York

(Harr It

771

SPO RTS
IN BRIEF
Seminole Community College
Schedules Wrestling Class
Seminole Community College w ill offer a wrestling class
tentatively scheduled for Wednesday from I p.m. to 6 p m.
ecrordlng toSCC Physical Education teacher Rachael R oll.
The class Is open to anyone," said Roil. "We feel there
are a lot of former w restlers who would be interested In
continuing (heir careers.
T l* class can be taken (or P .E . credit or leisure.

Jal Alai Opens 20th Season
Srm lnole-O rtando's J a l A la i fronton opens its 20th
season tonight at 7 when an overflow crowd of 3,600 Is
expected for the 12-match card.
Players' manager S a n li Echanix has stocked the
fronton roster with Its usual fine regutirs like Msnolo,
A ria and Zarre along w ith Bridgeport acquisitions
1-ecube, Marti, Goicoechea and Mends II.
The O rla n do &amp; m ln o le fronton is located In F e rn
P a rk near the intersection of UJs. 17-92 and SR &lt;36. A ll
games except the 12th on F rid a y and Saturday use the
Spectacular Seven scoring system. On Friday and
Saturday, the final gam e w ill be played to seven
straight points.
The fronton is open e ve ry night eicept Sunday. The
matinees are Monday, Wednesday and Saturday at
noon. Quiniela, trifre ta . and win, place and show
wagering is offered on a ll 12 matches. There is ■ d a ily
double on matches one and two and perferias are sold
on game two to 12.

C ro s s Country Starts M o n d a y

NEW YO R K ( U P lI - Pa t O'Grady isn't
only tnad, he's boiling, at what they've done
to hla son and he isn 't going to take It
anymore.
He's calling lo r a thorough investigation of
boxing by both the federal government and
the media, which isn't D ial novel a proposal
except In this p a rticu la r case you have an
outraged father dem anding justice be done in
behalf of his ion.
O'Grady's son, Sean, la an uncommonly
courteous, intelligent lad of 22 who is one of
the better fighters around. He shows 76 vic­
tories and 66 knockouts in 77 bouts and was
the WBA lightweight champion for lour
months plus one week until he was stripped of
his title a few days ago.
The action was taken by the WBA acting
under a court order issued by Stanley J.
Hroiman, a U S . D istric t Jucge of New Jersey.
With the title now vacant. Top Rank, Inc.,
headed by Bob A ru m , announced Wednesday
it w ill promote a bout between Trinidad’s
Claude Noel, the No. I ranked contender, and
second ranked Rodolfo Gonzalez of Mexico at
B ally's Park Place Hotel In Atlantic City Sept
12, with the winner to be recogniied as the
new WBA champion.
Brotman issued h is order stripping Grady
of his title after Noel brought a complaint
before him in Camden, N J . . seeking to enjoin
a proposed title fight between O'Grady and
llilm e r Kenly from whom O'Grady took (he
championship last A p r il 12. Noel’s attorney
argued hit client w as the legitimate No. 1
contender, not K e n ly , and the WBA ratings
committee had acted a rb itra rily In demoting
Noel from No. 1 to No. 2 and making O'Grady
the No. 1 contender.
The judge ruled the O'Grady-Kenty fight
could go on provided the winner met Noel
within 90 days of A p r il 12, and after O'Grady
beat Kenly for the title. Top Rank entered into

Cross country practice for the Seminole High School
boys team w ill begin M onday. Aug. 24 at the high
school according to Coach Ted Tombros

Lacy

B a lt
100 007 0 0 0 - ) SO
C a lif
010 410 &lt;300— 4 14 0
F la n a g a n . Schn e id er (4) and
O em p*ey R r n k o . Aa*e ( l) and
D ow ning
W R rn k o ( J J ) , l
F la n a g a n ( I S )
H R - C a lifo rn ia .

Grid* (I?)

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001 101 0)&gt;
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L y le
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and

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001 0)0 OOO 7 | I
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7OO0UOO&lt;
4 40
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and H eath W K eou gh f? )) l
Tana na
(3 91
M R Oakland,
Johnson (10)

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100 000 4 1 0 ' 4 14 7
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(3).
Boone ( S I . D o lla r (7). L ittle fie ld
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M a rtin . S h ir ir y (7). L J t t t ll (7),
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707 ) 00 000

Lamp

an agreement with Noel to fight O 'G rady Sept
12. But O'Grady, through his father and
manager, Pat, advised Top Rank lie had
suffered a cut in the Kenly fight and sought a
post pane men l to which Noel agreed
Top Rank had an option to promote
O 'G ra d y ’s first title defense him] sought to
exercise it but the Oklahoma C ity youngster
asked lie be allowed to fight another opponent
for the title before meeting N oel D ia l was
when Noel went lo court and O 'G rady last his
tide.
The cider O'Grady says hia son was not
represented at the proceedings In which
Judge Brotman issued hts order, and fur­
thermore, he also says A rum knew of an
e x is tin g contract betw een the E m p ire
Sporting Club, Inc., and Slarm aker, Inc., a
promotional organ!ration O 'G ra d y heads
According lo O'Grady, Arum paid the Em pire
Sporting Club 96,000 (or the privilege of uiing
his son against Kenly for the W B A title and
took E m pire in s i a partner in any future
promotions involving young O 'G rady after
w hich he reneged on the E m p ire d e a l
If a ll this sounds a little sticky to you,
welcome to the dub,
" I ’in completely w ill mg to go up against the
system existing In boxing today/* Pat
O 'G rady said from hia Oklahom a City office
Wednesday. "What we are asking for
p rim a rily is an investigation into the legal
proceedings against Bob A ru m which took
place In Camden before the Judge made his
ruling. We were never subpUnaed and we
were never represented there at all. Nobody
was In that court to speak (or Sean O'Grady.
"M o re than that, I'm saying there were
'inaccuracies' in what Bob A rum and his
representatives had to u y in Camden. The
entire truth did no&lt; come out."
The W BA'a rating system has heroine
something of a laughing stock and the W BA
itself, despite repeated denials, is said to be
influenced by Arum 's preferences in its
election of ila governing officials.

000 000 001 - 1 so

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100 011 O la - 4 V 1
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MM* N ew York* V a le n tin e (41,
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W r h fm e it t fr H I a n d C fr o n t w
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Atlanta (N ie k r o 4 4). t 31 p m

Boxing Shady Says Father O'Grady
By M ILT O N R IC IIM AN
UPI Sports E d ito r

(4)

Ateiamdiff. Tuft* 111, (Iren
ilng IS), Holland 171 and May
Janet. JACkvon III and Pena
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at

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003 707 TOO- t 17 I
K a n C ily
700 010 0 1 0 - 4 74
B e re n g u e r,
M c la u g h p in (I)
and M a r lin e !
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next three would go to the home park of
the first-half wtnnrr.
The players would get 60 percent of the
revenue from these games, not Including
television money. However, the coaches
and managers would not gel paid since
they were paid during the strike.
TTh*revised plan also includes a sort of
“ incentive bonus" for the teams that won
the first half. In order to try ami curb
com p lacency am ong the firs t-h a lf
winners — Oakland am i New York in the
American le ag u e and I/ m Angeles and
Philadelphia in the National — a sy stem
lias been devised w hereby a team w ill gel
more money If it wins both halves.
The winners of the first half of the
seaison are already assured of spots in a
"m inlsertes" against the second-half
winners.

belt III, O’Connor (it and
Wtmegar, Scbitfeder* Tobik (71

M a io r le a g u e R e iu tt i
B e U n ite d Pro i t Inter na tio na l
N a tio n a l League
L o t A ng
OOO 100 0)1
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Linescores

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Bad C alls Singe Lasorda

■

of the executive board and the results
m ay be known late today.
T h e p la n e lim in a te s the o rig in a l
concept in which the team with the
second-best overall record would qualify
(or the playoffs. That idea created
problems because it raised the possibility
of team s losing on purpose or forfeiting
games to get in as the w ildcard team.
The new plan does penallic teams that
were contenders In the first half but
protects the game's Integrity.
In the event one team wins both halves
of the season, the playoff series would
open in the seccnd-pUce team's ballpark
(or one game and switch to the first-place
team’s for the rem aining games.
If there arc two different winners, the
series would open in the home park of the
secondhalf winner (or Iwo games and the

NEW Y O R K (U P I) - The M ajor
league P layers Association is expected
to approve a new playoff formula today
that w ill elim inate the prospect of teams
profiting from losing.
Major-league executives, concerned
about protecting the gome's integrity,
have devised a playoff plan to take care
of the possibility of a team winning its
division in both halves of the season. If
that happens, the first-round playoff
opponent w ill be the team that finishes
second during the second half of the
season.
The two clubs w ill meet in a best-of-fivc
series to determ ine the overall division
winner.
Don Fehr, an associate counsel (or the
Players Association, said the proposal
submitted Wednesday would go in a vote

f

Thursday, Aug.», 1S H - 7A

Evinlnfl Htrald, Sinford. FI.

( I I inning*)
C la
0)0 000 070 0 - ) 7 7
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001 070 000 I - 4 II |
D enny.
M onge
(!)
and
Ha*«ey.
G Ifa to n
D r ago
(•).
H a w le y (8) and N a rrc n , B u llin g
(I).
W R a w le y
I t 3)
L -

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Leaders
M a te r L e a g u e Le ad e r*

By Untied Pra** lateraattewal
Bitting
Ib a te d o n 3,1 appearance*
e a ch te a m '* gam e* p layed )
N a tio n a l League
• ab
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D e m o n M il
98 77S 74 )?8
M a d lo c k . P tf
48 148 S3 373
Rose. P h il
44 740 •4 773
to iler, Cin
43 730 80 370
G u e rre ro , L A
47 77) 71 II I
Brook*,, NY
i f 204 44 J l l
R a iim , M i l
47 7)) 77 308
M a y . SF
41 703 4) 307
C n tp o o n . O n
44 734 71 307

Howe,

44 778 70
League
e #b h pet
P a o o re k .S e a
44 7 47 l i j p
J '* k . Sea
37 )07 M 317
Sing tin . ( la l
4) 771 ?4 333
O liv e r, Tee
*4 748 i s ));
A lm o n . C h i
47 771 77 7)4
Fven*
Bo*
43 )44 M 379
H e n drsn. O ak
47 747 13 374
L a m to r d . Bo*
43 74) 14 ) lt
M m p h ry . N Y
94 71) 44 318
R e m y , Bo*
30 70) 44 313
Hem e Runt
N a tio n a l Le a g u e
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PM
and
K in g m a n .
NY
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14 H e n d ric k , S tl II
A m e r ic a n Le a g u e
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CMk 14. G r a y , Sea II F o rd and
G ric h . C a l a n d M u rra y . Bat 17.
R u n t B a tte d In
N a t io n a l L e a g u e
F o t ir r .
C»n
50.
Schmidt, P M
44
C o nce p cio n .
C in
43
G a rv e y .
L A , (lu c k n e f. C h i and K in g
m an. N Y 41
A m e r ic a n L e a g u e
A rm a *
O a k and B e ll
l e t 4f, O glkvie
and Thom e*. M il 43 W in fie ld
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M t l 37: N o rth , SF 74, ic o tt . M tl
and M o re n o P it 7). C o lU m Cm
71
A m e r ic a n Le a g u e
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to n. O ak 37.
C r u f, Sea 31.
O 'lo ne, C lt 70, L e F lo re , C h i 18.
B u m b ry . H a l U
P itc h in g
V ic to r le t
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C a rlto n
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IA— Evening Herald, Sanffd, FI

r # r

Medfly Button
Memorializes
Gov. 'Moonbeam'

Thursday, Aug. It, 1981

PEO PLE
IN BRIEF

LO S A N G E L E S
The Mediterrsnean
in fe s ta tio n
has
m em orialized with a
the expense of Gov.
G. Brown J r .

Barbra Streisand Was
'Mesmerized' By Redford
C a lled P r t u International
Barbra Streisand had a lot ot romances alter her
m arriage to E llio t Gould, including Omar Sharif.
Canadian Prim e M in u te r P ie rre Trudeau, Ryan
O'Neal. Peter Bogdanovich, Warren Beatty and K r u
K r i i toller ion. But her relationahtp with Robert
Bedford was tomething else, according to the current
M cC aQ 'i magazine excerpt from the biography
"B a rb ra " by Ja m e i Spada Although Spada doesn’t
include Redford on h u list of Streisand romances, he
does think the sexual chem istry between them was
real. He quotes A rthur la u re n ts, who wrote their film ,
"T he Way We W ere." as saying. "She was sim ply
mesmerized because she found him so beautiful."
Redford said of Streisand, "H e r femininity brings out
the masculinity in a man, and her masculinity brings
nut a nun's fem ininity, vulnerability, and rom an­
ticism , whatever you want to c a ll It.”

Pop Knows Almost All
Neal Gray is the proud surrogate papa of a bouncing
baby penguin boy. Or maybe it's a girl. It a ll started
when a King penguin chick, later named Adm iral Bird,
was hatched at the Cedar Point amusement park in
Sandusky. Ohio. Its father abandoned the usual papa
penguin role of incubating the chick. That left park
curator Gray and his staff to hand-raise the baby.
Although the birth of K in g penguin in capivity is
uncommon. Gray extrapolated from what is known
about other penguin breeds.
We made educated guesses about things such a»
quantity of food and incubating temperature," be said
"F ro m here, we based our actions on the behavior of
ihe anim al." What G ra y doesn't know yet Is Adm iral
B ird a male or female. Sometimes only another
penguin knows (or sure.

t

t

f U P llfruit-fly
been
button-at
Edmund

The JW-inch button shows a
drawing of a M edfly with
Brown's face where the pest's
head would be. "F r u it F ly of
the Y e a r” says the caption
with the words. •‘Governor
M o o n b e a m " below
the
drawing.

A JOB
WELL D O N E

S an ford I’o lic r C h ie f H rn H u tlrr, ( r ig h tI p r e se n t* p la q u e s o f a p p r e c ia tio n to
Iton n ir G r e e n , ( c e n te r ) and C h ris I .a k r for th e ir c a p tu r e o f a r o b b e r y s u s p e c t
fiv e m o n th s a g o . 1-akr and (ir e r n . b o th e m p lo y e e s o f a lo c a l l ir e s to r e , w it­
n e sse d tw o m e n k n o ck a 6 6 -y r a r-o ld - S a n fo r d w om an lo th e g r o u n d , sn a tc h
h er p u r s e , a n d fle e . I.a k r and G r e e n c h a s e d Ihe b a n d its’ c a r an d fin a lly
sto p p e d it b e h in d G o ld sb o ro E le m e n ta r y S c h o o l. T h e tw o c r o o k s e s c a p e d , hut
th e g e ta w a y c a r d r iv e r w a s c a p tu r e d . A ll th r e e hav e e ith e r b e e n c o n v ic te d of
th e c r im e o r p le a d e d g u ilty to r o b b e r y c h a r g e s s te m m in g fr o m t h e in c id e n t.

The
“ M oonbeam "
nickname was first hung on
the governor by Chicago SunTunes colum nist M ike Royko,
who has expressed frequent
bemusement over Brown's
more unusual proposals.
Shirley Whitney, chairman

G O V. BROWN
of the 38th Assembly District
R e p u b lic a n C e n tra l Com ­
mittee, came up with the
button idea. She said 1,000
buttons were quickly sold at
t l each "and we're now into
the second thousand."

Singers Who Act, Actors Who Sing A re First Noticed
By RUTH TH O M PSO N
There are two lines that
usually rate press notices:
"singer turns actor" (that’s
the biggest draw , and "actor
turns singer.”
Johnny Cash, who by now
has several
fin e
p e r­
formances to his credit, a ll
but apologizes to the trained
actors with wham he ap­
pears for being "new ” at this
side of the business. He
needn't
K irk Douglas, with whom
Cash worked on his first
H im . c h a ra c te rize d the

solemn-faced country singer
as a fine natural actor. The
Douglas sentim ent was
echoed earlier this season by
E li W a llach w ho added,
"Johnny has fine tim ing,"
when they appeared together
in the CBS m ovie, “The
Pride of Jesse H atlam ."
For his dram atic debut
last winter in an N B C movie,
"Three Hundred M iles for
S te phan ie," s in g e r Tony
Orlando won wide praise as
the father of a c ritic a lly til
daughter
Then there's singer Kenny

Rogers whose first television
movie, "K e nny Rogers as
the G a m b le r ." fo r CBS.
earned the highest movie
rating last year. He's dune a
second one on location in
Georgia, “ Coward of the
County."
With a few exceptions, the
actors and actresses who
suddenly develop club acts
or star In m usical television
specials, turn out to have
mudeal talent and often
c o n s id e r a b le m u s ic a l
training as well.
E ste lle P a rs o n s caused

comment when she sang a
hymn in last spring's "The
Gentleman B andit" an CBS
because movie-goers got to
know her first as a dram atic
actress. But M iss Parsons
needed no crash coaching
course. She is a graduate of
ihe New E n g la n d Con­
se rva to ry of M u sic.
Another trained singer is
• Wooder W om an" Lynda
Carter who sang on radio
when she was 15, moved on
to l a s Vegas when she was
19, and was m ore than ready
when asked to star in a

m usical variety television
speciaL
Donna Pescow, who went
in to h e r own te levisio n
series, "A n g ie ," following
her touch mg performance
opposite John Travolta in
" S a tu rd a y N ig h t F e v e r ,"
didn't sit around waiting far
cast agents to call when
"A n g ie" folded She shaped
up an act she had been
developing just in case and
debuted as a singer (again,
she has a good voice and has
studied at the New York
cabaret Les M ouches.

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OURSELVES
Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Avg. it . 1 H I— IB

In And Around G eneva

'Salute-A-Youth
Essay Contest

. Geneva's own M artha (M rs. B ill)
lo e hte thinks the folks of Geneva are a
well-read bunch!
And. she should know — she's been the
librarian of the bookmobile since the
Geneva
inception of this service two years ago.
Correspondent
M rs. Izichte says that over "100 books
319-SIN
were checked out weekly during this
sununer" from the Seminole County
Bookmobile during Its Geneva route.
This is a hefty average, according to her, inoculations before entering school Aug.
compared to comm unities with a large 31. and others who would like to have
populace.
their blood pressure and urine checked.
The bookmobile comes to the Geneva
At the invitation of the Geneva Citizens
Post Office every Thursday from 10 30 Association, the Seminole County Health
a m. until 12:30 p.m., and then goes on to Dept, sponsors a health c lin ic — free to
n e ig h b o rln g O vle d o fro m 2 -6 p m .,a t the the public — the second a id fourth
Meat World parking lot.
Frid ays of esch month at the community
Interestingly enough, the bookmobile center from I 00 a.m. until noon. The
is operated much like a branch library,
next clinic before school starts w ill be
and has its own collection of books.
Aug. 28.
However, if you need a special book. Just
A lso , upon request, the health
let M artha know. She assured me she w ill
department w ill bring the necessary
do her best to meet your request.
equipment lor free hearing and eye
-------examinations.
M r. and M rs. W ill lochte, Martha and
B ill's son and daughter-in-law, have
A "welcome home" U due lairaine
returned from their honeymoon to the
Whiting who has Just returned to Geneva
mountains of North Carolina and the
from her varaUon which was partly
state of M aryland to settle Into their
spent in Washington, D C. attending the
home at Lemon Bluff.
fiveday convention of the National
W ill m a rrie d the form er Sandra
Association of Professional Educators.
Wheaton of M aitland on Aug. 1 at the
While talking to U ra in e this week, I
Geneva United Methodist Church. The
teamed that she U the State liegislative
ceremony was performed by hts uncle,
Chairm an of the Florida Association of
the Rev. le w is Sanderford, pastor of the
Professional Educators. She retired la it
F irs t IVesbytertan Church of Green­
year after 20 years as an educator,
sboro, Ga.
Ilaving served in her last position as
librarian at the Sanford Middle School.
U nlike the modem cliche, "1 have
i-oraine is very active in the com­
some good news, and 1 have some bad m unity affairs of Geneva, too. She would
news", the Geneva Citizens Association tike to encourage ev ery one to attend the
lias only goqd news - especially for
Geneva Cittiens Association meetings
parents of pre-schoolers who still need
which are normally held the fu st Monday

Seminole County Rotary Clubs w ill celebrate Youth Week,
Sept. 1J-19 by sponsoring a "Salute a Youth" Essay contest
According to C harlie F ritc h ol the Casselberry f lo u r y d u b ,
a "deserving kid w ill win the lirst prire of a 3100 Savitv.s
Bond."

of each month at I p.m. at the Com­
m unity C e n te r. The nest m eeting,
however, has been postponed tn honor of
the traditional la b o r Day, and w ill be
held Sept. 14 at 8 p.m.

* Lou

Childers

Fritch said, " K id s need a pal on the back I V contest u i t
the ability to w rite an e s s a y - lt’s to find a neat kid " He
suggests that anyone knowing a deserving kid to please pul it
in writing.
Rules are as follows.

Be looking f i r a mad-out from this
organization In the very near future. It
will explain in detail the scope of this
civic group whose membership dues are
only $2 annually.

Any parent, relative, friend or neighbor m ay submit an
essay |!00 words or less I on why any school age Seminole
County youth I grades 1-12) should receive recognition by the
Rotary d u b s of Seminole Countv.
Please identify yourself (name, address and phone number I
and state your relationship to the youth being an im ated .
Characteristics such as citizenship, initiative, responsibility,
friendliness and consideration are stressed

In Just three weeks, the Geneva
Homeakers, now under the leadership of
M rs. W. T. &lt;H e n rie tta ) E dw ards,
president, w ill commence meetings for
'8K82 at 10 a.m. the second Wednesday
of each month beginning Sept. 9 at the
Geneva Com m unity Center on F irst
Street. F o r more Information, you may
call Henrietta at 3494418

Essays must be postmarked by midnight Aug. 31, to be
considered.
M ail essays to: Casselberry Rotary Club. P O
Casselberry , 32707.

PILOT CLUB C O N V E N T IO N
I owe the wealth of new insight about
the homemakers to past-president and
28-year Geneva resident, Mrs Dave
(Jenny) Brow n of Lake Harney.
The Browns recently completed their
annual two-week vacation tn an un­
conventional w ay. N o rm a lly , D ave
closes his T itu sville automotive business
and they travel.
Thu year, however, they were based at
home, going salt water fishing at the
coajt some days, entertaining company,
and enjoying their three month old
grandson, A sh le y (good Southern
name!), while h u parents, Larry and
Jube Brown of T itusville, got away for a
lew days vacation themselves.
Jenny and Dave also did whal a lot of
other Am ericans do on vacation — they
wwked, living up around the home
place!

l-aura Chase. righ t, president and o fficial
delegate of the P ilo t ( lu ll of Sanford, and Helen
(Juinn of Ottawa, Ontario. Canada, president of
P ilo t International, are shown during the both
a n n u a l convention
of the c iv ic - s r r v ic e
o rg a n iz a tio n held in San Diego, C a lif .
Representatives of the 20.000 executive and
professional women from !he I'niled States, the
Baham as, Bermuda, Canada, England, France,
Japan and Mexico focusrd plans on their m ajor
project to provide fu ll citizenship for handicapped
people. Pilot members are community volunteer
Ira d rrs who help to solve problems and initiate
action that will bring a better way of life to people.
Projects of Ihe organization include safety
education, assistance to the aged, handicapped
people, the ill and youth. P ilo t Clubs are actively
supporting thr International Y ear of Disabled
Persons as proclaim ed by the United Nations.

Box i l l

Each of the eight Rotary Clubs in Seminole County w ill
acknowledge the winners and present awards during die week
of Sept. 13 -19

Swann Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. George L Swann Sr will celebrate their 50lli
wedding anniversary Sunday with open house hosted by tlielr
children at the home of a son and his wife, M r and M rs
Charles Swann. 175 S. 5th St., la k e Mary
George and O ra M ae invite friends to come help them
celebrate. "We want your presence- not presents," they said.

THE SMART W O M A N t\
PLANS A H E A D

/

Reader Says Booklet Best
$2 A Teen-Ager Can Invest

nD E
r iAi Ri Ai B
t iB
t iYv : 1
• just —
readi
your new booklet, "W hat
Every Teen-Ager Ought tn
K n o w ," and I think it 's
p ro b a b ly t h r best $2 In­
vestment a teen-ager can
make. Although I'm no longer
a teen-ager, I think it's
wonderful the way you ex­
plain the facU of life to young
people.
I was especially glad (hat
you told g irls It was possible
to get pregnant without going
a ll the way. 1 had never seen It
in print, but I know It's true
because It happened to me.
i M y mother didn't believe me
at the time, and even after the
doctor who delivered m y baby
told her that I w u still a
virgin, she rrfused to believe
it. I
I w ill never forget going to a
birthday party when I was II.
A bunch of us kids had drunk a
lot of beer, and on the way
home, a 17-year-old boy I
hardly knew drove me home.
He stopped at a secluded area
for a little Innocent making
out. One thing led to another,
and before I )new It, I was in a
situation I couldn't handle.

*V j «'

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When he couldn't talk me Into
going a ll the way, he tried to
lorce me, but I fought and
clawed and kicked. He didn't
succeed, but he came close.
T he fo llo w in g m onth I
(bought I had some kind of
infection because I missed my
period. After three months, I
went to a doctor, and when my
tests came back from the lab I
thought there had been a mixup. I knew I couldn't be
pregnant because I was still a
virgin.
Well, the doctor said it 'i
possible to become pregnant
without actual penetration tf
the m ale releases the sperm
dose enough to the '•mate's
vaginal opening for the sperm
to "sw im up” and meet the
ovum. Then the egg la fer­
tilized and pregnancy occurs.
When I told the boy I was
e xp e ctin g h is baby, he
laughed, his mother laughed,
and h u whole fam ily thought I
w u trying to pin something
on him that w u not his doing.
( I never did convince him that
the baby w u his.)
Today, that "b aby" is the
prettiest 17-ytar-old girl you
could ever want to act. She
never had a father to enjoy
her, but she h u a mother who
loves her very much.
So, A b b y, please keep
telling teen-agers that they
don't have to goal! the way to
get pregnant I know.

I WAS A PREGNANT
VIRGIN
DEAR ABBY: H. IN
HLUFFTON, OHIO, was
irritated by people who had a
habit of touching or patting

Tie W4WJV O U M C H O IC E O F

DRESS. BLOUSE &amp;
SPO RTSW EAR-fa
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him while conversing.
F o r a number of years,
therapists have been actively
promoting touching through
w h al they have te rm ed
"sensitivity training." They
m aintain that a friendly hand
placed on another's a m i nr
sh o u ld e r
has
g re a t
th e ra p e u tic
value
an d
prom otes a closeness not
possible to attain by mere
words.
Although I t in not naturally
in c lin e d
toward
such
“ fa m ilia rity ," I have been
trying to develop a natural
ease
In ap plying
th at
technique. But according to
you,
touching m ay
be
re sente d ra the r than a p ­
preciated. Please explain.
P U Z Z li'.D IN S A Y R E , P A .
D E A R PU ZZ LE D : IL IN

___________
B L U F fT O N
co m p la in e d
about people who not only
patted and le ache d, bat
grabbed him as w r l l - a tar
cry from a "friendly hand
placed on another's arm or
tho older."

H IO N

Agreed, le a ch in g d o rs
p ro m o lr a closeness net
possible by m rrr words, but U
oar prefers distance rather
than rlotenets, II is his right
to be left alone.
Getting married? Whether
you waat a form al rb urrh
wrdding or a simple, “ doy o u r oxo-thing"
ceremony,
get Abby's aew booklet Send
81 plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped (35 rents) envelope
to: Abby's Wedding B ooklet
12088 Hawthorne Blvd., Suite
5080, Hawthorne, C alif. M258.

218-230 E . F I R S T ST,
SANFO RD
PM . 32 2 3534

FR EE I

TREASURE
CHEST
-

Back to School
starts here
Shoes that under aland children s needs and likes Fine lit that
protects growing young lent, built-in quality and aupporl
Stylos and com lotl mat put on a happy lac a For him casual
oafoed and spsed-lacad ankle boot For her stilchery lie and
pratty T-slrap laa lh e r with molded sole

EXCELLEN T
SIZE RANOE
Mr. and M n. Dark! M.
(Debra) Towns of Sanford,
announce the birth of a son,
Christopher Lee, wbo weighed
in a tllb * ., lia s , on Aug. 18, at
Seminole Memorial Hospital.
Maternal grandparents art
Mr. and M n. Gene Wright
J a c k s o n v ille .
P atarn al
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. LeRoy Towns, McRae,

*
M B

�■ f * t *

1 6 — E van in g Herald. Sinlord, FI.

T lH in d ty ,A w fl.H . ( M l

1981-82 Bus Schedules For Sem inole County Schools
1J _

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1 4I1d Mvfht
It SIL ASinlord
A mAvt
*
Myrtlt
Santord
l it Santord Avt A Michigan St
7 K Santord Avt A Oak Way
7 St Santord Avt A M art a Farms Rd
7 SI Santord Avt A North Way

H era are but schedules for tom e
Sem lnolo County schools. Remaining
schedules w ill be p u b lish e d In the

Alltrntto Irtgt tor all itvdtnlt

H erald as soon as available.
1 14
1 17
1 14
1 IS
114
117
l it
I 74

SEMINOLE HIGH
Morning Trip* t*r itudritii onrollod in I perl*4%
In U a
Ptrtimmon River view SR 4* OtMk**rt
ID
I &lt;0
4 41
4 44
4 4S
4 41
4 44
4 so
4 SI
4 U

Persimmon A n ft Ith si
»■&lt;«»«» Av# 4 H i K i l l n T.
SR 44 1 Pomegraneir A*r
SRp4S A Mangoutlin* Av*
SR 44 A Molly Ay*
Pocon A v t. A 4ih Si
Av 0( 4&lt;}0 Avt 1 PH SI
in n si A oiivt A&gt;t
Oily* Avt A lllh SI
llth St A Oletndef

1 10
1 11
1 11

1 14
1 ft
1 77
111

B p i IM
Airport Bird Line*M Htighlt Actdemy Manor
Airport Bird 01 Mocal » Croctry
Southwatt Rd A llth St
Brthiaw Clr. (Media ol Beck I
Acadtmy Avt A Tutktogto SI
Acadtmy Avt IMiddit of Block!
Airport Blvd A in v tlt Ln
Airport Blvd A Sth SI
Airport Blvd at III Moult South at SR 44
But II*
Gold tbora
lllh St A Oltandtr Avt
Mulberry Avt A 10th St
Ith St A Ittaamlna Avt
But HI
Oaidtaart
lllh St A Molly Avt
lllh St A Olivo A v t
Ollvt Avt A 10th SI
lih St A Avocado Avt

Moritini lil t ! tor tivdtnli thrilled In I periodi

■M i l l
Wttivo Perk Lonewood Mtrthtm Rood Ldk i Mt'thorn ReadI*
W tylM t Drivy Ut(4l4 Rttd Idrttwlld*. Ravovin* Pork
7 04 Wtkiva P»fk Or 4t "Katia't" Landing
7.11 Wtklvo Pork Rd 41 "Muta'k" Slop
7 IS Wekir* Pork Or 41 ’ CtrvM 'k" Slop
7.11 SR 4t i l "Hulchltenv Sice
1 71 Longmio«f AAotthtm Rd. Oil SR 44
7 14 Longwood Marknam Rd A vi» Bonita
7 IS Longwood Mtrthtm Rd A Via Htrmo**
7 14 Lakt Markham Rd tl "Dugid'i" Slop
7:10 Lakt Markham Rd A Canal Dr
■ 7 11 SR 44 A Maurttn Or
■ 7 14 SR 44 A Ctnltr Rd
7 14 Waytid* Dr A Htndtrion Ln
7 17 Wayiida Or A Wilton Plact
7 14 W avldr Dr A Kalit SI
7 41 SR 44 A Eldtr Rd
1 41 uptaia Rd A Ruoy St,
1 4S U p u ia Rd A Vihltn Rd
1 t l Upset* Rd A Cardan Cl
7 44 CR 44A A Rldgt Or
M l CR 44A A Lartwood Or
7: SI Vihlan Dr A Tanorma Dr
7 SI Vihlm Dr A Cltrvt Dr
7 SI Cltrvt Or A Sattuma Dt
7 S4 Sattuma Or A Trmpit llr
7 14 Country Club al Ravmna B ip in l Church
But 1*4
Rlvarvlew Ir 44-llh Slrrtt llin llrttt
7 41 Rlvarvlew Avt A Ntftluut St
7:4S SR 44 A Pomtgranalt Avt
7 44 SR 44 A Mengoutlln* Avt
,7:.41 SR 44 A Molly Art
7 4t Prcan Avt A 4th it
, 7 SI Otlvt Avt A llth St

44-

Morning trial tor iludanti tartlltd In I ptrlodt
Bvt It*
CR 4*A CR 411 Orange (tvd CR.IA Acadtmy Manor
CR
44A
t
l
Suburban
E
Hefei
JO
7 It CR 411 A Markham Rd
7 17 CR all A Mt SI
7 74 CR all at Wilton Eltmtntary School
I 17 Orongt Blvd A North Rd
7 11 No S4IS Ortngt Blvd IBumgordntr’k Slop)
■7:14 Orangt Blvd A Now York Si
7 IS Orangt Blvd al "Caiurs" Slop
-7 14 Oronot Blvd al "Tindal l " Slop
7 17 Orangt Blvd A Ortgon Avt
7 ft Orangt Blvd A tlaltty Avt
7 14 Orangt lilvd A Dgnbtt Avt
' I 41 CR t l A Monrot School Rd
■1,41 CR IS A Church SI
7 41 CR IS A Palm Ttrr
7 44 Airport Blvd - 0« SR *4
■ 7 St Agodtmy Av* Middit d Block
'.lif t Acodomy Avt A lu t t H t H Si. *
M l htinuno O r Mtaeio at *•«»
Bu t!
lllh lllt t t Stuthwoil Road Lincoln HtipMi
7 44 lllh II A Oltandtr Av*
: 7 » Sculhwttt Rd 1 Iffh SI
7.11 Airport Blvd al Rocal’t Croctry
But 141
OtMbtrt Ct .lit Brnvtr Court
1 4S Ph SI A Avocado Avt
1:47 (ih SI A Jtstomint Avt
&gt;7:44 Mulbtrry Avt 1 Iftth SI
; 7 so 10th SI A Ollvt Avt
B n 111
Downtown Park Avt. Mtll*nvill*,|Sik Strati
7 s* Vd St A Laura! Avt
7 ft Park Av* A Sth SI
7 74 Park Avt A t'h St
7 41 fln St A C v p rm Avt
7 41 Locust Avt A tin SI
7 44 lllh SI A Park Avt
7.4* Park Avt A 17lh SI
7 SI MMlonviilt Avt A Forttl Or
7: SI ISth Si A Orangt A n
Bat It
Mtiionvriit Ctltry Avt Ctmvrtn City Sent re wttdm irt
7 II Mtl lonvillt Avt A 4lh il
7 11 Ctltry Avt A Mtllonvlllt Avt
1:11 Ctltry Avt A Scott Avt
M l Ctltry Avt at "Mobby t" Slop
7.14 Ctlory Ay* t l "BtyfAT ‘ Slop
7 IS Ctlory Av* *1 "Shulmin't" Slop
f:M Colory Avt A Ctmtron Av*
7 40 M oorn Station Rd tl hid Trtllar on Norlh (Etkl ol Bttrdall
Avt I
7 41 Ktntgcky Av* 4l "Jtcktonk" Slop
1:44 Pin* Way *1 "CWOtttil" Slap
7 44 Sanoro Blvd A MeYay Or (Recreation Clubl
7 SI Santord Av* al Sanford Cauttk A p trlm tN t
M l Santord Avt A 741h SI
But III
Waihlnglon Ooki
7 4i Mol lonvillt A Norlh V
7 SO Summerlin Avo A McKay Blvd
■ v o ltl
Midwoy
1:47 SJptk Avo A Main St
7: SO Ma.n SI A BaarOail Av*
7 57 SR 4* A Craonway
Bat 44
Highway 17 41 CR AHIunland ■ titles Midden Lakt LakaMary BlvdLakt Mary Road
7 14 Highway 17 41 tl Shmtndoth Villagg
7 ft CR a ll *1 Cardan* Or
7 11 CR *77 - Moo# Slooit Bd
7 S4 Swniand Dr A Bar wood Cle
7 la Parkviaw Or A Fairmont Or (Bus Shtllor)
M l Collins Or A Perk view Dr I But Shell tel
7 41 Hidden Lakt Or A Plum Ira* Ct
I al Hidden Lake Or A Loch Low Dr IS)
7 4) Wildwood Dr A Winding R&gt;dgo Dr
7 44 RamPlewood Or A Hidden Lake Dr
7 4* Lah# Mary Blvd A Rdg* Dr
7 a* Lake Mary Blvd A Sir Lawranct Dr
7 40 Lakt Mary Blvd A Palmallt SI
7 51 Crytlal Lakt Ava A Ind SI
I SS Old taka Mary Rd at "Lot's Slop
,1 '*
But IN
»' m
Markham Waadt Baad la k t Maty Blvd Lvnywked
*
LakaMary Raad CR llCaoalry Cluk Road Lo ci Arbor
1
j 4
M i Markham Woods Rd A Aero Cl
M l Markham Wood! Rd A Edttthoaran Rd.
111* Markham Woods Rd A Oak Ln (Turnaround)
4 / 1 Tl Markham Woods Rd A Sionogalo South
, *» 111 Markham woods Rd. A Windsor Isl*
*^
4 M S Greenwood Blvd A Donegal Av*
*1 M l longwood Lakt Mary Bd ON L a k t Mary Blvd
f* K
M A Langwood la k t Mary Rd A Humphrey Rd
M l longwood Lake Mary Rd A Acorn Dr.
a J ' 7 » CR t l A ConHntnlal Blvd
1 as CR 11 A Mam Rd
i l
141 CR 11 A Broadmoor R4
jjj Ijj 7 4SJ Ird 11 ON CR IS
1:41 Counlry Club Rd A Grand Band Ava
* is 7 M Country Club Rd A Root Rd
■
ft ■ ; *• Counlry Club Rd A Rantoul Lit.
» K M l Wall Crykltl Or A Sauih Clyslal
e ft .■
,* B 111 Wat Crytlal Or A Lata Bird
■ M ill
AIMMUH
1 j;
7.ft ft*h It. A Bt (stm Av*
# % f .U B n su n Avt. A Byrd At*.
•1
But 144
Carr tag* Coat CR a h Macce Hammock
l ft
&gt; Vi 1:41 CR a ll A Carr.ago Cevt (Northeatl Entranc*)
14) CR 477 A Tucker SI
1:44 CR 417 A Radio SI
1:41 CR a ll A Sunland Dr
1:4/ MyrHd SI A Lake Avt

CROOMS HIGH
Morning Tript tor tluOovdt tnroiltd In 4 ptrodl
Tima
Rat III
Santa Barbara RMftwoodAvg.
Country Club Manor m u si
*47 Florid* Av* A Santa Barbara Dr
*44 Ridgewood Avt A Ttrract Dr
* ft RidgrwooO Avt A Geneva Ttrr
in
Andtrion Clr A Country Club Or
*:SS 10th SI A Martwtll A vt
* S7 Lakt Avt A Ttth St
Alttrnoon trlpk tor all students
Bat t i l
lift St-Ctontry Club—Ridgmood Avt— 17th SI
T in t
I 14 Lakt Avt A 10th SI
100 ftih St A Hartwell Avt
1 n Country Club Dr A Andtrion Clr
1 04 Ridgewood Avt A Gen#** Ttrr
1 07 Ridgtwood Avt A Ttrract Or
1 dt Florida Avt A Santa Barbara Dr
M l llth St A Laurel Avt

SEMINOLE - CROOMS HIGH
Rut 111
Ctltry Avt Camtrtn City laniard Airport Orttmwald
TlMR
4 14 Ctttry Av* A Scott Av*
4:17 Ctltry Ay* al "lim pkln*'" Slop
4.14 Ctttry Av* A Ctmtron Avt
*11 Baardall'Av* A Moortt Station Rd
4:14 Richmond Rd at "Berry'*" Step
*11 Richmond Rd A SR 4*
BIB S Cameron Av* at "Duruvi" Stop
*14 S Cameron Avt it "Alm wofth'l" Slop
* IS Kentucky Aim it "Jocktgn’S" Slop
4 17 Rear dill Avt t l "Holcomb'S" Step
*:M Margvtttt Av* t l " Richardson's" Slap
4 41 Margvatit Av* A Ohio Av*
4 44 Santord Avo A lath SI
* 47 Santord Avt A Woodmtr* Blvd
*:44 lllh SI A French Ava (Creams Students Onlyl
Only!
4 SI Stmmolt High School
■vs I
Midway
4 ft (Srlfion Avt A Byrd Avt
4:40 Britton Av* A JWh SI
4:4) Slpat Ava A Mein SI
1:4) B*erd*ll Avo A Main SI
*47 SR 44 A Crvenwey
t SI Sam no 14 High School
1:01 Creemk High School
But 144
Rfitland Park Welhlnglen Oaks
t ft McKay Blvd A Hughes Avo
*47 McKay Blvd A Sterling Av*
4 44 h o lt Or A III Dr
* 45 HI Or A Summtrlln Avt
* ft Croomt M.gn School
g ift Sam no it High School
Bvt i n
Santord AveMtlleavilla
*17 Santord Avt at Drivers Lictntt
OMR*
* a Santord Avo A lath St
4 ft Santord Avt A Urn St
* 41 Mallonvliti Ave A Rosalia Or
4:44 Meflonvlllt Avt A Forts! Or
4:41 lllh Si A Orangt Av*
4:11 Saminoi* High School
7:11 Croemi High School
Bus II
Hoy t lt lC R A lt M e c c a HomntctSanart
t ft Hwy 17 41 al wmdy Mill Mobil*
Mom* park
1:14 Mwy 17 4) A SR *14 IConvanianca
Moral
*17 CR 417 A Gardens Or
4 14 CR *17 A Horst H abit Rd
* as Hutitr Avt A Myrtle H
i n Myrtle SI A Nolan Rd
s u Myrll* SI A Lakt Avo
4 IS laniard Av* A Michigan H
* 14 laniard Av* A Oak Wat
4.ft Santord Avo at Railroad Crossing
4.40 Santord Avt A North Way
* 41 Sanora Bird A McKay Or
IRtcroalion Ctnltr I
1.47 Santord At* at Santord Court ApH
t : R Samnoti High School
7 01 Croomt High School
Bu s h
Svnland E tlaltt CB 417 Plnacratt
(Creonu OolyI
* 11 Collins Or A Parkvldw Or
* U Coil ins Dr A Lakt Dot Dr
4 14 Swniand Dr A Baywood Clr
L B Swniand Or A Flamingo Or
4: ft CR 417 A Radi* St
* :» CR 417 A Tucktr Or
A ft CR 417 A Carriage Cove
(NorMetll Bntl
*41 CR 417 at " B a k tfs" Dairy
4 47 Airport Blvd A Park Av*
ICroomi students Only)
« ft Sammow High
1 01 Croemi High
Bus t it
Hidden L o ta Lakt Mary Itv* Lake Mary
Lab*Mary Rd Academy Maker Lincoln Hoighrs
lautkwas t Id
Hidden Lakt Or A Plum Tree Ct
Hidden Lake Dr L Loth Lb* Dr It)
Wildwood Or A Winding Ridge Dr
RamHewood Oe A Hidden Lab* Or
Leka Alary Blvd A Ridge Or
Lbk* Mary Blvd A l l r Lawranc* Or
C ry till Lakt Ay* A bid II
Lakt Mary Rd at Srd Mowtb on Right Pad
Airport Blvd
Crooms High School
Academy Ay* — Aral *H Airport Blvd
Acadtmy At* A Tul kaagaa At
Bothim* O r - Middl* *1 Block
Airport Blvd A Hufhdy It
»th i l A Southwatt Rd
Sam in*I# High School
■us 114
Markham Waadi a* Tba Oottlagv
Laagwaad Lake Mery B A Country lie*
HaftAtt-CR-lt-Ceuwtry C M BA

a*
n 4i
1 41
1 44
* 45
*44
*47
4 SI
7.01

0:10
0:11
on

0 17
0: II
0:10
4 11
IB

4 ft
4 ft
4 II

*n
* IS
* 17
* It
* 40
0:41
0 41
4 4]
* 44
* 4S
0:44
* 47
O ft
7:01

on
*71
an
0:1*
4 ft
4 11
4 ft
4 11
4 14
4: ft
IX
4 1*
4 40
I 41
4.41
4 44
4:47

* ft
* ft
4 40
0:41
4:44
4:41
*n
7 01

* II
on
* 15
1:17
AM
4«
4 4)
4 41
1 41

1 ft
.lift

(•a,.*
. b JRdi An Rantoul
a .Ln
Country
Club
Counlry Clyb Rd A Kingswood Cl
W Crystal Dr A Likovl** Or
W Crystal Dr A 1 Crystal Dr
w Crystal Or A Lake Blvd
Counlry Club Rd A CR 44A
Sammolt High School
Croomt High School
IV I744
WokivaPark Or LaagwoodMarkham Rd
Lk Markham RdWMiaa Place Uytala B A
■ avthha Part 1R.4*
Wrkiv* Park Dr at Wokhra Park Landing
Wtklva Park Or — iou*h of Camp
Wtklva Park Or af "Mutt's" Slop
Longwood Markham Rd — Just off SR at
Longwood Markham Rd A Lakt R o m Lan*
Longwood Markhom Rd A Via Bonita
Lah* Markham Rd at "Cowleys" Stop
SR *4 — East ol Mtvr*«n Or
SR a* A Center Rd
Waytid* Dr A Wilton Place
Wayttd* Dr A Kali* St
SR 4* A S Ortgon A n
SR a* A Stanley Rd
Uptaia Rd al Small Br&gt;dg«
Uptel* Rd — South of Railroad Tracks
Uptaia Pd al Dutch Mill Nursery
Uput Ia Rd A Garden Court
CR 44* A Rktg* Dr
CR 44A A l irk wood Dr
VIM«n Rd A Tangerine Dr
Vihlen Rd A Citrus Or
SaHuma Or A Tempi* Or
Country Club Rd at Ravenna Park
Aaptisl Church
Seminole High School
Croomt High School
A n 741
CR i l l Ora:** Blvd-CR.IA
Wist It Airport Blvd
CR AAA A Banana Lakt Rd
CR 4)1 A HI St
Orangt Blvd A North Rd
No. S ail Ortngt Blvd (Bumgardnar'i Stop)
Orange Blvd at "A I Kampground"
Orange Blvd A New York SI
Orang* Blvd at "Gann's" Hop
Orangt Blvd A Indiana Av*
Or*i.g« Blvd A Missouri A N
Orang* Blvd A Dunbar Av*
CR IS A Monro* School Rd
CR IS A Church St
CR IS A law* SI
CR IS at "Lake's" Slog (Just North of
Narcissus Av* at Cham Fanctl
SR a* A Old Monro* Rd
SR at ai "M A M " Motors
Airport Blvd A J*w«tt Ln
(Stmlnoi* High SludonH Only)
Croomt High School
Sominol* High School
Sot lit
Part A fo llth lt
Park Av* A l«h SI
Park Av* A llth SI
15IH H A Elm Ava
Din SI A Cedar A n
Semi not* High School
Croemi High School
Im III
Dawwtow* Georgetown
Ird St A Laurel A n
Ird SI A Palmetto Av#
Ind SI A Loculi Av*
Ind SI A MellenvIU* Av*
Metlonville A n A 4th St
Metlonvlll* Av* A Ith St
Metlonvill* Av* A CHtfy Av*
Cn»ry Av* A Bay Avt
Loculi Av* A tlh SI
Croomt High School
Stmlnoi* High School

Alttrnoon trip* to* all tludamt
Bn t il
Old Lakt M ary Rd-Lab* M *ry-&lt; R-U-Lbw gw*ad Lakt Mary Rd
at Rd— The C rtwiagt —atarbbam Waadi Rd
f 11 Ovpart from Croomt High School
1 os Stmlnoi* High School
I I I Old L aka Mary R d at lo t Mom* on R Ighl
1:11 Crytlal Lakt Av* A Ind It
I D bd H - ON C R —11
I I I CR— 11 A Evantdal* Rd
M S CR— It A Broadmoor Rd
l;M CR— 11 A Main Rd
1 17 CR— 11 A Continental Blvd
1:14 Lang w ood-Lake Mary Rd i Acorn Or
M l longwood-Lake Mary Rd 1 Humphrey Rd
M l longwood-Lake Mary Rd A la k t Mary Blvd
M S RMnahart Bd A Anderson in I turnaround)
1 ft Greenwood Blvd A Donegal Av* (The Creating* 11:14 Markham
A Windsor III*
i « Markham Woods Rd A Stonagal* South
Markham
Woods Rd A Oak in (Turnaround)
1:41
i a Markham Woods Rd A E d r shearan R d
1:44 Markham Woads Rd A Ortantrt* Ln
I 41 Markham Woods Rd A Dawn Ct
Rm i m
C R — o*A—C R —i l l —WUsa* Eiemaedary Schaol
Tima
I.SS Drear I from Croomt High School
Stmlnoi* High School
I:
l if t CR—AAA A Corkwood Dr
1 11 CR—AAA A Up**la Rd
CR-44A *1 Mayfair Villas
t:M CR-AAA pi Suburban Estates
I 17 CR-AAA A Banana Lak* Rd
CR—A ll A HI U
1:14 CR—A ll at Wilton EtamaNary School
(SludonH Tranafar I* Bus No 1(11
St* Schedule Below
Bos HI
Wilson ■ Stmaatary—WaysMt Dr—Wall IRA*— Markkam-Wskivl
Part
1 ft Depart from Wilson EHmtntary
1:11 Ways Ida Or A Henderson la
1 ft Way*id* Dr A Wilton PI
1)4 Waytid* Dr A Kalla H
1:41 SR-At A Ctnltr Rd
141 I E —AB A Orangt A n
1:43 SR-A* *1 "Bwaggarty t " Hop
1 44 SP -a * A Mauraan Dr
1:41 lake Markham Rd A Canal Dr
'1:0 Lak* (Markham Rd A South Sylvan Lak* Dr
1.41 Ltk* Markham Rd at ■'Cowley's" Slog
Longwood Markham Rd A VI* Hormoa*
in
t n Langwood Markham Rd A VI* Bonita
1 u longwood Markham Rd *11 5ft Mail Boies
i u Longwoad Markham Rd — South at I R —4*
i si SR —4* al "Hutchltant" Hoe
&gt;.n Wtklva Patk Dr at "Mute's" Hoe
I B Woklv* Park Dr *1 "Carvers" Hog
1 14 Woklva Park Dr ot " Katie's" Landing
I M Wrkiv* Park Dr at Wdklvt Haven

in

in

B n lit
Ravtaaa Park lock krber (Jpsata Rd.-IRA4
I 55 Depart tram Croomt High School
1 ft Seminole Hlgts Schaol
1:11 Country Chip R d Ol Ravens* Park BapHtl Church
1:14 Tempi* Or A SaHuma Or.
! : ■ Vmien Rd A Citrus Dr
t i l VMian Rd. A Tangerine Dr.
1 n Ilk a Blvd. at "Irm as " Houta im b Black)
1:14 Ltk* Blvd. A crystal Or.
1 ft Lak* gtvd A Fortasl Or.
1 M uptaia Rd. A Larkwkad Or.
I V Uptaia Rd. t l Dutch Nun N w w y
I ft upkala Rd A VUsSan Rd
114 Uptau Rd. at Small Bridge
M l IR-M at Imperial Station
&gt; n SR 41 A Elder Rd.
i » SR 4k at 'M AM Motors"
B m ftt
1R 44 CR1S BaakertewaOreng* Blvd
i t s Depart Irom Creams High School
l : « Stminol* High School
M l SR At A Rand Yard Rd.
I B CR IS at " L a k e s - Hag (Ckabs Link Ponce)
M 4 CR 11 A law* A n .
I ft CR IS A Church SI.
l i f t CR IS A Monro* Schaal R«
I P (bang* Blvd. A Dunbar A n
M t Orang* Blvd A NUtMurl A n .
l i f t Orang* Bird A Norm Indiana U
M l Or#&lt;sg* Blvd at "TlndWS" Hep
Orang* Blvd *1 "Gann's" stop
in
Orang* Bhrd. A New Vark tl.
I.H Orang* Blvd. al M Kampground
I B Mb Sail Orang* Bird I Bumgardnar'i Map)
Orange Blvd A Harm Rd.
• N il*
V S j a m M.-C rf* A n -W IL.RIv*r»t*w A n .
1:11 Oepkfl from Croomt High School
I N Saminoi* High School
M t nth si. a Eim a n .

Markham Woods Rd A Dawn Ct
Markham Woods ltd at Harmear Woods
Markham woods Rd A Edtashoetn Rd
Markham Woods Rd A Oak Ln (Tumaraungl
Markham woods Rd A Honogaio South
Markham Woods Rd A Windsor HI*
Craaiwvad »tvd A Donegal Av*
RhintAarl Ed A Anderson Ln (TwnsArgundl
Longwood Lake Mary A A lust ptl Lake
Mary Blvd
Longwoad Ltk* Mary Rd A Humpnroy Rd
Ldntwwd Las* Mary Rd A Acorn Or
CR II A C*M*WN*I Blvd
CR IIA Mam Rd
CR IS A droadmoar Rd
CR 11 A (vanadate Rd
* 4 H - Just *W CR 11
Counlry C M Rd A Grand Rand A N
Country C M Rd A Fraddrlck A n

in

lift

4 w
t l HA Park
Awa
1 10lllh
llth
1 Park
Ava
1 la Ird SI A Holly A n
1 IS ird SI A Prcan Avt.
1 M Ird Si A Mangwrtttn# A n
1 17 Jrd SI A Mulberry A n
1 14 SR at A Rlvtrvitw Av*
■ vs 17)
Park A n ONrgvtawo
I SS Depart Irom Croomt High School
1 BS Seminole High Schaol
1 f t Park Av* k irn H
M l Park Avo A Im H
1 11 MyrM* H i l l h H
1 IS Sth St A Cyprert Av#
Bus lit
Oeertetean-Mellanvills OowRtowa looter*
1:11 Oepart Irsm Croomt High School
1 01 Seminole Hgh School
1:10 LOCUSI Avt A till SI
1 11 Hh St A Mellonv-lte Av*
114 Melionvlll* Ave A ith St
1 IS M S I S Locust Ave
lit
Jnd Si A Senior* Av*
1 77 Ird SI A Mapvu.a Av#
1 11 Ird It A Elm An
Bus 114
ItRltrd A vaC eltry Av*, Cameron City
1 PS
1 14
) »
1 14
1M
i n
1 14
1:10
M t
1 11
1:ft
1 M
lit
1 41
1 45
la *
1:41
141
1 4*

I.SS
I BS
1:10
I D
I M

Seminole High School
Santord Avt A llth SI
Santord At* A llth SI
Santord Avt A Plumose Dr.
Locust Ate A llth St.
Ctttry Art A Vrlionvlli# Ave
Celery Av* A Scott A v t
Cotery A n tt "Sermono"' Hep
Ctltry Avt. al "Simpkins” ' Slop
Ctltry Are al ’’Bevta’t " Stop
Camaras l i t ON Ctltry Av*.
Richmond Rd ON SR 44
Richmond Rd at "Barry’s " Hop
Moores station Rd A Cam arm Av*.
Ktntucky A n al "Jackson's" Stops
Bear dan Av* al “ Holcsmb's" Stop
Bear cull Avt A Marguetl* Avt.
B**rd4li An . tl "Youngblood s" Hop
Beer*4II Avt at "Hill's" Stop

Bu st
Washing*** Oaks
Depart Irom Creomt High School
Saminoi* High Schaal
McKay Blvd. A Hugh** A n .
McKay Blvd A Stirling Av*.
ScoN Dr A III Or
Bus III
M t ila n v lllo S v m m e rlln

1 11
1.05
1: IP
1:1)
1:14
1 M
1:M

Depart Irom Crooms High School
Seminole Hfth School
lllh St. A Orango A n
AAaHonviil* Av* A Forest Or.
Melionvlll* Av* A Randolph St
Randolph SI A Summtrlln A n
Summerlin Av* A Langston Blvd

B n 171
Midway
I :1S Depart Irom Croomt High School
1 01 Stmlnoi* Hfth School
l i f t Britton A n A nm St.
1:17 Sipas Avt. -O N Hughey SI
1:14 Sipas Ave A Main SI.
■ n HI
Midway
1 IS Dapart from Croomt High School
1.0S Saminoi* High School
7 IS Brlsion A n A Byrd A n
1.17 Board*II Avt A Mam St.
1:10 SR as A Crenvway
B n 144
lllh II. lanftcd A n .-Airp o rtB lv d .I ll MargvtNt lipas A n
Way
1:11 Depart from Croomt High School
1 OS Saminoi* Hfth School
1.11 llth SI A Cedar A n
1 :» llth It. A Eim An .
I 77 tsm St A Filmed* Avo
1 74 Santord Avt. A Lemon St
I M Santord Avt A )Rh St.
1 M Santord Ave A ttth St.
1 :X Airport Blvd A Be ley Av*.
M l Airport Blvd A Melionvlll* A v t
1 ft Ohio Ave. A Maroued# Av#
I B Mamuetle Ave. tt "Garrett'S" GreeNious*
1 f t Slpat A n tl "Witten's" Hop
1.14 Pino way al "Ctrttoll't" Hop

Pm#

B a t ll
CR-417IBI Sealaad E n t it y Hwy 17 S lM yrttefl .1. Staferd A n .
1:11 Deperl from Croomt Hfth SrTvool
1 OS Saminoi* Mgh School
1 11 Tucker Or. ON CR 417
1:14 Sunland Or A Chtrokoo Clr. 5.
1:17 Hwy 17 41 ot Shonondoah Village
1:14 Hwy 17 41 *1 Windy HUH Mobil* Homos
1 10 Hwy 17 41 A East Rd
M l CR *17 A Gardens Dr.
1 ft CR *17 A Mors# Htbl* Rd
M t Myrll* SI A la kt Av*
1:41 Santord A# A Michigan H
1.41 Santord Avt A Oak Way
1:44 Santord Av*. A North Way
■ w ill
taaar* Cart lag* Cava CR 411 W loMaad Eltatts
1:11 Depart from Croomt High School
1 OS Sem mole High School
1 10 Santord Av* A Sanora Blvd.
1:14 CR a ll al Carriage Cov*
1.77 CR 417 *• Radio U
1:14 Flamingo Or. A Sunland Or.
M 0 Sunland Or A Mimosa Ttrr.(N )
M l Codint Dr. A lakt Dot Or
lif t
Collins Or A FoNviaw Or
!:)* Parkviaw Or. A Fairmont Of. (Bus Hvodtrl

I SS Depart from Croomt High School
I M Saminoi* Hfth School

110 Airport Blvd A Pork Av*. (Croomt Only)
1:11 Hidden lak* Or. A Plum Tra* Ct.
Hidden Lakt or A Loch Low Dr ID
i Tm
1:17 Wildwood Dr. A Winding Rklg* Or.
1:M Ramblewaod Or. A Hidden la k * Dr.
■w m
Lak* Mary Blvd Cauatr y Cleb Rd.
Depart from Croomt High School
Samlnof* High Schaol
Lak# Mary ttvd A Rldg* Dr.
Lbk* Mery BIN A "While's'' Stop (Lake Mary City LlmlHI
L*k* Mary b i n A Hr Lawranc* Dr.
Lak* Mary BIN. A Palmetto At.
Country Club Rd A Grand Bond Aw .
Country Club Rd A Ridge Rd.
Cmrnlry Cki* Rd A Rantoul Ln
Country C M Rd A Linda Ln.
1:11 Lak*view Dr A W Crystal Dr
1:M W. Crystal Or. A I Crystal Or.

1 SI
MM
1»
M l
1:14
1:M
IM
1:10
in
IB

LA K E

HO WELLHIGH

Morning trip* Hr ilvdaNi enrol lad in A ported!
■ w ill
1R—H S-Jom rt lewa yyi TdcrattlEaill
A
A
A
A

*7
a*
SI
S4

SR—411 A Eagl* Past Rd
Waston St A Souih SI
SR-434 A Harwood Or
S R -a t* at Owl Road on L*4t — Rad
04 Tusk*will* Pmbylarian Church
A: ft Howell Branch Rd A Village Growl Dr
7 :« Hull If IMidway Idaasn H aylaN CT A W oN crid Drl
7 0) No 7*14 Grand A n lLast Turn Before Kowtil Branch Rdl
B d t llt

IS)
A S4
AM
A ft
7(1
F;B4

Cltrul Av* A PelmtNa A n
F eme red Or A Fielder esi Av*
PbWtBaNA Av* A Tangerm* A n
Betty St A Aibwt Or
Jackman Hvd A Tangerm* Av*
PrIncest Gate BIN A Manchester Cle (Wed)

4 *4
A: A)
4.47
B:ft
A ft
4 SI
«:M
A SA

Carriage H ia-H w ed Park— Iwaasersaf ENBagRpgd
Carriage H&gt;U Dr A Appt* Hilt Hollow 111
Carriag* HIR Dr A LamptUo Way
Mango** By A Tvlft Tr
Marigold Rd A Vwlat Dali Dr
W M w Park Dr A Wildura B IN
Ivanho* Way A FrRIany Clr
BrHatty O r A Rmadict Way
Mark David Bhrd tt twirn O u t

(O n I
■■
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— - * - I - t l&gt; ,

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ThurtAiy. Avg. H, ItH—1»

... Bus Schedules
ll'ooUaord From Pair ZB)

LAKE HO

•a
• 0

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in
i or
04

I

t u

4 &lt;5

ta

«n
4 SO
I u
4 44

Mark David
K M Bug Rd
Bad Bug Rd
am Bug Bd
a m Bug Bd
a m Bug Bd

WELL

7:44
7 47
7 re

7:91
1:9
1:0
7 14

4U

Blvd t Mark David Ct
1 Lags VNto
t Camp Hvronwood
1 J** Kho Or
a V t v i t Dr
a Vrftr't Mill Or
■ n il

■ « Air* N lrth -f nglith W eedt-N rrtkga'r

B o u n a t t a L n a C ta iio n t» rr» B d
G la t t o n b a r r y B d a D trb v s n ir* B d
W im t o n R d - OH D t r b v f h ir t B d
H u n t a r f x t d B d a O ilo rd B d
O ilo r d B d a C a rsn sn Rd
O if b r d B d a E a t l R ird
W a v a t ly D r a M a d 0 T lx M i l l O r

7:47
7 SO
7 11
7 44
7 IS
7 sa
70
7 se

7 SS
7:14
1 :9

But HI
L g h t w o o d W x r t t - laky atm i W o a d t—E n g i t t h ■ i t n n —I M x n Hilli

I It Brchwood Or a Pmtwood Or
I ia Cixrrywood Dr a Summtrwood Dr

1:0
4 00

it *

Hignwty 17 41 *4 Houtt on R ighl-Acrota From
Andtrton't Nunrry

7 St

I
I
I
I
I
I

SO
11
U
M
IS
II

L a k t o l l i x d o o m B ird a W . n lt v g r t t n B ir d
G r a n a m R d a Dovtrrrood R d
D a k o ta T r a Yarm outh R d
D a k o ta T r a W m ntbago Tr
T a lb o t R d a C o il.tr Or
K r w a n r x * T r a Shokhorx T r

• 00
in

M
)!
to

L a k t Aha i H a i t i - I t d g t t i t i d A p a r t m a a lt - C a ia A l t t m W x t v r v r t t d l l* a ir * On* A p a r t m a n li—
Itm d a a rt A p a r t m a a lt — M a rfe ry a
L a k a H o n x ll L n a Laka A n n L n
L a k a A n n L n a Ranth Rd
S B — 414 a l Sadgaltald A p a rtm a n tt
C a v a A lo m a W ay a T x r r a C lr
C a v a A lo m a W ay a C o v m try D r
N o ttin g h a m O r a km g R ic h a r d 's C l

I n III

4
I
I
I
4
I

t]
&lt;1

ta
• tl
I if
I I)
I 14
4 H

Noll Ingham Dr a luttti Rd
Rome land Rd a Japan** Rd
H o w a ti B ra n c h Rd at S g g ira O n a A p a r tm e n ts
S R — 414 a l Sundanct A p a rtm e n ts
S R — 414 a l M a r b e y t A p a rtm e n ts

tvs III
S u m m it A p a r tm e n ts - L a k e M a x e ll B a a d - T a n g ie x e a d P la n t a lx r t A p trtm e n ts— H a w a ii B ra n c h R eat
I IT" S R — 414 a t Sum m .t A p artm e n ts
I ta L a k a H o w e ll R d a O e rb y sh ira R d
4 t l L a k a H o w a ll R d a T u scaro ra T r
I t l H o w e ll B ra n c h B d a W eum p i Tr
I t f L a k a H o w e ll R d a Ivy L n
I SI L a k a H o w e ll B d a Dover R d
I S&gt; L a k a H o w e ll R d a Lmden R d
t 14 H o w e ll B ra n c h Rd a l P la n ta tio n A p a r tm e n ts
t I f H o w e ll B ra n c h Rd t l la m o r a n N o r th A p a rtm e n ts
I OO H o w e ll B ra n c h Rd a t t ft e n ik Rd

Bus lit
Eattbreak-Wrenweod Heights
t SO
111
I 11
I U
I S4
I M
I If
1 00
101
T 01

E e s tD ro o k B ir d a Boa m an D r
E a s lb r o o k B ir d a I t r n d e ll O r
B o u g a in v ille O r a E astbrook B ir d
B o u g a m v tlla Dr a Cle m a tis L n
A u s t r a lia n C lr a Chtieen L n
B a ls a m O r a COCOS A re
B a ls a m O r a Bonania A va
B o n a n ia A v a a ftrn d e tl D r
B o n a n ia A v a a Anlhene O r
E a s tb r o o k A v a a B a ite r D r

4
4
4
4
4
I

L a u r e l W a y a Arlterton O r
L a u r e l W a y a Swallow D r
D e w D ro p C o ve East a E a g le C lr
E a g le C tr a Bluett rd Tr
E a g le C lr a Redw ing w ay
E a g le C lr a Swallow Dr

Bus III
Deer Bun
SO
11
St
14
17
00

Lake Howell High
Morning trips tor studentl enrolled in S periods
Bus If
Sterling Park—Dear Bun
Time
7 II Redwing Way a EagX Clr
7 11 Eagle Clr a Bluebird Tr
7 It Eagle Clr a Daw Crop Cove (E l
7 14 Eagle Clr a Swallow Dr
■ vs III

7 It
7 14
7 Id
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I 01

7 ta
7 td
7 if
7:11
7 11

7:14
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I SO
7 It
7 17

7 SO
in
7:St
7 14

7 II
7 SI
7 IS
7.0
7 If

7 47
7.4
7:44
7:11
7 11
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7.*4
7:11
7:|4

7 al
7 44
7 44
7 SB
7.0
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70
7n
7:44
7:14

7:0
7 St
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village Orefw—Weadcreel-Oear Oelly Ram
Village Green Dr
Ott Howell Branch Bd
Palmetto Ava a Citrus Ava
Perncresl Dr a fxidcresl Ava
Hull St (Midway Between Heylard Cl a Woodcraft Dr)
B e a r Gully Bd a Golden to d D r
Bet 141
Carriage Hill
Carriage Hill Dr a Shady Hollow (SI
Carnage Hill Dr a Barberry Branch IN)
Carriage Hill Or a Lamp Lila Way
Marigold Rd a Tulip Tr
Mangold Bd a volet Dell Dr
■us III
Wrea weed Hetghts - * a slbreeh
BougamvilH Or a Eastbrook Bird
Bougainville Or a Peruvian Ln
Australian Clr a Peruvian Ln
Australian Clr a Eastbrook Bind
Easlbrooh Bird a Tourney Dr
Bus 174
Summerset North—Sum merest
Wilshir* Bird a Brighton Cl
Mark Oavid Blvd at twim Club
Mark David Blvd B Mark David Ct
Bus 111
Howell Park — Summerset North
Wltshlre Blvd a W itter Park Dr
in s Rd a ZMvue Dr
Elm Dr a G-endview Way
Brittany Clr A Wiisn.re Bird
Bus IIS
Summers el North—Deer Run
Brittany Clr a lup.ier wav
Kendall Way a JeHarson Or
Laurel Way a Kingsley Dr
Laurel Way a Swallow Dr
E agX Clr a Pmeeeng Or
Bus ltd
E apish E notes-B el Air a North - Bogush weeds
Oerbyshira Rd a Oilord Bd
Derbyshire Rd a Giastonberry Rd
Gleslonberry Rd a South Blvd
Poinaette Ln a East died
East Blvd a Oilord Rd
O ilord Bd B CeroHon Rd
Bus 114
Bat A ka Narlh-Eagiish Weeds -E ng lish Esinas
O ilord Bd a HunterlieM Bd
Merkinpiam Bd a Wmelon Rd
W.nslon Rd A Derbyshire Rd
Bus 111
Lahawead Shores—Lake Ol The Weeds—
Oiterd le e d -IR —tM Tltlaay Severe
Birchwood Or a Ash wood Or
Cherry wood Or A Spartan Dr
Laka at T lx Woods Bivd A Caroiwood Blvd
Laka ot The Woods Bird A Oilord Bd
Fern Park Btvd A ftrnwood Blvd
SB-414 A WHstura Blvd
Bus Iff
Highland Pueas-laglish Weedf-lodteaMitts
AAatdol The Mrs! Or A Wtverly Dr
Dakota Tr 4 Yarmouth Rd
Dakota Tr 4 Winnebago Tr
Talbot Rd 4 Sepier Or
Kawannaa Tr 4 Shoshone Tr
Bos 111
Wrea wood Haights—Howell B states
Tangerine Ava 4 Pomona Auo
Tangerine Ave 4 Wrmwdod Way
Tangerine Ave 4 Jackman Blvd
Princess Gala Blvd A Manchester CM IW)
Prmcesa Gate Blvd A Manchester ctr ( E l
BustlS
Bgutre One Aperm eate-land once ApertaesaftLaee Ann EHeie s-lievea Oar dans-Cedar Ridge
Howell Branch at Sdvdt One Apartments
SR —414 al Sundance Apartments
Lake Howell Ln A Lake Ann Ln
Laka Ann Ln 4 Ranch Bd
Howell Orancn Bd 4 Mayses Rd
Dike Rd A Glenshire Way
B a e lll
Fares! Break-M ar beya Apart* ante-laesetrteL age Visit Aperture*tf-Bed Beg Read
Lake Howell Rd A Oerbysh.ra Rd
Laka Howell Bd A lutcarara Tr
Lake Howell Ln 4 Ruby Ct
SR —0 4 el Marbere Apartments
Sduteiilo Or 4 Sonera
Sausoiito Or 4 San Leandro Dr
Rad Bug Rd Pi Lege Vista Apartments
Rad Bug Rd al RoHmg»«od Apartments
Rad Bug Rd al Camp Hero
Rad Bus Bd a Jericho Or
Rad Bug Rd 4 Mar Irate Or
Rad Bug Rd 4 Sutter • MUI Or

r&lt;r ' '

7 14

BuellS
Pttatttxn Apartmenti —Tangteweed—Semeran
North Apartments—Oakcrett
Howell Branch Bd at Plantation Apartment
Howell Branch Bd 4 Waumpi Tr
Lakrmont Ave 4 Linden Rd
Ivy Ln 4 Lekg Howall Rd
No 1014 Lake Howall Bd
Dover Bd A Lima Ln
Howell Branch Bd al lamoran North Apartments
Grand Ave A Grand Rd
Bus 111
Sedfehetd Apartments—Casa Aloma- Winter Woods
SR—O l al ledge!.eld Apartments
Casa Aloma Way A Tterra Clr
T terra Clr A Coventry Dr
Nottwwham Or A Kmg Charles r :
Pome .ana Bd A Nottingham Dr
Polnclana Bd A West Hampton Clr
Pome laha Bd A japonka Rd
Nottingham Or A Wmiar Woods Blvd
Bvs 1ST
Bettkreek
Balsam Or A Pondarosa Ava
Bonania Ava A CoXus C!
Bonania Ava A Femdetl Or
Bonania Aw a Athena Dr
Eastbrook Ihrd A Baiter Or
■asm
IB —«S*— Jamaslwro—Data Raad
SR-alS a M.SXr Rd
Waslon St A South St IJamastownl
Dean Bd A Carotin* SI (Turtxroundl
Dean Bd a Dirt Road On B ight (Jusl Baton S B - a ill

L a st Hawa* High
Afternoon trips lor pll students
■ vs 171
Rad B * f Raad—SR—II*—Jatotilawn—Oaan Raad
1 14 Rad Bug Rd A Mlklar Rd
1 0 SR-414 A EagX Pats Bd
1 IB SB —&lt;14at House on R ignt — Just before Mikler Rd
I X Weston St A South SI IJamastownl
111 OaonRdat D r t Rd on Lett — Just ott SB—ala
1 IS Dean Bd A Carolina SI (Turnaround)
1:40 SB- 0 * A Starwood Or
1 4} S R -H 4 - Dirt Rd on Lett (Just betor*
TutkawilX Prttbytorlon Chur chi
• us SIB
Bear Oally Baad-Villag* Oreen-Woodcrest
1 0 Bear Gutty Rd A Golden rod Dr
1 IS Village Green Or A Oak Hill Dr
1 0 Palmetto Are — ott Citrus Rd
1 IB Woodcraft Dr A Blue Jacket Dr
1 11 Grand Avt A Grand Rd
B asil*
Waadcratt
1 14 Hull St A Woodcraft Dr
1 0 walnut Avt A Pomtatta Ava
1 It Poiraatta Ava A Tangerine Ava
1 JO Tangerine Avt a Wranwood Way
■ vs III
Hawaii Bit alas— Cedar Adige— Wienweed Heights
1 11 Manchester Clr IE) A Princess Gat* Bird
M i Manchester Clr IW7 A Prmeets Gat* Blvd
1 ?e Dike Bd a denshire Way
1 II Tangerine A x A Jackman Blvd
Bus tes
Maxell B u n c h Bead— Eaitkreok - tindm ci Apartments
1 11 Howall Branch Bd at "Green s Map"
(Just Past Park V*X Blvd)
1 0 Eattbrook Blvd A B a iler Dr
1 IS Eastbrook Blvd A Bowman Or
l it Howell Branch Rd A Moysts Rd
114 I B —4M at Sundance Apartments
1 17 Laka Howall Ln A L a kt Ann Ln
1 0 Lake Ann Ln A Ranch Bd
■us taa
Wren weed Heights
1 74 AuttrtlXn Clr A Esttbrooh Blvd
1 0 Australian Cir A Peruvian Ln
1 IB Peruvian Ln A Bougainville Dr
1 0 Bougainville Dr A Eastbrook Blvd
1 II Balsam Dr A Cocos Ava
Bvs IS*
■ t it Week
1 11 Bonania Dr A Athena Or
1 17 Bonania Dr A Ftrndetl Dr
1 0 Bonania Dr A Aalsam Dr
But 174
temaraa North Aportmenti-Caia Aloma
7 7* Howell Branch Bd at Semoron North Apartments
1 0 Txrra Clr A Tierra Clr
1 M Txrra Clr A Coventry Dr
1 11 Nottingham Dr A King Richard's Ct
1 0 Nottingham Dr A King Jamas Cl
R e f il l
SevenwM Aeertmenis - winter weed* Late Newell Read
7 0 SR—4)4 tl Sedoerxid Apartments
1 JO Winter woods Bird A Nottingham Or
I S Pomcxna Rd A West Hampton Cir
1 11 Pomcxna Rd A Japonlca Rd
I 11 Linden Rd A Laka Howall Rd
I II Laka HewMl Rd A iv y Ln
1 17 No MM Last Howell Rd
&gt; J* Dover Rd A Llttlo Ln
1 a) Laka Maxell Rd A Marshall Rd
■as 111
lev in On* Apartmaats—Plaalatwa Apartment —
T lx Mills—Taogleweed
1 0 Howell Branch Rd at Squirt On* Apartments
1 0 Howell Branch Rd al Plantation Apartments
1 II Howell Branch Rd A Waumpi Tr
1 1) Laktmonl Ava A Lmden Rd
■us 111
Lag* Visit Apartmaats— lemmit Apartments-Ferest Brook —
Rely Cevrt -M a rker* Apartmenti-taesaiila
1 71 Red Bug Bd al lego Vnta Apartment
1 0 SR-41* at Summit Apartmenti
1 0 Laka Hawaii Rd A Darbyshir* Rd
1 0 Laka Howall Bd A Tuscarori Tr
i n Lake Hawaii Ln A Ruby Ct
1 14 S B-aia al Marbaya Apartments
I B Sausotit* Dr A Sonora
■us 1ft
WitiMre B'y*— Indian Mltts-Bnglkk Waedi
1 0 Witshirt Blvd A Bowling AlXy
i n Kewanee Tr A Shoshone* Tr
1 M Kawana* Tr A Talbot Bd
1 M Oilord Rg a Hwntartxld Rd
t . V Oilord Bd A Carolton Bd
Bus 111
Hawaii Park—Carriage HUI
1 0 Imnx Dr A IrM Rd
I B Irlt Bd A Wilder Park Dr
1 0 Marigold Bd A V X X I Datl Dr
1:11 Marigold Bd A Tulip Tr
■w ill
Sum mart at (North)
1 M Brtllany Clr A Benedict Way
1 0 Brittany Clr A Ivanrx* Way
1 .0 Elm Dr A GrandvXm Way
■ • s ill
Dear Be*
115 EagX Clr A Pmosong Or
I 74 EagX Clr A Swallow Dr
1 0 Swallow Or A Wren Dr
1 IB Swallow Dr A Laurel Way
1 0 Lawal Way A Jaftarton Or
1:11 Jtflteton Dr A kendall Way
B e tlt
Sterling Park
1 0 EagX Cir A Dew Drop Cave
1 .0 EagX Clr A Bluebird Tr
1 0 EagX Clr A Shadow Oak Dr (E l
■us 114
■ *d Bug ■ a a d - Summer set
1 :0 had Bug R i A Sutter's M ill Or
1 0 Red n / g l t a MerlveM Or
1:11 Bed Bug Rd A Jericho Dr
1 I t Bad Bu( Bd at Camp Her onwood
ID
Bad Bu« Bd at Boll mg wood Apartment
1 IS Mark David Blvd A AAark DavKt Ct
I B Mark David Itvd al Swim Club
■ M ill
Bag Ink waadk-Lahawaad Shares-Lake Ot Tbt Weeds
1 :0 OarbystW* Rd A WInal an Bd
1 .0 Darbyshir* Rd A O ilord Bd
1 0 Derbyshire Bd A OlMtanbarry Bd
! : U Pirxwaad Dr A Birchwood Or
1:14 Cherry wood Dr A Summer wood Dr
I D Spartan Dr A Highway 1/ FI
1 :0 Lakt at lix Waodt B t v d - O t t Highway 11*1
1 :0 Laka *4 in* Woods Blvd 4 Caroiwood Blvd
1 40 Laka *4 M* Woods Bhrd 4 Moadowood Blvd
■ M ill
la g h fh Woods- India* H lilt
1 :0 wmnabaga Tr 4 Dakota Tr
1 :0 Dakota Tr 4 Tarmautn Rd
1:1) Wmalon Bd A Marsmgham Rd
■ m US
Tut any Sguara—Bat Air* Narth
1:0 Fem Park Btvd a Ferimocd Btvd
I D Eaal Bhrd B PoMaatta Ln
1 IS PomaaN* Ln A GaWonbarry Rd
■ m 111
Cm c AU#!—O atard Raad— RaAA Ire Nertb
1 :0 Wavarty Or A Maid O lix M Ja l Dr
1 la Oatard Bd A Graham Rd
I B O ito rt Rd A East Blvd
■ M ill
Carriage Httl
1 :0 Witshirt Blvd A Bri-hlon Cl
1:11 Lamptnt way A Carriagp hui Dr
I D Carriaga HiB Dr A Appta Hill Hatlaw (I)
1 :0 Carriaga HIM Dr A Shady HoUaw 111

v . w - g n n * » t v w ^ m w x •* *

»

Vf-V***

R E S IP E
Cmkit
fo r the EV EN IN G H ER ALD 'S 1st Annual
Special Edition of the

Heritage COOKBOOK
★ SEVENTH WEEK’S C O N T E S T *
Recipes for...

O N LY 2 W EEKS...2 CATEGO RIES LEFT
Don't D elay...O n e of YOUR Recipes Could

\Y7D
1st - 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
W e e k ly w inners a r e e lig ib le fo r th e G R A N D PRIZE
NO LIMIT T O NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED
YO U M A Y ENTER AS M A N Y WEEKS AS YOU LIKE
Food C ato go rlei Com ing Up In The N e xt 2 W o o k i Of Tho Contest:

DESSERTS — MICROWAVE
So send In that sp ecial recipe your fam ily and friends lik e so w e ll
...It could be a w ln n e rl

RULES:
No lim it to num ber ot recipes su bm itted but each
recipe m u s t lf\d u d e your ram *, ad d ress and
telephone.
TYPE o r P R lriT your recipe giv in g full In
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tem p erature. (A p p roilm ale num ber of servin gs
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ployees a n d their Im m ediate fa m ily .
Mall E n tr ie i to: EVENING HERALD

c-e COOKBOOK
P.0. BOX 1AJ7
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each of the nine food categories You m ay enter
as m a n y of Ihe w eekly categories as you like.
A p a n el of three expert |u d g*s w ill review all
entries and w inners will be notified at the end of
Ihe con test In September lor a ta s te off" to
select th e Grand P rlie winner D ecision of Ihe
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All r e c ip e s received will be pu blished In October
lor the E vening Herald's first ann ual cookbook
contest.
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En trias must bo postmarked by midnight

MEATS...

SUNDAY, AU GU ST 30
— Losf

**-*A*vv *■**

&gt;• ^ ••*x*'%4 |le«vw

Date for POULTRY...Sunday, August 23

x g ••

a* •- .taowl

�• r • *

B L O N D IE

4B-Ev*nlnq Htrald, Sanlord, FI.

Thursday, Aug. 70, »H1

4 1 Ancient port
of Rom*
42 Twtrtad
44 M irth
Guevara
4 Condenses
crocodd*
I Unheeding
46 M id i Of litvif
SO
C
hingt
12 Author
Fluffing
54 Railroad
v th K ll
1} Drift Immllt
55 Conctmmg (2
14 Sltinit
wdt, l i t ,
1$ SfflU bird
lbbr|
16 Truly
18 Gritni Grim 56 Unrtt
57 Spy group
figuri
(ib b r)
20 Good (Fr |
21 Horn food
58 PI i t *d
23 Cieti rititrvi 59 A rn n g i m
saquanca
27 KrttMn
gidgtt
6 0 T m b ir tree
30 Wagon
32 Th« t i f f i
(lit)

MR 9 L M S T E A D , MAV l
TAKE A Q U A R T E R F P O M M X R
AMO M £ A N ICE C R E A M ’

ME M E A N S

OOM PM

P O C K E T T O B U Y H £PM :£

VES

Jj

B E E T L E B A IL E Y
, LIST EN TO O L D
I b u t t e r b a l l .' i ' l l
{ BET YOU C A N 'T

IS T H A T A L L YOU
CAN O O V

.I N - 1

by A rt Sansom

TH E B O R N LO SER

ITHMJK
-L JU ST
ATS ^
U &amp; K T 16 !

WHAT'S
W R0U6?

A R C H IE
A l l LA S T WIUTIR TME
S TU P ID H E A T E R
D ID N 'T W O R K '

/

IT NEEDS
, SOME W ORK.
B ut i «

NOW SEE IF YOU CAN

B ut i Fitwi.tr

F i n d A w a y t o SMUT it
o f f D u r in g th £ s u m m e r •

F n ttD IT .

P :PVT 1 7 ;

’ GETTING It

V jN T O SHAPE

Answer

10

PrivKMtt Purrli

Hay Fever Victims
Can Be Desensitized

D E A R D R . L A M B —M y son
has hay fever in the ipring
and early summer. H ij eyes
itch and .welt. H is nose Is
d o g g e d and runny. He
re c e iv e s som e help Irom
39 Punned
Benadry l sometimes. Do you
40 First writer
have a Health Letter covering
43 Father |l i t |
this problem and what to do to
45 Okf Tullinunt
help him ? He is only 16 and it
bool
ruins the better part of his
47 Behold (Lit)
33 Copptrfuld &gt;
vacation.
41 Fourpunny
Wltl
DEAR
R E A D E R -H a y
49 English
34 Powerful
fever that starts in the spring
streetcar
■iploirve
(ibbr)
50 Suiimu (Pint is usually caused by the pollen
from trees. That which occurs
35 Shod t u n
51 Genetic
36 Finnic
in the sum m er Is caused by
material
d notion
grass. It is pretty hard for a
52 Jackies 2nd
37 Hin
huebend
10-year-old boy to avoid trees
38 Mithid
53 One (Sp)
and Rrass, but avoiding the
40 Big
su bstance that you are
4
10 11
1
6
7
9
5
a
2
3
allergic to Is one of the best
forms of treatment available.
14
12
13
AntihistamJnica do help. A
person m ay become tolerant
17
15
18
to one and it m ay lose Its
effectiveness. At that time It
19
18
Is wise to sw itch to another
one. They work because the
24 25 76
21
_
”
symptoms your boy has are
27 21 29
31
caused by cells tn the nose and
_
”
eyes reacting to the pollen and
34
32
p ro d u cin g h ista m in e . The
"
idstam ine Irritation causes
35
the sysmptoms.
"
Fo r the best results from
31
39
.0
antihlstamtnes, they should
_
be taken rrg u la rly before the
41
symptoms start. It Is easier lo
"
prevent the symptoms than
44
47 48 49
relieve them once they have
”
"
54
SO 51 52
begun.
53
A s you have requested, I am
51
56
57
sending you The Health I d le r
num be r 8-4, H ay Fever
58
59
60
( A lle r g ic R h in itis ) . Others
Ip
who want this Issue can send
75 cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for It
to me, tn care of this
newspaper, I’ O H Bo* 1551,
Radio C ity Station, New York,
By B E R N IC E B E D E OSOL
N Y 10019. A s It points out, a
cortlsteroid spray is useful in
For Friday, A u g u s t 21, 1981
some cases. The sm all
YOUR B IR T H D A Y
you’ l l fe e l i t ’s e q u a lly
amount needed for local ef­
Augtutn,1981
rewarding for you.
fects should not cause the
In the year follow ing your
CA PR ICO R N ( Dec. 23-Jan.
general effects noted from
birthday you may w ork hard 191 B eing t a c tfu l doesn't
these m e d ica tio n s. U nfor­
lln a lliln g s e v e ra l p ro je c ts dilute your strength today, It
tu n ate ly , som e of these
which have been im portant to actually Increases It. The
m edicines have not yet been
you. You’ll find the com- softer you U lk , the more clout
approved for this use in the
pletlon of your tasks both y°u gain,
United States.
rewarding and exciting.
AQUARIUS I Jan. 20-Feb.
Your son m ight profit Iran
L E O (July 23-Aug. 22! The 1»&gt; Working on on projects
manner In which you conduct around the house and waty ourself today Is subtle, yet rhlng each one as It ts cornleaves no doubts tn the minds p itte d
Im prove
your
of your peers that you are not surroundings, gives you much
to be taken lightly. Romance, enJoy*tK*&gt;l today,
tra v e l, lu ck, re s o u rc e s ,
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201
possible pitfalls and career Everyone needs diversions In
tor the coming months are a ll life. Today is your day lo set
NORTH
a rt
*1
discussed in y o u r A stro - aside y o u r m o re serio us
VKll
Graph which begins w ith your commitments and let your
♦ K q J t iM ii
birthday. M ail |1 for each to hair down a bit. It'll do you
♦ »
AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio good.
WEST
EAST
City Station, N Y . 10019. Be
.
..
t _____ _ . .
♦ 1041
♦ J 17 I ]
sure to specify birth date
A R IE S I M arch 21-April 19
»QJ»
♦ A 10 4
* 74)
0«
Y T R G tH A u g . 23-SepL 22) ^
«“ *
♦ 7541
♦ J 1 411
Once you set your m ind to
an&lt;* *helr
***re
something today you’ll be
anything you wouldn t do lo
SOUT1I
♦ AKQ5
very aggressive aboul seeing
***m Twfa y* 7°° 11 u l Je &amp;
♦ 47 54
your plans occur as you en- opportunity to p h y sica ll:
♦ A
vlsaned thent. Good for you!
demonstrate tills.

■1
■
■
A■
£■
■
■
■
■1
■

HOROSCOPE

EEK &amp; M E E K

by Howie S ch n e id er

TOUT GO AUJAV..
ee KOHr

MV K E R 15

uje.i l

\

ATTLR 7H* BRIEF

r * \

OKAY-WERE
B A C K -

» A tS S A j3 C

P R I S C I L L A 'S P O P
Stuart,t h e s e s n o '
WNV I LL E V E R LET SCU
BOUNCE THAT BAD. ON
THE U B R A R V STEPS *

d e s e n s itiia tio n from the
pollens he Is reacting to. But
to get the best results you
should start such a program
six lo nine months before the
hay fever season for him
begins. It takes that long for
the body to develop adequate
de sinsttiution.
D E A R D R . L A M B - 1 have
o b se rv ed th at allk in d s of
p re p a re d
foods contain
coconut and palm oils. They
are tn every conceivable kind
of cra cke r, snack food, dry
cereals am i canned foods such
ns to m a to soup. I have
le a rn e d th at coconut and
palm oils are very harmful to
the health of the blood vessels,
even more so than animal fat.
Please comment on this and
what ra n be done to stop the
widespread use of these oils?
D E A R R E A D E R - T h e y are
comm only used because they
are less Inclined to become
rancid, which prolongs the
shelf life of many products
and provides an economic
factor.
Y o u a re p a rtia lly rig ht
about them. They are very
high in saturated fat, about 90
p e rce n t
saturated
fat.
Saturated fats increase the
form ation of cholesterol by
your body and appear to In­
crease fatty-cholesterol by
your body and appear to In­
c r e a s e fa t t y - c h o le s t e r o l
deposits tn the arteries. They
do contain more saturated fat
than L* found in animal fat.
To h e lp
control this
problem, people ran refuse to
buy products containing these
oils. But m any times socalled
"v e g e ta b le o il" Is also
coconut o il and palm oil, so
unless you know from the
label what kind of fat or oil is
used, you tnay still be milled.

WIN AT BRIDGE

nO u

P L

S M ILIN G ' )
M AKES
__
y
SO U TH IN K
^
\
SOU C A N
\\
V
SUCCEED

W E H IRED
E T H A N TO
D O IT'

IM G LA D I r e m e m b e r e d
T O G I V E HIM S O M E
A D H ESIV E BAN D AGES
A L O N G WITH T H E
TEN N IS BALL '
,

NOW ?

♦ A K q i

BU G S B U N N Y

YOU E E NOT PUNNING’'
ID GO ON STAGE
WflWTHAT ACT "rYfMJ

ins UXBAfflW
,mL VYEU., yOU KNOWWHAT
“Mev »Y, DPP. 1— awful
LOOK
Ou t t h e s e . t - i

b y S t o lle l &amp; H e im d a h l

H A ft£ TO D AY. V
GOON'fcMOCROV. )

LIB R A iSepL 2 J O c L 33)
Some of the old light la back In
you today. You should be able
to do well In any situation that
is competitive, whether It be
In sports, romance o r comnTFFFt.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov H )
You're an excellent team
participant today, not only
because you pull your own

T A U R U S (A p ril 20-May 20
Although you are extremel;
p il) e n , t you won-t w al
trw ind fur others to do thing
((JC ^
today. y ou&lt;n u k
direct action lo accompli*
your purposes.

weight but because you also
know how lo rev up your

‘ w a y * hen “
*
jecurbvg your m a te ria l needi

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer West
West
Pass
Pass

Sank
)♦
Pass

Fast
Pass
Pass

Se
II

Opening lead V y

N
M a y 1,‘^une ®
An indirect approach work
M trem ely effectively lo r yo

teammates lo c a rry their \ ai know
P****1)' i,n
maximum bads.
• I™ 7* “ » an*w e rSAGITTARIUS (N ov. Z3C A N C E R (June 21-July 22
D ec. 21) M uch of y o u r Fun lim es are ahead for you
energies today w ill be devoted P»t* today, m ostly because c
lo working on something that the effort you extend to inak
appears to be tn another’s tt so. They’ll know you're th
interest, but in your m ind architect of their happiness

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alaa Soalag
North's vulnerable three
diamond preempt with an
eight card suit and an out­
side king would not be made
by most experts The mod­
ern tendency among experts
in making vulnerable three
level preempts is lo have a
good seven card sun with Di-

lie outside strength North
deviated by having too much
side strength and that eight
diamond
South had no idea what to
bid over North's preempt
Although North is cold (of
six diamonds from his posi­
tion. it ts hard lo Judge
Anyhow, South tried Ihrre no
trump If North had three
sm all hearts and a black
lack, three no trump could
be the only makcable game
North proudly displayed
his dummy, commenting
that this was the strongest
three diamond bid he had
ever made Unfortunately,
after a heart lead through
hts king, declarer rould
manage only eight tricks
Not one of those was taken
by N orth’s "m aenlliccnl”
dummy "Perhaps, lament­
ed South, "Y o u r hand wasn't
so good.”
Both North and South
have asked us lo assess the
blame for this disaster We
charge South 25 percent He
should not try three no
trump with that singleton
ace of diamonds, hut we give
North the other 75 percent
As North said, he had a
sujer strength preempt lie
should have passed or
opened four diamonds, but
over South's three no trump
North should have gone back
lo diamonds Had he Jumped
lo live South might have bid

ANNIE
FR AN K AND ERNEST

3 - hauc PBfksc's oesrim iM ?
1 DON’ T KNOW IF J CH 6NE &amp;
OUT THAI IMfOKH/lTION/

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don't

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M lttfP y o c t f f M°oTH.

by T. K. Ryan

TU M BLEW EED S

GO SLOW, K E E P YDUR E Y E S ON THE
ROAP, FOLLOW M V INSTm&gt;CTlONS,/WP
----------- “ ^ ^ T v W E t L M A K E ITI &gt;

M 'S ANNUAL

TRIP TO
THEcrrY. j

- n / OR, AS WE &gt;

}( DRIVERS CALL

{ Jw m w to F j
K A the c r o ss : /

this

ALL » 0 U T ?

- 1 MOULD
«-;&amp;£#« - HELL,
NEVERTHELESS OH S ttO W THOUGHT,
APPRECIATE r 1 I PONT GUESS IT
IT IF YOU a ROUP P0 AMY HARA-

W

eak w il e

HAHS LOOSE, I ' .
POY-'IT’S l j '
ALMOST QVRt/JlJ

THAT IS A PRIVATE
CONCERH-AfC FMLE
■ I RESPECT YtXJR
P lS C g E T K W -

FLET C H ER 'S LANDING

by DougUt Coffin
...W BOUf 1H M '
U N IT
O N 1 V it F A N . . .

.

rfSONTHt 6UNL

\

�1 1 »

School Board Announces
'81-82 Teacher Appointments
The Seminole County School
B oard
has
announced
Teacher Appointments lo r the
198142 school year.
The following 52 teachers
have been newly appointed
and w ill begin te ach in g
August 21 in the schools and
subject area listed.
P h y llis A d a m s. L y m a n ,
Math; Dtanne A lbright, San­
fo rd
G ra m m a r-H o p p e r,
M usic;
W illie
B a k e r,
Tuskawilla; Thom as Begley,
Lym an, E m o tio n a lly H a n ­
dicapped; D e n n is B n u le y ,
Lym an , S o c ia l
S tu d ie s;
Vemeena B rint, Woodlands,
Music; Monica Brow n, Bear
la k e , Art; Claudia Bush,
Oviedo, E n g lis h ; P r is c illa
Carreno, Bear Lake Elem .,
continuing c o n tra c t; K im
Colling, Sabal Point E lem .;
Cathy Crews, la k e Brantley,
Business E d; George Crews,
Milwee, Science; Diane Dehmcr, Longwnod E le m .; Karen
F in k e ls le ln , S p rin g la k e
Elem.; Sandra Foskey, Pine
Cresl Elem.; W illia m Glover,
Rock la k e ; M ath; Jannice
Golden, W in te r S p rin g s ,
M u sic;
A lb e rt
G re en e ,
M ilw ee, E n g lis h ; S y lv ia
H errin g , L y m a n , S p e c ific
la a m ln g D isability; Robert
H illery, la k e B rantley, Voc.
Bldg. Construction; E velyn
Holmes, Bear la k e E lem .;
Brenda lloberls Hunt, Spring
la k e Elem .; Donna Jnnectku, Winter Springs, A rt;
Sheryl Jensen, Lym an , M alh;
Sharon K a ttm a n n , F o re s t
City Elem.; M ary K irkla n d ,
Jackson Heights, Geography;
M ary C. Maher, Pixie Crest
E lem .; R uth
M a rk h a m ,
Winter Springs Elem .; Donna
M o rte n s e n , L a k e v ie w ,
Science; Constance Mosure,
la k e M ary High, Physica l
E d u c a tio n ;
M a r g u e r it e
McCarty, Casselberry. M usic,
Physical Education; M artha
Brow ning M u r r a y , la k e
O rienta
E le m .;
M oses
M w a u ra ,
G o ld s b o r o ,
Education; Lynn Neuberger,
fangwood, Speech Therapist;
K a rre n N ew m an, L y m a n ,
Physical Education; Sandra
Oswald, M ilw e e , E n g lis h ;
Pamela Palmer, South Side,
Specific Learning D isability;
Phyllis Poland, la k e B ran­
tley, Math; R ich ard Scott,
tak e Mary High, M echanics
Teacher; G e r a r d K r a n c li,
Smota, Lyman, M ath; Sharon
T h o rn h ill, la k e v ie w , A rt;
John A. W illiam s, Oviedo,
Electronics Teacher; Sandra
A lte n b c rn ,
Ito s e n w a ld ,
T ra in ab le M e n ta lly R e ta r­
ded; I aura Ceres, Sterling
P a rk
E le m .;
C h e ry l
Chibnonik, la k e Brantley,
Business E d. h a |l tim e ;
Bonnie S to c k s till
Good,
Sterling Park E lem .; Jeanne
G a n ia , la k e Orienta Elem .;
C a ro l Keth, S a b a l P o in t
Elem.; Brian Keyes, la k e
B ran tle y , B io lo g y ; D ia n e
Levilske, IdyllwikJe-Wilaon,
A rt; Mark Morsch, la k e v ie w ,
Education ;Nancy Brockm an,
Eastbrook, Speech Therapist,
hall time; as needed;
E ig h t S e m in o le C ounty
school teachers have been
reappointed (or the upcoming
198182 school year. They are:
Francine Hauptkorn, South
Side Elem.; Sarah Jackson,
English Estates, Educable
M e n ta lly
h a n d ic a p p e d ;
Nancy Link, Red Bug E lem .;
Robert E. Paige, Goldsboro
Elem ., Education Resource;
D iane T h ra sh e r, S a n fo rd
M idd le, E n g lis h ;
L in d a
Zim m er, H opper E le m .;
B a rb a ra M a n d e ll,
Lake
O rla n la
E le m .;
M a r ia
V n q u e t,
R o s e n w a ld ,
Trainable M entally retarded.
The Seminole County School
B oard has g ra n te d the
(oliowing promotions, tran­
sfe rs a rd re c la s s ific a tio n s
effective in August:
Regina
A lc o lt ,
Lake
Brantley, From teacher to
Guidance Counselor; Joanne
Bohannon, U k e B ra n tle y ,
F ro m
O cc.
S pe c,
lo
Registrar; W illia m Gibson,
Rock lake , Fro m Dean to
Asst. Prin. H; Norm a Hayes,
From teacher at M ilw ee lo
Media Specialist ct Oviedo;
Sara H o llin g sw o rth , F ro m
Casselberry lo Sterling P a rk ;
M a rily n H o rn q u lsf, F ro m
Tuskawilla lo t a k e Brantley
(teacher); Je rry Kirkm a n ,
la k e Brantley, F ro m teacher
to Occ. Spec.; M a n fre d
Me Rory, Rosenwald. Fro m
teacher lo Guidance Coun­
selor; Debby L
M itc h e ll
F ro m
S te rlin g
P a rk
(te a ch e r), to Co. O f f lc t ;
H ea lth E d u ca to r; W a lte r
M organ, F ro m
S a n fo rd
Middle to ta k e M a ry High
(te a ch e r); O la T h o m p so n ,
From Casselberry to Sterling

Relocation; Edythe Finkley,
R o s e n w a ld ,
P e rs o n a l
reasons; D e n ise Fountain ,
D is tr ic t Speech T h e rap ist.
Other em ployment; Melanie
G ro v e s, T u s k a w illa , Other
e m p lo y m e n t ;
H o w a rd
Harrison, Lym an, Personal
reasons; K a th ry n M yers,
Lym an, Relocation; Daniel
Paulson, Lym an, Personal
reasons; C h e ry l Pow ers,
Rock la k e , Relocation; Judy
Reed, S terling Park, te a rin g
area;
P a t r ic ia
T ille y ,
A lta m o n te , le a v in g area;
G lo ria T o la r , Co. O ffice,
R e lo c a t io n ;
M a r le n e
W e is m a n
(V a n D u yn e ),
Milwee, Other employment.
Two
wom en
refused
re a p p o in tm e n t
lo
(heir
teaching Jobs. T hey are:
Martha M cC arthy, Red Bug.
Relocating; C a rrie Walton,
Rosenwald, Relocating.
Continuing contracts have
been extended for 43 persons.
On continuing contracts Jobs
arc scheduled for 10 months
but may be extended lo in­
clude sum m er employment.
These employees were ex­
tended fur the summer of
1981.
T a lm a d g e
M etts,
J r .,
lake view . Guidance; Ixiuis
Bross, L y m a n , G uidance;
Walter Lee, Lym an, Adm.;
Daphne Frutchey, Teague,
G u id a n ce ; J a n e G e n try ,
Teague, Guidance;
A t Oviedo High
Pauline Arndt, Occ. Spec.;
Donna N e e ly , R e g istra r;
I avert nee Tyson, Guidance;
At Ia ik r Brantley High
Vocational Teachers
Peggy
A y co c k ;
John
B lanton; W illia m
E lv e y ;
Robert
H ille r y ;
G e ra ld
lo w cry ; Thelm a McGhee;
L au ra
M o ra n ;
W illia m
R uland ; W e sle y S a lle y ;
Horace ft. Self.
Seminole High
Vocational Teachers
K a th e ry n
A le x a n d e r;
How ard B u tc h e r;
Louis
Girard; Angct Mendez; Joe
Orseno; Vernon Rice; Robert
Schmidt
County Office
S y lv ia E c h e g a ra y , Soc.
Worker; Shirley Edmondson,
Ed. Diagnostician;
Susan
Kessler, Ed. Ding.; Molly
M cD o w e ll,
Ed.
D iig . ;
Thomas M cD ow ell, language
P lu g ;
E lle n
M e rcer,
A u d io lo g ist; L o is Jackson,
Soc. Worker; Eileen Rogers,
V isio n C o n s u lta n t; G la d y s
Wilson, Soc. Worker; Dannie
Roberts, Guidance; Joanne
Bohannon, R e g is tr a r ; Joe
M ills, Registrar; Je rry K irk ­
man, Occ. Spec,
Three persons served as
sum m er
em p loyees (as
needed). They were:
F a irlie Bagley, InserviceW riting E m p lo y e e ; W illie
Bond,
S e m in o le ,
P .E .
T eacher; P a ts y K im b a ll,
Oviedo, Adm .

I t (17) NKIHT OAILERY
11:30
O l TONIGHT G u m I h « l O anl
l#ll#*m*n Gu#ttl Georg# lid V .
Al J#rr##u Eh# S o m w
J O U ’A’ S’ H
(I) O ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
40 (35) WANTED DEAD OR AUVE

8:00
O 41GD O &gt; o x r w s
II (351 ANDY QWrrtTM
CD 110) THE TOM c o m ! SHOW
Roychec Row m lfj Ma*d#rt |
•omjn who *1 tuft th#H8 pvyefeC
to*» about ho* pommi - M a bur
dan and a# a grtl
605
11 (17) f a t h e r Know s BIST
8:30
0 4 NBC NEWS
j o c a s new s
D O ABC NEWS
lit (35| CARTER COUNTRY
(D ( 10) H I R E S 10 VOUR
HEALTH I K K #
Inw gancm

12:30
O (D TOMORROW Guatlt (Hon
John SJI Murray, caul mambara ol
SC TV Natwork 90 (R)

(RJO
8:35
1 1 117) THAT atm.

1:00

7 .00

J

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J O P M MAGAZINE # comp#ny O u t m IM #Mi-«py w&gt;J #niM#rtorwl d n t H « «rd food In i n
North Corohno. Ch»l T«0 prvptrn
MUC# gntxch# Aft* U iu O l k u
iu n r c t v n lor Iho iK-gh# and Horn•ch. Joycr Koiourtt Im • hot or
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(7 Q JO KER S WHO
1|(35) b a r n e y M ille r
ID (10) U A CN EL / lEHRER

O NEWS

1:10
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MgMmdto Alta,
|B/WI 11047) Tyton# Pon*r Joan

2:00
O

S DAILY DEVOTIONAL

A U G . 21, 22, 22
A ll N iw ly S o rv lco d B r a n d N s m o s

WE'RE O VERSTOCKED!

11:45
0 ) (10) STORY BOUND
^

. b l a c k * w h it e

AFTERNOON

12:00

12:00
I D ST ARSKY AMO HUTCH
) U CHARLIE S ANGELS The
Ang#H IM# to th# **»#»#■ to li#cv
dorm * kWar oho h#« thr##l#n#d •
nvwtrvoman « kH |R)
11(35) AM SAKKER

. p o r t a b l e s

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4T CARO SHARKS
f iC D O N E W S
T 5 ) THE WORLD O f PEOPLE
[10) ERICA
12:05
42 (17) fftEEUAN REPORTS
12:30
O (4) NEWS
(T&gt; O t h e YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
0 o RYANS HOPE
.5) FAMILY AFFAIR
FAST FORWARD

Sales A Sdrvlca
JCJ Sooth Sanford Avo., Sanford
311-2244
F rl A Sal t t . Sun 1:24-5

to)

1:00
O (4) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
: ALL MY CHILDREN
5) MOVIE
10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
1:05
42&lt; 17)uovtc

FRIDAY,

1:30

Li) a

ncponr

DAYTIME
MORNING

705
.12 ( 17) ALL IN THE FAMnY

500
(7) U MARCUS WELBY. U 0.

7:30
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j O sotm c e n t u r y w ith w a l TER CRONKITE
(7: o f a m i l y f e u o
f it (35) RMOQA
CD i 10) DICK CAVETT

5:15
42(17) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
530
(I) O SUMMER SEMESTER
5:45
42 (17) WORLD AT U R G E

7:35
12 (17) BASEBALL Nor. York
Met* at Atlanta Draws

5:55
O ® DAILY DEVOTIONAL
0 O DAILY WORD

800
O
(|I NBC MAGAZINE WITH
DAVIO BRINKLEY
1 O THE WALTONS »• Cor#
both ! kratxth #r-d D-r» #rr #n lor
m#nl#dbyprobt#msotlo&gt;« |R|
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CHARLES DARWIN Darvwn maktt
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A/ganttna a coattM chltt gaining
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tile community |Part3HRj

8:00
) TODAY IN FIORIOA
I HEALTH FIELD
I SUNRISE
) JIM SAKKER
60S
I t (17) MOLLYWOOO REPORT

7:25
f ) (£l TODAY IN PlOAiOA
(T O OOOO MOANING FLOAfOA
7:30
0 ( 4 ) IOOAY
lT o OOOO MORNING A ME MCA
iffl (35) BKHXHA SPLITS
(D 110) SESAME STREET (R)g
800
(J. Q CAPTAIN KANGAROO
(fli 735) FRED FLWTSTONt a n o
FRIENDS

42117)

HOTPOINT

3:05
4 2 117) FUNTIME
3:30
&lt;1t (05) KROfFT SUPERSTARS
E S 1 10) OVER EASY
3:35
42 (17) THE FUNTSTONES
4:00

12(17| MY THREE SONS

000
fjJ HOUR MAGAZINE
Q DONAHUE
Q MOVIE
(35) DOUCR PYLE
(10) SESAME STREET(RJg

9 05

&lt;U(35|ANOYORtfnTH

R E G — S 349.15
MODEL t a n

5.05
42 (17) OZZTE ANO HARRIE T
5:30
43 ® GILUQAN S ISLAND
J t O M ’ A 'S -H
T O NEWS
(D (T0| ELECTRIC COMPANY (R|

Ll L4

9:35

10:00
Q (4 )B U U S E Y t
) p RICHARD SIMMONS
f t (35) I LOVE LUCY
0 ( 1 0 ) MISTER ROOERS (R)

10:05
12(17) MOVIE

10:30
) BLOCKBUSTERS

J ALICE |R)
,35) O C K VAN DYKE

Phil Pastore1

( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R;

11:00
) WHEEL Of FORTUNE
) THE PRICE » RKJMT
I T 'OIlTHREFS COMPANY (R)

Pioneering.
rin g. 'I'80s style.
concocl a
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Being forced lo roneocl
p itc h e r of
la n h a lia n s
bee,ause you're out o( the
bottled mix

EMERSON QUIET KOOL*

5:35
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R h F k w lT h a a t r a s R
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30-40-90 DAYS
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F IR S T A F R E N C H A V E .

3 2 2 -0 2 4 4

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b u sin e ss Cards
cLetterheads •E n ve lo p e s
*1invoices •Statem en ts
^Annoucements ,cF lye rs

DISCOUNTCARPETS
HAS MOVED TO
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SANFORD
PH. 212-4494

It'd gelling vo thal lolk
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C

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]) P HOGAN'S HEROES
35) WONDER WOMAN
( 10) MISTER ROOERS (R)

9:30

Q | 1 7 )N E W S

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LO TONE M U FFLER

4:35
42 (17) HAZEL

0 (17) FAMILY AFFAIR

104)5

•l&gt;&gt; HP BRIOGS A
STRATTON ENGINE
•OIL FILL DIPSTICK
•POSITIVE REAR
GEAR DRIVE
HEIGHT ADJUSTMENT

4:30
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8:35

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STREET A U#tt#&gt; 01 Honor
l o w u i (Kan# lor • gourmolt
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8:30

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8 05

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,35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(10) MISTER ROOERS (R)

10:00
41) (35) HOC PENDENT NETWORK

[M IRSO N

21”

4:05
4 2 117) THE AOOAMS FAMILY

8:25
M r n TODAY MFIORIOA
0 O OOOO MORNING FIORIOA

0 30
} O ABC NEWS CLOSEUF The
Mona!lary" A rare loo* 'inpda trw
waM' ot a monaetary « St Joeaph i
Mi' rural Maiaachuaatti. wha&lt;« unu
r'*c«Niit»y lha &gt;mon*a wara undar a
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CLEAR AN CE

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3:00
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J O O W O I N Q LIGHT
(7 o GENERAL HOSPITAL
lUi (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
0 ) 110) POSTSCRIPTS

0 D MERVonirriN
) l (35) s u p e r m a n
LE ( 10) SESAME STREET In ig

7.05
12 (17) FUN TIME

INVENTORY

2:30

(I p SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
0 ) |T0) DICK CAVETT

8:45
(D&lt; 10)A M WEATHER

Q ® tooay
lT) O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
0 O OOOO MORNING AMERICA
351 HERCULOiOS
(10) VILLA ALEGRE

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W*&gt;ma act «M*gned to accompany
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Iwanty-tia fa**vtvon. ttagt and
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humo*Out and daring c*rcua aci»
ihayd Qndga* ftocfc Hudson, Angala lanilw ry and Vatone N n « i era
rmgmaaiar &gt;hoata (R|
(X) O
SAAMCV MILLER The
pe#rn&gt;«ra ahowing of Harriet
111000 ovwr budget porno Mm
•ends Shoe* n e w s through lha
precinct (R|Q
CD (10) UNOCRSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

2:00
(J) ANOTHER WORLD
ONE LIFE TO LIVE
O lriO ) FOOTSTEPS

Q r a 1m o v ie
lT) O JOHN DAVIDSON

7:00

830
(7
o
BOSOM SUDOttS Kip
•mpultsvaTy qu«tt hit job m lha mutaken balsat thal Manry Wit wait out
with Iwn (R)

a s t h e w o rld turns

8:30
( J I O E O ALLEN

855
(I) O OOOO MORNING FLORIDA

11:00

Sanford A.V 8 p.m., 2181 W. F irs t St.
AFAnon, 8 p.m., Crossroads Halfway House, la k e
Minnie D rive, Sanford.
F K IU A Y, AUGUST t l
Singles of Sanford, 7 p.m., F u s t United Methodist
Church Fellow ship fla il. Covered dish supper and
games. Interested welcome.
Seminole Sunrise Kiwanis, 7 am ., J e rry 's Airport
Restaurant.
SA T U R D A Y , AU GU ST 22
World’ s Perfect Bacardi Plaa Colada routest bet­
ween Central Florid a lounges, U a m. to 4 p.m.,
poolside at the Oriando Marriott Inn. To benefit the
Ronald M cD onald Houae In Gainesville. Open to the
public.

1130
11 PASSWOflO PLUS
j THREE S COMPANY (R)
(35) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE
(10)BOOKB1AO

11:35

(I) (Si 0 ( 7 ) 0 NEWS
5| BENNY HILL
10) POSTSCRIPTS

T H U R SD A Y , AUGUST 20
Sound-of-Sunshine Chapter Sweet Adelines, 8 p.m.,
Si. Andrews Presbyterian Church, B ear ta k e Road,
F a re d City.
Wright Watchers, 7 p.m., Quality Inn, Longwood; 7
p.m.. Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 2917 Highway
17-92, Sanford.
Overeaters Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.. Community
United Methodist Church, Casselberry.

35) BUD BREWER
(tOlSTUO W SEE

41 (17) MOVIE
UodMir Bi*-tr
{tMO) Morae# Villi T#r#nc# Sump

10:30

w it h y o u r I n s u r a n c e !
- C A L L -

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F a i l — P fe s o n t — F u tu re
HI M VI A U I K I ON ALL AFFAIRS
• u s e •l o v c • t u u u c t • w m i a s
B E E N IN B U 9 N E S S F O H 5 0 Y E A R S
IN P R IV A C Y O F M Y H O M E

HOURS 8 A M. - 9 P.M. Cloved Sunday
s S i IKKV HORN Of OOCmACa BO.

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S an fo rd Prin tin g h a : served a s an in H o uso printing sa rv ica for C o d is c o , Inc.
fo r lh a past few y ea rt and now h a s expanded It's c a p a c ity to h a n d le tight
co m m e rc ia l printing.
The next tim e yo u need any type o f b u s in e ss torm s, g iv e u e the o pportunity
lo h e lp you. A s k for Debra

S A N F O R D P R IN T IN G
•03 WEST THIRD BTPEET
SANFORD, FLORIDA 327T1
PHONE: 323-4911

EHecttvd 8-t7 thru 8-21
II* M I n H

tm IIM t *

CASH A CARRY
MON. THRU FRI. ONLY

TV* &lt;#.#

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faafrgcz,..

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11:05

i T H U RSD AY

41 (35) POP1 DOES m i COUN­
TRY

CALENDAR

Thursday, Aug. 14. I H I— I B

TONIGHT'S TV
EVEN**)

Park; B arb ara Rohter Tyson,
From Oviedo lo la k e Mary
H igh |te a c h e r) ; Law rence
Tyson, Fro m la k e v ie w . to
Oviedo as Guidance Coun­
selor; V ir g in ia U ric h k o ,
From Home bound Program
to Red Bug E lem ., Music
teacher; P a tric ia V ick , la k e
Mary , From Compensatory lo
R egular T e a c h e r, Robert
Wagner, F r o m
Jackson
Heights to la k e M ary High
i Shop te a c h e r); P a tric ia
W esley, F ro m Longwood
Elem. to Red Bug Elem.
I teacher I; E th e l Merrym an,
F ro m C ro o m s -M ilw e e , to
f a k e M a ry H ig h -M ilw e e ;
Teacher of the V is u a lly
Impaired.
Five persons have been
granted a leave of absence
from
S e m in ole
County
schools. They are:
M arc Baron. Co. Office,
Attend
A m erica n
P s y c h o lo g ic a l A ssociation
Convention in la s Angeles,
Ca,, Effective 8-21-8) through
8-284); Randall Johns, Data
IToe., Attend a workshop for
I n fo r m a t io n P r o c e s s in g
A d m in istra to rs of Large
School Systems-Assodation of
Educational D ata Systems in
lass Vegas, Nev., Effective 92341 through 9-2841; Jenifer
Ownby, W in te r Springs,
Maternity, E ffectiv e 8-2441,
e n d in g u n d e t e r m in e d ;
Margaret Ttnkley, Izmgwood,
Maternity, E ffe c tiv e 8-2441,
e n d in g u n d e t e r m in e d ;
C a rolyn W olf, T u sk a w illa ,
E s l. Sick, E ffective 8-2441
ending undetermined.
le ave s were also granted lo
17 persons for the school year
196142.
They are; L y n Cahen, Pine
Crest,
P e rs o n a l;
C a rol
Corcoran, South Side, Per­
sonal;
D oroth e a
Fogle,
Goldsboro, Personal; Shirley
Gibson, Sabal Point, Per­
sonal; John Heine, Oviedo,
Pe rsonal; L y n H enderson,
Lyman, M aternity; Ralph D,
Jensen, Milwee, Personal; Jo
E lle n K u n s w e ile r, W inter
Springs, Personal; Valerie
layser, la k e H o w e ll P e r­
sonal; Charles A . Mandevllle,
Lake B ra n tle y , P e rso n al;
Joan Nii-kmim, Ijik e Bran­
tley, P e rs o n a l; R osalyn
P lc k e ls lin e r, M ilw e e , P e r­
sonal; G a ll Rosser, Wektva,
Personal; B e lly T id w e ll,
Sanford M id d le , P e rso n a l;
S h irle y U ts, S a b a l Point,
Personal; Linda White, Pine
Crest. M a te rn ity ; S h irle y
Williams, Sabal Poinl, Ext.
Sick.
Instructional resignations
were accepted from 25 per­
sons effective June ’81. They
are: B e v e rly B ra c k m a n ,
Casselberry, Leaving area;
P a tric ia C oon,
Ja ckso n
Heights, le a v in g
area;
U llia n Crocker, Sabal Point,
R elocation; C ra w fo rd D.
E a rn h a rd t,
C ro o m s,

t v - r ” —- - — —

-

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

V iS

\ % %.« « » * - •

J

.V

♦ - V -# V k c --v - -t 4 - J

-id*

-s

�4&amp;— Evtftlng H g rild . Sanford, FI.

Ttiur»d«r, A t f f J M W I

n o t ic e

REALTY TRANSFERS
toT

(OCOI Barry C Sweat. igi
Joseph G P oio Jr lo Donald P
SvnthlaA Sweet. to I . Loti 11 A it Weber A a l Maimda L . Un 14
w w k plot Lake J n t j p t o «tc.
Indlin Rldg*. Condo. Ph I,
UK
US OK
&gt;01* M Miranda 1 «t Ann* to
Leon Lindsay lo Richard J
Albert E. Wanton, igl , Lot U L Bailut A a tM a rlo R . Lot 14. Blk I.
Traliwood E t .lt , Sac 1, t o r n
Sun14rwf Esialos Amended Plat,
R K k y 0 Oranl A wt Pairtta to SIS MO
Leon Lindsay (mar t. Lot I. Bid C.
BelA.re Homos Inc to Dorsey
Paradll* Point Fourth S*c . W Bennett A a t Lucinda. Lot lit
V IM
Oak Forts!. Un 1A. 170*00 .
01-n Amor Homo* FI. to Mad
F A R Buildaes. Inc lo Donald R
lord S Mother A w f Dorothy $ . Brady A at Paula O . Lot S. Tha
Lot 41. Bid A. Greenwood Ltkat. Villas ot Ctttotbtrry, Phas* On*.
On 1. t n »0
SS0 7K
Donato Vlolantt A at Maria to
Frederick H Casey. Ind A tr to
M ttv Lar*. lam* at abort. *100 Donald Van Ralph A a l Claudia J.,
Cur t ttnio. Ind. A tr to Lot IS, Blk C. Beer Laka Haights.
Narthia Lakes Ptrtnip Portion ol 11J. TOO
Wooer I S Violet' A at Patricia to
NE'a ot s*&lt; n i t 1 * *tc i)7)f
Gary R Pettit A at Debby. Lot 44.
tern m I 1100
Oak
forest Un On*. S7I.0K
Frrn Park In*, to Thomas A
10CD) William P Cobourn 1
Paul A wt Ellen J Un 79SB Ath
Carolyn to William P Cobourn.
wood (onto . U t 000
William T Smith A art Odette lo Lots 105. 104 A 10?, L o tt Sylvan
* G Bridget A L B . from ttw E lls . IIK
Jamas R Keck A a t Virginia lo
(or Let A. torn I, Semmol* Para
Amtndtd plat, 1 pared*. 143.009 Edaord R Jamas Broan A at
RCA to Kalman Kopatti A art Cottarln*H . L d Is T A I . Host E T9
Elll LI IS. Hidden Laka, Pn II, o il) Blk 0 Entrmingar Addn No I,
S47.QK
Un I, Sat.too
Arthur C M cG roa A at Aik* I*
RCA lo Gregory Sica A art
Eugenia M Lot *). Hidden Lake Dovd M Malus, s g l, Let 17 Blk
M. North Orlando T t r r , Sec Ora.
Pti II. un. I. 141.400
Sprmgwood Village Apt Corp to Un On*, SW.000
Samuel l til etc
to Equity
Roger N Hitl-ngt A art Daphnt S ,
Realty In c. Un. 41. Sandy Coy*.
Un 11lb Springarood VIII Condo
S1K
S4I.SK
Equity Rooky Inc to Samuel
Springarood VIII Apt Crp lo
Edgar B Moroni A art Lurltnt E Cohen A at Clair*. Un a* Sandy
Cove.
SA4.K0
Un 1146. Springarood VIII Cond
Stadtl 1*11 ate lo Equity Realty
UtMO
Springarood VII Apt Crp 10 Inc . Uh 101 Sandy Co**. SIM
Equity Realty Inc lo Bruct
Frank H Abrahams A rot Joan M
R . Un tltD Springarood VIII Cotton, t g l . Un Ml S ndy Co**.
U1.SK
Cond . I to.000
Springarood VII Apt Crp lo
Thiro P Careido Jr Un 1146
Spr&gt;ng&lt;rood VIII. Condo I4),000
Tnp Do*. Co
Id Waynt
School!i*ld, Tr . Lots S7, SI. SI A S4
from SW cor ot H ‘ t ol SW'. ol Sec
31 II 11 etc . US.000
NOTICBOF SH ERIFF'S s a l e
Samo lo urn* at abov*. L it t S
n o t i c e is h e r e b y g i v e n
ra. in Sec s a i n t . 117 SOO
mol by *irlu« ol that cartam Writ
Either S Kirby, sgt to Angel L. ot Elocution issued out ot and
Re, *11 Marr l E , ol Lot t, blk C, undo* Ih* tool ot th* County Court
North O rf Ranchos sac J. »10.090 ot Orong* County. Florid*, upon a
Edmund D Nicholson A ait final lodgement rendered m the
Dorothy N lo Bruct C Slltor A art aforesaid court on th* Tath day ol
Kothlaon M , L it IS A I*. F armor'» Jura. A D i f l l , in that cartam
addn, 1)1.000
(Alt entitled, Viking Sales A
IQCDI Garlr* Oulnn lo Snlrlay Seryico P la in tiff, vs Arnold
Ouinn, Lot 4 A E IS’ ol Lot S. blk J, Bulkr and wlfo, Mrs
Bullar.
Carman, SIM
Defendant, nhlch aforesaid Writ
IOC01 CraHl Ournn to Shirley ol E locution was delivered lo me
at Sherill ol Seminole County.
Oulnn 1100
Tha Babcock Co lo John E Flora*, and I ha*t levied upon the
Monaco A art Nonol M . Lot 114. tolloamg described property
craned b* Arnold P Butler. J r .
Crono t Rooot Villas. 177.SOO
Wmtor Spgt Do* to Aylesbury sad property being keeled m
Homos Inc Lot 1*5. W lnltr Seminole County. Florida, mort
Springs Un ). WO.WO
particularly described at follows
Georg* B Norm*, sgl. to Wm P
On# IIF4 Chevrolet Von, brown
Dunning A art Vaudi* G , E ly ot In color. VIN No CGYIS4U114I1I
SE&gt;. ol NE'&lt; ot Sac I? t i l l last being tlorod al 17 t l Shall,
Casselberry, Florida
pari. Itt.MO
David H Andoiman A art Charyt And ih* undersigned at Shanlf ot
R. lo Eorl &gt; Ballard A nt Susan Samlnol* County, Florida, will al
M , W IS ot Lot ?. blk L A Lt A blk II 00 A M on Ih* list day el
August, A O 1*01. otter tor tale
L d( . Noting*!#. I ll 000
IQCDI Rlchord D terebo A al and SHI to Ih* highast bidder, tor
Patricio to Poltlcla L terebo. W cash, subltct to any and all
1)0 ol S U ))’ of Lot I A W It SW tiltin g lions. *1 Ih* Front IWetll
ol Lot *. Blk D Tr. ?*, Sonlando Door ot Ih* Seminal* County
Springs, SIM.
Courthouse in Sanford, flora*.
tomes C Gambit A art Eydl* J Ih* above described personal
to J t t t f t y fr b u lls A art M a r y P . progeny

Legal N otice

La4 S tW e b lv a t s lll, . baa. a, 111.100
W illia m a ho yuaes. III. •*!

Augustin* O. Ooadd* A art Don
Anna, Un. )I4F, Altam tnlt
HeigntL II* £00
IQCDI William C Ll«l* A at
flora I* John M Oktay A at
Swlorm* M , LI ). Blk 1. Tier 1,
E R Trotlordt Map ot Sanford,
SIM
Honey Bee Homat Inc to
Nttberl N Grovenilein A al
Lind* T.t Lot SO. Rep ot Wyndhom
Woods, Ph on*. 1100 000
Robte! W Whltakor A at D
Carolyn lo Jamas A do Ganahl A
at Dorothy, blk la. Crystal Laka
WiNor Nonas i d , ISO OOO
Aubrty B Eads. Jr A at Mary
E lo John A Holloa* y sgl. Lott »
A 10. Blk 11. Tier 4. E R Trotlordt
mop ol Sanford, t l) SOO
JackC Crawford A a t Shlrtay lo
Loonord E Sovidgo A at Susan A ,
Lot IS. Blk C. Saaataalor Oaki.
Sac. a. tios.soo
Mkhaal J v *111110 A at Shalla
M la Mkhaal J Wagntr A at
Jorco. Lot I*. Blk I. Woodland!.
Its OK
Bock C o n t t r . Inc to D o n ald J
to m A a l M a r l* . P a r t of Lot 11.
frpi ot IS. B lk Q B . Q u a il Pond
addn Cb. ttt.OCO
W iim im a G J o rd a n to W llm m la
0 Jo rd a n A B e tty F a y * Raeeal.
LOIS • A 0 , B lk A . B ue na V lt la
E k lt . U K
W D S p iv e y . W ld r lo F ra n c e s
T Jonas A a t G a y lt M . W M l 41
ot s is?' ot i a n l l ' o f N i i i sa- al
W l l ' . ch of G v l L l I. to e IS I I It.

UOOO
IQCDI Daniel S Laartn ct it
Kitty A. L a a rtn ct, Lot 10 Maylalr
lac . 1st Addn, IIW
Naihan Anton, sgl to Mas Anton
A a l Ptarl. blk B. Tr IS. rstil,
SanJanoo Spgt lets W 4MII It OOO
Honey Be* Homat. Inc lo Jtery
L Spangler A at Barbara A , Lot
II. rtpl Wyndhom Woods. Ph
one. HI 000
lea tkld Apis . Inc. I* Harry
Hershon* A a l Nan, Un I) lilt .
Cedaraood VIII Condo I, 13J.S00
iram Schaarli. Tr. etc lo
Murray L Fredericks, Trustee, W
440- ol W i of SW '. ol Stc a n i l .

’&gt;

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOE
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
File Nvmber *1 M l CP
Division
IN R l : E S TA T E OF
NOEL R 6AL0WIN.
Deceased
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
to ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIMS
OR
DEMANDS
AGAINST TH E ABOVE ESTATE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
IN tE R E S T ED IN THE ESTATE
YOU
ARE
H E R EB Y
N O TIFIED
that
Ih*
ad
miiusiralien of th* estate ol NOEL
R BALD W IN . deCfAttd. file
Number It M l CP, is pend.ng m
tha Circuit Court lor Seminole
County, Florid*. Probatt Division,
ih# address oI which is SammaN
County Courthouse, Santord,
F lor do Th* personal rtprrsen
loir** ot th* astat* is KENNETH
BALDWIN, whos* address Is 1101
Thundrrbkd Avenue. BrookSville,
Fiord* l i l t )
Th* name ,
address
ol
th*
personal
representative's attorney or* sot
torth below
All persons having claims or
demand* against Ih* tslai* are
required.
WITHIN
THREE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE. 10 III* mth th*
clerk at th* above court a written
statemmf of any claim or demand
they may havt Each claim must
b* in writing and must indicate the
bosk tor th* claim, Ih* rum* and
address of ih* creditor or his agent
or attornty. and th* amount
claimed tl the claim it not yet
duo. Ih* dole when it will become
duo shall be slated it tha claim n
contingent or unliqudattd. Ih*
rulurt ot th* uncertainty shall bt
sta'od It ih# claim it sacurad. Ih*
security shall be described Tha
claimant shall deliver iwlliclant
copies ot in* claim lo in* dark la
enable Ih* Clark lo mall on* copy
lo each personal represent any#
All persons interetlad m Ih*
mats lo whom a copy of IMS
Not ic a of Admmitirel Ion has been
mailed are required. WITHIN
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
DATE
OF
THE
FIRST
PU BLICATIO N
OF
THIS
NOTICE, lo til* any obfoctiont
they may nava that challenge tnt
vei d.ty ot tha dectdtnl't will, tha
q u illllca llo n s of th* portonal
rtprataniallv*. or Ih* venue or
lurtscbcllon ol Ih* court
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED
WILL BE F O R E V E R BARREO
Dole ot th* lirtt publication ot
this Notice ol Administration
AUGUST 10. INI
Kenneth Baldwin
At Personal Representative
ol Ih* Estal* of
NOEL M BALDWIN
Decoasad
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE
JOHN A BALDWIN. ESQ.
ol BALDWIN 4 DIKEOU
SOO Highway 17 0)
Fern Park. Florida DIM

se ta o o i* is n e m o m ean I * l

sataiy th* teems e* u k a n t oi I
Elocution
John E Polk, Sheriff
Seminole County, Flora*
Publish July Id. August A I). 70.
aith Ih* sal* on August 11. 1*41
oEa i n
CALL FOR RIDS, REM O VAL OF
BUILOINOS AND O TH IR IM
PROVEMENTS
Staled bids will b* received al
111) West First Stroet. Sanford.
Fiord* 117)1. lu ll east el railroad
croatmg on SR at west o4 Santord.
II K A M o n Ih* ) r d d a y of
Sapttm bee t t t t . to r th* s a lt and
rtm o v a l. o r Ih* d e m o litio n and
rem oval, o t b u ild in g s and other
I m p r o v e m e n t s I r o m lo c a t io n s
needed lo r r o a d c o n s t r u c t io n
known os S e c tio n 774X) 10* 1. SR
H la m mot# c o u n t y . P a r c o ii ios
sd 104. F A P NO H R S 114 1(11
Th* b&lt;dt w ill be opened p u b licly
a n d a n n o u n c e d o t th * llm *
d e l •peeled to r r e c t i* m g them
No bid w ill b e c o n sid e re d unless
It is su b m itte d o n th * o f llc l* l E d
Pro p o sal fo r m p ro v id e d by lt d
F lo r id * D t p a r t m a n t o l T ra n
s p o rtttio n S u c h p ro p o s a l lo rm s
and in fo r m a l Ion r e g a rd in g IN I
C a ll lo r B id s o r , in t p e c t d n ot lt d
build mgs m a y be o b ta in e d from
P r opart y M a n a g e m e n t Section.
F lo t ld o D e p a r t m e n t o l T ra n
sp o ria flo n. P . 0 B oh *7 , D oLand.
f io r d * 177)0 . P ho ne (1041 7)4
1171, E a t 1)4
Th* D e p a rtm e n t re se rv e s th*
r ighl lo r a la c t a n y o r a ll b id s and to
w a iv t t e c h n ic a l e r ro r s a s m ay be
deemed best to r ih * in l e t r it t l Ih*
Slot*
P ro p e rty M a n a g e m e n t Section
U P * o l F lo r id *

Department at Transportation
Right ol way Division
P vtriS h

A u g u s t 10, 17, I N I

DEL Id?

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FL04IDA
CASE NO. I !-lis t CA *1 K
A H MALCOM and CORALOU K
MAICOM. his wilt.
U LO K
Plaint lift.
Dee Corp SI John* lo Murray
Fredericks. Tr SIM
L H Stephens to Mrryin D CHARLES W ROSE and JEAN
Hennings. Lot 10. Blk A. Tha ANN ROSE. HIS wit*
D e l end a n il
Springs Spreading Oak VIII
NOTICE OF SALE
tlH O M
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
Ihtt, pursuant lo an order or a
tlnal lodgment ol lortclosuft
m'rred m Ih* abov* capllonod
action. I will sail th* properly
P h il P a s to r e t
situated in Samlnol* County,
Florida, described at
Hindsight U often most
Lai 1). H IC K O R Y C R E E K ,
highly developed in those
according Id IN* plat Ihoraol as
recorded In Plat Book 11. Pag* 11,
with lack o l foresight.
Public R tco rd t o l Samlnol*
What la the w orM did they
Cvuniy. Florida.
and
do a Ufa dried or I toft-sip
let *. HICKORY C R E E K , *c
pens be Iore ifaey M l tfaem in
cordng to in* plat lhafaol at
p a r k ilt s »od napfen lo
recorded .n Plat Book II. Pag* )L
Public R tco rd t at Stminolt
County, Florida, at publk sal*, to
IN* hignttt and bast burner
cash, at th* W ttt Iron! door ot the
Samlnol* County Courthouse
Santord. Florida. Sem.noi* County
on ih* ISIN day at Sepltmbar. Ittl
(« A L I

BARBS

People who lung for nick­
el beer can find Ibe s w e
old suds i t m y grogshop for upward of tlx bits

I n a coaierwailvf.
Ym 'tt lull tao chicken Id
UJ aaytklBg aew.

A rthur H S a c k w it n J r
Clark o l th a C ir c u it C o u rt

By Susan E Tabor
Oaguty Clerk
MILLER B CO OPER, PW.
AltorneyS tor Plainlill
P O Drawer t i l l
Orlando. Florida 7710?
Publish Augotl Tfc 1). t**l
DEL »*

• &gt;

■r.p w

h ea r in o

of
to

a

the

I pH M a t t r E le c tro n ic
1 Scat*. T oledo
I P a r a lin M a n at E a f h a la c . II
I pH M a la r B a tte ry
t S c h lo tt Tonom eter
I C a n t r it u g a I n la r n a llo n a l
C lin ic a l
I M iSC. G la s s w a r e
I F ith e e C o lo n y Counter
I D ru m C lo s e rs to f SS g a l and I

**l
pH M e te r M e trte n IV electric
C u ltu re R t r r ig a r a t o r
T o rsio n B a la n c e D ia l 0 G ram s
F lasts Co nd enser
V a c u u m P re s s u re P um p
C h e m ic a l O rIn d e r

&gt;■
I Inhalation Unit (or Animals
I O p h th a lm o sc o p e
I W a la r B a th Elacfrk
t Egg Incub*lor
I Small Lilt
1 boats Carton Slides IK
I Mammae Grinder Electric
I Star liter C tl)
1 Corvdervser M illit a s tilin g
l A n im a l B a la n c e in k ilo an*
g ra m
l M a g n e tic S t lr r o f w Hal P it ta
and ih * u n d e rs ig n e d *t Sharitt «
Sem inole C o u n ty . F lo r id a , w ill a*
IIN AW
o n th* n t h 0* r at
August, A 0 - ISSI. o tte r lo r sal*
and s a il to Ih* tugboat b idder, tor
c a s h .w b lo ct lo a n y and a ll
t u t t in g n a n s, a l tn * D E F E N
D A N T 't P L A C E O F E U S IN E S S .'
I t t C o n co rd D f iv a . C a tta ib a rry ,
F lo r id a , t h * a b o v * d e s c rib e d
personal p ro p e rty
T h * M id s a l* I* b e in g m ad* I*
M in t y th* t e r m s &lt;4 s a id W rit *4
E it c v t M n

PUBLIC LEO AL NOTICE
As * result ot Ih# ISM Federal
Ctniua th# Division at Alcoholic
Bavtrogat
and
Tobacco.
Dtpartmant
*1
Butlnats
Regulation. Slot# ot Fund* will
be accepting application tar Iho
istuenco ot seven (7) quota liquor
IlCtntot In Samlnol* County
beginning August HL INI and
continuing througn November I),
INI.
Ail inter rile d persons should
make Inquiry and or III* lhair
application by contacting Cap!.
I B W a llact, District Oillca,
Division at AkohoUc Brvtragtt
and Tobacco. S*0S Diplomat
Cuti*. Suita lit . Orlande, Florida.
Announc tenants will be mad*
sailing a public haarlng m San
lord. Florida lor all appllcalions
received during IMS tiling period
Chart** A. Nulwm,
Ot.-octor

F IR S T C O O K

Evpeeienctd only need apply
Applv in person Holiday Inn on
tha Lasefront

Lbnaly Christian Singles
Meet Christian Singles m yawr
a re a Writ* Southern Chfrst.an
Singles Club. P O Boi 141)
S u m m e rv ille , S. C 1S441 or
can I M ) *11 K M 14 hr*
Lonely &gt;Write "Bringing People
Together Dating Service'" All
ages 1 Senior Cltllsns P O
last. Winter Haven. Fla Sjago

N O T IC E
OF
A
P U B LIC
H E A R I N O TO C O N S IO IR T H R
A D O P T I O N O F A N O R D IN A N C E
• Y T H E C IT Y O F S A N F O R D .
FL O R ID A

Unattached* Lonesome* Start
Trial Mamberih.p. just 170
Confidential Dqmhtd Ois
creel Different Countrywide
Literature Oat.ngal Prestige.
Williams!own. Mass *1)17
Tet al j asi sag?

Nolle* ll hereby givm ihai a
Public Hearing wll be held at Ih*
Commission Room m Ih* City Hall
in th* City ot Santord. Florida, at
7 OOod o e s P M an Saptambar IA
tttl. to consider th* adoption ot an
ordinance by Ih* City of Sanlord.
Florida, as IoIIm s

5-Lm tt Found

O R D I N A N C E NO I N I

ANOROINANCE OF THE CITY
OF SANFORO. FLORIDA. TO
A N N E X WITHIN THE COR
P O R A TE AREA OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD, FLORIDA. UPON
AD O PTIO N
OF
SAIO OR
D INANCE,APORTIONOF THAT
CERTAIN PROPERTY LYING
B E T W E E N COUNTRY CLUB
ROAO ANO CR 44A HSTM
S T R E E T ) AND WEST OF AIR
PORT
BO ULEVARD :
SAID
PR O P ER TY BEING SITUATED
IN
S EM IN O LE
COUNTY.
F L O R I D A . IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THE VOLUNTARY AN
N E X A T IO N PROVISIONS OF
S EC TIO N W ia tt. FLORIDA
STATUTES; PROVIDING FOR
S E V E R A B L I T Y . CONFLICTS
AND E F F E C T IV E OATE
W HEREAS. Iharthas been tiled
with th* City Clark ol th* City ot
Santord. Florida, a petition con
lalning th* name at th* proparty
awrvtr in Ih* era* described
her email tr requesting annaitllon
to the corporal* area at Ih* City ot
Santord. and
W H E R E A S , th* Property
Appraiser of Sammola County,
F lo rid a , having candied that
more is on* proparty owner in th*
are* to be anneved. and that M id
property owner has signed th*
petition for anntvatlon. and
W HEREAS. It has bttn deter
mined that th* proparty deter ibad
herein viler is reasonably compact
and contiguous to tn* corporate
ere# ** mo City ot Sanlord.

Reward lo anyone finding
sunglartsas with Gold mllials
(M l) possibly Sanlord Plat*
))) 4tt» Of 771 1*5*
Found — Silver Atgnan hound
with grey coloring, lemela.
call 1)4 04*4 III S M or D ) 4SSI
Reward — Cal loot in IdyltwUdt
area Reddish brown A white,
bobtailtd and slightly trots
eyed Wearing collar nllh an#
ortngt bead 177 711Y

6— Child Care
Child cart in my horn* 5unland
Estates — fenced yard, ac
llvilits. hat meals »140t)
Child care In mr home alt
school. 11 4 p m School pickup
availabi# toe pr* schoolers at
noon It schools art centrally
located 17) 1145

Right now w* need a tew good
Mies people who navo Ih*
ambition and dedication 10
succeed II Ihal'i yog, then
wo re prepared to otter you
real rewards R the methods to
get them For interview pleas*
call Century )1 Hayes Really
Services Inc , Sanlord
H ) MM
Pest control technician wanted
tor route work Santord
area Call))) IMS

Certified Group or Private
lessens Children a specialty
Deu* Mallcitwsli m i n i

Bab M Ball Jr.
Sclwalat Baal Estal*

of

Th* F la g s h ip Bank at Sem inole,
lo cate d t l M M South O rla n d e
D r iv e , S a n lo r d . F lo r id a , w it h
b ra n ch e s lo cate d at TOO West t it
Street, I H * Sta le Street. Santord.
F lo r id * . WTO S ta lt R o a d 454.
L o n g wood F lo rid * . S4* w e st L a k e
M a r y , Bird . L a k a M a r y . F lo rid a .
SAM
Red
Bvg L i k e
Road.
C e n t ib a r r y , F lo rid a . SO] Hunt
Chib B tvd . A popka. F lo rid a , and
IM * Hlghseay I l f ) . M a ltla ik ).
F lo r id a has m a d tar F e d e ra l
D epot it In su ra n ce lor a proposed
b ra n c h
T h a lo c a l .on a t ih o
proposed b ra n c h Is an State Road
4)4 a t a p o in t I N feet due to s t o l
th# can ter lin e a f tha w estern
t n ir a n c a la H a c ie n d a M o b il*
H a m * P a r k , Sam inaia cou nty,
F lo r id a IW m ttr Springs O ffic e ).
Th* a p p lk a t la n w as a cce p te d to r
a t t k ia l t ilin g w ith th* F e d e ra l
D e p o sit in s u ra n c e C o rp o ratio n as
a l J u ly N . I N I
A rty p a rso n w ishing lo com m ent
on t h is a p p lk a t la n m ay lit* M s o r
bar c o m m e n ts in w ritin g w ith th*
R e g io n a l D ire c to r at tha F e d e ra l
O e p o sil in s u ra n c e Co rp o ratio n at
if* R e g io n a l O H k * located at H )
P e a c h lra a Street. N S , P a a c h tra a
C a n to r H a r r is Tower. Su it* ]« « .
A tla n ta . G e o rg ia . 70301 l l any
p a rso n d e s u e s to p ro tts l tha
g ra n tin g 01 th is a p p lica tio n ho o r
she ha* a rig h t 10 do to II h * a r she
l-le s a w ritte n note# ot h is ar her
'W ent w ith Iho Reg-enal D ire c to r
A

Publish

a

★

★

★

* *

a w * •

★

★

★

n - m e

29—Rooms
SANFORO. — Reas wkly h
monthly rafts. U1&lt;l me. Kit
SM Oat Adults 141711)
Room lor rant, double oc
cupancr. ) working ladies or
middle aged cpt Kit priv ,
pool, ritefences. ITT 74*0
G o t s o m e th in g to t a l l )
A
Class,f.*d A d w ill s a il it la s t

J O - A p ir f r m n h

- t oorm a d e n .
ceramic
bath,
furniture
availabi*. adults. SHS mo I
We havt apartments to rant
Jvn# Pori lg Realty
Btailor 777 4*71

★

Erfio'y c iv n t r y liv in g t " ? B d rm
A p ts . O ly m p ic
s i.
P o d l.
Shenandoah V illa g e O pen I f

1917 FRENCH AVE
Full Charge Bookkeeper
Etc P o sitio n fo r E ic s k ills

n it m

needed

Good

C o rn e r at n t h t P re a c h
T a u r tvtvra a v r c a m a ra

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

A

m
Cook — riper,meed m lino
d*n,ng. breakfast 1 dinner
Full llm# Apply in person I 4
pm Deltona Inn S74 444)
WHY SAVE IT

SELL

Mar mar's VIIlag* on L aka Jkda I
bdrm Horn STS*. ) bdrm from
U K Lbcalod 7717 jutl South
of Airport Blvd in Santord All
Adults 0)1474
BeaufiM Large 1 Bdrm Un
furnithtd Privata paHo in city
U K Call I 444 4471

IT

Q U I C K L Y w ith a F a i l A ct mg.
L o w C o il C lt s s illo d A d

CONVENIENCE
STORE
CASHIERS
Good salary, hospitalltation, t
weak paN iac alien every 4
months
E ip trltn c *
nol
necessary
Far interview
Own* th* manager al
Airport lied
Cosset berry
Cakry Av*
Laka Mary

t Bdrm Aptg tram 1775 1 1 7
Bdrm also avail Pool. Iannis
court n s e d t
W athry gryor connection
Ranch stylo ] bdrm available
Slap Mvrr design with many
built In energy savers Call
OS M il l i t a m __________

» ) 4 ) ll

in m i

ra

lit ail)
tM i

L ir t U R T
XPAJTTMEhTBfc
Fam ily B Adults section
Pools kk 1 Bdrm 1 AkaMar'I
Caw* Apts l O igga Open an
1

B d rm . 1 B a tik . K i l c h t n
equipped, w a th a r d ry e r, a ir ,
pool. l ) K
mo
L o o m and.
depot,I. O rla n d o 144177).

DELTO NA V ILLA S
H I C a rrd w a n It., D olto n*. 1 m il*
o il I 4 ! b d rm . 1 B .a d u t t t o nly,
ap plian ce s B la u n d ry la c llH lo t
turn,tn ed . C H B A . W W C a r
pot m g. m o n th ly ra n t Iro m
li e ) . F o r lu rth a r into c a ll I K S )

07 41*1
1 Bdrm Apt, carpet, drapes,
stove, reffig . d-shwather itso
mo

m c lu d rt w a la r. g a rb a g e .

sewer 111) W Md St O l 4011
Brand new 1 room otlkloncy
Oowntown I IM month. ♦ IM*
seewritr 111 S07i

IN I

August TL K . 17. Sap
L ISSI
P tL H
_____

Experienced Real Eslat* Inves
lor otter* Joint Participation
to small investors M* 4407

Mrtionviii*
Trac*
Apts
Spacious, modern ) Bdrm. 1
Bath apt. Carpaltd, kit
equlpptd,
CHBA
Near
hosp-iai h laka Adults, no
Dots 1)74 J?? RS).

CALL 323-5176

iic t io n

store
it e m

^ Investm ent O pportunities

A A A EMPLOYMENT

Legal Notice

r eq u ir em en ts

room
to
w in t e r

FRQMII90
I Bedroom Apts Availabi*
Shown by Appt Only H ) IU0

Elactrklan

m iiik i.

your

S. SELL "DON'T N EED S "
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 111 M il or 4)1 *44) and
a triandly Advisor will help
you

441 71*1
★

E x p e r ie n c e d
Com p any

NOTICE OF FIIINO OF AP.
PLICATIO N FOR F E D E R A L
D EPO SIT
INSURANCE
OF
BRANCH BANK

M AK E

Unfurnished

CIRCULATION O l PT

ind m in i

mm*

Two question* Will you bo
financially independent In ) lo
S years* Ar* you paid what
you ar* worth? it not call H )

E v e n i n g I le r u k l

M u s k Le sso ns Piano. G u ita r,
b a ss b * n io . d ru m s, b r a il.

l l Hr be m u renewal course by
m i.l BRE approved. HISS

M—Business
Qjportunlti**

The P a r U im a C a re e r

CALL 322-2611

TvrsfTtt tm tfu rtto rt r-» ||,H * .T .A r

W o rk * 1 h o m e Jo b s a v a ila b le !
Su bstantial ear rungs p o s tib l*
C a n S44 *4 1 4K ) E i t 111 to r
in fo rm a l ton.

AVON R I p r H E NT ATI y t t

AFTER SCHOOL

■ Y i M R L a v vs*Ian.
P R E S ID E N T
B Y : A lla n * Sears.
SECRETARY

«

AD D R ESSED
EN VELO PES
NEEOEDII Far information
mall tall addrttsad, stamped
envelop* lo
BOX
1)1.
DURAND. Ml 444)4_________

H — Instructions

1amber

p—

Full charge doubt* tnfry bkpe
Pitas* vend complete resume,
including address and phont
no and rtfermcet lo Boi 194
C O Evening Herald. P O Boa
I4S7. Santord. Fla _______

)}) IJ44

ro rt.

m r* rk j i f / p I

Kindergarten
L
preschool
teacher
Early childhood
degree I 30 1 M F
The
Gingerbread House. 1S)4 Elm
))7 IS47 far Appt

b a b y s it t in g

M M
.

J U S T T H IN K . IF C L A S S I F I E D
A D S O IO N T W O R K . T H E R E
W O U LD N T BE A N Y if

BOYS &amp; GIWS
AGES 13-17
EARN EXTRA SS

Th* noneore Idenlial parIIona ot me
SECT ION 4 : That all Ordinances applkatlan art an til* In Irw
or pari* K Ordinances In canfllctl Regional Oflk* as parf at Ih*
her awIth be and Iht Mm* ar* publk III* mainlined by ih#
hereby repealed
Corporation Thu III* it available
SECTION I: That IMS Or far public Intpacllan during
d.nance shall become effective rogutar business hours,
immodlototy upon Itt pan*** and Publish. August t). JU. i n i
adoption.
D EL II
A copy shall be avadabi# *1 Ih* __ ______________________
OHk* (4 Ih* City CHrk Nr all
NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS
parsons dellring la tsamlna th*
NAME LAW
NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN
All parilas In interest and
ciliiano shall hat* an O p p o rtu n ity that Hit undersigned, desiring to
engage in buses*** under In*
to be hoard at MW hearing
By order at the City Commotion I'd ,lou t name ol AMERICAN
ol th* City ol Santord. Florid#
G E M APPRAISERS at Altamonte
Mali, in ih* City of Altamonf*
H N Tamm, Jr
Springs, Flot 14*. Inlands to
City CM rt
Publish: August U K , ! ) and register tn* m W name with th*
Saptambar ). INI
Clerk af tha Circuit Court of
Seminal# County, Flerwa
D E L JS
Dated tt A leiarttri*. VA, this
17ih ddr *1 July m i
KAY
JEW ELERS. INC.
-FLO RID A-

sw shsni

E ?nd St. Sentord

Painter — p ra ltrrtd
*■
per .freed gel coal sprayer,
but will consider training
someone w.lh other spray
painting tip aritn c* Must
hev* a good work record
E lem e n t benafits 1 par lor
raat producer Night shift
Coo,* Boat Co Silver Lake Rd.
Santord. FI*

H a .r s l y i i t . tv p e n a n c e d tor
p ro g re ssiv e sa lo n m L a k e
M a r y 17) 41)7. e v e s « M » I )

SPUR OF THE MOMENT

N O W . T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
E N A C T E D BY THE P EO F LE OF
THE
C IT Y
OF
SAN FO RO .
F L O R ID A
S E C T I O N 1 That Ih# follow mg
d e s c rib e d p roperty siiuatad In
S o m ln o t* County, F lo rid a , be and
th * s a m e is hereby arw tved la and
m a d * * p a r t al th* C ity at Sanlo rd .
F lo r id a , pursuant to th* vo lunta ry
a n n a v a tla n p ro visio ns *4 Sr&lt;1 ion
111 *44. F lo r id a Statutes
Th* N o r th e rly MS le ft of th*
lo llo w in g d escribed property;
B e g in n in g 17* leer Was! ot th*
S E c o rn e r at Section S4, Tow nship
I* S. R a n g * M E . ru n North l? V j
c h a in s . W est III teat. S 11' .
c h a in s , C 114 leet to paint o l
b o g in n in g
Th* ab ov * D escribed property is
fu rth e r d e scrib e d as a pot lio n ot
m a t c a r t a m p roperty ly in g bat
w oon C o u n try C lu b Road and C R
44A ( is m street I and west ot
A ir p o r t B o v ia v a rd . M id p ra p a rty
b e in g s iiu a ta d in Sem inal* County,
F lo r id a
S E C T I O N 1 : That upon ttila
O rd in a n c e besom mg effective Ih*
p ro p e r ty ow ners and any ra s ld tn l
o n th* p ro p W ty O rscnbed herein
s h a ll b a e n title d to a ll tha r ig h ts
a n d p r iv ile g e s antf Im m unities a s
a r * Ir o m llm * I* llm # granted to
r r s k t m t s and tro p d rty owners a t
Ih * C ity o l Sanlo rd , F tor Ida. and a s
a r * lu r t h a r p ro vid ed m Chapter
1) 1. F lo r id a S la lu tt* . and sh a ll
lu r ih e r be sub ject to Ih* respan
s ib lllll* * * t resid en ce or owner s l i p
** m a y Iro m lim e t* r .nv
d e t e r m in e d b y th e g o v e rn in g
a u t h o r it y *4 m * CUy at Santord.
F lo r id a , and tn« provision* at M id
C h a p te r III, F lo rid a Statute*
S E C T I O N J: It a n y section o r
p o rtio n o l a section ol this O r
d m e n c * p ro v e s t* be in v a lid ,
u n la w fu l, e r unconslitvtienaJ. It
s h a ll n o t be h e ld to in v a lid a te a r
im p a ir tn * v a lid ity , tore* t r affect
of a n y s e c lw n e r p a rt af th)

.

R N F u ll Tim a 7 ) Sh.11 A p p ly a l
L a k t v lt w N u rsin g C a nte r *1*

444 10)g — Collect 4SS 4704

determined that the arwevatlon ot
M id propeety will not result In Ih*
creation ot an anclaet. and
W HEREAS, th* City at Sanlord.
Florida, is m a position to pravuta
municipal services la Ih* prapany
described her am, and ih* City
Commission at Ih* City al Santord.
Florid*, deems It in Ihe best in
teeast of th* City ot accept said
petition and to annav said
property

FICTITIOUS RAMI
Nolic# I* hereby given that I am
engaged m busmen *1 M) Det
Pmar L is. Longwood. Samlnol*
County. Florid* under th* Ik.
I.tious name el ABLE TV SER­
VICE. and that I uri end la re*HIer
Mid nam# with th* Clark el lit*
Circuit Court. Somasole County,
Florida In accord anet wilts lh»
provision* of th* Fictitious Nam*
John E Polk. Sheriff
Statutes. T o w n
Sadloi BAS OP
Seminole County, Florid*
Flee at# Statutes ITS?
Publish A u g v s ) 4. &gt;1 3*. 17, with
Sig W ILLI‘ M ISAACS
th* Ml* On August M. INI,
Publish July M. August L I U L
del a
1111
DCKIM

L P N It I part lim e . I l l p art
tim e A p p l y la k e v ie w N u rs in g
C e n te r .SITE Ind S t , Santord

Weekly, day Babysitting In
my horn# Have
References » l 04)1

O to e ld a . o n e ll h a s t u r n e r bee n

Bagwtolien
Tallahassee. Florid* jb c i
August M, INI

•• * * -m

41) and 111 Sh.tt Full time
Applv m parson Sanlord
Nufimq Convalescent Canter.
SSO MeHonv.il* Av*

4— P e rso n als

Legal Notice

Ac countint — I day a week help
needed ,n small sales atlict lor
fairs, payables receivables,
bookkeeping,
etc
Need
sophisticated
advise
L
counsel
Opportunity lor
someone tem. retired Reply
to Boi No III. CO Evening
Herald. P-O. Boi 1*5). San
lord. Fla 17771.___________

R N OR L P N

Sunday - Noon Friday

WHY BE LON ELY) Writ# "Get
A Malar' Dating Servlet All
agts P O Bo*'M il. Clear
walar. FI ))J1I

Need immediately Security
Guard Mature N.ghl Shill
Apply el Cavalier Motor Inn
7700 S Orlando Ay*

Security Supervisor — full tlma
tor
industrial
security
operation Retired m llila rr
referred Rep'r to B°*
11*. c o Evening Herald. P O.
Bov 145). santord. FL. DIM

DEADLINES
Noon The Doy Before Publication

D iv is io n o t A lc e n o lk Beverages
and T o b a c c o
D e p o rtm e n t o t B u ltn o ss

-

RATES

Deliveryman wanted Ut* your
own truck Call United Fur
nilurt Seles ))l 714*
The Best Buy In Town — A low
cost Classified Ad

Salas manager - avperiancfd
only, qualified rastdentlal A
co m m ercial
#«P*rl*nt»
necessary
For Inlarvlaw
please call Century 11, Hayes
Realty me . Santord 773 MS0

T tins*
50c a lilt*
HOURS
1 H B M U t l l l l l m g i ste a lin g
f consecutive tint**
Oe
I M A M
-SIO PM
M O N D A Y thru FR ID AY 10 consacutlygtlm ai He a lift*
11.M Minimum
S A T U R D A Y » Noon
) Unas Minim um

4 - Personals

s

earnSHSWaday Call Shirky
m ia a * _________________

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

1m

t l N re d ie c ro tl ,s ro u r hobby,

O rlando - Wintet Pork

322-2611

a n o r o in a n c e o f th ecity

aaotor

I
t
I
*
I
I

Seminole

ADOPTION OP AN OEDINANCE
■ T THE CITY OF SANFORD.
FLORIDA
Nolle* Is hereby givsn that a
Public Hearing wilt b* held at Ih*
Commission Room In th* City Hall
In th* City ot Santord. Florida, al
&gt; 00 o'clock P M an September It.
IM!, lo consider Ih# adopt Ion ce an
ordinance by tha City art Santord.
Florida. ** follows
ORDINANCE NO. 154)

OF SANFORO. FLORIDA. TO
A N N E X WITHIN THE COR
PORATE A R E A OF THE CITY
OF SANFORD. FLORIDA. UPON
AD OPTION
OF
SAID OR
DINANCE. A PORTION OF THAT
CERTAIN PROPERTY LYING
EAST OF AND ABUTTING THE
INTERSECTION OF COUNTRY
CLUb ROAD AND CR 4*A (J1TH
S T R E E T ) : SAIO PROPERTY
BEIN O
SITU ATED
IN
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA.
IN ACCORDANCE WITH T N I
VOLUNTARY
ANNEXATION
PROVISIONS OF
SECTION
111 044. FLORIDA STATUTES:
P R O V I D I N G
F OR
SEVERABILITY,
CONFLICTS.
AND E F F E C T I V E OATE
W H EREAS. Iharthas been Iliad
with Ih* City Clark ot th* CUy ot
Santord. Florida, a peritlan con
lalNng th* names ot th* pr (party
owners in th* art* described
hart-natter requesting anneiellon
loth* cor pot ale area otlh# CUy Ol
Santord. Florida, and requesting
ta be included therein, and
W H EREAS, th* Preparty Ap
pralsar of Seminal* County.
Florida, having ctrllflad that
there ar* two proparty owners In
Ih* art* la be annesed. and that
Mid proparty owners have signed
th* petition tor armaiaiian. and
W H EREAS, It has been deter
mined that th* property described
heremettef is reatonatXy compact
and contiguous lo Ih* corporal*
art* of Hi* City at Santord.
Florid*, and It has further been
determined mat the aryseiation of
u id property will not result m th*
creation ot an enclave, and
W H EREAS, th* City M Sentord.
Florida, is in a position to pravld*
munk ipal services lo th* property
described herein, and tha City
Commission ot th* City ot Santord,
Florid*, deems It in th* bast in
ttrast ol Ih* City ot accept said
petition and lo annas said
properly
NOW. TH EREFO RE. BE IT
EN A C TE D BY THE PEOPLE OF
THE
C IT Y
OF
SANFORO.
FLORIDA
SECTION I: That ih# following
described property sltvatsd In
Sent mo I* County, Florida, b* and
Ih* sama Is hereby anne.ed ta and
mad* a pari o4 Ih* City ot Santord.
Florida, pursuant lo th* voluntary
annexation provisions *4 Section
111 oca Florid* St*Mas
That part ot Lot l*. New UpMia.
Plat Book 1, Pag**?, lyingsouthot
Country Club Road, last part M
road, and tublact at to part last
Telephone I Mil 1)4 1414
West S chains to reservation ol
Publish August 10. 77, INI
Si.il* Road Easamani
OEL IN
Th* abov* described property It
further described at a portion ol
that cartam preparty lying lest ol
and ■bulling th* intartectign ot
N O T I C E O P S H E R I F P 'S S A L E
Country Club Road and CR 4*A
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
tilth Street I, said property being
mat by v ir tu * o t th a t c t r ia - n w rit
sniveled in Seminole Ceunly
M l i , •&lt; u l * n aw wad a u t •« and
Fiend*
under tha seal ot th# Circuit Court
SECTION 1 Thai upon this
ol Samlnol* County. Florida, upon
Ordinance
becoming effective tn*
a Inal judgement rendered In Ih*
property owners and any resident
aforesaid court an th* I tin day at
on tn* property described herein
March A 0 INI. In that carta,n
shell be entitled lo all th* right!
cat* entitled. Aurallfo Arrtaia,
and privileges and immunities as
Plainlill. vs Chemi# Have Inc ,
ar* Irom llm* I* llm* granted to
ate. at al, Dalandanl. which
residents and properly owntrs ot
aforesaid Writ at E r ecu'an a n
th* City of Santord. Florida,and as
delivered lo m* as Sharitt at
Seminal* County, Florida, and 1 ar* lurthar provided In Chapter
171. Florid* Statutes, and shall
havt lav ltd upon th* tallowing
further be subltct la th* respen
described property owned by
sibiiitles
el residence or ownership
Chami* Haws. Inc. said properly
as may tram llm* to llm* b*
tang located in Sammola County.
determined by th* governing
Florida,
mgr*
particularly
authority of in* City ol Santord.
described at toilows
Florida, and th* provisions*! u id
Invent ary and Igulpmaal
Chapter 111, Florida Statutes
I IR 11 Doubt* Beam Infrared
Quel Control Irat.
SECTION 1 If ony station or
portion ot a section ol this Or
1 S u .m e s s S la t ! V acu u m Tank
with m o to r- 410 g a l
dmenc* proves lo be invalid,
unlawful or unconstitutional. It
I G C G a t CN ram ato gragN
shall not be hold to invalidate or
1 O ly m p u s M ic ro s c o p e I IS mm
c a m a ra t a n d I t A lt O p t i c a l- TC
impair Ih* validity, force ar effect
ele ctro nic c o n tro l
ot any section or port ot mis or
t M i c r o t o m e - Thar m ot Elec
dmanct
F r t o tin g U n it V a m a to K o k i Shear
SECTION* Thai all Ordnances
and O ly m p u s M o d e l M A 101
or parts ol Ordinances In conflict
I A u lo Tech n ito n
herewith be end Ih* Mm* ar*
^1 S p e c tro p h o im e te r Sp ectrank
hereby repealed
SECTION )
Thai this Of
I S ta in le s s Steel v a c u u m Tans
dmanct shall become affective
IT* g a l w ith m otor
immediately upon Its patMga and
I S la in la s s Steal V acu u m Tank
adoption
Too gal
A copy shall b* availabi* at Ih*
I I B M T v p * w vite r
OtlK# ol Ihe City Clarh tar all
I O ven P re c is io n
persons desiring lo evamne th*
I B e tte r 1*1 In cu b a to r L a rg e
Mma
1 A u t o c la v e S l t r l l l t t r steam
Alt p a rllts In Itslarasl and
prats. sa
cltltans shall has* An opportunity
I C o p y M a c h in e w ith paper
I* be heard at Mid haarlng
o -tfw ntsv
&lt;
Br order ol tha City Commission
t S ia u titsa V a s t V a c u u m Ians
*4 th* City ol Sanlord, Florid*
I K gal
M N. Tamm. Jr
1 Chemical Pumps (I SlakUatt
City Clark
Publish August t), 70, 17 and
I L a r g o A u t o m a t k S t t r iliia r
September 1. ISSI
1 C a n tritu g a E a tr a c ta r E m
DEL 7*

■

CLASSIFIED ADS

p u b lic

c o n s id e r

is—Halo Wanted____

lg — f t o t o W t t r t B d ___

Legal Notice

legal Notice

ASSOCIATE INC. REALTORS*
llO ll'C ts 1hrouM«uf
Central Florida

LAKE MARY
SU M
Set W Lak* M4ry Blvd
IN DRIFTWOOO VILLAGE
New All Cedar. Quality Built 4
) Horn*. Split Plan Sunken
Tub. Eat-In Kilchtn.
In
tarcom. Slant F lrtp le ct,
Wooded Art* Many Extras!
Greet Localionl
Fantastic Country Estal*. S
Bor, 4 6th. Poet. Sauna, a
Acrrsi Has Evorythingt K
Mint To UCF Wast.nghouM
SI7T.9M
Cedar Contamparary On Abeul
I Acrtk ) Idrm. I Bath. Eat In
Kitchen
in Island,
tlon*
Flraplac* Lg Screamed Porch
Assume it Percent Mtg

SALES ASSOCIATES
NEEDED
S opining* Mt.
C a ll F r a n k

Alik slgrag* g ln g lai, en erg y a l t l c i t n r
S'ud-os. ready to move in. call
O I3 R I 114 pm

. IM FalmdfSe Avo. j
Cowan m b |'
Santord I B d rm , K id s . P it * . I KM

Dpnei S M Mo US 7)00
5 A V -O N B B N T A L S B B A L T O B

SANFORD — lr m .d k , ulil Inc .
I I K dn. U » m e ) M 77K

SAY Ott R IN TALI RBALTOB
E V M y DAY is BARGAIN
DAY IN THE WANT ADS O l

Milo* •)!***)
Santord. Adults only, no pots. I
Bdrm. All oltcllc appliances,
air, SIM mg. m w i l
Completely turn ! bdrm apt.
no p e ts u a

mo

4 Itt

»*4**H.

Loan mg F*r a New Horn*) —
Chocs 1Ad Want Ads tor houses
0* every til* and prk*

�31A—Duplexes

E6\Q
-

LONGWOOO LK M IN !
) rm.
kWi.tlOOdn.IKO mo 1)1 )X»

HAL COLBERT REALTY
351-7033

J ’fWrm. *ir. ireihiy pjmifij &amp;

carpeted,

Eves M l Oil*

t'lO'vr, ratrkg., no

P*l*27S with n w

r o r E i i m St

13779*}

Olio no longer
IT*rn4 high n an elephant t
' I ' Fiaca a claim,eg »a am
P-l# th# money w your wallet I
SANFORD — 1 barm. carport.
* 01 US a* 1)4 THO
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR

Newlbdrm. 1 B w air Available
now HI. I?*t ♦ security
Shewn by appl lam Place.
Sanford i l l Hat t c m II
a m , » ! AMS M a m 1 p m .
at* lor Oend

aHoum OnturnM wd
Sanlord — Itfyiiw.ide School —
Newly painted in 1 out 1 BR. I
B. lam rm. CHAA. ip lanced
yd. no pelt UTS mo. * tec
J D U K or H I 144*
For rtnl — nice retirement home
with encloied garage In
delightful DeBary alto 1
bdrm. 1 B mobile home In
Meadowlea By Ihe River Four
Townet Really Inc Broker
444 4JM

LANDLORDS
O u t lin e d lo n a n r t w a n mg

No le e K t 1100
6AV-ON R (N T ALS, RAAirtPO
) bdrm.} B with
double car garage. In
Deltona Call l i t Itil

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
1(44S French H I 0131
After Hours 14* *000. M l 0)1*

STENSTROM

1 B d rm . I B a th on wooded
acre. A C, p o ol USD m o
lilU I I

C O O L O F F 1 T h is sum m e r In
your aw n P O O L A N D P A T IO t
1 B d rm . !&gt;s B a m C usto m B uilt
hem * an e a rn e r le ft E v e ry
fe a tu re y o u c * n im a g in e
E sta b lis h e d neighburheod
1*4.100

D O N 'T S T O R E IT. S E L L IT w ith
a low c o i l C la t u lie d Ad
O el'o na la d a re a I B d rm hom e
w asher, d ry e r , a ir , S1IS m o ♦
dec H I ASM
S A N F O R D — 1 b d rm . porch,
k id i. p e lt. I K S m o l i t I MO
SAV ON R E N T A L S R IA L T O R

up t

b

ASSOCIATES NCEDEOI New
or eepentneed
Call Herb
SiHilirtm ar Laa AlbrigM
today A discover succvsst

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420

1M I

Fork

REALTORS
Multiple Lilting Service

JJ—Houses Furnished
Mouse tor rant in DeBary —
1st. lest * 1100
secirflly l i t flat

STEM PER AGENCY

Rebates only A 1 bedroom older
homo W ith large Hying and
family rooms, eat m kitchen,
front porch, ond corport Attic
ton Located near grocery,
laundromat, and restaurant
Owner meinletnt yard Other
rentari en property are
retired Write to* No l i t CO
The Evening Herald P O Boa
US). Sanlord. Fla 1)1)1
SANFORD — ( t r y cottage, air,
kids. no dap . SKI US IM0

CAS SAVER — TNI 1 bdrm
tewwhovfi condo it wilhm
wilting riktfafKV fo vhopprq,
hot CHA. WWC. I Club port
Onlp $41*100
&gt;X
(7&gt; J b d rm on •%
r» c fO( i f io n. good »ffve!fmant.

$42)00
HANDYMAN SPECIAL — Par
l i i l l Y ftfu r to iih e d 1 b d rm . 1 B
on H w p 46 W i t t
Ow ner
fin a n cin g a v a ila b le . U i *00

SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

R E A L T O R 122-4991

LK M ARY—M teres, air, kids,
pats, utils pd (3)5 1)1)100
SAV ON R IN T A L S R IA L T O R

1 Single Bedrooms 110 week and
I Bdrm tuilf tlaO mo HI
n it

f v» V Jlf Moo. JJJ l»|t, JJJ ]) 4*

Harold Half Realty
INC. R E A L T O R S ,M L S
323-5774

H IG H H A T H O O T
YO U DOW N?
C a ll e s fa r O w n e r
F in e need H e m e s

14-M o b ile Homes
G E N E V A - S a c re s . 1 b d rm . a ir.
kids. pats. » ) » l i t DOC
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A LT O R
O e t h ill e apo su ra — la t e lh a l
■'For S o la " Sig n d ow n L r im a
cla ssifie d a d C a ll H I H I I or
n it m

Day or Night

W AV W A Y U N D E R
m a r k r t f r ic e .
v e ry a ttr a c tiv e I y r . eld c m
cre ta b la ck in g tie * se c lie n at
D e B a ry O w n e r v e r y h ig M y
m e liv a t e d
M u l l sa lt new
1) 1,lt d A ll C a s k e r B u y e r
(• tia a need

J7—Business Property
SAN FO RD
TOM sg II II
In d u stria l ar
C o m m e rc ia l B u ild in g on I) t l
I boo n MS s N ic t sp a ce C a ll
H I ( l i t or i l i a i a l
H a v a a ro o m lo re nt* L a i a
cla ssifie d ad E n d a tenant tor
rou t

OffKtSpoca
Far Lam a
n o rm
F o r ran t o r lo a sa — 10.110 se It
in d u stria l o r w orohouso I I I

BUY OF THB W EEK — At
tractive 1 bdrm Concrete Bib
w Drapes. Rg*. Ret. A Disk
walker eu ievetr 11 a IM let Hi
top area Only MI.IMtl
CANOPY OF T R E I I strrauadl
Hut ipecievt 4 bdrm 1 bam siFam R m . tat t a t t le * * * A Scr
porch O w n e r w ill cartsM e r Ind
m tg l S U *M t
M A Y F A I R 'S C H A R M g r a c a l
m is b e a v tifu l 4 b d rm 1 b a lk
lu m a w o r s e i t H s g t ie * * i n
■ I I I p c lv r r s s v e le t C a ll ter
re a r p e rso n a l te a r . I K .N b .

W HI SI. Sanlord 111 HOC
N E E D A SERVICEMAN* YOU II
land h im t ille d m o u r B u sin e ss

Directory

kg

SAN FO RD
IT If In d u s tria l

or

Commercial Building on IT T)
LAOS n . in o ffic e sp a ce
H i sugar t u a u i

_

“

C a ll

41—Houses
________________________

IN V E S T IN Y O U R O W N I
A C R E S , ru c e lr w ooded e n d n e l
loo la r Iro m to w n O K lo r
hom e or m o b iM . p ric e d I M . M
w ith te rm * to I# y o u r budget

CallBart
REAL ESTATE
REALTO R. H U J H

P R IC E D ( E L O W M A R R E T Super 1 b d rm s p lit p le a w C tn
H t l . W N c p t, b ig b d tm i. scr
p a rck A te a c a d y a rd I Owed
e ssu m a tie n l U L l d b l t
pool

p a r a o is e

—

ti

•

u

sparkling peel w slide f
diving board Cdmd H i bdrm I
bams. Ce« H A A large bdrmt
an IM a 111 let everlevklng
hursest Ortal terms! ISl.kbA

ii

•ft. hrt. 555-7441

Vpcant
II
Cgmplalaly
radteoratad
New carpet
throughout Good financing
114.100
Homo with Income. Owner
financing 1 E# Nl with l i t
Rental college plug estra lot
All mu (H AM
Lake Mary - 1*4 W s l W . I
Bugles Will trade UASOt

110 Sanlord Ave

Llll U S E FIR STS!

351-6041

VsidUle and n* die HOC 372
U U or 377 311)

M LS

• EL A I R I Ar. 1 B. remeaeled
New A pa* A carpait FPL.
Lately yard IIILAM.

Good Used TVS, | 1S 6 up
M IL LE R S
M l* O rla n d o Dr
Ph H J E M l

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Friday and Saturday KOI (
Park A r t Tiara, clothes,
dolls, relrig, rill* J* Kawasaki.
Motorcycle H ia ta l
W ANT A O S A R E B LA C K L
W H IT E
AND HEAD ALL
OVER

M l Collins Dr Ond houso on R
Irom IJ f l in Sunlond).
Microwave, ladies 1 speed
bikt, tewing machine, mite
household Hams Sal 1 1
C a rp o r t Sal*
140* V a le n c ia St
I M S Sa turday

a family let* H i A Sal C lotres
all tilts , lays, pool lebtt.
dresser, rocking chair, mite.
ISO A und*r M Vmigra Or
(Hidden Laka oil Lake Mary
Bird &gt;

55— Boats &amp; Accessories
11 Stars Boa* motor, good shape
— 1)00 I f Jon boat, aluminum
— SIS ? HP Wisconsin engine,
complete over hauled — t ilt
f n H P Center engine, com
pitta overhauled. IDS IS
Br iggs A Stratton ersgm*. A I
shape - (too All Isorllonlal
arsg.no*. ID 4SU

f * buy »dviiy In Houlat,
apavtmants. vac an* land and
Acraaga.
LU CK Y
IN

ro w E ^ R S B E A U T Y S A L O N
F O R M E R L Y H a rn e tt'* B e a u ty
Nook l i t E 111 ( I , H I 1)4)

i - t s n

■

■

i

i I

Boarding A Grooming
AnimSI Haven hot rung end
Grooming Kennels Shady.
mul*l*d. screened, fly proof
maid*, outtida runs Fans
Also A ( cages Me cater lo
your pels
Starting sluJ
registry Ph HI 05)
Snow Hill Kennel oftefS Cat A
Dog Fla* Baths U up 14
.Hour. Full Service US S ill

Bill Carso, Slal* Certified
Building
Contractor
Residential or Commercial,
New or Remodeled 111beta
Tomorrow may be the day you
sail that roM a way bed you'vt
nowhartioroilaway
If you
place a Classified Ad today.

ELECTRICIAN 10 yrs t ip

Qualify tiettrkal work 1) yrs
trpe rlen ct Minor repairs te
complete wiring Jl) 0)14
Hey Kids Looking lor an telra
dollar! Ask Mom A Dad Id far
you hare a classified ad
garaga -ale
Paddle lent installed.
rriidenti*itlectric*l work.
ca llH X ias
tt you don't tell poegte. how areihey going ta knew? Tall them
with a classitiod *d. by calling
H ) 1411 ar p i *04)

Painting, carpentry, all type* ol
hom* repairs Call lor fra*
estimate HI If)}

Cemplete Ceram,.' Til* (err
walls, lloor*. countertops, ro
model, repair Fr asl, n*01ll

W -M jU c e I
L o w e ry

M o g lc

Imlnimatei
G anw

\ t

t

M

S

t

New or repair, leaky shower) our
tP tcw lts.H yrs E.p NT B4!

l

'

W
C.
)))0 )M

VONSECA PLUMBING
Can
strwcTian, Repairs, Emergen
cr Lie . Bonded. In*. *»» *m(
Plumbing repair - alliypes
water healers A pumps

* l '*r o e t r e e i n s t a l l e r
landscaping. DM lawn* Ra
pitied U ((K 1

C O MMU N I T Y
BULLETIN
BOARDS ARE G R E A T CLASSIFIED
ADS
ARE
EVEN b e t t e r

Mini-U-Lock
A r t you ( lu ll lim a d riv e r w it h a
p a rt lim e c ar? O ur c la s s ifie d s
a r* loaded w ith g ood b u y Tor
rbu

ipopila homes, Houle*. Hauls.
’ Trucks. Trailae, Etc Puiabl*
linil Hiioia nankin » ) I h i

Rkcords —
LattU Hlt«
All the Hits detiuatad to you
Pop Country Rock Gosput
Soul Ta order call Larry 4)*
1411

Remodtling
Any kind tl Masonry work
Hon*, brick, blocks A con
crytt 11)1141 John Masonry

Rem odeling S p a c la liit
W e h a n d ia th *

Whole Ballot Wa»

B. E. L in k G in s i.
555-7629
Financing A v a llo b i* '

Nursing CentEf
Roofing

m tw

Hauling A Yard Work is •. oh
with XU ID m i no an* HI
W
Lorry, Joys* Bryant.

1■
*••*»*

D A Y IN T H B W ANT A O S H )
m

b

m

m

e

&amp; W

W

H ^ B

Homa Improvt m int
CEN TRAL FLORIDA HOME
IMPROVEMENT!
Painting. Roofing. Carpentry
L K . Bonded A Guaranteed
P realtfiaiaN tm -IM *

QUALITY AT A FAIR PRice r
Gan Repairs A Imfeov II yrs
totally Semor Disc HIIKS.
c la s sifie d
ads

read

ads
a

are
use

Odd Jobs
J A ■ Mam* Improvement —
Carpentry work of any typo.
Rod repairs, gutter work,
painting Interior or r&gt;1trior I,
plumbing, speciallia in mpoilt
home repairs A roof coat mg.
and wood part* deck* Free
e ll,m e te jjy 1441

#

Painting

Hallman FaMfing A Pepairs
Quality work. Fra* Ew Disc.
. (a (amaes. 4)4 44*0. R o fC e

CkxkRtpalr
GWA L T N E y j e w e l e r
304 S. P*lk Ate
H14K4

R e p a ir s , la u c a t s .
Sp rin k le rs 1 1 I U I 0 .

P r a s s m Charting

OUR RATE) ARE LOWER
Ltkevew Nursing Center
»I»I Second ( I . Sanlord

H a u lin g !

tile

O rgan

Rylhm burtons Lika new (*»
4)0 1040.

,

meintjer

Freddie Robinson Plumbing .
,

Landscaping

l l ' t easy to p la c t a C la s s ,I lt d A d
W e 'll even h e lp you w o rd
H C a ll in N i l

Handyman

P*ep4* w ho lik * m oney .us* tour
cost c la s s ifie d ads to buy. sa il,
or Irad *.

CEramicTih

HYPNO$l$11
stop Smoking, Lo!# Wflght,
Build ConfidtfKa!, improvt
Ralal ionihipi, and much
m o rtll
Attar
a t ir !
of
ra!aarch,Dr Catty. or»a of th#
laadtf! th hrphoift. hat won
tho Kvani Award for hit
proven technique! Office
downtown Sanford f a m )
pm Call 323 7SOO for ap
poinfment or inlwma*ion

Mwonry

C ar Repair

Somebody is looking lor your
bargain Otltf H today Vi the
Class it ltd Ads

Ail

ty p e s of tfe rt r ia l w o rk of lo ir
p ric e s I D E M

Homs Repair)

Gun Auction Sho'gsns. Rttlw A
Handguns Sunday August » I
PM Sanlord Auction H i )H0

U l *9*1

i S

Etectrical

57A-Gum * Ammo

VESTM ENTS. * O ( a I M
S a n lo rd . F l a HTT1. H I &lt;1*1

Don't Despair Or Full Yaur Hair
- US* A Wan* Ad HI 1411ar

I M I N Q U A l l t r U ^ t R A T lO N
• y rs r i p Patio*. D riv e w a y s ,
e ic * * y n * B e al ))» U J I

Beauty Cart

Plumbing

Hypnosis

C o n c re te W ork, rooters, flo o rs A
p o o l*
L a n d s c a p in g A so d
w ork F r e w e s i 111)10)

Building Contractor

Acrot* Irom Kmart Sanlord
Soiling out ivrfythirsg must
go including shelves and eld
metal bod

47—Real Estate VWnied

Concrete Work

W l
Chits will seAke AC s. refng.
Ireeiers, w ile, coolers, misc
Call x n t n i
U N C LU T T E R YOUR CLO SET
San ih o se th in g s that e ra |u*l
ta k in g up sp a ce w ith t w t n l ad
*n ih e H e r a ld H I M i l or 4)1

Moving salt - Harts Saturday
t o rld a y l Open f * Hems lor
sal* Electric tan. tools, chain
hetsa. etectrice trolling motor.
•Tl Mercury JO HP trolling
outboard, adding machine,
table saw. hand great* guns,
clolhtrs A mrtc. utmi J111W
1st SI I By railroad tracks )

laniard Prim* lag* Acres w
“Pt«n* fgr toning MJ.dM w
Terms w Malic jews ki HI
1*E1. Evas H U M )

M G

AND L E T A N E X P E R T D O T H E J O B

Air Conditioning

f in a n

351-6641

Alter Acs 1J11IU and H U M )

C O N S U LT O U R

.

STATELY J E r. 1 E . 1 (tory
Irama. peat, game rm. aka
K * A telra let. Itt.HA

1)9 19*1

,

To List Your Business...

57 - TV RadioStcieo

te ACRES WOODED LIKE A
PARK. ON TOP OF A HILL IN
G E N E V A 140.000. TERMS
AVAILABLE

(M S . F ranch Av*.
111 4)1)

*kkkk(rtiin&lt;iisgi**il*olb •
(IN H w y.ttfl
Cissalberry

Urn more parts, servlet, usrd
washars MOONEY APPLI
AA C E S JUCafT

4 H OM ESITE! IN ORANOE
GROVE AT U M ATILLA t))M
EACH. CRAJV TERMS

AMC JEEP

(IM l

Hunrung or nof

*4495

SANFORD
MOTOR CO

')* Ford Van. s. fon. S4MI
k* Ponhac Firebird, a classic,

C A I N FOR CAW)

57—Appliances

ON I M l. NEAR NEW
WINN DIXIE CEN TER COM
ING AT L A K E M ARY BLVD
JO N E O
C O M M E R C IA L.
11)100

J DR
A C

'M
B o n n e v ille
B ro u g h a m ,
O.esel, loaded. (•***
7 ) P on fiac (u n b ird L ik e new .
OKS

.

54— Garage Sales

CASH FOR EQUITY
Wa can ctcaa in M k r i
CallBart Rant Estala HI IAN

eealtob

Let •XlOttMtfd Ad hHp you l«nU
more room for iforage
Clatiified Adi find bvveff
Uvt

D'hing Bm )ef, Tib*#- 4 chain*
china cabinet C«lr* Large
UOO 322 3421

(C L E A R E D D U P L E X LOTS IN
SAN FO RD sii.sog EACH.
JONEO f o r OUADSOR o f
FICES

1979 Concord

★ 339 /V89W

t BU Y JU N K C A R i A tH U C K p
F r o m H O tolSO or m of#
C a ll 323 ) 474JB7 44*0

*2395

17601073

M l 4*44

LAKE MAEV 1 Ed. 1 I , Fam.
E m . Fir apiece. Ceiling Fa n
Famed Lge La* lll .t M

new 110 f i 372 24)1

*1295

1976 Homet

★ B8.H Auto S a le s

UOO, 2 bate! for fconf !#it!

Call M l J ill

in

M 9H M I L tt

Van Bench laif, brand ntw

It y o u a re n I using your pool
ta b le , to k* a cue. and sen ,t
w ith a H e ra ld d e s s lie d ad

m o r tg ag e

1973 Bukk

apart men!» Sail "don't naodi"
ft!f with &gt; wtM a d ______

4)1 1224

in rgic

, g in

*3595

Moving fo a newer horn#,,

K in g Sica b e d (N o I r o m t l sao
G ood C n n o .lo n

fro nt

19)7 El Comino

MATCH BACK

4 OH XI4 ib«Ifed whllewilll fret
Lllv new. 190 firm

77—Junk Cars Removed

.H 154U

172

Foe your cif or truck* ragit
dieu ol con# Prater running.
„f r»• towing 13U1ALL i

66- Horses

fW I L S O N M a i e r f u r n i t u r e

ra d io ,

$249)

190PDO LLARS

76—Auto Parts

H ]D * i

SIA-Fumitur*

SIMILAR R E A L T Y BROKER

i:

Animal H a v e n kennel! b o ard in g
&amp;. grooming ALSO ST AW:
TING STUD REGISTRY Mali
own*r» cad 372 V)3

GARAGE
SA LE
14.40* M I L E S . L O A D E D

74 Dge Van. auto PS. PB. car
pef&gt; IlcrtOr ntw p|fnf, chroma
bumper! 11900 1)4 9*40

1200 222 )7)3

44* 4)10

7) T Bird l oaded, New T*r*i
Blue with Whitt Top
no
money down. $7) mo 229 9100.
134 440) Dealer

M u ! t S e ll P o n y G reaf w llh k ?dv

]t| A C R E S , t a l l
p in e s .
G E N E V A . (11.(00. L O W IN
TEREST
a s s u m a b l e

K js i- r

79 VW Bui I owner
New tiri*, iif, 21.000 mt
4*9 0027

0 4 **ts

» A C R E S W O O D E D R O L L IN G
H I L L S IN G E N E V A A R E *
iK o o p e r a c r e . ( E l l e r
F IN A N C IN G . M A Y D IV ID E

s e l l e r

green, mult le t
7*94

H) laa* y

I M ) Fa lco n 1 d o o r h a rd to p
Runs good, rsew s t ic k e r

197* C*ddr EKcadant condition.
A T . P S. P B . A M F M

G e r m a n S M il# ) V r i Super
w rlh c h ilc frrn #■( W tfch dog

y

1) M onte C a rlo E i c c o n L o w
m .leag r A s k in g *4000 C a ll
between U l p m
1)1 4BS4

197)Cadillac Coup* DaVdta Full
power. A C, low mileage, AM
tM . lealhar interior. 322 9179

75A-Vins

A nc Doberman Pup! Blidt and
Tan I Wm . teormed and 9iff«
rtKfced 1100 I 904 //) jots
$ U 229)

G LASSW ARE

CING

\n

65— Pets Supplies

Y la Hr W re c k e r S e r v ic * 9
Highest p rice s p a x ) fo r lu n k o r
used c a rs A (r u c k s

Dun# Buggr
fibergl*!! body,
full top, 1*00 VW eng ■11700 or
b#!t otter 32) 7)1*

Eves I K tilt

F re# lo pfopee hom# Young fe
male iee\hond ihof#. love!
children 37) 43)2 id ) »

D u a lity W e ste rn Bools ( I s t l
A R M Y N A V Y SU R PLU S

1 A C R E !. TALL, P i n EI SOME

m

J l P lym o ufh F u r y III. J door
h a rd to p . P ( A P B . g o o d
running corn). 1(00 U ) 144)

SO-Autos

P ic k u p cam per
sle e p s 4
ad ults, sen contained, g a s o r
H o c r e lr ig , IHSO
) J ) ( i( 4

H I IH I

•0—Lot v Acreage

lan d

Don't p-lr no longer needed
items high at en elephant s
rye P in * a classified ad. and
pile in* money In your wallrl!

___ ________ ___ _

MEN'S. LADIES' AND CHIL
O R BN ’S 1 * al* all H ut
Denim Jeans. Liberty lib b
Overalls and beetl Earlybird
**ts setactmn a* s lin .
WILCO SALES HINT (| W I Ml.
W OF 14 SANFORD Ml 441A

THIS ISNOMISPRINT
New24 • *0 Royil O ik t) bdrm. 2
B, fireplace, trihedral celling,
great room, garden fob.
completrty furmthed 4 many
more va!rat. only 113.7)0
delivered 4 vef up within 1)0
mile* VA no m oney down,
convenf ional 10 \ down Shop
Uncle Roy't Mobil# Home
Silet in Leetburg. on 441
South (904) 717 0324 Open
weehnightt 'til 1 20. Sundiyt
12 4 p m

iiA ig * .

I k . Real Estate Broker

351-0739

—-

N ew 14 e 70 S o y d l O i l , ! 3 bdfm .
2 B. I I4,f9). o r 14 h M 2 bdrm .
l i t B . H i m d e liv e r ed 4 le i
up w fttiln lt d m iie t W# ha ve
V A fina n cin g * no m oney down
o r c o n v e n tio n a l 19 % down
C i t y I m in c m g o n ly i f U ncle
Roy t M o b 'le H o m e S ile t U S
441 le e t b u r g
(904) 717 0124.
o p e n w e e h n lg h t t 'III I 30.
S u n d a y ! 1 )4 p m

5 ACRES WOODED JACKSON
BAY
A R IA .
O STEEN

i .s i

iO—Miscellaneous lor Sole

lawn Mower Silts and Servlet
We Sell the Best and Strvlct
tho Relt BoP Ball Wrstern
Auto Ml W Itl SI

M o v in g to a n e w e r h o m e ,
a p a rtm e n t? S t ll "d o n t need* '
to st w ith a w ant ad

The w rit her .« per feel for i
backyard
t ile
—
tell
every thing ♦i t 9with • went id
C ill 133 2411 or 1)1 999]

UME.

i;f‘ u

call Clark A Hirt HI TWO
Tho " G o o d O la O iy s ” h a v e
never lo ti tho C le it if f r d A d
t
Tho B u r l a i r s t ill The
Host l

B ro w n R iv e r Rock. Window
S ills . R e e d y M lt Concrete.
P e tto Stones. Concrete Steps.
G r o o t t T ra ps M ir a c le C o n
c r o la C a 30* E lm A v * .

r HA Shop Unci* Roy i Mobile
Homo S i l i t
U S 44) $
L r e t burg (904) T«7 0)34 Open
Sunday! II i p m *wee# nighrt
HI 7 10

I i acres c lea r ed
P A O L A 1)1000

Much , Much

1979 f oed P&lt;tk Up Hangar L*rt#f
F 2)0 Ofiuia !upar cab Fully
equipped, heavy duty towing
package Oeluta Scorpion
camper top no window! 17,000
with top UWO without top 22)
U U eve! DO 9)94

•S' temper trailer Set* con
lamed, spar* lire, can bo
pulled with compact car Eve
tend roM VP awning S1**(
)J)04() ah ft ) p m

F I L L D I R T A T O P SO IL
Y E L L O W SA N D

Deal with Dean — Top I paid tar
1st or Ind mortgaga you hold
Phots* quote* given Ed Dean
111 W Colonial Dr . OtUndo
(11 (POO. ph answers 14 hrs

II It sliding glass doors, brown
alum trim (100 D ia ls ) or

P i ACRES WOOOEO ROAp
F R O N T A G E IN O STEEN
tll.E M

CALL322-U74

W* pay cash ter 1st A ind
mortgages Ray Lrgg Lie.
Mortgag* Btokrr II* 11*♦

Center# 14 »44 2 or 3 bd rm fir#
r t t i t f i n t W ittt. wood tid in g 4
thin gi# roof o n ly H l. f f S
I I I 54'.o n ly | U . WS
I4‘ #7fl‘ . o n l v I ll . f f S
No m o ney dow n V A . 10% down

access

»w more

75— Recreational Vehicles

our beautiful new 0*OAiv
MORE, front 4 rt#r BR t
GREGOR Y MOBILE HOMES
e3RO OMindo Dr
221 5300
V4A 4 P MA f *nowe ir^|

. r iv e n
s u m

CU!5 t&gt;ed Ad! wdl ilw iy ! give
Mora than you an pact

« —Mobile Homes

Eva

bAYmW* A U T S AUCTION
ttwy t), I mil* well of SjieecT
way, Daylona Beach, will hole
a Public AUTO AUCTIQ^
every Wednesday at ■ p ns It't
the only on* In Florida You 1*1
me reserved price O H *04,
U4(4)11 |or lurther atefalls. ,

*972 Chfvv
Ton Long Wheel
bait 1S1 VI Sfrakghf itkk.
Look! good end runt good
1179) 1)1 1224

ONE p h o n e c a l l ’ s t a n t * a
C L A S S IF IE D a d o n
it s
h E s u lt fu l
e n d
th e
n u m b e r is h i j a i l

I1 9 .W
Sp a ciou s 1 B R . 1VS Bath. F R ,
N t w Roo*. N e w ly painted
near P irs e c r rs t School, large
fenced b a ck y a rd
A A M cC L A N A H A N
L ie R e a l E s ta te Broker
H I SH I

a g e

79—Truck s-TraileiS

H iM jg

O r t i t neigh

r o ad

79 Moftbi twin S tir
IBSCC P * r t t c l 400 m i

F o r E s la t t . C o m m o r c ia l o r
R r t d m i i a l A u ctio n s A A p
p r e it e t i Ca ll O e ll'i A u c tio n

bur hood too- Pottiblt CTwnif
financing 141*000._________

past u r e

If you art having o ff cudy
f ndng a place, to dva. car to
drive, a iota or %ome Ftfvica
you have need of, read ad our
want ad! every day

199) 4(9 0027

NEW LISTING 1414 Elm Aye
Simply levity Thlt I Bdrm
horn# h it C tn tfil H lA ind
scre e n e d p o rc h

$7#5
1 \\f$
$99)
$119)
12 #9)

71-AnHqwt

E y e M l IN *

C R EA T IV E
F IN A N C IN G
•Vf ,1*01* en M i ImmAcelAle I
bdrm w Huge calm kitchen,
kg kdrms, panelled Fam Em
A tg. yard W trees gelerol

BATEM AN R EA LTY
tw o S a n lo rd A e e

m \» n

78—Motorcycles

A lu m in u m , cans, co p p a r. i»ad.
t r a s s , s ilv e r , gold W e e k d av *
l a M , Sat 4 1 K aK o A k o Too*
C o *11 W tst SI H 1 1100

Ctassiliedaosserva thebuyng A
setting community every day
Read A use them often

M O V E R I G H T IN F u rn ish e d 1
B d rm . 1 B a th ho m e la lu n la n d
an targe t e ll O o od le c a tie a t
L a is s t a it r a s l m i x

! 'Ft#lit Pinfoi - Pint#! »
’ 71 A iffo m iN c
‘ 71 A u fO fh a h c.a ff
D Au(om jh&lt;
■ lllip e a d . i - f
'79 Art#, i l f
1)1 1774

«i&lt;r* gone, but th o s w in g s e t m
the b ack ya rd Isn 't? S o il it w ith
a want »d Call M l T i l l

Amours Diamonds Oil
Pamlingt Orienlal Rugs
B&gt;u)g«s Aniiguts
H I 1101

24 HOUR ffl 322 9283

S U P E R 1 B d rm . I B a lk an la rg e
treed le i P a n e lle d liv in g rm
w ith fire p la c e . F I . R m , D ining
R m . E a l in kltcD en. Pens.
F e n ce d y a rd , and m o ra l
A is v m iM e M o rtg a g e ton
iiit g g

10-Autos

t o p d o lla r P iiB lo r J u n E A Used
c a rs Iru c k i A h e a v y e q u ip
men, 11) J*W

68—Wiinlod lo Buy

A N p IN V E N T IV E 5 W L li
Y /s s c r i T i

REALTOR. MLS
HI) &gt;. Frents
Suite 4
Senterd

w E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M E S TH AN
A N Y O N E IN T H E
SAN FO RD A R E A

(41,Ida

1 1 1 lt* t

ROBBIE’S
REALTY

REALTY - REALTORS

M A Y F A IR
V ILL A S I 1 A I
B d rm . i B a th C ondo V ine s,
n e tt is M a y la ir C o u n try CJuk
Su ite! yo ur let. lit e r p la n B
in te rio r d t c e r t O v a lity canstru tte d b y (tia e m a k e r ter

) bedroom. I Bath
110 Wooomtr*
HIS month ♦ lacvrity

U9 P JT

I T T A T k K H E^ FERtEfCE

Country Estate in town — ]'y
acres heavily wooded, rened
egric 14 bear ms, »sy baths,
eat m kitchen, dining room,
living room. Central Heat B
Air. screened porch, 1 welts,
beeulltul landscaping, garage
♦ 1 tpece carport. 1 utility
buildings, and 1 (pace shed
away Irom house By owner
(11*000 111 1114

Sanford's Sales Leader

■A R O A IN D A Y S A R E M E R E ! 4
B drm . 1 B a th . 1 t le r y C B m
D rta m w g id
! p e e le rs G iv e !
ream w ith fire p la c e . L a rg e
tra c e d y a rd , p e rc h , le ts el
ream and m e r it S 4 1 .M .

W i M A N A G E REN T ALS
C A L L H A L L R E A L T Y , INC.
r ea lt o r m in t

K fu C E

77-Ju n k Cars Removed

Call. AppVbilmalaty
Til pounds

A lg e r and P o n d R e a lty Inc
144 W L a k e M a r y B lvd
P ro p e rty M a n a g e m e n t H I TM1

Ho I BOrm. I 'i Bam carpel,
air Madam Nice Araa IKS
mo III tail I K M l) *S Mai*
lor Carl
1 bdrm. I B. kllcti equ-pped air
1 httl Mohawk Dr , Sanlord
lltO m o. Itl m l . leave I HI
MIL ai* lor Ed

P C M N S T O T M IN si
5 W .7 W \ P
---------------------------P E C C U iT i\ E / I A N E P lB L S W E ( t

V iR I G H T

Thursday. Aug. 10.1 M 1 -7 B

67— Li vtstKk* Poultry

A F T E R A U jT t(E « lU T C N

New 1 bdrm. 1 B home kt
DeBary CH I A, carpel, awl.
assume mtgn lohrmy WAiher
Real Estate use Brener HI
MSI. alter 4 M l (Ml

me.

1«V ON R tN T A L S REALTOR

O J«

Evening H trik J. S in fo rd . FI.

with Major H oopla

O U R BOARDING HOUSE

41—Houses

■Jt— Houses

Whan you F*M* a Ciaivhed Ad
in Th* Eypung HaraM. (fay
dose to your phono because
something wonderful It about
to

Writ* Way Rooting and Pain
•mg Guaranteed work. Fry*
Estimates Fh H la m
ROOFS. Nats rtpaittdL Reelect
retie* tares and sinuate work,
■ tictaied. itiu rtd . tended
MHm H M D ).
Chrdlian Roofing IT yrs tap
)4S)f» free t il. Reroolmg
special,it in rtpeir work A
ntw roofing
SOUTHERN ROOFINO II yrs
t ip . re roofing, leek special
isl Depenoablt A honest
peR* Day ar mghl H I IK1

Sandblasting
SANOBLAITINQ
DAVIS WELDINQ
HA4H1. SAN FO RD

T r w S t r v ic *

fu n
them

O FT EN YOU'LL LIKE TH E
RESULTS

T E R R Y 'S I N T E R I O R S

Walloaptriqg, ggmflng. LOST
PflCM. Guar murk H I M ) *

■m g k - - w * V * ♦-

NAB FIR'S T R E E SERVICE
Trimming, removing A Land
scaping Fra* E t i. m « t )

�*

r f

r r &lt; # • r

e *

* ' r

• i r r r r r r "

• •

Scotty's Has the
CATALOG SPECIAL

CATALOG SPECIAL

Compact design, full
range Push on/push
off. No 800
"
X) 6600BP

Scotty's

P o w e r R etu rn TAPE RULE

T rim a tro n
W ALL DIMMER

Toggle lock, belt clip 1" x 25' blade.
No 0425.

|&gt;. n \

'''s y n t h e t ic
LA W N TURF C A R P E T
Good quality. Green turf in 6' and
12’ widths. L-2401.

Lufkin’

9 9 *4 '

CLOSET SEAT
Centura in d e c ­
orator colors.

Each

Each

Last Catalog Puce
teach1............ 101

Last Catalog Price
(each) ........... 8 2t

SURE-SEAL

Scotty?
Scotty?

In te rio r-E x te rio r
LATEX KORKER C A U LK

SPRAYER

Provides a clear
strong bond to
most surfaces.

In "C” or “ D" sizes

C a ta lo g S p e cia l

itenm

Save 20%
X0TTT1 IUIJ
WHITE ClCt

Root Lowell

H o u se -C o te
E x te rio r PAIN T

C artridge

Last Catalog Price teach) 99C

-----------

im

n n rm

m

White

Highlight or add dimension to any
room. 12” x 12” tile. Plain mirror.

‘I G o M B o n d

JBuektir*j

Gallon

'P ro d u c t*

Colors

H r

Each Tile

36” CEILING FAN

Bronze. Chrome Foil Vein, Gold Vein,
Gold Swirl and Antiquo Gold Vein

Four wood blades with four spood

Each Tile ...................... 1

control. In White or Brown. 30” dia
sweep. (Accepts optional light kit.)

Gallon

Sheathing PLYWOOD

&gt;29

CDX Shoots
Agency Approved

C U T -an d-C A R R Y CARPET
C om bination
PADLOCK

T U fT T O N E S -

48" CEILING FAN
Four wood blades with 5 speed
motor. In White or Brown enamel
finish. 4 8 " dia. sweep (Accepts
optional light kit.)

100% nylon lev­
el loop carpet
in Gold, Earth
and Green. 12’
wi dt h, f o a m
back.
_

No BD1090.
A

b a c M t o t c h o o l " b a rg a in '

Sheet
3 / 8 " x 4 ‘ x 8 ' .................. 6 .4 6
1/2" x 4* x 8* (3 ply)....... 6 .9 9
1/2" x 4 ’ x 8' (4 ply)....... 7 .5 1
5/8" x 4 x 8 ’ . ................. 1 0 .1 8

l x 12 N o .3 PINESHELVING
8‘ through 16’ lengths.

KOTTVS

U O V A l SCOT

I

campct

R eg Price teach) 2 2 9

S pruce st u d s

52" CEILING FAN

2 x 4 x 9 2 W Pracut

Antique Pewter housing, canopy and
shaft. Four reversible wood blades
with cane inserts. 52" dia. sweep.
(Comes with light kit.)

TRASH A N D G RASS BAG S
CEILING U G H T FIXTURE
With W hite bent glass
shade. No SL-123.
THOMIS

W a te r H e a te r ^
TIMER SW ITCH ^

flliRGIM

*The higher the ftvalue, the greeter
the Insulating
power. Aik your
Scotty’t talesman
for the feet sheet
.on R values.

|6 5
1

4 6 9

Piece

U

Piece

2x4x8’
P re s s u re T re a te d
P I N E ________ ^

Your Choke

FHA aporoved T103-20, 110 volts
or T104-20. 220 volts

K ra ft-B a c k e d
u sssi
FIBERG LASS INSULATION

Regular Size. 20 gallon capacity.
Box of 10 bags. No. E3-1003 Large
Size. 33 gallon capacity. Box of 8
bags. No. E3-0880. Tall Kitchen
Begs. 13 gallon capacity. Box of 15
bags. No. E3-1544.

2*4x96"

Kordite

SHEET FLOORING

S y n th e tic T u rf DOOR M A T S

Cushioned, no-wax. In decorator
patterns and colors. 12’ width.

18’* x 2 3 ” mat in
assorted colors.
Argonnt Ind.

Simulated woodgrain
face printed on a 5/32"
x 4’ x 8 ’ panel.

R-i i •
Sq Ft
3 V x 15"« 3Vi" x 23“ ■
R-19*
8 'x 15"
6" x 23“

Sq Ft

PRICES GOOD FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
H M D

AUGUST 27

— OfEHTEBPM---SANFORD
700 French Ave.

Ph: 323-4700
ALTAMONTE SPRINQ8
1029 E. Altamonte Dr.
Pte 339-8311
SooJy's store* open »t 7:30 a.m.
Monday thru Saturday
Ooaad Sunday

ORANGE CITY
2323 S. Volusia Ave.
Hwy. 17 and 92
Ph: 775-7268
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
875 W. Hwy, 438
Ph: 862-7254

P ric e s quoted in (hit ad are
based on customers picking-up
m erchandise at our store. De­
livery It available lor a small
charge.
Managem ent leserves Ihe right
to limit quantities on special
sale merchandise

ML

Electric,

Three metal blade fan, in White or
Brown. 4-speed motor. 36 ” dia.
sweep,

J c o tty -i

Latex paint for masonry or
metal surfaces.

MIRROR TILES

Reduce
Your

*

BATTERIES

Provides a watertight,
long-lasting seal. 11 fl. or.
C O tty^

Stai nl ess steel
sprayer with pro­
fessional features
Model 1Q5SS

G eneral P u rp o s e

�</text>
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                    <text>Evening H e ra ld -IU S P S 481 2 8 0 1 -P r ic e 20 Cents

73rd Year, No. 2 8 8 -F r ld a y , July 2 4 , 1981-S a n f o r d . Florida 32771

Winter Springs Changes Its Mind —
By BRITT SMITH
Herald SUll Writer
Two days alter tentatively agreeing on
a 34 percent municipal property tax
increase lor next year, Winter Springs
city counctimen Thursday night reversed
themselves and decided to maintain the
status quo and keep taxes Just as they
are
01 course, the 1981-82 budget is still
very tentative and council members
could change their minds again, but (or
now, all live councilman seem deter­
mined that local residents will have no
unpleasant surprises come tax time.

members reluctantly fixed the rati at
82.55per 81,000 value, thinking funding ol
a proposed paramedic program would
necessitate the 50-cent increase.
They later determined, however, that
the first-year start-up coat of 860,000 decreased from council's original 175,000
figure — could be paid for from existing
projected revenues and Immediately
killed the suggested tax increase.
The tone of Thursday’ s budget session
was set at the very beginning by coun­
cilman Martin Trencher.

That means the city’s tax rate will
remain at 1105 per 81,000 ol assessed
property value. On Tuesday, council

"I’ m not in favor of any tax increase
next year." Trencher said. "The county
and the school board are raising taxes.
Citizens' tax bills will be high enough
without us adding to it. This is not the

time for a tax hike."
So where does that leave the proposed
81 9 million budget for the fiscal year
which begins Oct. 1? The ball is in Gty
Manager Richard Rozansky’s court.
Cuuncilmen made no budget cuts
Thursday night, but rather changed
some priorities, shuffled projects from
one fund to another, and generally made
minor m echanical adjustments to
Rozansky's proposed spending plan.
About the only concrete moves to come
out ol the two-hour session were a
determination not to raise taxes, shaving
ol 815,000 from the pricetag of the
paramedic program, substituting a car
for a motorcycle in the police budget, and
an agreement to upgrade Sunshine Park

Tax Increase

next to city hall on N. Edgemon Avenue
Falling in the "definite m aybe"
category was a proposal to hire three
instead ol two new policemen next year,
or at least put one on the payroll in
October instead ol waiting until January
as originally planned.
With those general guidelines, council
members left it up to Rozansky to figure
out how to run the city with the 81.9
million they have tentatively given him.
He was directed to come up with a
revised budget and present it to the
council for review by Aug. 4
The most likely areas to (all under
Rozansky's paring knife are some road
and drainage projects, and cons'ruction
ol a 860.000 police building. Winter

Springs law enforcem ent officers
currently work out of the fire station. A
traffic light for the intersection of
Edgemon Avenue and State Road 434
may also end up cut.
Probably remaining intact will be a 10
percent across-the-board cost of living
increase fee all 58 city employ ees and an
additional 2 percent hike for certain long­
time workers.
auncilm en Hap Arnold and Jim
Hartman Thursday renewed their attack
on the "10+2". pay raise as too high.
"Why should government give bigger
raises than free enterprise business?”
Hartman asked "Private industry isn't
giving 10 percent raises this year and I
don't think we should either."

Pair Charged
In Murder Of
Seminole Man

Schools
To File
Lawsuit
By JOHN DIXON
Herald Stall Writer
The Seminole a u n ty School Board
voted unanimously Thursday to take
legal action to prevent the slate from
withholding a 8473,000 allocation from the
county's 1981-82 funding.
The board authorized its attorney, Ned
Julian Jr., to take ‘ legally appropriate
action" to block the withholding ol the
money, which state Education Com­
missioner Ralph Turlington has an­
nounced he intends to do.
In a letter outlining his recom­
mendations to board members, Julian
said he believes the county has a legal
basis to pursue recovery o l the money,
which was given in February os a cost-ofliving adjustment to funding received by
the district baaed on student population.
Turlington now says that the money
shouldn't have been given in mid-year,
that by law such adjustments are to be
nude only at the beginning ol a school
year. He has asked the county to repay
the 8471,000.
Since the money has been spent the
state plans to withhold an equal amount
from 1181-82 funding.
In his letter to the board. Julian
recommended that he be authorised U?
take legal action in cooperation with
William Rowland Jr., school board at­
torney for Orange County. Orange
County stands to lose an 8873.000
allocation because of the funding
recalculation.
••If It appears that our ultimate Interest
Is a little different than Orange a u n ty 's,
as well may be the case. Individual
consolidated lawsuits will provide for
that difference, and yet enable us to
achieve a common goal," Julian said.
••In addition, individual lawsuits
consolidated, would provide all Boards
participating with the combined talents
ol the involved school board attorneys,"
he i(Vkd.
Julian said he planned to talk with
attorneys for other school boards "a d­
versely a ffe cted " by Turlington s
decision when he attends a meeting of the
Florida School Board Attorneys
Association this weekend in Fort
luuderdale.
Commenting on Julian 's recom ­
mendations, School Superintendent
Kobrrt Hughes said he believed the
board had ' strong legal grounds" to win
a suit
Board members Allan Keeth and
Nancy Warren were not present at
Tuesday's meeting. Both are on
vacation.

VOLUNTEER
HONORED

Two ranch hands have been charged
with the murders of a prominent
Altamonte Springs businessman and his
associate who questioned the suspects
about missing cattle.
Robert Craig, 23, ol SumterviUe and
Robert Schmidt. 20, ol Wildwood were
ordered held without bond Thursday in
the l-ake a u n ty Jail on two counts of
murder each and charges of grand theft
and selling stolen property.
They are accused of the Tuesday night
shooting deaths of John Eubanks, 32,
president ol Agriculture Investments
Inc., and ETC Real Estate Inc.,
Altamonte Springs, and Bobby Fanner
ol Center Hill Eubanks owns the ranch
where the suspects were employed.
Authorities have asked a Tampa diving
Itrm to help them recover tha bodiaa ol
Uw tiro nwn which Investigators say they
believe are at the bottom ol a lUO-footdeep sinkhole several miles (rom
Eubanks' ranch on the Uke-Sumter
county line.
Deputies said the shootings occurred
when Eubanks and Fanner confronted
Schmidt and Craig about some cattle
thefts. Farm er had accom panied
Eubanks reportedly to lake over as ranch
foreman.
When Farmer failed to return home
Hereto Phut* br Tem V « w l
Tuesday night, his brother and father
started looking for him and found tracks
( ir r a t r r S a n fo rd C h a m b e r o f C o m m r r c e E x e c u t i v e M a n a g e r J a c k H o rn e r
from his Jeep adjacent to Eubanks' ranch
p re se n ts C e r t ific a t e o f lle c o g n lllo n fr o m ( io v e r n o r a n d M m . B o b G r a h a m to
property,
M a rth a Y a n c e y o f S a n fo r d . T h e c e r t ific a t e Is In r e c o g n it io n o f h er
Wednesday, investigators found a pool
n o m in a tio n f o r th e F in d L a d y 's a w a rd for F lo r id a V o lu n te e r o f th r N e a r.
ol blood near the Jeep tracks, and later
M r*. Y a n c e y is th e c h a m b e r 's
G ood w ill A m b a s s a d o r .
located the vehicle at the Florida Citrus

Currently. Herndon has three am­
By DONNA ESTES
bulances operating in the county full­
Herald SUll Writer
time _ in Sanford, Casselberry and
The three Herndon Ambulance Service
Altamonte S p rtn g s -fo r an annual
emergency v eh icles operating in
subsidy of 8107.000. The ones In
Seminole a u n ty full-llme soon wtU be
Casselberry and Sanford are stalled by
•brought all the way to TV-style." U
paramedics and equipped with advanced
county commissioners approve a subsidy
life support gear. The third based at
increase lor the firm.
Florida HuspiUt-AlUmonte is equipped
Herbert Perry. Herndon's gencrsl
with onl." basic Ufe support systems.
manager, Mid today his (inn Is asking
Perry Mid the 17 percent increase in
(or a 817.000-U&gt;-8».000 increase in the
annual subsidy paid by the county lor subsidy is being requested to pay (or
ambulance service U the third am­ telemetry equipment and paramedics in
bulance is equipped lo match the other the third ambulance and to move that
two In operation in the county. The vehicle's base of operation west of
interstate 4 in the area of State Roads
request is (or the 1981-82 budget year that
438-434.
begins on Oct. 1.

.
•
. . m i itt &gt;
__ i __ . i _
i k . ik U U s io K le U
"We'U
be ibringing
the
third vehicle
Perry Mid the county's director of
into
TV
style.
It
will
be
able to provide
public Mfely, Gary Kaiser, had asked
that the third ambulance be brought to the same service as the other two am­
the advanced life support standard. He bulances and what the public is used to
explained that advanced Ufe supptrt seeing on the television program.
systems give the abibty to send ("E m ergen cy") " Perty Mid.
Kaiser Mid paramedics are ctruiied lo
telem etric com munications (o the
hospital including Information from have 600 hours plus medical training and
operate under the control and direction of
electro-cardiograms.
Perry said the Increase requested does the county medical director. He Mid they
not include any sums for inflation. ran administer drugs lor cardiac a rra t
•'Basically we have two sources ol in­ and advanced Ule Mvtng techniques.
Relocating the am bulance's from
com e," Perry Mid. He pointed to growth
patterns In south Seminole and the Florida Hospltal-Altamonte is necessary
county a* a whole, bringing increased because more cells lor Ihe service are
revenues (rom increased numbers of being received from the areas west of 1-4,
according to Perry. Because of heavy
calls, and the subsidy.

By DONNA ESTES
Herald SUM Writer
A problem that has plagued the Sanford Fire Department
and the county Department of Public Safety for years-false
fire slzrtns s'- i!s ccs ftiw s s —Is
*n h* salved
Bob Revels, ihe county's safety officer and s committee of
representatives of courthouse departments, have come up
with a plan to place glam cov en over the 14 alarms switches in
the Seminole County courthouse.
Revels said. "With the alarm devices covered, before a
person can pull an alarm he will have lo first break the glass
cover. This may discourage those who are now setting off false

When Montmle'i nol looking. lt&gt;4» attracted to
the bright red lire alarm* can *et olf false
alarm*. County official* plan to install glass
covers over the devices.

* F^lse alarms have gotten almost to the ridiculous point
according to Revels The other day. he said, a t-monlh-old
baby while being held by his mother reached over to a "pretty
bright red" alarm switch and set it off.
Juvenile*, perhaps on a lark, haw regularly set oil the
alarms and others probably upset with how they fared to court

also regularly trip Ihe alarms, he said.
Rerels uid he expecta to complete a fire Mfety programfor
the courthouse indudmg an evacuation plan by Aug. 3.
The evacuation plan bring prepared for the courthouse calls
lut w ilt M iliw . ol the three -story building to t o . « a nigiter to
charge of organizing. Certain persons are being designated to
use (ire extinguishers whBe others will escort vision or the
handicapped out of the building. Others are marking
Irreplaceable records to be coveted by fire blankets.
A method also Is being set up to "count noses" to make sure
all courthouse employees tre oul ol the building U a fire oc­
curs.
Revels also Is developing other Mfety programs for county
employees, including one on defensive driving.
Avoidance of back injuries also is a concern since the most
common complaint among employees, next to the common
cold, la back Injuries. Classes are being developed to leach
employees how to protect their backs.

-i *

, w—

I r a f l i n on
net SB
C U 436
IV v and
A n d SR
S i t 434
4 3 4 at
Jit the
I h f 1-4
traffic
intersection, Kslser Mid, it is taking
longer to get to paUents and longer to get
them to the hospital.

"That ambulance has not had »
paramedic on it," Kaiser Mid, adding
that the people have become conditioned
lo expecting the u n it type service on an
ambulance as they see on the popular
television show, "Em ergency."
He Mid the paramedics can administer
cardiac defibrtlation. Intravenous fluids
and other sophisticated em ergency
treatment on instructions from doctors at
the hospital to which a patient Is being
transported.

TODAY

To End 'Alarming' Situation

L

Tower In Clermont, 20 miles away.
Schmidt and Craig were arrested early
Thursday after Investigators talked to
them
Deputies said they had been in­
vestigating both men for alleged cattle
rustling and when they were confronted
with evidence they had sold some of the
cattle at auction. Craig allegedly told
them he and Schmidt murdered their
buss and Farmer.
One of Eubanks' dose associates said
today
the
Altamonte
Springs
businessman was concerned over his
cattle inventory dwindling and had taken
Farmer with him to the Okahumpka
ranch to take over as foreman and to
question the two suspects about the
missing cattle.
Investigators Mid evidence turned up
that the suspects had been selling cattle
at the auction and about 810,000 in
checks had been made out to them few
those sales When Craig was shown the
canceled checks, he reportedly confessed
to the murders.
Craig reportedly also told investigators
he and Schmidt shot both men in the
back, then tied their bodies to cinder
blocks and dropped them In a 200-lootdeep sinkhole. The bodies have not yet
been recovered, investigators Mid
Eubanks' two businesses have main
offices in Altamonte Springs, but friends
Mid today he was well-known statewide
by the agricultural community.
Eubanks, they Mid, often acted as a
business agent for the John Hancock
Insurance Co.

Funds Requested To Better-Equip County Ambulance Service

County Plans Cover-Up

x

Arnold again proposed limiting raises
to 5 percent, but councilmen John Torcaso, Maureen Boyd, and Trencher paid
little heed. Similarly, they also turned
thumbs down on Arnold’ s recom ­
mendation that nest year's operating
expenses be trimmed by 5 percent.
Those two measures alone could have
saved the city 891,000, Arnold said, and
would have allowed taxes to be cut
slightly, from 82 05 per 81.000 assessed
value to 81 95 per 81,000.
Following the meeting, Arnold said he
knew from the outset that his ideas had
little chance of being adopted, "but I had
to try. 1 will not vote for any budget that
includes a 10 +2 percent pay raise. It's
too expensive and It’s not necessary ."

-w ——

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Witness, Burglars Car Pool
LEESVUJ-E, La. (UPI) - Timothy Marsh wanted to tell
someone about the burglary he had Just witnessed but the tint
person he found already knew about the crime.
Marsh had found ihe getaway driver Vernon Parish.
Authorities Wednesday Mid Marsh, a soldier at Fort Polk,
unknowingly flagged (town the burglar's accomplice. Jumped
in his car and Mid, "Hey man, someone Is breaking into the
store."
A few seconds later, when the alleged burglar Jumped iqto
ihe car with his am is full of stolen goods, M tnh leaned over to
the driver and Mid, "Let’s Just ca n y him to the police."
The driver refused to take him to the police station but let
Marsh off at a nearby store, where he called police. Marsh
later provided authorities with a detailed description of the car
and the men - James Haydocy, 18, of Cleveland, and Barry
Jordan. 18. of St. Charles. Mo., who were arrested.

�1A—Evening Herotd, Sanford, FI.

Friday, July 94, Itll

Court Action Multiplies Medfly Threat, Officials Say

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Israeli-Palestlnlan
Cease-Fire Announced
JEK U SAl£M (UPI) - U S. envoy Philip Habib
today announced a cease-fire to end two weeks of
fighting between Israel and Palestinian guerrillas in
Ubanon In an accord endorsed by Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin's government.
The Palestine Liberation Organization said It would
abide by the truce "on the condition the other side
abides by it.”
In Washington, White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said, "President Reagan welcomes this as a
hopeful and encouraging sign on the road to achieve
peace In this critical region of Ihe world. He expresses
his deepest appreciation to Ambassador Habib for his
continuing efforts."
Speakes said Reagan was informed of the ceasefire
at 7:30 a.m. by national security affairs adviser
Richard Alien, who sent the report over to him.
Arab diplomats close to the PltO said in Beirut that
since the PI JOhad no contacts with Israel or Habib, the
cease-fire announcement in Jerusalem was a
“ unilateral one,”

PANAMA CITY, Fla. (U P Il State agriculture officials say a
federal Judge's weakening of a
quarantine of California fruit has
Increased the chances tenfold that
Ihe Mediterranean fruit fly will
infest Florida groves.
list Jones, director of plant in­
dustry for the Florida Department
of Agriculture, said the state will
step up its Inspections of atl
California fruit entering the state
In hopes of stopping the Infestation.
"A s of this moment, the threat of
the medfly entering Florida Is 10
times greater,'' Jones said after
US. District Judge Lynn Higby

issued a preliminary injunction
Thursday barring Florida from
placing restrictions on California
fruit greater than those Imposed by
the federal government.
"About the best thing we can do
is start a more vigorous inspection
of trucks bringing in host material
from California," Jones said. "It's
going to take more time to do this
and we don't have time to spare —
we also don't have adequate
personnel."
Jones said tie probably would
have to request additional In­
spectors — possibly Including the
Florida Highway Patrol — to

conduct the more thorough in­
spections.
"The trucks ore now rolling into
the state and with that, the
danger," said Charles Poucher, a
technical adviser to the state who
helped eradicate the medfly twice
in Florida.
Acting on a suit filed by
California growers, Judge Higby
told F lorida lawyers: “ I will agree
with your most persuasive
argument that the state of
California has sal on their duff and
did not act fast enough in this
matter, but I feel the federal
government and the Department of

Agriculture have concluded that a
quarantine only limited to a threecounty area Is sufficient enough to
protect the nation. Far be it for me
to counter that."
Under the embargo, which went
into effect al 12.01 a.m. Monday,
Florida inspectors turned back 19
truckloads of California produce
out of 112 toads entering the state
from California.
West Coast growers said they
stood to lose nearly t i l million 11
Florida’s funitngation requirement
had continued and they have lost at
least $300,000 a day since the
em bargo began, said Charles

W oes G row
For Accused
Kidnapper
As It he didn't have enough problems, the take Mary man
accused of abducting a teenage girl al gunpoint from her
father's used car lot July 4 has been hit with an additional
charge of armed burglary in connection with the theft of the
weapon used in the kidnapping.
Charges were filed against Darrell Lynn Thcophilus, 24, of
163 Frederick A ve., Thursday after being returned to Seminole
County from Indiana where he surrendered to authorities

Iran Holds Tense Elections
to lle d Press laterusttonal
Iranians cast ballots today to choose replacements
for an Impeached president and parliament members
killed in a mass terrorist bombing. Ousted President
Aboihaassan Bani-Sadr called for an election boycott,
but Iran's clergy threatened death to anyone disrup­
ting the balloting.
The 12 hours of tense voting, which was almost
certain to Install Prime Minister Mohammed All Hsjal
as the new president, began at 3 a.m.
Prom his hideout somewhere In the mountains
controlled by Kurdish and Mojahldeen guerrillas,
Bani-Sadr urged Iranians to boycott "the disgraceful
spectacle of phony elections."
The clandestine "Voice of Iranian Kurdistan" Radio,
quoting a week-old RanhSadr broadcast on Ihe eve of
voting, said the "world is stunned by so much cruelty
and savagery" by the Tehran regime.
Tehran prosecutor Aaaadotlah l-ajvanli warned
anyone obstructing voting would (ace the “ maximum
sentence” — the firing squad. More than 250 opponents
have been executed since Bani-Sadr went un­
derground.

Red Cross Gives Up

Lynch, If. w a s said to be weaker limn Doherty, 23.
Neither had lost consciousness but both were reported
by their families to be suffering "great pain."
The three-member Red Cross team that came to
Belfast last Thursday to Investigate conditions in
Northern Ireland Jails returned to Geneva Thursday
afternoon after (ailing to bring the two sides together.
"W e cam e here to see whether we could play a useful
role," said delegation leader Prank Schmidt. But after
four days of talking with the eight hunger strikers, he
said, "W e came to the conclusion that this was not the
case. The two stdes would not meet and we found we
had no role to play.”

WEATHER

*

percent tedsy 15 percent tcnighl aid 19 percent Satarday.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Sunday through Tuesday Partly cloudy and continued hot with scattered mainly af­
ternoon and evening thunderstorms. Lows In the 70s except
near 40 along Ihe beaches and in the keys. Highs In the IQs.

(«»*» «&lt;»•»

Friday. July U. IH I-Vol. 71. No. I ll
pYbiitAad Daily and S u tle r. otc»»i Saturday *r T M
Hr raid. lac-. I N H F r t a i* Are..Saalord. Fla. U n i .

Santord

Second C l a n Pena to Fate *1 Sanleid, Flariaa S im
Hama M i v a n ' W eek SI.M i Meant, u . i l l S M a o ist. S M M i
Veer. SO Id &gt;r MaH: w««a l l l l i Maant. ISIS; a M aaiM ,
sssatz v e e r, s u e d
_______________________________

F ires

*

C ourts
*

MAGIC OF BOOKS

MAN ARRESTED OVER
MAYOR ROBBERY
Willie Lee Mills, 31, ol 313 Swoope Ave., Winter Park, was in
the county Jail this morning alter being arrested tn connection
with last month's burglary of Oviedo Mayor Tom Morgan’s
home.
Mills was charged with dealing In stolen property and ts
being held under $4,000 bond.
On June 21, Mills reportedly pawned several charm
bracelets and a high school ring, which, along with nearly
$10,000 worth of other property, had been stolen from Morgan's
home a week earlier.
SHE THOUGHT IT WAS EMPTY
Two young Sanford brothers were in the Seminole County
Jail today after being arrested far breaking Into a local
grocery store and stealing a quantity of food.
Lawrence Davis, II, and his brother, Freddie Davis Jr., 22,
both of IX Academy Ave., were being held under $4,000 bond
on charges of burglary and grand theft.
The pair are accused of breaking Into Phillips 66 Discount
Foods, 1X1 Airport Blvd., Sanford, late Tuesday or early
Wednesday. Upon discovering the break-in, Sanford police
detective Donnie Anderson and Sgt. Joe Dillard followed a trail
left by the bandits who appeared to be dragging their loot.
The tracks led to the Davts home where the officers asked
the young men's mother, Mrs. Jessie Mae Davis, If they could
search her freezer She said it was empty, but gave her per­
mission anyway. Inside was found a quantity of meat, bread,
and soft drinks.

S a n fo r d
L ib r a r y
c lo w n
Sandy V e r " V oR el (a b o v e )
p r e a e n ls a c e r t i f i c a t e f o r
c o m p le t io n o f th e lib r a r y 's
S u m m e r H rn d lr.g I'ru g r a m to
p a rticip a n t J a m e s A lle n C ro s s .
F o r e st C ity m a g ic ia n G e n e
S h irley (r ig h t p h o t o ) , s h o w s
s ix -y e a r -o ld T y r o n e W illia m s
a
rop e
tr ic k .
S h ir le y ,
p resid en t o f (h e F lo r id a S ta le
A s s o c ia tio n

of

M a g ic ia n s ,

p r e s e n te d a m a g i c sh o w

P o lic e B e a l

nearly two weeks ago. Theophi! us reportedly had been visiting
a relative before turning himself in to Greensburg, Ind.
lawmen on July 13.
The latest charge against Theophilus stems from a June 29
break-ln at a house at 109 Whippoorwill lane, Altamonte
Springs, during which a semi-automatic rifle was stolen.
A week after the burglary, police say Theophilus used the
rifle to steal a car from Jim lash Blue Book Cars 4114 S.
Orlando Drive, Sanford, and kidnap the owner'i daughter, 17year-old Angelina lash. The girl was freed seven hours later tn
Tallahassee.

fo r

y ou n g sters
w ho
r e c e n tly
c o m p le t e d th e p r o g r a m .
Harald Phot* Sr Tom Vine OKI

Uncle Sam (Really) Wants You

NATIONAL HKFOHT: Thunderstorms brought tornadoes to
the Northern Plains and forged 74 mph winds In Ihe Midwest,
knocking out power lines and causing extensive crop damage.
No Injuries were reported. Dark akles stretched over Ihe
western half of South Dakota, dropping two tornadoes 1 mile
north of Wall. Funnel clouds also were sighted in Black Hawk
and West Rapid City areas. Roaring winds were clocked at 66
mph In Rosebud. About 3 inches of rain fell in Missouri
Thursday while scattered thunderstorms fell over western
Tennessee, northern Mississippi and Alabama. Some rain
doused Ihe Carolina!, Gerogia and Florida. A cool Canadian
breeze covered Ohio Thurwlay - producing record-low
temperatures. National Weather Service officials In Cleveland
reported a U d eg ree temperature tarty Thursday , breaking
the previous record of 30, set in 1447, A 47-degree reading in
Toledo broke a 1447 mark. But most Southern states baked In
lOO-drgrre highs Thursday, with Meridian, M in , In Ita 14th
consecutive day of tripleiiglt temperatures.
AKKA READINGS |l a.m.1: temperature: 74; overnight
low: 71; Thursday's high: 43; barometric pressure: 30.44;
relative humidity: 81 percent; winds: calm.
SATURDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 3:01
a m ., 3:44 p m .; lows, 9:04 a.m., 1:31 p.m .;
PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 2:14 a.m., 3:31 p.m.; lows, 1:34 a m .,
4:49 p.m.; BAYPORT: hlgha, 1:11 a.m., 9:39 p.m .; lows, 1:04
a m ., 3:29 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Aaguatlae to Jupiter Inlet, Out
» Miles; Winds southeast 10 to 13 knots through Saturday.
Seas 3 to 4 feet. Winds and seal higher near scattered thun­
derstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Saturday. A
chance of Uunderstormi. Highs today in the mid 90s. Lows
tonight In Ihe mid 70a. Hot Saturday with highs in the mid to
upper 90s. Winds southeast 10 to 13 mph. Rain probability 40

E v rn ir iK lle n ik l

Action Reports

AND BALLOONS

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Red Cross
Investigators abandoned efforts to end the Mare Prison
hunger strike, apparently dooming two Inmates nine
weeks Into their protests today to Ihe same death as six
previous prisoners.
Kievan Uuherty, M days without food, and Kevin
Lynrh, who refused to eat lor a *3rd day, were as
"stable as possible under the circumstances," ac­
cording to the latest medical bulletin, said a
spokesman for the Republican Press Center.

Goetx, California deputy attorney
general who was present for the
hearing.
Florida mandated that that all
California fruit entering the state
be fumigated until traps in noninfested California areas produce
no medflirs for at least X days.
The California growers con­
tended that the U-S. Agriculture
Department's requirement that fly
traps in non-lnfested areas be
doubled was ample to delect if the
medfly had spread beyond the
three infested counties and said
Florida's Kklay wailing period
was unwarranted.

Phone Cable Cut

18-Year-Olds Reminded
To Register For Draft
Males whowUl have their 14th birthday
this year must register with the U.S.
Selective Service at their local poll office
within X daya of their birthday, a
spokesman (or the federal sgency
reminded today.
The spokesman noted that the agency
earlier this week selected (or prosecution
134 men who have filled to register from
across the nation.

A form (or the purpose can be picked
up at any post office, filled out and
submitted there, along with appropriate
Identification, the spokesman said.
The penalty for falling to register is up
to five years imprisonment or fines of up
to 110,000 or both.
The spokesman advised those men who
have reached their 16lh birthdays since
1971 to register now anyway.

Southern Bell's Geneva and Oviedo
customers had their telephone service
disrupted Thunday afternoon when a
tong distance cable was cut on Slate
Road 419 at Dyson Farm. The Incident
occurred at 4 :X p m. as the telephone
company contractor was burying new
cable with a plow, Larry Strickler,
manager of the Sanford Southern Bell
office said.
He said Geneva customers could
call each other, but could not reach
anyone outside the community.
Oviedo customers could call out, but
could receive no outside calls. The 30palr cable (capable of handling X
calls simultaneously i was repaired by
11 p.m. and service restored

RINGS ON THE SILL
Someone broke into a Sanford area home Wednesday and
stole two valuable rings which were sitting on a window sill.
Albert An tar, 39, ol 141 IdyUwilde Dr., told Seminole County
sheriff's deputies lliat the burglary occurred sometime bet­
ween S :X a.m, and 2 p.m.
Anlar said a screen was removed from a rear bedroom
window and two rings taken from the till. Other rings fell from
the sill to the floor and were left untouched. Deputies theoriied
that the family dog ran barking into the bedroom and scared
Ihe crook! a) away.
The two stolen rings were valued at $2,630.
THE SELLER BEWARE
A 33-year-old Osteen man was tn Ihe Seminole County Jail
today after he sold an undercover agent 11,300 worth of Illegal
drugs.
Leon Michael Quinn was being held tinder 44,000 bond on
charges ol possession and delivery ol a controlled substance
and resisting arrest with violence.
According to a sheriff's report, Quinn was arrested alter he
sold a band-aid can containing 300 Quaalude pills to an un­
dercover sheriffs agent in the parking lot ol the Level 111
lounge on Stale Road 436 In Casselberry.

AREA DEATHS
granddaughter. '
BURLW. FUGATE
Gramkow-Gaines,
IsmgBurl Wesley Fugate, 71, of 6
Plata Oval, Casselberry, died wood, Is in charge ol
Thursday it his residence. arrangements.
MRS. ELIZARF7TH JONES
Born In Harrisburg, III., he
Mrs. Elizabeth Frances
moved to the Orlando area
from there In 14X. He had Jones, 13, of 1401 Summerlin,
lived In Casselberry i l&lt; Sanford, died Wednesday
years, lie was a retired night it FlutltM HuiptUisupermarket m anager tor AlUmcnte. She w si a native
AkP, a Methodist, a member ol Frame, W. Va., moving to
in
197$
from
ol the Loyal Order of the Sanford
Moose Lodge No.
744, Charleston, W. Vn. She was a
dry cleaning preaser and a
O r la n d o ,
A m e r ic a n
Association ol Retired Per­ Baptist.
Survivors include three
sons, South Seminole Seniors
and the Happy Senior Citizens sisters, Mrs. Mary Stallings,
Sanford, Mrs. Tiilie Atkins.
Dub.
Survivors include his wile. Lake Mary, and sirs Sally
Mrs. Alice F .; sons, Robert Carter, Charleston, W. Va.;
W., Lake Mary, Donald W.. four brother*, late Rucker,
Clendennln, W. Va.; Jack
New Smyrna Beach; sisters,
Rucker, Nitre, W. Va.. Robert
Miss ten s and Miss Verdis
Rucker, Charleston. W. Va..
Mae, both of Orlando; one

4

and Daniel Rucker, Elk View,
W Va.
Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, Is In charge of
arrangements
MRS. MARY McNALLY
Mrs. Mary F. McNally, 82,
of 230 Oxford Road, Fern
Park, died Thursday ai
Winter
Park
Memorial
Hospital. Born In Glenluce,
Scotland, she moved to Fern
Park from Grand Rapids,
Mich, m 1971. She was a
homemaker
and
an
Episcopalian.
Survivors
Include
a
daughter, Mrs. Chiton Light,
Orlando;
sister,
Mrs.
Margaret Dimon, C lear­
water; two grandchildren.
Garden Chapel Home (or
Funerals, Orlando, Is tn
charge ol arrangements.

JOHN IL MrKIRBEN
John H. McKtbben, 72. of
IX Dahlia Court, F'orest Gty,
died Thursday. Born In
Missouri, he moved to Forest
City from Holly, Colo., tn 1931.
He was a retired security
guard.
S u n k e n Include biz wife,
Adeline; daughter, Mrs.
Martha Cameron, Petaluma,
Calif.; three grandchildren.
N a t io n a l
C r e m a tio n
Society, St. Petersburg, ts In
charge of arrangements.
CHARLES PETTIS JR.
Charles Edward Pettis Jr„
0, ol 21 Cowan Moughton
Apartments, died July 11
Survivors
include
his
mother
Rosem ary,
and
lather, Charles Edward Pettis
S r .; grandparents, Mrs.

- 4r —

Sarah U t Pringle, Mrs.
Rachel Pettis, Tommie Lee
Pettia and Ulyiaes Burke;
sister, Lakeltah M ichelle;
live aunts; sis uncles.
W lls o n -E lc h e lb e r g e r
Mortuary Is In charge ol
arrangements

F**M,t Jr. of 11 Cow on Mow|Mcm
A p artm m u . * n o o tO July II
*0) bo hold Saturday o' II a m
Of the o'avMHt* In Reittovn
Crm rlery with tn» Rer
E
Rchardson oftlclo'lno Wilson
E ic M ib t f g tr
M o rtu a ry
In
ctorgy

JO N ES . M M . C L I i a t t T H
FRAN CES G ra vrV d t Mf
n c r t t o r M r s Elitobetn Frances
Jones. I L el INI Summerlin,
Santoro. *ho 0 to Wednesday al
Florida H o w ' l l AJUmontt. a t"

F L O A T ! , MR. B U R L W I S H Y
— Funorol servlets tor M r. Surl
Was'ry Fugate. 11. of I Plata
Oval. Ctssttoorry. who dlod
Thursday. a i" bo now o' l l a m ,
So'w rday in 'b o G rem sow
Gamas Funorol Homo Chapel
With Iha R oy. Wight s u ltry
o fllce iin g Bur to) hi Grtonwood
C r m r 'r r ,. Orlando Grem ko*
Games F unoral Homo. 110 Dog
Track R o o d, Longwood. in
charge

le k e M a ry C rm rtrry with Sian
Brum H r ottictotmg G ram to*
F u n a ra l Hom o. Son'ord. 'n
m erge

OAK LAW N
M O N U M E N T CO
Rt 4 Box ] 44 Sjrtfnrd

Funsral Notices

p h H I 4311
P I T T 'S , M A S T I R C H A R L ES
(O W A R O —Funorol services
tor M A ito r C h o rlts E d v a r d

•
•

All t (p r i M£ftwnswftft

�Ewnlnj Hers Id, Sanford, FI.

Two New Principals
Appointed By Board

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Now Willing To

By JOHN DIXON
Herald Staff Writer
In addition to naming a new principal for
Seminole High School, the Seminole County
School Board Thursday afternoon appointed a
new principal for Wilson Elementary School
and selected two assistant principals.
As expected, Aubrey Wayne Epps, 35, was
appointed as principal of Seminole High
School. Epps, who was recommended by
Superintendent Robert Hughes, will replace
William P. "Bud" l«ayer, who is retiring after
26 years with the school system.
The board also appointed Gene Terry Rabun
as principal of Wilson Elementary School,
Eugene H. Greer as assistant principal of
Forest City Elementary School, and I-orralne
R. Offer as assistant principal of South Side
Elementary School.
Epps' appointment Is effective immediately.
The other appointments are effective Aug. 3.
Hughes also recommended the selections of
Rabun, Greer and Offer.
Epps acknowledged his appointment at the
meeUng by presenting Seminole High School
Booster Club sweaters to board members and
declaring them "honorary members" of the
club.
Epps hss been assistant principal at the high
school since 1972 He first Joined the school
system as a chemistry teacher and football
coach at Seminole High School In 1969. He also
was chairman of the science department
Epps was bom in Sanford and lives at 121

Compromise On Taxes
WASHINGTON (LTD — President Reagan, who
earlier this week vowed to ‘ 'hang tough" on terms o(
his Las package, now is willing to make a few changes
in the name of compromise with conservative
Democrats.
Rep. Barber Conable, R-N.Y,, ranking Republican
on the House Ways and Means Committee, said
Thursday Reagan Intends to stand firm on the cen­
terpiece of his plan — a 33-month, 25 percent acrossthe-board reduction in ta* rates.
But he indicated Reagan had agreed to phase out
certain portions of the windfall profits tax on oil, gear
more breaks to small businesses and revise estate
taxes and change levies on agricultural products.
"There are going to be substantial changes in our
bill," Conable said after conferring with Reagan and
top Republicans. Re said some details still were being
worked out Thursday.

Fire Flares Out O f Mine
CENTRAtJA. Pa. (UPI) — The mine fire burning
beneath Centralia for 19 years flared out of the ground
for the first lime, setting brush outside the com­
munity ablaze and triggering fears today flames could
surface in the town Itself.
Mayor John Wonddosky said the fire Thursday
erupted on the side of a mountain in an unpopulated
area about a mile outside of town in Canyngham
Township.
Former Mayor John Coddington said the flare-up,
which set brush and trees ablaze on the mountainside,
could exacerbate the mine fire, which has prompted
the town's 1,100 residents to call for the entire com­
munity to be moved, and c a u * the flames to spread
further to the surface.

Ford Returns To Profits
DETROIT I UPI l - Ford Motor Co., which suffered
12 billion in losses in a string of six unprofitable
quarters, returned to the black in the Apni-June period
this year with earnings of tW million.
The second-quarter Iziumph represented a dramatic
turn-about from the same period last year, when Ford
lost MU million.
Ford Chairman Phi bp Caldwell said Thursday the
company not only weathered the spate of record losses,
but even was able to trim its debt by 1640 million in the
first half of 1981

N/xon Seeks S2.9 M/fl/on
NEW YORK i UPI I - Former President Richard
Nixon stands to make almost 300 percent profit U
someone can pay the J2 9 million he's asking for his
townhouse in midlown Manhattan.
A spokeswoman for Sothrby International Realty,
the firm handling the sale, said Thursday the Nixon
townhouse was on the market for a price nearly fair
time* the 1750.000 the former president paid when he
and hit wife, Pat, moved In II months ago.
The Nixons are moving to a new home In Saddle
River, N.J.
The spokeswoman said the high price was not
unusual because real estate values in die neighborhood
have increased dramatically in the past two years.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
New Commissioner Joins
State Board Of Regents
OR IAN DO, Fla. (UPI) - Education Commissioner
Ralph Turlington wilt Join the Board of Regents ss a
voting member today under a reorganization enacted
by the Legislature
The board, meeting at the University o( Central
Florida, ts scheduled to consider higher student fees,
the expansion of Shands Teaching Hospital and unpaid
student loans.
During its past session, the legislature decided to
increase the board's membership from 10 to I) by
adding the education commissioner and two other
members to be appointed by Gov. Bob Graham.
Turlington has opposed the board on many issues in
the past, particularly on its proposed budgets, but has
said he expects to get along well with other board
members,
The legislature also approved higher student lees
and the board will consider the official schedule of
charges to be placed In effect this September.

Death Due To Child Abuse
ORLANDO. Fla. (UPI) — Prosecutors may file
additional charges against a man who spanked a 2year-old boy for wetting his pants, causing the child to
fall and sustain a fatal injury.
Nathaniel Deboles. 22, is accused of child abuse. He
was being held in the Orange County Jail Thursday
following the Tuesday night incident which occurred
while he was taking care of Darrel Curt Neal, bis
girlfriend’s son.
Dcpu“ : i a i d Debo!?! s&lt;imltt*d upankina the child
once when he wet his pants on a bedroom floor, and
then hitting the boy a second time when he got him to a
bathroom. He said the chid then went limp and fell,
bumping his head.

HOSPITAL NOTES
ImiMMle M»i»»rl*l

Jeev.U

ADMISSION!

discharges

Santoro
Ruin R Coes
Keren C . CreuM
Lvcilie Miller
W illie J Montgomery
Glenne J Tenney
H e lm C Won**mt
M a ry C W iU am t

Friday. July 14.IM1-IA

U rkw ood Drive with his wife, Jane, and his 7year-okt daughter, Kelly.
Ha bun, was born In Sanford and lives at 1609
Terrace Drive. He holds a bachelor of arts
degree from Stetson University and a master
of education degree from Rollins College,
From 1979 to 1980, he was an administrative
trainee in the Seminole District, assigned to
several county schools, including Wilson
Elementary- where he was acting assistant
principal.
Greer, was born in Detroit. Hr holds a
bachelor of science degree in elementary
education from Andrew University and a
master of arts degree In school administration
from Michigan Stale University.
Greer lias held a number of administrative
and teaching positions in Michigan elemen­
tary schools. He and his wife, lovenin, have
two children.
Mrs. Offer lives at 643 Wtllowwood Ave .
Altamonte Springs with her husband and two
children. She holds a bachelor of music
education degree from Howard University,
Washington. D.C., and a master of arts degree
from Rollins College.
Active in education, Mrs Offer lias served
as a Title 1 Resource Specialist ami as ad­
m inistrative trainee to the supervising
principals at several Seminole County
elem entary schools. She received the
"Teacher of the Y ear" award from Roaenwald
School In 1974.

School Contract Accepted
H erald P hoto O f T o m V in e out

NEW EAGLE

SIGNS IN

E d w a rd S ta n to n H uron of I’ aola H o&gt; S c o u t T r o o p
52D w h o r e c e i v e d h is E a g le Scout a w a r d J u ly IH at
St. S t e p h e n 's L u th e ra n C h urch , L o n g w o o d . s ig n s
his t r o o p 's E a g le r e g is tr y . The M - y e a r - o ld S e m i­
n ole H igh S c h o o l stu d en t is the son o f M r s . D o r is
H a c o n -E ls e a .

E d w ard

will attend

th e

N a tio n a l

J a m b o r e e in F o r t A .P . Hill, V a. J u ly 2 t -A u g u s t 6
w ith th e C e n t r a l F lo r id a C ou n cil c o n t in g e n t .

The Seminole County School
Board and the secretarialclerical union ten tatively
have agreed on an amended
contract ratling for an I.t9
percent Increase in base pay
for 1981-83,
The settlement increases
the base pay from 85,794 to
86.286, about 10 percent less

board’s lower offer because
they "believed that was the
top dollar."

than the union origin a lly
asked.
Sally
Harvey,
SECA
president, Mid she was
disappointed with the set­
tlement but expects the
unions' 500 members to ratify
it. She Mid the union's
bargaining team accepted the

The Seminole EducationalC le r ic a l A s s o c ia tio n
originally asked for an 18
percent Incrrase that would
have raised base pay to 96.
834.

Mayor Angered At Removal Of Hotel Skywalk
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - In
an unexpected move that angered
the mayor, workers at the Hyatt
Regency removed the third skywalk
from the hotel's lobby where two
similar aerial walkways collapsed
last week, killing 111 people.
"M y concern was with the speed
with which it was taken out," Mayor
Richard Berkley Mid.
"Obviously it should be taken out
because it, too, could be dangerous,
but It seems to me that having a
crosswalk that ts quite similar to the
ones that collapsed could provide

some clues into why the first two
walkways collapsed.”
Moving swiftly in the predawn
hours
Thursday,
workers
disassembled a large portion of the
32-ton cancrete-and-sleel skywalk
and removed It to a warehouse
owned by the Crown Center
Redevelopment Corp, which owns
the hotel building.
A day ea rlier, Berkley had
authorized the National Bureau of
Standards to probe the cause of the
colla p se. Investigators for the
bureau had requested the third

walkway be left Intact to enable a
thorough Inquiry Into the accident.
In another development Thur­
sday, the City Council sent to
committee Berkley’s proposal for
the form ation of an advisory
citizen's Investigative panel to In­
vestigate the disaster that killed lit
people last Friday at a tea dance.
He had urged Immediate action on
the ordinance that would Include
providing 825.000 to fund the com­
mission and it was the council’s first
Item of business following a
memorial service to honor the dead.

A t Seminole Hospital

“ A heavy obligation has fallen on
this city and on the city council,"
Berkley Mid. "We must demon­
strate to the community that we are
deeply concerned and make sure
pertinent Information Is avsilable to
the public."
At this point, a council member
made the motion to refer the or­
din ance to the City Council
operations committee. When the
vote was taken, all 12 members
voted to send the ordinance to
committee. Only Berkley dissented.
James C. McClune, president of

the Crown Center Redevelopment
Carp, said the decision to take the
120-fool-long skywalk out and store It
with the two other bridges was made
wv the urging* of experts who deter­
mined It could be a menace tu work­
men attempting to restor the
atrium lobby.
The courts were busy with suits
being tiled by sutvlvots and
relatives ot victims of the nation's
worst hotel dUaslrr since 1946.
"It's going to be one of the roost
significant negligence cases In U.S.
. ••„ u .11.
. D&gt;l l l . l —

A 15 -minute

i “Is th a t

Damaged Phones
Cause Problems
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
If you have had problems phoning in or out
of Seminole Memorial Hospital this past week,
you will be glad tu learn that the phone system
at the facility is back to normal.
Richard Fox of Deltona, whose wife Doris is
a patient at liie hospital, has experienced
several problems with the hospital phone
system since It temporarily w u knocked out
of service on July 13. lightning during a storm
apparently caused the equipment to
malfunction.
Fox H id he had trouble contacting his wife's
doctor from the hospital, since only a few
phones were functioning.
Fox, who labeled the situation ridiculous
said he y a i told by hospital officials that
repairs had been delayed due to the lack of
available replacement parts.
Kay Bartholomew, public relations director
for the hospital. Hid Wednesday afternoon
that all the phones In the hospital had been
restored to service by Tuesday night.
"The phones are fine now,” she said ex­
plaining that at the time .of the emergency the
situation w u compounded by power outages
in the city which caused low voltage at the
hospital.
When the |&gt;hone system malfunction oc­
curred special precautions were taken, ac­
cording to Mrs. Bartholomew.
"The more critical areas are taken care of
first," she said. Those ureas Include the
emergency room and the Intensive care unit.

In another ruling, the court
affirmed the death sentence
of Robert Lewis Buford, 22,
who raped and then brutally
be*l 7-year-old Toni Annett
Wright with a concrete b lxk
in 1977 near a Lakeland

? ”

The administrative offices and patlenta'
rooms are low on the priority list, according to
Mrs. Bartholomew. "Our back up system
includes runners If necessary." she added.
Mrs. Bartholomew Mid a repair company
responded "Immediately," but repairs were
time consuming because a large number of
components were damaged.
The internal phone r/stem at the hospital Is
Mpar.de from the Southern Bell system. It
w u Installed eight years ago and Is leased
from Trans Union Medical leasing Co.
Fos feels that the hospital should strive to
see that the phones function at all times, even
if that means replacing the system with one
that can be repaired quicker.
"I talked with several nurses who were
highly upset about the problem ," u ld Fox,
"They still were trying desperately to com­
plete communications with doctors on Mon­
day.
But only on* or two phones on each floor
were functioning. Patlenta couldn't call home
and relatives couldn't call patients."
“ A hospital Is supposed to b# an emergency
facility and it has a responsibility to Dm
public," Mid Fox. "There should be some sari
of emergency by-pass equipm ent"
The new hospital facilities now under con­
struction are expected to be completed by
19H Fox considers waiting until then to do
something about updating the old com­
munications equipment “a copout". "That
doesn't help me — my wife's In the hospital
now," he added.

Death Sentences Overturned
By Florida Supreme Court
TALLAH ASSEE,
F ia.
(U P I)
— The
Florida
Supreme Court in separate
rulings Thursday overturned
the death sentences of con­
victed m urderers Eddie
Odom and Roy McKennon and
sentenced both men to life In
prison.

dm

church.
Odom, 41, was convicted of
January 1978 gangland-style
shooting of Joseph Richards
in Jacksonville. McKennon,
31, w u convicted of the
November 1977 murder of his
employer, Jessie Ms ye, in a
barber
shop
at
the
Jacksonville airport
The high court determined
that the Judge In Odom's case
did not have sufficient cause
to overrule a Jury’s recom­
mendation that he be given a
life term.

tbe ju stice s overturned
McKennon'* sentence for a
similar reason, saying the
Jury bad recommended a life
sentence, and the trial court
only found one aggravating
factor and circumstance to
warrant a death sentence.
Buford received two death
sentences, one tor the murder
of M ia Wright, end the other
for sexually assaulting her.
The Justices vacated the
death sentence for the sexual
assault, but Imposed a lift
sentence for the d im e .

FROM l l $ f r V f 3 ^ Y ¥ B $ ^ f i U N D A Y .
10 mini*** from anrwhara in Florida
I&gt;tALKD D’ RWT*

tax n a included

B c o to n
C h ic a g o

$ 2 .7 2

D enver

$ 2 .7 2

K a n s a s C ity
S e a t t le
Lo e A n g e le s
N e w Yo rk
N e w O r le a n s

$ 2 .7 2
* 2 .6 4
$ 2 .6 4
$ 2 .7 2
$ 5 :6 5 "

Lang distanc&amp;Ybu can reach out
for alot less than you think.
You can reac h out with other low ra te s after 5PM weekdays.
Weekend ra te s also apply any night between 11 PM and 8 AM.
Get the e x tra convenience of your own personal Bell System
Credit Card. Call (toll free) 1-800-241-6360. In Georgia, call
1-800-282-6279.

Southern
Beil
'*
/ •

v

- -• « - gpmwk'wfe1
’

-&gt; &gt; .-W»W'W-&gt;•»»•*—*»»«■

;

$ 2 .7 2

r

**

i

a-

**'«( •* ' i .-**■£»i&gt;» • -

-S - T

»•&gt;wV »■

�Evening H e r a ld

SnuD-town politics Is always fun. No sooner is
ant election over than rumors start to fly about
who's going to run against who nest time; or,
who's in line tor commissioner fUngwhistk’i
seat who Is giving up the Job for some
bureaucratic cakewalk In Pago Pago, or some
such nonsense.

&lt;uiPi a n n i
MO N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 33771
Area Code 305-322-2611 of *31-9993
Friday, July 14, 1981— 4A

When you hear such wild speculation « see
some Juicy bit of scuttlebutt run up the flagpole,
you might best salute. Believe it or not, the
rumor mill is often a pretty good gauge of tart
when It comes to such matters.

Wayn* D. Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Olractor
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, M B ; 6 Month!, 124.00;
Year, 143 00. By Mail: Week, $1.33; Month, $3.23; 6 Months.
ttioO ; Year. 137.00.

Mr.
WattAnd
The Whooper
Interior Secretary James Walt may wish he had
never heard of whooping cranes. Me has contrived
to suggest indifference to the most endangered
species of all. the very symbol of the wilderness.
But his problem with the giant whooping crane is
also symptomatic of a good many other problems
that he cannot shrug off.
The controversy began with a letter to Texas
Gov. William E. Clements Jr., in response to a
■cquest that Texas be allowed to take control of
he Matagorda Island wildlife refuge. Mr. Wall
■x pressed his inclination
to
transfer
nanagement responsibilities to the states where
xjssiblc,” but added that matters of policy and
aw ... must be reviewed before I can make this
rommitment." It was, on balance, an unexreptionable statement, in line with previous
while positions.
1 Hut Matagorda Island is not jast any odd-lot
jarcel of federal land. The 50,000 acre island is
&gt;art of the Arkansas National Wildlife Itcfuge,
vherc the whooping crane winters. TTie nearly■xtinct bird has increased in population from 15 to
r8 in the past four decades. The notion of turning it
iver to Texas, perhaps for recreational" pur­
poses, was enough to make environmentalists
Fhuddcr as they contemplated hunters and off­
load vehicles tearing through the marshlands.
At issue Is 19,000 acres of upland and beach,
vhich not long ago were used by the U S. Air
’’orcc as a bombing range. ( In 1974, the Air Force
igreed to halt bombing while the cranes were
here, and a year later sold it as surplas.) The rest
s owned by Mr. Toddie L. Wynne, who has a
rattle ranch on the island.
Conservationists fear that increased public
iccess to the beaches would upset consistent
nanagement of the island. They tend not to op» s c stale control in principle, but point out that
date policies may shift as governments shift.
' In the case of the whooping crane — and the sea
Jurtles and peregrine falcons found in the beach
Region — they believe the risk of transfer is too
treat. We share their concern. Nothing now
orbids bonters from exploring the 30-mlle-long
stand. Nothing keeps out the limited number of
lunters and fishers who enjoy it. Hut neither
ihould wider access be encouraged — that is the
rrux of the issue.
Mr. Walt of course has not yet agreed to tran­
sfer. He told the Star's l,ancc Gay the other day
hat he was in fact interested in protecting the
Tone's habitat and was getting cream ed on this
&gt;ccausc of a misunderstanding." But the question
» not resolved, and suspicions linger — in large
part because of public perceptions of Mr. Watt
himself.
It may not be fair to Mr. Watt to have his every
word pounced upon, but no interior secretary in
memory has uroused such fear and loathing
among conservationists, who see him as an arch­
enemy of nature. One group uses his picture to
rnlsc money, Mr. Walt claims not to worry about
that, and says he is amused” by the views of the
politically con servative N ational W ildlife
Federation, which this week called for his firing.
Hut he cannot continue to ignore such reactions,
for in time they may make it as difficult to Im­
plement sensible policies as bad ones. Mr. Watt
must know that if he hadn't alarmed so many
environmentalists, his good neighbor" policy,
announced some months ago, might have
proceeded routinely, with any number of federal
holdings turned over to the states, which in many
cases ought not to be denied stewardship. His
insensitivity to this constituency may amuse him,
ami may at times amuse the rest of us, but his
con fron tation ” with the w hooping crane
•tuggcsls how it may go too far.
. peter DeVries once suggested that the world
may be divided between those who take their
coffee with meals and those who drink it aftorwards. It might similarly be divided between
file rs and snowmobilers, canoers and speed­
boats, hikers and Irailbikers. For better or worse,
Mr. Watt has identified hjmself with the latter
category. If he is unable at least to stand neutral
in that almost theological division, his problems
alt* hound to Increase.

BERRYS WORLD

* * cTo0
By BRITT SMITH

Far instance, weeks before Wayne Epps was
chosen to succeed William "Bud" layer as
principal ot Seminole High School, the grapevine
had Epps all set to take over. Now that he has
been named, many people consider his ascension
several months overdue.
The rrssonlng went like this:
When Don Reynolds, former Seminole High

&amp;

"The New Right Taberrude Choir wants to run
along side and sing Happy Trails To You.'"

•9

■we v- f

The committee had 14 candidates in mind —
Don Johnston, assistant principal at O oom s
High School, and Ray Gaines, assistant principal
at I.ake Howell High, among others. Jim
Stanley, assistant principal st Lake Brantley
High School, also was mentioned, but Insiders

"There's no truth to it,” Polk assured me.
" I ’m definitely going to run If the good Lord’s
willing and the cTeek don't rise.”
Doesn’t leave much room for equivocation,
does It?
The problem may huve started last year wtien
Polk noted to several people that at the end of his
present term — Jan. 1983 — he would have
enough years In law enforcement to qualify for
slato retirement But that doesn't mean he's
going to retire, Just that he could If he wanted to.
"A nd," Polk emphasires, "I don’t want to."

DON GRAFF

It's The
Silly
Season

Talk Of
Nuclear
Energy
WASHINGTON - All across the nation,
from the rock-bound coast of the Pacific
Northwest to the rolling hills of the Tennessee
Valley, the nuclear power Industry Is fsdng a
financial crisis of unprecedented proportions.
The energy technology once promoted as
possessing the potential to generate elec­
tricity at a price "too cheap to meter" now Is
fsdng construction cost overruns totalling
lens of billions of dollars
In addition, nuclear-powered generating
stations have lost the clear competitive edge
they once enjoyed over coal-fired power
plants as the most economics) source of
electricity.
The significance of those little-noticed
developments Ues In the fart that economy
long has been a com en tone of the nuclear
power industry's claim to providing the fuel
of choice for the 31st century.
In the Pacific Northwest, soaring con­
struction costs have forced the Washington
Public Power Supply System to dramatically
curtail Its schedule for one of the country's
most ambitious programs of nuclear power
plant construction.
WPPSS
originally
planned
to
simultaneously build five nuclear units, three
st the Hanford Nuclear Reservation near the
community of Richland In south-central
Washington and two outside Sitsop, s town
Just south of the Olympic Peninsula In eastcentral Washington.
The total cost of the project, projected to be
It I billion tn 1970, now ia estimated to be S23.9
billion. To finance those overruns, WPPSS
has been issuing an average of 1203 million
worth of new construction bonds every 90
days.
WPPSS recently placed u 3- to 11-month
moratorium on construction of two of the
nuclear plants. Even when they art com­
pleted, the coat of electricity from- those
stations Is expected to be 20 to 30 times higher
than the hydroelectric power from dams on
the Columbia River.
The Tennessee Valley Authority, which
plans to build more nuclear power plants than
any other utility In the nation, announced last
autumn that completion of 10 generating units
would cost as much as 131.6 billion — almost
twice as much as the llt.7 billion estimate
offered by TV A leas than one year earlier.
Completion ot construction of four of those
units has been postponed until the mid-1990s
and a TV A spokesman says "there Is always a
chance that we might not build the deferred
units."
Typical of TVA'a rapidly escalating costs
for nuclear plants are the two-unit Sequoyah
tsciUty northeast of Chattanooga and the
four-unit llarUville station northeast ol Nash­
ville.
Sequoyah's price has soared from a 1978
estimate of $337 million to a maximum ot H I
billion. The projected cost of HartsvtUe now
stands at more than $12 billion, almost nine
times the original estimate.
The Department of Energy estimates that
the cost of generating electricity In 1979, the
most recent year for which figures are
available, was 2.07 cents per kilowatt-hour (or
nuclear-powered plants compared with 3.34
cents per kwh for coat-fired stations.
But even that price advantage Is challenged
In an analysis recently prepared by Komanoff
Energy Associates, a New York consulting
firm, and the Environmental Action Foun­
ds lion, a Washington public Interest group.

Who’s afraid of Granma?
Ask die United Slates Treasury, which is
making it exceedingly difficult for It — not
h e r - to get Into the country.
Granma is a publication of Cuba's Com­
munist regime, one of several that the
Treasury has decided in a recent in­
terpretation of an antique law concerning
trade with actual or potential enemies may be
brought Into the United States only under
special conditions.
Granma from all reports is an exercise In
obvious propaganda lacking significant
redeeming social value far a sophisticated
readership , even Cuban.
It is, however, of interest to studenU of
Cuban Communist affairs, numbers of whom
In the United States have been receiving
subscriptions routed through Canada, since
there are no direct mail or other trade links
with Cuba.
Moat of them no longer. The Treasury Is
stopping Granma and family at the border
except foe subscribers who apply for and are
granted a special Import license from the
Office of Foreign A w l * Control

BUSINESS WORLD

Computers Come To TV
NEW YORK ( UPI |— Children's Television
W orkshop, the company that brought
"Sesam e Street" and Its Muppets Into vir­
tually every home teaching children en­
tertainingly via television, Is tackling com ­
puters with the same goaL
CTW Is Joining with Apple Computer Co., to
introduce this fall a series of games — tn color
and mostly with sound effects — designed to
entertain and at thi same lime acquaint
young users with ihe computer and its
caps btltties
CTW designed the game software. Apple, a
pioneer In small personal computers based In
Cupertino, Calif., wUI handle promotion and
advertising and market the first 10 programs
through Its direct mall catalogue and ita
network of more than 1,000 computer retail
stores. Discs containing (our programs wtU
sell far 130.
Joan Ginx Cooney, CTW president, called
the move "our first step Into electronic publi­
shing, a field tn wtdeh we see the potential for
one day having as much Impart on the In­
formal education of children at CTW's TV
series have had on broadcast Instruction."
There are 330,000 Apple computers tn use
which can use the programs — 10-20 percent
In homes, 13-20 percent in schools and the real
In offices, according to Apple spokesman
Fred Hoar.
"W e see these computers s i forerunners of
the dty when there will be two-way television
communication st home," CTW executive
vice president Paul B. Flrstenberg told UPI.
"M oreover,'' Flrstenberg added, "there is
■ growing Interest In software tn the com­
puter Industry. Now that the hardware has
been devised, the focus Is on what uses the
computer can be put to. Ihe fart that
programs are available that can provide fun
games for kids will be a factor in parents’
buying home computers."
Flrstenberg said the market for this kind of
new software la unpredictable "because while
we know there are to many computer sets out

there, the number being bought every day
keeps changing. This la a kind of market
teat."
Flrstenberg said Ihe programs Initially will
be aimed at the home market although CTW
is developing marketing programs to in­
troduce the products into the school system,
offering teachers additional materials along
with the games. "That's probably some
months away," he said.
Mike Cane. Apple's director of p e ro ra l
computer systems, said CTW adapted the
programs from a group of nearly 30 games It
developed and tested over the past year at
"Sesame Place," a new participatory play
park It helped found near Philadelphia.
"The programs have been thoroughly
researched and their appeal has been proven
... making them dearly superior to other
home-and schooltargeted software," Cane
said.
Each of the five discs available Is aimed at
a specific age group ranging (ra n pre­
schoolers to teenagers with some designed for
the whole family. Entertaining games art
presented with colorful graphics and humor
to develop everything from motor skills to
vocabulary to reading, math and logic ability.
One game, a vocabulary builder called
“ Raise the Flag," Is designed for spellers age
six and up. The participant tries to guess a
word by discovering its letters ora at a time.
Every correct guess causes an onscreen
cartoon character to raise the right letters on
his flagpole with fanfare and flourtsh. It also
signals an error.
"These games are not designed to be
educational In and of themselves," Flr­
stenberg said. "They are entertaining, non­
violent, age-specific, and some educational
principles are Involved. But basically they
are designed to be fun and to I n c h kids how to
work with a computer."

Really no big deal In Itself. But It smacks o!
requiring Individuals to register as redpents
of material Judged suspect by some
bureaucratic Big Brother. And It recalls the
situation of not too many years back when
Importation of p o llca lly black-listed
publications was banned wholesale, recipient
scholars and scholarly Institutions were very
likely to find themselves on ora list or another
and malt was being Intercepted and opened.
The Treasury's ban on Granma might be
dismissed as silly were It not for this
background. When it com es to attempts st
this sort of Inept, denighted thought ccntrol in
a country that stiU presumes to lake some
pride In being an essentially open society,
once ihould have been much more than
enough.
Shopping around for something different to
give that certain som eone who his
everything? Something REALLY different?
You could do worse than look Into (but
carefully, VERY carefully) the 006 Tricnlc
Briefesse.
This model, u recently advertised In the
Wall Street Journal, has several unusual
features not available tn the familiar no-frills
clutched by most businessmen. For­
es*
tunalely, from the sounds of it, for the rest of
the rush-hour crowd.
To start with, the 008 has a bulletproof
exteritr, which might or might not be in
advantage In a crowded bus or subway. But
then. It must be assxuncd that 008 owners have
other means of transportation, including
quite possibly armored vans.
Inside that exterior are:
— A device for detecting explosive vapors.
— Another capable of emitting a highpowered beam to blind and stun attackers
temporarily.
— A miniature lie detector.
— A signal light that reacts to a bug or tape
recorder In the vicinity.
— A screaming siren automatically ac­
tivated If the case should be seized.
— An electronic transmitter that can track
the location of the owner. ( Possibly Included
at the Insistence o f executive wives?)
— And for all we know more, much more.
But that's certainly enough to get the
picture of the perfect gift for the executive
who has everything — especially enemies.

JACK ANDERSON

NSA Has Tough Job Destroying Trash
sslsdcs: from zpy snUUit^ ~~ decoding

ft

When Layer announced tome months ago that
he planned to retire at the end of July, Epps was
considered a shoo-in for the top spot even though
a committee wasn't formed to look for a suc­
cessor until last week.

say he was dismissed as too good a guy tor a job
that on occasion requires a talent for political
maneuvering and Orwellian Doublespeak.
Obviously, tn this case, the grapevine turned
out to be right on target. Tis not always so,
however. Sheriff John Polk, for example. Is even
now trying to stomp out a bit of gossip he may
have Inadvertently started himself; namely,
that he will not run for re-election In 19*4.

ROBERT WALTERS

WASHINGTON - Of all the husbhuah
government agencies In Washington, the
National Security Agency keeps the lowest
profile. It handles such unglsnurws but
supersensttlvi Jobs as Interpreting Iran-

K

principal, left the post to take over the top spot st
the new Lake Mary High, It was generally
assumed that Epps, who had been at Seminole
for quite awhile, would soon be propping his
brogues up on Reynolds' old desk.
But when 1-aytr lost to Bob Hughes in the race
for county school superintendent, and the school
board subsequently refused to create an
assistant superintendent position for Layer, the
only Job open was the one at Seminole High

intercepted foreign communications.
Practically everything done at the NSA Is
secret, and that’s the problem: Every day Ihe
agency produces great piles — drifts —
veritable mountains of confidential, secret
ind top secret trash. NSA officials put the
figure at “ aevtral tons" a day.
How to get rid of It? Obvtmisly, the NSA
can't simply pile its used secrets out an Ihe
sidewalk for ihe nest trash pickup. The
Russians — or one of my reporter! - might
go rummaging through the stuff.
The NSA has Ita own disposal process —
which Is a tightly guarded secret, of count.
All that's known Is that there ire only a few
“ destruction officers" for the entire agency,

,

and according to a Defense Department audit
report they can't keep up with (he output of
secret documents by Ihe real of the NSA staff.
So NSA poofabahs put out calls for volun­
teer!. One appeal seems to have been
decepUrtly worded, like a piatccr. sergeant's
call for volunteers with driver's licensee when
wheelbarrow pushers are needed. At any
rate, the Pentagon audit found, " a p ­
proximately 900 people responded, bat only
300 actually volunteered a x e they were
aware of the nature of the work to be per­
form ed."
Even with the lure of time-and-a-half
overtime pay, the destruction work was
evidently so grubby that the volunteers soon
lost their stomach (or It. "After working ora
tim e," the audit re perled. "people asked to
have their names withdrawn or raver
returned to the work."
Not surprisingly, some of thoet who did
■tick It out were in the better-paying grades.

Same of the volunteers were employees with
annual salaries ol more than 00,000 — which
meant that the agency was paying aa much as
113.83 an hour for Its overtime document
This tethered 2 s Pentagon a u d ta e , whs
suggested that the NSA’s overtime costs
could be trimmed by at least 04,000 a jrter by
using lower-salaried employees to collect and
destroy the classified trash, and another
02,000 by assigning lower grades to oversee
the process.
The NSA did not challenge the validity of
the auditors' conclusions. But agency officials
did point out b a t It wasn’t always possible to
persuade lower-paid employees to volunteer
for the trash disposal chore.
Meanwhile, an NSA official told my
associate Luxtte Lagnado, 2 m agency has
been testing s new method of document
destruction, which should eliminate the need
for the reluctant volunteers.

• **,**,*,, ,, -eft

X
g t O ,-

;• r;_

"Wa are In the final testing stages," It
official u id . True to the NSA'* secretlx
tradition, the official declined to describe 2
“ raw" process In any detail. It La, she said,
"recycling defiber" system — In other word
s psper riarddsr.
BUBBLY TROUBLE? - At least 30 co
sumer products have been (lagged as poesib
canctr-cbuslng agents by governmei
agencies. They Include everything from son
hair dyes and bacon preservative to u
charin, cigarettes and certain types of boa

Now there is disputed evidence thit
chemical used to make plastic soft drir
bottles can cause cancer. The compound I
question Is dimethyl terepthalata, or DMT.
is the basic Ingredient of plastic pop bottle
polyester fabric and other synthetic era
pounds.

�OURSELVES
Evening Here Id, Sinlord. FI.

Friday, July II, IM l-JA

Gardening

Trapping Best M ethod To Destroy M oles
Tom

These are some questions recently
isked by homeowners. I hope the an­
swers will help other county residents
who m ay be esperiencing similar
problems.

other areas.
T rappin g generally is the most
satisfactory method o( destroying moles.
However, the results are likely to be
disappointing unless the trapper con­
siders and understands the habits and
Q. How do I go about controlling moles instincts of the animals. The mole is very
suspicious of any foreign object in its
in my yard!
runway. If any portion of the trap is
A. Moles require a large volume of exposed in the tunnel opening the mole
food, often as much as would equal their will tunnel around or under the trap. On
own body weight, per day. Because of the other hand, the mole is not at all
this it is impossible to reduce the amount disturbed by soil blocking the runway,
of Insects in the soil by spraying with a since it encounters this situation
lawn insecticide as recommended on the regularly when people or animals step on
label, and force the moles to move to the burrow and dose it.

regularly. An easy way to locale one is to
block by caving in short sections of all
visible runways and then check each day
to see which arc reopened.

Davis
I'rban
Horticulturist
JH -EJ3

Taking advantage of this fact is one of
the Important secrets of successful m ole
trapping. The two most successful types
of traps are the choker tjpe and the
harpoon type. To set these successfully
you must find a runway that is used

Carefully remove the soil to the depth
of the bottom of the mole runway. You
can now position the harpoon trap so it
will straddle the runway and leave the
trigger pan about 1 Inch above the top of
tire runway. Be sure that none of the
metal parts arc exposed to the runway
and the trigger pan Is positioned diredly
over the runway. Use a trowel to replace
the soil and carefully compact I t if the
mole la not caught after two days, reset

trap in another runway.
Q Can you please tell me about spider
mites and their control?
A. Yes. Infestations of spider mites are
a common occurrence in ornamentals.
Frequently homeowners fail to recognire
the problem until the mite population is
extremely high and severe damage has
occured. One of the greatest aids in ef­
fective mite control is to commence
treatment before the mite population
develops very heavy.
Learn to
recognlie the mites and their injury.
Miles are much easier to see wHh a
magnifying glass. Plants should be

Grandparents Unforgiving

Miss Walker,
K.T. King
Repeat Vows

Over Couple's Lifestyle
By ABIGAIL VAN BUKEN
DEAR ABBY: Our 25-year-old daughter is living with her
fiance. They consider themselves committed to each other in a
mature, lovtng relationship. They are both in satisfying work
situations, but neither of them wishes to marry at this time.
Although my wife and I were not happy when our daughter
and her fiance chose that kind of lifestyle, we trust their
maturity and Judgment. Her grandparents, on the other hand,
are shocked and totally unforgiving. Their relationship with
her formerly was excellent, but they new feel that she Is living
a sinful, immoral life and they make no distinction between
her lifestyle and that of a young woman who sleeps around
with several partners.
Our daughter has written them several long, affectionate
letters explaining her values and feelings, but to no avail.
What would your advice be to the grandparents? And how
would you advise the granddaughter? Is it possible to bridge
the double generation gap?
NEW YORK
DEAR NEW YORK: Since the grandparents consider their
granddaughter’s lifestyle si sinful, I would advise them to
“ hate the sin, but love the slnaer."
And I would advise the granddaughter to keep trying to
persuade her grandparents to respect her right to make her
own decisions and to trust her Judgment.
DEAR ABBY: I have several children, and over the years I
have bought lovely shower and wedding gifts for all their
friends. 1 have given expensive parties at well, and I laler sent
them baby gifts. All this 1 was happy to do, but now many of
their d o se friends are divorced and 1 am receiving invitations
to their second weddings!
How do you suggest I handle these? Abby, please tell people
that it Is not proper to send Invitations to second weddings.
HAD r r WITH
SECOND
TIMERS
DEAR HAD IT; U Is not "improper" to send an invitation,
providing Ihe Invitation Is sincere.
What you want to do about It Is up to you. You obv lously feel

prmurrd to send a gltl because you received an invitation.
Since you’ ve had II with secondtlm rn, send your regrets and
best withes.
DEAR ABUY: I am a widow, 74, and my boyfriend is 67 and
single. We both live in a nursing center — that's where we fell
in love. We want to get married, but my boyfriend is on welfare
and I understand Dint If I marry him, he will be taken off
welfare and I will have to support him. I have some money, but
I would rather not support him If 1 don’ t have to,
My children tell us to forget about marriage and Just con­
tinue to be sweethearts like we have been doing. 1 have nothing
against this, but I would prefer to get married unless, of
course. It means supporting him. Please advise.
IN LOVEATI.AST
DEAR IN LOVE: Each stale has Its own laws conrentliig
welfare recipient!. However, In most states a person is not
eligible lor welfare II a spouse Is able to provide support.
Inquire at your local wrllare department, and lind out II this
■ppllcs to you.
DEAR ABBY: Sharp as you usually are, it’a apparent that
you were never a "second w ile." That woman who refuses to
attend family gathering* with her huaband’a ex-wlle doesn’t
have a problem. She'* normal. No woman want* to socialize
with her husband's first wife who’ s been part of his family for
years and probably worked hard at getting diem to like her.
The tn-laws should be more sensitive and entertain each wife
separately.
SECOND WIFE
DEAR SECOND: You re right, ol course, and many renders
wrote to point It out. Scores Readers, 190; Abby, ».

M U . A N D M R S . K K N N K T I I T E R R Y K IN fi

Poison
Stickers
Available

CALENDAR
FRIDAY, JULY II
Tang lew ood AA, closed, 1 p.m., St. Richards Church,
la k e Howell Road.
lam gw ood AA. closed, I p.m., Rolling Hills Moravian
Church, State Road AM.

’ ’ O fficer
Ugg
Poison
Control" is an ongoing project
ol the Sanford-Semlnole
Jaycecttes. Four day care
centers in Sanlord were
recently visited by Officer
Ugg and the Jayceettei.
Children
were
given
stickers bearing a likeness of
O flicer Ugg which is a
poisonous "no-no.”
These stickers to label
poisons are available at the
Sanford offices ol Dr. Vann
Parker and Dr. Marttia
Pastis.
Suppllei
are
limited.
Contact Orlando Regional
M edical Center, Orlando
32606, or Nancy Kyle, 323-6936.
Sanford.

SATURDAY, JULY »
Affinity Singles (11 und over) dance contest and
party, 8:30 p.m., El Greco Studios, 3X30-A Edgewater
Drive, Orlando.
SUNDAY, JULY M
Ballroom and round dancing, 6 p.m., Temple
Shalom, Providence and Elkcam Boulevards, Deltona.
Seminole AA, 1 p.m., open. Crossroads, M l lake
Minnie Drive, Sanford.
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p.m., Florida Power and
Light, Sanford.
"Young-aF Heart" dance, 8 p,m „ DeBary Com­
munity Center, Shell Road, DeBary. Instruction, 7:30
p.m.. Open to public.
MONDAY, JULY 27
Deltona Public Library Summer Program, 10 a.m.,
1691 Providence Boulevard, children 6-12 years.
"M essages by Hand end Sign language."

Feel B e t te r ...
Sleep B elte r. . ,

TUESDAY, JULY H
Seminole AA, 8 p.m., open discussion, 591 la k e
Minnie Drive, Crossrosds, Sanford.
Winter Springs Sertoma, 7:30 n.m., Big Cypress,
laogw ood Rotary Huh, 7:30 p jn ., Long wood Village

In A ir C o n dillon td
C o m lo rt —

Seminole AA. t p.m., open discussion, 591 la k e
Minnie Drive, Crossroads, Sanford.
TOPS Chapter STS, 7 p m ., First United Methndlm
Summ it

Help
without
Hassle

Casselberry.
, „
Overeaten Anonymous, 7:30 p m ., Florida Power k
Light, Sanford.
Sound- ol-Sunshine Chapter Sweet Adelines, I pm .,
St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, Bear la k e Road.

TV SlRVtCE
UK

O' IN rtl

1

UuHrl

(305)323-7885
SIKV lM i

Qronge - S*rrv*J*__l/bAmm Courier*

B U Y ON O U R
REN TA L PLA N
• D E L IV E R Y
• SE R V IC E
•PARTS
• LABOR

YOU'VE GOT CREDIT WITH USI

NO ONE REFUSED!
Coll Today &lt; Enjoy Today
s ic u a ir v

d ep o sits

N O DOW N PAYM EN T

T

'TEENHOTLim
m

(Ml

ARRIVEAil
m subhwi

T O N Y
A

/'

644-2027
-* 0 »m

m n,

R U fS I

IN S U R A N C I

I

322*0263

BOAT IN SU RAN CE

*• wr§• tr •

S anlo rd

D O N 'T G A M B L E
with your Im urancel
-C A L l-

WEDNESDAY, JULY 19

1-r *4

'-■S

No. 7 Likeview Plan — HI CemmtrctalStr
Sanford. Florida 11771

“ F LORI O A *

C A llM I L L E R S
PH. 111)111 1

Forest Cttv.

Sanford-Breakfast Rotary Club, 7 n.m., Sanford

E L E C T R 0 /V /C

RlHIAl l SAUS CO.

P h 111 I U )
J007 S a n lo rd Ave

FOR TJtE BEST

Apts.,

Airport restaurant.
Oviedo Rotary, 7:30 a.m., Ihe Town House
Restaurant.
Sanford Klwanis, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Optimist, noon, Holiday Inn.

a sa K s ss e ®

| A / n / f P LU M B IN G i
V V U I I H E A T IN G INC.

Glgi Dunn f Officer Ugg) and Nancy Kyletell kids about poisons.

7 p.m .,

A n aquemarine cryitel found in B fit il weighed 243 poundi.

no

W e a lh u rtro n Central
A ir C o n ditio ning System

Church, Sanford.
Sanford Lions Club, noon. Holliday Inn on la k e

Church, Sanford.
Weight Watchers,

Vanessa Ann Walker and Kenneth Terry King were
married July 4, at 6 p in. at Zion Rope Missionary Baptist
Church, Saninrd. The Rev, Robert Doctor performed the
candlelight and double ring ceremony.
The bride is die daughter o( Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
I jw son , 2361 Dollarway Ave., Sanford, The bridegroom is
the son ol Mr. and Mrs. Willie II. King, Sr. 141 Bethune
Circle, Sanford.
Given in marriage by Eddie lawson, die bride chose lor
her vows a formal gown of white Alencon lace over bridal
satin fashioned with a detachable Alencon lace Cathedral
train. A cap trimmed in Alencon lace flowers secured her
veil of illusion. Site carried a nosegay of y ellow roses and
white carnations.
Sheila King Prather attended tier sister-in-law as
matron of honor. She wore a peach colored Qtana knit
gown with u printed chiffon cape. She carried a bouquet of
daisies and baby's breath with yellow streamers
Bridesmaids were Shanda Byrd, Ukraine llollaway,
sister of the bride, Marie Harper and Bertha Gordon.
They wore identical gowns to the matron ol honor and
carried peach colored floral Ians.
Craig Brown served the bridegroom as beat man
Groomsmen were Keith Walker, brother ot the bride,
Ricky Wilkins, Willie King Jr., brother of the groom and
Dmald McCoy. Ushers were Trscy Cashe, Joe King,
cousin of the groom snd Kenneth Brown.
laitauslia Holloway, niece ol the bride, Nieote Thomas
and Tlieresa Jones were flower girls. Marcus S. Lyons
was ring bearer.
Alter Hie wedding reception at the Sanford Garden
Club, the couple left on a wedding trip to Ft. Stewart, Ga.
The bride is employed as a teller at the Atlantic Bank ol
Florida. The grown Is presently serving In the United
Stales Army. - MARVA HAWKINS

N O O IM M IC K I — NO C l i o IT C H I C K

Inn.
TOPS Chapter 376, 7 p.m , First United Methodist

Monroe.

examined frequently and treated
promptly when an infestation appears.
Some of the plants most commonly at­
tacked by spider mites include roses,
marigolds, tomatoes, beans, pyracantha
and crotons. The presence of mites Is
indicated by fine webs around the plant
and a scorched appearance. Mites are
most prevalent during hot, dry weather.
There ire several different mitlrides
on the market Sometimes continued use
of one mitlcide over a period of time will
result in a poor kill. This Is because miles
will build up a resistance to a particular
chemical. A couple of the recommended
mitlrides include Kelthane and Tedion.

J|i

"•«** ■a

*»*, •**# ft '"V- » «* *#*

A N V V ID E O C A S IS T T * R E C O R D * * , H O M S IN T I I T A I N M I N T C I N T I a . CO N SOLS S T E R IO .
S T I a l O SY S TE M . P O R T A S L E T V , C O N S O L E TV ,
A N D R E M O T E C O N T IO L TV i P R O M O U R CO M
P L B T E S E L E C T IO N j j g . a i m y
products

�SPORTS
F rid a y , July 24, 1111

4A— E vtn ln g Hsfstd, Sanford, Ft.

iors Need 3 Victories

Gammons Saves Wood
No-Hitter A s Oviedo
Grabs District Title

Braden Buries Beach
Chad Braden pitched a complete game
victory (or the Sanlord All-Stars Thur­
sday night to keep the local team alive In
lh«j Florida Junior Major 1-ea^ue District
I Tournament.
Sanford stunned New Smyrna Beach
15-4 to advance into the losers' bracket
finals tonight.
Thursday's second name, between
Ormond Beach and Port Orange, was
ruined out and will be played at 6 p.rn.
tonight. The loser of that 8 p.m. game will
play Sanford at 8 p.m. The tournament Is
being played at Chase Park on Celery
Avenue in Sanford.
The complete game by Braden meant
Sanford was able to advance one game
farther in the tournament without using
one of its top three hurlers. Braden
struck out nine and walked just four,
while allowing eight hits.
Braden also helped his own cause at
the plate, slapping a pair of singles and
scoring three runs. One of the hiis drove
in two runs during a seven-run outburst
in the third inning.
Bruce Franklin had three hits (or
Sanford and Donald Grayson slapped a
pair of singles.
Sanford picked up two runs on just one
hit In the top of the first Inning. Kevin
Smith walked with one out and stole
second and third before L,rry Thomas
walked. Thom as stole second and
Grayson beat out an Infield single to
score Smith. Grayson stole second and
then advanced to (hint as Thomas was
lagged out at the plate while trying to
score on u passed ball. Grayson scored
Ihe second run of the inning on a wild
pitch. William Carr also walked, but was
picked off after stealing second.
Ixe Frederick doubled with one out in
Ihe second Inning and stole third before
Franklin scored him with a IwcmjuI in­
field hit.
Braden gave up a leadoff single In the
firpt and back-to-back two-oul singles in
the second, but managed to work out of
the Jam each time.
fn the top of live third, Sanford ex­
ploded for seven runs on four hits.
Grayson opened the inning with ■ single

and Carr was hit by a pitch before they
pulled off a double steal Glen Undress
walked to load the bases before
Frederlck hit a sacrifice fly to left field to
score Grayson and advance the other two
runners. Fred Miller popped up to the
second baseman, but Braden singled
down the right field line to score both
runners.
Franklin followed with a single up the
middle. Braden was running to third as
Smith took a fourth ball for a walk, but
the catcher sailed the ball into left fieK
and Braden scored. A wild pitch ad­
vanced the Iwo runners and Thomas
drove them in with a single to left.
Thomas took second on a throw to the
plate, went to third on a wild pitch and
scored when Grayson struck out but
reached first safely because the catcher
could not handle the pitch. Grayson was
later thrown out trying to steal third.
Fired up by the big lead, Braden
retired the tide In order In both the third
and fourth frames, striking out five of the
six batters.

Sanford, stole second and third and
scored on a ground out.
An error extended New Smyrna
Beach's half of the sixth Inning and they
were able to load the bases, but Haggard
popped out to Braden to end the Inning.
The final two Sanford runs came tn the
top of the seventh. Braden singled up the
middle and went to second when
Franklin singled lo center field. Alter
Smith walked, Thomas grounded out b
score Braden. Carr drew a tw»cut walk
to load the bases again and Undress
walked to force In a run.
Braden faced three pinch-hitters tn the
seventh and retired the side tn order,
striking out two of them.

Sanford picked up two more runs in the
top of the fifth. Braden and Franklin
drew consecutive walks after Miller flew
out to open the inning. They both ad­
vanced a base on a balk and Smith drilled
a single lo right-center, scoring Braden.
When the renter fielder hobbled Ihe ball,
Franklin raced home.
All of New Smyrna Beach's runs were
scored In ihe fifth Inning. Donnie Moore
started the inning with an Infield hit and
went to second on a passed ball before
pinch-hit ter Mike Atkins fouled out lo
right fielder Thomas. Pinch-hitler Bryan
Span singled up the middle and went to
second on the throw to the plate. John
Merrick then unloaded a double that was
good for two runs, lie stole second and
scored on a passed lull Alan Huskey
drew a two-out walk and stole second. He
scored when John Haggard was safe in a
throwing error by Franklin al shortstop.
Jim Merrick followed with an Infield hit
and Pat Merrick walked to load the
baars, but Moore grounded out to end the
rally.
Grayson walked to lead off the sixth (or

SANFORD
Al R HBt
Bruce Franklin.*!
4 1 1 1
Aumdra Wilhemi Jtf
0 0 0 0
KevinSmrfh.2b
1z 1 1
0 0 0 0
Prut Harriot)
Larry Thomairf
4 1 1 3
Donald Grayu&gt;n.to u
1 1 I 1
WilliamCarfill
I 10 1
GfenLandretLCf lb
1 10 \
Mike Camefon,
a « o 0
tee ♦redeftCk.C
i i i 1
Fred Miller, lb
40 1 0
Theron Liggonvcf
a o o 0
Chad Braden,p
z &gt;i 7
letalt
16 IS It II
NCWSMYRNA BEACH
AB R MBl
JohnMerrick.7b p lb
1 1) 7
30 0 0
Tony Ptummer.cf p
Alan:Huttity.lt
7 10 0
40 0 0
John Haggard.c
JimMerrick,lb rf
30 1 0
ducky Chamberfain,ph
t 0 9 0
Pat McrriCk.p 7bit
10 0 0
10 0 0
Richard Beauchamp,pn
Donnie Moort. if
J 1 3 0
Gene Varano pn
t 0 0 0
Scoff Merrick.rf
10 1 1
Mike Afkinvph lb
70 0 0
Doug Teeterman,3b
10 0 0
Bryan Span.ph to
7 11 0
M4 1 3
Total*
717 021 3- IS
Sanford
NewSmyrna Beach
000 040 0-4
Game winning RBI - Grayten
E—ErtfAlln Jt Landrett, Haggard. Jim
Merrick LOB Unions7*NtwImynn Beach
9 7b Frederick, John Metrich SB—Franklin.
Sm«th1, Thamti. Gr*yvon 4. Carr 7. Frederick
7, Braden, Jpna Merrick, Minify, SFfredenck HBP—By Pat Merrick ICirr) Bell
John Merrick J WP Braden, PH Merrick,
John Merrick 3, Plummer PB Frederick 7
SANFORD
IP H R IR BB SO
7 1 4 7 1 9
RraUrnlWi
IP H R ER BB SO
NEWSMYRNA
Pel MerrickU*
11 * 9 7 7 t
JohnMerrick
31 7 4 2 S 4
Plummer
f 7 1 7 3 t

H&gt;r«ld Photo, 4, Tom VlROlt

GLEN LANDIt ESS
... Kill single

Dave Wood fired a no-hitter to lift the
Oviedo 13-year-old all-stars to the
District 14 championship, 11-1 over
West Oak Ridge Thursday night at
Eustls, but the young right-hander will
be the first to point a finger toward
center field for partial credit.
Because In center and roaming like a
13-year-old Willie Mays, strong-armed
T erry Gammons threw out three
potential West Oak Bulge base hits all
the way to first base.
Oviedo opens sectional play at Fustis
Monday at 8 p.m. against the District I
winner which comes from the Pen­
sacola area. "We're having all the
games at 8 p.m. to allow the parents
time to get there," said Tournament
Director Don Crawford.
Wood and Gammons along with a 10run fifth inning was the undoing of an
overmatched West Oak Ridge nine.
Wood struck out It batters. He walked
four hitters, but three came in the
seventh Inning when he was tiring.
One of the walks—to Ridge catcher
Mike Green—ending up costing him a
shutout when the speedy Green stole
home on a return throw to Wood with
two outs in the final inning.
But the rest of the ball game belonged
lo Oviedo. Catcher Mark Hofmann
ripped a shot off Ihe left-center field
fence for a double In the second Inning.
Wood sacrificed Holmann to third base
and Royce Moore belted a single for
what proved to be the only run the 1Jons
needed.
Oviedo turned the game Into a rout tn

the fifth Inning by using seven walks, an
error, three hits and a sacrifice fly off
five West Oak Ridge pitchers as losing
manager Jack Collet) tried lo stem the
outburst.
Moore started it with a walk and
Randy Ferguson reached on an error.
Gammons walked and Tuesday's hero
against Altamonte—Craig D uncansingled in the Inning’s first run.
Shortstop Ellis Bell, Jimmy Andrews
and Doug Powell all drew passes to
force home three more runs and a M
advantage. Hofmann and Wood both
walked prior to Bell tallying on a balk
and Wood drew the RBI.
Holmann then scored on a passed ball
after Moore, balling for the second
time, grounded Into a force out.
Ferguson chased home his second run
of the frame with a single to left
center.
Gammons then stroked a base hit to
reload the bases and Duncan plated hls
second RBI with a sacrifice fly for an
11-1 bulge and the eventual final score.
Oviedo sent 15 batters to the plate.
Other Oviedo players seeing action
Thursday night included Jim m y
Munsey, Seth Heine, Eddie Trembley,
Scott Holton and Freddie Hill, who
made a nice toss to Wood to shut off a
runner trying to score on a wild pitch In
the seventh inning. — SAM COOK

« H I

W«tl 0«k Ridft

000 000 0 0 0 1

OvtwM

001 0&lt;1010 X II I I

Winning pitcher -

Tracy 7B

Wood Losing plliJw f —

Hofmann

Stabler Hangs Up Spikes

M lllC t: FRANKLIN
... three hasp hits

SAN A N G K IA Texas (UPI) — Despite
the shocking announcement that quar­
ter liack Kenny Stabler was finished with
football, the Houston Oilers say they are
not In a panic to find a new signal-caller.
Coach Ed Biles said he regretted
Stabler's decision, announced by the
Oilers Thursday, but would not beg him

to change hls mind. Biles also tagged
backup quarterback Gifford Nielsen as
his starter.
“ A player who doesn't have hts heart in
the game is of no use to this football
team. Obviously we haven't dosed the
door on Kenny but we are not going to
actively pursue him ," Biles said-

D eputy Schm it Hangs A p o p ka,

_—
---------—

Altamonte Locks Up Championship
A lta m o n te
l.r a g u e

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n ig h t’ s 11-1 b la s tin g nf A p o p k a
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a n d ou t s c o r e d the

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s tr ik e o u t s a n d a tw o -h itte r.
T u e s d a y . A lt a m o n t e o p e n s the
s r c t io u a l a g a in s t th e D is trict

W

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15,000 Mile Limited Warranty
Super Dura-Tuff

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tro p h y fo llo w in g T h u rsd a y
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I I . J a c k s o n v il le w in n e r ul H
p .m . in t k c o e e . S e e M o n d a y 's
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plus 1.55
By BENTON WOOD
Herald Sports Writer
i the good ole days of the wild west,
i criminal was captured he was
g,
uesday night, Gene Letterio
did ace deputy Mike Schmtl the
t with orders to seek out the bad
s.
'hether or not the Apopka Major
gue All-Stars were crooks was
ide the point. Schmit thought
lelhing was wrung as he tracked
n down with a two-httter for an IIdlamonte execution to cop the
trict 14 title at Ocoee.
.built, who h U u x d a healthy
ball and a sweeping. curve to
ord 18 straight victories this
ion. decided thal Apopka deserved
stiff punishment after a Mike
intan home run in the bottom of
first.
he nghl-hander threw an 0-2 curve
l forgot to swoop, and Uwman hit
to the pond over the left field fence
a quick 1-4 lead.
Die kids didn't seetn lo be
le n d by it," Slierilf Letterio said
le homer, "but that doesn't mean I
n't concerned,"
Iter the aolo blast by Uwman,

Apopka paid the price. Schmit
proceeded to strike out 15 and didn't
allow another ball out of the Infield the
rest of the night.
Altamonte started the lynching with
seven runs In Ihe top of the third.
Number-nine hitter Steve Shakir
dash ed a aolo round tripper off loser
Chris Hooper to lead off the inning.
Four walks and a pair of eiTon by
Uw m an resulted in three more runs
b efore third baseman Anthony
U sxalc doubled to center and Shakar
hit a sacrifice fly for a 7-1 Altamonte
bulge. The winners mobbed II batters
lo the piste In the Inning.
In the fourth, f f i l e rto nj&gt;i«l to plane
Apopka in front of the firing squad.
Jeff McGrath had Ihe first o( three
pinch hits in the Inning with s
backside home run.
Schmit followed with a ground
single lo light and moved to third on a
pair of wild pitches. Two outs later,
letterio called on rifleman Bruce
Csrlson and he shot a pinch single to
right scoring Schmit.
Catcher Dan Beaty kept the rally
alive with a run-scoring single up the
middle before G aiy Nuss came off the
bench (or another base hit to put the
noose around Hooper's neck and give

Altamonte tta final 11-1 spread.
Southpaw Henry Wells quieted the
District champs in the (Inal two and
one-lhird Innings without a run and
Just a double by Carlson.
In the meantime, Schmit was
mowing down Apopka. A harmless
fourth Inning infield hit was the only
other safety he allowed besides the
first Inning homer. That marked the
first run Altamonte had allowed in Its
list four tournament games.
The win pushes Altamonte Into the
sectional next Tuesday to be held at
Ocoee. Thus far in lire five tour­
nament games, l^tterio's crew has
oulscored its opponents 4+-J.
A loss to Apopks Tuesday night
would have forced Altamonte lo face
lawman, who like Schmit, had failed
to lose a game on the mound this year.
"W e faced him and his brother 'Big
Ski' last year in the lop-team tour­
nament,'' Letterio revealed. "We
knew whal he was like, and we didn't
want to see him again."
Carlson supplied two hiti In as
many at bats off the bench for U lterio. I js z a lc and Shakar each drove
In two runs from the eight and nine
slots in the order.

. . J

ALTAMONTE
Saana ctirrio, JO
Jimmy Foa. 1b
Mil MiCaatn.cl
Mika icnmlt, p

• Free Flat Repair
• Free Rotation
• Free Mounting

N » ,iM ,r n t , ri

Sandy Hovit, it
RyanLilla. It
Todd Oaary. II
Bral MarthaO.ti
Srvct Carlton, it
Dan Bra, y. c
Anthony Latialc, lb
Cary Nvtl lb
V n t Ihakar, &lt;1

SIX*

Prico

A78x13
B7B113
070x14
E78x14
F78X14
076x14
070x15
H78x1S
L76X1S

20.99
21.99
24.99
25.99
20.99
27.99
28.99
29.99
31.99

1 FET
1.43
1.65
1.81
2.09
2.19
2.34
2.42
254
2.91

Plus old lira oft ca r

MICHEUN “ X” A “ XZX”
Steel Belted Radlals
Slit
BRTSill
Cftriiu
DB7li14
tart*14
F17lsH
GR7IH4
Hnriiu
GArtitt
Hartsit
jartsii

APOPKA
Mart Qrtana. it
Mika Cowman, tt
Crtg Dykat, It
Da.d Brown, lb
Robbi* Pattin. pn
Mart Mathuin. cl
Gary Mental, tl
Cnr it Hooper, p
t odd iron. ]b
DuaneMa,nerd c
Henry Wetlk. lb
Jonn MeMurrey, lb
A lM m tn lt

*»«»**
E — Cowman

T ir e

Polyester Whitewall

MtMurrii

LOB —

Alt,mom« 4. Ajxjph, ) IB - LHUk,

Carlton HR Lowman. Shakar. McGtotfi
i f - ihakar IB — Sctimlt.
ALTAMONTS
IP M ■ ER I I SO
SClwwttfw I t )
4
Jl I I 11
APOPKA
IP H R (R IB 10
Mooptf
111 I II 4 4 1
wtot
ill I t a o 2
WP — Stltm.t ), Hoop*, 4.

Price FET
Slit
Pri«r FZT1
luiti
u n 241
H.M 111
MsU
UH Ml
eon Ml
tniit
tin 272
BIJB 1.11
1191 M4
mitt
14JB 2BO
u n MO
m en
ittiit
n.n 271
MM 1.21
lUill
44H MS
rtn 100
I1*B Ml
mn&gt;
son 1.10
TBM 102
111/Kill 4IM 1.17
'M b 1.11
m/mn u n 1.77
Plus olC tire oft car

Alto FIU
BIlSsIX
airista
01ISitS
BlltsM
aroiiii
niisis
msits
misif
PZZJitS

We Don't Sell Factory 2nd* or Blemished Tires
7 BIG LOCATION^
2650 S. ORLANDO DR. (17-92) SANFORD 323-6614
N K lt l
Ml M. ORANGE AVI. HHSI
• 4414 t. OEANOB *«■ . IS14444
TNrvI
m s W. COLONIAL OR. W »m
f OM S. oranob SLIM. TB. 4114*11
JM l
HI SBMORAN ILVO. Ill OM
• «*1 S. ibm o r a n blvd . b l o w
Of (N MONDAY THRU SATUIOAV ■ A M. TIL * RJ*.

�I E*tn! g H*r«ld, S*nford. FI.

Minor

Friday, July 14. l»*l —7A

Fires4-Hitter

Ocoee Washes Aw ay
Altamonte Seniors, 6-2
By SAM COOK
Herald Sporti Editor
the rain it Is said falls on the Just and
the unjust accordingly. It U not supposed
to have a preference for whom it dam­
pens when tumbling from God's clouds.
I Thursday night at Fustis' Stewart
Cottrell Field, however, one would have
been hnrdpressed to find any believers In
[Justice among the Altamonte Senior
league all-stars.
Qtoee washed away the last Altamonte
supshine, M for the District H chamIpidnship behind the stellar four-hit, eight
strike-out performance of right-hander
Paul Minor.
Ocoee now advances to Monday's
|sectional also held at Stewart Cottrell
Field at I p.m. Altamonte needed two
Ivictories over the undefeated Ocoee
bunch to wrest the crown
*In a game this Important you
shouldn't have any trouble getting up for
it," said Altamonte Manager Russ
Whittington. "But we Just didn't have It.
|W'e were flat.”
Whether it was flatness, the steady,
[light downpour during the first four In*
iliigs or the dipping curve ball of Minor,
rtiltingloo was right — Altamonte
lidn't have It.
In the first four dampened frames, the
tplors left six runners in scoring
Won as Ocoee molded a S-l advantage
Igalnst right-hander Marty Cofiey.
1 The all-stars, though, did Jump on the
groreboard first when first baseman
Crnli: Bolton slictd a double Into the left
eerier field alley and clean up hitter
Greg Shatto roped a shot through the
middle for a 1-0 lead.
(ie w t roughed up Coffey in Its hall ol
the Inning. Alter Jell Oliver look a called
thttf strike, Gary Jolley and Jeff Morgan
rapped singles.

rocked it to deep left center, chasing
home Jolley and Morgan while the Wuot1 slugger erased Into second.
Haten then moved to third base on a
wild pitch. Third baseman Dave Butler
squeezed a soft grounder Just out of
Shatto's reach at third as Whittington
had his Infield drawn in (or a play at the
plate. Hazen Jogged home (or a 3-1 ad­
vantage.
Coifey turned in a 1-2-3 inning in the
second, but ran into trouble again in the
third. Alter Morgan struck out, Hazen
walked, but Butler popped to Shatto fur
out number two.
A wild pitch sent Hazen to second base
and Minor then slapped a single to right
center to score Hazen for a f-l lead.
Minor went to second on Scott Unterwood's throw to the plate and moments
later barely stole third base. Th&lt; daring
move paid off when Coifey bounced a
curve ball in front of Uie plate which
eluded catcher Rod Metz Jr. and a
gleeful Mtnor waltzed home.
While Ocoee was taking advantage of
every Altrunonte miscue. the Seniors
couldn't capitalize. "We had the guys on
base," moaned Whittington. "We Just
couldn't get the big hit."

First baseman Dean tlaxen then picked
of! a pitch "up" In the strike tone and

It was never more apparent m the
fourth. Alter Coffey fanned, Mark
Cochran and Tony Johnson, who hit a foul
bail home run, both walked. Metz hit a
soft ground to the right side which the
second baseman threw away, loading the
bases.
Whittington then summoned pinch
hitter John Dnnkwater to bat In the still
wet atmosphere (or left fielder Keith
Wallace. Drinkwater, a fitting choice
considering the elements, though, fan­
ned. And when Underwood popped
weakly to short, Altamonte had squan­
der'd its best opportunity.
Altamonte did pick up one more run in

the filth when Bolton backsided a double
to left field, moved to third on a flimsy
throw to the infield and scored when
Shatto ripped a deep fly to left center.
Ocoee touched reliever Cochran for Its
List tally in the sixth when an error by
Shatto opened the door and catcher Steve
Crow singled to right field (or the final 6-2
count.
Coffey whiffed six hitters in his three
innings of work and walked two. He was
touched for four hits. Cochran struck out
three, walked no one and gave up one hit,
Bolton's two doubles paced the
Altamonte attack. Shatto added two RBI,
while Hazen did the same (or Ocoee, who
mustered Just five hits.

R E S IP E

Ceidest
for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual

ALTAMONTE
Scot! Untffrwood, cf
k o tf C g icpl.rf
Cr» g Bolton, IB
Gr«| SKsTlo. 3b
Mar ty Coffey. p 7t»
M ir I C o c M in , It p
Tony Johnson. 2b 1b
Bob Mt»i Jr ,c
Keith Wallace. It
John Dr rk* #!tf ph It
TOTALS
O CO f E
Jeff Oliver, ct
Gary Jolley, It
Jeff M orgen, u
CVenMa/efv tb
Pave Buffer,, lb
Pagl Mmof, p
KyleW M aKer. 2b
jetf Waller. 2b
Sieve Crow, c
Neil Fridge&gt;on. rl
Moger Martin* rf
TOTALS

t I
0 0

A l R M II

) 0 0
1 1 I
1 1
1 I
0 I
2 1
0 0
0 0
0 t
0 0
0
«

0
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
1
0

Altamonte

100 013 0

24I

Ocaet

»2 001 i

A S2

Game winning fiftl - duller
E
W h'lflMf, Jolley, Sbalto LOO
Attamoote 7. Ocoee 3 28
Bolton 2, H aien t
SB
M nor I, SJbaffo. Underwood Sac —
Snath}. Waiter WP
Cotter 1
A LTAM O N TE
IP H H E R BB SO
Coffey fL I
1 4 S S 2 *

Cochran

311001

OCOEE
MrwMWI

IP H R E R f i t SO
2 4 2 1 2 1

Special Edition of the

H e rita g e C O O K B O O K
* THIRD WEEK’S CONTEST *
Recipes for...

VEGETABLES

P la y e r s F a il T o N ib b le A t O w n e r 's La te st Pitch
WASHINGTON ( UPIl - Major-league
players (ailed to nibble Thursday at the
owners' latest pitch to end the 43-day-old
baseball strike and there now appears to
be grave doubt whether a settlement can
be reached in time to salvage the rest of
the IMt season.
After four days of hard negotiations tn
fOuhlzigton, where t-abor Secretary
Raymond Donovan entered the lineup, a
breakdown occurred when the playera

termed inadequate the owners' latest of tiie negotiations "remains lo be seen.
Tlie situation gets more difficult with
proposal on iree-agent compensation.
"We made a drastic proposal Tuesday each passing day."
evening, which was a definite move to
When asked what the chances were of
end the strike," said Doug DeCmces of
the Baltimore Orioles, one of the players' any more baseball being played this
negotiators. "We said, 'It you want to end year, Miller said unhesitatingly: "Very
It, let’s go. II not, then play around.' And bed."
that's w hit happened."
T h ere a p p e a rs to be a v a s t diffe re n ce
Man-in Miller, executive director of of opinion over how much progress was
the Players Association, said the future made at Thursday's meeting.

: i

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

Don’t Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

Diapered Daniel, Whitworth
Share U.S. Open Advantage

wD

LA GRANGE, 111. tUPIl - Beth Daniel was In
diapers when Kathy Whitworth was playing tn her first
U 5. Women's Open, but the two find themselves in a
similar position entering today's second round of golf's
most prestigious event.
Whitworth, representing the old guard, and Daniel, a
symbol o( the new wave of talented young golfers on
the women's tour, share a onestroke lead after each
fired J-under-par 69 Thursday at the 36th Ui . Women's
Open.
^

1st - 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
Weekly winners are eligiblo for the GRAND PRIZE

Lookouts Land O-Twins, 5-1
Southpaw John Bonnett combined with Steve
NorleskJ to limit Orlando to fours hits Thursday night
i s the Chattanooga I-ookouls dropped the Twins, SI
before 403 fans at Tinker Field
Tonight, the O-Twtns open a four-game set with
Charlotte. Ted Krwny will be on the mound for Orlando
looking for his ninth win. Catcher Tim laudner ac­
counted for the only Orlando run Thursday with one of
his two doubles.

NO LIMIT TO NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED
YOU MAY ENTER AS MANY WEEKS AS YOU LIKE
Food Categories Coming Up In The Naxt 7 Wooks Of The Contest:
SALADS &amp; V E G E T A B L E S -C A S S E R O L E S -S E A F O O D
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

Gliders Heads Klngsmlll By I
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (U PI) - Bob Glider was tn
the foot-deep rough at Klngsmlll Golf Course Just
slightly less than anycne else Thursday and ended up
with a one-shot first-round lead In the 1300,000 PGA
tournament, sponsored by Anheuser-Busch Inc.
He had six birdies en route to a J-under-par tt.

So send In that special recipe your family and friends like so well

...It could be a wlnnerl
H tr.14 riMtw l&lt; Mob C o m ,

RULES:

STUART FOR TWO
K v e r g r r e n C h ap el 121'* S lu a r t S m ith a r c h e s a

Steak 'N A le Drubs Rhodes

sh o t o v e r th r top of O v ie d o 's Ito n n ie M u rp h y in

Steak 'N Ale drubbed Rhodes, M and National Paint
whipped Electones. 7*1 Thursday night In Men's softball action at Summerset Park In Casselberry.
In the other game. Pants U.5.A. and Tom-Tin both

S c h o o l. T h e L io n s d r o p p e d S e m in o le , (4I-H3 vvheff

b a s k e t b a ll

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g u a r d R ic h a r d f i r r y 's sh ot a t th r b u z z e r f o r the
C h a p e l (a ile d to g o d o w n .

L ast

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c o n c lu d e s ! th e s u m m e r s e a s o n fo r E v e r g r e e n .

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T Y P E o r PRIN T your recip e giving lull In­
structions for preparation, cooking tim e and
tem perature. (A pp roxim a te num ber o f servin gs
also helpful.)
Anyone can enter except Evening Herald e m ­
ployees and their Im m ediate fam ily

Greyhounds
•J
&gt;

No lim it to num ber of recipev subm itted but each
recipe m u tt Include your nam e, address and

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A -

Mall Entries to: EVENING H ERALD
c-o COOKBOOK

First, Second and Third prizes w ill be aw a rd ed In
each ol Ihe nine food ca tegories. Y ou m ay enter
as m any of the w eekly categories as you like.
A pannl ol three expert Judges will review ell
entries and winners will be notified at the en d of
Ihe contest In Septem ber lor a tesla o f t " to
select the Grand Prize winner D ecision o f the
judges is final.
All recipes received will be pu blished In O ctober
for the Evening H erald's first annual cook book

contest
Or Drop Off At Our O ffice t
100N. FRENCH A V E .

P.O. BOX 1157

(By the lak(front in dow ntow n Sanford)

SANFORD, FLA. 12771

M O N .-FRI. 1:10 5:30 -

DEADLINE FOR

Entries must be postm arked by m idnight

Vegetables &amp; Salads...

SUNDAY, AUGUST 2

— Last Date for BREAD A ROUS...Sunday, July 26 —

l. t lli H**4I« U 11.174W

vv n * *

* t

SAT. 1:10 NOON

‘ ♦ '*'* *»qA«w*

-e or ** w
r w* -el-A ■* + + % *

�a. V

lA -E vtnlw g Herald. Untord, FL

Friday, July 14. H it

REALTY TRANSFERS
L
D a v id W a ttn e r
4
wf
JS* D#v Inc .to G Itn o A Rcppi#
Margaret To Grady M Cook toy 4
&amp; wf Jo#n t to t 31. W«00«*ood
Walter
H
Robmton
jr
.
E
‘
&gt;
of
Lot
T^n.% Vt|l#v ftSi.900
•) 4 N 70- ot E» i of 10. Slavia
Jun# H Gorman to Jottp* W
Colony Co t d. S43.0Q0
Qcan L nf Barbara. LI 4. Bill A .
Dorothy G Howard, tgl lo Toby
S*vttw«t#f C o v t. ftllMOO
F rd f M ock. B i 4SS F P . Lott I 4 2.
A it t K n h &amp; * f taona to jot#
bik
i. Rotabnd H tigh it. S70.000
M«raryla 1 « l M iriam Comm«nr»
Gofhrmg Day to R*c9iard R
300* J L 277* « ot NC cor ot Sac
Motecha k. Un 3A. Tutc any place.
It 31 10 t i c . u to o o
Condo . P h a te ona. Sad.400
(OCOI G tra M D Grtttom. igl
(QCDi Waiter G Suffer 4 wl
to Jootl f* Zytftrvoid 4 Jtanttlt
D Haan, ta itm a n t — Gvf LI }. &gt;n Dont J to Waiter G Sutter. W IS*
ot
Lot 4 4 a il ot S. blk B, L a tt par!
W c 7S 70 It. 1100
Trcp c Mil! i d 7 S3 1 Bag U* of
K aim w Marrah &amp; art Janat to
NW cor at SW'« ot N W « ot Sac
Jarrokl K 0 * oqs 4 «vt B Jana,
IS 30 70 etc 4 LI 17 Bradley t addn
Lot i. iautaiito tec Thraa. U7.000
LW. t l 000
Mooting Author Sant to Willi#
Springwood V ill Apt* Corp to
» Bro«n. Sr , Lott II 4 11, Bit I.
Tad D ou ce, t g l.
un
I73A,
Tiar 14. Sammola Park, ftlf.000
Springwood Village S47.700
Oi«n A mar Momat to David A
Springwood V il Apt Corp to M
Kallam 4 *f Dolortt It . Lot S.
Philip H a rd iso n 4 Solan L
Clutter D . Dear Bun Un 71.
Chalkner.m Jr . Both * g l. U n 177
U J 000
O Springwood Viitaga 1D.000
Charlat A Brookt to Hobart E
(OCDI Ronald E
Smith »o
S»m» 4 Aibarl Daipnia. Lot m
Margaret J Smith, Lot I. Bik B.
Ouaant M irror So rapt addn. CB
Country Club M anor Un t ftlOO
S it .700
M Skewet 4 wf H rtb a I Par i)
Law it Dabavac Sr to Paarl
4 Ronald Skawat 4 wf P a trk ia
D a b a va c,
Lot
t.
Saminola
F . |par III to R Edw ard Cooley.
Bacaw ar. F irtt Addn. tlOO
Trutfaa. P a r i N 144’ of LI 70. etc
Jonn L Bonomo 4 wt Carlana T
blk |4. C r y l t a l L a k e Winter
to Ktnnttti M
Barnar 4 *t
Hornet, par 7. Lot 17 4 E t ’ of 30
C ngarlaa. Lot 71, Appit V ilify .
bik 74. C r y tta t L a k e Wm tar
Un ) t 47.100
Hornet, ft24.100
W ngl.#l&lt;J Dev Co to Alliliatfd
GMR E ntr . Inc to Jamet L
Svc Corp ot W P . Inc , Lot I).
Wilbamt 4 wf G a yl D . Lot t . Blk
W.ngft«ltf P rter va Phata Ona.
H. Co*umbu* Harbor %d. 1*9 *00
D U B
Vernon R Boyd, tg l to Richard
/r nql aid Day to Aftiliated Svc
w ^ duyna. If, SV&gt; ot Lot 111 O P
Corp ot WP Inc , Lot It Wingftrtd
Swope Land Co Plat ot Black
Ratarva Pha»a Ona. U iM O
Hammock ft 17 000
Sam# a t abova. LI 77 Wingfitfd
Burton M Bongard, Trutfaa lo
R a ta rv a P h a ta Ona, 74 79 10,
County ot Sammola Part of S E C 10
447 000
20 10 etc 1100
Ruth I Prlnca, ig l to Stanlay M
F4R Builder* Inc lo Municipal
Sandatvr 4 art Daboran C , Lot 41
contuttantt. m e . Lot 4S. The
Laka ot the tooodi Townthouta.
Vtlia* ot Ca**atbarry. Ph Ona
Sac Ona. U f 500
U4 700
E a rl O C o i to Gonialo Muaman.
Fern Park Invetfort to Alfred G
E 17* ot l o l ft 1 W }7‘ ot 4. bik l«.
Wafkm* 4 wf. Francm a. Un tOIB.
Jnd Sac . San Lanta. 971.000
Aih«»ood Co n do . S79.9O0
Tropical Supply C o . Inc to Trl
LawranceM N o rfo n 4w f ma E
City E lec C o n tr. Inc . S 't ot NE'«
fa Robert A Steele. Beg 471* N 4
Ot N E'« ot N t ‘ « ot Sac I f f l l t ,
1997' W ot N W cor ot SEC 24 19 10
la tt E 7V Ot N 110 t r . t l 10.000
H e . at al 4 inventory etc ftlOO
Ra*gt C Otnatata 4 wt ioyca lo
ClattK Cuttom Home* Inc. lo
DaWayna C
Th rill Jr k *f
Chatter Packet! 4 wf Barbara.
M.thata O . E 41* ot Lot 49 4 W 70*
Lot t| Brantley Cove. ftl09.700
at SO. Ouaant M irror So rapl eddn
Robert E M cK ee 4 wf G a ilC to
c b . i m .ooo
Vivian S Wheeler. Lol 7. Un D.
SI even Gaffney, tgl to Jay L
The Terrace fttt.000
Ltpalat. Lot 7. Clutter L. Start*ng
Harold Davi*. repr Ett Frad T
Park Un 74, S47.700
ftmarheim to Harold Davit 4 wl
The Greater Contlr. Corp to
Brule. Lott 4 4 7. Blk 1. Highland
Enoch H Spiegel 4 art Lillian, Lot
Park ftlOO
lat. River Run Sac Pour, fa MOO
ftuncraff Parnerthip l to William
F ra d d ia L
W hitaker 1 «f
R Spencer. S g i. Lot I. Bik B. The
Brenda to Oavid S Pefert II 4 *f
ftpringt Whtipenng P.net. SEC
Debra S . Lot II, blk I Lakewood
One S94.900
Shoret. U 4 .700
Emheit Contlr
Co
Inc
to
Diana 4 A t io c , Inc lo Waiter
Maurice O Grant 4 wf Yvonne L ,
Tomateflo P ream an 4 wt Franc at.
Lot 17. Carolyn C u t 474 900
Lot 17. Blk O, Cotumbuf Harbor.
Warren W Hendrta to John f
117.000
Horton Inc . Lott 14 4 IS. Blk F.
F O Hodge
Sr igl to W A
Longwood Park. I9.S00
:
Hoffman Jr Trvtfee. Lot 109.
Bruce E Aitken. tg l to John »
• Frank L Woodruff't S D. f 100
Kurton Inc
Lo l
14. Bik F,
!
Roby J Tyree 4 wf Mary Jo to
Lcmgwood Park. 14,000
• GraHan H Voyar 4 wf Barbara E .
Donald M Kew 4 wf t).ane to
• Lot 4. rapl Nk C. Nob Hill. Sac.
Johnnie C Walker 4 Linda D
;
M e red.th Manor. U S 000
Sfrada. Jt t e n . Lot L Blk C.
•
Jamet A Sprigg 4 wl Sandra to
Starling Park Un 1. *100
*. Paul A Gaboury 4 wf Rita P , Lot
Earl D Koonfj 4 wf. F a ya to
f
44, Blk A. Crytfal Bowl addn CB.
Earl D Koonfi 4 wf Fay# B 4
{ Sfl.SOO
Miriam M Rytdyk. Lot 17. Blk 14.
IQCOI Kenneth j C mer tan. igl
Towmita ol North Chuluota. ftlOO
,
4 Barbara C tg l la Barbara E
IQCDt Paul Sharp Walker to
•r I m u i a n . t f l . Lot I. l i t A. Peggy S Walher, W' »•« LO* 4 4 oil
Bngtitn «%!#••«. U fi 3, It®
ot t 4* Blk O. EdOawater Halohl*
.JThe Babcock Co to Hector N
ftlOO
/
Ceballot. »ot. Un J01 Crane %
M ariaC Kornick. w»d to Donald
•; Rooit VIII Sac Sra. ISI.700
J Johnton A wf Nancy. Lot IB.
1$
A J Thomaa Jr 4 Ella Mae
Bik A. North Orlando Ranches.
•1 M errill to Jeffrey C Betet. Un |7,
Sec 9. ftlO.OOO
M ayfair Villa*. SS7.700
Ronald F McLaughlin 4 wf
$
W L K irk, tr to Garatdma C
Oorpthy to M a ry Wayna C
K irk, Trutfaa, Beg USB 17 N 4
Bywafer 4 Jam et M Nichott. Lot
y
1747 74 W ot I E cor .a le Sac 7 70
1S2. San Lanta. Third Sac . SaO.OOO
x . tu n
Harry R Radi# 4 wf Wmitred j
F la
Rat id
C o m m , Inc to
Ronald E B ya m 4 wf Patricia L . to John Barber 4 wf Lort. Lot 471
Un C. Bldg S. W tkiva Fairway 4 W 't of 414. lo n g wood. Bat 000
Howard A Jacobs 4 wf M aria
Townhomev Sfl.SOO
Complete in i' , Inc to John H to Charles C M iles Jr 4 wf
Lot SI. Devonshire
Thao, Carolyn Thee. Stanley Mark Joanne R
Thee. Lot 1. Blk 7. Cedar Ridge Un SSI.SOO
Louise
P
.
Jones,
repr ett Henry
I. 1100
4
D unhilllnc to Robert E Barrett C Parker to Louise Parker Jones.
5
Cmarr 1, Lot II. Woodbr*dge at the W 734 ol E 14 9S ch ol S 377 3* of
NE'« of S EC 74 31 10 S100
J
Spongt. Un Two. BUS 000
Joteph H. M orale* 4 wl
The Hutkey Co to Rut*all T
Lourdes H to Juno M Hankins,
Swam Jr . Lot II. Bik B. Sweat
tgt. Lot 37|. Spring Oakt. Un. II,
wattr Club. Un III. 1100.000
Robert S Harrell 4 Terry D 140.400
W ilfrad A rn o ld . Jr
4 wf
Hagan to Hagan Homat. Inc . Lot
Kathryn B to David J. Rots 4 wf
II. Brantley Pomt, f t 4 000
Bernice I . Lut 341. Winter Springs
PI
Land Co to FI R eid
Comm , Ik , L«t S. Greenwood Un 4 Itft 000
The Greater Com tr Corp to
Laket.
Un
7.
It!
Addn.
ft
11400
I
Sam# a t abova. LI H . Blk A, Ronald J Jonke 4 wf Sharon B ,
Lot
171 River Run Sec
Four,
Greenw ood
Lake*.
Un
7*
110000
Patricio L Sionar. *gi 141M

I

Ij
&gt;
;
&gt;
.
&gt;
;•
!*

i

llorm Stagnant) la Thom at J
Dough man 4 wf Barbara R . lo t
14. Blk P. Glen Argen Height*.
F trtl Addn. M 7.400
S 4 A Lea*mg Corp lg Broad
Siraaf Confraci Sarvicat Inc.
From W*« cor. of Sac 14 71 79 etc
I 744 acre* m I. U7ft 700
Robert E M cK ee 4 wf Gail lo
Jam et A Alexander II 4 wl liana
M . Lot I. Un O. Tha Terrace.
9)4000
Ronald A Ha mien 4 Renata M.
to Stephan R L areau 4 wf Marcia
L , Lot 14. Blk B, Lynwood
Ravi*ion. UO.OOO
(OCO) George Sm th 4 Rota
M aria to Rota M aria Smith. Lot 47.
Wathtngton H fig htt S O. ftlOO
The Hutkey Cd to Oaccattama
Contlr
Corp
Lot 14. Blk C
Sweetwater oa kt. Sac II. ftM.OOO
Tha Hutkey Co lo Dwrran&lt;«
Contlr Co Inc . Lot 30. Bik B.
Sweetwater O akt. Sec 17. 144.900

Legal Notice
FICTITIOU S NAM C
Nolxa it h ar.by giv m m .i I ,m
n&lt;a*9*d in but met* at IM C y p r .tt
Or . O .B a ry . Srm tno.. County.
Florida undtr m# Ixtltlaut nam .
o lO A IO N F E N C C C O .a n d mat I
mmd to f eg -iirr ta id n,m » « m
ma Clark el lh« Circuit Caurl,
Sam m ol, bounty. Florida Mi a&lt;
re rd a n c a m lh m . p ro .n lo m ot In.
F xM io u t N a m , S iaiuttt To Wil
Sodlon lASOt Florida SlalHl,*
ITP
Habml SaiintAi
Fubi.cn July 14. SI A Aueutt I. IA
INI
Q t » III
___________

IN T N I CINCUIT C O U R T O F
TH I C I O H T I S N T H JUOICIAL
C IN C U IT .
IN
AND
FO N
S f M I N O L l C O U N T Y . FLO R ID A
CASI NO. II n r r I A It L
3
PARK F C O C R A L SAVINGS AN D
LO AN
A S S O C IA T IO N .
IS A
\
W IN TE R
PARK
FEDERAL
P IC TITIO U I N A M l
SAVIN O S
AND
LOAN
Not.ct l»
9*.... Ih,f •«
1
ASSOCIATION. ,4(
? w .,n g .« .&lt; 9 " b u n n n i .1 n o . *
Plaint.M,
*f Jfd t l r f . t . S .n lo r d t .m m o l.
it
* CuL.ni.. r io r id . un J.f m» lx
GNAOV
W EEKS.
JR
and
J lit to\/% ntm* u# 8 4 B CON
C
H
E
R
Y
L
O
W
E E K S , kit m l* , W
&lt; I? NUCTION. and ih.l «t wl«4
t
i
.
I*
u l d B* m , a.th Ih.
Datondonlt
C l . ' k •• 18, C irc u it Cdurl.
C L lR K 'S N O T I C E OF S A L S
' la m in o lt Co u nt., dlondd Hi dc
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
i i o f d . n t . a i l h Hid pro.itlondat I8d
mat F v rtu .m to a Summary F .nal
’ N I ' I K M Nam# H a M M . T o a i
Judamonl
ol Far m o w n a i l y i u
lact.on US 9) &gt; lor .da H a w n
hi lh« abova t n M in l c tu M m Ih,
i HS
Circuit Court (d m* E ^ h lrm tn
&lt;
i « Nonaid t Sa.it*
Judicial C ir c u it . In and la r
I '
MUHa.1 IN S n . M
Vrm.ncly County. Florida. I will
4 pubi.wi July L 18. II. H INI
i p e n ; * _____ _______________ • d i a l public auction to lha hiahttl
tuddaf lor cath a l lha Wtt&gt; Iron!
doac 04 Ih* Courthout* in m« C.iy
8 ICTITIO U t N A M l
04
S anlo rd S .m in o l, County.
•;
N o lx a it h , . t b . (man mat l
Florid* a l Ih . hour 04 II.00 A AL
ti m g a « M mi H j y n m al 1108 Via
on Aueutt IT. INI. Dial ctrlOHi
i M a rm a ta . S anlard
J .m a iu i.
p a i d ot roil property datcfibad
t u .n i.
Florida umwr ma He
ot to'lowt
|n taut
nam a
«( h n i n b o w
l o l ! t and 10 . H E F I A T OF
O N i T l and mat I inland la
tar u . d nama m in m« (N fV
WINWOOO P A R K . acuKd.no lo
in* plot I n a r m ot rocordod In Flat
Iha O rc u .l Caurl. 1 W « H
ly , rio n d a h i .u o id a n c t
Boot X F o o t SB. Public Record! or
Sam n o t. County, Florida
Iha prayltiam V lha fit
gu* N . m , U a M W . t » W il
HEAD
A R T H U R H B E C K W IT H , JR
lian l i i a* i to.id , Statute!
C L E R K O F CIR C U IT CO U R T
By FalyX i# RobmMet.
l a J.C M o n EnitrpriW !
N ub rri in J.&lt;«&gt;on
Deputy Clerk
Fublitk July I*. 14. INI
Wl July &gt;8. II. It. II. INI
d e k rt
f t D C * 11

Legal Notice

i •••***%'*4

II

C L A S S IF IE D ADS
S e m in o le

O r la n d o - W in t e r

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1
D E P T .

H O U R S
108AM

-

AVON r e f r e s e n t a i i v e s
The Port Tim# Cortw
444 M J f - C o I N c t U S im *

P a rk

F u ll chorg* doubt* h i try bopr
P N o i. *wid com piau m u m .
including o d d rru and phono
no and rttarancot lo Boi 184
C O E .a n in g H n a ld . F O Boh
l*SJ. Sanford. Fla

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

C LA SS IFIED

S S tP M

R ATES

I Tim e
S c o n ta c u tlv o tim e !
7 c s n ta c u M v a lin t* *

M O N D A Y thru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y t ■ Noon

50c ■ Mi n
s tca M n *
......... d ie

Stoody rob la r ratlrtd or in n i'
r . t r t d p H ion lo hHp doon
Her* 1 10 morning*. 1 day* por
* ffk
S , . Mr
Fow .ll al
T o y rr* morning*.__________

II cam aoitlva Timas STcaMna
SS 00 Minimum
*) Linas Minimum

C O N V E N IE N C E STO RE CASH
■E R S Good S.IAry hotP'Uli
lotion. I w».k p o d vacation
n r r . A month* Now looking
lor ..p a r knead p « p k r.ody
lo work For Mityrvkw pnon.
Ih# m onogH ot:
Airport B ird
S7741SI
Ca u W bo rrr
JJ117»
C H try A v .
777 4717
LAko AAory
111*147

D E A D LIN E S
N oon

The

D a y

B e fo re

S u n d a y - N o o n

P u b lic a t io n

F r id a y

4 -P e rs o n a ls

I h ip WStiU d

♦ .P R T S O O ih

Cortot
Ifttffttttd »h a ref*ned lady,
retired, widow or *pmtfer. *n
late Vt% or mtd 40 % A fun pal
tor dinnert. fheater*. art,
current rvtnt*. to forth I'm a
ref.reg CPA. Write 1LW. P O
Boa 997. Langwood. f t 377SO
Lonely7 Writ# '‘ Bringing People
Together Dating S e r v k f f M All
age* 4 Senior C if if an* P O
1411. Winter Haven. Fla 37440

Legol Notice
FICTITIOUS N AM E
notice i* hereby given that we
art engaged in butm etl at VS
W&amp;odltr#
way
C a s se lb e rry .
Florida 37707 fterntnoH County.
Florida under the lict'tiov* nama
of DOMICILE DESIGNS, and that
we intend to r«gr*tee *a&gt;d nama
with tha Clark of tha Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Florida In ac
(OfdOKf with tha provition* of tha
FKfltdu* Name Statute*. To Wit
Section 44109 Florida Statufas
I9S7
Sag D avd A Wemy**
Jean B Wemy**

WHY BE L O N E L Y ? W rit. "O ol
A M H H - Dating S w v k . All
ages P O Boi *071. Clear
water. FI 33511
CO M PAT A O ATE
Taka 1 mmuft fa listen to
recorded message - 1 403 471
99S7 94S1 or writ* Campaf A
Data P O Ben )I73 tummer
villa, S C 79441
Lonely Christian SongIts
Meet Christian Smg las m your
area Write Southern Christian
Smgles Ctvb. P O Boa 1473
Summerville, ft C 7941) or
call t 401 471 9 i» 14 rs

Lost
Cockapoo type white
dog. emwersfo Rags
Reward 377 413)

4 - C h il d C * r «

IN AND FOR THE CIRCUIT
COURT SEM IN OLE C O U N TY .
FLORIDA
LASE N U M B ER II4 S 4 C A 4 9 L
O RLAN O O
H E LIC O P T ER
AIRWAYS. INC .
a Florida Corporation.
Plamflff.
v
JOHN
LACKEY
and
DON
TAYLOR, d b i
DON TAYLOR M E C H A N IC A L .
Def and are*
NOTICE OF S A L E
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that the undersigned. Arthur H
Beckw.fh. J r . Clerk of the Court.
Seenmole County, Florida, will on
tha 7th day ot August, t f t l. at It 00
A M , at the west front daor ot tha
Seminola County Courthousa.
Sanlord. F lor Ida. off or lor sale and
sell at public out i f y to the highest
and best bidder tor cash, tha
tallowing described personal
property located at tha Bantord
Airport, lemmata County. Florida.
*o wit
One Brantley
M odel
B IB
Helicopter
Serial No 474
Reg steal on No N 7743U
pursuant to Final JviJqmont m
ireed in tha above styled pending
cause
WiTNEftft my hand and the seal
of sa&lt;d Court this lath day of July.
1911
ISIALI
ARTHUR H B E C K W IT H . JR
Clerk of the Court
By Patrkia Robinson
Deputy Clark
Publish July 17, 34. 1941
DEK 40
LEGAL a d v e r t i s e m e n t
TH I
BO R R O O F
CO UN TY
C O M M IttlO N lR S
( H i COUNTY OF t I M I N O L l
V p a r . i . !M l« l bx» tor H«mt *t
•’!i,d b,io« *111 b« t u n . t o Hi Hi*
Oftkaot lha Fu»che*lne Oue&lt;le&lt;.
l . m in e l.
County
it r v lc t *
BulMiO*. ImJ Flo*., C o rn ., *4 1*1
!4r»W and F4f» A ,m u * l.n fo rd .
FL l l t t l . until 100 F M . local
llm*. W,&lt;lrwta.y. Augutl IT. 1*41.
, i « M d i time m aai* b ** m il b*
publicly »h a i 4 and r.* d aloud
blO NO M l — Fufnich IntKII
Tr.M x Jian.1 tQU'Pm ,nt
BIO No l*a
Fgrn.cn I m l.ll
T r .t ix l u i.i Cquipmonl
BID No
1*1
Annual
Mrou r.m cnti tor Wolw Trool
nwnt ol Condrm ir* and T o n .r t
For H d No M l O N L Y
iuc
c r tilv l b ddtr moy b* r R y i r N la
turnim p ir m n il and pOTterm.nce
bondv r .c n In Ik, amount ol MM
pH &lt;ant al lo u i bid im o urH . preol
o tH n u ro n c m ilb a rto u ira d Bond
Ior m i m il b , lurn.ihrd b , in*
Itm ino ie County F u r c k o tm e
fV p jrtm m l
For Buf No TOO O N L Y —
I n k n l W»a« R .lo t mill apply
Upon onord. lu c c o u lu l b o o n
m il b . r rq u ir .d lb lu rm tn
pa. mrnt Hid pH lor m ane, bond*,
rocn n in* .mount ol 100 o p coni
ol laUI bid .mount and prooI el
ntur.net Bond lorm t m il b*
i.in.ihrO by in . Saminola County
FurckoiMig O ivtion
lo r B-d No » l O N L Y - Sue
c t u ly l biddH may bo rw u ira d lo
convey hi* bid p r K rt and contract
lir m t
and
condition*
la
m unicipoiiim and ottior g o in n
" W i n ,a«nci»»H!iilia» mthMi
Somaiala County
All «ork mail b* m accordance
m in ip M iix tiia n ta y a iio b ia Hilka
OHxa oI in . Purckotlng O lra clH
In . Count, ratarvot Ik* ngni to
r .iH I any or HI b*di. milk ot
m lhout
caul* .
to
n a iy *
i« n n .c,iii.» i, or •* occrpt tha bid
•nick hi lit iude«m«nt b n l i m n
m , H iltr n l ol in* County. Cott ol
tubm.lUI ol Ikit bnt it contidHnS
hi op.rolion .1 c stl ol Ik* bHtdor
and mail not b* potM d on la or
tern* by Ik* County
F m o n t o u . d . i M d in n . il in.«
drcido lo ,pp«al any docitlon
mod. *1 thi* mealing rearing,
may m il rttO i rrcord ol lha
prociadingt. and. lor w en pur
pot*, i n . . may rmo I* Hiurr a m .i
o y .rb a lim
reco rd a l
Ik*
procoMng* &gt;t mad*, which racerd
m ciud.* lha t .it im o n y
and
n a m e upon which in* oppoal I*
la to baud
JaArm BUckman. C F M
Furchatui* O irtciar
Saminola County
S a rv lc a t
Building
Ind Floor. Corn*, ol III Slratt
Hid F n k Avtnu*
S*rlord. F L TJI7I
(MSI H14JJ0. t . i (41
FubHth July 14. 1*11
D f « 114

Babri'tling mi my homt Mon
Frl F m c rd f .r d lor ploy
N .o r High School 131 M U

Nmdtocranar* Earn
monoy w in your hobby
Call Arm 110 t a ll

C O M M U N IT Y
B U LLET IN
BOAROS
ARE
OR E A T —
C LA S S IFIE D
AD S
ARE
EVEN BETTER
D#y 4 N*q m bohysitflng
in my homo Rtosonoble
371 0405

74—Business
Opportunities

JIA—Duplexes

U m m tsh e d
-*•
*1 bdrm. I ■ ro u .p p rd i lchHi.
A W C .i r no pot*
7180 month 4r4i418

Brand naw ot.tr occupiad 1
bdrm. dining room, carport,

31-A p e r t m e n t * F u r n i s h e d

BfAulilul claon all n n r tla.pmg
room* L man and m aid I H v C t
fro . a t d A v a ii.b ia now Call
111**41 or inguira at &lt;]]
•almalfo Ay*
»*NP&lt;WO Raa* w k t y 'T
monthly rata*. U til Inc. KN M
Ook Adult* 141 m i

Sanlord. adult*, no pat*, ltu d k .
HI alactrlc appianca*. nr.
711* mo R ) MIT

1 bdrm noir Cardinal In d .
romadaind. ig lancad **rd.
km*. IH7 mo . o rp M l W U

I pH ion or m a rrk d co up k 70
yr* or oldw No p H l 7100 ma
♦ 170 lac m u t t

Finwcrnt ) T. Forth, carport,
la r g t room*, quiet ntigh
borhoM traa! 7117 t 7100
Dap U la iS S Alt 7________

t Bdrm Furnish*# Apt with
Patio and Tcrtw kd Porch
M l O il)

Apt lor rant, wnturn 1 bdrm, I
B. A C. 1100 mo a 1100 WC

SANFORD — I bdrm, n t . kid*,
util Inc. US dn 11* 1100
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

)11 HI*or U l 1141
Taniord. adultv no pot*. I bdrm,
all e k e t rk appiianra*. air.
sm o me n i a e t f

F urmmod apArtmanf
U00 m o . 1*1 A latt
M ila n

Claon 1 room downstair* apt
Oukt ganllamon prtttrrtd
414 M y r lk Av* 117 m *

slag
1 B .d ro o m Apt* A y .lla b i.
•Shown by Appt Only HSI14A.
f rom

New Oupiav.
tqu ppHl kitchen SMS mo
Call i l l saw
LONGWOOD -L K F R o n T — I
rm*. ItOOdn. tw o mo n o F108
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R
Late Mary -141 R u t! n SI Naw
1 Bdrm. CHA. WWC. U l t Mo
til A 1*41 1T1 n ot or 1*1 IN I
Orlando

it T lr U R Y
4FARTM RN T4
F p m lly 4 Ad ults sectkfi.
Roofside ) Bdrms M o s fv 't
Cove Apts 3D 7900 Open on

Un turn 1 b drm . c o m p U U ly
radocorotad. now c n p a l. A C .
lancad yard, no pH*. U0S ♦
wc M l 10*1

AWmev » Villogeon Loke Ado I
Ddrm from ft2)S. 7 bdrm from
1244 Loco ted 17 t l iusf South
of Airport Blvd Ri Sontortf Ail
Adufts 123 4470___________

S A N F O R D - 1 b d rm .k k * . poH.
sirs down, u w mo J l . 1X 0
Sa v o n r e n t a l s r b a l t o r '

Nk# 1 bdrm opt
Coll for def oils:
June Porftg Rooffy 373 44/4

S H A K L C f HERB TABLET
WE O E L I V lR
m I trt

'

Santoro 1 Bdrm. CB noma U17
. tig o ia c
Will accept I
sm all child S tatFtt altar a
p m
r.laranca*

O u .M iH llH i.n t , wailing
No law 11*1100
sav o n r b w ta li. r b a lto r
1 bdrm I B lemily room.
tear gortg*.In
Dali ona Call 71* t a il
lb drm .1 B.CM A. lg yard.
III. last ♦ daposit.
m in ) .

31 A - D u p le x e s

*«iey covwfry living? I %4tm
A f l l . O lym p ic
II. Foel.
fthewofMeok Vitioge Open 9 ft.
. R H 9 R . ___________________

Brand Naw 1 Bdrm. 1 Bath, with
Fireplace. Rafc**rator. D.th
wachH
Ac raw U om Call
Courw No pan
Can a r t « M l 1401,

LANDLORDS

F um uhagaportm anfi lor Sonkr
CRH*nt 111 Palm alia Air*., J.
Cowan No phono call*

V .it o n y ii l.
-T ra c t
A p it.
SpACku*. modrrn 1 Bdrm I
Both opt
C a r p . i.d ,
kit
rq u .p p rd .
CHAA
N otr
hoipitai A lok* Adult*, no
potk-tlFO i n TIT)

S-H m m s Unfurnished
Brand Naw Wood ond Sion*
EnacutlvO Unturnithad Home
1 norm. 1 Bath Lk Mary.
Wirdw Sprgt Area 7*17 Mo
♦ Sac Alt ISM____________

F urn,mad 1 bdrm apt
Utllltksturnithod. 7)80 m o
_________ 111 4)0*__________

3DApartments
Unfurnished

central h*at A Ok. U W mo
MS SHI

N.cHy Fwrnittkd l bdrm Gar ago
apt
Lok* Gold hi
R rtirtd
co u p k p r.lo rro d No pot* B l
8174

7 9 -R o o m s

Day G rill Cook M u ll b* out ot
school
M ud
nay* iro n
tp o rla tlo n
C o n ttcl
Mr
Hugh.* *1 McDonald*

Ba a Rawiaigh Oktrlbuior and
bo your own Boss Moke up lo
ftlO.OOO O yeer OitfO Coil 721
u f l lor oppf

AA-HMtthSBMuty

Working Gir lo r Collaga
Studant la i n . , , n am .
A aipania* C o l lH lla .1

L A « E JE N N IE A P T S I. |h»A IBdrm an L a t t J#«nk hi
San lo rd
Fool, rac
ream,
outdoor B B Q. larmit court* A
d d p o M it Walk to mopping
Adult* only Sorry no pot*
J3 1 8 U 1

f will do housework
Avoiiobie onyfime
Coll 77) 7479

S F U R O F THE M O M EN T
BABYSITTING
m t it a

Will shore my Dupfes.
R aa io na bk
11I0MS

l Bdrm Apt* tram 1117 1 A )
Bdrm at*# avail Foot. Unnit
court m * n *

71— S it u a t io n s W o n t e d

Found Female «M1 Bull Swniand
Ests Appro* S mas old Call
Judy 373 4700

T o S ta r*

S A L E S L A D Y — E .P H m o d Ml
I M o v i M d r to w o ir Apply hi
p»r«on No pnon* o n * R*
Joy. I l l E lit St . Sanlord

R N 't 10 74 70. L P N t lo 7418.
port llm * or lull llm * Mad.cal
Concrpl*. I d 0811.

S-Lost ft Found

PubN*n July 14. 31 4 August 7. 14.
1911
D E k 10)

m .ndrd wornh i with
g H i.r .1 art,c* *k.II* ny.drd
immodiAtoly to work with latt
poent grom ng company Coll
lor oppoHitmHit bri«r«n It 7
p m ot 17)181*.

jDApertmgnts

2 3 - A p h . &amp; H om es

Brand now unfurnished 1 bdrm,
*11 appliance*, air, carpal, no
pot*. I1W mo *M 1110

) bdrm. |iy I U lS m o
I M C .R 0 pat*
(S)!)*44 1*17 attar F p m
1 Bdrm. *h*d. carport IMS
month « S1W Otp A lt 7 140
Tati or m HI*
4 bdrm. I B n Chuluota
tit A latt
CH taftof Op m 147 701
1 bedroom 1 bath fam ily room,
double garagr
I yr. old
Wotttida DaBary U W month
First, security *.* SOI
SANFORD — 7 bdrm. I sfory.
km*, pat*. SVC mo I H 1100
I A V ON R E N T A L R B A L TO R
SANFORD CO?Y C O T T A G E ,
kldt. pats. BITS mo 1111100
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R
1 Bdrm. I!y Bain, walled yard.
Air cond . me# neighborhood
U40 mo Rat rag 1114710

CO N SU LT O U R

I I — I n s t r u c t io n s
Iannis instrocTton — U S P T A
Certified Group or Private
lessens Children • toecie'ty
Doug MaiiCiawski W l 3341.

AND LET AN E X P E R T DO TH E JO B

Il-A—Art»SCr*fti
C e ra m ic
maid
sola
I0'»
discount, k s a a t r a for cash,
traa mold making 4 repair
demo. 99a W Amalia Si. In
Rina Hilts 193 1411

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-99.93

_____ 1 2 - S p t d i l N o t i o n
SOCIAL s e c u r i t y
Bm»t tl OHUHlt E»p»ti hHP
o y.ilo bl» on .p p M l!
PAS
A u o c u lr* . &gt;8* E
lit St.
Sanlord 771)111
Taking Ik* B .k a m . C r a m
Avguit l i t Lw k and F ..I
B a M lila l with a Nan turgic.l
F . C , L in Only t u O n, A h
piic.non work! wandwt
__________ 171 4HA__________

l&gt;— Ho Ip Wanted
E a p o rlan cd t.l.pnon* io ..k.u r
iH fd id by lo ll p i c k ] u H*
o r g o n u .lla n
M u ll
n .» .
Initially* o n , b« o b i. I*
m u m , rnponciCkiity Or m i
orowm polHiHol U r a iM d H
E .tn m g hour*
InUrtttodf
Coll IW I i n 1*41 • S o ik tor
Telephone Solicitors needed for
Joyceesprotect 9 ) p m o r ) 9
p m 377 7)74

~MAINTflUNCS
MECHANIC

ENGINEERING
TECHNICIAN
im m r O . li rv«d k r .apariancad
locnklan who hat drolling,
routing and p r o m t wrillng.
work tla lk n layout and l m«
study Only tnoat lookuig lor *
long l« m opporturuly with
odv a n c.m a n t
p a t u b ililit t
n o t apply Raply H P O Bon
No 1*7. C 0 t .to.no HHOtd.
Sartqrd.FL DIM
Light OHivHy
Small Car p r tk r rM
Can 1171114
•• •
parson. m aM tHitnc.. Sanlord
Nurvnq and Convalrscrnc.
Ca nltr. ISO M atknyilk
F u lltim a R N F lm .it Apply
L Akavkw Nunaig Canter.
I I I E Ind S t . Stnlord

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 FRENCH AVL
a i l 323-5176

Ywrf tytur* mrr conctro
★

★

★

♦ ★

★

Beauty Care
TO W ER S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H H r k t t ‘1 Boaut,
Nook 71* E 1*1 S I. M l 7141

Boarding AGrooming
Anim al Havan Boarding and
O ro o m in g Konnalt Shady,
maulatad. uroanad. tty proo*
•mide. out, •#* runs Fan*
Alto AC cogot W* talar la
your pats
Storting ilu d
ragntry Fh M l 1171

Brush Cutting
CU STO M WORK
R t a ia n a b la
Rata*.
Fra*
Ettim ata. CHI Early A. AL or
C .a MS 17*4 or 11071 It* I1U

Building Contractor
d ill Cor**. Slat* Carlltlad
B u ild in g
C o n t r o c lo r .
Rastdontlal or Commorckl.
m o o t*

Car Repair
L o tt worry A meonyonknet W a ll com* to you M l 1*4
Hobby** aaobrk A*t* Servk*.

Catpet daaning
Ju ly
bom btholl.
Fro*
iModoriiingw shampoo A oar*
t it a n 1 bdrm lrtrt« wee traa
w Ny rm . dm rm . and hail U B
• Only t l* tar aach additional
room niB a o *

Ceramic Tlla
M C I N T J E R T .L (
,Now or repair, taaAy ihewaai * u
t p a tia tt y .tiy T t E&gt;p M*«A1

Clock Repair
g w altney

jew eler

lo a s F a rk A v a
U l *70*
^b------ -A- AAA AUXKflNTW™

CO R N ER OF IM*
AROERSRCH

A

Electrical

Law n A G a rd e n

Concrot* w ork. ta otH L noon 4
pool* L a ndsca pin g 4 sad'
wor*. r m u i m r m

to m
*&lt;p am
fypet of efectriel v e r t #i f#ir
prk# l 373 4734

electr icia n

Mowing.
aqgm g
rubbish
r.monad Schaduitd to suit
your naad! *11174*

N E E D A SECOND INCOME?
No N1Y . no k ill, no n o Big
mcnoy .n ip a rt tuna M U M

KN gon*. but tha taring Mt M
tha back yar* law i’ Sail it with
o want ad CaR M l l t t l

Weg e*" . i \ A -0 i otfe «a i

FO N S E CA P LU M B IN G
Ch i
struct«n. Repair*. Ernwgan
CY L k . Bond*#. In*. M l ecu

T 5 n c^

SALE
Summer Wood l i n e r S a k 17.000
R i t wood tanca and poll*
mutt ba taMt Can ba laon at
Sentry Fancy* 111 Hwy 1101
Long wood W ido toloctlon
Com* o n ly U k commua* IIM
m t r c h in d lt* I* o il M id
Murry I Hurry I U d 4M l

Tomorrow may ba tha day you
M il that roll * w ar bod you'va
nowharatoroliaway . . II you
p i n t a C lassilk d Ad today
Law* Mowing

r 'W &gt; &gt;N. T. L A C K; BY
r u n

U N C L U TTE R Y O U R C L O S E T
Tall thota thing* that are Iutl
faking up ipac* with a want ad
in tha Harold U l M il o r U l

Mailing Labels

tandymen

Computer Fr MOad Mailing
Labats Call
Buty Baa l abaft MS 4A11

Faulting, carpentry, all type* at
homo ra p a in Call tar trig
attimat* U l i n

Mini-U-Lock

Mobil# Homo*. Housaa. Roots.
Truck*. T ro lk r. Etc Fortebt*
Unit Harold Rankin m l i s t

Remodeling

-_

Wa handle tha
Whole Ball ot War

B. E. Link Const.
323-7039
Faianclng Ayaitabia
r\

mi

K o o t ln g

Hauling#
YBrdWbrK

NEW Cane rota BullOMigt. all
!il*a 71* 4 up A l 14 4 I R 4*
14 Industrial Park. M l 00*I

Hauling A Y a rd Work 10 k oft
with Ad i l l t u t no ant U l
Utl La rry, Jayca I t ,tr t
E V E R Y O A Y IS BAROAIN
DAY IN T H E W A N T AO S U l
M il or 111 m i

Want Ad* Cot People Togtthtr
— Thost Buying And Thota
tailing 771 M U ot U l m i

Homt Improvemanr

Writ# Way Raotkig and FH n
Img Guwanlaad work Frto
Eitimat** F h m a o t )

ROOFS, taak* rtpauad. Ragtaca
rottoo t t . n and sktogta waak.
llctn te * . la ta ra d. baodad
m a , in u n .
Christian RooTmg t l yr* ,yp
M t 7174 Irao «st R .rootng.
tpoctam* In r^ a # work 4

Nursing Center

C E N T R A L F L O R ID A NOME
IM P R O V E M E N T S
Painting. Rooting, Carpentry
L k . Bonded 4 Ouarantaad
Fro* lih m a to t USI04F

OUR R A T E S A R b L U W t r
l at e* rw Nurting Ctnf*r
919 I S#cond i t . . fttnfortf

It you or* having ddfkvlty
finding a ploe*. to lly*. cor to
dri»*. * iob. or tom* earner
you hay* naad ul. rood all our
a am a d! rv a ry'day

J a • Homo tmprovtmant —
C.rpantry work al any ryot
Root rogalrv gutior work.
Minting (interior or m o rta r I,
gtvmbmg. t p o c k li] , in moBda
homo r«pairt 4 root coating,
and wgod patio dock* Frao
Mtimata n» 14*1

I f A L L P H A S E D O E S IT A L L ♦
Fan
in ita tla tio n ,
aitarlaa
'• p a i n ,
stucco,
r t M at.
t i Krtantng
A L L P H A S E CO N TRACTO RS

Looking For o Nrw Homo? —
Chock ih . Wont Ad* tor houtot
at rv r fy t u * on# p rk o

Sandblasting

Odd J o ts

Home Repairs

7ANDBL AITINO
O AVISW ILO IN O
u n it y , s a h f o r d

Trag Service

Painting

i f m o is t a a o i m s j l

NOUSB F 4 IN TIN «
. ; latartar 4 1 1tartar
I t T L A C K R T ) 1 ) I tft.

Q U ALITY 4 1 4 F A IR F R t c l l
C r
&amp; U tfT H . 17 r«A
NcSlty. Senior Disc. M SUB 4

Ironworks

Prapura paining

Remodeling Specialist

f Ha Iman FaHUmg 4 R epairs'
Ouaiity work Fro* ( M . O tic
. R I t t a r v IM tote. A t t a r .

Al t OrrvamonUI Wrought Hon.
Window t a r t and Sam m y
Door* *711*4*. Orlando

b u t* Pa Miter - lit Clew W o.k,
rtownabi* prko* IS y * * n
np
Ksnnoth Holt M l SMI
•any! im« alter 7.

tl you aren’t using your pool
lab**, taka a two. and Mtl it
with a Harold c ia u i .t d ad
U tl M ila n

T E R R Y 'S IN TERIO RS
W allpa^ jfing, gginlm g L * p
, F H N . Guar work M X

F IG H T E R
SPECIAL

in fla tio n

U D a n .o n ly labor an iota a m
OteK til* Flu* our Malarial
A ll wwk guarantaad. M l ? i ) l '
tar tr «* n t Pkk upa 4 OH hr
R D O'Bryant
W ill U p k a lita r Dm att* and
Occasonoi Chair!, plus smalt
itomx Call n u n *

i\ S k

I M A N . O U A L IT V O PER ATIO N
* m t i p F a lio t. DrlyfwayV
ttc Woyn# Baal 111 ijji

CarpantH
withUatk
________Call M l ta n

P lu m b in g

S e r v ic e
Chri* will s a t v k t A C n , ftln g ,
freeiers, w a in c o o k n mite
. ca n m i n i

Snow H ill Kannol ofla r i Cot A
Oog F k a Bath* U up I*
Hour. Fu ll Sarvka. SkSSIl).

Skitku mamiftionc* machomc
capabk ftl Wtldin*. moth in*
latup and raptir. t k d r k t l A
a rl.n* work M ull b* *H* lo
moinUHi tool* and li.lu r t* tor
pru d u d io n tin* aqu'pm tnl
Only lha** kakHi* tor a kng
larm opparlvnily with ad
vtncam .nl pouk&lt;lilk* naad
apply Raply to Bo. No MS. C
O Ev*n&lt;ng Harold. F O Baa
1*71. Sanlord. F L RFFt.

★

Air Conditioning

)

VrindowRepairs
I.AHGR T R i E l N I T A L L i r
" — ■—
Low nt R b
ftaco d MS 7711

1

Froddl* R e l Incan Flum tUSg
R tp a ir* . ta u ca it. w
Ci
Sprmktar* i n t S H , J U 47C4

A ll Window* r ^ y rad G ia i,
R tp U C M Porch Rrtcrtoning
snvdi

�3 2 -H w w s U n fvm h tw d
J txJrm. |*i B family room,
gem* room ,! replace N o p e fl
1)50 mo . Ilf. last • ISO Off
m m so
Art Montflo Rtnlali.
M l,old M.M ( t o l l , ln(
■ ooitor m i n i

•41—Houses

HAL COLBERT REALTY

/

JUHI
M
* POfZIG KUITT \

331-7132

Rod R .a l Citato Bra M r |
m iit i
C o o iu t m

M oult for rent — unfur rvthrq

in s mo » u n ite
m u tt

33—Houses Furnished
Deltona — A ttra ctiv e, neat,
clean A C. no pets 2 bdrm
1735 ) bdrm 1210

34—M obile Homes
SANFORO C A N A L FR ON T
J
bdrm, »&gt;r. 11H mo J). TJOO
IA V ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R
SANFORO
2 bdrm. a&gt;r. kids,
pets. H 2Sdn. 1200 mo l) f 2200
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R
J bdrm ir .O r r m L,»» M .r y
«r.4 Phoru. lor ,ppo.nrmimt
ITT U / T o r U U

37—Business Property
A R A G f tor tease
potential
tor body shop, used car lot.
a a s originally a gas station
la r g e corner
lot
Good
location 122 02U
Commercial Building for rent
1500 sq ft .1400 mo.
1st Blast 12JUII

37-B— Rental O ffices

A L L FLO RID A REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTO R
W ATERFRO N T
- F o r the
fiecutive S bdrm. ) full batM.
»pl. launa wet bar. intercom,
on 100* aide cenal leading lo
St Johns River Priced at only
10)000
B u n n e ll opportunity
Small
investors check th.s Get M o
your oan business tor only
14)00 Call tor details

I bdrm J R. CHA. load'd »ith
*m « iitiri. k x .i. d * b u t trwn
gall co u rt. U t MO

UM.VA 6 . M E R E C H K R F P L A Y

WE LEA R N ED T3
P R IN K W A T E R U P S T R E A M

E V E R T ? &lt;SAtN ViEIOKT )

F W «

OH T M E S U R V I V A L X
P U T 1N 6 ' W H A T
^

O NLY W H AT T H E P

S

M CNkEYi EA T!
^ ----------, / - /

T

A SP

Y

BUILDIN G LO T - City ««!»f.
in r t r . Ig lr r « , l.n d t c p c d good lo c tM n 14/00

\

Arrow glass ( U n boot
loaded with accessories 1)000
firm I Itoil )t) 0**2

I For t —
Income Property
One is 4 2 Bd. IB. CB A ir 2
Bdrm. I Both Rented tor 17)5
mo Both 159.000 ))) 11)4. t i l
1141
Owner Real Estate Associate

Sanford P r im . 14 J» A c r n w
tgi'Ont lor ton.ng StJ.JOO w
Trrm t IN M d l.clO M b . JJJ
t . u , E»»t m j x i

R E A LT Y -

R EA LT O R S

Sanford's Sales Leader

J1 A C R ES H IG H G R O U N O
NITH t A L L PIN ES N EA R
LAKE
HARNEY
StJ.SOO
W ITH
LO W
IN TE R E ST .
A S S U M A B LE
M O RTGAGE
S A C R ES INOOOEO NE AR o s
TEEN
G O LF
CO URSE
t it MO, t e r m s a v a i l a b l e
larg e

selec tio n

P IU S A C R E S .
W O OD ED N E A R

JUST L IS T E D ) Bdrm, I Bath
Home an landscaped corner
loft Cent HA. wall to wail
carpet, brkfst bar, Fla rm,
equipped kitchen and lots
m oret N ice neiphberheed
144.900
CO U N TR Y LIVING ) Bdrm. I
Beth home en fenced t ♦ Acre
near Wtkiva Cent HA. wall ta
wall carpet, breakfast bar. )
screened perches, equipped
kitchen with pantry, and lets
more Horses welcomed Just
I79.9H.

N IC E LY
O STEEN
golf
course
iko o PER
AC R E OR M A K E O F F E R
2 l ACR E W O OD ED TRACT IN
O S T E E N N E A R SCH O O L
112 500 A S S U M A B L E FIN
ANCING
tOO'ilOO’ Z O N E D F O U R P lE X
ON AIR POR T B LV D . IN SAN
F O R O 112.500 S E V E R A I
A V A ILA B LE
20fr f r o n t a g e / o n e o c o m
M E R C IA I. H IG H W A Y 12 97
N EA R L A K E M A R Y BLV D
T E R R IF IC L O C A T IO N IN
FR ON T OF F O R D D E A L E R
SHIP 112* 000 TOTAJL
i t s IN T E R C H A N G E AT SAR
NO RD IN M E L B O U R N E
S 45.000.
EXCELLEN T
term s

n e e o io i

n #«

•r .ip trra n c td
Call Harp
Slantlram ar t a a Albri«ai
tadar A dnearar vutcatti

C A L L A N Y T IM E

9730

n its
itIO Phoenn S j Coupe loaded

e Bank financing available •
ISN H a y 17 *2
Casselberry

FromltOi. isoormort
c . i i m u n m tu o .
CASH FOR CARS
Running or not

’ tens
Beeuftful end playful
Black end Ab le Free to a
good and loving home 777
IM!

When you place a Classified Ad
in The Evening Herald, stay
dose to your phone because
something aonderfu&lt; is about
to happen

F r n 10 oood horn. —
t n b r . 00rpu.pt I n k to ld
m ./at

67—Livestock Poultry
79—Trucks Trailers
Erl k Sat no M ayta r Circle
C B Radios with Antenna*
Almost new l awn Mower *
Grass catcher, cement miaer.
cameras L camera equip Pius
all h&gt;ndi of m*sc.

Don't p ie no longer needed
items high es an elephant s
eye Place a classified ad. and
p«le the money m your wallet!
Yard saie Sat 10 a m I2QI Park
A»e No early sales Assorted
furniture, miscellaneous
Sat A Sun . )5ih A ;Mh. 9 4
Furntfure. plants, clothes tor
the big A beautiful woman A
misc 25)2 Palmetto Ave

44 Chevy P*ck up Reasonable
in Osteen.
Call Aft 5 p m 12) 0*2

74
D i.m o n d t
O il
”gt O fiM U i Rugt
A rl.g v .t
n&gt; )4Ct

BABY SALE
Trav cr&gt;b. sw.ng. walker, inf
carriers, pony rocker, tnf
clothes, shoes • many more
mi sc household items all in
fkC cond . very teas 2001 E
2nd St . I Mayfair areal 12)
SII2. f n A Sat e I

Tri a ile equipment trailer tor
sate Mea*y duty CaH M7 07*4
days, or )2) M l) after 1 »

68—Wanted to Buy

Aluminum, cant, copper, lead.
brats, silver, gold Weekdays
• 4 M. Sat 9 1 KoKoMo Tool
Co III W 1st St 12)1 too

/ bay tBna auto auction
77—Auction

Pt«iy tj. t m il, » m at S c o t
way. Daytona Beach, will hole
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday 41 • p m It**
tt&gt;«only one in Florida You set
the reserved price Call 9047*4514U lor further details ,

• A U C T IO N *
M O N ., JU L Y 27 7 P .M .
New furniture
m ainly
upholstered couches, chairs,
lovfiaatv good used bdrm A
d&lt;n.ng rm furniture ♦ some
antiques,
collectibles
A
reproductions m.*ed in Also
color A bik A wht TV'S

71 Toyota Coroilo Cold Air. N»*
Radial Tires
Sacrifice 111
Laurel Ave 172 1241
74 Plymouth Grand Sedan all
power &lt;v air. 1200 121 124*
days 121 )945 after S
21 Chevy C 10
Ton Pick up.
Long wheel base VI Auto. PS
Body rough but clean intide
Runs excellent White spoke
wheels and good tires |**»
•)l 1774

TRANSMISSION SERVICE

S E lG L E R R E A L T Y BR O K ER
121 4440

lla m ily c a rp u flia la Sal A Sun
• a m III 144 Country Club
Circla L o ll ot good thing!

• S A N F O R D A U C T IO N *
• 1215 S. F R E N C H A V E *
323-7340

Shadow I k Woods I g wooded
lot. owner w ill finance below
current rate, tow down 177
1420

Yard sale Sat o n ly ! I Cebirw 'i
%% snk w&lt;th faucet, drapes A
misc
111) R andolp h S t .
Sontord

Del s Auction Service No soles
until Friday. Sept 4 Hove 4
met summer 17) 5420

a v a ila b le

NO M O N E Y OOWN Plym w ilt
12S month Monte Carlo. PS.
PB. Auto. A M FMtteeeo. air A
many other e itra s 779 9100 or
U 4 4401 Dealer

• Adiwtl B .n d t t l l f t l . f ,

t ie ASM VISA v e i l
It AM ERICAN l x PME S S U

several

1071 Lincoln Continental Coupe
lo a d e d liees

B U Y JU N K C A R S ! TRUCKS

4S— Pets Supplies

W . h4», 4 l»» m o r. Color T V t
tor |t» M ,rb t »V IS./ S
Sontord A « . J]J 17)4

iteo T ra n i 4 *
top. loaded
IS 000 mi le i t*eil

is m

77— Junk Cars Removed

))* lottoow Dr (H iddm L a K tt
H ufditdt of un utid A,dd&lt;ng
g.ttv &gt;ooib.M t a b '. Sat •
a m Id

WOOOED 25*150 C O U N TR Y
LOT IN C H U L U O T A O NLY
12)00 WITH G O OD TERMS

• Cb*M« Fluid. Fllttf A 0 ,lk ,1
• C h . t i Oh h i w

I C.KditiM

JIM LASH'S
BLU E

B O O K S E R V IC E

CENTER

43B-Lots &amp; A crw a a
W anted

INVENTORY

REALTORS
M u ltip le L ilt in g S e rv ice

46—Comm ercial Property

INC. R E A L T O R S , M L S

Pn JITOSSJ

★ B&amp; H A u to S a le s *

1*2* im pale Wagon I ke nea

Dodge 8200. HI teg gat.
fully loaded. 14000 t.rm )2)

m iller s

&gt;41. Or Undo Or

a s s o c ia tes

323-5774

S l- T V R a d in S te re o

n

la a n M oaer Sales and Servic*
We Sett the Best end Service
thy Rest Bob Bell Western
Au*e » t a 1st St

Good UtHt T V t , 11$ ft up

M A Y F A IR
VICCASt I t
)
Bdrm . I B4ta Cond. V ill.i,
n*al to M a .U ir Country Club
S«t,&lt;t your M , Hoar ytaa A
intatwr d .co rl Ovality cart
ity u tt.d by Shaam.kar tar
147.100 A up I

41 -H o u s e s

Thunder bird If*, root d«r,
toilet, shower. link
12100 M l 1172

7IA V ans

43— Lots- A crea ge

Top Dollar P j .d for Junk k Used
c o n . truck! 1 heavy equip
men* ) 2) 59*0

* 3 3 9 -7 9 1 9 *

F i l l DIRT A TO PSO IL
YELLO W SAND
Call C la n 1 m m 12) 25tO

'E T T E R HIDE The HAMRRG VRVPIN&amp;e.AlAdC7R»

l»EJ Toyota truck M ILUX Etc
cond M u ll too lo approclafr
Do Rory ,v o t 441 tooo

IfTI Dodge Trtvco temper

47—Lawn G arden

) bdrm house. Assume VA mtge
of
CMA. fenced. *n
Sunland Estates 14) *00 12)
57*1
For sale by oaner 7 bdrm, t B
Hying rm , d&gt;ning rm 1 kitchen
C H A . carport. 70 b 70’ garage,
a e ll, fenced »d 1*100 do k
assume mtg* )7) 2)24

75— R ecreational Vehicles

)S HP Evin/ude Never m Sait
aeter F irit ft2S0 tekei it 777
t in

) bdrm. 1 B CB Wooamere
P a n area, carpet.
2 Screenedporchei. 721 )4S4

L A R G E O L D E R HOME 4 Bdrm
2 Bath. Pme fleers, fireplace,
trots, needs work SS4.904

Otaan Front attKiancy. Daytona
Baarti Snorn H ttp t 4 H i t
turn U04 «.» )T1 2/44

Auction E very Monday Night, 1
P M Sanlord Auction. IJI5 S
French j j j t j o a Oa&gt;ly MS

5URV1V EP .

A n u m o FM A Mortgage Coiy 7
Bdrm Home. Fireplace Huge
liv in g R m Cent Air Asking
1)4 IOO C a ll M l H * 2122

R E A L T O R &gt;12 4*91
Eves )I9 H R , 122 I9S9. )22 11)2
Multiple listing Service

F\F.\L E S T V TF

121

HE

Wf

TO W N H O U S E C O N D O
2
bdrm. 1’ i B ineac cond . close
to Vhoppng Has C H A and
WWC. only 141.S00

Atger and Pond Realty Inc
1*4 W la k e Mary Btvd
Associates Wanted
17)214)

T o r E i f . l t , Com m ercial or
Rand»nii4t Auctiani 1 Ap
l » i u i i Coll D*n t Auct on

EAT

S

/{w

7?—Auction

Fri 1 S it *4 p m lo t s of
children*! 1 adults clothing
andmiscelieneous iSO R osaia

SS—Boats &amp; A ccessories

JUST L IS T E D — 1 bdrm I B.
good location, . t t u m . b l .
m o f t g .g , O n n .r &lt;n&gt; out
U I MO

Want to rent 7 or ) bdrm unturn
house ws Sanford area Not
over 1)00 mo After S 1*04) 719
4SD

OWNER FINANCING
17.
btk. Split plan, asking M S.000

V ILLA 6 E 5

F r id a y . J u ly 2 i, IM I— *A

FCR

A V * 2 R IP W AR H J U N 4 L E

M A J O R A*\?0 A H O C P lE :)
H E* TH E F lR * T M AN &lt;

A V A R R IP R ! J

STEM PER AGENCY

3 8 -W a n ted to Rent

40—Condom inium s

^

JM4S F ranch U7M J1
Att.fM o u rt j i t w a o . i n o m

Off *ce Space
For Lease
DO 227)
M oving to a newer hem e
apartment? Sell •'don't needs
fast with a went ad

W

CF THE Y E A R 14

JUST R E D U C E D - SpocMut 4
bdrm. ) B 7 story home Ig
eat m hitch , toft of bititt mi.
peddle t«n. (lose Iff

SAN FORD
AIRPORT B L V D
7 bdrm 1)00 mo ))* 2700
SAV-ON r e n t a l s r e a l t o r

C o m 277 04 14
w t n n is t

AND T H E C A M P E R

E v e n in g H a ra ld , Sanlord. F!

with M a jor H o o p la

OUR BO ARD IN G HOUSE

•*1—Houses

REDUCTION

D ay o r Night

OW NER FIN AN CING
home
w mcome 7 1. d.ning rm . eat
in kit;hen corner w * lot. *
separate 1 br furnished rental
cottage A ll this 159.500

47—Real Estate Wanted

24 HOUR (B 322-9283

B A T E AAAN R E A L T Y
UN f a a lE u .t a B«oKar
2444 Sanford Aya

CASH »OH E Q U IT Y
We can dose m aihrs
CslIBan Reel Estate 171 249*

Discounts
Up To

3U-07S9
Home For Sale By Owners 1010
Willow Avenue, Georgetown
Section Price 17 1 900 Down
17 500 Mtg 119.400 Term s
1742 4) moly 20 y f l at 14 *• No
closing costs Call 777 0977
STOP AN D THINK A M IN U T E
It Classified
Ads didn't
work
there wouldn t be any

m od ern

ouest

house

comes w this spacious ) bdrm.
w eat sn kitchen, separate
Dming Ream, cedar trim +
lovely yard Value 4 at
M7.HEt

OWNI u w ill • iN AN CE
Superior M a y fa ir Location
Highest
qu ality,
roomy,
gracious living for those who
appreciate the finest Thrs )
BR . )' i 5. fie cu tiv o home is
priced right at lil.SOO Call
now tor appf

R E A L ESTATE
R E A L T O R . 177 249*

l.l,

la c lb ir l

r,Out, 01

Cou ntry lly .n j
l lr t p l. c a i ,
fru.l ) bdrm I ', B Oyufwr
t i l 000 44 4 7011 or 1)1 1400

41-B— Condominiums
F or Sale

ASSOCIATES. INC. BCALTORS*
D O tfN a i tnrougbouf
Cantral Florida

LAKE M ARY

CALL 323 5774
1417V L a k tM a ry Bird
IN DRIFTW OOD V ILL A G * i

Let a Classified Ad netp you find
m ore room for storage
Class‘fe d Ads find buyers
fast

O P E N H O U SE
Eoacutira H am . la Aaautilvi
Idyiimlda I Bdrm. I BatR
W-Caal. H A Scraaaad Sa*ar
H .a ltd Feat A Falra. Laualy
Traa laadad Lai STT.Wd

SALES
ASSOCIATES
NEEDED
top * nings lefl.
U a il F r a r *
3?J I960

the ter r ac e

lUO R idganoodAya
Modal Opan Tvat
Thru Sun Id JOloA
I Bdrm. I'y bain. Caniral a d A
naal. fu lly aguppad kite Kan
■uitn m ic r m a ia t H f . VA A
Cony Low doan paymant. lour
monthly
paym ant
with
graduatad mortgaga U I H t)
nr tj) 1047. )7) IIM

Crane s Roost
Towfhou*e.
deiyat 1 bdrm. TVy B. lake
view, tenn.1 iwlmming. all
appi ♦ more 7 y f l o»d. like
new. assum mtg l i t 2)4|

47-A— M ortgages Bought
A S o ld
• pay cam tor lit A 7nd
mortgagai R a y la g g . I N
Mortgaga BroAar »a 7/at. _

&gt;0—M tscelU neous fo r Sale

BIRDS
Toro Lawn Mower left Propet
led. Good Condition it s Gas
G rill 145 177 7014

43—M obile H om es
&gt;aa our baaulihil naw b n u a OM O R E . iron. A raar IR »
G R E G O R Y M O B ILE HOMES
M U Orlando Or
m im
VA A F H A F .n « n rm g
M k n O T H I I T n iL A
l l ’xSA' Concord or )c i l l '
Hartford Both I bdrm. ! I •
m rn g la root, nood 1-d ng.
d a lu ia carpat. drapat A ap
p lia n c a t
Your cboica at
llt .a a i Only at U n c i. Hoy »
M a b lla
H o rn .
S a l. i
in
la a ib u rg No dmun paymant.
VA. dll olhaf Inancutg 10*.
down
Shop U n c la R d y't
M o b il. H o rn. Salat. US 441 S
L c n t b - r j f« 4 ! t k ; l u ..
CUyt II A P m »km gM| - J j

F o o U o c A a n tltb tw p A R M Y N A V Y S U R FLU S
A rm n H i.r r Rock. O u t I
r.raaia tra p i. Dry Walt!.
Car S'apa. Camanf. Sand
M-racia Cone rata Co
W Elm Ava
ST)

ESCORTS
MUSTANGS
FAIRMONTS
1979

C0 U0ARXR 7
LOADED

•8995

•5695

1900

MUSTANO

51-A—Furniture

NEW LO G HOME

4 CYL * 6 4 9 5

OPEN HOUSE
THURS. • FRI. • SAT. • SUN.
lO B .m .-4p.m .

J BLOCKS EAST OF S.R. 411
OSTEEN
(N a a r C o ll C o u r i d — W a tc h F o r S igns)

PH . 3 0 5 -5 7 4 -2 7 1 6

52—Appliances
43— Lot v A crea ge
Srmmuld Woody — Braut tul
wood yd s s acra y t .ir horn,
i-ta. Good tarm i Can u ; 7T/J
offer 4 p m

q

1 1\/) h % g f

t

1979

LINCOLN
21,000MILES

1971

TRANS AMS
2TOCHOOSE
FROM * 5 9 9 5

1900

T-BIRO
2TONE
mil v
GHLT

1977
FORO
4WHEEL DRIVE

•2995

.

�«4 *

B L O N D IE

IIA—Evening Herald. Sanlerd, FL

Friday, July 14. 1761

by Chic Young

K iN lJ S lR .

l S'EJ^’ERaTEO' NEED

40 I ( G ir)
'■1 Troprdl fruit
1 R *ipnit .'y o&lt; 42 Dinith corn
gn.
45 At* prty
5 Moon
46 Month (Ibbl)
9 Com m ut'd
49 Attroniutl
t om igetfr
III right'
{comp «rd |
(abb. I
50
In
th| otfmg
12 aught* pnp
school
52 V irn ty of
13 Alcohol lim p
moth
14 Southern
53 S iim in
54 R otm
t t l t i llb tx)
15 B r ilth i bird 55 m m
56 Epoch
I t Chargtt
17 B'blieil mb* 57 Food
I I T M t girl
56 Slam
19 II l l (COntl)
20 Untt'IKul
DOW N
22 Without much
m ilt
1 Tibi*
24 Attorn*| t
Supports
chirg t
2 Mormon S t i ll
25 R uitu n lind
1 Nisi I &gt;11
0&lt;*n*r
4 Grotl
N itio n il
27 Builduigt
•long th«
Product
Rhm«
|ibbr|
5 Bis*bill
11 C h ttn |Sp |
mcSnimo
32 Finn
13 Fining
6 Am trK in
34 Dollar b&lt;ll
Ind'int
35 Craving
7 Com pitt
point
16 Pile*
37 P r i! ir
6 l i n t difficult
39 S tir in
9 lo t* lu ttir
10 Thundir p o ll
Cygnut
1

by Art Sansom

T H E B O R N L O SE R

2

3

4

5

42

TIM E ANO TEM PE»ATU«E
iir c ^ n o u A iin u 9

7

9

5

■

26

■

43

"
26

■

"

■

”

38

11

”

■
■

10

21

■

*

■

40

8ETTV. VOJ SHOU.D SEE
THE NEW STOVE APCMiE
BOUGHT ' IT'S TEW.LV NEAT'

|,bbf 1
5 1 1»* 8*«,“
(*bbr)

17

37

YEAH • BUT WE
HAPTO CAU . A
REPAIRM AN
AI D C / D V s

35 Perm*"'
36 Stige of •
journey

tceomaH

16

34

IT H A S AW CN EN WITH A

8
48
m itin il
47 Inner (prtM
49 Fiber
j j f n&lt;ironm*nl

15

31

'M tAtCXY- THAT S T O « S

'""T*
43 lion i cry
44 Soup g rim
4) ____

14

25

377335211

23 W sttsm Aem i
ip h trs o&gt;gin&gt;
Iltion (Ibbr)
24 RtligiouS
o b u rv m c f
2 5 S c . iw b ill( il)
28 Sktllton part
27 R u d y money
26 Reclined
29 Sm illtword
30 Cigirene end

"Sr

6

22

by Bob Montana

31 lovd climor
39 drought ibout
4 1 Svrimp plint*

13

■

Pancreas Maladies
Can Often Be Fatal

11 Slang
19 Printer t
commodity

12

11

A R C H IE

An|»r«f to Previous P u n ll

ACR O SS

29

30

"

3.

”

■

44

■

|

51

52

49

50

53

54

55

56

57

58

47

48

n

HOROSCOPE
By BKRN1CE BEDE: OSOL

For Saturday, July 25, 1981
E E K &amp; M EEK
.THESE Q C « S 6 0 U 5 . .
UJHATRE SCU READ fU Q ?

by Howie Schneider
"RklAJOCIAL R ESFCXElW liTV
IU IIJT1MA1E. B E L A T O J5 H IR V

BUGS BUNNY
I HAVE CAtfBDT Q J S W d \

CARROT CHIP— .
CARROT P U F F CARCOT R j P ~

b y S lo fle l &amp; H e im d a h l

CARROT AIOCHA e u r :
CARROT PLUPF;
FRENCH CARROT CARROTS.
MANDARN CARROT.

ICESP fTA SECRET, KID—

1ALXUKETUATIS 5 AP J
FOR BUSINESS. V —

rW i

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob T fu vti

YOL'R BIRTHDAY
JULY25.19M
Several situations that have
caused problems (or you this
past year will suddenly and
quite unexpectedly begin to
change (or the better. These
events are likely to occur
simultaneously.
LEO t July 23-Aug. 8 ) Be
extra-careful today, or you
may find yourself out on a
limb with adversaries trying
to saw oil the branch. Don't
place yourself In vulnerable
positions. Romance, travel,
luck, resources, possible
pitfalls and career (or the
com ing months are all
discussed In your AstroGraph that begins with your
birthday. Mall |1 for each tr
Astro-Graph, Box 469, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to specify birth date.
VIRGO (Aug. O &amp; p L 8 )
This Is not a good day to ex­
periment with unteated
methods (or making yourself
and your friends extra money.
Your Ideas may need more
work.
UBRA (Sept 23-Oct. 8 )
Joint venture* could prove to
be quite complicated today In
that moat of the burden and
expense could revert to you,
rather than to those with
whom you're Involved.
SCORPIO (O ct 14-Nov. 8 )
Someone you may have to
deal with today might try to
coerce you Into making a
decision agatrat your better
Judgment Don't decide under
pressure.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Tasks you perform
hastily today are not likely to

F i x Ed

in c o m e

,

TUM BLEW EED S

There are many causes of
pancreatitis and one of these
is gallstones. The long tube,
called the pancreatic duct,
that drains the pancreatic
Juice into the small Intestine
empties tn the same spot as
the bile duel. When a
gallstone lodges tn the bile
duct Its pressure shuts oil the
opening of the pancreatic
duct. When the pancreatic
Juice cannot drain It builds up
in the pancreas and starts to
leak Into its tissue. This starts
the
digestive
and
In­
flammatory process.
The functions of the pan­
cre a s and the causes of
pancreatitis are discussed tn
The Health Letter number 11­
4, The P an creas: Your

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 8 )
Friends will take your advice
to heart today, so you must be
very careful not to counsel
them on things about which
you know little.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19)
Don't take any wild gambles
today on things that would
affect your work or finances.
Conditions appear rather
uncertain In these areas.
TAURUS (April 20-May » )
You won't appreciate people
who behave too aggressively
toward you today. Keep this In
mind when you, In turn, Issue
directives to associates or co ­
worker*.
GEMINI (May 21-June 8 )
There la a possibility ■ loss
could occur today If you ire
too ca ra la ii with your
possessions. Be sure to safely
store Items you prtze.
CANCER (June 21July 8 )
Try to avoid individuals today
whose basic views art not In
harmony wtth yours. Each
could rub the other the w m g
way If you're not cartfuL

NORTH

7 &gt;411

♦
51
♦ 1472
» » JI4 I

9 AM

WEST
♦ Q JI

EAST

92
Wi l l
V Q It
9 KQI0
971142
910 9 2
9K Q J744
SOUTH
9 A K 1 1 14
WK72
9J2
9 AI
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer. East
West

N«rU

Pass
Pass

2»
29
Pan

Put

Am is
Dbl
29
49

East
19
Pan
Pan
Pan

Opening lead+10

By Oawald Jacoby
sad Alaa Soatag
South's four-ipad* con­
tract is quite sound la fact.
It Is *o sound that If spades
breah and the heart queen

H E C R .c w r n e I ti € y have their
RNlM T » N X L C V rJ R EASONS, EZRA. W)
HAVE ANY THUS y CHEMICAL PLANT
V O Q WRt IT IF ) HAS CONTAMlNATEf
IT £¥£&gt;?/f l n f /2 SUUhRE Wl£$ CF
LAND- m W E D
LAND-*

-S O T W T A ttflA

SHWSOlWODY

M JtE R

MCrMSPlANT
works? m r

M U CAN SEE

W 0TH ER

THAT IT PRE 5ENT5

. _

w - u . _____

_

can be picked up, South w ill
take all 13 tricks.
Therefore. South wins the
ftnt club and plays his ace
and king of trumps East
shows out and the best South
can hope for ts to make one
overtrick.
So he plays hta king and
deuce of hearts West fol­
lows with the six and 10 and
It la now up to South to make
a moat unusual safety play.
He must refuse the heart
Unease and rise with
dummy'a ace. This ts going
to coat him hts overtrlck If
West started with the Q-10I. but It Insures hts contract.
He limply leads a third
heart. East Ukes hts queen,
rashes a club and plays hts
king of diamonds. South
wins with dummy's ace and
discards hts remaining dia­
mond on a good heart West
ruffs for the third defensive
trick, but that ends hts trick
taking
If south took that heart
finesse East would win. cash
hts club and lead the king of
diamonds South would win
In dum m y
and
play
dummy’s ace o f hearts, but
Wen would ruff right In and
give hts partner a diamond
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN|

JEE-HOSAMT! TW CN dlT

AWPLt LOT0*PEOPLE . .
ON12SMB MlfS/ EP f W c
a 0 N' VPO?

i

(rJ

d OF COURSE-A S
I CAh

/

y

^ ----------------- /
BUT... AH l

V - . - - * * 4 * J , | *

• - » -m »

— — - I p a M

a R P

e &lt; x ! b e ts THA.T
M A R R lA ^ t HAVt

\ W 1 L / S t f r V - S P R IX 1 U M 5 .
^ y R o e m - .')
— ■

j

* ____

All of this means that as a
woman
a pp roaches
the
change tn life she needs an
exercise program that In­
cludes enough strength-type
exercises to maintain the slie
of her body muscles. If she
ca n 't do that she must
exercise m ore or consume
fewer calories If she wants to
avoid the middle-aged spread

F L E T C H E R 'S LA N D IN G

T S06i
t S N T • A A /V C V Y

v &gt; * -'

DEAR READER - Careful
studies h ave shown that
women tend to have a
decrease tn the size of their
muscles at that age. Your
muscles use some calories
even when you are at rest.
The lass of muscle cells
decreases the number of
calories your body needs even
at rest. The decreased calorie
need, combined with eating
and e x ercisin g as usual,
results tn a surplus of calories
that eventually results in body
(at.

WIN AT BRIDGE

*/V A A &lt;tY ** O H * D B £ R T t

fcTWA

DEAR DR. LAMB - Would
you please explain why
women have a rapid gain of
weight and the stomach ex­
pands Into a pot belly after the
menstrual flow stops? I had
always been underweight and
now I find I'm overweight
wtth a large stomach and I
really don’t know why. I eat
and exercise the same as
before but I've gained 10
pounds that 1 don't need tn all
the wrong places

by Leonard Starr

EhMffronetr.

by T. K. R yan

P an creatitis means In­
flammation of the pancreas.
The pancreas Is a tong, thin
organ with Us head encircled
by the first loop of your small
Intestine, Just outside your
stomach. It forms a Juice that
contains enxymes (or the
major part of digestion of
your carbohydrates, fats and
proteins. That is why I call it
your enzyme organ. This is a
pow erfu l digestive Juice.
When It gets out Into the
meaty tissue of the pancreas
itself, It wtU digest the pan­
creas, a process that causes
Inflammation and pain.

AQUARIUS! J*n. 8-Feb. 19)
If there are tilings around the
house that are In need of
repair, you'd be wlae to start
thinking about ways to get
them done now. They won't
ftx themselves.

FEA, n w w o t s ? NO CWridER TO THE

I'D H*TE TO f f t IT
WHEN |T WAS
SftOXEN.

DEAR READER - It Is
always a shock when someone
d o s e to you dies suddenly or
alter a short Illness. People do
die
from
pancreatitis
although many people have
chronic or recurrent pan­
creatitis and live wtth their
Illness.

Enzyme Organ, which I am
sending you. Others who want
this Issue can send 75 cents
wtth a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for It.
Send your request to me. In
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 15551, Hadto City Station.
New York, NY 10019.
Death occurs tn acute cases
when the accom panying
shock is so severe that the
body can't cope with It.

A N N IE
*L vh*T M en

IF rH if If A

turn out too well. Take pains
to do work that you'd be proud
to sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. B Jan.
19) If you tre socialising
today with people Important
to your business or career, be
extremely cartful bow you
conduct yourself. A bed
Impression would linger.

DEAR DR. LAMB - My
mother, age 67, Just died from
acute pancreatitis. I Just don't
understand why It happened I
never heard of anyone dying
from this. She went Into the
hospital with abdominal pain
and they said she had to have
her gallbladder and stones
removed. She did but she
never recovered from this. In
three weeks she was dead.
They said she died from acute
pancreatitis. Can you tell me
Just how It kills you?

♦ -» .
7
7

'
'

\

1

�E t v n iii|* H e ra ld

LEISURE
Com plete W oek's TV Listings

♦

Sanford, Florid a — F r id a y , Ju ly 14, t t l l

Scuba Diving C la sses
Stress W ater Safety
Scuba divin g m eans underwater adventure
(or many S em in ole County residents. But it
can be a h azard ou s activity for people who
lack proper equipm ent and training.
That’s why cou rses in scuba are offered at
the pool of the East Seminole Y M CA in

Casselberry.
Tw enty-four-year-old Kevin Gonzalez of
Sanford, a licensed open water instructor,
said he is enth u siastic about the popular sport.
It’s a w hole new adventure — som ething
that most an yon e can do if they’re in
reasonably good health. Also, Florida o ffe rs a
greater variety o f diving opportunities than
any other p la ce in the w orld ," Gonzalez said.
The YM CA p rogra m offers junior diving
certification cla sse s for ages 12 through 14,
and basic certifica tion classes for people 15
and older. C la sses meet two nights a w eek for
six weeks, with instruction divided betw een

wetsuit" sessions at the YM CA pool and
indoor sessions at the Jim Hollis Scuba World
in Altamonte Springs.
To be certified b y a national training
organization, students m ust also participate
in one snorkel d iv e , on e scuba dive at
Alexander Springs locates! in the Ocala
National Forest, and tw o scuba dives in the
ocean at West P a lm B each, Gonzalez said.
Tuition for a typ ical cou rse is about $70 plus
a $25 Iwat fee.
Gonzalez said b a s ic scu ba diving equipment
costs from $400 to $500 and includes a tank,
backpack, regulator, buoyan cy com pensator
and a pressure gau ge.
It's always im portant to have proper
equipm ent," he said
A fter all, safety is the
most important co n sid e ra tio n ."
To register for th e cla sses o r obtain further
information, call the C asselberry YMCA.

H e's H ead in g
Fo r A S p lash
K evin Gonzalez of Sanford demonstrates
his skills as a scuba diving instructor
(a b o v e ) after gearing up (le ft) for a
splashdow n" in the pool at the East
Sem inole YMCA in C asselberry. Assisting
him is Maureen D eslslets. head swim ming
instructor at the Y M C A . Gonzalez is an
em ployee of Jim Hollis' Scuba W orld, which
offer* six-week certification cou rses at the
pool. (Herald Photos by Tom Vincent)

M o re Photos O n P a g e 2

�1 — Event ng

S tnlifd, FI.

Friday, July 14, Itt)

Water Safety Depends
On P r o p e r Equipment

Bill M acy Talks About His Roles
In 'Maude' And 'Stunt Seven'
"I appeared a s M aude's
husband for six y e a r s ," says
actor Bill Macy, "a n d , while
the show is no longer on the
n etw ork—though it 's in
syn dication
in
so m e
areas'—people still stop m e
on the street and Identify m e
us Mr. Maude.' "
The amiable M a cy, who
drove a N.Y. taxi for 10 years
before he finally found work
as an actor on Broadw ay,
portrays
a harried film
director In "Stunt S even ,” to
be rebroadcast Tuesday on
CBS.
"It doesn’ t bother m e that
they call me 'Mr. M aude.' In
la d , I’m sorry the series
ended. It might have been
interesting to see what would
have happened if M au de's
husband had gone on to
W ashington. T h ey co u ld
have named a new series

after him. Now I'm doing
television films and stage
work.
“ In ‘Stunt Seven,' I gel
involved with stunt people
who go after a group o f
desperate men who have
kidnapped the star of the
film i'm directing—and let
me tell you, those stunt
people earn their m oney.
" I t w ss fa scin a tin g to
watch how everything was
orchestrated because, when
you do things like wing­
walking on an airplane, you
have to take a ir currents into
a c c o u n t; and If y o u 'r e
scaling a building, you really
have to know what y o u 're
doing.
"G eorge WlUig, Ihe fellow
who went up the side of the
World Trade Tower, doubled
for one of the building-climb
stunts in our film. H e's like

TheSfonemans
Reach Their Star
CloNPup o f instructor Kevin
YM CA pool in Casselberry.

G on zalez

at

N A 5H V IIJ£, Tenn. (U P I) - Palsy Stone man stood
over by the hors d'oeu v res, both arms wrapped firmly
around the plaque certifying her fam ily's new star In the
"Walkway of S ta rs" at the Country Music Hall of Fam e
and Museum.
"Holdln' this is hard to explain,” she said. "It feels Just
great. W e've been w aitin' so long — it’s Just grea t."
Tlte Stone mans had Just seen the star uncovered In the
lobby floor of the m useum building, right beside the one
placed there years a go honoring their father, Ernest V.
"P o p " Stoneman.

Gonzales checks his scuba diving gear. Scuba
Is an acronym for self-contained underwater
"breathing apparatus." v
*v.»

The twelve living Stoneman children (Pop was the
father of 23) w atched the cerem ony along with the other
honorecs: Boxcar W illie, Moe Bandy, The Armstrong
Twins and In ulse Mandrel], whose sister Irtene
represented her. Then they went downstairs to a reception
to toast themselves.
Patsy, Jim and Van, still perform as "The Stoneman
Fam ily", while R on! has becom e a celebrity on the syn­
dicated "H ee H aw " television show and Donna Stoneman
is a musical evangelist.
The other Stoneinans — J sck ( “ I know my nam e's Jack
‘cause it's on m y belt buckle” ), Eddie, Gene, Dean.
John, G race and Billy are sprinkled throughout Maryland
and Virginia in Jobs unrelated to music.
Pop Stoneman sold the first million country records and
his version of "T h e Sinking of the Titanic" In 1924 was one
of the earliest country songs to be recorded.
He remains m ystical to country purists who talk of him
in the same breath a s A .P . Carter and U nde Dave M acon
and Lx one of five persona nominated (or Induction next
October into the Country M usic Association Hall of Fam e.
“ October's a long tim e to keep m y fingers crossed ,"
Patsy said, "but I'm going to. He deserves to make it ."
It was during the Depression that Pop Stoneman settled
in the Washington, D .C ., area where he took a Job in a
naval gun factory aa record dates became ^ a ra e.
Growing up, moat o f the kids learned to pick som e kind
of stringed instrument and began playing dates with their
Daddy In many parts o f the E ast and South.
In 1962 The Stoneman F am ily m ade its Grand Ole Opry
debut and by 1M7 had its own television show. Pop
Stoneman died in 1968, but the children carried on their
dad's tradition.
Palsy remains con vinced her daddy should be In the
CMA Hall of Fam e
■ " I f the Smithsonian Institution refers to him as legen­
dary,' he should be In the Hall o f F a m e ," she says flatly.

D inner' I had to leap 10 or IS
feet and land on a couch. It

the guy who climbed ML
Everest. He has to climb. It's
just part of his constitution."
Asked if he himself had
ever done anything of a
"s t u n tin g ” nature, M a cy
replies:
"In a stage production of
"The Man Who Came to

alw ays got a gasp from the
audience because it was
unexpected, and probably
because I did It rather w ell."
R eflecting on his early
years in New York City,
M acy has thoughts about
what he learned then.
“ New Y ork Is a place
where you have a sense of
professional orientation. If
you
have
a
stage
background, you do better tn
te le v is io n w ork . We all
played the 'situation' on
M aude.'
None of us paid
any attention to the camera.
D oes he have a philosophy
about his work? "I lake
great stock In what James
Cagney once said: 'Plant
your feet, look the other
actor in the eye, and tell him
the truth.' "

G o G u id e
U you're thinking of getting out of the bouse and are
looking for something to do this weekend, here are a
few suggestions;
Central Florida Zoological Park, open daily 9 a.m. to
5 p.m . U.S. Highway 17-92 between M and Sanford.
Picnic facilities.
" Young-at-Hrart" Dance, every Sunday at 8 p.m.,
DcBary Community Center, Shell Hoad, DeBary.
Instruction, 7:10 p.m. Open to public.
G en ev a G e n e o lo g irs l and H is to r ie s ! Society
Museum, First Avenue, Geneva. Open Sunday, 2-4 p.m.
or by appointment by calling 349-5205
Senior Cltiiens go to Once Upon a Stage to see "Play
It Again, Sam ", Saturday, August 8. le a v e Sanford
C ivic Center, 11 a m., pick up at Casselberry Leeds,
11:30 a.m.
"S e a the Arts" all proceeds benefit the arts through
PESO, Sea World, Orlando, August 1,6 p.m . through 11
p.m . Tickets on sale at special reduced rates, Sears,
Bur dines and PESO office.
" B y e Bye Birdie" will be presented by Florida
Summ er Theatre, 8 p jn ., July 23-23 and July 30-Aug. 1
at Stetson University's Stover Theatre In DeLand. Call
904-734-1186 for reservations.
Rollins Rep 11, Annie Russell Sum m er Theatre,
Rollins College, Winter Pkrk, presents: "The
M ikado," July 17,21, and 9 , 8 p .n t.; July 23 and August
1 .1 p.m .; "O n Golden P o n d ," Ju ly 22, 23, 30. 8 p.m.;
"T h e B a t." July II, 2 1 ,14,18, 31 and Aug. 1, 8 p.m.;
July 18,1 p.m. Call 848-2143 for reservations.
M e rit Gallery e f Art, Lam ps, windows, pottery and
vaaes from the personal collection o f Louis Comfort
TUfany. I s.m . to 4 p m , Tuesday through Saturday, 1
p m . to 4 p m Sunday. 133 E . W elbom e A re., o ff Park
Avenue, Winter Park. Continuous guided tours.
Arrangements In advance fo r groups o f 12 or over, call
643-4311. Special June Exhibit, The Influence of the
Middle East and North A frica on 19th Century
European and American A r t
Croes aad Sword plays nightly a t 6:30 p m except
Sunday through August 30 (The only Sunday it Is
scheduled) at the Cross and Sw ord Amphitheatre
located on A1A South In St. Augustine. F o r m ore In­
formation o r tickets, write P .O . Box 1965, St.
Augustine, 32064, or call (904) 824- 1963. G roup rates are
availsbU , aa well as a senior citizen discou nt

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, July H , 1M1— 1

W h o t M o d e M ic k e y M o u s e M o v e ?

They Drew Disney's Cartoon Stars
By DAVID IIANDI.KH
NEW YORK — lib Iw erks, that pioneering 20th cen­
tury artist. Is presently on display at the lofty Whitney
Museum of American Art. So are m ore than a dozen of his
pals, all of them big nam es — Norman Ferguson, Dick
Lundy, Ward Kimball, Frank Thomas, Vladimir Tytla.
Never beard of any of these guys? Feeling ignorant?
Relax. Outside o f their colleagues, few people know who
they are. But m aybe you ’ ve heard of their creations.
Iwerks gave the world M ickey Mouse. Ferguson: Pluto,
lsindy: Donald Duck. K im ball: Jimmlny Cricket.
These are the anim ators who tolled long and bard for
Wall Disney, the pioneers who helped revolutionize
animation in the 1930s — brought it to life, as only the
Disney shop could. They are gifted and important artists,
and they are finally getting the public recognition they
richly deserve.
‘ ‘ Disney Animations and Anim ators," at the Whitney
through the summer, explores their work during the socalled Golden Age from 1932 to 1942. This was when moat
of Disney family of characters was bom . It was the period
when the limitations of the anim ated form were stretched
beyond belief in a series of short cartoons called Silly
Symphonies. And it w as when the Disney animation
factory produced a string o f feature length classics which
seem fresh and innovative even today: "Snow White and
the Seven D w arfs" (1937), Plnocchlo" (1W0), "F an ­
tasia" (1940), "D u m b o " (1941) and "B am bt" (1942).
Here is the first com prehensive museum exploration of
the Disney magic. In all, som e 1,500 drawings, sketches,
cels and backgrounds are on display. More than 150
Disney animated films are being screened as part of the
exh ibit Coincidentally, the “ Disney Animations and
Anim ators" opens on the eve of the national release of
"T h e Fox and the H ound," a new feature length cartoon
by a new generation of Disney animators, and only the
fifth feature the studio has produced since Disney's death
in 1966.

It was Walt Disney who set the standards for
what was Kami enough to belong In a Disney
film . Hut he couldn’t have done it without the
pioneering animators on display in the
W h itn ey
M useu m o f A m e r ic a n
A r t’ s
e x h ib itio n
o f D isn ey A n im a to rs
and
Anim ations being featured through Sept. fi.
The above scene is from '( ’lock ('lean rrs'*
&lt;1!«7&gt;, (P hoto courtesy of Walt Disney
Produ ction s.!

The animation process — what makes Mickey move, if
you will — is detailed here step by fascinating step.
Preliminary sketches outline and detail the characters.
Background elements are drawn. Then the characters are
positioned against the background, and a test reel made to

check the movem ent. Videocassettes of the test reels have
been provided as part of die exhibit.
Then the character sketches arc cleaned up and tran­
sferred to celluloid. By positioning these cels against the

background paintings, the illusion of three dimensions Is
created. By photographing hundreds of these cel pain­
tings, each a bit different than the preceding one, and by
running these phots through a movie cam era, animation
is created.
The exhibit exam ines the progression of movement
techniques devised by the Disney Studio. Iwerks, (or in­
stance, Is credited with inventing three-dimensional
movement In the early M ickey Mouse shorts. In other
words, Mickey not only m oved back and forth from left to
right but, seem ingly, inward you and away from you.
But the Disney cartoons don’ t rndure in the heart of
Am erica because of technique. It was the ability to give
d e a r and lovable personalities to m ice, ducks, cows,
flowers, even doorknobs and broom sticks that constitutes
the Disney m agic.
"D isn ey's Mickey Mouse, like Charlie Chaplin’s Tram p,
lias a subtly articulated personality designed to interact
with and Interpret the world created In the film ," writes
John G. Hanhardt, the Whitney's curator for Film and
Vide, In tlie exhibit literature.
What takes "D isney Animations and Anim ators" past
the textbooks is that it introduces the key contributions of
the animators in die creation of those personalities.
Iwerks didn't Jut draw M ickey Mouse. Nor was laindy's
Job simply to pencil In Donald Duck slipping and sliding
across a frozen pond. Each of the animators responsible
for the Disney characters defined his character — was his
character.
Nobody knew this belter than Disney. "D isney in fact
'cast' anim ators the way producers cast actors and ac­
tresses," writes Handardl, "giving each one leeway to
create roles, so that their distinctive drawing strengths
and the personality o f their drawing style would con­
tinually inform lhe character and story id ea ,"
Though he himself was an artist, Disney functioned
through these golden years o f the studio us a producer —
always looking over his anim ators' shoulders, urging
them, pushing them, driving them. It was Disney wl*&gt; net
the standards for what was good enough to belong in ii
Disney film . But he couldn't have done it without the
pioneering anim ators on display here.

Bogart's B ab y P ictu re W asn 't U se d By G e r b e r
DEAR DICK: Could you p ira te settle an argument lor
m e? Was Humphrey Bogart's baby picture the original
G erber Baby Food baby? I aay no, she says ye*. D.B.
BROWN, M l Clem ess, Mlcb.
Y ou win. Bogart'a mother, artist Maude Humphrey,
drew picture* o( her dim pled darling and sent them to an
ad agency. One of thoae pictures was used by a baby food
com pany to promote Its product — but It was Melllns, not
G erber
D EAR DICK: Could you please settle a dispute? What Is
the nam e of the western series that Steve McQueen played
ta and his name In that show? TONY HRZPALY, Peter*
■burg, Ontario, Can.
McQueen played Jonh Randall on a show called
"W anted: Dead Or A live."
DEAR DICK: My boyfriend and I have made a Utile
w ager on who plays the wom an administrator on "The
White Shadow.” He claim s It Is Cicely Tyson. I'm not sure
w b a tb eru am els, but la m sure It's not Cicely Tyson. Can
you help us out? CAROLYN CAHILL, Princeton, N.J.
You win, lt 'i Joan Pringle.
D EAR DICK: Some tim e ago, m y wife road a book
ca D fd “ Sea-Wyt” about three men and a woman on a ra ft
The author was J. M. Scott and there was a sequel "SeaWyl and BIsculL" My wife claim s to have teen a movie
made about that book but I have been unable to document
any picture by that nam e. Can you provide any In­
formation about It? AL W AITE, KlUern. Texas
There certainly was a picture based on those charac­
ters, The woman on the raft w as a nun, IncidentaUy. The
m ovie was called "S ea W ife," and it cam e out In ‘57 and
starred Richard Burton and Joan Collins.

Ask Dick
Kleiner
By DICK K LEINER

D E A R DICK; Has Joe K. Rosa eo-flarred In any TV
series since "C a r M, Where Are Y ou "? U be has, please
leU m e what they were- Also, did be play la a T V series
with Hope Lange? K. K ASSl MarreDut, Mlcb.
Rosa played one of the cave people In a dum b show
called " I t 's About T im e " which ran in the '66-'67 season.
No, he was never In a series with Hope Ia n g e .
D E A R DICK: While watebtag “ The Ten Com­
m andm ents" this last Easter season, my son noticed that
“ Baby M oses” was played by Fraser Heston. It Is possible
this could be Charlton Heston's son? PAT JACOB, Racine,
WIs.
Possible, probable and absolutely true.
D E A R DICK: I watched John Davidson's show, and I
thought I heard him say that Hobby Benson was 47 years
old. Please clear this up for me because m y friend loves
him and she thinks he is 55. JU IJE BOIIONYI, N.J.
Y ou a rc both bonkers. Benson Is only 25, as I am sure
you know full well.
D EAR DICK: Can you please tell me If Ijiellle Benson,

who played In "T h e Dukes Of llazzard” recently, Is the
tam e lady who used to play ou "G reen A rret” ? She and
her husband had a pig on that show. I say It Is, my
husband says It Isn't C.G., Rock Hill. K.C.
It isn't. Doris Ziffel, the lady with the pig on "G reen
A cres," was first played by Barbara Pepper, then by
Fran R yan; but never by Lucille Benson.
DEAR DICK: Who were the actor and actress who
played In the m ovie "G re e n Dolphin S treet"? PEG
MEHALYAK, LawreneevUle, N.J.
Ian a Turner and Richard Hart were the stars of the 1947
film, with Van Heflin and Donna Reed In ch ief support.
DEAR DICK: Can you please leU m e the approximate
age of Burt Reynolds? My m om says he’s la his Ms. I say
he's only In his 40s. G N . Lethbridge, Alberta, Can.
You couldn’t be m ore right — Burt Is 45, which places
him sm ack In the m iddle of his 40s.
DEAR DICK: I was told that James A r o n s has two
brothers who are also actors. If Ibis Is true, who are they
and who la tbe oldest and youngest? a JAMIESON,
Cleveland, Ohio.
I only know of one brother. The family name Is Aurness,
Incidentally, and Jam es la the oldest (born In 1923). Ills
brother, two years younger, uses the name Peter Graves
- you rem em ber him from "M ission: Impossible,”

A lu tv e y showed that o u t o f 4,000 ip e c its o f
f low er •,
o n ly
40 0
g iv e
o ff
a pleasant
sm ell.

r .ij i.v .v p *

�4— Evtning H r a ld , Santord. FI.

F n d iy , July 14.1W1

G o o d Fo rtu ne Fo r S a ra h P urcell
A nybody
w h o 's
ever
watched NBC’ s hit aeries
"R eal People,” is fam iliar
with its smiling host Sarah
Purcell. And Judging from
the new c o n tr a c t s h e 's
signed with NBC, it's likely
she'll continue smiting tor
years to com e — both in front
and In back of the television
cameras.
For Sarah P urcell is m ore
than Just a boat: She has
produced segm ents o f "R ea l
P e o p le ;" she is scheduled to
star in a TV -m ovie and to
produce another nest year;
and, when and if “ Real
People" ends, she has been
promised her own series
pilot by the network.
Not bad for a farm er San
D iego te le v is io n station
assistant program director
who suddenly found herself
in front o f a cam era when all
the newscasters went on
strike.
"When 1 w as first on
camera I thought I was going
to die of hypreventilatlon,"
she says. “ I was frightened
to death by the FCC ( Federal
Communications
Com m is­
sion). I thought if I missed
Just one thing w e'd lose our

license. I kept thinking there
was this m asked gunman
painting a gun right at m y
sola r p lt iu s . I c o u ld n ’ t
breathe."
As a newscaster in San
Diego and later a talk show
host for "A.M . In s Angeles,”
M iss P u rcell w a s w ell
prepared for the on-cam era
interviews that she does for
the "R eal P e o p le " aeries.
But speaking in front ol a

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studio audience was a dif­
feren t
e x p e r ie n c e
a l­
together.
"I can deal with a TV
cam era but if I have to look
in the facet of the people I'm
talking to - that's when I get
scared.”
The moment of truth cam e
while taping a gam e show,
when she found the gallery
filled with p e o p le . H elp
cam e, however, in the form
of veteran gam e-show host
G ene
R aybu rn.
" D o n 't
worry about it ... go out on
sta ge and Im a g in e that
everybody in the audience is
nude and you're the only one
with clothes on,” he advised.
"Y ou have to laugh if you
Imagine the whole audience
silting there stark naked ...

(and) you’ re the only one
with cloth es o n , " M iss
Purcell says with a smile.
"It gives you that little extra
bit of confidence, along with
a sense of humor.”
Although the next big step
in her career was made
m ore gradually, it resulted
in her new contract with
NBC, one that not only deals
with
a ctin g
but
w ith
producing, too.
" I becam e interested in
bein g a p ro d u ce r fro m
watching the film crew ,” she
says. “ I found out a lot of
what was filmed depended
on the questions I asked. I
began to ask the producer
m ore questions and as I
b e ca m e m ore te c h n ica lly

M P N l Pa ol
Maid k r v l( «
14 Howr Pharw S t r v t d
It CM niw I C ab le T V

• li«i BMartirnmvfit

NEW YORK - The cast
and crew of ‘ T e x a s " are
gearing up far some location
shoots that will be taking
place toon in the lone star
state. The filming will be

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Charo makes another guest appearance as the
tnixed-up April lx&gt;pcx, who's traded in her
ca re e r as a singer for that of a nanny, on "The
l
B o a t," Saturday on ABC.

I M

'Texas'Cast Heading
For Lone Star State

OBEOROO„
•
•
•
•

PURCELL

Involved, he started standing
back and letting me do it. I
found I wanted to have m ore
input m y self."
She took the idea to George
Schlatter, the director of
"R e a l P eop le." She worried
that Schlatter might think
she was getting "to o big for
her britches” and tell her to
s tic k
to
a ctin g .
But
Schlatter, who had already
been primed by a secondunit p r o d u c e r,
re a cte d
positively and Sarah was on
her way to being a producer.
S in ce then, Sarah has
produced four shows, two
that have run and two that
a re s till b ein g ed ited .
S ch la tte r has giv e n her
leew ay to do as many "R e a l
P eop le" segments as she
feels she can do. So far she's
had to turn a few down.
Will she concentrate on
acting or producing?
"T h ey 're both priorities at
the sam e time because of the
deal I have at N BC," she
says. "R ight now I'm doing
both Jobs — so I've got to
m ake sure my makeup is on
right at the same time I 'm ;
ta k in g n otes fo r w hat f
cam era angles w e've don e."’

nHEALTH tu n ic
V*

CONTROL

W h ere W eight Control It Moro T h a n A Dlot!

done in and around the
Houston area during the
month of August. Viewers of
the show, which is still
floundering in the ratings
ra ce, wlU be able to view the
on-acreen results of the shoot
during late sum mer or early
fail.
There’s some good new
and som e bad news on
"E d g e o f Night" right now.
The good news is that there
are several new cast ad­
ditions including Ix a h Ayres
a s Valerie Bryson, Albert
Owens a s Collier Wells and
l.ls a
S loan
as
N ico le
Cavanaugh. The bad news is
that T e r r y D a vis (A p ril
S cott) will be leaving in
Septem ber. The pert actress
is awaiting the birth of her
first child and will take time
off after the baby is bam .
Right now it's not been
decided whether or not Terry
will return. The role of April
could be recast or they might
decide to keep her out of
(own indefinitely.
T h e h an dsom e you ng
blond actor portraying Chris
Kositchek'a younger brother
J a k e on " D a y s of Our
L i v e s ,"
is
da y tim e
new com er, Jack Coleman.
The rote of Evan Whyland is
being portrayed by another
new so a p a c to r , I s n e
Davies.

Adam Kendall (l.lnwood R oom er) tries in
tain to console his wife, M ary (M elissa Sue
A nderson), when she learns (heir infant son
has died, in a two-hour Little House on the
P ra irie ," Monday on NBC. (R ep ea t)

Rill M acs stars as a Him d irector who hires
team o f stunt experts to rescue his leadir
lath from a kidnapper. In Stunt S e v e n ." to I
rehroadcast Tuesday on CHS.

�Evening H e ra ld , San ford. FI.

TELEVISION

F rid a y , J u ly H , m i — 5

WEDNESDAY

J u ly 2 4 t h r u 3 0
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B r o a d ta il,n t S ri'r m

In addition to tha channola lutod. c a b iarm o n lu b ic n b a n m a r tuna In to independent channol M
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Specials Of The W eek
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and odddioo m Iho natron &gt;capital

SATURD AY
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(ID (35) AGAINST T H t WINO -The
Farmor a Friend Qronao now a
poworhil landownor. tnoo lo lorco
Mary and Jonathan horn the* land
(Porta)
900
d t (35) EDWAftO THE KINO
"O oaroal Prin ce" Alocandra
romamo loyal lo Edward datpne

SU N D A Y
A fT CIM O O N
3 :0 0
CD (10) NATIONAL QCOQAAPtflC
SPECIAL G ordo ’ E O Uarohoi
hoolo a took at Iho artor11 ol too
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800
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A N O M A L m e a The problem* lacmg America a maaatva and troubled
Social Security ayalem era

M ONDAY

TUESD AY
EVEN M O
8 00
(I) O
t h e ROYAL W EOO N O A
report on tha upcoming wadding el
Ihitam a Prince Chartea lo Lady
Diana Spancar wu ba praaantad
GD (10) THE SILENT 8PRM Q OP
R ACH EL CARSO N In a program
hri l awed in IM S. R a c M Career,
and Eric Severard eiplore tha
a ila n l to which paauddaa may
endanger men and hu amusnmant.
an update la tnckided

10 00
0 GD T H f ROYAL WIDCXMQ A
report on fh# upcoming m k B n g 04
Brit A in 't P rin t# Ch«rt## to L#«ty
(Mmu Spamsm
bo prwttntad
m (10) SCAJtCHMQ FOB WORCMN A V tN U C Tb# hum#n ttrugglt
tn d A t f w lu r * tbATAd by « i *mm»g rAnt group# &gt;• A votA d in thtt vtv»d
r a crA A tion of t*A vanrtbA d H ungar*
Ian community of Bridgeport. Con-

10:30
CD (10) M ARK RUSSELL
kennel Math Ruaead lahea

5 00
0 ) (X) O CD O t h e r o y a l
W EOO M O Tho n M M ig d B m a m i
Prmco Chortao lo Lady Dune Span
cm and retatad Matmtiaa wra be
to ucan ttvo be

a

A FTtA M O O N

1 1 :3 0
( D O THE ROYAL WEOOMO Dan
Rather. David Croat and lady Anto­
nie Free* report on tha upcoming
wedding ol Britain t Pratco Chartea
to la d y Olene Spancar

to Lady Otano Spancar. wtuen tooa
place earbat today at SI P k J I
Cathedral m London
1030
(t&gt; THE ROYAL W TD CM Q
Highaghta ol the wadding ol Brit­
ain » Prmca Chartea lo Lady DUna
Spancar which took place aartur
today at SI PauTa Cathedral M
London, we be proeented

S

1.-00

FRIDAY

S&gt; (10) MISTER ROOERS TALKS
WITH PAREN TS ABOUT COMPETI­
TION

JU LY S I. I N I

EVENING
8 .3 0
III O
TH E ROYAL WEOOMO
Mighaghta ol the wedding oI But
otn 0 Prmco Chartoo lo Lady Diana
Spancar. which look place earner
today at S i PauTa Cathedral m
I D (10) TH E ROYAL WEOOMO
Tha wedding of M u n i Prince
Cherwa to Lady O una Spancar and

830

a

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the

RO O T* O F R O C K -N

R 0LL Rock S la n t Roamg" Hott
Franku Avalon O u e tu The Flammgoa. The ChanteU. Woliman Jack.
The Drlhark. LdtU Anthony Pal
Boone. Conway Twdty. Danny end
h e Juruort. C a n Perk me (Pan I)
8 :3 0

( D O M S T U B S * P O H T O F F tl
PO CK, W HERE a r e
yout

mcBcm.

430
■ GD THE ROYAL W EOOMO Ova
coverage ol Iho beginning ol Iho
taelrntlea unrounding the wedding
01 Bntatn'a Prmco Cnortot to Lady
Diana Spancar

E V D M

W ED N ESD A Y

*00
(1) O M O M . THE W O LFUAN ANO
M E A tameuat photographer a prvcocjou : young daugntar conapeoa
to change her mother’l ample ala
tua Patty Duka Aeon. Dand Bknay
and Danube Brtaahota liar

IT) O C H A R L ES ANO DIANA THE
ROYAL W EO O M O Peter Jormmga
and Barbara Waltara report on h a
woddmg Ol Bntawi'a Prmca Chartaa

Arvmaied A good-nelurad but
gooted up pick u pecker wnh on
Ihe-tob prootama gate aome help
horn an umiauai aourca (R)

coveraga ol the Ihed rocmd el play
m th e god tournament (from
L e O r a n g e C o u n tr y Club In
LeOrange. B )

8:30

) S-COUNTRY rtSHM G
_
THE BASEBALL BUNCH
Hoal Johnny Bench dUc m eaa bai­
ting and ceKfung npa

7:38
&lt;D (17) TH E BASEBALL BUNCH
Hoal Johnny Bench Greet Am
Rite
AFTERNOON

1D0
*» I D WRESTlbOO

M0
O

8:00

CD O

W E B W O R U) O F SPORTS
Ltve and lapad coverage ol com ­
petition m tha National Spoilt FeeINN. being held Hue week m
Syrecuee. New York
ID (10) S O C C E R MADE M G E R ­
MANY

0 (i7 )W R B a n jM

2 :1 8
a
(3) N E C SPO R TS SUMMER
S EA S O N Belgium Orand Pru Side­
car Motorcycle Chempiorwtvp: ProMeemnel Soflbe* Mahemg the Cmcmnati Sude. P k a Fm Contact
Karate Champwnehip

3.-00

7:38
8X

(17)

BA SE B A LL PewtucbN

1038
(Q (1 7 ) N ASL SOCCER Atlanta
Clvalava JackaonvNe Tad I

G R EATEST SPO RTS U f t -

3 :3 0
OD
O
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tdO H U O N TS

SU N D A Y
BOW L

IS

3:38
8X (17) W ATER BKSNO •Maeierl

CD O

CD (IQ ) V C BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE
The Serve
Vic Braden rapiacee bad bnagary at
aarvmg wMh wmrung term |B)Q

6:35

CD B A SEB ALL TODAY

(T O

4:30

400
U.B. W OMEN’S OPEN thro

11:00
0D (10) V C BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR TH E FUTURE The S a n a
VIC Braden replaced bad Imagery m
aarvmg with winning lorm (R)Q

AFTERNOON
1 :3 0
( D Q NATIONAL SPO R TS FEBTV
V A L Live end taped coverage ol
Wyfbweo. New York, among over
MOD amateur elNato* In U tporta.
mdudtng moot ol moee wrven are In
h a Winter and Summer Olympic
Garnet and the Pan American

Comedian Robert Klein la |o(nsd
by Rodney Dengerftefcf. Jan# Curl in
and •porticeeter Marv Albert for •
Mturtcal took el aor

WoFtd’e Scat teat Pool Ptayere (hem
Lae Vegaa. Nev )

8:38

lX(i7)WResTUNa
■VEMNG

7:30
81 (35) S PO R TS AFIELD

M ONDAY

1:35
&lt;I2) (17) T H » W EEK M BASEBALL

*00

CD (10) FR EEDO M 'S OFFENSE
A M E R K A -S C U P IM S The color,
drama end beauty o l 13-motor

7:38
US (17) BABBBI
Brovee va Syracuaa Chieie

prwahgmue trophy n yacht racmg
on h e Newport. Rhode M end coeat
U captured m h u documentary
nan tied by Robert Mac Ned

ax (17)

TV C irc le s

By Bob Bowie

Words in the list below appear across up do.vn
backwards and diagonally in the diagram Find each
word and circle il Some circled letters appear in more
than one word Letters forming Ihe answer are tell
over Arrange (hem in order to arrive at the answer

9 :0 0

O ( D T H f RO B ER T K I X M ftMOW

Sports On The Air
SATURDAY

When Arnold (G a ry Colrm an) gets bused to a
new school and discovers parents of students
don’t want him there, his adoptive father
(Conrad lla in ) offers consolation, during
D lffren t S trok es.” Wednesday on NBC.

TU ESD AY

C lu e : S U P t R S T A R

AEAKMPARKERMcSN
CWBWOODEN1R0DEA
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(SO LU TIO N : 1 1 letterk, 1 w eed. )

2:06
7:38
aX

430
CD O U S . W O M E N S O PEN Live
coverage o l the hnM round ol play
m h ie god tournament [from
L e O r a n g e C o u n try C lu b In
LeOrange.« L
4 :3 0
I D O SPO R TS SUNDAY Live cov­
erage ot the I L r u u id WHO World
Bantamweight Chemplonelup tight
Rengitor (horn la * Vegan, Nev l

117)

BASO AL

brkvwa vk Syracuaa ChleTk

FRIDAY
J U L V S 1 .T M 1

ax ii7)
Breraeva Tl

7:38

Ajaye, Allen, Amos, Arnold. Award, Baio, Blinn. Cash
Coco, Colen. Comedian, Comedy. Conrad Cosby
Dances. Day. DeNiro, Drew. Duke Edwards
Fairbanks. Farr. Fell. Fix. Flynn Fonda Gold. Golden
Globe Jones. Jump. Kaye. Ko|ak. Lahr, Lame. Lane
Law, Lloyd, Merman. Morgan. Most. Neal, O ’Brien.
Parker. Rea Redlord. Rolle, Rooney, Ross. Ryan.
Sellers. Sharif. Sinatra. Sinclair. Soul. Star. Starr.
Utman. Wood
V»I«M |W*»B 'B I M I N V

t t l I United Feature Syndicate Inc

�S— Eysnlng H iftld , Ssnlord, PI.

Friday, July » . »**&gt;

July 24

FRID AY

0 :3 0
a&gt; (10) SUNSHINE MUSIC H ALL
- M ite Redman ”

July 25

SATURDAY

10:00
farm
(X) a
t h e in c r e d ib le h u l k
David ta p a a iyiad bom tha a a n l
down in an accident (R)
(7) O
BENSON Whan Clayton

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ANOY GRIFFITH
s t i t c h -a -l o n o

t n b a y attempt ha M to,cad to
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Sand Crank by U S Army aoidiara
(D (10) WASHINGTON W EEK M

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4 2 (1 7 ) FATHER K NOW S BEST
6 :3 0
O 'D M K N r w a
&gt; O C B S NEWS
&lt;7 i ( J A B C NEWS
11 (T'i) CAR TER COUNTRY
ft) ( 10) COOKIN' CA JUN
6 :3 5
(IX (17| TH AT (URL
7 :0 0
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()j
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detail. an S-year-oM marathon
runner Jerry Reker cm p n m g
prams. Capt Carrol haa an "accuLunch” c w a to, muscle cramps
Joan Embery ml induces an otter
•no used to ba afraid o , water
(7) Q JO KER ’S WILO
If D (3 5 I BARNEY MILLER
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Tha Span la WRmg |1M7) Sid Caesar. Vara Maaa
A couple rani a laainta nouaa and
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0:00

7 :0 5
(IX (17) A L L ** THE FAIRLY

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7 :3 5
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SI ICIAL Jour nay To The Ihgh
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the d u kes o f h azzar o

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It C a m s From
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12:00
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Anatomy Of A
Murder ' (B/WT(1*S9) Jamat Slawart. Dan Calcar a
1 2 :3 0
CDSCTV NETWORK *0

6 :3 5
(17) ROMPER ROOM

7 :0 0
NEW ZOO REVUE
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(10) MAGIC METHOD OF OIL
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10:05
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Tha P m ca And
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Clprda Rama A prmca laad ol caramony Iradaa adanlilwa ntlh hta
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2100 S. French Ave.
Hwy.l7. n - Sanford
M.M

M Y BLOODY
V A L E N T IN E

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12 :3 0
Q 0 AMERICA’S TOP TEN
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on tha dack and Ha loundatron
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1 2 :3 5 .
(IX (171 M O W
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Tha Roach Boyt And Smokay

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EVENING AT POPS
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pun John Wilaami and lha Botion
Pop* tor a performance of -full
Tha Way You Art and * Sondheim
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11:00

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10:00

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7 :0 5
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F O SOCIAL SECURITY MYTHS
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12:30
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2:05
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July 27

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9 :0 0
CD O M - A ’ B 'M Whd* dfMng to
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11:35

L -F rl

Shirley M a rL aln e, w ho
admits not giving a party In
IS years, also adm its she's
slowly sinking Into reclusion.
...Loving every inch o l the
Big Time, to o l Anderson
tells any and all humans that
success sure beats obscurity.
Ann Miller's running hot.
This week her Stage Door
Irvings presented her with
tw o lollipops, a b o x o f
crayons and a pack age o f
bubble gum. So la r, no
diamonds or cham pagne. ...

Daytime Schedule

1 1 :0 5
6 2 (17) M O N T O ALLERY

6 2 ( 1 7 ) M O Vte
&lt;IM7) J*&lt;

down that long road. When
those “ laugh lin e s " around
the mouth and eyes get
chiseled Into solid granite
wrinkles she'll d u ck acting
fo r p ro d u cin g .
...R o b in
Williams' newest sandbox Is
a $3,000 water tank that's
about eight feet long and four
(eet deep. Guaranteed to be a
mind relaxer....Look, don't
ask
me
w hy,
but
photography buff R ichard
Gere's favorite subjects are
naked llghtbulbs.

8:05

11O0
1N

By CINDY ADAMS
NEW Y O R K —It s e e m s
Ihst Bo D erek prefers being
a irro to s 10. Down deep,
the wants out of dieting and
show b li and Into raising
horses and dogs. She wants
to let herself go. T w o m ore
years and she figures she'll
have enough m oney to d o It.
...Joe Namath bought tils
Inch-and-a-half long Y orky a
made-to-order mink coat.
Sure beats a serving of AJpo,
no?...Jhne F onda’ s looking

1 0 :0 5
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Bo Prefers Being A Zero To A 10

(U (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

1 0 :3 0
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E v e n in g Hera ld , Sanford, FI.__________F rid a y , Ju ly 7(, i n i —*

Angel Of Light' A Contemporary Tale About Evil
When J oyce Carol Oates Is good, she is very, very good.
"Angel of Light” (D utton, $14.95, 4$0 pages) stands with
her best fiction, ft m ay be one of the most important
novels of this season.
it is a m odern-day tale of evil, a wholly unsentimental
examination o f a theme announced by the 18th-century
epigraph: "W h a t we call Evil in this World, M oral as well
as Natural, is the grand Principle that makes us sociable
Creatures, the solid Basis, the fife and Support of all
Trades and E m ploym ents without Exception."
But In the readin g, the idea of evil is subordinate to a
transfixing story and to torrents of words which Oates
fashions like no other living writer. Sixty-four selfcontained ch apters—episodes from the main ch aracters'
distant and recen t pasts—are spliced into a suspenseful
whole.
The book begins epically, and forebodingly: "I t is on a
windy m orning in early March (1900), a day of high
scudding dizzy clouds, som e nine months after their
father's Ignoble death, that his only children, Owen and
Kirsten, m ake a p a ct to revenge that death."
One by one, we a re introduced to the other principals,
beginning with M aurice J. Halleck, their father, a onceesteemed law yer lately fallen from grace at the top of
Washington pow er. His death, deemed a suicide, followed
a confession of having accepted bribes in connection will)
a CIA coveru p in Chile while he was director o f the
Commission for the Ministry of Justice.
Nick Martens, w hom Halleck brought to the M inistry of
Justice, proves to have been Mauric's best friend and the
long-time lover (one of several) of his wife, Isabel. Owen
and Kirsten believe that Nick and Isabel murdered their
father.
We are w itnesses to crucial moments In the long
friendship, going back to prep school days, when Nick was
a scholarship student and Maurie—with big m oney in his
family—idolized him . "M aurie Halleck with his gnomish

™

TU ESD A Y

up with record prralaa |fl)
I'll O WALTER CRONRITE’S UNI­
VERSE

EYENIMQ

6:00

Q (jpGDO (X) O

ID O
news

AMOY OWTtTM
f f l i 10) 8CX/TMBOUNO

CUmhel*

A look it taken at the mutura of |tu and Southern tiring
muuc at il «••• developed by Doh
W*t and it carried on by Johnny

Qawtoia
0 :0 5

IX (17) FATHER KNOWS BEST
0 :3 0

a &lt;41 NSC NEWS
&gt; O CBS NEWS
I ABC HEWS
11 (3 5 1 CARTER COUNTRY
0 ) ( t b ) B PO LE TO SI "Hippy
Bwirtdly. Own Car*)" ?«ro p u lw m
M l Pam iha Weal mint tar Chow end
the Spoieto FltttvW Orcheelra ere
loao*ad Pom n H i m l to ■ con.
cart cetafcraiing lealivel founder
Own Carlo ManollH ?Olh birthday

0:35
4 X (1 7 ) THAT o a u .

7:00
O U&gt; NEWS
(T) O FM UAOAZINE Th* manta
nor, on Prince Cherlea ro n u n u
win Skydiving on the 3000 tool EJ
Capitam cM i. Pta preparation! lor
Prmca Chariet wedding, Slava
Canay makaa a malar tiuta Cap I
Carrol on nautili tub bathe lor
raiaiation unda Hama viaiia
Ratal Morocco
(7&gt; O JOKER S WILD
11 (35) BARNEY MILLER
tO (1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEMRER
REPORT

7:05
IX ( 171ALL i t THE FAMILY

Brnarn a Prmca cnartaa lo lady
Diana Spencer mu be presented
&lt;J8 ( 3 5 ) MOVIE
■H um an
Rouietie (C) 11S7SI Oaorga Segal.
Danhokn EWoll A Royal Canadian
Mount* trial to head ofl an aaaaam e lo n plot aganel Ruaaian Pranuar Koiygm «hae ha w wading
Canada
fO ( tO) THE SILENT SPRING OF
RACHEL CARSON m a program
hrti lead n IMS. Rachel Carton
and Eric Sevareid aaplora the
arlani la which pattrentaa may
endanger man and hra anvrrorwnanl.
an update la Included

830

( f I O COMEDY O f HORRORS A
young couple go lo a euppoaecPy
haunrad hotel lor llw r honeymoon

9:00
a (.4) HILL STREET B L U ES A hamar cop ortara lo provide nlorm alion an police corruption in
aachanga lor freedom and a new
idanllty (R)
(J) O M O W
Slum Sevan"
I t»7»l Chrtalophar Com aPy. Chna
lophar Lloyd A laam ol elunl
arparia attempt a daring land, lea
and aa reacue ol a kidnapped mow
tier iIII
(D O

7:35
IX (1 7 ) BASEBALL Richmond
Braraav* Spacuaa CluaTa

0:00

a ( I ) 1 0 9 0 An aaprrmg r o d
twiger gall lo b o and Parana m ia d

THREE S COMPANY Whee

laerivng el hra old achool. Jack
become! amtaodad n a alrcfcy «rtualien etih Iha dean a mace ( R i:j
t D (10) NOVA A/wnel Ofytnp*
*n»" The teeuty, end ur t o e * end
.powriK of arumal* w the wH4 e re jut*
tsp osed wtth Otympoc a th le te s per*
form ing N u t t which ha ve p a r abaft
m Iha anim al b rngdom (RJCJ

7:30
O tflT C T A C D O U O H
ISi O JOTHCENTURY WTTH WAL­
TER CRONWTI
( 7 ) 0 TAMILT TCUO
1 1 (3 5 ) RMOOA
tZ) (10) OCX CAW TT

the r o y a l w e d o im q a

report on Iha upcoming m ulling 04

ABOUTBOO KS
Review s prepared by
the A m erican Library Assn.
monkeyish (ace: the features undersized and squeezed
together: pale blue w atery eyes, snub nose, puffy lips,
narrow Jaw...good-hearted Maurie, embarrassing his
friends with talk of ‘C o d ' and 'Christ' and the 'privilege of
being alive.’ "
And handsome Nick Martens with his wit, his sarcasm,
his zest for com petition, his plotting, his calculating, his
restless mannerisms ( clicking his pen, winding his watch,
shifting about in his s ca t), his tireless self-promotion."
Nick saves Maurie from drowning after a canoe ac­
cident in Canada. Som e years later, when Maurie brings
his fiance lo the M artens' sum m er cottage, we watch,

Rona Barrett's Impact Is 'Widespread, Credible'
H O li.Yw D O D ( U P !) Ilona Barrett is one of the
most visible women on the
tube, seen by millions every
morning on the "T o d a y "
^how and a couple of tim es a
year as hostess o f TV in­
terview specials.
"M iss Bona" to her host of
admirers, she is one of the
tu b e 's best known Jour­
nalists, a morning coffee
klntch confidante on the
rating piece Of avKfence flatten m
INI Hart mention |R|
&amp;D (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NCWS
(D ( 10) SEARCHING FO fl WOB-

ON AVENUE IN) human struggle
trull tdw nluit ithared by all «mmlgrm l group* il evoked in Ihit vMd
re-creation of tht virUthed Hunger,
itn community of JfrtdgepoH. Con.
nectieut
10:05
1 X ( 1 7 ) hew s
10:30
I P (3 5 ) BACKSTAGE AT THE
ORANOOLEOFRY

1100
a iiH D o tr o

11:05
H X | 1 7 )h n s h t o a l l e r y
11:30

O
(1 ) TOMOHT Ho* i
Car ton Quean Mac Dev*. Jamea
(I ) O the ROYAL WTOCOMO Den
Renter, OevK) Fish end Lady Anto­
nie Ftaier report on me upcoming
weddvtg of Britevt'i Prmca Chartaa
lo Ledy Diana Spencer
go p ABC NEWS MOMTUME
I t (35) WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE
11:35
(JX (17) MOVIE The Reel Glory"
(103*1 Gery Cooper. David Niven

12:00

ItlOM'VI'H

m ( J CHARLIE'S ANOELB The
Ange* go undercover in a c&lt;rCtrl lo
hnd out *ho * Cauaang a eer&gt;e« o(
myytertoua and dead*, accident!
|R)
48 (35) j m b a r k e r
12:30
O &lt;0 TOMORROW Oueati little
Richard and Wayne Cochran

(|&gt; o

b ta rsk t a n o h u t c h

1:10
d)

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MOW
David Copperrm d ' IB/WI (la ist W C
Fteida.
Tradd* Barthoiomaw

yeer-CM daughter a claaa

10:00
Q

(ft THE ROYAL w c o o m a A

report on Iha upcoming wedding ol
Britaeii Prince Chartaa lo Lady
Dtane Spencer e * be praaanlad
&lt;7&gt; O HART TO HART Jonathan
and Jenntar are taken hoalaga by
1*0 katari eho a a atier an mcrvru-

hews

111 (3 5 ) BENNY HILL
0 0 ( 10) POSTSCRIPTS

9:30
(2) O r r a a u v m o t o * m a n
•n wnoakMorwd ipaach m detente
ol eailraMaa n Iron! oI her 10-

horrified, as Nick instantaneously covets Isabel. Hun­
dreds of pages later, Oates discloses that Nick had
claim ed her during that first beach hike.
As the story moves on, episodes of psychological and
actual viotencc supplant all other kinds. Owen, at first a
preppie pre-law student, is converted inlo n radical
lerrorist, Owen and Kirsten’s childhood identification
with abolitionist John Brown — a distant forebear —
becom es a twisted, revolutionary obsession. Thoreau had
ca lled Brown an Angel of lig h t ; to the crazed Halleck
children. Brown Is a call to blood revenge.
By the laws Oates has created for the w orld of "Angel of
li g h t ," Maurie must die. There is no room for a moral,
Gml-fearing person in a lim e and place where "E vil is the
grand Principle that n u k es us all sociable Creatures."
Kirsten ami Owen—w ho've been bent and crazed by
societal clubbings — Intuitively know that their father was
a true innocent. Bui their acts of retribution are the
handiwork of angels of darkness, social Justice, 20thcentury style.

1:30

( 1 ) 0 HEWS
1:35
OX (17) S«OW "A Kike In The
D«h
|IMS) David Hrvan. Jane

Wyfnen

O

2.00
daily devo tio n al

latest show business news,
film ca stin g, ro m a n ce s ,
m arital woes and power
struggles.
Site's a bit touchy about
the term "gossip " because it
con n otes u nsubstantiated
items, rumors and the like.
In fact, Bona ami her staff
spend endless hours running
down rumors — most of
which don't pan out — before
establishing attribution ami

broadcasting them.
Bona is tiny, expensively
dressed nt all limes, im­
m a cu la te ly co if fed and
bright as new paint. She's
a ls o a g g r e s s iv e , toughminded and aware that she is
one of the most powerful
reporters in show biz.
In som e respects s i* is the
lineal video descendant ol
su ch
H ollyw ood
m edia
doyennes as louella Par-

sons, Itrddu Hopper und
S h cila h G ra h a m . She is
every bit a s well-known but
perhaps less powerful.
The old girls could make or
break the ca reers of young
a cto rs,
g la m o u r
girls,
directors and others. Bona
can 't. But she's among the
Industry's best pipelines.
Her im pact is immediate,
w idespread and credible.

�It— Evtnlnq Herald, Sanford. F t .

Friday, J u ly » , 1711

Entertainers Took Variety Of Jobs
En Route To TV, M ovie Stardom

u w w G ie rye terrene
c u )e 5H cw m
A 5 g ? /6 £ O F

rt&gt;

sp ell r y e

t it l e

of

fM JIB CO M ED IES.

Kathryn Walker, who was
seen earlier this sum m er on
PBS In John Cheever's "O h
Youth, Oh B eauty," once
said that, having found she
loved acting, she might not
have hung In there if she had
not struck a succession of
paying Jobs In r e g io n a l
theater right away.
But the chances are that
slie would have done what so
m any a cto rs m u st d o :
Conceal the real dream and
take
w hatever
jo b
is
available that will pay the
bills until you're discovered
for television, m ovies or
theater.
Along the way, the m ost
frequently chosen of the
"od d Jobs" for both seres is
"waiting tables." Som e of
the loudest guffaws L ily
Tomlin once evoked ca m e
from actors when she did her
skit about a great star w ho
had a secret d r e a m o f
becoming a waitress.

■ yr&amp;nt) d m n g ir ft t i

D evor Auto Insurance
• SR 21 F IL IN G

The list is long. H ere's a
sampling:
Hue M cClanahan, Bea
Arthur's next-door-neighbor
on "M aude," had already
earned her M.A. in English
anil drama when she found
that heaving heavy trays
a rou n d
an
O klah om a
restau rant w as the im ­
mediate route to earning
a living.
Eileen Brennan worked as
a
singing w a itress
in
Manhattan. She cheerfully
says it was good life e x­
perience and it ca m e in
handy when she was later
cast as a waitress In "M y Old
M a n ," which c o -s ta rre d
Kristy McNlchol.
Among the others who
slung hash, ham burgers—or
c a v ia r —en route to the
hvellght are such brainy,
well-educated beauties as
C on sta n ce M cC ashin ( o f
CBS's "Knots U n d in g ") and
M eryl Streep.
CUff DeYoung—known for
the "Sunshine" series and
such television specials as
"S cared Straight," earned
"survival money as an office
t e m p o r a r y " ! type f a s t . "
Angle Dickinson and Sharon

D obson ,
w orked
as
a
trainm an on the I/mg Island
Hall Road in New York.
When knocking on doors
later in Hollywood seemed to
b e yielding zilch, K evin
considered taking a full-time
railroad Job in CaUfomia.
Then he landed the featured
role as Crocker In "K oja k .”
In the faU he will be starring
In his ow n series, "Shan­
n o n ," on CBS.
B ill
M a cy
drove
a
Manhattan taxi until he got
his break in Ihe "M au de"
series. Jack Klugman, now
starring as "Q u in cy" for
N B C , taught g y m n a stics,
painted houses and worked
JA C K KLU G M AN
as a postal clerk before his
talents o s an actor were
retelecast) both worked as
recognized.
s e cre ta r ie s before they
J am ie FarT (Corp. Klinger
m ade the full-time break to
on "M .A .S J I ") also worked
show business.
for the post office. He adds,
S h a ro n 's
co-star
In " I also sold yard goods and
"Hardhat and Legs," Kevin picked c o m ."

G less (whose 'T jist Con­
vertible" and "Hardhat and
L e g s" have recently been

A c c o rd in g
to f o lk lo r a ,
bad w inter If ■ q u i r r a t r

W ED N ESD AY

• Y O U N G D R IV E R S

July 29

• NON O W N E R S
• M O TORCYCLES

EVtMNO

tj

• LOW R A T E S
• G O O D D R I V E R DISCOUNTS

nm
1

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CD

(10) T H f AOVAZ WTOOtNQ
the wwddlng ot Brltem I Prince
Char tea to la d y Diana Spencer and
related tettrvmea w« be teUcael

7:30

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1 1 :3 0
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Hobart Klein.

3)

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| M 'A ’ B*H
U A B C NEWS M O N T U M
(35) W AN TED DEAD OA A U V t

11:35
I X (17) M O W
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Years S C ” |1H7) John Rachard-

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A ” road it buaed to a p ie n o u a ty aa-ra te eubukban sch o o l (R )g
( 1 ) 0 M O M . T H IW O L fS U IU tN O
M l A M narnai photographer a prwc o d o u a young daughter canapaaa
to C h e n gs hat mother a m p a a la ­
lia P a lly D uka la in . D e n d b e n a y

STAASKY AMO MUTCH

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today at SI Paula Cathedral at
London, w t ba praaantad
CD a C H A A U T B ANO CLS The
Angola go undercover m a awmgmg

BOAT

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M am a her la th e r a about to b a
rtre a te d horn p riso n and w ants to
vted her at sch o o l |R)

1 :3 5
OX (17) M O W
Staler a army
(tSAS) Roaeknd Ruaaea, Dean

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1*0
news

(D O

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3 ) THC ROYAL W tOO M O
Mighkghit o&lt; the wedding ol Brit­
ain s Prmca Char taa to lady Diene
Spencer, which took piece earlier
today at St P a d i Cathedral St
London, wd be presented
CD O DYNASTY The threat ot
hnencral drakaler disrupts Bleat
and Kryenes global honeymoon
(A)
a t (35) MOCPCNOCNT NBTWOAK
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1:10

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M ig h a g h tl oT tha w edding o l B ril
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Barts Benton. Jam a Farr, ' MemoMet OT You" Petty Duka Attn. Rica
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OMAALBB ANO OUNA: THB
AOVAL WCDOMQ Pater Jannmga
and Barbara Watters report en lha
wadding ol Brtum 't Prince Chertae
to la d y Oiane Spencer, which rook
pu ce earear today al SI Pacta
Cathedral In London

6 *0
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h a u n ted house, a waa m uaeum . the
o fh c ia l W llcn ot Salem . M a te . an
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S j f c IB
f JC N M Y H A L

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OX (17) M O W
Fade M" |IMS)
Burt Aaynolde. Barbara Loden A
man accustomed to many ahaaow
romantic conguaalt dracovara a
tma aouimtle tn a lovely Mm editor
who gala Mm a |ob with a aunts

(D O

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I t (35) NASHVILLE MUSIC

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4 :3 5
&lt; 0 (1 7 )1

�Friday, July 14. i m - i i

Evening Herald, Sanford. Ft.

L e ste r 'Interested ' In A ttem pting 'S u p erm an III'
N IA G A R A
FALLS,
Ontario (N EA) — Itichani
lis t e r Is a director who
doesn’ t listen to "th e m ,"
whoever “ th ey" are.
"T hey keep saying that a
director should never d o a
s e q u e l,"
t-ester
says,
"becau se most sequels d on ’t
work. Bui I've done sis, and
most o f them have worked
reasonably w ell."
The sixth h as w o rk e d
rem a rk a b ly w ell, l i s t e r
d ir e cte d "S u p e rm a n I I ”
w h ich , m ost c r it ic s and
ordinary movie-goers sa y, is
b etter than the o rig in a l
"Superm an,” And that one
was no slouch.
Now he is considering
making a sequel to a sequel
b e ca u s e (he folk s w ho
brought you "S u p erm a n "
and "S u p e rm a n I I " a re
beginning to make plans for
"S u p e rm a n I I I . " L e s te r
adm its he is "in terested " in
doing it.
"A ctu a lly," the director
says, " I realize that the odds
against 'III' working are
terrible. But I think It's good
to do things that frighten
you ."

1e s te r quickly established
himself as a tup director In
England, with his innovative
technique of rapid cuts and
even m ore rapid comedy
timing. He happened to get a
job directing some young
singers — Die Beatles — In
their first m ovie, "A Hard
D a y ’ s N igh t,” and that
established him as a major
name.
H e’s
still
based
In
E n gla n d . Out of h is IS
Itm iA H I ) I.KSTKH
movies, he’s done two In (he
When you think about it, United States — "PetuUa,”
he's done frightening things w hich w as shot in San
most of his professional life. Francisco ( he still considers
Dick l/ester Is a Penn­ it an English m ovie, though,
sylv a n ia n o rig in a lly , who because the crew was mostly
left Ihe United States after English) and "B ulch and
c o lle g e
(U n iv ersity
o f Sundance — The E arly
Pennsylvania! "because 1 Y ea rs,” which was totally an
wanted to sec the rest of the Am erican film.
world.”
One of the Interesting
He had already done some
notes about l i s t e r Is that he
d ir e c tin g h ere — co m ­
has continued to do TV
m ercials mostly - so when
com m ercials. He has long
his travels brought him to
felt that doing com m ercials
England lie suddenly found
lias been a way to keep his
himself in demand.
directorial skills sharp, and
"When I got to the U.K.,”
he eiperim en ts with new
he says, " I arrived with a
techniques while doing them.
skill at a time when they
But tie says he simply Isn’ t
needed that skill.”
allowed to do com m ercials In

TH U RSD AY

J u ly 3 0
(D O WORK AND MINOT Mindy
to totd lo 0«1 an interview with

EV tM M O

comedian Room Williams or to%•

6:00

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a® C3S) UOVTC

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i c « s hcws
( 7 ) 0 A B C NEWS
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CD (10) FLORIDA FOCUS A took

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Hurl RaynokJa Arthur Karmady A
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a ) o BOSOM BUOCXES H « 1
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7 :0 0

&gt;.M. MAGAZINE ApfoAW ot
radio commantetw Paul Harvey. a
Maaaachuaetii town* popular pig
maacoi. O a l Ian praparaa peech
melbe. Judi Makati mtroducee |aaaat m outdoor tporiing gaar

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110) SNEAK PREVIEWS

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John Banner Bated on atorlaa by
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'•sarnlriM ttto U ft. Army a rwcruHkng
m ethod*. 0*rrtck Uttoy re p o rts o n

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bacomaa a tar gat tor mur dar |R|
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M l to coot hra hada tn a tad met a
naurotic murdar auapad white tat
lawyat work* la gat contempt o4
court charges droppad IPart Z) |RJ

. (10) (MEAT 1_____________
Guests o r Tha Nation" Frank
Convaraa and ErlaBa Paraona alar
in tha dramalualton or Frank
O Gomor a abort atory M tn Iraland In tg z t revotwngaround ape*
o( Irian maurganta and tna two cap­
tured fir mm k U w i Ihay ara
or dm ad to guard |H)
9 :3 0

homo and acoopa Iha acrid. Douglot Knar loot! at the protnama
an amora how arm Iha U B. Palant
OThca. Jack Pwktne proMee Jamat
Co«ywy (R|

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THE WALTONS Jaaon a
gaWiand a Jaaon rekgmn aparka a
comrovarty n Me tlrtcl Papiial

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KNOTS LAMOBM Abby
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10:00

something else for her lo do,
and gut a thinner girl to wear
the bikini."
Doing "S uperm an II," he
sa y s ,
w as
a
trick y
assignment. The story has
becom e a legend, and the
(siblic lias its own precon­
ceptions about what that
legend should b e like.
He doesn’t consider the
move "p a r o d y " or " c a m p ."

He says that "p a ro d y has
never worked lor m e, and
cam p is close to p a ro d y ."
Instead, he see* ‘Superman
II” as a blemi o ( action,
com edy and rom an ce, all
treated virtually straight
As lor "S uperm an 111":
"They tell me not to do it
But I have a reasonable
death wish, so I'd like to do
it.”

Leonardo Da Vinci it believed to heve invented the tcittou.

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unta a guaat at Iha B a n tn u brings
him to h» lanaaa (Part S)|H)

STREET

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(O (10) THE TOW c o m ! SHOW
Vietnam khan ’ An A ,my nu.ee

w&amp;vr

■Hornbra ' &lt;C)

P»ut
f &gt; adne
March An Aomhn-rmmiS wM#
man to lor cad to protact tha bvaa of
thoaa ha hataa

England as much now as ho
would tike.
" F o r a long U m e," he
says, "tl w as fashionable to
hire us, the m ove directors.
But now it is unfashionable
(o hire us. liis t year, 1 only
did on e ."
But what a one (hat was. It
was lor a new English soft
drink, and he tiad a hefty
budget, so he hired I’ eler
Cook and Dudley M oore and
Ursuala Andress as his cast.
" D e a r U r s u la ," Lester
says. “ 1 hired her because
she looks so m arvelous in a
bikini. And she showed up
5 4 months pregnant. 1 found

10:05
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(ft Q ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
K t(35) WANTED DEAD OR ALfYE
11:35
dX (17) MOVIE
The Queer
Memorandum (ttSS) Oeecge
Segal. Alec Oumneee
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Sabrina Tea&gt; m low* mm e young
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OX (17) MOW
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• Drawings will be held every Saturday at 11 Noon af each store.
• Winner has until 10:00 am. Monday, following tha
Saturday drawing to claim their POT L U K (TM) cash.

WIN AT EACH LOCATION!
Msvsr toss than MOO - *50 added each wsek untfl won

�Friday. July 14.1961

11—Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

'B arn ey M iller' C o n siste n tly Funny A n d W a rm
or the w him sical crazies who departm ental war horse who
Is a windbag, a bore, a total
wander through. Part of
p e s t This season huger was
w hat
m a k es
"B a rn ey
appointed the "W hattya call
M iller" a success is that both
It, m edia lee-aye-zon officer,
the cops and their collars
live In the sam e Irrational as if it’s any of their
business—huh, B a m ? "
and very amusing world All
Even though Ram ey would
any of them is trying to do is
love to throw loiger out
survive.
The other key Is the depth b o d ily , he to le ra te s his
of the regular characters. presence and is always, well,
T h e e s te n d e d "B a r n e y d ip lo m a t ic tow a rd him .
M iller" fam ily Is made of After all, the department is
flesh
and
b lood .
The (Alger's whole life.
Out in the squadroom he
m em bers like their work and
accept each other, faults and has his three detectives to
all.
Our ringleader and title
character (Hal Undent sets
the show 's tone. Barney is an
exasperated and weary guy,
but he never loses sight of his
humanity or his sense of
humor. That's not easy.
From above he Is pressed
b y Inspector huger (Jam es
G r e g o r y ), the hard-nosed

I know of no prime-time
series that has held up as
w ell ov er the y e a r s as
"B arney M iller."
Quite a feat, when you
consider the show has lost
two vital mem bers since its
m id -sea son p rem iere on
ABC in January 1975. Abe
Vigoda, who played the all­
suffering Phil Fish, left to
star in his own failed sitcom,
"F is h ." Jack Soo, who lent
his brilliant com ic gift to the
role of Nick Yemana, died.
le s s e r shows would have
(altered under those cir­
cu m s ta n ce s .
But
the
structureof "B arney M iller"
is so sound, the players so
adept, that it remains con­
sistently funny, real and
warm.
Here is a show that enjoys
its characters, whether they
be the regular inhabitants of
the 12th precinct squadroom

Juggle:
W ojo
(M a x
G a ll) —A
n aive, sw eet-n a tu re d St.
Bernard o f a guy, loyal hard­
working
and
D-U-M-B.
Wojo, In a lesser show, would
be a walking ethnic Joke. Not
in this one.
H arris (R o n G la s s )—A
d a p p er, u p w a rd ly m obile
black, a ladies' man and,
after all those years of
ty p in g.
a
b est-sellin g
novelist. He can buy and sell
Barney 10 times over, and
on ce r e fu s e d to go un­

And always on Barney's
dercover a s a Santa Claus
case
is Levitt (R on C arey),
because "1 don't look good in
the swaggering file clerk
re d ."
D ietrich
(S te v e
han- whose life's dream is to be a
d e s b e r g i-F is h 's
replace­ plain cloth es d e t e c tiv e .
A fine recent two-partner
ment, the resident liberal,
am ateur In te lle ctu a l and showed how w ell "B arney
headshrinker, as well as M ille r " can s w in g from
master of the dry wisecrack. co m e d y to tr a g e d y . The
"I 'm sorry If I’ ve put you to police department decides to
any trou ble," sobs the pretty experiment with specialty
amnesiac he has collared in sq u a d s—e a ch sq u a d han­
dling one type o f crim e for a
a supermarket (or try ing to
steal produce. "F o rg e t It," wide area instead o f all
he assures her, " I f you crim es in one precinct. T)ie
12th draws hom icide detail
haven't a lre a d y ."

Tied Down By
Pri&lt;
High Restaurant Prices?

CROSSWORDL .
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. M M A R V IN
ACROSS
1 ( n l t f l li W
— W i*»0O
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I Ti m *

17
13 100 4 q u tx
mnlira
14 A 44144
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16 School org
17 O w i Ft
11 A(IO» J M W 4

TOSm go
W aff* —
77 K 'od ol
Ch M M
74 U v r
Beniamin &gt;

{MO*

IS Crystal
71 Smgar
Jams —

JO Up lo now
33 Edam*
J4 Shad* Ii m
JS Useless
JS — G i r i n j

37 — da m ax
JS — Shat
39 01 Fr
40 Loretta —

47 Scxvtackittr
Howard —
46 A cl’ MS —
Sknlord
SO Wicked
51 Corn unit
S3 Tardy
34 Fur*ra*
abroud
SS F*t*m
36 Coocirnmg
S7 Tak Sp
SI — Bialty
39 Protrkcla
DOWN
1 Bkmwr

11 E u ro p u n
ciptiai
19 Outer*
commur*
71 S«kb*rd
73 MiyWy —
73 P r ill*
76 — V*godi
77 J i p iM M
morwy
79 B iF o n n o o n
»t&gt;t)i
30 — Brynrwt
31 — Wailacn
37 Tt*olog*cil
l*br Aain
34 E ic fi abtv
35 Actnaa —

Wood
37 — Torn*
36 My country
— o* in**
39S*g*r —
Flaara
41 C ltX K l
47 Omen
43 El'P l'C il
44 Eirllry
Mdvnnnt
43 B o x ' —

Spmk 4
47 Rmif 4 abort
41 T o t* Ft
49 Marn*u*&lt;
in d Rwmtk
37 Fruit drink

7 — Flian a
3 Munich &gt;
nvtr
4 Actor —
RotwrtS
1 Da actor
Fianfe —
I Actor —
Camay
7 Fiaeto* And
tha —

I Chart* —
5 Final

10 Polynesian
god

Kids 5
and Under
Eat FREE
at Poppa Jay’s
If you've been traveling or just want an evening out with your family don't get tied
down by high restaurant prices or those bland fast food places. Break away like
Gulliver and pop on over to Poppa Jay's Family Restaurant. That's where kids
5 and under eat absolutely FREE, thanks to PJ’s Junior Meal. A complete meal
ol spaghetti with meat sauce, hamburger and western fries, or fried chicken and
fries; each served with jello and a drink . . . FREE! For the bigger folks there's
Poppa Jay's giant buffet and salad bar wt]cre you can indulge in fried chicken,
salad, spaghetti and vegetables.
Come back for seconds or even
thirds all at one small price. Don't
get caught in a bind by high prices.
Travel over to Poppa Jay's
and have a giant meal today!

Ana That’s No Fairy Tale.
u ua

u u j

m

INqqNi|J«Y’sij

£

ecu

ua □□□ Boon
Sanford. F L 2501 French Avenue. (305)
322 9212

The Family Restaurant
Where The Choice is Yours

•C h*kanS4ndundarm u4lt»a«om pinw db*anadukha».n*4'iw al OlWf a not .akd tar U M out w n w

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SUNDAY EDITION
74th Year, No. 13—Sunday, September 6,1901—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening H erald -(U S P S 401 280)—Price 35 Cents

Bail B onds
Proposed Law Would Abolish Commercial Bond Industry
A proposed law which could abolish the commercial bail
Ixind industry m Florida has local bail bondsmen already
mounting a lobbying campaign against the measure, but
gearing down their businesses in preparation for the worst.
Governor Bob Graham's 22-member task force on criminal
justice system reform - chaired by state Supreme Court Chief
Justice Alan Sundberg and Attorney General Jim Smith announced their proposal last week and immediately ran up
against stiff opposition.
Tlie group's recommendation - which may go before the
legislature in the form of a bill in January — would place
release of defendants on bond totally upon the courts, a move
designer! to devise an equitable, standardized statewide

system for the release o| persons jailed on criminal charges.
The task force approved a three-part proposal which would
put the burden on the court to prove that a person released
prior to trial would probably not show up in court.
If such a risk existed, conditions could then be imposed to
ensure the person’s appearance, "protect the safety of tlie
community and prevent intimidation of witnesses and interte.''nce with the orderly administration of justice."
Tlie gn.cn said requirement of monetary bonds should be
reserved as a final measure.
The task force advocated a court-administered system
which would allow persons required to post bonds to do so in
several ways — by posting an unsecured bond, by posting an

unsecured bond with a cash or security deposit of 10 percent, or
by depositing the full bail amount in 'ecurity and cash.
Upon their reappearance in court, defendants would get
back most of their deposits with only a small percentage
deducted for administrative costs.
Under the existing system, a person can post bond himself or
pay a bondsman 10 percent of the bail and the bondsman posts
tlie full amount.
I-ee Wheeler, a Sanford bondsman, said the state's
professional association of bail bondsmen has "already
started lobbying the legislature to vote this thing down I don't
think it will p ass,' Wheeler said. “The people in tlie legislature
know this won't work."

Bob -Smith, an Altamonte Springs bondsman, isn't so sure.
Y°u inn never tell what's going to happen in Tallahassee."
Smith said. "If the governor gets behind this thing he could
railroad it through 1 II tell you one thing, me and some other
bondsmen around the state an* cutting back on our advertising
and cutting our overhead." he said "If this passes and we're
out of business, we don't want to be left holding a full bag."
lawmakers “couldn't adopt this thing," Wheeler said
I hey just couldn I Everyw here this has been tried it resulted
in a Id-fold increase in the number of outstanding warrants for
failure to appear in court,' lit* said. "The cops are behind now
as it is. If this goes through, they will have failure to appear
Sir ItAII, I’age |,\

■MHK

j| For Teachers

By TEN I YAltBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
The seven-member board of directors
lor the Casselberry Senior Citizen
Multi-purpose Center has laid down the
law concerning usage of the facility,
according to city grant coordinator
l&lt;eotia Cadenticad.
The senior volunteer board determined
the Center will be open from 9 a.m. until 5
p in., Monday through Friday. After a
senior manager is hired, the facility will
be open on Saturday from 9 a.m. until 5
pm , Cadenticad said.
Fees for use of the facility were also
set.
Non-senior organizations will be
required to (»ay $10 per hour for use of tlie
facility and a damage deposit of $50 will
lie charged. The damage deposit will be
returned to the organization if no
property damage occurs during usage.
Senior organizations will not be
charged for the use of the facility, but a
$15 damage deposit will also be charged
to cover possible damages. Tlie $15
deposit will be returned if it is deter­
mined no damage has occurred
Cadenhead added that non-senior
organizations can opt to pay the $50
deposit annually if a particular
organization plans to use tlie facility on
numerous occasions during a year.
However, if extensive damage occurs
through such use, Cadenhead said the
organization could be denied future use
and may be held responsible for the
damages.
According to Cadenhead, persons
wishing to use the Center's shuffleboard
courts will be charged 50 cents daily or
$7. annually.
Pending budget approval of the senior
manager position at the Sept. 23 council
meeting, applications (or the (Mist will be
taken and a manager hired by DecernIht. Cadenhead said
Cadenhead asks that persons in­
terested in applying for the position,
which will pay approximately $10,000 a
year, should wait until Council approves
the |lost before submitting an ap­
plication
"We will be looking for someone with
good administrative and managerial
skills, typing skills, previous work ex­
perience with seniors and the ability to
establish a good rapport with seniors."
Cadenhead said. "No one will be
discriminated against because of age due
to civil service and affirmative action
guidelines," she addl'd
Cadenhead said tlie Center needs
volunteer workers for a variety of
committees now. If seniors are in­
terested in participating on a committee.
Cadenhead urges them to write or come
by the Center, 200 N. Triplet Drive,
Casselberry, for more information.

TO D A Y

’ *1

(
L
yi f
&amp;
fe

Action Report*
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i/v C o n tract
M ed ia tio n
T his re -c re a tio n of an a rm e d ro b b e ry Is a g rim re m in d e r th a t v ic tim s c a n e x p e rie n c e sid e e f­
fects fo r a long tim e a f te r th e tr a u m a tic ep iso d e.

Crime Victims Have Bitter
Memories Of Their Assailants
By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
Every morning, Liz steps outside her
upartment and wonders if it will happen
again. Will she be attacked’ Will tins be
another day like the one when she was
accosted at gunpoint in broad daylight,
sitting in her car three blocks from the
Altamonte Mall, in a neighborhood
where numerous Mercedes dot Hie
streets and rents run upward of $400 a
month.
Harry Black, 73, is afraid to leave his
Midway home unless he's with someone
who can protect him from what he calls
"the human animals that roam the
streets." A retired construction
worker. Black was robbed tri downtown

Sanford one morning while vlsiUng
friends.
I-udus Urgent isn't afraid He'll
carry a gun if he has to. It's hatred that
lias seared Urgent, hatred for an
armed robber who kicked and robbed
him one night outside a bar on San­
ford's west side
Liz, Black, and Urgent are three
of the more than 100 persons who have
been robbed in Seminole County during
the first half of this year. An ailing
economy, unemployment, and an in­
crease in drug traffic here are blamed
for the continuing rise in the number
of reported robberies.
Statewide, crime statistics reveal
that robbery was up 20 9 percent during

the first six months of 1981 with tlie
value of property stolen set at $307.3
million.
Statistics may shock, but numbers
cannot convey the human side of
robbery. The victims do that easily
enough, for robbery is a terrifying
crime. It's not like burglary where the
victim comes home and discovers his
house ransacked, his privacy violated,
his valuables gone. Robbery is a faceto-faev confrontation with terror, and
robbers can strike any time and
any where, at anyone.
Liz, a branch bank manager, was an
unsuspecting victim.
"It liappened while I was sitting in
See CHIME, I’age 2A
■wmaean

By DONNA F.STKS
teacher demands ranged from class size
Herald Staff Writer
to salary increases
"Disappointment" is the word used In
A major bone of contention has been
Seminole school teacher representatives the teadier union demand that kin­
and the school administration to describe dergarten classes contain no more than
their final bargaining session M ore a 20 students; that first through third
mediator takes over this coming week grades have no more than 23 students;
The federal mediator, Dick Deem of that fourth and fifth grades have no more
Tampa, is to begin meeting with Ilian 25 students and that teachers lx*
representatives of both sides at 4 p hi.. paid $25 more weekly for each student in
Wednesday
each class over the limit allowed
"We expected when the union asked us
The union was also asking that middle
to go back to the bargaining table they and high school classes be limited to 28
students except band, chorus, study hall
and physical education. For each student
School Clerks, Bus Driver in excess of that number, teachers
$5 additional per student weekly.
Contracts Settled, Page 2A wanted
The school administration was
proposing to nuke every effort to keep
would have proposals to get some of the class size at the following: kindergarten
issues out of the way," said Ernest through third grade. 25; fourth through
Cowley, the school board's chief fifth, 30; middle school and high school,
.'to students per classroom.
negotiator.
Cowley said the union negotiators' new
"Instead they addressed new issues,"
proposal submitted Thursday night
he said.
"Nearly two weeks ago we agreed to go asked for something entirely different.
'nie new language of the teachers'
to mediation. We went to the tublc
Thursday night with a major revision on proposal for 1981-82 is that kindergarten
class size and the board team did not classes not exceed 23 students; first
respond," said Ron Boothe, executive through third not exceed 25; fourth
director of the Seminole Education through 12th grades not exceed 27 Tlie
Association.
proposal for the 1982-82 school year would
Boothe said 12 contract articles remain limit class size in kindergarten to 21
to be mediated.
students; first through third grades 23
Prior to Thursday's three-hour students and all others 25 students
negotiating session, the two sides had
The new proposal also includes tlie
met a total of 85 hours trying to iron out requirement that class size be deteran agreement with no success. The
See TEACHER, Page 2A

FHA Will Foreclose On Delinquent Loans Statewide
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald Staff Writer
Florida borrowers who are delinquent
m payments to the Farmers Home
Administration 4FHA * may have to
shape up or ship out

Uilance for community projects such us
paving and utilities
Tin- largest project loan FHA has made
in the state is one for $83 million to help
fund Hr* $100 million Florida Keys
Aqueduct to take fresh water from
Mitchell N. Drew, new stale director Homestead to Key West, Drew said.
Coim milities are generally defined as
for FHA, who made his first visit to the
rural
when the population is under 10,000,
Seminole-Brevard office in Sanford this
week, is concerned about the 20 percent but some cities such as U'esburg I which
delinquent rate for FHA loans and plans is in the 10,000 to 20.000 category) are still
eligible because of special qualifications.
In do something about it.
Seminole County areas which qualify
"The empliasis in the future will are lake Mary, Geneva, Oviedo and
concern collections of loans," said Drew. Chuluota, Mrs. Ferrell said
"One out of five FHA loans in the state is
"Seminole County is a very difficult
delinquent compart'd to a l-to-2 percent place to find lots priced low enough to
delinquency rate in commercial banking. qualify." Whitfield said. FHA has
I/its of people never make a single financed construction of 27,000 single­
payment and we’re going to bring a halt family homes in the state for low and
to this."
moderate income jieople living in sub­
Coming under the U S. Department of standard housing or no housing. Tlie
Agriculture, FHA makes 100 percent house must be of "modest" design with
loans for rural housing, farm operation, square footage restrictions and not cost
emergencies and disasters and rural more than $33,000 li lias to be a price tlie
communities' and associations' water applicant can afford. We approve the
and sewer facilities as well as other plan and location of tlie lot and determine
how much we’ll loan. We make the loan
community projects.
As of Oct. 1, FHA will no longer grant to the homeowner, not the contractor.
Interest on municipal and emergency
IK business-industrial loans, according to
(A
Mrs. Marie Ferrell, county office loams is only 5 percent, while interest on
housing loans may be up to 13&gt;&lt; percent
1C assistant.
ami he farms, 14.5 percent, Drew said
4A
Mrs Ferrell and Seminole-Brevard "It is a service and we're losing a little
SC County Committee member Mrs. Pat bit on every loan We are emphasizing
1C
Hunziker met with Drew and the District service and supervision of loans and
........ IA
Director Ron Whitfield, whose office is in counselling the borrowers on liandltng
..........IA
Ml. Dora. The state is divided into 10 their finances.
2A districts with 43 county offices, and Drew
"We are in the process of foreclosing
........ 1C said he's visiting all tlie county offices. "I on a number of loans. When regular
IA
am visiting some of the projects financed means such as counselling, advice, and
by FHA such as Southern Chemical in letter writing fail to bring results, we do
1C-JC Sanford," he said.
foreclose on farms and homes. We have
SB
Drew said low cost FHA loans in the no other recourse, most of the money we
4C-5C state totaled $225 million this year with loan is borrowed money at the going rate
1B-4B $70 million of that going for single-family of interest and we lave to culled to repay
residences and apartment loans in tural FHA's debts." said Drew.
2A areas; $100 million for farm loans and the
"There will be an examination of

f .

9

2 II1U U .

___

M aH r F e r r e ll (s e a te d c e n le r i o f th e F a r m e r s H om e A d m in istra tio n office in
S an fo rd d i s e u s m loan o p e ra tio n w ith (fro m left! Kmi W hitfield, d is tric t
d i m o r. M ichell D rew , s ta te d ir e c to r a n d P a t H u n zik er, co u n ty c o m m itte e
priorities," added Drew, "we will not be down by private lending institutions and
making any more recreational loans in I’tniTu iso qualify. We don't compete with
the foreseeable future for swimming die banks." said Mrs Ferrell
pools, tennis farms or golf courses."
"Tlie three-member county committee
F-astbrook Pool Association's swim­ serves to determine eligibility so dial
ming pool and recreation complex in rllA can know it is making loans to
.southeas. Seminole County was funded fieople with tlie character to pay bills, Hr*
by FHA in the past.
fortitude to stick with their crops and can
"We are a last resort. To get money farm. They liave to envision wlieHier Hie
from us people liave to have been turned applicam lias the "stuff" to make good

• v♦ •

-

-

and whether they are credit-worthy with
a reasonable expectation o| our being
fiaid and liave good security in case they
don’t," Drew explained.

"TIr* demand is high for this type of
loan, especially with the current .redit
iruiah because of high interest rates "
he said.
Pal Thompson is local office super­
visor for FHA

�2A-Evenlnq Herald, Sanford, FI.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Governm ent Reporters
Barred From Convention
By RUTH F. GRUBER
GDANSK. Poland fUPI) - The Independent
Solidarity labor union banned government-approved
reporters and photographers from its first national
convention Saturday after talks broke down with
Communist authorities over worker access to the
media.
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union's tanks, planes and
warships were engaged in large-scale military
maneuvers today near the Polish border In what ob­
servers saw as a warning to labor activists in Poland.
The nine-day exercise, which began Friday along
Poland's eastern border and in the Baltic Sea, Is the
Soviet army's regular (all maneuvers.
Gdansk, the Baltic Coast city where the labor
upheaval that transformed Poland began little more
than one year ago, was the scene of Solidarity's first
national congress Saturday.
Soviet news reports have not linked the congress to
the military exercise, but they have kept up the bitter
round of criticism of Solidarity's policies and leaders,
who are branded "antl-soclallst” by the Kremlin.

Bomb Kills Iran Prosecutor
ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) — Iran's military
prosecutor-general Ali Qoddousi was fatally wounded
today when a powerful explosion ripped through his
ollice in downtown Tehran.
it was the second major bopibing this week against
high-ranking members of the Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini's Islamic regime.
Qoddousi was the clergyman reponslble for trying
military personnel.
He was rushed to the hospital with leg injuries and
underwent surgery but died soon after, a hospital
spokesman said.
"Brother Qoddousi is martyred,” he said.
The spokesman gave no additional details.
In another development, Tehran Radio said Iran's
police chief died today of injuries suffered last Sunday
when a bomb exploded in the prime minister's office.

... Teacher Contract

•

J*

Sunday, Stot. s. m i

(Continued From Page 1A|
mined by dividing the total number of students in each grade
level in each building by the number of classroom teachers in
that level.
In the event a grade level exceeds the specified class size by
two to five students, the school board would assign a part-time
instructional aide to that level; ir\ the event a grade level ex­
ceeds the specified class size by six to 12 students, the board
would provide a full time instructional aide and in the event the
grade exceeds (tie specified class size by 13 or more students,
the school board would expand the teaching staff as needed.
Cowley insisted llte teachers' union negotiators "always
tagged on something they knew would be unacceptable. 1
question their sincerity," lie said.
Rootiie said, however, the teacher demands are student
oriented. "We ure trying to increase the contact time between
the teachers and the students. A major problem Is that class
sizes being loo big," lie said.
"We are going to continue fighting for a reduction in class
size and the [Hiblic supports us on this Issue,” Boothe said.
Rootiie said another issue separating the teachers and the
school administration negotiators is the one concerning
teuchcr evaluation. "Rather tlian Just pointing out deficiencies
to teachers, principals should also be required to give
suggestions on Itnw a teacher can improve."
"The school system doesn't want to work to improve
teachers, they would rather fire them," he said.
"It seems (utile to negotiate," Boothe said, noting (he
mediator may be helpful. If differences cannot be solved with a
mediator, Boothe noted, a special master may have to be
called in.
Cowley said the school administration negotiators were
ready to trade agreement on one article In exchange for
agreement on another. He cited as an example an article
entitled, "Communication."
Tha section Cow ley was proposing would permit teachers to
use the county schools' courier service. However, materials
which could be construed to be political in nature, such as:
campaign literature, partisan positions, bumper stickers,
candidate cards and flyers, political announcements and
endorsements could not be sent via the courier service, nor
placed in teacher mail boxes nor posted on teacher bulletin
boards. He said legislative issues pending before Use state
legislature or ttie U.S. Congress would be exempt.
Cowley said it wus very "unorthodox" for the teachers'
union negotiators to add new issues at the last minute.

WEATHER
AREA READINGS |7 a.m .|: temperature: 74; overnight
low: 73; Friday's high: 90; barometric pressure: 29.96;
relative humidity: 94 percent; winds: NE at 4 mph.
SUNDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 1:56 a.m.,
2:32 p.m.; lows, 7:50 a.m., 6:52 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 1:48 a.m., 2:24 p.m.; lows, 7:41 a.m., 1:43 p.m.;
RAYPOHT: highs, 6:15 a.m., 1:40 p.m.; lows, 12:19 a.m., 1:52
p.m.
MONDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 2:48 a.m.,
3:31 p.m.; lows 8:46 a.m., 9:52 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 2:40 a.m., 3:23 p.m.; lows, 8:37 a.m., 9:43 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 7:18a.m., 10:43 p.m.; lows, 1:14 a m , 3:23
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
SO Miles: Wind variable mostly northeast 10 knots or leas
through Sunday. Seas le u than 3 feet, but moderate to heavy
northeast swells will make Inlets extremely dangerous. Few
Afternoon and evening thunderstorms.
FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Sunday. A good chance
of afternoon and evening thunderstorms today becoming more
likely on Sunday. Highs in the low to mid 90s. Lows In the mid
70s Light and variable winds. Rain probability 50 percent
today, 30 percent tonight and 60 percent Sunday. Outlook for
Labor D'.y, little change.

Edgewater Man Killed In Two-Car Crash
By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
An Edgewater man was killed Friday as the result of a twocar accident involving a Casselberry woman.
Edward Steighner of Edgewater, a passenger in one of the
vehicles, was pronounced dead at West Volusia Memorial
Hospital.
Sandra Dacey, 29, of 969 Oliver Drive, Casselberry, has been
charged by the Florida Highway Patrol with “following too
close" after a vehicle she was driving near Detand collided
with another car.
The Dacey car, traveling eastbound on State Road 44, five
miles east of Detand, swerved to avoid a rear end collision and
went out of control into a broad slide across the westbound lane
colliding with a car driven by Edwin Moore, 50, of Edgewater,
the FHP said.
The two passengers in the Moore car, Edward Steighner and
Edwin Vernon, both of Edgewater, were injured and taken to
West Volusia Memorial Hospital. Steighner died at the hospital
shortly thereafter, according to the highway patrol.
INGEBORG IN COURT AGAIN
Ingeborg Morris, the 46-year-old Forest City woman wlio
recently lost her year-long battle with Seminole County of­
ficials to keep a herd of 18 miniature goats at her home in
defiance of county zoning laws, has lost another one.
Earlier this week, Mrs. Morris was convicted In 1jk e County
of making haraaing telephone calls to an ex-boyfriend and
was fined 1500.
Should she not pay the fine by Nov. 2, she could face the
possibility of 60 days In Jail, authorities In that county said.
According to Herb Baker, investigator with the take County
State Attorney’s Office, the offending calls were being made to
the Ag Carriers trucking firm in Leesburg.
"They weren’t obscene or anything," Baker said. "She was

Action Reports
★ Fires
* Courts
* Police
Just calling them so much — more than 50 calls in one day —
that they couldn't get their work done. She kept all their phones
tied up."
“It was some type of boyfriend-girlfriend problem," he said,
"lie apparently ran out on her and she would call him at work
and harass him.”
During the past three months, Mrs. Morris has been ordered
by Circuit Judges Vernon Mize Jr., Joseph Davis Jr., and
Kenneth taffler to get rid of her goats which she keeps at her
take Brantley Shores home. She has found all 16 goats new
homes, but Is still fighting the legal rulings. She has appealed
her case to the Fifth District Court of Appeals in Daytona
Beach.
BURGI-AR GETS PROBATION
A 19-year-old Sanford man accused of two residential
burglaries has received a five-year probationary term in
Circuit Court in Sanford.
John Albert Keller, of 3648 Celery Ave., was accused of
breaking into a home at 2307 Oak Ave. on Feb. 5 and stealing
three shotguns, three rifles, and some Jewelry.
Two days later, police say he burglarized a home at 1012
Magnolia Ave. and stole guns and Jewelry.
In other court action, Christopher Michael Secklngton, 22, of
230 Spring take Hills Drive, Maitland, pleaded guilty to bat­
tery and resisting arrest with violence. Sentencing was

deferred pending completion of at. investigation into
Seckington's background.
He was accused of striking Sgt. Robert Powell, a booking
officer at the Seminole County Jail, on March 12 while being
Jailed for driving under the influence. Powell suffered a broken
ankle and shattered kneecap.
PURSESTOLEN
Hazel Foster left her car unattended for only five minutes,
but that was long enough for someone to snatch her purse off
the front seat.
Foster, 35, of 40 take Monroe Terrace. Sanford, told police
the theft occurred about 9:45 p.m. Tuesday just after she had
left her car to carry her laundry inside her apartment.
The purse contained $152 cash and $238 in food stamps,
Foster said.
CLEANING THEIR CI-OCK
A Forest City watch repair shop was robbed of an estimated
$1,000 worth of used watches and spare parts earlier this week,
according to police.
Manuel Alvarez, the 57-year-old owner of the shop at 1170State Road 436, said thieves removed the glass from one door
and kicked in another to gain entry to his business between 5
p.m. Monday and 10 a.m. Tuesday.
STRONG ARM ROBBERY
A 49-year-old Orlando woman was robbed by a lone assailant
Wednesday afternoon as she walked in front of a Sanford
restaurant.
Barbara Jane Hollenbach reported that she was walking on
the sidewalk in front of the Holiday House restaurant, 330 E.
Commercial St., about 4 p.m. when a man came up behind her,
put his hand around her neck and said, "Give me your purse." :
The thief snatched Hollenbach’s purse and fled on foot. The •
purse, minus $120 in cash, was later found at Redding Gardens
Apartments on Ixxrust Avenue eight blocks away.

For Clerks, Bus Drivers

School Board Approves New Contracts
ByDONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Three-year contracts with the
Seminole Education Clerical
Association and with the Seminole
County School Bus Drivers
Association Inc., granting 8.49
percent across the board pay raises,
have been unanimously approved by
the school board.
New benefits granted under the
two contracts will cost an additional
$799,346 annually.
Under the new contract, beginning
bus drivers will receive $4.80 per
hour, up from $4 42. The contract

Among the changes In the bus
affects the salary and working
conditions of 190 school bus drivers drivers’ contract were:
— A three-step, rather than fourin the county. Total cost to the
grievance
procedure.
county school board for salary in­ step
creases, increased fixed costs such Previously the bus driver would
as social security and state appeal first to his supervisor, then
retirem ent, additional uniform the school superintendent, the school
allowance and increased insurance board and then an arbitrator. The
premiums is $113,156 annually, said new procedure eliminates the school
Ernest Cowley, chief school board board from the procedure.
— Introduction of a pilot program
negotiator.
The new clerical union contract, on handling sick leave, Cowley said.
involving 500 clerical employees, Sick leave Is accumulated at the rate
will cost the county school board an of one day per month.
The new measure will allow bus
additional $686,190 annually. The
pay raises arc retroactive to July 1. drivers at the end of the year to

"sell" their sick leave time back to
the school board at 80 percent of its
value. "This is to encourage em­
ployees not to abuse sick leave,"
Cowlqy said. The bus drivers may
also opt to carryover their sick leave
from year to year.
— a new procedure to remove
items of a derogatory nature from a
driver's file after five years.
— Increase in uniform allowance
from $75 to $100 annually. The board
also agreed to pay the $93 more
annually it costs for each driver's
hospitalization and life insurance.
The board approved as changes in

... Crime Victims Recall Ordeals
(Cewtlaaed From Page I A)
my car, waiting for a friend who I was
going to drive to work," says Liz.
Suddenly, she recalls, a hand grabbed
her arm. A gun barrel loomed Urge
directly in front of her face.
"Hand over your purse! Now!" a
voice boomed.
"No," Liz said, replying so quickly
that her own words surprised her. The
man lifted the gun to her face.
"Don’t cause no trouble, lady, Just
gimme the purse."
"All I could think about w u how
much trouble it would be losing my
address book, and driver’s license, and
credit cards, I don’t know why I wasn't
more afraid," Liz recalls.
She bent down to get her purse, and
then suddenly lunged to the passenger
side of her sports car, straddling the
gear shift, screaming as she pushed
open the car door and tumbled outside.
Her attacker jumped inside the car,
where the keys still dangled from the
steering column, and took off.
“Look," liz says, lifting her thin left
hand. "I’m not the kind who shows

i was so angry.
Why did It happen
to mo.' Why did
the man taka
my property?'
emotion, but look at my hand trem­
bling.
"It happens, sometimes everyday,"
she adds. "How l o n g . . . how long will I
be like this?"
She pauses, glancing down at a trio of
gold chains dangling from her neck and
begins nervously rolling them between
her fingers.
"I was so angry,” she begins. “Why
did It happen to me? What gave that
man the right to take my property. To
do this to me?"
The Incident has made her a bit
paranoid. She quit frequenting a
favorite restaurant In Sanford's black
community (or fear of running into her
attacker. "It seemed ilka they (blacks)
were all watching me," she says.
“When I see blacks, I'm afraid.”
She stops suddenly, her face red­
dening. She runs her hand through her
black hair. Liz is 34, the product of a
small town In upstate New York where,
u a kid, "we didn't even lock our doors
at night.
“I didn't mean that like It sounded. I
m ean .. . it's ju s t. . . well, I know there
area lot of good blacks, fine people, but
he, the guy who robbed me, he w u
black."
The fear w u the first hassle. There
were others; Uka changing the locks at
her apartment. He had her keys so she

replaced all the locks. It cost her £7.
Then there was her car. Police
recovered it several days after it was
stolen, tt had apparently been wracked
nnd abandoned In ta k e County. IJz Is
still paying car repair bills.
Even alter all that, she's not even
sure she wants the man caught. "On the
one hand, he should be punished," she
u y s. "But on the other hand, 1 don't
want him caught because I'll have to go
through it all over again. It’s so
frustrating."
Small and female, Uz was an e u y
target. So was Harry Black. He Is old.
"Wtiat's an old man to do?” he aks
angrily, pounding a wrinkled fist on the
arm of his rocking chair. "We ain't got
no control of our own lives. Somebody
want to rob us, kill us, all they have to
do Is do It."
It was five months ago when Black
was robbed, the second time in as many
years. "I was Just walking downtown,
going to the store for some tea so me
and some friends could have it for lunch
when these two kids, one of them had a
knife, grabbed me and said they wanted
my wallet."
Before Black could hand it over, one
of the young thugs knocked him to 11*
ground, causing him to break a finger
and skin his knees. " I’m laying on the
ground and they take my wallet. Got
$250. I'd Just cashed my pension
check."
Black u y s he la afraid to go out by
himself now. "I don't trust nobody no
more. And I lived here near all my life.
It shouldn't be that way," he u y s,
shaking his head back and forth, tie
pauses and repeats himself, "But
what's an old man to do?"
Lucius targent knows what he’s
going to do. "I'm gonna hurt those
dudes if I ever see them again. I'm
really gonna hurt 'em."
Looking at targent, one has to doubt
his words. His spirit is willing perhaps,
but his body isn't so sure, targent is
thin, probably doesn't weigh more than
130 pounds. He doesn't know. "I could
probably put on some meat ITn I'd eat
more," he u y s, tugging st a scrawny
arm. "But I forgets. Sometimes, 1 Just
want me another drink. That’s a ll"
It w u his drinking that, indirectly at
least, led to targent's run-in with the
wrong end of someone elie's shoe.
It was a Saturday night about three
months ago at one of the tiny bars that
dot the Goldsboro section on Sanford's
west aide. "I w u Just standing around
with some guvs drinking and I got kind
ol woozy, so I went around back to ait
down, you know. Wasn’t hurting
nobody,
"Then these two dudes come around
back too," (argent recalls. He didn't
suspect a thing. "They had a bag. I
figure they had a bottle and they was
going to share. We do that sometimes,
you know."

But not this time. "They was Just
kids,” targent says, "you know, 15 or
16. They tell me, ‘This is a stick-up, old
man.' Hell, I ain’t but 43." He looks
older.
"Where’s your money, man?" they
asked.
"Ain't got none," targent replied.
"Done drunk it all up.”
One of the boys slapped him. "Lying
son of a — ."
They slapped him around some more,
targent (ell and they began to kick him.
"I couldn’t do nothing," he says, ad­
ding, "1 was drunk."
As 1-argent lay on the ground
helpless, his assailants went through
his pockets. They found $25 In his shirt
pocket. One of the boys pulled a knife,
sticking the blade in targent's face and
warning him, "Don’t you call the heat."
targent became ill. Then there was
silence. The punks were gone, but
ta rg e n t couldn't move. He was
nauseous and shaking. He could hear
the sounds of the Juke box inside the bar

T hat alni right,
man, kicking folks
when they Is down.
A ln i right at all. Next
time, I'm gonna get
me a gun.'
and the laughing and conversations of
people on the other side of the building.
But he lay there motionless for what
seemed like hours. It w u probably only
minutes.
Finally able to stand, targent walked
around to the street to get help. He tried
to flag down a car. It didn't stop. Two
more aped by. The fourth one stopped.
The driver called the police, targent
made a report. No one w u ever caught.
He didn't git his money back.
"Probably never will," he concedes.
targent should be happy to be alive.
Instead, he's mad. "Ain't nobody got
the right to do that to me," he rails,
waving his bony arms. "I understand
the kind of people who done this to me. I
been poor all my life, lived with those
kind of folks all my life."
But Just because he understands,
doesn't mean he forgives. “Man, I ain't
never hurt nobody. I work a little and
drink some. Just trying to survive, you
know? 1 ain't got much and what I got
nobody should take."
Drained of his sympathy by life's
cruel realities, targent, like many
crime victims, is left angry and
searching fer an answer and finding
only a personal solution.
"I never done nothing to thou dudes,
but they kicked me and robbed me,” lie
u y s, shaking his h u d . "That ain’t
lUht, man, kicking folks when they is
down. Ain't right at aQ. Next time. I'm
gonna get me a gun."

the clerical union contract:
— Elimination of the school board
as part of the grievance procedure,:
The new steps call for grievances to:
be filed first with the supervisor*:
then the superintendent and then the
grievance will go to binding ar­
bitration.
— Assurances that reprimands
will be given privately only.
— Permission for payroll1
deductions for tax shelters such as
mutual lunds.
— Addition of a $100 bonus an-',
nually for participation in courses to
improve job skills.

�Lake Mary Asks Chamber Help In Drive To Dial Orlando Toll-Free
By DONNA ESTES
lirrald Staff Writer
Lake Mary will be calling on the city of
Sanford and the chambers of commerce
of both communities to band together in
an effort to get toll-free telephone service
to Orlando.
A! Wichman of Sunrise Point urged the
city to lead Sanford-f-ake Mary area
drive (or the expanded service, saying ft
costs him 11.50 to call Orlando from
Sanford or Like Mary.
He said Orlando customers of Southern
Bell recently petitioned tor the expanded
service to U ke Mary and Sanford, but
were turned down because only 2.3
percent of that area's customers want
the additional service.

Stricklcr said one of the most misun­
Wichman said Larry Slrickler, Sanford
district manager for Southern Bell, derstood matters about local telephone
urged him to conduct a survey to sen-ice is the belief by many that it is
determ ine how many Lake Mary free. "The cost of local calls arc
telephone customers make calls to averaged and ull telephone subscribers
Orlando monthly and then to take their share the cost of that sendee," he said.
"If only five percent of the people in
request to the state’s Public Service
Like Mary and Sanford have a 'strong
Commission iPSCt
Wichman said he currently pays |2.50 community interest' in Orlando and want
extra monthly on his telephone bill for 30 the expanded sendee, the other 95 per­
minutes worth of telephone calls each cent would have to share in the cost. Vet
that 95 percent would receive no benefit
month to Orlando.
Slrickler said today the PSC is the only from the expanded sendee," Slrickler
agency with authority to make a decision said.
He said the PSC would be looking at the
on extending the local sendee. He said
Like Mary would have to prove a question of community interest.
Stricklcr said while he was in public"strong community interest" with
relations with Southern Bell for two
Orlando,

years in the Orlando area, he recalls no
petition being circulated by Orlando
residents wishing expanded service to
Like Mary or Sanford.
Some 5L telephone calls are made
monthly per telephone by Sunford-Lake
Mary subscribers to Oriando Stricklcr
said. One of the parameters used by the
PSC for extending service is three calls
per telephone per month, so the activity
does fall within those guidelines,
Slrickler said.
Tlie second parameter ts that 50 per­
cent of all the customers must make two
or more calls per month to Orlando,
Stricklcr said and that statistic Is
unknown. "We don’t have that in­
formation," he said.

City Manager Phil Kulbes was in­
Stricklcr noted that surveys done in
other areas show, however, that structed to contact the Sanford city
generally 10 percent of the people make80 commission, the chambers of both cities.
l&gt;ercent of the telephone calls. If the Southern Bell and the PSC on the request.
(Ireater Sanford Chamber of Com­
service were extended, he said, the other
90 percent of the subscribers would have merce Executive Manager Jack Horner
said today it would be nice to pick up the
to pay more to benefit the 10 percent.
When service is expanded like this, the telephone and lie able to call Orlando
base rate of all telephone calls go up a
"This is not the first time it has been
lew dollars, he said, adding he doesn't brought up,” Homer said. “There un­
know exactly what the amount of the reasons why it is impractical. The bot­
increase would be.
tom line is that the cost would have to tsStricklcr added th.T the telephone picked up by someone."
Wichman said Thursday mghi the
company policy is that all telephone
service should stand on its own and pay additional service would mean an ad­
for itself. "Extending the service would ditional cost on monthly telephone base
probably not bo in the best interests of all bills, but many are willing to pay that
extra charge.
Sanford-Like Mary customers."

-i

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• •

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„ 72

„

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�&lt;A— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

tonjjayjept.*, m i

NATION
IN BRIEF
Glenn Turner's Operation
Challenged In Lou/$/ana
BATON ROUGE, Ij . (UPI) — Dvuisiana Attorney
General William Guste has challenged the legality of
Florida promoter Glenn Turner’s company that sells selfmotivation courses and promises participants wealth for
attracting others to the firm.
Gusle filed suit Friday against Challenge Inc., Turner
and several other company executives, claiming their selfmotivation ’•pyramid" selling courses violate trade laws.
The suit was filed in Orleans Parish Civil District Court.
Guste said the suit alleges several violations of
iMilsiana's Unfair Trade Practices and
Consumer
Protection I.aw, including deception regarding the income
to be earned by Challenge participants and the nature of the
market for Challenge courses.
He and Consumer Protection director Ann P. Myers said
the Challenge company utilizes a "pyramid sales
marketing scheme" promising riches for participants who
p n recruit new participants.

Energy Prices Drop Slightly
By United Press International
Energy prices at the wholesale level dropped another 0.7
percent In August —the fourth monthly decline in a row, the
iiibor Department said Friday in its report on producer
prices. Gasoline prices fell 1.6 percent for the month.
Texaco Inc., the nation's fourth largest gasoline
marketer, said Friday it will require its dealers to pay a 3
percent "processing charge" on gasoline credit card sales
beginning Nov. 1 — a move that could cost its customers
about 4 cents more a gallon.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will
hold an emergency meeting late lids month at an un­
disclosed location to try again to reunify its pricing policy,
the daily newspaper A1 Ral Al Aain said Friday.

CALENDAR
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER i
Florida Hospital-Orlando offers six-part seminar on
understanding children. For information call 897-1929
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBERS
Sanford AA Beginners, 8:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
Starlight Promenadrn, 8 p.m., DeBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
Overeaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m!, Altamonte Mall,
Sean.
Alrohollri Anonymous, 8 p in,, Altamonte Springs
Community Church, Stale Hoad 436 at Hermits Trail.
Closed.
Bom to Win AA group, 8 p.m., Havenpa Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Road, Sanford. Closed.
Casselberry AA, 8 p.m.. Ascension lailheran Church,
Overbrook Drive, Casselberry. Closed except second
and last Wednesdays when open.
Rrbos and live Oak Rrbos Club AA, 220 IJve Oak
Center, Casselberry, noon and 8 p.m.
Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m:. Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
Sanford Serenaders senior r ltlir u dance, 2:30 p.m..
Civic Center.
FHIOAY, SEPTEMBER II
Sullie Harrison Chapter DAR, 2:30 p.m., at home of
Dr. Sara Irrgang, 133 Aldean Drive, Sanford. Cdr. Guy
Strickland will speak on "Reflections on Hie Con­
stitution."
SATURDAY. SEPTEMRF.R 11
Murids Symphony Youth Orchestra final audition,
Bob Carr Auditorium Rehearsal Hall. For musicians
elementary through high school. Call 862-7434 tor
appointment.
I.upui Foundation of Florida, IJ-'A, 2 p.m., 1215 E.
Nebraska Ave., Orlando l Boy Seoul building) SpeakerKaren McKentie, teacher at Valencia Community
College, on "Relaxation Techniques."
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13
Sunbelt lirmerorallls Chapter, 3 p.m., First Federal
Savings k Imm. DeBary - Plant auction and slide show.
MONDAY, SEPT. 14
We Care Inc. orientation for volunteers, 7 p.m., 112
Pasadena Place, Orlando. Monday and Thuraday
nights through Oct. 15.

The Most Dangerous Holiday
United Press International
Thousands of I jb o r Day holiday motorists traveled the
highways en route to that perfect picnic spot or weekend
getaway to celebrate the last holiday of summer, and
perhaps the most dangerous one.
The National Safety Council said Labor Day is considered
the most dangerous holiday of the year.
The council estimated earlier this week as many as SBO
people wilt be killed on the nation's highways during the
Ihree-day period and 23,000 others could suffer disabling
injuries.
la st year, Ml people died in traffic accidents during the
weekend, and 21,300 were seriously injured. The death
count began at 6 p.m. (local time) Friday and ends at
midnight Monday.

Brinkley Quits His Job
NEW YOHK (UPI) — David Brinkley, a guiding figure of
television news broadcasts whose wit, style and baritone
made him the cornerstone of NBC News for 33 years, will
retire in October.
NBC, which made the announcement Friday, was sur­
prised by Brinkley's decision. An aide said Brinkley, 61,
took a couple of days off and "doesn't really want to talk to
anyone right now."
But the Washington Post quoted the newsman as
stressing lie's "not quilling work." "I just wanted a
change," Brinkley told the Post, saying he has "already
received a dozen phone calls regarding possible Jobs."

Murder Trial Postponed
ATI.ANTA (UPI) — The murder trial of Wayne B.
Williams, who prosecutors claim is linked to two of 2S
Atlanta black slayings by fibers "unique in their com­
binations," has been indefinitely delayed as a result of a
defense motion.
Williams, 23, a freelance photographer and would-be
talent scout, was present in a secured courtroom Friday
when Superior Court Judge Clarence Cooper announced he
was delaying the case to allow lime for a review of
prosecution files and subsequent rulings on a series of
defense motions.
Citing a U S. Supreme Court ruling, the defense had filed
a motion asking for disclosure of all exculpatory evidence,
or information in prosecution hands that might be favorable
to the defense.

...Bail Bond

(Continued From Page lAi
warrants running out their ears.”
Smith, o former Orange County deputy sheriff, said caseload
and manpower constraints "won't allow the cops to do as good
a job as we do. f know when I was in Orange County, if a
warrant was issued today, It could lie there for weeks before an
officer even started to work on it. The dude could be in Brazil
by liven.
"This is Just another one of these deals where government Is
getting into the area of free enterprise," Smith said. “It would
be putting another burden on the taxpayer."
Wheeler pointed out that a 1971 study in Broward County
showed that it cost 8151 lor police to execute a warrant on a
suspect for failure to appear (or his day In court. "It doesn’t
cost the taxpayers a dime (or us to do it.
"A deputy Is going to collect his paycheck on Friday whether
he catches the guy or not," Wheeler said. "Knowing that, he
may not give It his best shot.! ( we don’t make sure our clients
show up, we lose money. That's a definite incentive to do the
best Job possible.”
Jerry Bennett, a low professor al the University of Florida,
presented the committee report and said there is little data to
support a theory people are more likely to show up In court if
they have posted bund.
"Commercial bail Is not on incentive," agreed former state
legislator Barry Richard oi Miami, who said defendants don’t
gel their 10 percent back when they appear In court.
"Its only purpose Is to keep a private industry In business,"
he said.
Sen. Joe Curluccl, D-Jacksonvllle, predicted the task force’s
proposal will enrage bail bondsmen.
"We ought to call this the woodwork evacuation art because
this will bring them out," he said. — BRITT SMITH

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...

m iC R O W flV E

Cut Ufedt...£»( Ctkwcef
Don’t Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

D O N 'T O A M O L I

with your Insurance I
—CALL —
f

TO N Y D U tfl
A

_

I

IN tU D A N C I

33241RI

H O M E O W N ER S IN SUR A N CE

1st - 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
Weekly winners are eligible for the GRAND PRIZE
N O LIMIT T O NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED

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

HOSPITAL NOTES
Itminolf MtmarMIHstptMl

Friday
ADMISSIONS
SANFORD
Elite P Ho* von
Elilabelh M Mathewv
Cdvmj L MlUtiall
Karri Ann Srabo
Margaret
M
M iNam ara.
Deltona
(tonnie Lou Wllvon. Deltona
John Wm Collins. Winter Para
DISCMANOES

Y O U M A Y ENTER AS M A N Y WEEKS AS YO U LIKE

So send In that special recipe your family and

SANFORD
Oar held Armstrong

Grrttudr P For
Harriet E Frotke
Virginia E Peck
L i r n i e Perkins
Jean Mary Trent
Emma Jran Burley
Dorolhe Fisher. DeBary
Manuel NMI Bordon. Deltona
Wilfred « Duprey, Deltona
Dorothy P Landman. Ocltona
Blanche H onihauvtr, Deltona
Helen R Vemo. Osteen

ROBERT L. BEVIER, M.D.
Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of His

LAKE MARY OFFICE
For FAMILY PRACTICE

friends like so w ell . .. it could be a winner!
RULES:
No lim it to num ber of recipes subm itted but each
recipe m ust include your nam e, address and
telephone.
TYPE or PRINT your recipe giving full In­
structions for preparation, cooking tim e and
tem perature. (Approxim ate num ber of servings
•Iso helpful.)
Anyone can enter except Evening Herald em ­
ployees and their Im m ediate family.

Mail Entries to: EVENINO HERALD
c-e COOKBOOK
P.O. BOX IAS?
SANFORD, FLA. 12771

First, Second and Third prizes will be aw ardad In
each of Ih t nine food categories. You m ay enter
as many of th# weekly categories as you like.
A panel of three expert |udges will review all
•ntrles and wlnnars will be notified a t the end of
the contest In September for a taste off" to
select the Grand Prize winner. Decision of the
judges Is final.
All recipes received will be published In October
for the Evening H erald's first annual cookbook
contest.

Or Drop OH At Our Office:
INN. FRENCH AVE.
(By the lakefrent In downtown Sanford)
MON.-FRI. I :)0-S:)0 - SAT. SsM-NOON

By Appointment Only
D E A D L IN E F O R

Entrtos must ha pastmarked by midnight

LAKE MARY 321-0085
ISf N. COUNTRY CLUB ROAD
ACROSS PROM THE NEW
LAKE MARY CITY HALL
rr

M IC R O W A V E ...

S U N D A Y , S E P TE M B E R 13

usr date roe oissuts...sunoay, stntMtu t

�Sunday. Sapt. I, IM1—5A

Evtn'.ig Herald, Sanford, FI.

Historical Society
May G et First House
ByTEN!YARBOROUGH
Hospital, Vickers said.
Herald Stall Writer
"I didn't even know it was a historical
; It mav not be the fabled “house that Jack building when Florida Hospital purchased the
{built" but the newly-founded Altamonte property," Bob Metcalf, acquisition and
\ Springs Historical Society is pretty excited, property manager for Florida Hospital, said.
i The Society may soon acquire its first “We purchased the property for the purpose of
historical property if costs to move the an ingress and egress to the hospital in
. structure are not prohibitive, according to Altamonte," he added.
' Dolores Vickers. Vickers is In charge of sites
Metcalf said the hospital will be more than
acquisition for the 20-member society.
willing to work with the society if it requires
The house the society hopes to acquire from additional time to raise the funds to move the
Florida Hospital-Altamonte Is located at 130 house as the demolition deadline of January',
Park Place, Altamonte Springs. The early 19S2 approaches.
1900s structure is “one of the houses in what
“We are really excited about the possibility
we call the original village of Altamonte of having these reminders of our past centrally
Springs," Vickers said.
located," Vickers said. “With all of the
According to Vickers, the house will be progress going on around us, it's nice to have a
moved from its current location and restored. little bit of our grass-roots here too."
Three areas being considered for the house's
The Altamonte Springs Historical Societyrelocation include the property In front of the meets the third Wednesday of every month at
Altamonte Springs Public Safety Building, the the Altamonte Springs City Hall. According to
properly near the library and property near Vickers, the society Is open to all residents in
Hermits Trail Park, she said. She added, and around the Altamonte Springs area.
however, the society is not limited to these
“We’re a young society," Vickers said, "and
areas.
we are currently establishing bylaws and
: If the society cannot afford to have the house membership policies but we would appreciate
moved, it will be destroyed by Florida any community interest and support."

Y O U 'R E
G O IN G
T O L IK E
ECKERD.
'm m ,
V/iM ,

New s^

“ Apparently what has happened is 'New
Florida’ sent three issues of their publication
unsolicited to people and then sent them a bill
implying their credit rating would be damaged
if they didn't pay," Horner said.
"That scares a lot of people, especially older
folks, and they'll pay for a magazine they don't

RAZOR
PACK
OF

/59*

Priced

IRISH SPRING

BAR SOAP

CALCULATOR

can!

5-OZ.
Sal*

No. EL315

i
C a rb o n a te d b e v e ra g e in
ta k e -a lo n g c a n s . Limit 2

PEANUTS

7

Bala

P ric e d ..............

%

FINAL NET
HAIR SPRAY

0

-4 6 9
■

N o n -a e ro so l, 2 ty p e s.
Limit 1

p -

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9

'U N T E R S

Priced ............

9-INCH FOAM
PLATES

COSMO DIGITAL

ALARM
CLOCK

1 6 9

PACK OF SO

No.F101AReg.12.M

Reg. 2 .2 9 ........ I

S o a k p ro o f foam .
Limit 2

I

TUMBLERS
14-CT. 1S-OZ. PI eel k

1-GALLON

Lighted d ro p -le a f
n u m e ra ls.

99*

KODAK PR-10
INSTANT PRINT

099

FILM

Reg. 2 .9 9 ........■ ■

C le a r p lastic.
E asy to c le a n .

3 type*. P ric e reflect*
20* off label. Limit 1

ENJOLI

10 in sta n t c o lo r p rin ts

ZEBCO202
COMBO

THERMO TRAVEL

8PRAYCOLOGNE

TUMBLERS

a
R 66
Priced ........... W

Reg. 4.SO

OPEN MON.-SAT. I M

Long lasting, s e n s u ­
o u s fra g ra n c e . Limit 1

VIP PRO 1200-WATT

TURBO
DRYER
&gt;
* M ean a rm

Z a les
GO LD SALE!
15% TO 33/,%
OFF A
SPECIALLY
SELECTED
GROUP

w ith

Regular 12.M

Drink w ithout spilling.
D ish w a sh e r safe.

G re a t c o m b o for th e
b e g in n e r fish e rm a n .
R od h a s pistol g rip
h an d le.

BED A LAP
TRAYS

WONDERBOND
PLUS GLUE

2 s p e e d s &amp; 3 h e a ts

YOUR
CHOICE
|
Reg. 2 .9 9 ........ ■

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Ideal for s n a c k s or
b re a k fa s t In b e d .

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B o n d s m o st s u rfa c e s
Instantly.

Pre-LABOR DAY Suntan Savings
ORIGINAL
HAWAIIAN
TROPIC

COPPERTONE

TROPICAL
BLEND

FOREVER
TAN

•-OUNCE

ECLIPSE

SUNSCREEN

LOTION
4-OUNCE

•-OUNCE

Your c h o ic e ot
lotion or oil.
Limit 1

You'll find all the great looks you expect at Zales
. .. earrings, chains, bracelets, name-brand
watches, pendants and more. Some arc for
women, some for men. And all are 14 karat gold
and sale-priced as only Zales can!

H elps hold your
ta n lo n g er.
Limit 1

P ro te c ts skin
from s u n s
h arm ful rays.
Limit 1

HAWAIIAN
TROPIC

80LARCAINE

S u n tan lo tio n

COPPERTONE

COPPERTONE

Here are some of the great buys you'll find!
2.5-gram ingot pendant
Chain bracelet
Chain necklace

m ci i

riHALCOet

No. AFC-M Reg. 1S.SS

A C 'D C o p e ra tio n .
T e lesco p in g a n te n n a .

H-OUNCE
SANFORD PLAZA -

L C u d isp lay . P e rfo rm s all
b a sic fu n ctio n s.

1 5 »»

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tPriced
r *0..............
1 i * o*

Rag. 11” ..

V acu u m p a c k e d to e n ­
s u re fre s h n e s s . Limit 2

TAP-A-QLASS

EDGE
SHAVECREAM

SHARP W ALLET

GRAN PRIXAM/FM
PORTABLE
RADIO

ad 5 9
# " "

11-OUNCE

Priced .............

2

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OLD FASHIONED

t-PiNT

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Priced . .p a c k

ISOPROPYL
ALCOHOL

said.
Council is also scheduled to hear a report
from Mayor Owen Sheppard on the status of
the Iron Bridge Interlocal agreement and
decide whether or not to approve or disap­
prove the terms of the agreement.
If passed by all entities involved —
Casselberry, Winter Park, Winter Springs,
Maitland and Seminole County — the
agreement would facilitate hook-up of
Seminole County and area cities with the Iron
Bridge regional wastewater facility through
on 18 million bond issue. The validation
hearing for the bond issue is scheduled for
Sept. 11.

8/499

PLANTERS

70% so lu tio n . M any
u s e s . Limit 1

*

8-PACK
COCA COLA

Twin b la d e . D isp o sa b le .
M icro sm o o th e d g e s .
Limit 1 p a c k

even want," he said. “Unfortunately, this kind
of thing seems to be a coming trend In some
industries."
Even so, Homer said recipients of the
magazine are under no obligation to pay the $9
if they didn't agree in writing to subscribe to
"New Florida.”Onc need only "write the
company a note saying I didn’t order your
magazine and I'm not going to pay for it. You
can also write 'Refused' across the front of the
magazine and send it back. The company will
have to pay Hie postage," tie said.
Horner requested persons who have
received bills for unsolicited "New Florida"
magazines contact his office at 322-2212. —
BRITT SMITH

An tv O lO O O * *k f

w ish spring

GILLETTE
GOOD NEWS

Casselberry 1981-82 Budget
Discussion Set Tuesday
The Casselberry City Council is slated to
discuss a proposed tentative budget for fiscal
1982 and a proposed tax rate Tuesday at 7:30
j.p.m., in city hall.
• According to City Clerk Mary Hawthorne,
i;Uw propsed budget for all city departments,
^excluding the utilities departm ent, la
44,003,080. Hawthorne said the utilities
^department budget is not available at this
time.
The proposed tax rate for Casselberry
! pro[&gt;erty owners is $1.96 on every 11,000 of
assessed valuation, Hawthorne said.
"Tlie millage rate proposal is the same
;:mil!age rate as this year — 1.95," Hawthorne

mm

3 O lH tin W Bade &lt;k***\

Sal*

n 9 o n o » * •* »

wish spring

Good

Sanford Chamber Warns
Residents About Magazine
The Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
is warning local residents about the heavyhanded billing practices of a new magazine
entitled "New Florida."
Chamber director Jack Horner said he has
had several telephone calls from citizens
puzzled about a bill from the magazine to
which they never subscribed.

w t m i

Gillette^

LOTION

Reg. NOW SAVE
$125 $89.95 $35.05
$120 $80
$40
$240 $180 $60

•-OUNCI

8HADE
PLU8

4 -O U N C I

P ro te c tio n for
s u n se n sitiv e
skin. Limit 1

- F o r a d e e p d a rk ta n . Limit 1

8UN8CREEN
GEL

X

LOTION
or SPRAY

2-OUNCB

YOUR CHOICE

P ro te c tio n for
s u n se n sitiv e
skin. Limit 1

C h o o s e 3-oz.
S p ra y o r 6 -oz.
L otion. Limit 1

L a b o r D a y Sale!
YouVs Going to Uk» Eckoid's Famous Photo Of fori

ZALES
T h e D ia m o n d
I f| *\

i t i$i i v litis*

%AMI 4V» AMI

lance NteP»M4« ._ G el en eitra M l ot print* with every roll ol color or bloc*
and while print l,im developed and printed TO D A Y A N D E V E R Y D A Y
lance die M m ... G e l two roil* ol pnni Mm lor the price ol one Kodecoior or
bleck end arhite a rh e n y o u h a v e y O u rM m p ro c e tie d a lE c k e td l TO D A Y AN D
EVER YDAY
lance W«e O ust or***
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goot arai in the picture taking

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OPEN OAILY •to 9, SUNDAYS 10 lo 7
Sal* Prieto good thru Wod. 8opt. Oth
Wo rooonro the right to limit quontHloo.

* * -H- v *• - S*
* *- —•.-»*

�* t

E v e n in g H erald

Around the clock... the name ot this column.
Who knows when or why this daily feature
became a part of The Herald? Did a popular
Sanford dock influence the column's origin?
What the column actually reflects is that news
doesn't take a holiday — not even a coffee break.
And it doesn't make an appointment with
reporters and photographers.
The news —people, places, things —is there —
around the clock.
Just this week several artists were in our of­
fices getting photosand information in order for
the annual Fall For Art festival sponsored by the
Sanford-Seminote Art Assodatlon in Downtown
Sanford nest month.

lU S P i 411101

300 N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, F LA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831^9993
Sunday, Septem ber 6, 1981-4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Pobllther
Thoma*Giordano. Managing Editor
John Toen|ei, Advertiilng Director
Home Delivery : Week, 11.00; Month. $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45.00, By Mail: Week. $1.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
$30.00; Year. 157.00.

N ew Tax Cuts
Costing Charity?

By DORIS DIETRICH

Several reporters hovered around the large
patnUng that won Sanford artist Bettye Reagan
the "most popular In show" at the art
association's member show at the Sanford Civic

Center in February.
Bettye's work of art was set In the middle of
First Street and Park Avenue. The focal point of
interest was the large clock that once stood in the
middle of the Intersection.
For a few spilt seconds, the art came alive. I
could see a handsome traffic officer decked out
in red and blue with a lot of gold braid splashed
across his chest. SpoUess white gloved hands
directed the heavy flow of traffic created by
shiny expensive automobiles of another era.
In my mind, 1 could hear the clackety-clack of
horses hooves —probably drawing an ice wagon.
Whistles blew, bells rang and in the hustlebustle the stately old clock pealed melodious,
symphonic chimes.
Dream on.
Another old landmark, the Valdes Hotel, was
captured In the artist's colorful painting. Fond
memories were stirred of the late laidlle and

Harold Appleby and the busy, busy restaurant
they operated on the ground floor of the quaint
hostelry.
The hotel also housed a popular watering hole,
the Caribe Lounge.
__
Don't tell me those days are gone forever,
cause they're not. People like Bettye Reagan are
going to keep them alive.
From time to time, I do hear discussions of
restoring the antiquated timepiece which now
:
Maybe, someday, the town clock will come to
rest in thi center of Sanford as an instrument of
historic significance, if nothing else.
There may not be a lick —nor a lock. But there
will be news.
Around the clock.

jftusry

JULIAN BOND
C h a rita b le o rg a n iz a tio n s h a v e b e e n w a rn e d th a t
th e R e a g a n a d m in is tr a tio n 's b ig ta x c u ts m a y
cost th e m billions of d o lla rs in lost d o n a tio n s by
re d u c in g th e in c e n tiv e fo r c h a r ita b le g iv in g .
We th in k th is w holly c y n ic a l v iew of c h a r ity by a
W a s h in g to n th i n k t a n k u n d e r e s t i m a t e s th e
g e n e ro s ity of A m e ric a n s a n d m is ju d g e s th e
m o tiv e s fo r giv in g .
A m e ric a n s d o n a te d $45 billion la s t y e a r to
n o n p r o f it h o s p i t a l s , u n i v e r s i t i e s , m u s e u m s ,
c u ltu ra l a c tiv itie s , a n d a n ti-p o v e rty a n d re lig io u s
g ro u p s.
H ie U rb a n In s titu te , an in d e p e n d e n t r e s e a r c h
o rg a n iz a tio n in W ash in g to n , e s tim a te s th a t th e se
a g e n c ie s will re c e iv e $18 billion less u n d e r th e new
ta x law in th e n e x t fo u r y e a r s th a n th e y w ould
h a v e u n d e r th e old.
T h e In s titu te p re d ic ts th a t g iv in g w ill d e c lin e
b e c a u se n ew la w re d u c e s th e m a x im u m ta x r a te
on u n e a rn e d in c o m e to 50 p e rc e n t fro m 70 p e rc e n t.
As a re s u lt, th e ric h c a n k eep 50 c e n ts of th e
d o lla rs th e y w e re g iv in g to c h a r ity , in s te a d of only
30 c e n ts — c h a r ity , in e ffe c t, w ill co st th e m m o re .
T h e U rb a n I n s titu te ’s view m a y b e o v e rly
p e ssim istic , u n d e re s tim a tin g th e ta x re d u c tio n 's
effect in in c re a s in g in d iv id u al in co m e, th u s
m a k in g it e a s ie r to su p p o rt c h a ritie s . T he
d isin c e n tiv e fo r th e ric h will a lso lie o ffse t to a y e tu n d e te rm in e d d e g re e by new d o n a tio n s fro m
m illio n s of lo w er-in co m e p e rso n s, w ho a r e p e r ­
m itte d fo r th e firs t tim e by th e new la w to d e d u c t
c h a rita b le g ifts fro m th e ir in co m e ta x , e v e n
though th e y do not ite m iz e th e ir d e d u c tio n s.
T h e In s titu te 's p re d ic tio n s, m o re o v e r, fail to
ta k e in to a c c o u n t th e s e n s e o f o b lig a tio n in g ra in e d
in th e A m e ric a n c h a r a c te r .
T h e m o ra l c o m m itm e n t to im p ro v e so c ie ty a n d
p ro v id e fo r th e le ss fo rtu n a te h a s m a d e
A m e ric a n s th e w o rld 's m o st g e n e ro u s people.
But if th e I n s titu te ’s fig u re s a r e e v e n p a r tly
c o rre c t, n o n p ro fit-in s titu tio n s fa c e a d e c lin e in
p riv a te d o n a tio n s a t th e s a m e tim e g o v e rn m e n t is
re d u c in g its so cial s e rv ic e s b u d g e ts.
| C o m p e tin g f o r f e w e r d o l l a r s , c h a r i t a b l e
o rg a n iz a tio n s w ill b e u n d e r g r e a t e r p r e s s u r e th a n
Over b e fo re to d e m o n s tr a te th e e ffe c tiv e n e s s of
w hat th e y do, a n d th e e ffic ie n cy w ith w hich th e y
do it. And (his n e e d to b e c o m e a c c o u n ta b le m a y
p ro v e m o re b e n e fic ia l th a n h a rm fu l.
C h a rita b le a n d c u ltu ra l in stitu tio n s th a t c a n
o b ta in m e a s u r a b le re s u lts sh o u ld h a v e firs t ca ll
on p u b lic d o n a tio n s. T hose th a t c a n n o t d e m o n ­
s tr a te th e ir w o rth to so c ie ty sh o u ld e x p e c t to
low er th e ir a m b itio n s — o r go out of b u sin e ss.
M ost of th e a m e n itie s th a t e n ric h c o n te m p o ra ry
life — th e a r t s , h ig h e r le a rn in g , so c ia l s e rv ic e s ,
an d re lig io n — a r e s u p p o rte d w holly o r in p a r t by
p riv a te g ifts.
T h e g ifts , in tu r n , e n ric h th e g iv e r c u ltu ra lly o r
s p iritu a lly .
T he m illio n s of A m e ric a n s w ho p a r tic ip a te in
th is m u tu a lly b e n e fic ia l e x c h a n g e sh o u ld not be
d e te rre d b y a ta x la w th a t s im p ly m a k e s u s a ll
.m o r e a fflu e n t.

Please Write
U tters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be &gt;igned, 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 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

brow n

Keep Him

Height

O n The

Makes

Ranch

No Matter

President Reagan reportedly toils only
from nine to five on weekdays and spends
most weekends at our country's rural estate
in the Maryland mountains.
He seldom takes work home from the office.
He frequently escorts the little woman out to
dinner or to a party at a friend’s home. And he
entertains in the people's mansion at least
once a week.
When the Washington weather turns so
muggy that tiie air conditioners surrender,
the Reagans By cross-country to spend a
month at their rustic retreat in the California
hills.
Are you worn out yet?
Reagan Isn't — but the rest of the United
Slates should be.
Despite this schedule, the oldest man to
have been elected president of the United
States has swiftly and radically altered
government's relation with the governed
more than any of his predecessors since
Franklin Roosevelt.
The president's ability to win absolute
mastery of the Congress and his national
constituency was not learned In his only prior
public post m governor of California. That is
no small jotjbut surely it is not comparable
to running the United States.
Rather, his success is the product of per­
sonality, a self-proclaimed mandate and the
demise of party politics in the 1980s.
While some critics will always see Reagan
as the proper foil for a chimpanzee (as in his
movie "Bedtime for Bonzo"), many more
derive their image from his role on "General
Electric Theater" and "Death Valley Days"
as a genial guide to each week's adventure.
As president, Reagan has relumed to the
role of host and guide in his carefully or­
chestrated television appearances. He
welcomes guests to view their government
through his eyes, warning them of Its
treacheries and waste, enlisting them as
soldiers in the battle against bloat and
corruption.
His much-publicized "mandate" la largely
an Illusion. The popular-vote difference
between Reagan and Jimmy Carter was
narrower than the difference in their elec­
toral votes. The November results surely
were not permission to erase 40 years of
government growth.
Reagan, however, sees things differently. If
the good guys won the election, he seems to be
saying, why not let them sit in the saddle and
lead the wagon train? After all, didn't the
other fellows lead us into'swamps and
thickets — when they bothered to lead us at
all?
The temporary demise of the party system
— particularly on the Democratic side of the
aisle — has completed Reagan's success.
There are 435 political parties In the House of
Representatives today; that some members
still insist on calling themselves Democrats
and Republicans is irrelevant.
In his first six months in office, Reagan
conquered Congress and reversed four
decades of government growth, especially In
human services.
He began to erase 25 years of civil-rights
protections for racial minorities and to
review 10 years of affirmative-action gains
for women.
He slashed corporate taxes, and shredded
the safely net he pledged to erect.
He replaced human rights with mineral
rights and Cold War rhetoric.

JEFFREY HART

Social Issue Politics
Until now, the assorted "social Issues"
have helped the Republicans politically, but
this fall as they move once again into the
foreground they have potential of causing
some serious trouble.
The important political fact to bear in mind
is that the "social issues" have come in two
distinct waves.
The first wave emerged in the mid-'60s, was
racial-urban in character, and was summed
up In the rhetoric of Nixon's 1968 campaign.
The key issues were busing, racial quotas,
crime, the death penalty.
The first-wave issues divide the Democrats
but unite Republicans. Hardly any
Republicans at all favor busing or quotas, and
virtually all Republicans take a tough stand
on street crime. There are no Republican
Ramsey Clarks who blame society for every
mugging. At one point a few years ago,
Republican "moderates" were tepid in their
opposition to busing and quotas, but I»well
Welcker is about the only survivor of that
breed and he is today a political freak.
The second-wave social Issues are of a
moral and religious character, and here there
is division within the Republican as well as
the Democratic Party, and in the coalition
that elected Reagan to the presidency.
The second-wave social issues include
abortion, sex education, teenaged chastity,
textbooks, E.R.A., creationism, homosexual
rights, the Moral Majority, and so forth.
On these there is a cultural division bet­
ween traditional Republicans, you might call
them Ford Republicans, or Bush
Republicans, who tend to be conservative on
economic issues but not moblized on the
moral-religkms issues. The moral-religious
vole, in fact, went heavily for Carter in 1976,
but swung to Reagan in 1980. It la therefore

both volatile and an important component of
the Reagan political base.
Five recent polls, (or example, show that
the strict Rlght-to-Llve Constitutional
Amendment is favored by no more than a
third of the voters. That one-third, however,
has what the social scientists call a very high
intensity factor — they care, sometimes, it
seems, about almost nothing else. They
therefore have political clout beyond their
numbers. And there are doubtless other
voters who, while not supporting the absolute
prohibition, are sympathetic to the antiabortion position and willing to support
another approach.
My Information is that Reagan will support
a constitutional amendment which returns
jurisdiction on abortion to the states. That
might finesse the issue politically as far as he
is concerned, and it would also be in tune with
American representative government:
abortion should be dealt with legislatively,
and not by murkily formulated Supreme
Court edict.
But that debate will be a bitter one, with the
anti-abortionlst feeling deserted by Reagan
and the pro-choice people not pleased either.
On the sex-related issues, the split will be
sharp. The fundamentalist and moralreligious people want all sorts of federal
initiatives such as Senator Paul Laxalfs
family-protection bill, while other
Republicans and conservatives believe that
the federal government has no business
pushing into the area of personal sexual
behavior.
From Reagan’s perspective, these issues
will have to be fought out one ai a time, while
lie attempts to steer among the political rocks'
and whirlpools.

:

I think Prince Charles and Lady Di muffed
their big chance. They should not have
disguised the fact that when she puts her
heels on, she's taller than he is.
Doesn’t the prince know a wife can still look
up to her husband even If they're on equal
footing?
That's why It saddened me to read how he
stood on a box to be photographed with her for
the new British stamp and stood one step
higher for their official engagement photo. I
also noted the very low heels she wore en
route to their honeymoon, so as not to ac- .
centuste the fact she’s barely an inch shorter.
The prince and princess are giving in to all
that old tommy rot that It "looks" better If the
husband is taller, l.e. physically dominant
over the wife.
Maybe it was family pressure. I-ook at what
happened to his auntie, Princess Margaret,
when she became romantically linked with a
much younger man at the end of her marriage
to Lord Snowdon. Why, the entire royal
family went into cardiac arrest, and poor
Margaret was nearly banished from the
kingdom.
Just think how many of us have suffered — ;
and limited friendships — because of those
two old shibboleths about height and age.
I know a man who’s 5 feet 4 who fell in love
with a 6-fool homecoming queen in college. :
She would only go on dates with him if she :
could meet him, sitting down, in a restaurant, i
Luckily, some notable notables have
outgrown all that nonsense and are making It :
obvious that, these days, successful t
relationships are built on attitude — n o t.
altitude. Look at how Nancy KLaetnger tope j
Henry, ex-secretary of state. Diane Keaton ’
didn’t ask Woody Allen to stand on a box to &lt;
kiss her when they filmed "Annie Hall."
I like what actress Susan Anton, a :
statuesque 6-footer, said recently when asked ;
about her relationship with actor Dudley:
Moore, 5-foot-2. Said she: "Short men fall in i
love with tall women. Tall women fall in love I
with short men. I wish people would Just be i
glad two human beings have found each
other."
At least in this country, we have the
president's family doing their best to crack
the old idea that wives must be younger.
First, Ron Reagan, the 23-year-old ballet
dancer, wed a woman six years older. Then
President Reagan's daughter, Maureen, 40,
married lawyer Dennis Revel], who's a dozen
years younger.
Who could forget the robust romance
between Dinah Shore and Burt Reynolds, II
years younger? Or the devotion between
young John Travolta and the late Diana
Hyland? Did you know that venerable actress
Ruth Gordon is 14 years older than novelisthusband Garson Kanin? And that Arlene
Alda, clarinetist and photographer, is three
years older than everybody’s favorite man,
Alan Alda?
The women who dare pooh-pooh the old
taboo about age are frequently celebrities In
their own right — women with confidence,
identify and control over their lives. If men
their age are still plugged into macho needs to
appear dominant, these women are apt to
look for someone more supportive of their
desires for an equal partnership. If he hap­
pens to be younger, so what?
What we need are more confident princes
and president's kids, more movie and TV
stars to dare the rest of us to realize that what
really counts is not age or height — but what
works between two people.

JACK ANDERSON

Sen. Thurmond Helps Drug Firms

"Hey. how about it? I say, we worried about the
commie mlHtary buildup, now let THEM worry
about OURSt”

WASHINGTON - The multiblWorwloUar
pharmaceutical industry has a number of
faithful lackcvs on Capitol Hill, but none Is
more influential than Sen. Strom Thurmond,
R-S.C., the 78-year-old chairman of the
Judiciary Committee.
Thurmond got $2,500 from Pfizer, an in­
dustry giant, in his last Senate campaign.
Earlier this year, he did the drug companies a
huge favor by holding lopsided hearings on
special-interest legislation in their behalf.
The bill negated a 1178 Supreme Court
decision that allowed foreign governments to
bring antitrust suits against UjS. drug Arms.
Thurmond's hearings did not include any
opposing witnesses.
More recently, Thurmond has been giving
strong support to another piece of apodalinterest legislation that would benefit the
pharmaceutical leviathans. It's called the
Patent Life Restoration Act, and it could cost

»

the drug-buying public millions of dollars.
Under Thurmond’s aegis, it pareed the Senate
with ease.
What the bill would do is extend a drug
company's patent protection for seven years
beyond the standard 17 — thus giving it
freedom from competition far a substantially
longer period than other patent holders.
On the face of it, the drug industry seems to
have a good point: It argues that Iht govern­
ment's requirement that drugs be proven
both safe and effective forces the drug
companies to spend years meeting the
regulatory criteria — years that eat into the
17-year monopoly period.
Congressional supporters of the industry’s
position have died an unfinished report by
the Center for the Study of Drug Development
in Rochester, N.Y. According to the center’s
study, effective patent life far new drugs
dropped to «.i average of B£ years in 1878.

But the center is not exactly a neutral ob­
server of the pharmaceutical field. Although
the patent-life study is being financed fay the
government, the center Itself gets about half
of its funding from the drug industry.
Furthermore, the Rochester center's lop
man, William Wardell, has qwnt years
testing drugs for such pharmaceutical giants
as Merck, Lederle and Bristol.
And there is evidence that the center’s
estimate of 9 i y ean as the effective life of a
drug company's patent protection may quite
simply be wrong. A draft report by tlw
Congressional Office of Technology
Assessment concludes that the effective
patent Ufe of eight topselling drugs averaged
more than 19 yean.
In other words, the legislation extending
patent protection for seven y ean would give
(bug companies more than five y ean of
additional time to peddle their best-selling

products without competition from generic ' drug manufacturers.
"The consumer will pay more for the drug •
during patent-term extension," the OTA \
report states. "Furthermore, some groups of
codMmwrs, the elderly and the chronically Ul,
wlU be disproportionately affected ..."
“It's a clastic big steal," a generic drug t
industry spokesman told my associate John '
Dillon. "This is a case study of how you can
con the whole Congress."
But the whole Congress hasn't been conned !
- yet. Rep. Albert Gore, D-Tetrn., plans to
hold hearings In his oversight subcommittee
of the House Science and Technology Com­
mittee. And pert of his investigation will be a
look at the Rochester center's finances.
"The only side being rfiwu— ts the
pharmaceutical Industry side," Gore said.
“Claariy, the evidence Is not what the in­
dustry would have you believe.”

�OUR READERS WRITE

Congress Speaks Against W aste; Votes To Spend
I voted against this funding, and was
deeply disappointed when the vote to
eliminate it failed. The continued
existence of this commission cannot be
Justified.

which was submitted in 1966. The third
one, submitted in 1970, was never fully
pursued and the final one — submitted
in 197B — is currently awaiting action
by both the House and the Senate.

In 1955, Congress authorized the
formation of this commission to come
up with a proposal for a memorial to
President Roosevelt. Since that time, a
span of 26 years, this commission has
been funded annually — which has cost
the taxpayers a total of 1510,000.

Resolutions have been introduced in
both houses of Congress authorizing
this latest proposal which is estimated
to cost over 120 million. It is now up to
Congress to decide on the memorial:
the work of the commission is done and
has been done since 1978, when the
proposal was approved by the Fine Arts
Commission and submitted to
Congress.

Over the years, four memorial
designs hare been submitted. The first
one, submitted in 1962, was rejected by
Congress — ns was the second one.

Smokers Pay 100%
l feel I must reply to Diane Petryk in
reference to "Around The Clock,"
Thursday, August 27, 1981, re. —
Ambient Smoking.
I’m not sure if she is Just misin­
formed or her prejudice is showing. At
any rate when writing a newspaper
article she should strive to print the
truth.
In June of this year, an American
Cancer Society study authored by
Lawrence Garfinkle, the society's vice
president [or epidemiology and
statistics, published an article in the
Journal of the National Cancer
Institute. Garfinkle analyzed data
gathered over a 12 year period from
176,000 non-smoking women. This was
the study's conclusion: women married
to smokers have little, if any, Increased
risk of lung cancer.
In 1979 the Surgeon General’s report
states explicitly, “ Healthy nonsmokers exposed to cigarette smoke
have little or no physiologic response to
the smoke and what response does
occur may be due to psychological
factors."
May I also add one other bit of in­
formation, It actually costs 32 cents per
pack to deliver cigarettes to the con­
sumer. Florida holds the distinction of
being the only slate in the Union which
has a 32 cents per pack tax — in short
100 percent taxes on that produ0 ,
All the non-smokers enjoy the
benefits derived from the sale of every
pack of cigarettes while at the same
time they are yelling for non-smoking
sections and prohibition of all smoking

in public places. In short it’s like the old
saying, "Don't cuss the farmer, when
you have a mouthful of food.”
Smokers are not second rate citizens
and I have found that most of them arc
even courteous.
G.J. Tenney
Sanford

Those who defeated the measure to

end the appropriation of funds argued
that such a move would kill the entire
effort to build a memorial. There are no
grounds for this concern, since It is now
in the hands of Congress. Those who
voted to continue funding also stated
that Congress could reject this latest
design, and that the commission would
be again needed to come up with still
another proposal.
The measure which was defeated,
however, only terminated the ap­
propriation for the commission, not the
authority for it, which would remain in
law. If another proposal is needed,
funds could sinply be appropriated

SORRY, KID. *T^E GOVERNMENT &amp;UB&amp;IDIZE&amp;
T o bacco , not &amp;cw ool ^lu n c h es , have
A C IG A R E T T E ; I T ’ LL
D u l l Yo u r a p p e t i t e .

We would like to take this opportunity
to thank everyone who participated on
the Ronald McDonald fund raising
project.
The front page article published in
the Sanford Evening Herald on Sunday,
August 16th and the follow up coverage
lent great credibility to our project.

Thanks to the efforts of our excellent
"hostage", Seminole County Sheriff
John Polk and the generosity of our
community, we were able to make a
sizable donation In excess of (3,400 to a
very worthwhile project.
We have enjoyed and appreciated you
working with us in the past and look
forward to future endeavors.
Beverly Huffman
Publicity Chairman
Junior Woman's Club of Sanford

©TEJM'S i NEA
fiUCnv Mr*. m.wfc

The fact that the House voted to
continue the existence of this com­
mission is a slap in the face of every
person in this country who is feeling the
effects of budget cuts. Whether we are
talking about (30,000 or (30,000 million,
the argument is the same; there is no
Justification (or wasting tax dollars of
the American people. The House should
not be proud of its vote or the FDR
Commission —especially during a lime
when our nation's leaders should be
setting an example, not undermining a
national commitment.

As it stands now, the House has ap­
propriated (30,00ft to pay for an office,
one staff member and the expenses of a
12-member commission composed of
four U.S. Representatives, four
Senators and four persons approinted
by the President. A Senate bill con­
taining the same amount of funds for
this purpose will be considered on the
Senate floor in September.

Congressman Bill McCollum
Altamonte Springs

'Everything Too High'
Our President has been doing his best
to get our country on an even keel by
culling government expense and taxes
to help our country and Its people. In
the meantime our business and
manufacturers, farmers and all others
are not willing to sacrifice and show
their patriotism by staying firm, not
increasing their prices and costs and
going along to help our President. One
notable example is the building
deoartment In Sanford where they have
increased the cost of a building permit
for a home of 1000 square feet by 77
percent. The cost of building has almost
readied the prohibitive point and the
increased building permit cost is going
to help only a few and hurl many.
I have every reason to believe that
building in Florida is going to slow­
down considerably liefore tltc end of
1981 and during 1982. I have Just
returned from a trip of over 4.500 miles
through 14 states and part of Canada.
Wlien you get north of South Carolina
the conditions arc not good and the
further north you go tlie worse they get.

Thanks For Help

The tremendous publicity given the
project by the news media, radio
staatlan WELE-FM and TV channels 2,
6 and 9 enabled us to better educate the
public about the Ronald McDonald
House in Gainesville (a home away
from home for families of patients at
the Shands Teaching Hospital).

again. If for some reason Congress
■refused to appropriate the funds, the
memorial still would not have been lost,
since the original enabling legislation
authorizes the commission to accept
gifts.

V *'

1 Not too long ago, Congress approved
I a budget (or next year which includes
unprecedented cuts in federal spen• ding.
During the debates which took place,
nearly every' one of my colleagues
spoke out against waste and abuse of
tax dollars, and in favor of significant
budget cuts in dozens of federal
programs.
Ironically, however, the House of
Representatives voted Just a few days
earlier to spend (30,000 next year to
continue to fund a commission which
has served its purpose and is no longer
useful or productive — the Franklin D.
Roosevelt Memorial Commission.

The most reasonable complaints by
the people were as follows: taxes are
too high; insurance rates arc too high;
utilities rates are much too high; prices
of food and clothing are too high;
everything is too high and not com­
patible with peoples' earnings and
salaries.
Our m anufacturers ond other
businesses are complaining about the
low production by our workers.
Tlie quality of work produced is not
comparable with some products that
arc imported. Because of tlie higher
costs and inferior quality our Imports
are exceeding our exports. When are
going to get wist* and turn this around?
Millions of dollars of our farm
products are going to waste in the
norllteru states because most of the
labor is controlled by the unions. Tlie
value of the fann products do not
warrant the high salaries and lowproduction for the union labor.
Stephen G.Ballnt Sr.
Sanford

'Freedom Is Not Free; Eternal Vigilance Is The Price'
Dear Editor :
Sir! For you to publish, just wlien I
think I have my "letters to the editor"
itch under control, such things as the
Don Graff column, "Something To Be
Desired" l Herald Aug. 29) is cruel and
inhumane
punishment, clearly
outlawed by the Constitution.
So, with your permission I would like
to point nut some of the things in that
column that smacks of Don Graff being
one of the C.A.T.s l Communist Action
Today) "Kittens” in the media.

As is usual of tlie C.A.T.s "Kittens”
lie lights into Pinochet &amp; Chile. This is
normal for communism can not stand
defeat. It gives hope to.all who a rt
behind the barbed wire and under the
Gun of Communism and Chile has been
such a defeat ever since AUende was
overthrown.
Graff says: "Two days later —
Pinochet's security forces ordered four
op|&gt;osition position leaders out of the
country. True they weren’t Imprisoned,
tortured or killed, which if it was not

coincidence says something for quiet
diplomacy. On the other hand, political
expression in Chile has been further
diminished. (This Is where the "Kitten"
comes in) Which doesn't. —It’s not all
that unlike Soviet behavior. After all,
there is "(A) Solzhenitsyn in Ver­
mont.” end quote.
Wliat Graff does not say, is lluit
Solzhenitsyn was tortured to the point
of suicide. And had a fellow*prisoner not
sat down beside him and drawn a cross
in the dirt, he would have committed

suicide by trying to escape over the
barded wire with tlie guards present.
Sec Renders Digest story.
The above dem onstrates that;
"Freedom Is nol tree. Eternal vigilance
is tlie price" and that one must always
listen for the "kittens" squall In tlie
media to know that C.A.T. is as busy as
ever to put us nil behind that insignia of
Communism. The Barbed-Wire Fence
and the Gun.
S.B. "Jim " Crowe
Sanford

’ *1

M ary Hawthorne Contes From Europe To Controversy
motel, but rather at the fact that he had
the city pay for his wife's slay as well.
Times certainly change.
But back to Mrs. Hawthorne and her
European trip. Her traveling companion
was former City Councilman Edith
The controversy is over whether it is Duerr. She and Dr. Duerr during the
proper or not (or city officials to stay- three weeks were in Holland, Germany,
overnight al Florida League of Cities Austria, Italy, England and France,
conferences when they are held close to
She says the most beautiful country Is
home. This fall's conference Is scheduled Switzerland and the loveliest city is
to be held at the Sheraton Twin Towers, Geneva. Site said the country is so clean,
Orlando.
its flower beds scrupulously tended and
i Four members of the council — Frank the mountains gorgeous.
Schutte, Bill Grier, John Lelghty and
Other cities the pair toured were:
Tom Embree — decided to attend and l-ondon, Paris, Cologne, Munich, Vienna,
Stay over. And it has become a major Venice, Rome and Florence.
Issue.
While In Italy they toured the Vatican,
the
Coliseum, the Pantheon, the Roman
The issue has become so hot that some
Seminole County city officials who have forum and St. Peters. And Dr. Duerr saw
Stayed over night during Florida league the Sistine Chapel.
of Cities gatherings when held In Orlando
The two women were even serenaded
hi the past, haw shied away from doing as they rode in a gondola in Venice. Italy
the scene this year,
was one of the more interesting nations
i The practice was a regular one in past and also the dirtiest, Mrs. Hawthorne
years. No one voiced any sound of pronounced, noting the nation with all Its
thoughts of impropriety then. Several historic sites is ridden with crime.
She also noted that the rate of
years ago, however, one Casselberry
councilman, no longer In office now, was monetary exchange for Americans is
criticised. The criticism In that case was very favorable at this time. Mrs.
directed not toward the city's picking up Hawthorne said that a year ago her son, a
the bill for his stay at the Orlando city serviceman, then stationed in Germany,
Casselberry City Clerk Mary
Hawthorne, after a restful and enjoyable
three week tour of Europe, returned to
her community Just in time (or Hint city's
latest controversy.

Parties &amp;
Politics
Donna Estes

toured the continent. He found the rate of
monetary exchange was 1 61 marks for
each American dollar. This summer the
rate of exchange lias climbed to 2.52
marks per American dollar.
Mary Hawthorne is still tlie heart of
Casselberry.
Six of Seminole's seven cities will have
municipal elections this year beginning
on Sept. 8 and concluding Dec. 8.
Only Sanford of the cities is nol
scheduled to have a regular election this
year. Election to Sanford City Com­
mission posts are held every two years in
even numbered years.
The municipal election in Oviedo is
scheduled for Sept. 8.
Posts up for election are the mayor's
office and two council seats in Oviedo. A
charter question asking the people
whether they favor a full time mayor will
also be on the ballot.
Candidates who liave qualified, said

Farmers' M arkets A re Friendlier Places To Shop
By Ike Editors
of Psychology Today
Shopping for fruits and vegetables in
farmers' markets is a pleasure during
the summer partly because farmers'
markets are friendlier places than
supermarkets. But bow much friendlier
are they? A rectnty study found out.
;

Psychologists hid themselves at 28
supermarkets in 12 California cities and
at 12outdoor markets in the same cities
. where farmers gather to sell their own
• produce from trucks. The results:

Psychology
Today

supermarket customers who shopped
alone chatted socially with other
customers; two out of every three solo
shoppers at the farmers' markets did.
— About half of all the supermarket
- Of 900 supermarket shoppers, only customers made perfunctory remarks
II percent shopped with other adults; of like “have a nice day" to employees.
the 241 shoppers who were observed at But at the farmers' markets each
' the fanners' markets, 75 percent did. shopper asked about two questions for
— Only about one out of every 10 spedflrinformation, and half discussed

topics other than food.
The researchers were led by Robert
Sommer,
an
environmental
psychologist at the University of
California at Davis. Sommer points out
that the unfriendliness of most
supermarkets is "at least partly the
result of deliberate design." Unlike
fanners' markets, Sommer explains,
most supennarkets are arranged for
shopping speed.
Still, Sommer and his colleagues
think supermarkets could become more
sociable If they were laid out with lower
partitions so customers could see one
another, and include "social centers
including soda fountains, con­
versational nooks and child-care
centers."

I

City Clerk Nancy Cox, are: Kenneth P.
Triplett and Robert W. Whittier for the
muyur's office. Mayor Tom Morgan,
completing his first two-year term in
office, has declined to run for re-election.
Triplett is a former police chief in the
city. Whittier is currently a former
councilman.
For the group l seal on ll« council held
by Whittier, the candidates are Nita
Rawlson and Hansford C. Pyle. Can­
didates for the group 2 council seat are
Frank Salzmann, incumbent, and Donna
Wilhelm-Hudson.
Tlie polling place is to be al city hall, 20
E. Broadway. Poll officials are Mrs. Cox,
clerk, and Mae King, Eleanor Morgan
and IJIlie Wright, inspectors.
Oviedo has 1,309 qualified voters.
Elections are scheduled in Winter
Springs and Altamonte Springs on Nov. 3.
Voter registration books will remain

open in the offices of Seminole Elections
Supervisor Camilla Bruce until Oct. 2.
The pasts up for election in Winter
Springs are the mayor's office and two
city council seats.
Mayor Troy Piland, an elected official
in the city for the past to years, first as a
councilman and then as mayor, has filed
qualifying papers seeking re-election.
Other seats up arc the group 4 city
council seal lield by Maureen Boyd
completing her first two year term in
office. She has qualified for re-election.
The group 2 council seat, currently held
by Wilfred "Hap" Arnold, is also up for
election. Arnold has said he will not seek
re-election.
In Winter Springs and Altamonte
Springs where voter registration will also
close Oct. 2, two city commission seats
are up (or election as well as live office of
mayor.

Tlie city commission seats are held by
Jim Thompson and Dolores Vickers.
Thompson has said he will not seek reelection while Mrs. Vickers, completing
her second term in office, has not said
whether she will run for re-election or
not.
Hugh Harllng, completing his first
year In live mayor's office, has said he .
will stand for re-election.
Elections will also be lieId in Lmgwood ;
and Casselberry on Dec. 1.
Up (or election in Lin gwnod arc (lie;
city commission seats held by Ju n e:
lawmunn, Steven Uskert and John Hepp.!
In Cussclberry the council seats held by !
Tom Embree und John Iiighty are up (or ■
election.
I^ike Mary's election is scheduled for
Dec. 8. Three city council seats are up for
election. Those scats are held by Gene
McDonald, Ray Fox, and Victor Olvera.

Right O n Red May Spell Disaster
It could have been a disaster!
The green light was shining greenly. A
car made a legal right turn on red. It
missed me by a few inches.
The driver swore at me. I swore back.

pedestrian-vehicle accidents increased
79 percent and collision between vehicles
increased 25 percent. Overall, accidents
involving a pedestrian and a vehicle
increased 59 percent.

OK. Let's go to U.S. News and World
Some of you may remember my
previous column that contended that Report, which disclosed in its Dec. 22,
right turns on red are dangerous — 1980, Issue that “accidents soared since
especially to older people like me, to the the (right turn on red) rule became
common."
handicapped and to children.
The report noted that the govenunent
Some new statistics further sub­
planned to complete its own study of
stantiate my views.
turns on red this year. "If there Is a
A headline In the Dec. 11,1980, edition serious hazard," a government
of the New York Times noted: "Study spokonuui was quoted as saying, “wc
asserts turns on red cause 20 percent rise will try to develop measures to reduce
in intersection accidents."
the risk of right turns on red without
The story reported that the Insurance losing their energy and lime ad­
Institute (or Highway Safety had vantages."
gathered information from police
You see, somebody figured that the
departments In six states that had righMurn-on-red taw saves a gallon of
adopted rtght-tum-on-red laws between gas per car per year. We don't know who
1(74 and 1977.
worked up the itaUstic or how he or she
The analysts estimated that if similar arrived at it,
laws had been enacted in the same period
We, of course, are mainly concerned
in all states, 20,000 additional accidents about the elderly and our grandchildren.
would have resulted each year. And 1,400 And statistics Indicate that the law has
of them would have involved brought about a 110 percent increase in
accidents Involving the elderly and a 30
pedestrians."
In urban areas, said the institute, percent Increase tn accidents Involving

Growing
Older
Lou Cotta

children.
In my earlier column on this subject, I
proposed that "zebras" be established tn
streets between traffic lights, especially
In suburbs that have not installed traffic
lights at all crossings.
Zebras are wide sections of dlsgonsl
lines drawn across the street that permit
pedestrians to cron safely in areas
between widely separated traffic lights.
At these zebras, all traffic must stop In
both directions the Instant a pedestrian
leaves the sidewalk.
I also propose that we ask our city,
state and federal governments to end
right turns on red altogether!
Many of us have always been prepared
to risk our lives for our country.
But should we or anybody elaa be asked
to risk oar lives to save a spoonful of gas?

�T W

Mayoral Race On In Altamonte
The Altamonte Springs election race for mayor
and two city commissioner seats is off and running
for the Nov. 3 city elections.

any of the three positions have until Sept. 21 to
qualify, Mrs. Jordahl said.
The city commissioner's position for District 3,
Incumbent Mayor HuRh llarling and Ray currently lie Id by Commissioner Dolores Vickers, is
Ambrose, an Altamonte Springs police officer also up for election. Mrs. Vickers has not said if she
currently on leave of absence, have tossed their will run lor re-election.
hats into the ring for the mayoral race, according to
To qualify to run for the position of mayor, a
City Manager Jeff Etchberger.
person must reside In Altamonte Springs, pay a 1210
Dudley Bates of San Sebastian has officially fee with a check from the campaign treasury, take
declared he will seek the Altamonte Springs District Hie oath of candidacy, file a financial disclosure
l commission seat, currently held by City Com­ statement and designate a campaign treasurer and
missioner James Thompson, Etchberger said. bank depository, Mrs, Jordahl said. The mayor’s
Thompson has said he will not run for re-election. term is for three years.
To qualify to run for the city commissioners'
The candidates qualification period officially
began Friday at noon, according to City Clerk posts, a person must reside in the district for which
Phyllis Jordahl. Persons interested in running for he is running, pay a 1180 fee with a check from (lie

campaign treasury, take the oath of candidacy, file
a financial disclosure stalemenl and designate a
campaign treasurer and bank depository, Mrs.
Jordahl said. Commissioners arc elected every Iwo
years.
The fees are based on five percent of ihc annual
salary of Ihr position. The annual salary for mayor
is H.W0 and for Use commissioners, 13,600.
Meanwhile in Winter Springs, where an election is
also scheduled Nov, 3, the mayor's office ami Iwo
city council posts will be on the ballot.
Two cand Wales hare qualified for Ihe election so
far. They are: Troy Piland, seeking re-eleclinn to
die mayor's office, ami Maureen Boyd, completing
her first term on the city council. Wilfred "Hap"
Arnold lias announced fie will nut seek re-election to
his council seal, - TF.NI YARBOROUGH

Tax Rate, Budget Talks Scheduled Tuesday
By TEN1 YARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
The Altamonte Springs Board of
Commissioners is slated to establish a
Us rate and adopt a budget of
revenues and expenditures for fiscal
year 1981-82 at a public hearing
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at city hall.
According to City Manager Jeff
Etchberger, a Us rate of 13.81 on
, L IV IN G R O O M

every 11,000 of assessed valuation Is
being requested lor the coming year.
If the tax rate is approved a resident
of Altamonte Springs owning a home
valued al 180,000 for example, could
expect to pay 1190 annual taxes.

The proposed budget for the 1981-82
fiscal year totals $14,777,096, of which
111,114,619 is for operating costs,
Etchberger said.
Tills year's revised budget totals
113,215.138.

The proposed tax rate is less than
this year’s tax rate of 13.85 on every
11,000 of assessed evaluation, Etchberger said.

Etchberger said the increase in the
proposed budget with u decrease in
(lie taxes for fiscal 1981-82 is possible
because of additional non lax

D IN E T T E S

D IN IN G RO OM

SOM S

revenues coming into the city.
The commissioners are also ex­
pected to discuss a proposed
Altamonte Springs Citywide Tran­
sportation Study. The stud) is a
detailed plan of the scope of work and
budget for determining the feasibility
of a transportation system in ttie city.
The estimated total contract amount
lor the study is 126,000, according to
city officials.

SLEEPERS

TA B LE S

Sunday, Sept.O, IN I

IA— Evening Nora Id, Sanford. FI.

AREA DEATHS
City, a Mason and a Shriner.
WILLIAM F WOOSTER
Survivors include his wife,
Mr. William
Edward
WiKisler, 92, of 770 Riscayne Edylhe T., daughters, Eunice
Drive, Orange City, died Hcrtzog, Concord, N.Y., and
Thursday at his residence Annebelle Zuliaca, San
following an extended illness. Antonio, Texas; sons, Jack
Born in Ontario, N.Y., he K., Chenango Bridge, N.Y.,
moved to Orange City *in 1956 and Gifford B.. Boca Raton;
from Rochester, N.Y. He was slepson, Bruce, Orange City;
a farmer and a member of the sister, Gladys Campbell,
Norlhsldo Raptisl Church, Lyons, N.Y.; 15 grand­
Defend.
children, and six great­
He is survived by his wife, grandchildren.
Chloe M., and son, David F.,
I-inkfnrd Funeral Home,
Orange City.
Orange City, is in charge of
Allen-Summerhill Funeral arrangements.
Home. Orange City, is in
ARLENE F.. PUCKETT
charge of arrangements.
Mrs. Arlene Edna Puckell,
74, of 1357 E. Normandy
Blvd., Deltona, died Friday al
Ihe Orlando Regional Medical
Center, Orlando, after an
extended illness.
Born in Presque Isle,
Maine, she moved to Deltona
lour years ago from Nashua.
New Hampshire.
She was a former wedding
consultant In New Hampshire
and a member of the First
United Methodist Church of

MIL LEON I. STONE
Mr. lx‘on L. Stone, 81, 510
W. Blue Springs Avc., Orange
City, died Thursday at Fish
Memorial Hospital after an
extended illness.
He was born Dec. 14,1899, in
Thompson, Pa., and moved to
Orange City in 1964.
He was a retired road
foreman for the Com­
monwealth of Pennsylvania
ami a member of Ihe Pilgrim
Community Church, Orange
S TE R EO A T V

L A M P S A P IC T U R E S

Deltona.
Survivors include her
husband, Theodore
P..
Deltona; daughter, Esther
Dobbens, Deltona; sister,
Marie Darling, Deltona;
several half-sisters and
brothers; three grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren,
MIL EDGAR G.WHIGLEY
Mr. Edgar G. Wrigley, 81.
429 I Jikeview Ave., Winlcr
Park, died Wednesday at
F lo rid a H ospital-S outh,
following an extended illness.
Born in Bamsborn, N.J.. he
moved to Winter Park in 1978
from Crawfordsville, Ind.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Lillie Wregley, Winter
Park; sister, Mrs. Anna May
Widncr, Paterson, N.J.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
Winter Park, ts In charge of
arrangements.

Hunt Monument Co.
Display Yard
Hwy. 17-n — Font Fort
Pti. J 3 M N I
Gono Hunt, (Xvner
I Bronze. Martlo'A Oronlto,

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c jp iy s / £ S J &amp;

Reg. ittt.H . UMd, Good Condition, Whlto A Gold
French Provincial D m u r by Johniton.
lontord itoro only ......................................... SALE

V*

^

Rog. U 4 t.fi. Stereo Component Sot with AM -FM
Radio. I Track Tape A Record Player by Morse.
Floor Semple. Sonlord store o n ly .....................SALE

*118

Rog. SMf.tS. UMd, Good Condition, 40“ Cobinat
Model Steroo by Mono. Sonford store only .... SALE

Ref. WOf.H. Utod, Ooed Condition, Torracotto
Rust Sofa fey American Heritage.
Sanford store only ....................................... IA L E

Rog. M4f.fl. Ussd, Good Condition IS” Color Console
TV by OuoMr. Sonlord store o n ly................... SALE

Matching C h o ir.............................................. SALE

Rog. Ilff.fS. Pooch Colored Velvet Occasional Choir
by Highland House. Floor Sample.
Sonford store only .............................................. SALE

Reg. W4f.fl, UMd, Good Condition, Ruit-Biego
Eorly American Sofa. Sanford store only... SALE

Rog. M4f .fi. Yellow Print Volvo! Occasional Choir by
Highland House, Floor Samplo.
Sanford store only ............
SALE

Matching C h o ir.............................................. SALE
Reg. Iltt.tt. Used, Good Condition, Maple with
Gloss Front BooA c o m Unit by Cosord.
tonford store only ......................................... SALE

Rog. U ff.f5. Oreen-Rust-Yellow Print Traditional
Attached Pillow Bock Sofa by Highland House. Floor
Samplo. Sonfordstoroonly ............................ SALE

Reg- Stlf.fS. Oreen Velvet Swivel Rocker by
Foirilald, Floor Mmple...................................SALE

Rog. MSf.fS. Brown Corduroy Velvet Occasional
Choir by Highlond House. Floor Sample. Sanford
storo only ............................................................SALE

Reg. Ilt t .t l. Maple Finish Corner Desk by Athens.
Sanford store only ....................
SALE

*188 I

Rog. Uff.fS. Hoiculon Covered Groon Eorly
American Sofa by Amorican Horltogo.
Floor Semple..................................................... SALE

Matching BookcoM, R*g. SlOt.tS ................. SALE
Rag. H I M ) . Whits A Gold powdor Table by
Johnston ........................................................SALE

Rog. SI .Ott.ffl. 1 Piece Bluo-Rust-Whlto Modern
Stctlonel by KrMhler. Floor Samplo.
Sonford Storo only ........................................... SALE

Rog. I I , l l i t). ] Fiscs Traditional Frultwood
Bedroom Suite by Huntley. Floor Sample.
Sonford Store only ....................................... SALE

Rog. USf.fS. Brown A Balge Modern Sofa with
Geometric Design by Schwolgor. Floor Sample.
Sonlord store only ........................................... SALE

Rog. D IM S . Oold Velvet Traditional Lova Soot by
American Horltogo. Floor Simple.
Sonford store only ...............
SALE

Matching Choir. Rog. M ff.fi

..........................SALE

*438
•2 2 8

Reg, Uff.fS. UMd J cubic foot Chest Frooior by
Hotpoint. Sonford store only ...................... SALE
Rog. SNt.VS. Used It cubic foot Harvest Gold
Refrigerator by Hotpoint.
Sanford store only .............
SALE

*498
P * \C F S
OFF

Rog. MOMS. Utod lo cubic toot Whlto
Refrigerator with Ice Maker by PMko. Works
Ooed. Sanford storo only ............................. SALE

_ _
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Rog. SSff.N. Used, Ooed Condition Juke Box
Storoo by M o t m . Sonford store only ...........SALE

$ 1 0 8
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Rag. Ilff.fS. Used, Ooed Condition, Twin EnMmbloby Tropic. Sonford store only .........SALE

$ O fl

EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE IS ON SALE! We have gone
through every department SLASHING PRICES on SOFAS,
CHAIRS, BEDROOM SUITES, DINING ROOM SUITES, RECLINERS, BEDDING, STEREOS, TV s and APPLIANCES
In addition to this we have taken FLOOR SAMPLES, ONEOF-A-KINDS and SLIGHTLY DAMAGED MERCHANDISE
and marked thorn down to ABSOLUTE GIVE-AWAY PRICES!
BE EARLY FOR B EST SELECTIO N !

Bog.SOW.to. Floor Sample Premier Potlurpedic Full
Site Me ft ret« g Box Spring by Sooty.
CO# O
Floor Semple. .....................................
SALE
O O O
Re*. Mlt.fS. Plnehun! Brawn Print Choir by _
Amorican HorltoBt. Floor Samplo.
$1 L Q
Sonford More only ........................................... SALE
I O O
Rob - MJf.M. Traditional 7 Piece Dining Room Suite
to include Table A 0 Chair* byBroyNII. Floor Sam- U Q Q
pto. Sonford (tore only ....................................... s a l e
*) # 0
Bog- M«*.f*. Utod, Good Condition,Microwovo Oven
by Hotpoint............................................................ SALE

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Evtning Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sapt.4,ltS t-tC

‘

|'I Wanted What I Wanted'

| SheCouldn'tWait
I

Mr. and Mrs.
Vincent Accardi
and a niece pose

For The ERA Era
By M ERU MANOR
Herald Feature Writer
The sight ol Marie Accardi, a deminutivc woman under
live feet tall with Immense dignity and humanity, invites
cliches.
"Small hut mighty." "Never underestimate the power
of a woman." "Afraid of what?"
“I wanted what I wanted," she said, "and that was
that."
What she wanted was to live life to its fullest and that
she did. If one road dosed in front of her, she chose
another,
Mrs. Accardi was horn in Sicily and came to Brooklyn,
N.Y. when she was 8 years old. When she graduated from
High School, she decided she wanted to be a lawyer and
went to work teaching dressmaking to pay her way
through law school.
With one year to go, her brother decided the family
would be disgraced with a woman lawyer In it and insisted
that slio drop out.
Undaunted, she continued her dressmaking classes
through pharmacy school. Stic graduated from Brooklyn
College of Pharmacy in 1924. The same day a young man
she had met earlier, Vincent Accardi, graduated from
Fordham University, also in pharmacy. They were soon
married.
“I set up a drug store in my name," she said. "I always
had my own store until 1 sold out in 1958. It was very
difficult for a woman pharmacist to gel a job in those
days. Having my husband in the store helped me, but I
couldn’t hire another woman pharmacist. No one would
tiove come in the store,They would have said, ‘My God!
Thai store is run by women.’"

In the late 1920s
In front of their
first drug store
In Brooklyn, N.Y.
Marie Accardi
was among the
first women
'

ta n

pharmacists In

j

f ’1ro

the United States.

j*,

§ .*»

j

-

**

"v

to

5L

y

"However, I had customers coming bark tome. I spoke
their language, t speak Italian, Spanish, Yiddish and
French. I gave medical advice.
“In those days people took their minor ailments and
injuries to (he pharmacist instead of the doctor. 1 luid
people coming all the way from the Bronx to tell me their
ailments.
"That could be dangerous. One pharmacist I knew
treated an actress when she got something in tier eye and
she lost the sight in her eye und sued him. He had to sell
his store to pay her. So when a woman came to my house
one Faster and asked me to take something out of her eye,
I sent her to the Emergency Hoorn of the nearest hospital.
She accused me of being prejudiced."

Marie Accord/,
above, In her
DeBary home,
and, right,

After eight years of marriage, Vincent Accardi died and
left Marie with two small children to raise and a drug
store to run.

entertaining

*’l was afraid I might have to sell (lie store, but
business got better and better, and before long I was able
to hire help. In fact I eventually owned two stores.
Everyone loved me. Men customers appreciated my
candor and honesty In telling then) exactly what wns in
the prescriptions I filled for them. Tltey went home and
told their wives to have all their prescriptions filled at my
store, " Marie said.

aboard the
Unlvenlty
Campus Ship.
i

In 1957, while vacationing in Ormond Beach, u realestate friend suggested to Marie that she open a drug
store in Volusia County. Her son Myron (Mike) now u

registered pliarmndst, himself, liked tlte Idea and
decided on DeBary as a likely site.
The next year Mrs. Accardi retired to a life so full of
politics, world travel, bridge, sewing and plant-growing
that you wonder where all the energy comes from.
"I travel a grent deal with students and senior citizens
on llie University Campus Ship. I have been around the
world three times on that si)ip, and I often help put on skits
lor entertainment. In 1979 I went to China."
In April of this year the Deltona Republican Club named
her Mrs. Republican and gave her a framed award.
" I’m head of the DeBary Republican Club telephone
committee. Rut I do everything necessary to get out the
Republican vote; from taking voters to the polls, to
convincing undecided voters that they really want to vote
Republican. I’m a charter member of the DeBary
Business and Professional Women’s Club. We work hard
for ERA, and 1 am happy to say that women arc much
more welcome in pharmacy Hum they were when I started
out. Then a woman was lucky to get a job in an institution
or hospital. I’m the only woman I know who ran a drug
store on her own without a husband to give her respec­
tability. Today about 40 percent of pharmucy school
graduates are women and tltey have no trouble at all
getting Jobs. You sec them everywhere."
In farewell, this small, lovely person mentioned wist­
fully dial at Hie age of 85 her active years were
necessarily limited. But she Inspired one more cliche.
"Where there is a will there is a way."

Zoo Anim als Up For 'Adoption'

Whats Your Fancy? A Monkey, A Tiger, A Siamang...
By DARLENEJENNINGS
Herald Staff Writer
If the cost of feeding your own family has got you down,
imagine the Central Florida Zoo's dilemma when the food bills
start coming In. One Uon can eat as much as 12,500 worth of
food in one year.
Trying to beat the ever-increasing cost of feeding the zoo's

animals, Hie zoo has come up with a plan to help feed the
animals in the style to which Uiey have become accustomed
and to involve Ihe public in their attempts as well.
Hie zoo lias an adoption program whereby individuals can
adopt a zoo animal. This does nut mean the animal packs its
bags and comes home with you. But, it does mean that you esn
lake on the responsibility ol feeding the animal and know that

It is being cared (or properly and the park recognizes sponsors
efforts with a plaque mounted on the exhibit.
A1 Rozon, executive director of the zoo, says Hie zoo got
the adoption program idea from another zoo in Biloxi, Miss.
"We saw another too trying to hold down cost and it was doing
so well we decided we would try it," said Rozon.
Rozon says individuals may chouse any animal for adoption
or they can make a contribution if the animal is already
adopted. "Parents" may then sign on for their commitment
and make monthly payments for the animal's food.

"Six weeks agu Hie zoo's exhibits were completely repain­
ted. They had not been painted in nearly five years," said
Rozon.
At this time, most nf tlte animal* have been adopted, but
adoption commitments run out and people move so there are
animals that can be adopted.
Parents of the animals are going to be recognized by the zoo
sometime between September and November for Ivelptng to
moke the program work.
Rozon says it's the person’s "fancy" that decides which
animal the person will adopt. How do you "fancy" a spider
monkey, a Bengal Uger, a siamang.......... ?

Of course, some animals have greater appetites thun others
so fees do vary. Tlie average hippopotamus lias an average
dinner bill somewhere around 1528 a year, while it runs about
(192 annually to feed a mandrill, a member of the baboon
family.
Snakes and the other reptiles In the park seem to be least
favored by adopting parents, says Rozon, but it only costs
(2,700 to feed the entire snake population at the park.
Private individuals as well as businesses sponsor the
animals. Last year, according to the zoo's director, Uie owner
of a family-run Daytona Beach oil firm came to the zoo and
wanted to know how many of the zoo's animals had not been
adopted in the main exhibit area because he wanted to adopt
all ol the ones not yet adopted. Animals In the main exhibit
area are the heavy eaters like lions, tigers, bears and
primates.
But there are people like the Phipps of Eola Drive, Orlando,
private individuals, who came to the too to adopt one animal
that they can support. The Phipps just wanted to adopt a bird
and they decided on an African gray parrot.
"Actually, my wife Is the big too lover," said Robert Phipps,
"and she loves birds. 1 think UUs is her way of telling me that
she wants a bird."
The Phipps visit the zoo often and they say this la just one
■mall way they con say they ore supporting the too.
Razor has observed that the primates seem to be among the
most popularly adopted animals. "I think it's because they are
characteristic of homo sapiens (humans)," he says.

I k b Bengal tiger is quite comfortable in his cage
at the Central Florida Zoo and couldn't care less

about packing his baga to go borne with adoptive
parents." Plenty of good food is all he a s k ^ *

The adoption program does figure into the whole picture of
the zoo, because the extra funds the zoo receives will go (or
feeding the animals as well os for upkeep and improvements
for the park.

Folly wants more than a cracker. The colorful
macaw eals like a bird—and a bird eats all the
lime.
i

I

�1
' IC-tvattlngHtraM , laniard, FL

Sunday, teat. 4, im

OURSELVES
IN BRIEF
Sewing Classes Offered
For Senior Clthens
Sewing classes for senior citizens will be offered by
the Community Services Diviaion of Seminole Com­
munity College.
Classes will consist of demonstrations and
workshops on quick and easy tips, fitting, alterations,
clothes for the family and sewing for the holidays.
There is a 12 registration fee, held the first two weeks
of class, for the II weeks of classes. Enrollment is
limited.
Classes will be held at the following locations:
Regency Apartments, Casselberry, Sept. 15,10 a.m. •
12 N; Summit Apartments, Casselberry, Sept. 15, 1
p.m. -3 p.m,; Chuluota Community Church, Chuluota,
Sept 16,10 a.m. -12 N; Lutheran Haven, Slavla, Sept.
16, 1 • 3 p.m.; Village Green Apartments, Altamonte
Springs, Sept. 17,10 a.m. • 12 N; and Windmeadows,
Altamonte Springs, Sept. 17, 1 - 3 p.m.

Hospice Meeting Called
Hospice of Central Florida Inc., a program of home
care for terminally ill people and their families, will
hold an information meeting Sept. 14, from 7:30 to 9:00
p.m. at the hospice office, 359 East Fairbanks Ave.,
Winter Park, parking lot of All Saints’ Episcopal
Church.
General Information as well as information about the
hospice para-professional volunteer training program
will be covered. For further details, call 647-2523.

Cheerleader Rock-a-thon
High School cheerleaders at Deltona Christian
School will hold a rocking chair rock-a-thon on Friday,
in order to help finance new uniforms, according to
their sponsor, Mrs. Don Herchenroder. Pledges made
to each girl will sponsor her for a designated amount of
money per hour for as many hours as she will rock
between 6 p.m. Friday and 6 a.m. Saturday. Several of
the other students will be assisting the girls in this
fund-raising event. Anyone who is interested may
phone 574-1911.
During a Cheerleader Clinic In Orlando In July the
squad won a first place blue ribbon in competition.
They will be cheering for soccer games as well as
basketball during this school year.

English Classes For Adults
Day and night classes for adults wishing to Improve
their English speaking ability are being offered at
Seminole Community College. The ESOI, (English for
Speakers of Other Languages) clasaes are also
available at two study centers located In Seminole
County.
Instruction In English usage and communications
sktUs is available to all adults over 16 years old. For
information on schedules, call SCC at 323-1450, Ext.
511

In A nd Around Lake M ary

PTO And DJs To Clash In Fun Benefit
The tak e Mary Elementary PTO will spoasor a softball
game on Sept. 27. Disc Jockeys from WHOO will be opposing
members of the PTO.
Live music will be played by "Sundown" from 3-4 p.m. The
game will begin at 4 p.m. Seven local restaurants have donated
two free dinners, each, and there will be a drawing for the
dinners after each Inning.
The admission will be 61 for adults, SOcents (or students and
children under 4, free. A lot of fun is expected and refresh­
ments will be served.
Ray Fox and wife, Pal, celebrated their 30th wedding an­
niversary Sepl. 1. Ray and Pat have three children, Raymond
G. HI, Caroline, and Earl.
Ray also celebrated his birthday on Sept. 5.
Cindy and Dennis Brown returned from a visit (o St.
Augustine. While there they visited historical sights including
the Lightner Museum.
Cindy and Dennis have recently Joined the take Mary
Volunteer Flr^Dept.
The tak e Mary Pub held a grand opening Aug. 29, linda and
Tom Herendeen, new owners, celebrated with a free fish fry,
serving approximately 300 guesta. The Wooden Nicklc Band

Bonnie
Olvera

The Calvary Baptist Church will observe "Old-Fashioned
Day" at the morning service on Sepl. 6. Members will come to
the service wearing old-fashioned attire.
After the service, they will have dinner at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Kemmlg of Sanford, and participate in a
Singspiration. There will be no evening service.

take Mary
Correspondent

322-7666
provided the entertainment.
The Pub is planning to have a band entertain once a month.

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey (tats) Pugh celebrated their 64th
wedding anniversary Sepl. 3. They moved to the tak e Mary
area in 1939. Their daughter, Mrs. Ruth Wicboldt, resides in
Sanford.

Sue Klelnman from Miami. Is spending the week with Walter
and Kathryn Lippincott. Mrs. Klelnman is Kathryn’s sister. A
family get-together is being planned at the home of Bob and
Marcia lippincott.

Harvey and tais owned the service station in the city until it
was sold approximately 10 years ago. Haney was a former
deputy sheriff for Seminole County and was a volunteer
fireman for the city when the fire department first formed.

tana Eith celebrated her 84th birthday Sept, 3. She and her
husband, Joseph, moved to take Mary from New York in 1955.

tais attends the Presby terian Giurchand is a member of the
garden club. When asked what the secret was for 64 years ol
marriage, she said "Just lots of patience on both sides."

At IIk* Aug. 27 meeting of the Rotary Club, Pete Jamison of
the Sun Bank in Orlando, spoke on Rotary International and
foreign programs. Visitors were Jack Homer, Sanford Rotary
Club president and Freeman Baggett of Sanford.
The second Thursday of each month has been designated for
honoring wives that have birthdays during that month.

Mobley Plays In

Engagements

Atlanta Concert

Scoff-Burns
Mr. and Mrs. Damon C. Scott, 112 Mayfair Court,
Sanford, announce the engagement of their daughter,
Roberta June, to William Thomas Bums, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert C. Bums, 113 tarkspur Drive, Altamonte
Springs.
Bom in Sanford, the brlde-elecl is a 1976 graduate of
Seminole High School where she was a member of Tri-HiY and Wrestlettes. She is a I960 graduate of Seminole
Community College, attends University of Central Florida
and is employed at Sears, Altamonte Mall.
Her fiance, born in Port Chester, N.Y., is the grandson
of Mrs. Florence Bums, Green port, N.Y. He is o 1977
graduate of New Milford High School, New Milford,
Conn., where he was a member of the concert and mar­
ching bands.
Mr. Bums is a 1960 graduate of Seminole Community
College and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from
Rollins College, Winter Park, In 1981. He Is employed at
Cam Craft Automatics, tangwood.
The wedding will be an event of March 6,1982, at 2 p.m.
at Nativity Catholic Church, take Mary.

ROBERTA JUNE SCOTT.
WILLIAM THOMAS BURNS

SAT; CLEF Tests Review
A review class for the SAT test and the G .EP test Is
being offered at Seminole Community College in
Building 1/-201. The class meets Monday through
Thursday from 6 • 9 p.m. The fee is 15 for nonregistered students.
Call college 323-1450, Ext. 536 for Information.

Dlxon-Gibbs
TR A C E Y

Mr. and Mrs. George L Dtxon of Geneva, announce the
engagement of their daughter, Tracey Ann, to William
Gregg Gibbs, ion of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Gibbs of
Winter Springs.
Bom in Miami, the bride-elect is a June 1(61 graduate of
Oviedo High School where she played basketball and w u
a member of FBI-A. She Is employed as a secretary.
Her fiance, barn in Alwater, Calif., is the grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. C.F. Mlnter, Oviedo, and Mr. and Mrs.
James II. Gibbs, Geneva.
He is a June 1978 graduate of Oviedo High School and is
employed by the Winter Park Telephone Co.
Tiie wedding will take place on Sept. 26, at 2 p.m., at
Christ Episcopal Church, tangwood.

ANN
DIXON

Child's Free Food Program
The Rescue Child Care Center announces the
sponsorship of the Child Care Food Program. Free
meals are provided without regard to race, creed,
color, aex or national origin and there la no
discrimination in the course of the food service at the
Rescue Child Care Center, 2200 Airport Blvd., and
Rescue Child Care Center, 1315 S. Summerlin Ave.,
both in Sanford.

New Auburn Graduates
Auburn University, Auburn, Ala., awarded degrees
to 1,040 at the two campuses at the end of summer
quarter, Aug. 26, bringing the total for this year to 4,576
and the total for all time to 105,746, according to Tom
Stallworth, registrar.
Receiving degrees from tangwood were: Mary Betti
Melnlck and Mark Edward Moryer.

Juvenile Arbitration Course
The Office of Community Services at Seminole
Community College will offer a "Juvenile Community
Arbitration Training Course" beginning Sept. 9
through Nov. 11. Class will meet (or eight consecutive
Wednesday evenings from 7 to 10 p.m. There will be a
|1 fee for the course.
For information please call the Juvenile Arbitration
Office, 322-7534 or the Office of Community Services at
SCC 323-1450, ext. 304.

Wanna Clown Around?
Fun World Alley, Gowns ofAmerica, will once again
present its "Clownology Oh m s " for all would be
clowns In the central Ftaftfla area. The Monday
evening sessions begin Sept II and continue for eight
weeks.
For information write Clowns of America, 101E. 7th
St., Sanford, FI. 32771, or telephone 323-9132 or 277-2611
in Orlando.

UCF Women Plan Coffee

j;
'I |

11

Tie UCF Women’s Club will IxM their Fall
Welcoming Coffee on Thunday at 10 a.m. Mrs. Trevor
Colboum, honorary president of the dub, will host the
event in the board room located on the third floor of the
Administration Building. Parking space will be
available In the Visitor’s Lot.
Women of the untvcnity family, especially new
mentbers, are encouraged to attend. Those who wiah to
sign up for special Interest groups (such as bridge,
books, tennis, oil painting, luncheon out, gourmet,
needle work, gardening, physical fitness) may do so.
F of information, call one of the following officers:
Jane Denning, president, 265-7443; Nancy Gerber,
vice-president, 6TI-0671; Gloria Paul, secretary, 4475W ; or Betty Eldredge, treasurer, 631-2535.

Chorus Needs Singers
The Community Chorus of Seminole Com­
munity College I* seeking new members lor
the 1H1-82 school year. Membeihlp is open In
all community residents ind college students
over the age of 18. No audition is necessary.
The Community Chorus, founded In 1973, is
directed by Dr. Burt H. Perinchlef. Rehear­
sals are held Monday evenings, beginning.
Sept. 14, al 7 p.m. in the choral room &lt;G-105) In
the fine arts building on the college campus.
Registration for college credit must be
completed before St pi. 4 In the registrar's
office in the SCC Administration Building.
Leisure Time registration may be com­
pleted either by null or by filing In (lie
registrar’s office within the first two weeks ol
the class.
The featured masterwork for Term I will be

Girl Scout organizer tari Anderson is in need of leaders lor
the Junior girts, ages 9, 10 and It. They also would like (o
organize a Cadet Troop for girls In (he 6th, 7th and 8th grades.
Anyone interested in becoming a Junior or Cadet troop
leader may contact tari al 323-4984.

The
Chancel
Choir
presented Sherwood A.
Mobley in on evening of
classical and contemporary'
music at Shaw Temple A.ME.
Zion Church, Atlanta, Ga.
Sherwood, the youngest ol
five children, is the son of
Mrs. Freddie Mobley, 1203
West 8th St., Sanford.
He Is a graduate of the
public schools ol Seminole
County and has received his
Bachelor of Music degree
with a major in Applied
Percussion from Boston
Conservatory of Music.
Freddie lias studied com­
position privately for two
years with John Adams at
B oston C o n s e rv a to ry ,
counterpoint with author and
professor Dr. Hugo Norden,
and conducting and in­
strum entation with Attilio
Polo.
He has also studied with
Walter Tokarczyk, professor
of percussion at Boston
Conservatory; Arthur Press,
assistant timpanist, Boston
Symphony Orchestra; Dean
Anderson at Berklee College
of Music; Ray Steadman,
professional percussionist in
Orlando;
and
Williarp
Elmore, Seminole County
School system.
Sherwood has taught
percussion at Clark College,
Reinhardt College, Georgia
Academy of Music and
private students in Central
Florida and Boston. He Is
presently teaching percussion
at DeKalb Community
College and Ken Stanton
Music.
He lias perlormed with the
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.
Atlanta Pops Orchestra,
Atlanta Chamber Orchestra,
Savannah
Sym phony
Orchestra, and Theatre-ByThe-Sea In Matunuck, Rhode

j K ^ 9 Marva
1 ^ y H a w k /n s
322-5418
Island. He has been the
timpanist with the Boston
Conservatory Orchestra,
Harvard University Cantabrigia Orchestra, Berklee
College Concert Band and
with the American Orchestra
European Tour culminating
nt New YorkCity'sTown Hall.
He has wide experience as a
percussionist in theater,
opera and symphony or­
chestras. chamber and en­
sembles groups as well as Jazz
and dance bands.
He has performed under the
batons of Robert Shaw, tauis
Lane, Hiroyuki Iwaki, Sarah
Caldwell, John M oriarty,
Rouhin Gregorian and Milton
Rosestock.
His solo recitals were at the
Contemporary Hotel at Walt
Disney World, Berklee
College and Boston Con­
s e rv a to ry ,
W e rn e r
Tharichen’s Timpani Con­
certo with the Boston Con­
servatory Orchestra.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Wright Jr. of Hyannis, Mass,
recently spent a two-week
vacation us the Itouse guests
of their godparents Mr. and
Mrs. Ivory Washington, The
Wright* were here to attend
their family reunion.
Wesley and Deloris enjoyed
visiting with many family
members, old friends and
enjoyed the Central Florida
sights.
Making the trip with the
Wrights were her sister, Joan,
and son, o| Virginia.

'T c ih t o n 'T a l/ X ic i k o x G x e a t iv e P e o p l e !

*

the “Jubilee Mass" (in English) by the
modern Belgian composer Flor Peelers.
Copies of all Community Gtorus music (or
Term I may be purchased in Ihe college
bwksiorc prior to the first rehearsal.

Getting Married?
Engagement and wedding forms are
available at the Herald office to announce
these events. The forms nuy be ac­
companied by professional black and
white photographs if a picture Is desired
with the announcement. Wedding forms
and pictures must be submitted within two
weeks of the wedding.

Close your eyes, and picture
yourself 5 t o lf r ) years younger.
*

1

Now, open your eye*
to the newest
technological break*
through In non-surgteal
(ace lifts.
"Oar palntesi. naa-surflcal
program e4 muscta-tMiag has been
shewn la ba effective la preventing
and reducing facial wrinkles."

For ■ Free Consultation

CALL 323-3743
SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC
Mil 6. French Ave.

(Acres*Pram Pirn Hut)
'ONr*Theme* Ysndsll
CMrspractk Pbyikle*

—* r

r

4* ** w * • ** ••*+-**

■

■• •• • - 4 *

�Jaycees,

J a y c e e t t e s M a n Phones, Hos

H tr*M Phot* kr T*m Vtnctnf

&lt;ieorj»e C u rrie , fro m left, p re s id e n t of th e S a n fo rd
J a y c e e s , D ona S p e ir, S a n fo rd J a y c e e tte s and
c o o rd in a to r of th e S an fo rd p h o n e c e n te r for

m u s c u la r d y s tro p h y ; a n d Kick ( ir a h a m , v o lun­
te e r fo r ta k in g M l) p led g es, a r e g e ttin g p rim e d for
th e M I) te le th o n b eg in n in g S u n d a y .

Broken Engagement Better
Than Miserable Marriage
DEAR ABBY: NO NAMES wrote, "My fiancee and t light
ami argue every time we see each other, tail whenever I
s u re s t calling off our Christmas wedding, she (.Tics ami
carries on, saying site'll be humiliated before her friends."
You said, "Call it off anyway!" You ure absolutely right. I
know. I learned the hard way.
My fiance and I were both 21. We fought constantly. Several
times he suggested we call off the wedding, or at least postpone
it for a while, but I insisted on going through with it because I
didn't want to face the embarrassment of having to tell people
that I wasn't getting married after all.

li

Today, after two years of a miserable marriage, 1 am five
months' pregnant and in the process of getting a divorce.
Obviously, we never should have gone llirough with tlic
marriage in the first place. I hope NO NAMES takes your
advice.
TOLD YOU SO IN DALLAS
DEAR TOLD YOU: Thank* for the reaffirmation. A broken
engagement U usually embarrassing, sometimes humiliating
and always painful. It can also be costly. But It's not nearly as
painful and rosily as dlvorrr —especially If there are children

Births
Mr. and Mrs. Eric John tarson, (Carol Karelia) 103
Rabun Court, Sanford, announce the birth of their first
child, a son, Eric John tarson Jr., who weighed in at 6
pounds, four ounces on Aug. 28 at Seminole Memorial
Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Karelia,
and paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
tarson, all of Sanford.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hardy I Mary Sorenson) Wells of
KayetlevUle, N.C., announce the birth of a son, Richard
Hardy Wells Jr. who weighed in at 8 pounds, 6 ounces on
Aug. 25, at Wormack Army Hospital. Kort Bragg,
KayetlevUle.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
Sorenson, IN llrierwood Drive, Sanford. Paternal
grandparenls are Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Wells, 405 Vihlcn
Road, Sanford.

to ronsldrr.
DEAB ABBY: After moving our seats three times at the
movies last night, my wife and I decided to write to you. Our
problem Is people who sit there and constantly pop and crack
their gum in public!
Please print something about this rude ami obnoxious
practice. 1 want to make photocopies to liami to those in­
sensitive, inconsiderate klutzes who do it.
SILENCE IS GOLDEN IN L A.
DEAR SILENCE: I agree, It is a rude and obnoxious
practice. Make your photocopies If you wish, but be careful
where you distribute them, or you might get another kind of
‘‘crack" and "pop."
DEAR ABBY: I am the younger of two sons fn a family
business. My father, who runs (be business, is a very impallenl
man. I can never do anything to please him. He finds fault with
everything I do. When I try to defend myself, he just throws up
his hands in disgust and walks away.
There's not a day Dial passes in my life that he doesn’t (imi
fault with me. I am losing confidence in my sell. I do my very
best, and all I get is verbal abuse. I Just can't tolerate it
anymore.
What should I do?
M. IN BALTIMORE
DEAR M,: Gel another Job. Or find a doctor who treats
ulrers.
DEAR ABBY: You were asked, "Why don't light hulbs last
as long as they used to?" I think I can answer that.
Nothing lasts as long us it used to. Including me.
FIGHTING 50 IN FRESNO
Do you hale In write letters because you don't know what to
say? Thank-you notes, sy mpathy letten, congratulations, how
to decline and airept invitations and how to write an in­
teresting letter are Inrludrd in Abby's booklet, "How to Write
letters (or All Occasions." Send fl and a long, stamped &lt;15
cents), self-addressed envelope to: Abby, letter Booklet, 120*0
Hawthorne Blvd., Suite SON, Hawthorne, Calif. 90250.

The national Muscular
Dystrophy Telethon starts
Sunday night and continues
through tabor Day at 6 p.m.
This movement Is when Jerry
Lewis lakes a "holiday" to
vigorously campaign (or the
crippling disease.
Around Sanford, the San­
ford Jaycees and Jayceettes
will Join J e rry ’s MD
motivational movement by
manning the telephones for a
24-hour period, beginning at 6
p.m. Sunday. The phone
center operation will be
located at Chelsea Title &amp;
Guaranty Co., phone, 322-4396.
George Currie, president ot
the Sanford Jaycees, assures
those wishing to phone and
make a MD pledge prompt
and courteous service.
Adding to the MD tabor
Day festivities will be a block
party, beginning at It u.m., at
the Jaycee Park on French
Avenue, between 4lh and 51h
Streets. Music will be by the
Wooden Nickle Band and local
talent will be spotlighted
during the day.
The party is open to the
public at no admission
charge.

Applications arc available
through E. Berga, 19W Collier
Drive, Fern Park 32730.

DORIS
| w
DIETRICH L-w «

Jacqueline M. Wade was
named to the President's List
at Troy State University,
Troy, Ala. lor the summer
quarter. The announcement
was made by Edward F.
Bamctt, vice president for
Academic Affairs.

OURSELVES

Executive Committee.
Dora Lee’s daughter,
Debbie Russell, a professional
dancer, lias left the glamor
and glitter of ta s Vegas for
take Tahoe, Calif, where she
is under contracl—dancing in
a new Hollywood-lype show.

Carol M. Crumley has been
named lo the President's
Honor Ri ll at the University
of Central Florida upon
achieving perfect 4.0 grade
point averages during the
just-com pleted sum m er
quarter.

t.ida and George Stine
celebrated their 62nd wedding
anniversary Monday. They
went to church Sunday and
had lunch with Genevieve
Brumley, Lida said.

Bonita A. Tnlkamp is
among some 590 women from
throughout the United States
and 21 foreign countries
beginning their freshman
year at Wellesley College in
Wellesley. Mass, this month.

But on the actual an­
niversary' date, George had to
have oral surgery. He is
getting along “Just fine" Uda
added.

A prospective member of
Hie class of 1985, Bonita is the
daughter of Joanne Telkamp
of Sanford, and LeRoy
Telkamp of Winter Reach.

She said they received
many cards, (lowers and
phone calls. "For 62 years, I
can’t complain," Uda said
cheerfully. "1 get around
VERY well."

Speaking of muscular
dystrophy and the Jaycees,
tlie Rich Plan of Florida held
its annual company picnic at
Like Golden on Aug. 30.
"Tlie hit ol the day," ac­
cording lo Judith S. Nichols,
was the employees getting the
chance to "sink their
supervisor" in the Jaycees'
dunking tank—for a price, of
course. Tills fun segment of
the picnic raised $97 for the
M u s c u la r D y s tr o p h y
Association, Judith said.
W.E. "D uke" Adamson,
president of Rich Plan,
matched this amount to be
donated to the American
Cancer Society In memory of
John V. Rossi, a Rich Plan
employee for several years
prior to his death.
George Palmer was "chef
of the day" and grilled about
200 steaks on Flagship Bank's
large grill, which the bankers
loaned to the Rich Plan.
A magician was on hand to
thrill the kiddles with his bag
of tricks. The children also
took turns riding two pontes
furnished by Linda and Tom
Alderson. Linda is a Rich
Plan employee.

WEEK
M rs. II.E . T ru e , V ice
ItcR enl of th e S al lie
H a rris o n
C h a p te r
N atio n a l S o ciety of th e
D a u g h te rs
of
th e
A m e ric a n He volution,
u u lc h e s w hile L a k e
M ary M a y o r W alter
S o ren so n sig n s a p ro ­
c la m a tio n to o b s e rv e
C o n s titu tio n
W eek,
S ep t. 17-23. T his y e a r is
th e I'JU h a n n iv e r s a r y
of th e ad o p tio n of th e
C o n s titu tio n of th e
U nited S ta le s . V ario u s
p a trio tic o rg a n iz a tio n s
a r e u rg in g c itiz e n s to
becom e
m o re
in ­
fo rm e d
of
th e
g o v e rn m e n t
byre a d in g
th e
C on­
s titu tio n a n d fly in g Did
Ci lo ry .

June Patterson reminds
artists that it Is not too late to
register to enter the SanfordSeminole Art Association's
Armuat Fall for Art festival
scheduled Oct. 10 and 11 in
Downtown Sanford.

1

l

«* &gt;» *v

t t %

£

fa1* iNt minis

Basket* * what w* v* got • lot oi
if Browser t Barn &lt;n Long wood
Com# to think of 4. m# b a ttn it
one of m#n't floor contrivance* Ot
use* And benefit* during fat litl
I ooo yeari — tom# fragment* bay #
been authentica*od' a* about faff okl
— m ull m att It rM k with fa# wheel
in importance
ia tittf m iking, no doubt,
developed at fa# need arot# in many
parti of th* world. Confront**! with
fa* problem of having
tt«vm to hold in two
to §rim port farm, temeon#
and footed around No
•fifing what vinat. reed* or ru-thet
fait temaon* put together Th*
r#airy important thing it how fa#
materia It wrr# utvd
One* far concept w*t grasped
nature provided • multitude at
matermt tor basket making, and
one ut# ot the basket lad to another
Today coilectori are buty seeking
out fa# old basket*, which art surety
more attractive man papa# bag# and
plait 1c container* And. though
dwindling, tome cratttman art itMl
weaving them
ol
whatever
material* faetr particular locale
furnishes
At Browtec't Barn, we have many
fate mating batkett — both old ond
new In fa* Lott, where eight dealert
have antique* and caiiactiWet. there
are tome pint noodit one* dono
year* ago here in Florida Down
ttairt in The After* t Nett are
done recently kiting wild
vine*, witter la end other
material* from fait area
leveret at our daalert have

CHfCKUP

trd
i am is

| CL IA N I NO

mu s ^ m .H. • pluoridk tr k a tm en t I

CRUISES! CRUISESI CRUISES!
TWO GROUP CRUISES
S/S DORIC
10 DAYS -

I

9 PORTS

|

in*
contratt between a batket made ter

S/S OCEANIC
7 DAYS -

tour iff trade Another unique batket
it one made at tree bark by naMvte
tn the Norfa wett Terr iter let
From Arkantai, we have
beautiful dltpiay of oak ipflt
batkett. each made fa an aufaenfk
style and labelled i t to IN original
ute, although you may think ot a
differentor better uta That * one of
the wonderful faingt About batkett
— vertetllilyf
That t one of the wonderful fa mot
About Browter t Barn, too Not only
con you learn about batkett and buy
one, you can buy a plant or a doll fo
put Into it, and you don't have fa
bring your lunch batket with you
The ftuncible Spoon Tea Room
t e r m a delicious luncheon menu. (1
to 3 10. tnac kt to 4 p m
We'ro ot 110 Wett jettup Avenge
in Longwood There* A tign #n
County Road 431. wett tide, jvtt oae
block North of the hot! Office

&gt; PORTS

DEPARTS NOV. 2V, 1991 | DEPARTS MAR. 13, I9M
Includes Transportation Via Chart*red
Bui Ta And From Ship
Book Now For Bast Location

VOLUSIA TRAVEL AGENCY

u

l » Hwy. 17-91, DoBary, FI

6614119 66*4115
MMMMMMMMMAMA

Porms Craatad Just For Your
Typo Of Hoir, And Fit Your
Stylo Ot Living.

B w t i A P i 't

Boot

APPLE PECTIN
PERM
.A K O O
Rag. 930.00 * 4 3
Wtndy Williams

In L*ft|w**i'i
Historic tl District
■raws* tra in * tom
*1111 aar TO A ROOM —
iw v ln g toned plus
mornm* an* attornaan

Ph. 322-7684

'p in g s of £Batr

■ M ill.

JE S S U P A V I .

STYLING SALON
1*11 FranctiA v*.

"I

r Att Tfcai

M S SSL : * ™ ' «
°«*f O°od

-------------------

OrucgetdiNewC

MCKTOSCNOOl

Dr. and Mrs. Earl (Gerry)
Weldon entertained the
faculty and staff of Seminole
Community College at the
16th annual reception at their
Sanora home. Joining the
steady stream of the SCC
family were three members
of the college board of
trustees.
"We hove the largest
number of students again,"
laughed
Dr.
Weldon,
president of SCC since its
inception 16 years ago. "But
we have managed to say that
every year."
While Dr. Weldon is leading
students during their later
years in education. Gerry is
giving them a good foundation
as kindergarten teacher at
Idyllwilde School.

v

Tlie Sanford Lion's Club will
hold Us annual SpaghettiBingo Dinner on Sept. 26, at
llte Sanford Civic Center.
Dinner will be served from 4-8
p.m.
Donations to the "all-youcan-cal" LiklU die $2.10 |**i
person. Tickets are available
from any Lon or at the door.
Profits will be directed lo the
Lons' Sight Program.

* ■, » &gt; •

Sanford

PHONE
JJ1-44B1

JS

The Joyoei,

U m ttn M Eewgy

of heofjfars

«

rm d m t

ixpnssiok
I* £Nodaf-~

Jeff Htferrfy Moktt

h r HAPPY riMfSf !
Wt A rt PaiitonaUly
Curious About
What tuning
Talanti Will Ba
RavoaM As
TWy Loam...

Dora Lee Russell and Jack
Homer were hobnobbing with
Gov. Bob Graham whan be
breezed In and out ot Sanford
recently at a land develop­
ment meeting at the Sanford
Airport.
Dora Lee said she talked
with the governor at g n a t
length before he jetted off to
join the First Lady at the
premiere of "Honky Took
Freeway" In Leesburg.
The State
Convention will be Md at
Hollywood next month, and
Dora Lee aayi she Is “real
excited’’ about attending as a
delegate of the Bemlzwle
C o u n ty
D e m o c ra tic

H rrsto ekktk Sr T*m V meant

Vihlcn Rd. She plans to major
in math or computer science
at UCF.
The UCF President's
Scholarship program is a
(our-year award providing
$450 in each of the fall and
spring sem esters. Con­
tinuation in the program is
contingent upon enrollment as
a full-time student and
maintaining a grade point
average of 3.5 or better.

A Sanlord student, Liura
Bcrnosky, is one of six
University of Central Florida
(reshmen lo be awarded a
President’s Scholarship for
the current term.
Liura, a 1981 graduate of
Seminole High School, is the
daughter of Mr. und Mrs.
William It. Remnsky, 1001

Joining the good neighbors
in the Sanora Subdivision are
Diana and Jim Walls and
their son, Dan.
Tlie Walls family moved to
Sanford from Allentown, Pa.,
alter Jim retired as a stale
trooper there and accepted a
position as documents analyst
lor the Sanford Crime tab.
Diana, a professional en­
tertainer and dance instructor
opened Diana's Dance Arts
Center, Casselberry, and
recently staged the Heart of
Florida UtUe Miss Talent
pageant at the Sanford Civic
Center—a first for the a m .
"I love it here," vivacious
Diana said. "People In
Sanford are very friendlyvery open."

CONSTITUTION

1*

Sunday, Sopt. i , 1M1— IC

Evtnlnfl Htraid, Sanford. FI.

In And Around Sanford

S titts
F A U TERM BEGINS SEPT. 8th
BALL1T—TAP—JAI2—JAZZ EXERCISE
B*finning —Inform*#lata —Advanca# Clams Fan
CHILDREN —TEENS —AOULTS
Call Or Stay ly Far Fvrtkar infarmattaa

REGISTER N O W
ISM S. ELM AVE SANFORD SIS-ltM
DIRECTORS: Miriam Ry* Wright a Valeria Ry* WaU
in # &gt; w

i

r, r c r

s r,

.7 r*

_ ? * v r ^ . C .-- -t . * .

T -^

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t

♦

1

�e

&lt;C—Evtnlng H trtld, hnford, FI.

Sunday, Sept.«, 1911
.VA^.V.’ V.V 'M A J

Adventist

Methodist

T H I f I V I N T H -D A Y
A D V I N T I I T CHURCH
C a n m r M T lk llim
R r , KMHMtti a r y M
r im ,

...THE

• :M■m.

w m m ih n k i

CO M M UNITY U N IT 1 0
M IT M O O IIT CHURCH
Hwy. 19-91I I PMPt RMRI R i

II M i m

HOPEOF OUR COMMUNITY,

Rat. H .W p M k im t T
R M .D m rM H .H M pM
M m M p M in M p

9:99*.m.
U M TP
RmaMR

Assembly O f G o d
am

wm

to m iiii

&gt;000

9 0 I I .91 a m
N n t o r 9kr» 911 P M ,
W w tM p lW Tk *
1411 M a m
90.1,1* t * i,****l
II M i m
■ MfHkRWtnMa
I Ppm
Wt* liM * ItrAy
9.M p m
M M L lp k l k l il l V l l l k m tatlaf.
■ • T l l l M M 'l
1 :1 p m .

RHRMA A lt I M R L Y OP 0 0 0
h I Cr r R i O M R i M
m iip k a *
laaa M o*
R K tfim a
PMMr
M K Ila p WwiMp
9 :M i.m .
iM W a* ttto k ,*
lip * .

Baptist

tt

C IN 1 R A L R A P T III CHURCH
1)11 O i l A ft It"!* ,*
I l l t il l
*,!**•* Imrtk
Pl»*l,
l.a A tr !&lt;*••'
flltm
M oa.at Pri,|*,l
II M l r*
£ * »,,* Tiai*r*9
I H i*
I ita .af T r o ik a
I M | l*
M t l P r itt r I t r t
IM p m

The
Church...

P IR IT R A P T ItT CHURCH
119 PtfR AfRfWt. )**•*,*
l i t . P p m R . M*rp»T. it PltM r
If H llM H l
9 :tli.m .
AAsnUep MwtRIp
ll:M 9.m .
CAtft* T f t t f p
lip *
R tM M p M K tM p
IN p *
W M P r t r K U r v ic t
lip *

OUR NATION!

MARKHAM MOOOI
CHURCH OP T H I NAIARRNR
IR 441'imll*, ft MI-1
AlW akltaR lm r

IM H IM

Catholic
ALL I 0 U L I CATHOLIC CHURCH
I I I O K A n , &gt;a*&lt;*rt
Pr.M UUim R m I i
P u li,
I I I V lp llM ill
111*
Im M ni
i i m . P M A II* m «
C S M n llM t. I l l
1 1 11 &gt;&lt; X

H O LT C A O II
w i P i n *&gt;•

The Weekly Headline

Orthodox

llll*

MtfW Mess

mod Staff** *4 m
Cress A *e*e«clte*

Grandpa turned when I took this picture It
won t look natural." ho said My desk is never
clean."

What made Grandpa strong in the lace ol dan­
ger — incorrupt when confronted by unscrupulous
forces7

It s clean now. Tho umbrella stand is empty, tho
hat rack is bare His old Web press has been re­
tired But Grandpa s presence Imgors on

His church was tho center and circumference ol
his being Its truths and its goodness sustained
him It was all that he needed — he remained
steadfast and sure.

For over titty years he printed the Mayliold
Progress, leportmg the news with integrity There
were times when he was threatened, cajoled by
attempted bribery, menaced by pressure groups
but he stayed true to principle He was a giant m our
town

IM p m
»e t? M p m

Christian
P IR IT CH R ItTI AH
IM91. t o H t r i A t *.
Pi t . I t m o w
MMW*

RPIICOPAL CHURCH OP
T H I H flW C O V IN AN T
I I I Tm a a m h a r » m
NIM m l*ri*ft
PHM9 99I49II
Rt* O rtP K fO PfTffTf
VICK
I t M a t Rk A k UI
IA I9 I m
liM C lM
91 m

LANS M ARY CHURCH
K A r N A Z A R IH I
IM P CnrtlTlLM raA t t
LARr M a t t
R t t m . R tf I rrw
l — *9 » *n*l*
IT M t m .
MK T Mp iRTTteR
t llM lH .
■ tr . W tnM p
1 1 p .m .
- nr. IM M .I
9,a

Evangelical
Congregational
W IN T1R 9*01 COMMUNITY
R V A N O IL IC A l
CO N O RIO ATIO NAL
tit IN*T# It,T O
«v*Bev tehee*

»• M e Ml

II Him

mor ship

*»v ••MrtlyrM

1 1 1 *.

lliM p .m .
9 1 p .m .
9iMp m.

P lH IT CHURCH

OP THK NAIABEWC
H U tenter* At*
J t M j Hmten

UMiy l(M«l

• lilir

Lutheran
iu t h c p a w c m u b c h o p

T M IA IO C IM K A
ia n t o r o c h r iit ia n c h u r c h

Pentecostal

P IP IT R A P T IIT CHURCH
OP LOHOWTOOD
I AIR. W n l M 19 91 T* H*ni CM
R t t . I m m w '.S cm m rrt
a t t io
I t M a y I cRrM
9 M•m
M o * ,* ! Wk i M*
1:11 A 19:419 m.
CMMrtR'l C k K ik
19:119 m.
Ck w cR T,9M *p
1:41pm
tm M a tW tnlM *
9 M pm

J*e John ten
Sendee IcHeet
met ship Service

fiM p m

P A lM I T I O A V f NU1
B A P Tl|f CHUACH
l l l l Paimetta Ave
Ray R iy m e M C fM lM
Patiae
IcePAay Scheel
f eta m
AAaempfWorship
II M a m
f vapftliilK lerv.ee*
aMp m
mod Prayer A B.pie SfedyI M p m
Independent AAii»tenet y

Christian Science

C »K C * T,iim * f
RtmiMpWtrtMp
WM Pttr** U f t ic t

Sunday
I Corinthians

CH R IITIA N IC IIH C R IO C IR T T
c« Iw cCw citf Acairm r
9(1 L i f t PfAAtlTf 0,1ft
L, » | w , l
I t a T i r l o t 'c t
19 M p m
14 M l m
lip m

Church Of Christ
CHURCH o r CHR 1)9
•••&gt; Pact Aveflwe
C vaMpetiti
t» M a m
II M a m
a Mp m

B.Mf SWdy
Marmpf Worship
CveniPf ter vice
LaBitt Bipie Clan
N r lM t liy
a e p e i l ly BiMeCiatt

It M a m

IMpm

Church Of God

R t f J t Aa j * « &lt; * „ ,t
Pane
I v M t , tcA Tti
9 ,ia m
W e tk ip l e f r i t ,
I M ill Mam
» , m aiAU.A a C kn iiiaA |(k**i
K 'A pr, far it a IkftTpk R tfM h O r a tr

Monday
II Corinthians
12:1-12

Methodist

Tuesday
II Peter

3:17-10

• R AC l U N IT1 D
M R TH O O IIT CHURCH
A lrpirTS IM H M P I M D ,
R tt AtRaW 0, 4*1. ) ,
Pant,
Ckw ckIckM l
9 M em
llAplAp 4M iK Iup
IIM 4 m
W trtM p iK v K t
II H i m
YMCRMMIMp
IM pm
T t t m t , R IM tllM r
tM P rtrK
II M i m

Wednesday
Isaiah

40 27-31
Thursday
Ecclesiastes

U u rM p O fM M
llp m
H k m t y PrttIM R H r III U f T K M

7:1-0
Friday
Isaiah

O ITR R N UH ITRO
M R TH O O IIT CHURCH
Ck r k tl C e p tA it,
A M e r i t II

30:0-10

CHURCH OP 0 0 0
944 W IIM Hr Ml

MKA.Af WtMAi*
IftARtl'tllC It f f
PimllY RKicOmtM
iK T ilt

1414119m

P t llt ,

I « •»

IIN l*
IMpm

IRM INOLR H R IR H TI
T il
■ CH
T. PM m iM
I t M m I k y K m I* Hw

•III m
BiWe »he#y
11 M p m
w tukia
Y aO kCkn ,
IMpm
CkK tk Triima*
4:99a m
WKlWp
IMpm
waTattAa, l o f i t t al
C t ,.***1 afatkftKia* c *k c *
a ,It * , A RIM* ItvAt
T Ma m
AdeHCMlr
liP * m

CMtlftT U N ITS D
M IT M O O IIT CMUACH
TiKfeer Drive. ftpMpmlIttatet
I n l i l t r l W M.iter
Matter
tvM a rtc M e i
t llam
MermiiiWeriliip
' II M a m
M Y M M 4 4t*lwA
TMam
l e t *»rt*ip HI A k i tv* T M p m
m*dn4\0*r Maemtf Prayer Orewp

5:14-23

IM pm

Congregational
' I

CONOR I OPTIONAL
CH R IITIA N CHURCH
l l l l 1 P e t Aft
111 UB4
A t . A rfA N tll
Pester
A t . 11 fatal l K IM '
U e d iy |&lt;hMi
Fv"e«*vh’p
Mo»n.nf Worship

Presbyterian

*

1
l

»
•

^ 1

• M em
tl M tie m
Ii Me m

PIR49 PR RIP Y T i l l AN CHURCH
Oat A ft A k i l l
R tf VtrRri L P ,ftAi. PaitA,
R tt OtAiat CtA iii. a , u &lt; P a iiK *
i n n i n im i
Mar A. AT W „ ik,*
4 M am
C k e tk lakMi
Iclim
MarA.kf w e tk .*
II M l m
Rm ei

THR LAKR MARYUNITRD
PRRI9YTR RIANCHURCH
Wilke Aft .Ltll Mart
Rtf AP IHftAl
MrArtie

U M a rC k e c k ia k * * ,
M w A -M W e tk ,,
Vmrmormep
a*a CMie etactici

tllam
II M a m

tH m m

t ap p m

IIN an
II Ma m

WpraMplarvMp

Saturday
I Thessalonians

4:19pm
9Npm
llp m

t

P ia t t PCNTCCOt TAL

CMuaCHoplohomooo

Bat Or eng* lu e e t le ttfe i i l
Aev C RptAOrant
Pester
teelaylckeei
II M a m
Merw.rvp Mter*n.p
II M a m
t « M a y l« r e i M
IM pm
P e l t ik iilM v
TMpm
Ce*avereMM*ef'*atw^aay a M p m

I T LUKR ILU TH R R A N C H U R C H
IR &lt; l , I R , C 9 v « R C
Ofrtpt I H tflA I

15:1-0

» * M t , I i Km i

R A P T IIT CHURCH
&gt;9i)C**KTT C IM R tM
R tf R K f Ot I t U
llll 9 1

OOOOIHRPHRRO
LUTHRRANCHURCH
9911Of IAAR* O, II tl
I L K t e t « C t e c t i* A m e ic ii
l i t RtlpRI LtmtA
P u le
II M a m
Ntreaaev Ptevded

IMpm
IMpm

K veMinf*ier vice
P tete t Meelmp P e l

R tf O K OwAltf

..... . . . . . .

Miiiitttr
• M am
If Ma m

Pted Aaaar

Pray* Service

Dr. J i t

R tf R im e A R to tcte
P tU e
I y M a ? Ic t tr l
I It,*
Alwikr( t e n e t
tIM tm
-.A p fffC ltA i m R w i e ,

II I A r,* o l l i f t
PH*AT III MM

I.I.HMM

I A K I M AR T BAPTIST M ill.O N
!&gt;• L akevitvp Lake Mary
••» Jim Hefkeni
Patter
Iv M lr lc k H l
I llin
* Weeship ter vice
II M a m
Ctr m *f Worship
IM p m
W#B Priyer terv
IM p m
NvMery Previtfei

Pet’e*

I Him

M pcm w f*«t*ip
II M a m
***** M*ar
IM p m
IvaAfaiitt Service
IM p m
Midweek If f vice lifted I
IM p m
N »H »fy Provided H f «ll If rv K tt ,

TV ’ Thti it The L,ia '

M iMAJR.
M iM tm .
M pcpM h Service
■vrnuap Service
9iMp.m.
9iMp.m.
TnHkt Mr * H r* Dry

I l l
liM p -l
lip ,

M « ,R H M | k n
M M Ararat 4 At o m

• M em
H Me m
H Me m
U M e a.

Church tcNH

Your church is eager to help you meet tho
pressures ol your day. Its resources are unlimited
and eternal Go to your church or synagogue and
take your family with you

im ,

.

l»(»H

l i t R tt L r r it D I I f f '
Mtl, Ctmmta.a*
Hety Cemmemefl

Mel? CemmtAteM

OUR LADY O U « I HOP
PRACR CATH O LICCH APPL
t il I . MIRRlHI A ft , 9l*M fl
IW 9111
to M a r Tartlet
lliM R -m ..

m k m m m k im

“The Lv'htten Meet " end
IORDAN R A P TIIT CHURCH

1:99*4*.
9:M P-M,
9lMp.M*‘

irmihH,

Naxarene

Episcopal

IvMtr Uttn
C O U M TA Y H D I P A P lItTC H U R C H
Ctwnlr, Clwfe Rtf* L t t l M i r t
Pe»»e#
Avert M le e i
f lie m
le M ev U h—i
if «le m
Pree&lt;*i*f A m*t%h&gt;p*ng
IM p m
time 1 »*B?
» Mp m
ftheriMf A Arwlerm.**
9 M pm
Me# PrifetMeH
H vtttff Presided

AU K .
t M il * I
9:99-11 AM .

P I I I T U M IT IO
M IT M O O IIT CNUACN
eiv rm w mwm•wWt
L** A. KM*
• k k a tll.V H M a
Pmftm
lamaa A Tkam at
DtratHf M NNttlt
m*rtl*9 T**Mk,*
11411am.
9 H em
BmMpy Bdmwi
IMpm.
U4AVR
M aat k r ir t f 4rttaiatl
Ai MBJW.
9*44914 TkartAar
9 am Ay N f M Itaa tf
IMpm.
M ltH a t

U PtALA PA | f A T T I P I AN CHUB CM
Car Caaatry CiwB A Uptaia A t
OarwiN IM a
Paitae
U M ly tc M I
» M em
MervK.pterv.ee
UNam
Wariery PravAet

TOU CAW P I A T U il
TO U i CMUPCM
IW fMIt i p a c i a OB
ti n a i a m i i b
C A U U ) Ml.

11

i * i a— i ,— ,— ^ t i ^ tt ^ m

v •'

The Following Sponsors Moke This Church Notice And Directory Page Possible*
A T L A N T IC N A TIO N A L BANK
Sanlord, Fla.

T H E M cK IB B IN A GENCY
In su ra n c e

C E L E R Y C ITY
P R IN TIN G CO., INC.

L. D. P L A N TE ) INC.

STEN STR O M R EA LTY

O viedo. F lo rid a

H erb S te n stro m a n d Staff

H ow ard H. H odges a n d Staff

M EL'S
G U L F SERVICE
M el D e k le a n d E m p lo y ees

D A IR Y Q U E E N
Mark and Eattier Perry
2523 Park Drive
FLAG SH IP BANK
OF SEM IN O LE and Stall
200 W. F irs t St.
3000 S. O rla n d o D r

G R E G O R Y LU M B ER
T R U E V A L U E HARDW ARE
500 Maple Mve. Sanford

OSBORN'S BOOK
and BIBLE STORE
P A N TR Y PRIDE
DISCOUNT FOODS

HARRELL A BEVER LY
TRANM ISSION

WILSON E IC H E L B E R G E R
M O R TU A R Y

2599 Sanlord Ave.

E u n ice W ilson a n d Staff

P U B LIX M A R K E TS

a n d E m p lo y ees

a n d E m p lo y ees

WILSON M A IE R F U R N IT U R E CO.

D avid B ev erly a n d Staff

M r. a n d M rs. F re d W ilson

SEN K A R IK GLASS
A P A IN T CO., INC.

K N IG H T'S SHOE STORE

JCPenney
Ed Hemannanditaff

D ow ntow n S anford
Don K night &amp; Staff

J e r r y &amp; Ed. S e n k a rik
a n d E m p lo y ees

WINN D IX IE STORES
a n d E m p lo y ees

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY
. A ltIM R L Y 09 0 0 0
a .„ l A lu m 9 *t •• O H I&gt;t* 4 Rim
Rkama AitamK? a4 D ai. Canmr *4 Ci ia lr t CHR Rm 4 M 4
VMRar 4 * 9 . LAM Marr
■Af lilt
AMiMk l i p l il l Cfctftc* One##
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�RELIGION
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Briefly

Debate On Who's A Jew
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
UP1 Religion Writer
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Begin’s long — and finally successful —
effort to form a coalition government,
dram atically dem onstrates how en­
tangled Israel’s Internal politics are will)
the powerful but often fragmented US.
Jewish community.
In order to form Ids government, Begin
had In deal with and make concessions to
the 13 elected members of various
religious parties in Israel, and it is these
concessions that have embroiled US.
Jews in a sharp and vigorous debate.

Seminole Heights Begins
State Missions Drive
Seminole Heights Baptist Church, Sanford, will have an
emphasis on state missions during this month on the theme
"Building Florida’s Tomorrow". Beginning this Sunday
members will make special gifts toward the goal of $500.
The fund drive will benefit new church sites, United
Christian Action, scholarship aid and assistance to the
Baptist Children’s Home.
On Tuesday, Sept. 15, beginning at 10 a.in., in the home of
Miss Sarah Tatum, 2618 Marshall Ave., members of Baptist
Women will observe a Day of Prayer fur this purpose.
Program arrangements are under the direction of Mrs. J.T.
Hardy Sr., the organization’s president,
i Women of (lie church ore also participating in the
Seminole Baptist Association Woman's Missionary Union
effort of making health kits to be distributed at the time of
the ministry of the Mobile Dental-Health Unit to migrants
and others. Thus far, materials for 46 kits has been
collected by the three mission circles, and the church will
be represented when all of the Association's kits are
assembled on Sept. 16 at the Centra) Baptist Church of
Sanford.

ChoIr Program Resumes
The full music program resumed at First Baptist Church
of Sanford on Wednesday. There is a choir for every age —
the schedule is as follows: Wednesdays at 6:30 P.M. —
Preschool Music Activity, Music Makers (Grades 1-3) and
Young Musicians l Grades 4-6); Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m. —
Chancel (Adult) Oioir; Sundays at 5 p.m. — Youth Choir.

Youth'Choirs Rehearse
First Presbyterian Church of Sanford choirs for children
and youth resume fall and winter schedules this week.
Rehearsals for the Junior Choir (third through fifth grades)
will be 4.30 p.m., Tuesday; Senior High Choir (grades 9-12),
6:30 p.m., Wednesday; Youth Club Choir, 4:30 p.m.,
Tuesday.

Spanlsh-Amerlean Festival
A Spanish-American Festival will be held Sept. 12 from
noon to 6 p.m. at (lie Orange City Recreation Hall, located
at University and N. Holly Avenue. The event is sponsored
by the First Spanish Baptist Church of Deltona for the
Building Committee. Features will Include exotic foods,
such as tacos, burritos, arroz con polios, and magical en­
tertainment, hispanic folk music and a slide presentation of
travel in l^tin America. The admission is free and the
public is cordially invited.

Wednesday Activities Set
Wednesday activities will resume this week at Com­
munity United Methodist Church of Casselberry. The
Cherub and Chapel choirs will rehearse at 4:15 p.m. There
will be crafts and games for children followed by a covered
dish supper In fellowship hall at 6 p.m. and Bible studies for
all ages al 7 p.m.
The Youth Choir will begin rehearsals Sunday, Sept. 13 al
4 p.m.

Homecoming Scheduled
' Homecoming services at SI. James AME Church, San­
ford, will be held Sunday, Sept. 13 at 11 a.m. Guest speaker
Iwill be Attorney James T. Golden. A musical program will
be held at 3 p.m. Dinner will be served following the mor­
ning service. Stewart Baker is Homecoming chairman and
the Rev, K.D. White is pastor.

Ferrell Attends Conference
Burbon Ferrell, of Ixmgwood, treasurer of Community
United Methodist Church of Casselberry attended Ihe 2Btl&gt;
annual Conference of Church Business Administrators of
the Southeastern Jurisdiction of the United Methodist
Church August 10-13 at lak e Junaluska, N.C.

Labor Day Picnic
Sanford Church of God will hold its laibor Day picnic at
9:30 a.m. at Blue Springs Stale Park. Gates open 8 a.m.,
cloae 11 a.m.

Family Hobby Show
There will be a Family Night Hobby Show at Community
United Methodist Church, Casselberry on Scpl. 13 al 6 p.m.
.in fellowship hall with members of all ages invited lo share
their hobbies. In honor of National Grandparents Day all
grandparents will be honored. Ref reshments will be served.

Single Adult Day Slated
Single Adult-Day will be observed at Ravenna Park
- Baptist Church, Country Club Road on Sunday, Sept. 13.
The early service at 1:30 a.m. will be honoring all singles of
the church followed by a get-acquainted and discussion
, time during the usual Sunday school hour at 9:45 a.m.
All area singles, whether divorced, widowed, single
parents or never married are invited by the church to at­
tend.

Child Evangelism Banquet
*

The Child Evangelism Fellowship of Seminole County
• will hold its annual banquet at 6 p.m. Friday at 6 p.m. at the
, Sanford Alliance Church, 1401 Park Ave., Sanford. The
speaker will be the Rev. James Perdue, new state director
lor Child Evangelism Fellowship. There will also be special
music. For ticket Information call 323-3067.

Woman's Day Observed
Allen Chapel AME Church, Sanford, will hold its annual
Women's Day observance Sept. 13 at 11 a.m. Guest speaker
‘ la Mrs. Clara Walters. At 3 p.m. there will be a special
musical program. Mrs. Barbara Alexander is chairman.
Rev. J.H. Woodward is pastor.

Sunday, Sept. 4, m i — 1C

Although the debate, both in Israel and
the Uniter) States focused on a relatively
narrow question — an amendment to the
Law of Return - the wider issue in the
debate is a question affecting Jews
throughout the world: The definition of
who is a Jew and who will be recognized
as such in Israel.
I)K . H E R B BOW DOIN

Following Begin’s narrow electoral
victory over the opposition Labor Party,
iwo Israeli religious parties, the National
Religious Party and Agudath Israel, both
strongly Orthodox, sought to make
amendment of the 1-iu of Return the
price Begin would have to pay for their

District Sponsors
Bowdoin Crusade
At a regular meeting of (he Orlando District United
Methodist Men, a formal invitation was extended the Herb
Bowdoin Crusade Team to conduct it week-long intensive
Crusade, Nov. 15-22 in Orlando.
With 140 men present, it was unanimously voted to give the
project the men’s full approval mid cooperation. The Pastors
of the District had met previously with Dr. Herb Bowdoin to
discuss this possibility.
Tlie total Orlando District of the United Methodist Church is
officially sponsoring the Crusade. Participation, of course, is
not obligatory: but most of the churches of the District liave
indicated interest and willingness to take part.
The executive committee is currently meeting weekly witli
Mrs. Betty Fisher, the Herb Bowdoin Crusade Director. Betty
Fisher was associated with Ihe Billy Graham Crusade Team,
along with her husband, for over 23 years. l&gt;ec Fisher served
with Dr. Graham as researcher, writer, and consultant.
In this Crusade, u layman and a pastor will be serving
together to head up each committee. Howard Jones and Dr.
Clarence Yates, of Pinccastle United Methodist of Orlando,
will be serving us general chairmen. Ron Burlfi, also of
Pinecaslle, ami Fred Williams and Rev. Curlls Norton of
Grace United Methodist Church, Orlando, will be serving as
co-chairmen. Lynn Teneyck, president of the Orlando District
United Methodist Men, will serve along with his pastor, Rev.
James Ulmer from Sanlando Methodist Church, as executive
secretary.
The week of evangelistic services will be field in the First
United Mctliodixt Church, Orlando, located at 142 East
Jackson St. Dr. David G. llortln Is (lie senior minister.
This project is unique on Iwo counts: it is the first districlwidc, officially sponsored United Methodist Church Crusade in
the history of the Orlando District. Methodist men, along with
their pastors, believe tliat this is ttie time and place for such
undertaking.
Second, it will be the first time Dr. Herb Bowdoin has con­
ducted an inter-church Crusade in the district where he
resides, and where his office is located. From this office in
Altamonte Springs emanates the Methodist Hour radio
program which is heard each week by an estimated 300 million
people — 100 million in the Far East. Even now, while the
Committee prepares for the Crusade, Dr. Bowdoin is con­
ducting u crusade with several churches In Seoul, Korea. Tills
is his fourth trip to South Korea.
Bowdoin will be back in time for the first major event in the
Crusade, the Kick-Off Banquet, which will be field on Sept. 19
at Ihe Tupperware Auditorium. Hie goal for the Crusade
Banquet is 1,000 persons. In Mobile, Ala., 2,400 attended a
similar pre-crusade banquet. Bishop Hunt, titular head of Ihe
Florida United Methodist Conference, will attend this Banquet
along with all the Bowdoin Crusade Team.
The theme established for the Crusade is: “Strengthening
Families for Christ." An office has been opened al 3101 S.
Orange Ave., and Mrs. Patty Harrison has been installed as
secretary. More Information can be secured by phoning 6572418.

M ^ .m

You would not think of Inviting (he president of the National
Council of Churches and Rev. Sui: Myung Moon to the same
party.
The liberal NCC, friend of the mainline churches. Is no friend
of the Mnonies.
But religions sometimes make strange bedfellows. And
wlien opposition was lining up against a bill in New York Stale
which would have made it easier for "deprogrammers" to get
their clutches on "brainwashed Moonies," the NCC was right
there in line with Moon's Unification Church and other cults.
Tlie bill (known as the tiishcr bill after assemblyman
Howard 1-asher who was chief architect of the measure)
passed Ihe New York legislature but was vetoed in July by
Gov. Hugh Carey.
Cheering the governor's action were not only the Moonies
and the National Council of Churches but many organizations
representing the Homan Catholic, Protestant and Jewish
faiths.
While the Moonies and the other cults would appear to liave
the most to gain from Carey's veto, the NCC was probably
looking ahead to the time when any church whose doctrines
and practices offend somebody would find itself or Its mem­
bers subject to the possible deprivation of their constitutional
liberties and civil rights.
As a Seventh-day Adventist magazine said in an article
protesting the takeover of the Worldwide Church of God by the
state of California, "It may not have been your church this
time. But tomorrow it may be."
Tomorrow has already come for some who could not be
considered cultists.
There is the caw of Reverend Philarel Taylor, a monk in the
old Catholic Church (which has about 500,000 members in the
United Stales). He was abducted from an Oklahoma City
monastery when he was 22 and placed under the guardianship
of his father through a court order.
Reverend Taylor said that during his deprogramming his
abductors ripped off his monastic robe and his cross. He later
escaped.
Then there is Debby Dudgeon. She charges she was taken
from a Roman Catholic community in Ontario by members of
tier family, who are Protestants, and was worked over by
deprogrammers for 14 hours. She also escaped and returned to

/

Orthodox Jews, however, led by the
aggressive National Council of Young
Israel, strongly defended the changes as
"merely carrying out the mandate of the
Israeli electorate” and charged the
Reform-Conservative coalition with
“economic and political blackmail."
At the last minute, the religious parties
abandoned their Insistence on making
the amendment n matter of coalition
disicipline, but the issue raised — the
legitimacy of Jewish Identity inside and
outside Israel — remains a bitter point of
contention both In Israel and the United
States.

SAINTSAND
George Plagenz

her religious community.
Another case of the deprogramming of a member of
mainline church is that ol Peter Willis. After fie joined
Redeemer Church in Houston, a charismatic neo-Penlecoslal
church, his mother hired Ted Patrick, tlie county’s most
famous deprogrammer, to try to gel her son lo renounce his
involvement In the church.
After being locked in a Holiday Inn hotel room for 17 hours
with Ills abductors, lie was released.
Deprogramming is the practice of forcing somebody In
recant his beliefs. It often includes forcibly abducting a person
and subjecting him to an Incessant assault on his newly ac­
cepted faith. It ts usually done on orders ol members ol the
culllst's family who charge he Is under mind control.
Those who support programming claim that Ihe brain­
washing techniques of the cults take away a person’s capacity
to make his own decisions. Deprogramming is thus seen as a
means of restoring the individual to "normality."
Wlial is feared by critics of deprogramming outside the culls
is that the practice could lead to a full-scale religious war —
with Protestant parents attempting to regain their children
who have Joined the Roman Catholic faith. And vice versa.
From the point of view of Hie cults and some other churches
(mostly smaller ones), tilings have reached a crisis stage,
calling for concerted and Joint ocUon. These groups banded
together just recently lo proclaim August "One Nation Under
God Month." Participating churches are being asked to alert
their people to Hie Uireal of government intervention in
religion.
Tlie cults are still not resting easy. Neither are some
mainline churches — wondering wiiat tomorrow will bring.

Charles Allen Clergyman Of Year
Dr. Charles I,. Allen lias
been designated Clergyman
of Hie Year by Religious
Heritage of America Inc. Dr.
Allen, with over 40 years In
Hie ministry, is pastor of First
Melhodist Church of Houston,
Texas, and is the 31st annual
awardee chosen by Religious
Heritage. His congregation,
with its 12,000 members, ts the

Pastor's
Comer
By FRED BAKER, MIN
Sanford Church of Christ
Henry Drummond, in his sermon, "Hie
Greatest Thing In the World," preached ■
years ago, most impressively states our
theme: " ‘The greatest thing,' says someone,
'a man can do for his Heavenly Father is to be
kind to some of his other children.' I wonder
why it Is that we are nbt all kinder than we are.
How much the world needs It. How easily It is
done. How instantaneously it acts. How In­
fallibly it is remembered... Lavish it upon the
pour, where It is very easy; especially upon
the rich, who alien need it most; most of all
upon your equals, where it Is very difficult,
and for whom pertiapa we each do least of all...
I rise no chance of giving pleasure. For that is
the ceaseless and anonymous triumph of a
truly loving spirit. I shall pass through this
world but once. Any good thing therefore that I
can do, or any kindness that I can show lo any
human being, let me do it now. Let me not
defer it nor neglect it, for I shall not p u s this
way again."
. Others should have a place of preeminence
in our thinking. We can not be true followers o&lt;
Jesus and live selfishly. We have been u v ed to
serve. It Is our mission In God's kingdom to
help others.

f r **!1 r«

Israel already are at odds with the
Orthodox in Israel and amendment of the
law of Return would have further placed
non-Orthodox movements in a “disad­
vantaged place in Israel."
“We leel morally obligated to state
that Hie proposed amendment will have
the most serious consequences for the
North American Jewish community and
its institutions," the statement said. "As
issue is whether Israel, Ihe major
unifying force in Jewish life, will alienate
itself from world Jewry and become an
agency for fomenting disunity and
divisiveness among the Jewish people."

Is Deprogramming Threat To A ll?

Who Is M y Neighbor?
In the 20th chapter of Matthew we find Jesus
settling a dispute among his disciples about
who should be greatest among them, with Hie
words, "Whosoever would become great
among you sliall be your minister; and
whosoever would be first among you shall be
your servant: even as Hie Son of nun came not
to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to
give his life a ransom for nuny."
In the 25th chapter of Matthew, we find
Christ describing Hie judgment day In which
all men will stand before him. To some he will
say, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit
the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world: for I was hungry, and
ye gave me to eat; I was thirsty, and ye gave
me drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me in;
naked and ye clothed me; I was sick, and ye
visited me; 1 was in prison, and ye came unto
me."
This same emphasis upon Ihe needs of
others was stated by the apostle John, "But as
for the well-to-do man who sees his brother in
want but shuts his eyes —and his heart — how
could anyone believe that the love of God Uvea
in him? My children, let us love not merely in
theory or in words — let us love in sincerity
and in practice." (Phillips’ translation of I
John 3:17-11). This emphasis is found in
Christ's great summary sentence which men
have called the Golden Rule: "All things
therefore whatsoever yc would that men
should do unto you, even so do ye also unto
them: for this is the law and the prophets."
(Malt. 7:12)

joining his government.
Under the change proposed by the
Orthodox religious groups, those con­
verted io Judaism by non-Orthndox
rabbis would not be recognized as Jews
in Israel under the law of Return. The
Iaw currently grants every Jew the right
to immigrate to Israel and become a
citizen at once.
Not only were the Orthodox religious
parties seeking to amend the law but they
also sought lo make it a matter of party
discipline, meaning that members of the
coalition would have to vote for the
proposal rather than vote their con­
science on the issue.
The proposal was sharply criticized in
the United Slates by representatives of
the Reform, Conservative and Reconstructionisl Jewish movements as well as
by Jewish community relations agencies,
but strongly defended by America's
Orthodox Jewish community.
In a joint statement by the moderate
U.S. Jewish religious groups, leaders
said the proposal could lead to "a
dangerous schism in worldwide Jewish
unity” and could lead to undermining
important support for Israel among U.S.
Jews.
Reform Jews in the United States and

^

•** e r

largest In the United
Melhodist Church.
A newspaper columnist for
he Houston Chronicle for the
last 11 years and well known
to Houston television viewers
through his weekly broadcast,
Dr. Allen lias a national
following through his books.
He lias written 31 books
conlronting life's problems.
Ttie titles include: "When You
Lose
a l.oved One,"
"Healing Words," "Twelve
Ways lo Solve
Your
Problem s," and "P ray e r
Changes Things."
Dr. Alien is a graduate of
Young Harris
College,
Wolford College and Ihe
School o| Theology of Emory
University. He has received
honorary doctors degrees

Irom Piedmont College,
Emory University and John
Brown University.
Time magazine said uf
Allen: "The success of
Charles l„ Allen is not the
result of rafter-ringing
oratory. He speaks simply,
seldom raises his voice and
uses few gestures. He empluisizes Christian dally living
and prayer. He is inclined to
say simply, ‘You'll be happier
if you live this w ay.'"
Dr. Allen joins a list of 30
p re v io u s p r e s tig io u s
Clergymen of the Year in­
cluding 1980 awardee David
fl.C. Read, Hilly Graham,
Norman Vincent Peale;
Bishop Gerald Kennedy,
Ralph Sockman and Robert
Schuller.

Churchman of the Year was
Ambassador J. William
Middcndorl,
If,
U.S.
Ambassador
to
the
Organization of American
States, Presbyterian layman,
businessman and composer.
Churchwornan of the Year,
Mrs. Audrey Kariel, is a
housewife, civic leader, fund
raiser for artistic and cultural
causes, Jewish historian.
The RHA Gold Medal,
awarded annually lo a
clergyman with more than 50
years in the ministry, was
presented lo Dr. Edward UR.
Elson who retired
In
February as Chaplain of the
United States Senate. He is
Pastor
Em eritus
of
W ashington's
N ational
Presbyterian Church.

©1

SEMINOLE HEIGHTS
BAPTIST CHURCH
CortBoiy Invitti You To Attond
Thf Sonrice Of CowtHvtlon
On SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 13,1981
AT 3 O'CLOCK IN THE AFTERNOON
NEW LAKE MARY NIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
Reception Immediately Following
Dr. Jty T. Crsmate, Patter
Rfv. Oggrft E. Du m Sr., I
.Larry II .
Pint Baptist Church, Oarnva

,i *

-

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lChurch

�iC— Evening H« raid, Sanford, FI.

B L O N D IE

Sunday, Sept.4, m i

by Chic Young

DOWN

ACROSS

Answer to Prmous Puiila

1 Gnnt
I Signals
5 Gave signal
2 Amthcin
S CommumceIndians
lion* agency
M id i srsik
(abbr)
Hebrew holy
I I Spirit limp
diy (thbr|
13 Smellaword
Conitillllion
14 Dabtor't riots
Abovs
15 Dntsroui
Long fish
IS Lonpdritinca
Ofths(Sp)
telephoning {I
Authoritative
wdl)
commsnd
IS Compsu
10 Gsnui of
point
African trss
19 Enjoyment
11
Fanatic
30 Ststs (Fr}
duration
2 1 Greek duty
17 Ptnny
23 Swamp
25 Tings deeply 19 Ensmy
27 Stm ts iction 22 Groovt
31 Smill hocis 23 Musical sign
24 Ago
32 Detective
C hirlis____ 25 Applies
frosting
33 Profstiionsl
26 Additional
ctisrgs
27 African land
34 Prior to
35 City in liratl 28 Flying saucsr
sluditr
38 Anthracite
37 M ids tranquil 1 2 3 4
39 Tropicsl trsss
12
40 Dog s foot
4 1 Csntsnnisl
11

S Q Q D |Q Q Q Q l D
{ ) □ □ □ ■ □ □ □ □ ■ DQEJI

□□□□■□□nnuanol

sn a o u n n
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□ D u n n □ □ □ n n c iL :
nonn naan ddd
□DO OODO ODDD
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| atrtpfl

n n n lra n n n ln n n ra
29 Quantity of
papsr
30 Eltctrtc fish
32 Ball of yam
35 Arrival tints
guast (abbr)
36 Hsat unit
(abbr)
36 Chimps
39 Afflictive rash
41 Mors darling
42 Italian
1 a 1 ■

gristing
43 Arm bont

44 Spot
45 Poktr kitty
47 Actor Krugtr
48 Lsgums
50 Lsgums
51 And to on
(abbr.. Lst. 2
tads)
52 Honay maker
i

11
II

11

tuts (abbr J

42 Sugir portion «•
45 Auiilitry
(•bbr)
_
46 Old M il
ii
49 Disbursed
21
poorly |2
wdl)
14
52 Chew
53 Vsir (Sp)
IT
54 Feminine
40
(luffn)
55 It (Sp)
*i 41 44
SS Csrisl g rin
|
57 Gsnui of
41
SO II
m ipisi
14
11
59 English
collogs
II
IT

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10 11

14

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it
ii

M w im iriM ii u m

W IN A T BRIDGE
by Bob M o n tan a

A R C H IE
^

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L Stt------------

SLOWLY AND SURELY I'M ,
WHY DOWT YOU GIVE U P ^ SETTING A HANDLE ON IT/
ON THIS JUNK PliE, ARCHlEP
YOU’LL NEVER GET IT TO
SHAPE UP/

NORTH

♦ 10111
TP10 714
♦K7
♦ 74J

EAST
♦ 65
▼61
•85432
♦ J 9 65
SOUTH

♦ AKQ
♦ AKQ
♦ A it
♦ AKQJ

we present a bridge problem
fln t shown by a Scotsman
named Gray In a 1940
“Bridge World Magazine"
and In this column in 1970.
Gray describes the band
as actually being played, but
we assume he took a bridge
writer's privilege and made
It up Anyway, South open
with five notrump and North
raised to six.
The queen of diamonds
was won by South's ace and
now South cashed his three
ace-klng-queens to come
down to this end situation: S10 H-10 D-K;S-J H-J D-J; D8.5 C-J; D-9.6C-2
According .to Gray, South
conceded down one at this
stage of the proceedings. Do
you readers see how he
could make two of the last
th ree tric k s and hla
contract?
All he had to do was to
lead the deuce of clubs. If
West chucked a major suit
Jack, dummy's 10 of that suit
would be hia second winner.
If West chucked the diamond
Jack, South could discard
dummy's king of diamonds
and make the last two tricks
with the nine and six since
East would have to lead a
diamond to him
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

r.
f t

m
jw ,

j£
•W J2*7*
AO

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Sunday, September 6, 1981
Your Birthday
Septembers, 1981
You must persist this
coming year even though
projects you begin may seem
slow to develop and prosper.
Time will help you complete
your goals and you’ll be a
better person for your
patience,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You're a good starter today,
but you could weaken In the
homestretch and assign that
which you’ve begun to others
who are not likely to complete
It either. Find out more of
whBt lies BheBd for you in the
year following your birthday
by sending for your copy of
Astro-Graph. Mall II for each
lo Astro-Graph, Box 459,
Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Instead of being your own
person today there's a chance
you'll yield to a stronger
personality and do what
pleases him.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Profit From your past
mistakes. Make no loans
today, be they of merchandise
or money, to anyone who has
faded to pay you back what
they previously borrowed.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) It's always wise to
lake the odds into con­
sideration when we are
confronted with opposition or
challenge. Unfortunately, you
may fall to do so today.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Even though you know
something
juicy
about
someone who hasn’t always

spoken kindly of you, it's best
lo keep what you know to
yourself today.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19l. Be extra-careful today if
you are doing business with
people or firms with whom
you’ve never traded before.
Their big bargains might not
be so hot.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Diplomacy and tact will be
required in dealing with your
mate today. He or she may try
to push you in a direction
you'd ralher not travel.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be very careful whom you
tease or kid around with
today. What you may feel to
be harmless remarks could
(ouch a raw nerve and arouse
another’s ire.
TAURUS i April 20-May 20)
Gambles or speculative
ventures might look a bit
tempting to you today, but
this is not the time to take
risks, especially large ones.
GEMINI (May 21&gt;June 20)
Instead of operating In tan­
dem today, there is a strong
possibility you and your mate
may pull in opposite direc­
tions and then each blame the
failure on the other.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Someone you might have to
work side by side with today
may lack your skill and
comprehension. Instead of
criticizing, try to be un­
derstanding.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Because It’s curly in (he
month, you might feel y ou'
have a little extra in your
budget and spend funds you'll
later wished you had saved.

For Monday, Sepfember 7, 1981
Your Birthday
today. You’ll not let others
September?, 1981
impose on your time.
New friendships you have
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
acquired over the last couple 19) This is an excellent day to
of years will be strengthened attend to private matters. Get
In the year ahead. Several of off by yourself and employthese pals will become ways that you feel best serve
lifelong buddies.
your purposes.
VIRGO l Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
isn't that you're not in a Something (or which you've
sociable mood today, it's just iiad high hopes looks like it
that you'd prefer quieter could work oul today, but
companions and perhaps even you'll have to get serious
one at a lime. Romance, about it. Then it will become h
travel, luck, resources, reality.
possible pitfalls and career
ARIES (March 21-AprU IS)
for the coming months are all Your day may begin
discussed in your Astro- playfully, but It won't take
Graph that begins with your much to settle you down to
birthday. Mail |1 for each to concentrating on the more
Astro-Graph, Box 489, Radio serious things in life.
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
sure to specify birth date.
Even when involved with
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) sobering business today,
You might waste the early you're still able to maintain a
morning hours socializing philosophical outlook. This
today, but once started you'll helps you get through your
put your all into your work tasks much more easily.
and still accomplish your
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
tasks.
Concentrate today on joint
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ventures or situations where
This is one of those days when you share something in
you prefer to be anchored In common. This is where you’re
one place doing a lot of little more apt to experience
tasks that you feel need success.
tending to.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- You need lo associate with
Dec. 21) The formula you're people today who take what
inclined to use today lo add to they're doing seriously. Don't
your resources Is one calling team up with those who do not
for good old-fashioned hard fit this description.
work. You're not afraid to put
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The
in the effort.
way situations work out;
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. today, your responsibilities
19) Personal freedom and become greater as you get;
independence to do what you more into the day. Plan ahead:
(eel to he necessary is ex­ so you'll be able to meet your:
tremely important to you duties.
!

�Sunday, Sapt. 4, itl 1— 7C

Evening HtraM, Sanford, FI.

TONIGHT S TV
7:20
•
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"Trantat Yacht Pact Hot! Janat
Gauaa
after n o o n

m o M A W C U 8 W n a r.n o .
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BASEBALL: AN
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X B t tlE W O R L D
0 ( 3 5 ) MOWE "Jack And Tha
Bu riatMh" (C) (1157) Abbott and
Cotuao. Buddy Saar WhUa baby
anting. Lou lad* atltap and draamt
ha t Jack tha Giant KMar
B (10 ) PRESENT! Tha annual
afWata eonvantion ol tha National
Convantlon el La R au

10*6
92 (17) H A U L

10*0

8

BLAOK AWARENESS
HAST BAFT M l CHURCH

1 0 *6

O (1 7 ) MOWS "A Star M lo rn"
(19651 Judy Garland. Jwiwa Uw on
Faaang laa awn popMertty tapprng
at hrt young wr*» « caraar It on tha
naa. a btgnama alar luma m tna
LaJAla
-. I .
porn* a---ror comrofl

11*0
6*0
12 (1 7 ) WORLD A T LANGE

FLCWOA FOOTBALL
Moat Charley Pa*
TMRTY MWUTSS
0 ) WC SRAOENS

sw

School Menus

1

TUESDAY, SEPT. I
ALLSCHOOLS
Crispy Fish
Whipped Pots toes
Battered Pets
Fresh Fruit
Fresh Baked roili
or Boas
Milk
EXPHESS-Middle and
Senior High Only
Sabmartne Sandwich
Potato Rounds
Kreth Fruit
Mlik
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. •
ALLSCHOOLS
Pork Entree
Scalloped Potatoei

Seasoned Broccoli
Mixed Frail
School-Mode Bread
MOk
EXPRESS-Middle sod
Senior High Only
B ar B4} Sandwich
Potato Rounds
Fresh Frail
Milk
THURSDAY, SEPT. 10
ALL SCHOOLS
Chicken with Rice
Buttered Spinach
Fresh MeUn
School-Made Bread
MOk
EXPRESS-Middle and

IN SCI Daytona Baach
Orlande

(1 0 )

Senkr Hign only
Beet Sandwich
Potato Rondo
Fresh Fruit
MOk
FRIDAY, 8EPT. 11
ALLSCHOOLS
Beef Entree
CoraNIhkti
Tossed Salad
Spiced Applesauce
Fresh Baked Bread
MOk
EXPRESS-Middle and
Senior High Osly
Fish Sandwich
Potato Rowds
Fresh Frail
Milk

(Q C D ) Theresa J . Hallauar 19
Slav an A , Lot 1: from IW m ill
post ol S e e n If 19 ate. I M S . S100
Winter Spgs Dev 10 Nader
C o n tlr. C o .
In c ., Lot 11,
TuscawllU, Un. 9. 1100
Jamas L Dobson A w l Joanna to
0*0 L . Hendon Jr., sgl., Lot 1, Blk
F, Seminole Te rr flepl. 54,100
Theodora J. Slone to O ta L.
Hendon F r „ tgl .Lol I, Slk F,
Seminole Te rr Rapt., LLMO
David C. Pegram A wf E m . Id
R ichard R. C a s lO lltn l A w l
Virginia. Lais S A 6. Blk E. T r . it,
Mnlando Springs. 1*0,000
Raymond C. Kahl A wf Mam tolo
Donald R. Sullivan, sgl-, NWfk,
Blk 4, Tier 19, FI Land A Colon
Map ol St Gertrud* Addn lent ,
57.MO
la r r in Tallm ad g a lo Floyd
Cornell Jr. A w l Jana. Lot f t
Wmaor Manor, 1st Addn. I N N S
Cathy j . Paairots. sgl. lo Jaaaph
R. Vandigrlll A wf M ary A , Lot i.
Blk 0 , Columbus Harbor, 177.100
L a rry J. Cegle A wf Joyce lo
John Macik A w l Jonol. Lad M
Garden Laka Eats , Un. 1,167.M S
O a n w a y Inc. la Ronald D
wagnar A wf Julio. Lot it, Sanera
So . Un Una. M R S

8*5
91 (17) I DREAM OF JEANMC

9:00

Dan Way Inc.lo J a m n D Still A
wl Gall *&gt; , Lot II. Sonera So Un
On*. S44.SOO
Oan Way Inc. to William M
Aarolal. Lot 6, Sanora So Un On*.
544.900
Eugene Matonti, tgl. Id Michael
K Batista A w l E it it M . Lot 11.
Blk E. Country Club Manor Un 1.
519.900
Stale S k . For*»t City to SE Nall.
Ok. Of O r l , N 400’ Ol W MO1 Ol:
Irom NW cor ol Sac I I » » sfc ,
541,701.
The Greeter Contlr Corp lo F.
Jay Saltitr A wl Linda L . Lol Ml.
River Run Sac. Four. 146.100
Oan Way Inc. 10 Ralph T. Smith
A w l Christina A ., Lol 19, Blk C.
Cryklai Bowl, Ind Aeon, s m .900
John W. Womack A wl Jawall lo
Robarl C. Noyes A wf Salty J ., Lol
0 6 Foresi Brook Fifth Sac.
560,100
Sonniland Carp to Dlarva G
walson, E ly of w iy Of N E 'a ol
N E i« llo u S H ’l See 11-19 31 ol o l ,
SMI,WO
William S. Thompson lo Manual
R Oliveira A wl HIM*. Lot A Duck
Pond i l l Addn C S . 44.000
Dennis R. Barton A wf Kathy lo
Barton B. P lkhor A Gaorgt M .
Willis, te l X N H Garner’s O at
Hill Addn, S Sant., U S .400
Elis. Cartar, hair ol Nall E
Smith to Laura M . Gold, trustee,
Lais M M . Laka Sylvan E « t ,
William T . Thiam J r . A orl
Mndria 1 . f t Ranald P. Buftau A
wl Carnal in* m , L N 111, Spring
Oakk Un. 1. tll.sso
Frank I . Kaana III A wl Aprd fa
Artur# Cftagaiian A wf L i u A , Lai
166 W rtlva Hunt Club, F o « Hunt
Sac. I. 571.M l

.

2*0
X B NFL FOOTBALL Graan Bay
Pack art at Chicago Bear*
X B S A S ftA I I Regional cover­
age ol Oakland A'a at Bailrmor*
Onoiat. Cincinnati Rada at Pfuta-

92|17)HEW S

a no)

I1 )(3 S }JM B A K K E R

11:30
B X PASSWORD P IUS (TUEFRI)
X O THREE'S COMPANY (R)
0 (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE

5:55
B (4) DAILY DEVOTIONAL (TUCFRQ
( J ) O DAILY WORD
92 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

4*0
B X NFL FOOTBALL Houtlon
Orvara al lo t Angela* Rama

OiLUOAN S ISLAND (TUE-

(TUS-FRI)
f O M ' A A*S*H
'I
ws
X Q NEWS
B H o i pPOSTSCRIPTS
os

6:35
9 2 117) BEVERLY H kLM LUES

IfJftaydTb— frssl

l h

V
» 2 a it i lllMl M

ib

S IL L MURRAY

DAYS OF OUEI LIVES (TUB-

) ALL MY OSLDRSN
(jC ^ 5 H
(M O W

j lM O v lt L A N b lL .

9 2 (1 7 ) i l O W 1;OT

"■ t n I l k
m e « e * A

111 f ill
m u

.
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|

1:30
X

O

AS T M WORLD T U R M

M a c T A V IS H
DISC O U N I C A WI ' t T S
MAS M O V I 0 f 11
I V f M A ( « N O l •A A V I
SAM own
MM \ 1 1

7*5
9 2 (1 7 )F U N TM E

7:25

12:05

X

1*0
X

B X TODAY
X O MOANMO WITH CHARLEE
KURALT
(?) O OOOO MORNB4G AMCRCA
T 5 ) TOM ANO JERRY
(IO ) VILLA ALEGRE

B X TOOAY IN FLORIDA
x o &lt; OOOO MOR9MG FLORIGA

9 2 (1 7 )O F E N U F

530
B

12:30
B X NEWS (TUE-FRO
(T l O U S . OPEN TfN M S (MON)
X
O THE YOUNG ANO THC
RESTLESS (TUE-FRn
X B R v a m hops
0 ( 3 !5) FAIRLY AFFAM

7:00

B (1) JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
(C O N TD )
XBBOuoaoui

6*5
91(17)TH SBR AO YBU N C H

12*5

6:55

12*0

X B TO ** BROWNS JOURNAL
# 7 1 0 ) GEORGS SHEARING AT
TH E C A R L Y S L I J a i l primal
Georg* Shearing perform* "Itea
Can I Be Love." "My Funny Valan.
1 me" and other cietuca with bataitt
Brian TorIf horn the Holal Cartytl*
m New York (R)

HOGAN'S HEROES (WED-

92 (17 ) FR UM AN REPORTS

X O GOOD 9AORNMa FLORIDA

11:35

4:30

TOOAY M FLORIDA (TUE-

6*6

92 (17 ) THE LITTLE MIRACLE

O

12*0

ax (17 ) HOU.VWOOO REPORT
|.&lt;M
X O B JA L L E fi
6 :4 5
S (10) A-M. WEATHER

11:30

5*0
X

Cl) JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
“ N)
CARO SHARKS (TUE-FRII
XQNEW S
,)
THE WORLD OF PEOPLE
a if

(35) JH I BARKER
(17)1
) WORLD A T LARGS (WED)

(1) O U.s. OPEN HfQHUOHTS
High lights ol the dey'a achnn m
IM U S Open Tanma Champtonahipt (Irom Flushing Meadows
NY)
X O MONTE CARLO SHOW
11 (35 ) IT S YOUR BUSINESS

4:35
9 2 (1 7 ) LEAVE (T TO BEAVER

B

(4) JERRY LEWIS TELETHON

I THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
) SPECTRUM (TUE)
BLACK AWARENESS (WED)
THIRTY MMUTSS(THU|
) HEALTH FCLD(FRI)

92 (17 ) CARMSEAH NIGHTS
Hosts Judy Gordon, Carlos
Condo

X
O
CHILDREN'S MYSTERY
THEATER (TUE)
U (3 5 ) TOM ANO JERRY

AFTERNOON

6:00

11*6

3*0

11:15
ffi (1 0 ) MATHEMATICAL RELA­
TIONSHIPS (TUE-FRI)

5:45
91 (17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON.
TUE)

11*0

4*5

11:00
B X WHEEL o r FO R TU M (TUEFRI)
X O THE PRICE IS RKWT
X S TMREE'S COMPANY (R|
11) (35 ) BUD BREWER
B 1 10) TNMKASOUT (TUE-FRI)

SUMMER SEMESTER

(lO IiO W M
B (TO ) THE OOOOCS

OX (35 ) M O W
"Thai Carlam
woman" |B/W) (1917) Balt* Oavia.
Henry Fonda A former criminal it
upaat whan ah* it Ihraaianad with
atpoaura ol lha Wa tha MU behind

10:30
B X BLOCKBUSTERS (TUE-FRO
X O ALICE(R)
U) (35) OICK VAN DYKE
B (1 0 ) ELECTRK) COMPANY (R)
(TUE-FRI) .

5*30

10:30

10) SESAME STREET (R1Q

4:30

10:15

X
O
MARCUS WELSY, M O
(TUE-THU)
31 (17 ) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE
(WED)

ft

r lMCRVanFFIN
15) WOOOY WOOOPECKER
32 (17 ) THE MUNITERS

B (10) MATH PATROL (TUE-FRI)

5:00

10*5

FROM
INDIA "Ih
" II * Golden Forlraaa"
(1974) tn a myttery 1*1* lot both
chkdran and adutlt wntlan and
duactad by Salyain Ray. a 6-yaaroM boy clatm* lo ramambar let
ptenvou* incarnelton and the aria ol
a labuioua iraatura
0
(1 7 ) BASEBALL Allanl*
Brava* al New York Mafa

X

4:55

8

JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
T O ) (MON)
) M O W (TUI-FRO
) HOGAN'S HEROES (TUE)
JOHN DAVIDSON (WED.

9 2 (1 7 )M O W

X O CELEBRITY REVUE (FRI)
92 (17) MISSION R4POSSWLE
(THU)

a

4*0

X

10*5

MORMNQ

1)10

3*5

10*0

MONOtf

10*0

3:30
1 1 (3 5 ) SCOOSYOOO
B I TO) ELECTRIC COMP ANT |R)

JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
1(MON)
1BULLSEYE (TUE-FRI)
® Q RICHARD SIMMONS
5) I LOVE LUCY
8 R 3) MATH PATROL (TUE-FRI)

9 2 (1 7 ) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

O l4"i JERRY LEWI* TELETHON
(CONTD)
X
O
TRAPPER JOHN. M.O
Gonro •cctdcfiUify learnt (hat a
dying patient i« the father »ho
abandoned him and hit mother 70
years earlier [R|
B MO) MASTERFCCE THEATRE
F E S TIV A L
OF
F A V O R ITE S
Suntal Song Drilling Ahar W&lt;*1
tecreliy wadt and leavet the vUlege John w h e n a Hr oka and
Chrrt spend! long weeks lending
her bedridden Inner |Pmri 3) (R|

3:05

92 (17 ) GREEN ACRES
B

JUMPSTREET

9 2 (1 7 )f u n t» «

9*5

4:45

I E (35) JIMMY SWAGOART

FROM

&amp; n » O UtPASAT(FR 0

IC (3 5 )A N D Y O M FFITH

3:05

4*5

IR|

(10 )

92(17)TM BFIJN TS T0N ES

9:30

X o MOW
Once The Kbimg
Starts" (C| (1974) Patrick O Neal
Patrcia Donahue

9:30

1:30

6*5

4*0
B X JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
(CO NTD)

11) O THE JCFFERSON8 George
*■ aggeralat Tut Imancral tlandmg
10 gam acceii io an aicKitn* club

B

32 117) HAZEL

Inwtibi# Stupes'
|1919| Humphrey Bogert William
Mbtden

9:05

Q N FLTO O A Y
fiW R E S TU N Q
T ' O ) W A U STREET WEEK
Can America Slit Compete!'
Guetl Arthur Levrtl J r . chairmen ol
tha board, American Stock
Eachang* American Buameaa Con.
far one* (B)

B

NEWS

92 (17 ) M O W

92 (17 ) ATUUfTIC CITY ALIVE
Hot! Bofc Eubtnkt Qoott Tony
M*rttn

a X NFL FOOTBALL U w n Dor
plena at Si Lour* Cardinal*
COUNTDOWN TO MCXOFF
MORAL ISSUES
5) MOVK "Top Banana" (Cl
11154) Ph4 SJvara. Roaa Mena A
laraviaion u tr ra dittraught over the
poaarbrkty ol toeing hr* aponaor and
hn girlfriend
B 110) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW (R)

B (3) JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
(MON)
X HOUR MAQABNE (TUE-FRI)
‘ n DONAHUE
J MOW
35) OOMER PYLE
(10) SESAME STREET (R )Q

2:5 5
X O MOW
Theodor* Goes
Wild (B/W) 11976) Iren* Dunn*.
Mefvyn Douglas

X O M O W "The Domino Prmcipi* 11977| Gan* Hackman. Candie* Bergen A connctad knar and
tut wife art drawn into a mysterious
organualion a plot lo aaaatamala a
hvgh-ranting pobtician
B (10) MASTERFCCE THEATRE
F E S TIV A L
OF
FA V O R ITE S
' Suntal Song Ploughing John
drtcovwrt Ihtl Wk a guifnend it
pragnant. Will brmgt home a
charming Inand who lakat an intar•tl in Chill (Pari 2| (R|

1*0

9*0

2:25
X O

B X TEXAS (TUE-FRI)
) ’ O GLEOMO LIGHT (TUE-THU)
“ T U G . OPEN TENNIS (FRO
| GENERAL HOSFTTAL
(I (35 ) BUGS SUNNY AND

B,

6:35

B ( ! ' JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
(C O N TD )

2:30
X O SEARCH FOR TOAJORROW
(TUE-FRO

FtELM Q FREE (TUE)
) P tO P U OF THE F W T
UOHTfWEOl
B (10 ) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

9 2 (1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

2:00

|R|

B X BOSSY BOWDEN
X Q DIRECTIONS Tha economic
pirghl ol mrddia-claai Americana tn
tha one* Ihnvvng Saimaa Valley ra
aiammad (Part 1)|B)

) TOOAY
X Q OOOO MORMNG AMERICA
) OREAT S W C e COASTtR
) MISTER ROGERS (R)

1*5
32 (17) M O W
Th* Judge Slept
Out (1949) Ann Sothern. A N itnder Knot

B ( I ) JERRY LEWIS TELETHON
An annual special kva Irom Laa
Vagat and other location* laaturat
a long bit ol caiabriliaa and it held
lor lha benef.1 ol Muscular Dyatrop*r
X Q ALICE Vara teat atari whan
Mai aikt har lo the moviet after
than ratpaclw* rWahonthtpi flop

‘ DO* Boa* Sandy and
Jenny dacid* lo hoal a laa lor a
particularty allraclrva girl end her
loUowera lo gam new facta tor the*
(ournei |R)

8:30

12:30

2:00
B X JERRY LEYW TELETHON
(CONTOUM ON)
B X ANOTHER WORLD (TUEFRO
X O D M LIFE TO LIVE

3:00

6:25
B X TODAY M a O W O A
X O OOOO MORNWG FLORIDA

X O M O W
Hornet t Neil (C)
(1970) Rock Hudson. Sergio Fenionr

X O ONE DAY A T A TRIE Ann
and Nick a new company has a
good chance ol landing its lull big
account (R)
I I (35) JERRY FALWELL

1MEET THE PRESS
| STAN TREK

•ilS
»U

LOCKER ROOM
OIRLS
FUN OtRLS *

y p Z Z Z Z Z 2 2 2 2 2 Z 2 Z ^ 2 Z 2 Z Z 2 2 2 Z Z 2 2 Z Z 2 2 Z Z 2 n 2 Z Z 2 2 Z 2 2 Z 2 Z Z 2 Z Z

4:35
(12 (17) LAST OF THE WHO

6*0
( D O U E OFCN TENNIS Uomad
In Progratt) Top lanrwt proa,
including Bjorn Borg, Jmtmy Con­
nor*. Chrta Evan Lloyd and Tracy
Auatm. compel* m thra tournament
on* ot tha Grand Slam ol Tannri
avanla (lira Irom Fluih m g
Meadow*. N Y I
X B DIALOGUE Moat B.u Nar-

ton

3L (35) GRIZZLY ADAMS
B 1 10) F1RRS0 U N I A Trad,Iron•Ml Concern For Europe" Guaal
Or Olio von Hababutg author and
rapraaanlalrvato Ih* European Par-

Western Sizzlin Steak House's

-

5
N
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5

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6:30

B (10) FLOREM HOME GROWN
Hoal TomMacCubban

N
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No. 1

No. J

No. 2

S IZ Z L IN

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* 3 1 4

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BLAZER

$ 3 8 2

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No. 6

6 *6
92 (17 ) MCE FBOP1
Anna Loughkn

sL,

Hoal Mary

7 *0

B X 0MNBVB

WORLD "Tha Barefoot Eaacufrva"
A network peg* drtcovwrt a Chrmi Ih* tmeanny abkty fo
i.(Fart i|(R)o
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"Thra* Rmg
Cecua (1964) Oaan Mart*. Jerry
Laww A parr ol recently dwchargad
gaf into M aorta al

R O U N D -U P

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6 4 7 9

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NOT OOOD W ITH O TH ER DISCOUNTS OR COUPONS

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Western
SIZZLIN Steak House
2 9 0 0 5. O E L A N D O

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$ 2 3 4

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6*0
X

7

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No. 11

7 *0
0 (3 5 ) ITS YOUR *
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CHEYENNE

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ih* Cura* Ihal aland* balnaan a
yovmg prmca and hit nghNul place
on the IJvone (R)
0 ( 3 5 ) WILD NNOOOM
B (TO ) SOUNOETAQE Smger t
aangwiilw Gordon UghHool parforma ‘ Collon Jen ny,’ "Ih *
Edmond Ftugaraid
and "Tha
Ghoat Ol Cap* Horn*." (R )p

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X B M O W "Smbad And The
Eye « Tha Tigai" 0977) Pattic*
Wayn*. Jan* Seymour A hero bal-

&gt;

OOOD IN SANFORD, F O k T M Y IIS
AN D KISIIM M K I

12 (17) WRSSTUNQ

6*0
Al) (35) BKMB WOMAN
B (10) MAOB METNOO OF OS.
PAJNTNO

J

ON ORIGINAL IS STIAKS

s

s
S

s-

THANK YOU SALE
25% off

N

02 (17) RAT PATROL

5 *6

S
N

7th Anniversary Celebration

S

5 *5
X
B
U S AMATEUR OOLF
CHAMPONSMP Lrv* coverage ol
Ih* knw round of play m Ilea golf
tournament (Irom Ihe OTympu: Club
m San Franctaco Cakl)

REALTY TRANSFERS
Palmer, sgl. A Donald 5.
v g l, Un. 119, Sandy Cova, 1 17,400
Equity Realty Inc lo Anno C
tinm an A Kathy A. Unm an, tgl.,
Un 14 C. Destiny Spring*. S19.S00
Tha Huskey Co. lo Indltn Enfr.,
Inc., Lol 10. Blk B. Sweetwater
Oaks. Sac. II, S4J.4M
je m m r Assoc, lo P I. R t t .
Comm , Inc., commonclng ot SE
cor ol Sac 1* 1919 ale. N &gt;46 6cras
m I at ai l parcels, 1100.000
Meronda Homes Inc. to John S.
Chotnowaki A wt Barbara M .. Lol
It. Cedar Ridge Un III, S U N M

6:00
X O CAPTAIN KANGAROO
I T (3 5 )CASPER

Orlando Public
BraaEcatfinf In te rn

&amp;

8:30

AFTERNOON

6:30

Carolt Whilnay. tgl to Anna M.
Oalarol A Julia S Arnold. Lot M
5lfipy Hollow.. I t 10.000
Lou it C Buahra A wf AAargaral
to Larry D Mattingly, t g l , Lot 70
Wlndtraa W ail, tM.000
la m C. Matnar, Tr. to E Kan
nafh Lana, Lol D &gt;1 L ik a Harnay.
116.500.
Iry in M tS w iin . T r io Millard M.
Corbin Hr. A wt Ranaa, Lol M II.
Laka Harnay, 116,500
Robert L. Brown A wf Lynn lo
Jack W. Em ig A wt Lett M . Lol 19
Blk D. Wintar Woodt i d Un. J.
544.500
Dorothy L. Surratt, tgl to Aron
mtarnational Inc., Lol I I A portion
N Lot It Blk A . M a ndith Manor,
•Itob Hill Sac.. 1100,000
• M Q C O ) Ranaa 5. Morris 19 Wm.
, ir.M o rrn tr., bag. pt 1641.17' N A
r J 4 i i r E ol SW cor ol Sac. M U 11
la ic , aka Lot 40 Laka Pichrti a m ,
M ilo
Thomat E . Cot A wf Carol to
Latlia P. Dickinson. Lol MS.
Wran wood Un 1 Jrd Adn . 179.900
Wranco Homat. Inc. lo Jam at E
Butler A wf Sharon K . Lol 507
Wrtnwood Un. 1 4th Addn, SS4.400.
Wranco Homat. Inc lo Norbarl
N Hissing A wf Kathryn. Lai 436.
Aran wood Un. 1 .4th Addn, 151.900
Wranco Homat Inc. to Albarl L.
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Sunday, Sapt. 4, t*»i—l B

Lake Mary Baby Takes First Football Steps
B&gt; SAM COOK
Hrrald Sports Editor
Like Mary’s young Hams take their
first football step Thursday when they
kick off the fall foothall season against
I-ake Howell at l.yman High School.
The new high school, located one mile
south of Lake Mary Hlvd. on Longwoodlake Mary Road, will play a junior
varsity schedule during its initial season
and progress to Hie varsity level next
year.
Coach Roger Beathard, who also
serves as the athletic director, has a 43member squad made up of sophomores.
"We considered a few freshman," said
Beathard, a former defensive whiz at
Seminole, "but we felt it would be better
to keep them together on (he freshman
team,” Tlie Rams will play a five or six
game trosh slate.
Beathard has encountered the usual
new-school difficulties with his players
that he draws from l.ongwood,
Altamonte Springs and Sanford along
with Like Mary. "Getting the kids out
here consistently has been the biggest
problem," said Beathard. "But when
school started llwt was solved.”
Despite being in its first year,
Beatliard is looking for a winning season
right sway. "This is a $14 million school
and there are a lot of dreams and op­
timism concerning it," said Beathard.
"Ever since the beginning of practice
we've talked about the Seminole County
junior varsity championship.
The Rams will play a 2A and 3A varsity
schedule next year. “We know II will be
tough playing u varsity schedule next
year," said Beathard. "But it will get us
ready for the following year when we
step into the Five Star Conference with
our first senior class."
One draw Lick thus far has been the
lighting of the field. The lights are con­
tracted fur Sept. IS, but the Rams will
play their first game i Sept. 10) at l.yman
against lake Howell.
The second game (Sept. IS) will be at
Like Brantley against the Patriots’ JV.

Frakes Runs Veer
To Beathard s Delight
The Rams squad will not pass a great
deal until it establishes the running
game. "After we get our running game
going, we'll probably go to a 60-40 ratio,"
said Beathard.

Ram §

have to make a decision on which side of
the line we put him on."

Beathard Retains

l J»ke Mary will run from the veer and I
formations. Beathard feels he has the
quarterback to handle his offense in Kyle
Frakes. "Kyle doesn’t have out­
standing speed, but he has good speed,"
Beathard will run the defense and has
pointed out Beathard.
brought
along his 50-slant setup which
"He will develop into a good veer
was so effective at Seminole. "We slant
quarterback because he runs the option
all the down (five) linemen and the two
pretty well," continued Beathard. "He
linebackers scrap off and fill the holes,"
has an above average throwing arm and
said
Beathard.
doesn’t take any wasted steps."
The Rams' receiving corps is made up
of Brent Blakely, Mark Chasey, Jay
Woida and Jerry DiBartolo. "Blakely
and Chasey are fighting it out for the
tight end job," said Beathard. "And
Woida and DiBartolo look good ns wide
Billy Vickers and Hopkins are the
receivers."
Rams top two linebackers. "They’ve
both done a good Job and Cornell Young
will probably play some linebacker too,"
observed Beathard. "But Cornell’s big
enough f 6-feet, 165-pounds) that he can
handle himself on the defensive line too."
Hopkins played noseman at l.yman
Six-foot-1,
153-pound
Reginald last year.
Anderson will run out of the tailback spot
Kolbjornsen will be the biggest
for Lake Mary and will be joined in the
backfield by 5-foot-8, 155-pound Greg lineman for the Rams. He will be Joined
by Curtis and possibly Turney. Steve
Shatto.
“We have good talent at running Kaiser, a 5-foot-10,160-pounder, will see
back," assessed Beathard. "The fullback some time ai tackle. Mark Schwartz, a
position is a battle among Mike Smith, converted fullback, will help out.
Jeff Hopkins and John Brantley."
In the Ram secondary, Mike Weippert
Hopkins, who Beathard says is the and Joe Dalton, both backups to Frakes
strongest Ram, has the inside track on at quarterback, lead the way. Weippert is
the fullback job because of his size (5- slated for the "Ram back" role.
foot-9 and 160-pounds) and strength
Mike Smith, who has been bugged by
minor injuries, will help out at defensive
back as will John Brantley, who
Beathard calls "the quickest kid we have
on the team."

50-Slant Defense

Vickers, Hopkins

Lead Linebackers

Anderson, Shatto
Bevy Backfield

Luke M a n ' s huge defensive tackle Net! Kolhjornscn (right) rushes quurlerhnek
Kyle F rak e s during a drill lust week at the R uins' loot hall practice, ( ’tint'll Huger
llealliunl feels the Big Swede will lie Luke M ary's first m a jo r college prospect.

Roster Schedule

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Rams' Offensive Line

Six-foot-2, 175-pound Ned Kolbjornsen
is the main man in the Ram defensive
line. "Ned may be our first major-college
prospect," directed Beathard. "He may
go both ways, although we'll try to
platoon most of the time."
Kolbjornsen will be used at tackle
along Bob Schaffer, who is Moot-10 and
150-pounds, but "very aggressive" ac­
cording to Beatliard. Steve Irlandi and
Derek Turney, a pair of 160-pounders will
fill the guard spots.
Jeff Curtis is looked upon as the center.
"Jeff has looked pretty good defensively
too," said Beathard. “We're going to

Hopkins, Dalton
Battle For Kicking
The punting will be handled by Hopkins
and the extra points will be decided
between Dalton and Hopkins. "Dalton is
a sidewinder and is more consistent, but
Hopkins has a stronger leg," said
Beathard.
"The kids have picked up on it and
that's what they’re shooting for. If
there’s one thing that really impresses
me about these kids, it's their enthuaiam.
They’re ready to go."
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L ak e M ary q u a r te r b a c k K yle
F r a k e s ( r ig h t) h a n d s off to
ru n n in g b a c k G re g S h a tto as
t a i l b a c k R e g in a ld A n d e rs o n
tr a ils a s th e p ilch b a c k . T he
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H ow ell,

H »r«M t h e f t br It m Cm *

Leand Stuns Jaeger At U.S. Open
NEW YORK (UPI) - For Andrea
L'and Ihc main attraction in coming to
the US Open appeared to be the junior
tournament.
Nut only was she an unknown among
the glorified hotshots of big-time tennis,
but she’s still an amateur and had never
played in the main field of a professional
tournament.
On Friday, it was all but a certainty
l^and would be doing the rest of her
business at the National Tennis Center
among the juniors. Her opponent in the
second round was Andrea Jaeger, the
world's secondranking woman, who won
the first set with ease and was leading, 52 and 304), on her serve in the second.
But I&gt;eand, refusing to concern herself
with reality, rallied to win the next five
games, then went on to complete a
shocking upset. 1-6, 7-5, 6-3.

Fro

Goff

"In the second set I played it one point
at a time,” said lian d , who entered the
main draw as a wild card. “ I played each
point as if it was the most important ...
and didn't worry about the score."
Jaeger, who recently suffered a
shoulder injury, said the shoulder
bothered her during warmups before
Friday's match “and the doctor rubbed
something in it, but I'm not going to
blame it (the loss) on anything."
"1 let her get back In the match and she
took advantage," Jaeger said.
Kathleen Horvath, at 16 the youngest
player left In the Open, also produced an
upset when she beat lOlh-seed Mima
Jausovec of Yugoslavia, 6-3, 6-7, 6-3.
On a most hectic day at the National

Tennis Center Friday, 25 seeded players
were in action. Along with Jaeger and
Jausovec, the only aeed to fall was No. 15
Sue Barker, forced to retire because of
leg cramps after she split the first two
seta with Sharon Walsh.
Fifth-seed Jose-t.uis C ltrc almost
became a casualty, but survived a final
set tie-break, 7-0, to hold - off Tim
Wllkison, 6-1, 5-7, M , 5-7, 7-6.
Second-seed Bjorn Borg escaped the
night match he dreads each year, beating
Larry Stefanki, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Borg was
able (o put in only 56 percent of his first
serves, but he notched eight aces.
Jimmy Connors, Guillermo Vilas,
Gene Mayer, Eliot Teltscher, Brian
Gottfried and Vitas Gerulaitia all won in
straight sets while Roscoe Tanner, Peter
McNamara and Johan Kriek required
four seta.

*JL

(Jrr
1

Philips Touchdown Pass Earns Split
Sophomore quarterback Steve Philips
f i f a f i
hooked up with junior speedster Gerald
“The defense, r hich was one of our
Sutton lor a 30-yard touchdown pats to
give Trinity Prep a split in a football question marks, really performed well,"
jamboree Thursday night at Ocala's St. said a pleased Coach Ron Vierllng
Friday morning. "We begrudgingly gave
John l-ulheran High School.
Trinity had dropped the first quarter, up both touchdowns after getting in poor
14-0 to Hawthorne, a 2A school. An in­ field portion with our mistakes."
Philips, who will share the quar­
terception and twb lost fumbles con­
terbacking duties with senior Gary
tributed to the Hawthorne scores.

Crayton, shook off his early game jitters
to find Sutton out of the Saints' shotgun
formation for the score against Heritage.
"We scored easily on Heritage,” said
Vierllng about the Prep's third opponent
this coming season. "Nobody completed
a pass against us and we intercepted
one."
Trinity Prep opens its season at
Frostproof, Friday, Sept. II at I p.m.

t, - - V * «

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HtrtW P*oIt » » T#m ViM M I

DAVID AND
GOLIATH

H ie n in th g r a d e r s a r e g r im in g big th is y e a r in S a n fo rd , ( r o o m s ta c k le F ra n k
R rum ley &lt;le f t) g e ts a look of re s p e c t fro m his s m a lle r te a m m a te Itru c e M ontes.
Itru m le y , a Jin -p o u n d b e h e m o th , is tig u ri'd on to plug a few holes in C o ach Hill
K le in 's ilefm isiv e line. T h e P a n th e r s open th e ir se a so n S ep t. 29 a t h o m e a g a in s t
(lie L ak e It ra n t ley fro sh .

�*

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3B -Ev»n ln g Herald. Sanford, PI._______ Sunday, Sept. I, m i

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Season Tickets On Sale;
Tribe Boosters Meet Tuesday
T V Seminole Athletie Roosters will hold their Initial
meeting of the (all Tueaday, Sept. 8 at 7:30 p.m. In the
teacher*’ lounge (room 1306) at Seminole High School.
All parents of Seminole and Crooms athletes are
used to come.
The following night, Wednesday, Sept. 9, “ Parents’
Night" will be held for the mothers and fathers of the
Junior varsity and varsity football players.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will take place In the Seminole
High gymnasium.
Seminole Business Manager Gay Ailing has an­
nounced reserved seat tickets are now on isle for Tribe
JV and varsity football games. The cost is $20 (or the
entire season of both squads.
Tickets may be purchased by calling Ailing between
. 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. at 322-4311 (ext 232).

Softball Elects President
All those interested in playing softball this fall should
attend (he meeting at 7:30 p.m., Tueaday, Sept. 8 In the
Civic Center.
In last week's meeting, Jeff Small was elected
league president. Election of the remaining officers
and other action was postponed until the Sept. 8
meeting.

Football Needs Players
The Sanford Hecrealion Department is sponsoring a
flag football league (or boys sge 8-11 All those in­
terested should register at either the Recreation Office
In City Halt, the Civic Center Youth Wing or the
Westslde Center. The $3.00 fee plus proof of age is
required to register.
A clinic will be held at 9:00 a.m., Saturday, Sept. 12
at Randall Chase Park. League play begins Sepl. 26.
For more Information, call Jeff Monson, Recreation
Superintendent at 3224111.
The Sanford Recreation Department needs coaches
and officials for its (lag football league. A clinic will be
held for all interested on Thursday, Sept. 10 at 7:00
p.m. in the Youth Wing of the Civic Center.

Reeves, Gibbs, Biles, Phillips Debut

NFL Quartet Set For Reversal
By (Jolted Press International
A quartet of new coaches set out
this weekend to reverse their team’s
fortunes — easier said than done.
All four coaches — Dan Reeves at
Denver, Joe Gibbs at Washington,
Ed Biles at Houston and Bum
Phillips at New Orleans — make
their debuts against 1980 playoff
teams.
The Broncos take on the Super
Bowl champion Oakland Raiders,
the Redskins meet the Dallas
Cowboys, the Oilers —also a playoff
team — are at I/&gt;s Angeles and the
Atlanta Falcons host the Saints.
Reeves, at 37 the youngest coach
In the league, has been reunited with
former Dallas team m ate Craig
Morton, who is a year older.
During the pre-season, Reeves
began rebuilding the Broncos,
cutting quarterback Matt Robinson
and running back Jim Jensen and

LEEMAN

BENNETT:

"People will be shooting at us more
since we won the division last year, but
j '.we’re still going to be a pretty good
' team — best I’ve had since 1 came to
‘Atlanta. We have more confidence we
I ■can win and belief we can win. With six
• Pro Bowlers, offense is our strength."
! J
OFFENSE
j

PASSING Pundits all say Steve
Bartkowskl has arrived as big-play QB.
' Can’t argue with figures, but I
remember his erratic days. And there’s
j concern about backup. Receivingcorps
out wide is beginning to show age —
Alfred Jenkins Is pudilng 30 and Wally
Francis is there. But Alfred Jackson Is
'good relief. And Junior Miller made
.whir debut at light end. VERY GOOD

I
!
j
‘

RUNNING Fine one-two punch with
. Billy Andrews and Lynn Cain. Can both
deliver 1,000-yard seasons? But their
: forte Is up the middle. If Bubba Bean
‘ ever got untracked, they'd have wide
i threat as complement. Andrews also
\h a s been good receiver coming out of
backfield. VERY GOOD
if
;• BLOCKING Draft concentration on
&gt;1ine in recent years has really paid off.
; Mike Kenn al left tackle is strong All&gt;Pro, and others are close. If Warren
&gt; Bryant on other side ever played up to
jt potential, he’d be All-Pro, loo. One
&gt; slight concern is age of center Jeff Van
&gt;Note, 35, who's also spiritual leader,
v Pat Howell might play more at guard.
£ VERY GOOD
&gt;
:*
DEFENSE
LINE Switch to 3-4 alignment worked
-lout, though young Don Smith is still not

.

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NEW YORK (UP1) - Are we
going to have the same kind of
strike in professional football as we
did in baseball?
George Ha las, the chairman of
the board and president of the
Chicago Bears, says he wouldn’t be
surprised if the football players do
call a strike when their present
contract with the owners runs out
next July 1$.
Ed Garvey, executive director of
the NFL Players' Association, says
his people don't want a strike —
which is the same thing the
baseball players said before they
went out three months ago. Garvey
is talking tough, saying his union is
stronger and expecting a strike
although it is hoping to avoid one.
It struck me that some NFL
players who had gone through the
last football strike in 1974 but are
no longer active might provide a

completely comfortable as middle
man. Pair of Jeffs, Merrow and Yeates,
draw blanks when you bring their
names up, but they're steady on the
flanks. Puxsla Is Iallure of big Wilson
Faumuina to develop. FAIR

relatively neutral view and I found
several of them, all doing TV work
now, at NBC's annual football gettogether Thursday.
Those I spoke with were Bob
Trumpy, a wide receiver and light
end with the Cincinnati Bengals 10
years; John Brodie, the San
Francisco 49ers' quarterback for
17 seasons; Gene Washington, who
spent 11 years in the league with
the 49ers and Detroit Uons as a
wide receiver; Dave Rowe, a 14year defensive lineman with New
Orleans, New England, San Diego,
Oakland and Baltimore; Rocky
Hleicr, who retired last season
after 12 years as a running back
with the Pittsburgh Steelers, and
Jim Turner, a kicker for 16 years
with the New York Jots and
Denver Broncos.
"Unfortunately, I think lltere
will be a strike and 1 also think the

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RUNNING Ideal combo would be
Wendell Tyler team ing with 'll
sparkler Jewcrl Thomas. But Mplavaai
likes Cullen Bryant (or steadiness,
blocking and being able to hand on to
ball. Biggest d I(appointment has been
failure of Injury-prone Elvis Peacock to
develop Into game-breaker. VERY
GOOD

The Redskins, who won six games
in I960, will be buoyed by youth for
the first time in years. Gibbs plans
to start three rookies on the of­
fensive line, Including No. 1 draft
choice Mark May. Joe Thelsmann
opens at quarterback and will be
Joined by a pair of new running
backs in Joe Washington and Terry
Metcalf. In addition, John Riggins
returns after a year's absence.
But against Dallas, which led the
league in points last year, Gibbs will
be hard-pressed to get off U&gt; a
winning start as the Cowboys try to

make it 17 straight opening-day
victories.
Houston, eliminated in the first
round of the 1980 playoffs, will once
again depend on running back Earl
Campbell, but Biles, who spent the
last seven years as sn assistant to
Phillips, plans to open up the of­
fense. Ken Rubier returns after a
month-long retirem ent and will
probably start ahead of backup free
agent John Reaves. Gifford Nielsen,
who took over when SUbler said he
was through with football, is on
injured reserve.
Los Angeles, with Pat Haden as
the sU rting quarterback, and
Houston will be meeting for Just the
third time, with the Rams winning
both previous matchups.
Phillips, whose Saints lost IS of 16
games last season under Dick Nolan
and Bill SUnflll, will send his team
against tbs defending NFC West
champion Falcons, who have beaten

New Orleans in 17-of-24 games.
Running back George Rogers, the
Heisman Trophy winner and No. 1
pick in the NFL draft, will make his
debut and quarterback Archie
Manning enters his 10th pro season.
The Saints' revamped defense,
which allowed a league-high 487
points, will be tested by running
backs William Andrews and Lynn
Cain and quarterback Steve Bartkowski.
Minnesota, the NFC Central
champion, opens the 62nd NFL
season against Tampa Bay Saturday
night.
In Sunday's other games,
Baltimore is at New England,
Kansas City at Pittsburgh, the New
York Jets at Buffalo, Seattle at
Cincinnati, Green Bay at Chicago,
San Francisco at Detroit, Miami at
St. liOuis and Philadelphia at the
New York Giants. San Diego is at
Cleveland Monday night.

players are fools to go out," said
Trumpy. "I simply don’t feel the
NFL Players Association has the
support the Baseball Players
Association has, nt«- does it have
the leadership."
"I'll tell you why I think the
football players are foolish to go
uut. Any club can draft 12 players
and sign 33 free agents and that
means every club can field a 43man roster. It’s Ed Garvey’s
contention the owners have
guaranteed Income with the TV
money and the season tickets they

For Kickoff

No Hoboes' Role For Bum

SECONDARY It's obvious Bennet
and staff sense some deficiency. No l
draftee was cornerback Bobby Butler,
and he can step right into lineup, though
site is question. Also picked up Georgia
safety Scott Woeroer. There Is chance,
if Butler comes through, that Ken
Johnson, '81 rookie surprise, will move
to safety. Look for continued Juggling.
FAIR to POOR
BPEC1AL TEAMS
KICKING John James has been
among superior punters for decade;
maybe his strength has dropped off but
he still delivers In clutch. Tim Maxxetti
made comeback of sorts as
placekicker. GOOD

PROSPECTUS
Falcons aren't ready to take rank as

BLOCKING Awesome crew. Guard
Kent Hill and tackle Doug France on
left side are probably best tandem In
NFL No slouches on right aide, with
Dennis Harrah and Jackie Slater with
Doug Smith pushing Harrah for playing
time. Fine young reserve In Irv
Pankey. And backbone of whole line, In
coaches' eyes, is longtime center Rich
Saul, spirited 13-year veteran. EX­
CELLENT
DEFENSE
LINE Slightly hoary with age. Entire
foursome la over 30, and Fred Dryer,
33-year-oid right end, Is definitely
vulnerable. Toying with moving Cody
Jones outside and putting Mike Fan­
ning at tackle. Drafted pair of rookies,
Oreg Meianer and Bob Cobb, for
protection. The m a n who keeps p e r
farming at peak capacity la sILpro Jack
Youngblood. FAIR to GOOD
LINEBACKING V eil, Hacksaw
Reynolds la gooe, so Carl Ekern steps
into Job in middle with Uttle fanfare or
p u t achievement. Bob Brudslnski flew
coop, too, opening way for George
Andreea. Draftee Mel Owtna la unlikely
to play right away. Jim Youngblood Is

committee of the Players
Association (or a couple of years
and he says:
“To be honest about it, our strike
in 1974 was not successful. Our
Association then was relatively
new and naive. The present
players make much more money
than we did. It's hard for me to say
whether there will be a strike or
not because the players today may
have different incentives than we
did."
Brodie said he wasn't well
enough Informed to be able to
predict whether or not the players
wiQ strike and Rowe said he
doesn’t know exactly what the
players are seeking, so he couldn't
make any guess whether they'll go
out or not.
"I'd hate to see it," he said. “I
went through (woof them and I can
tell you ... nobody ever wins."

Enthusiasm Impresses,

UNEBACXING Did any team ever
get luckier in draft than Falcons last
year? Buddy Curry on inside and Al
Richardson on left side stepped right
into regular Jobs and performed nobly.
Joel Williams had strong season on
right outside, and Fulton Kuykendall
came back to full duty. Now they’ve
added another bright rookie prospect in
Lyman White. GOOD

RETURNS Johnson doubles as
reliable punt reutmer. Reggie Smith, 5foot-4, tries to hand on as kickoff return
specialist. Scott Woemer is possible
help on special teams as return man.
FAIR

sell in February and in that case,
there Is no incentive for the owners
to build a championship football
team.
"I don't agree with Ed Garvey.
However, if there's no incentive for
them to put together a cham­
pionship team, as he claims, then
why should the owners capitulate
to the players? By Its very set-up,
the NFL structure has built-in
insurance against a strike."
T uner, beginning his first year
as a telecaster, feels Garvey will
be the catalyst In any strike.
"1 think the players will go out on
his advice," he says. "I hope they
start negotiating now rather than
wait until the season is over.”
Bleier, who was a player rep four
years with the Steelers, feels there
won't be a strike because of a lack
of agreement among the players.
Washington was on the executive

NFL Ready

one of powerhouses In NFL, but slight
slippage by Rams leaves Atlanta as
team to beat in their division. They've
got to get another spectacular season
bout of Bartkowskl and Co.
PREDICTION First in NFC West,
maybe at IM.

Rams Look To Haden For Leader
; &gt; COACH RAY MALAVASI: "You
. «J can’t lose starters and not get hurt.
: £ We've lost four or five, but even so we'll
- be competitive. I like the way our of- &gt; tensive line and our defensive aecun■' £ dary shape up. I'm not worried about
quarterback because Pat Haden's been
. ^successful in the past."
: ^
OFFENSE
PASSING Defection of Vince
" Ferragamo to Montreal again raised
- ' doubts about Rhodes scholar Haden
1 being able to lake a team all the way.
t Unleu there'* a trade, he’* It - sharp
and smart, but small. Far receivers,
he'll go Preston Dennard and BUly
Waddy deep. Change at tight end finds
. Victor Hicks or New Orleaosrttroad
2 Henry Childs succeeding Terry Nelson.

Raymond Chester. The running
backs are Kenny King and Mirk van
Eeghen.
The Broncos possess a strong
kicking tandem of Fred Steinfort
and punter l&lt;uke Prestridge. The
defense is spearheaded by
linebacker Randy Gradishar and
end Barney Chavnus

NFL Question: Strike Or Not To Strike?

Falcons, Bartkowskl Team
To Beat In NFC's Western
COACH

replacing them with Steve DcBerg
and Tony Reed.
Morton will start Sunday with
DeBerg and rookie Mark Herrmann
as the backups.
Tlie Raiders, led by quarterback
Jim Plunkett, have set their sights
on a second straight visit to the
Super Bowl while Denver hopes to
rebound from their first non-playoff
season in four years.
With the release of Dan Pastorini,
who started Oakland's first five
games before suffering a broken leg,
Plunkett will be in control from the
outset, with untested Marc Wilson as
his backup.
Cornerback lis te r Hayes, the
AFC Defensive Player of the Year,
and mammoth linebacker Ted
Hendricks, both coming off their
best pro seasons, head the Raiders'
defense. On offense, Plunkett will
look to wide receivers Cliff Branch
and Rob Chandler and tight end

solid. FAIR to GOOD
SECONDARY Brilliant talent at all
spots. You don't find more clinging
corners (on pass coverage) than Pat
Thomas and Rod Perry. Nolan
Cromwell has merely become best free
safety In game. And Johnnie Johnson
lived up to big money In his contract as
strong u fe ty . Good depth. EX­
CELLENT
SPECIAL TEAMS
KICKING Frank Corral takes care of
both punting and field goal kicking in
professional style. VERY GOOD
RETURNS Rams anticipate rookie
talent will Jack up special teams. They
didn't get much mileage on returns
from Drew Hill (kickoffs) and LeRoy
Irvin (punts) last year. FAIR
PROSPECTUS
Fuss about Vince Ferragam o's
departure has to hurt despite blustery
optimism. Too much controversy,
starting at top, swirling over heads of
Rams. They have tough enough time
concentrating on football.
PREDICTION Second in NFC West,
but out of playoffs.

Murray
Olderman
^ E ^ g t^ J rtU r

COACH BUM PHILLIPS: "I’ve been
Impressed with the enthusiasm of all
the playera, and the community.
Everybody's anxious to erase last year
and get to work on a new season and a
pew program. I know the Saints will be
able to move the football with a talent
like Archie Manning — a good starting
point."
OFFENSE
PASSING Theoretically, Archie
Manning, In 11th year, should be shell­
shocked and discouraged, but that’s not
Archie. And If they muster any kind of
support, he will produce. He has good
targets, too, In talented Wes Chandler,
who caught 88 last year, and Ike Karris.
Plus a brace of competent tight ends
and little rookie named Kevin Williams
who can surprise people. GOOD
RUNNING Bum believes In building
around a super talent, and ostensibly he
has it In George Rogers, first man
chosen In draft. Tony G ilbreath
professes to be happy again In his role
as supporting fullback who also catches
ball well coming out of backfield.
Wayne WUaon Is promising. FAIR to
GOOD
BLOCKING Tackles are big and
Imposing — Stan Brock and James
Taylor. Center John Hill Is good football
player with credentials, Guard spots
are a mesa. There's opportunity for
newcomers to make their presence felt,
and one such la Louis Oubre, New
Orleans native who played at
Oklahoma. Success of Saints in ’80 will
ride on protection they can give
Manning. FAIR
DEFENSE
LINE Bum Phillips believes in U
defense, and the way Saints would line
up now Is Eiois Grooms and Derland

Moore at ends and Barry Bennett at
noae tackle. But they’ll try other
combinations because tank-sired
rookies Jerry Boyarsky, Frank Warren
have chance to play right now. POOR
UNEBACXING Not bad on paper,
with Ken Bordelon and Reggie Mathis
penciled in for the outside spots, Joe
Federsplel and Jim Kovach lined up
inside. Federsplel, a physical type, is in
10th year and might be slipping.
FAIR
SECONDARY Only sure of couple of
players: Dave Waymer, corner man
who's a hitter but lacks some speed,
and Tommy Myers, the class of Saints'
secondary for a decade, who also lacks
swiftness but compensates with savvy.
New man who could make immediate
Impact is second-rounder Russell Gary,
slated for ufety. POOR
SPECIAL TEAMS
KICKING Hope remains rampant
that Russell Erxleben, who was flop for
last two years, will recover his college
form and handle both punting and
place kicking. But for insurance they
have Benny Ricardo and free-agent
punter Ken Hartley.
RETURNS Rich Mauti, king of
special teams, and Jimmy Rogers, a
spare back, make spirited pair on both
punt and kickoff returns. If step up in
clau is mandatory, they could always
summon (as!-stepping Wes Chandler.
PROSPECTUS
You've got to give homespun Bum at
least a year to get his benign ad­
ministration entrenched. Results can't
be as disastrous as last year's 2-14
record. If Rogers is real article, offense
has genuine possibilities.
PREDICTION Last In NFC West, but
not hopeleu.

49ers Race For Darkhorse Spot
COACH BILL WALSH: "We're at a
point competitively where we feel the
defense and a large portion of the of­
fense have the athletic ability to play in
the NFL But offensively, we’re at the
mercy of Hofer's injury and Montana's
development. He can be a (actor in *81."
OFFENSE
PASSING Mobility puts Joe Montana
in driver’s seat over Steve DeBerg. But
Montana still has to prove he baa
passing arm that can win In NFL
Dwight Clark catches Iota (83) but
doesn't get far. Freddie 8okxnon ran*
like wind, not so nimble finger*. Jamee
Owens stars in promises, prnmlue
Neither Eason Ramson nor Charles
Young are captivating aa tight ends.
FAIR to GOOD
RUNNING Paul Hofer's alow
recovery from knee surgery fumbles
plan. Must find running mate for Earl
Cooper, who slumped as rookie when be
had to carry full load. Other vet backs
also were knee-stitched. Solution might
be swift James Owens coming out of
backfield with speed. FAIR
BLOCKING Major change, but only

one, at left tackle, where Ken Bungarda
looks like Superman — but hasn't come
out of telephone booth y et He's huge
and untested. Randy Cross at guard
sticks out in Improving Une. About time
ho got some AB-Pro recognition. GOOD
UNB wm stick with three-man front,
benefit Bom return of Dwsin* Board,
best peas rusher. Jim Stuckey at other
end can only get better. Archie Reese
as noae guard will have to hustle
because of rookie John Harty. And
watch for kid named Pete Kugler to get
playing time 19 B o at GOOD
LINKBACKING No shortage of
rsvs other guys
now slaps ahead of
•.with
vet Witts Banner. D u Bans, sapor
blitter, might finally have found home
at inside * o t, though Craig Puki
figures there, too. FAIR
IHXMOARY How about entrust!^
T»percent of works to bunch of rookies?
That's what Walah is about to do, and he

feela good about It. Already has comen
staked out for top choice Ronnie Lot
and Eric Wright; Carlton Williamsoi
may oust ricky Churchman at stront
safety. Only Incumbent sure of Job i:
free safety Dwight Hicks, who's comini
on. FAIR
SPECIAL TEAMS
KICKING Ray Wersching hat
banana year aa field-goal kicker, b
steady Eddie. Jim Miller was upend
down as rookie punter, but his barefoo
boots should get longer with ex
perience. GOOD
RETURNS Freddie Solomon is ai
good as any around fielding punts anc
getting good yardage. If Owens doean'i
get hurt, he’s breakaway threat or
kickoffs. Lota of young hod iff fw
support GOOD
PROSPECTUS
Insiders see tiers as darkhorst
throat in NFC West, but I'm skeptical
roey're leaning too much on youn(
blood to Jack up defense, and offense
lacks spark of proven leader. Health)
Holer could change all that.
PREDICTION Still sub 400, third ir
NFC West:

�Sunday, Sapt. 4. IM1-1B

Evening H«r*ld, Sanford, PI.

Never Give Slugger Even
Weaver Blames
Break
Umpire For Armas' Homer
AN D RE DAWSON

NOLAN RYAN

D IC K DAVIS

.n e a r m iss fo r fiv e g e m s

...b r e a k s u p n o -h itte r

Ryan Shrugs

. . . p i n c h - h i t d o u b le

By United Press International
Never give a slugger an even break.
Manager Earl Weaver of the Baltimore
Orioles believes umpire Nick Bremigan
broke that commandment in the ninth
inning Friday night and, as a result,
allowed the Oakland A's to eventually
pull out a 5-4, 11-inning victory.
Oakland won Hie game at Baltimore in
the Dili on a solo homer by Cliff Johnson,
but it was a game-tying solo homer by
Tony Armas in the ninth inning that
caused Weaver lo blame Bremigan for
the defeat.
Weaver contends Armas had struck out
on a pitch by Tim Stoddard before hitting
the homer, only Bremigan missed the
call. Both Weaver and catcher Rick
Dempsey Brgued so vehemently with
Bremigan they were tossed out of the
game.
“Armas knew It was strike three. When
a hitter takes two steps toward the
dugout, lie knows he's out,” insisted
Weaver. "The umpire cost us the game.”
Dempsey, who was so angry at
llremigan’s call he threw the bull into the
stands, was more outspoken than his
manager.
"They talk about the difference bet-

OffNear No-Hit Miss

By United Press International

W

Nolan Ryan used about as many words
in describing his near-feat Friday night
as he allowed the Montreal Expos to get
hits.
Ryan threw shutout ball for 6 1-3 in­
nings before Andre Dawson singled In the
seventh and spoiled his bid to become the
first pitcher in majorleague history to
notch five nohit games.
Along with Sandy Koufax, Ryan is the
only pitcher ever to register four nohitters.
After the game, he shrugged off his
miss.
"I was aware I had a nohitter but I
wasn’t upset ” said Ryan, who combined
with Joe Sambito on a three-hitter to
back Houston’s 5-0 victory over the
Montreal Expos for the Astro’s ninth
straight triumph.

—

i M

II

"Dawson is one of the best h itters in
this league," he said. "T h ere’s nothing
wrong with th at.”
Ryan’s victory was helped along
considerably by C esar Cedeno, who
drove In three runs for Houston.
Ryan, 5-3, allowed Just two hits and
struck out seven in seven Innings with
Sambito pitching the final two innings to
earn his eighth save.

Mets I, Braves 1
At New York, pitcher Greg H arris
ignited a two-run sixth with a double and
posted his first victory since Ju n e 3. Ellis
Valentine hom ered for New York.
Phillies 7, Reds 8
At Philadelphia, pinch-hitter Dick
Davis doubled home two seventh-inning

runs to break a tie and power the Phillies.
Davis batted for winning pitcher Sparky
Lyle, 7-4.
P ad res S, P irates 4

At San Diego, Gene Richards’ two-run
triple off loser Don Robinson, 0-3, capped
a Ihreerun seventh inning to bring the
Padres from behind. Rookie Eric Show
earned his first major league save as he
checked the Pirates through the final two
innings.
C ardinals 7, Dodgers 2

At Los Angeles, Rookie John Martin
doubled in two runs and tossed a fivehitter to lead St. I/&gt;uls. Cards’ first
baseman Keith Hernandez had four hits
and scored two runs.
G iants 3, Cubs 2

At San Francisco, Jack Clark's linedrive homer over llie left field fence wilh
two outs In the 10th inning boosted the
Giants.

M «|«r League Slendmg,
Dr Untied P re n International
I Suom i Hall)
National League

St LOUl,
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New York
Chicago
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Cinci
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Friday'* Hvtvllt
Houston 5. Montreal 0
New York 4, Atlanta I
Philadelphia 7. Cincinnati a
San Diego 5, Pittiburgn 4
SI. Louis 7, Los Aftpties 3
San Fran 1, Chicago ]. 10
Inns
Sunday’s Oamet

Houston at Montreal „ .
atlanta at Menu York
Cincinnati at Philadelphia
St Louis at Los Angalrs
Pittsburgh at San Oiego
Chicago at San Francisco
Amtrlcan Ltagua
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Detroit
Milwauke
Balt
New York
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Seattle I. Boston 7
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Seattle 5, Boston 3. reg gm

Toronto 4. Chicago 7
Teias ). Detroit J
Nr* York 4, Kansas City 0
Milwaukee IS, Minnesota 5
Sunday's Oatnas
California at Cleveland
New York at Kansas City
Milwaukee at Minnesota
Toronto at Chicago
Oakland at Baltimore
Seattle at Boston
Detroit at Tt«as. night

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By united Press Internitianal
Natlenal League

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(3 71
MR- Bulling (IS ); T o rrtt, Campbell
Phitadelphia. L.Smith (7)
(S),
Burgmelrr
(7),
Apontt
Ptsbgh
0)0 100 OOO- 4 4 I
San Dgo
000 003 )0 u - 111)
Perai. D R o b l n s o n
(4),
Scurry (7), Lea (I) and
Nicosia. Lollar. Llfllelltld (71.
Show II) and Kennedy, Gwosdi
&lt;*l W—Littlefield (M l. L D Robinson (0 31
St Louis
071 070 110- 7 14 1
Los Ang
001 000 100- 7 SO
Marlin and Porter; Gotti,
Nirdcnlurr (at, Forster (4).
Stewart (I), Howe (4) and
Yeager W-Mariln (J31. L Goltr 17)) HR—Lot Angelas,
Thomas (4).
(14 innings)

Chi

007 000 000 O- 7 II 0

ween the American league and the
National league, well, it is the um­
piring,” said Dempsey, "He (Bremigan \
was all right for the first few innings, but
then he choked. He didn't call the last few
innings wilh any competency."
Johnson’s game-winning homer came
as the Icadoff batter in the Uthand made
a winner ol Tom Underwood, 3-5.
DougDcCinrcs hit a threerun homer in
the first inning for Baltimore.
Elsewhere in the AL, Seattle won a pair
from Boston, 5-7, in 20 innings, and 5-2,
New York blanked Kansas City, 4-0,
Torontoshul out Chicago, 5-0, Texas beat
Detroit, 3-2, Milwaukee crushed Min­
nesota, 155, and California topped Cleve­
land, 3-1, in a rain-shortened game.
Mariner* 5-S, Bed Sox 7-2
At Boston, Joe Simpson tripled in Dave
Henderson in the 20th inning to give
Seattle a victory in the completion ol a
suspended game from Thursday night. In
the regularly scheduled game, Julio Cruz
hit a three-run homer and Richie Zisk
added a solo shot to help the Manners
complete the sweep.

NOW
OPEN

Major-League Roundup
SfaiMffitgs

A lta tb o f j

Mrtw
0)4 701 400 14 II 0
Minn
000 110 0)0 5 10 3
Caldwell. D Moore (I). Ber
nard (I) and Simmon,, Moore
(II. Arroyo, Fellon (3), Hobby
(4), O'Connor (7), Vrrhoeven
(II and Butera W-Cutdwell
(10 7) L-Arroyo 1)7) HR,—
Milwaukee, Thoma, 111), Gant
ner ()l, Howell (4). Yount II)

M«|or League Leader,
•y Untied F r e t, Internettenet
Setting
(feeted en ) . l appearance, i
tack team'* game, played I
Natlenal League
• lb n Pit

Madlock. pa
43 77) 40 3)4
Row, Phil
74 373 104 33)
Guerrero LA
14 7)4
371
Gfilley. Cal
7) 743 43 317
Hrnndi. St L
73 747 • 3 317
Dawson. Mil
74 741 •4 317
Schmidt, Phil
74 771 44 317
Durham, Chi
47 733 74 313
Bonilla. SD
77 354 11 313
1171, Ralnty &lt;&gt;7&gt;, Tudor ( I I I ,
71 774 44 31?
Stanlty
(701
and
Allanton, Howe. Hou
American Leigut
Gedman ( l ) . w — Gaiatso I I I ) .
g 4b
pci
L — Stanlty (7 1 ).
Zilk. Sea
4) 743
330
Lamtord.
Bo,
)■ 311 10) 3)1
(Regular Game)
Oliver.
Tei
71 37) 10) 374
Saattle
HO DIO OOO- 5 10 1
I? 371 1H 374
Boston
000 100 100- 7 40 Mendrin. Oak
77 7)1 I) 37?
Stoddard.
Parrott
(71 and Hargrove. Cle
Memy. Bo,
44 74) 4) 371
Bulling. Tanana. Crawford (7)
Patiorek. Sea
14 304 44 370
end Gedman W — Stoddard ( )
Bell, Tei
)3 i n 44 311
0)
L — Tanana
O il
HR—
Carrw. Cal
11 311 44 31)
Seat)la, J C ru ) O l. Zisk 0 4 ).
GHch. Cal
)? 74) 11 314
Boston, Rudi ( I ) .
Heme Run,
National League — Schmidt,
Toronto
700 000 0 )0 - 4 I I
Phi
74
.
Kingman. NY and
Chi
000 700 OOO- 1 I I
Slltb
ond
Whitt;
Lamp, Dawson. Mil 34. Foiter. Cin 14
Hendrick. Stl It
Farmer ( I I and Fisk W -S lie b
American League — Armat.
( I I I L -L a m p O ) ) .
Oak 71. Thoma, Mil II. Evan,.

Bo,. Gnch. Cal and Luimiki,
Chi II
Run, Batted In
National League - Fenter,
Cln
70. Schmidt. Phi
4)
Concepcion, Cm and Garvey,
LA
54 Buckner. Chi and
Carter, Mon 51
American League
Arma,.
Oak 47 Oglivle. Mil 54 Bell.
Tea
54. Winfield. NY $£&gt;
Evan,. Bo, 5?
Stolen Bate,
National League — name,
Mil *4 Moreno. Pit M: North.
SF and Scott. Mil 74. Collin,.
c m ?s

American League — Mender
ton. Oak 4t. Crui. Sea
34.
Leflore. Chi 7). Oilone. Cle ;?.
Bumbry, Bat and Wilton. KC
It
Pitching
Viclorltt
National League — Carlton,
Phi M 3 Valenrueia. LA 114;
Waver, Cm 10 7 Rulhven. Phi
10 5 Hoot on. LA 4 ). Roger,.
Mil 4 »
American League — Vuck
ovich, Mil It ). Morn,. Del It
4
Forgch,
Cal
114;
D.
Marline). Bal 10 4, McCalty,
Oak 10 4 Caldwell. Mil* 10)
Earned Run Average
tbawd on I inning per tach
taam't garnet played)
Nelionil League — Ryan.
Hou I 74. Knepper. Hou I 40.
Seavrr, Cln 7 7). Reu„. LA
7 75 Blue SF 7 11
American League — Stewart.
Bal 1 II. Lamp. Chi 7 77.
Burnt. Chi 7)1. McCalty. Oak
7)3 John. NY 7 45
Itriktouti
National League — velen
luela. LA 144. Carlton. Phi 17).
Solo, Cm 110. Ryan. Hou 105
Gullickton Mil I)
American League
Barker,
Cle 101
Blyleven. Cle 45.
Guidry. NY 14 Lronard KC
11. Burnt. Chi )a
Save,
National
League
Sutler.
StL 14 Minton. SI and Allen.
NY 14 Camp. All II. Luca,.
SO It
American League
Finger,.
Mil 31; Go,,age, NY II;
Quitentoerrv, KC 14,
Saucier.
Del t). Farmer. Chi and T
Marline). Bal 10

Yankees 4, Royals 0
At Kansas City, Mo., Willie Randolph
tripled and singled and scored twice to
lilt the Yankees to victory. Rudy May, 6,
8. and Ron Davis combined on a thrcchltler for the Yankees,
Blue Jays 5, White Sox 0
At Chicago, George Bell's RBI single
capped a three-run first inning that
sparked the Blue Jays to victory. Dave
Slicb, 8-9 went the distance for the ninth
time in 19 starts.
Kangrrs 3, Tigers 2
At Arlington, Texas, Bump Wills’ tworun homer in the fifth inning drove in the
goahead runs and enabled the Rangers tq
snap the Tigers' five-game winning
streak.
Rrcwrn 16. Twin* 5
At Bloomington, Minn., Hoy Howell
slugged a three-run homer, Robin Yount
ripped a two-run homer and Gorman
Thomas and Jim Gnntner contributed
solo shots to spark the Brewers.
Angels 3. Indians I
At Cleveland, loirry Harlow scored one.
run und singled home another to pace the
AngcLs to victory in tin' first game of a
scheduled doubleheader that was called
alter 5' j innings liecausc of rain.

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5 0 '. . .

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I menu 11 A M to 3 PM

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7 A M to 11 A M

pies &amp; stuffings
cooked fresh

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COUPON

SUN., MON.. TUES., WED., 9-4 la 9-9

Tty our home
made biscuits,

8 9 4 2 with
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COUPON
Reg. 11.92

3 Large E g g t. Sautage or Bacon
T o a d or Pancake, or H e m r Made
B iic u ilt and Colter

j DINNER SPECIAL

5

| A n y Hem on our dinner

0

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COUPON

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SUN., MON., TUES., WED., 9-4 to 9-9

everyday by
Aunt fdie.

] G Y R O S A N D W IC H
1 o r P la t t e r

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SUN., MON.^UES,, WED., 9 4 to 9-9^

I CHICKEN TO GO
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322-2778

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ENDICOTT, N.Y. ( U P I 1 — A wet and *oggy
c o u n t could well hold the key today for a
■■lurpriaed" Ja y H aas, a “ hohum " Calvin
Peete and an "aggressive" Bobby Q am p ett In
the 1275,000 B.C. Open.
H aas, who (hot a 6-under-par 85 F rid ay (or
the second-round lead in the PGA event, said
he w as "su rp rised " a t the score over the M K yard En Jofe layout, heavy from rain and
expected to play even longer today following
m ore rain overnight.
Peete, the first-round leader, got a birdie on
the first hole F rid ay , then played " h o b u m "

p a r golf the rest the way for a 134 total that left
him two shots off the lead.
C lam pett also had a 65 F riday to put him In a
tie with three others for third place at 135. The
slender, long-hitttng CUm pett claim ed his
"ag g ressiv e" style helped him score six
birdies and no bogeys in the round.
At 135 with C U m pett w ere Tom Kite, one of
the steadiest pU yerson the tour this year, Dan
Pohl and Denis Watson. G ary McCord was
alone a t 137, while tour rookie Tom Woodard
w as another shot back a t 131 after a p a r 71.
Seventy five g o tte n rem ained In the chase
(or the first prise'of 149,500 a fte r the field w as
cut from 158 following F rid a y 's round. The
final round win be pUyed Sunday.
"T he fairw ays w ere extrem ely soft," H aas
said. " I used a lot of Irons and m y putting has
been good to excellent." He said " I waa pretty
su rp rised " by a birdie string a t holes 12, 13,
and 14, when he ram m ed in putts of 90,45 and
IS f e e l
" I 'm aggressive," C U m pett said with a
grin. “ I ’ll hit a lot of d riv e n off tha tee where
other p U y e n are hitting 3-woods. T h a t's my
sty le."
His six-birdie, no-bogey ca rd F riday was
rem arkably different from T hursday, when he
had seven birdies and (our bogeys.
K ite's round put him in good p o rtio n for hU
19th top -10 finish in S tournam ents. He’s also
leading In the race for tha V ardon Trophy,
given annually to the tour p U yer with the best
■coring av sra g s.
Pohl said, " I have the top 10 locked, so bow
I 'm working tow ard winning a tournam ent."
W atson, a tour rookie from South A frica,
said he w as disappointed In not doing b etter
a lte r being 4-under in the opening round.
“ I h it the ball well but m issed acm e easy
p u tts."

2 DAY LIQUOR SALE

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�4B-Evtnlng Hsrstd, Sanford, FI._______ Sunday, Stpt.i, ttll

Jamie's Tears Of Joy
Hu name w u Jamie. He wai a few
days away from being 10-years-old. He
lived in Lafayette, La. Ironically, he
Just moved from Lafayette, Ind.
Bui, Jamie could easily have lived In
Casaelberry or Altamonte Springs. Like
a lot o! almost 10-year-olds, he likes to
play baseball.
Unlike a lot of more fortunate near 10year-olds, however, Jamie didn't haw
the money to finance the equipm ent for
such an undertaking.
His family was dirt poor. Jamie's
mother and father along with three
more brothers and sisters lived in a
painted-over blue school bus that was
parked near the diamond al Clark
Field.
While Jamie's equipment for playing
baseball was a problem, his enthusiasm
never dimmed. He was the happiest
when he could run down foul balls that
popped out of Clark Field.
It was only natural then, when this
gang of overachievers arrived from
Florida to partake in the Bronco World
Scries, that Jamie would (al) right into
their routine.
Jamie adopted the Seminole Broncos.
And the Broncos of Richard Coffey
were more than happy to adopt him.
Jamie became the Bronco# persona)
valet.
If there was an errant throw during
practice, Jamie ran It down. If a pop
foul went tipping over the screen,
Jamie ran It down. If one of the coaches
needed a favor, Jamie ran it down.
"They Just sort of attached them­
selves to one another," one Seminole

H *r*M P A d H fef l i m

M e m b e rs of th e S em in o le H roneos W orld S e rie s ru n n e ru p te a m a r e first row ,
(le ft to r ig h ti, D ale S tev en s, J im m y W arin g , K irk H ozek, K ddie K v an s, T ra c y
T u rn e r, S co tt B ow ers and M ickey H elm s. In th e seco n d row , (le ft to rig h t), a re
K eith D ial, M ark C offey, K ddie T a u b e n se e , T e rry M iller. K elly lly s e ll, D re g
K h h e rt, J a s o n B ra y and S ean F la h e r ty . In th e h ack row a r e c o a c h e s D re g Khh c rt a n d D ick W arin g along w ith m a n a g e r H ichnrd C offey.

Coach Dick Waring tried, but didn't
dn much better. "The parents and fans
nil had tears In their eyes," informed
the Seminole booster.
Upon receiving the presents, one
Bronco parent tried to snap a picture of
the "adopted Seminole.” But now it was
time for Jamie’s wet eyes. "All I got
was Jamie with his head down,"
shrugged the photographer. "His head
was down and he was bawling his eyes
out in the picture."
N'o doubt that was one picture worth
2000 tears. . . of Joy.
POST SCRIPT - You can tell kids
how hungry people are in China all you
want. But until they witness real
poverty, it's tough for them to realize
just how fortunate they are.
Probably Jamie's biggest gift lo the
Seminole Broncos is — he made them
realize Just how lucky Ihey are.

Sam

Cook
Sports editor

parent said about Die Seminoles and
their adopted mascot. "Jamie really
seemed to enjoy being with the team
and he did a lot of things to help them.”
One of those things was lo bring ice
water in a Gatoraid bottle (or the
Broncos. Another time he built o bridge
out of boards leading In the drinking
fountain to keep the Broncos spikes
from getting wet.
After the Seminole outfit lost the
championship game to Richmond. Cal.,
II was time for the Broncos to do
something for Jam ie. Business
Manager Greg Ebbert generously gave
the youngster his second place trophy.
The Seminole parents and fans
colic 'ted $140 from their own pockets
and gave it lo the family. The best ami
most touching gift, however, was saved
for last.
Manager Coffey introduced Jamie to
the crowd following the final game. He
explained to the crowd that Jamie had
done for the team and how much he had
helped them.
After the Introduction, the Broncos
presented Jamie with a Seminole hat, a
bat and a new glove they had purchased
for him, Coffey, choked up by the
emotional moment, wasn't able to
finish.

Wes (tinker, Florida Baseball School
owner, hosled the Broncos banquet in
his unique "Dugout Club" lounge
Wednesday night. Rinker, who lias
instructed some of the Broncos in his
camps, was Just as impressed with the
Broncos' behavior as their baitplaying.
"1 Just returned from Kentucky,
Illinois, Minnesota and Indiana," said
Hinkcr about his clinic tour. "I was
discouraged by die attitudes of young
ballplayers.
"This i tournament showing) tells me
that the Seminole Pony Baseball
Association is doing things right on and
off Hie field."

O-Twins Move Within O ne Victory O f Eastern Playoff

Serum

It) JOE DeSANTIS
Herald Sports Writrr
Nip and tuck. Scratch and daw.
Tom Kelly’s Orlando Twins bait ten
from behind three times Friday night h&gt;
secure n scrappy 7-6 victory over the
Savannah Braves in Southern league
Eastern Division playoff action at Tinker
Field. The win pushed Orlando's playoff
advantage to two games to none in a best
of five division playoff series and leaves
Die Twins with a simple case of one, two,
three.
The Eastern Division playoff moved
tuck to Savannah Saturday ami moved
ttu* Twins into the position ol having lo

sRelief Salve Smothers Savannah,

win just one of three possible remaining
games to secure a shot at the Southern
league's Western Division cham|w in a
showdown for the lMl Southern D-ngue
thumplonship.
"It was u pretty exciting game that
went rigid down to die wire," smlted
Kelly aiiout Orlando's eighth-inning
rally. "In a short series die team with the
llest pitching and fewest mistakes is
going to come out ahead."
Whie neither Kelly's Twins, nor
Savannah's Braves showed over­
whelming mound work, Orlando
liarlayed timely hiding, superb relief
work by Gary Serum and mistake-free

baseball into the come-from-behlnd
victory.
Orlando's llmcly hitting came in the
form of rigid fielder Steve Douglas' twoout, two-run double in (he bottom of the
eightii that erased a 6-5 Savannah edge
and secured the Orlando victory,
The superb relief work was the effort of
bullpen ace Gary Serum, who came on in
the middle of the eighth Inning to short
circuit a Savannah uprising, securing his
21st save of the season that enabled the
Twins to set Ihe stage for their two-run
comeback.
Ilie Braves took their first of three
leads In the game in the top half of the

Kunzmans' Catch Chases A w ay Fishing Blahs
Fishing has been blah.
Wilbert Williams is one of the best
bridge fisherman I know. He could
catch fish out of an ashtray. And even
tic's having trouble. Bight now you
liave to be at tin- right level and nobody
does that belter than Wilbert.
He starts at three feel below the
water and goes down a little until he
linds them. The funny thing about lish
Is if you’re a foot below them, they
won’t bite.
But if you're a foot above them, they
will. So, It’s always belter to be above
than below.
Hie best spots to catch fisti are north
of here. Try the luke Monroe urea, the
1-4 bridge or O k * railroad bridge. My
right-hand-man Steve S|&gt;cars says to
lish tlie deep holes. At about five lo
seven (eel, you can catch specks amt
catfish. Drift fishing is Hie best
technique.

Although Hie IikIi kill was ID miles

Dell
Abemethy
322-MIS

Irons here at I-ike Harney, it has hurt
Hie fishing. The fish have drifted down
here and the others aren’t biting. But I
expect it to clear up In two or three days
when they wash away. It hasn’t af­
fected Hie bass like the small fish,
though.
lust week Sanford's Bob West ond
Jake IJford pulled in IB specks. Another
Sanfordite, Bobby Midgett, hauled In a
three pound, (our ounce catfish.
lust Tuesday Don ami Marie Kunzmail from Apopka caught 34 specks,
three cattish und one blue gill. They

used minnows to bring in tbelr haul.
Don and Marie also nude out pretty
well al the Ponce Inlet Friday as you
can see by the accompanying picture.
They were fishing off the Jetty with
Zebco 404's and using fIngerling mullets
for bait.
One fish was so big, Marie came
away with a swollen wrist after pulling
it in. Better swollen than empty hooked.

first inning.
The Twins countered In their half of the
first to knot the contest at 2-2. Center
fielder Andre David likewise led off the
inning with a walk and scored on Steve
Douglas' first of three doubles on the
night Douglas tallied two outs later on a
fielder's choice for the 2-2 deadlock.
Orlando took Its only lead of the game
in the bottom of the third when third
ucker Gary Gaetti crushed his 31st
homerun of the season over the left field
wall with left fielder Randy Bush on
board to give the Twins a 4-2 advantage.
Savannah countered In the top of the
fifth with a three-run outburst, however,

lendnff hitter Albert Hall and dashed any
to move ahead 5-4.
The Twins tied the game again In their hopes of a Savannah comeback by
half of the fifth when Douglas cracked his whiffing Brook Jackoby for the final out
second of three doubles on the night, and
"Serum did a super Job," com­
scored on Randy Bush's follow up single plimented Orlando skipper Kelly. "We
for a 5-5 deadlock.
wanted him for the last go around, in a
Orlando's Douglas, who came up with a short series it's tlie pitching Hut counts."
circus cstch earlier in the contest to save
Considering Savannah manhandled
a pair of runs for Orlando, delivered Ids Orlando by a 6-2 edge in second half play,
third double of the night in Orlando's half a 2-0 advantage In a best of five series has
of the eighth lo score Rod Booker and to be labeled a boon for the Twins.
Lance Hallberg giving the Twins a 7-6
"I think Hie guys are pretty keyed up,"
edge.
agreed Kelly. "We're swinging Hie bat
Serum closed Savannah's eighth by pretty good. Savannah is real tough at
getting second sacker Handy Ingle to home, but right now all we’re looking for
ground out, opened the ninth by fanning Is a one-game winning streak."

We're
Meeting The New Season

Hunting licenses are available at all
fish comps for around 112. Spears tells
me Hut there's an overabundance of
doves this year. He says they are
everywhere.
"In Hie 15 years I've been fishing this
area, I've never seen as much as this
year," said Steve.
But remember to hunt those doves In
a farmer's field, you have to have
permission. Dove season will open Ihe
middle of October.

We brought you complete coverage throughout the baseball

H t f i M M m tt

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i vuk

season...local and notional, we kept you posted.
Now that football's here, we'll bring you the same in-depth
coverage you've come to expect. The players, team standings
— we'll have It all.

«* I

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th is loud o ff (h e Jelly a t P o lice In let u sin g fln g e rlln g m u llet.

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�Evening HorshL Sanford, Ft.

California Psychology

BUSINESS

Develops In This Area

IN BRIEF
Tax Workshops Offered
For Small Businesses
The Internal Revenue Service will oiler a Small
Business Tas Workshop the first and third Thursday of
each month effective in October in Room 398, Federal
Building, 80 N. Hughey Ave., Orlando.
The workshops generally last from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
and are divided Into two sections. The morning section
is an awareness session which Introduces participants
to the basic types of business organization, business tas
returns, recordkeeping, IRS functions and em­
ployment taxes. The second section Is a practical
application session focusing on employment taxes.
Participants actually prepare business returns, such
as the Form 941, "Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax
Return," and compute income and expenses on
business tax returns.
The workshops will help people who are new in
business or Just want to learn more about their own
business tax responsibilities and benefits. They are
offered free on a first come, first served basis. Par­
ticipants are encouraged to bring calculators.

THE 1AND/NGS SPOTLIGHTED
T he L a n d in g s, new zero lot line C a lifo rn ia -in sp ire d re s id e n tia l d e v e lo p m e n t
on R an g e L ine H oad in l-ongw ood, w as fe a tu re d re c e n tly in th e New Y ork
T im es a n d H ousing M ag azin e, a le a d in g h o m e bu ild in g in d u stry
p u b lic a tio n s. F lo rid a R e sid e n tia l C o m m u n itie s’ 1.15-home c o m m u n ity w as
c ite d for its o u tsta n d in g p la n n in g a n d a rc h ite c tu ra l sty lin g in clu d in g open
floor p la n s, g re e n h o u se w indow s, v o lu m e c e ilin g s, p la n te rs in v a u lte d e n trie s
and p o rth o le s in b ed ro o m s o v erlo o k in g living room s.

AREA BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT

Rail Repair Operations Begun
JACKSONVHJ-E - The Family lines Rail System
has begun operations in modern, $4 million freight car
repair and diesel servicing facilities at its Winston
Yard near Lakeland.
The new facilities consolidate freight car repair
functions previously performed in Mulberry, Ukeland
and Winston, and locomotive servicing previously
handled at lakeland has been moved to the new
Winston Facilities.
Some 75 freight cars are repaired each day in the
around-the-clock operations performed in a new
structure spanning four tracks and measuring 160 feet
long, 130 feet wide. Each of the tracks is equipped with
hydraulic floor Jacks, cranes and necessary support
equipment and supplies.

Fannie Mae Seminar
TAMPA — A special seminar will be conducted in
conjunction with the Florida Manufactured Housing
Show to explain to lenders the mechanics of the
Federal Notional Mortgage Association's recent
decision to purchase manufactured housing mor­
tgages.
Hie session, for lenders only, will be conducted from
9:30 a.m. to noon, Oct. 8, at the Holiday Inn Airport,
host hotel for the 30th annual show.

Administrative Changes
Thomas L. Werner, former administrator of Walla
Walla (Wash.) General Hospital and Tillamook County
(Ore.) General Hospital, has been named a senior vice
president at Florida Hospital.
Werner, who previously served as vice president of
Verticare Corporation (an ambulatory care cor­
poration) and assistant personnel director at Portland
Adventist Medical Center in Oregon, is a graduate of
Union College in Lincoln, Neb., with an MBA degree
from the University of Nebraska and a Credential of
Advanced Studies in Hospital Administration from the
University of Minnesota.
Several other administrative changes have been made
at Florida Hospital, including:
Bob Uhran, former director of the patients’ business
department, has been named assistant vice president
and administrator for Florida Hospilal-Apopka;
Tito Weiss, former vice president for finance, has been
named senior vice president for finance;
Don Bohannon, former vice president for personnel,
will assist Weiss as vice president for finance and
general administration;
Royce Thompson, former administrative assistant,
lias been promoted to a general vice president.

G r e a te r S an fo rd C h a m b e r of C o m m e rc e p re se n te d its B e au tificatio n
A w ard fo r S e p te m b e r to th e I'a u iu c c i P a r k lo cated at F ir s t S tre e t an d
S an fo rd A venue. T he p a rk w as d o n a te d by J e n n P a u lu c c l to th e city
w hich m a in ta in s it. A ccep tin g a w a rd a r e fro n t left C ity C o m m issio n e r
Ned Y a n c e y . Liz P a u lu c c i llc lfric h an d C ity M a n a g e r Warren P e te "

Knowles.
P . C a th e rin e K ilroy
has
jo in e d
F irs t
F e d e ra l of S em inole
us B ran ch M a n a g e r
of
th e ir
D e lta ry
O ffice, a c c o rd in g to
G ill
K d in o n d s ,
p re s id e n t
of
th e
S an fo rd -h n sed
sav ­
ings a n d lo an . F o r­
m e r ly
in
th e
M a rk e tin g
D e p a rt­
m e n t of H e r ita g e
F e d e r a l's
D ay to n a
O ffic e w o rk e d on
p re m iu m
p ro g ra m s
in c o n ju n ctio n with
th e
s e n io r
v ic e
p re s id e n t th e re .

Banking School Graduates
Mrs. Carol Larson and Jack Byrd graduated in August
from the Florida Bankers School of Banking held an­
nually in Gainesville.
[arson, currently assistant branch manager of
Flagship’s Downtown Office, began her banking career
in 1972 with Flagship.
Byrd is branch manager of Flagship's newest office in
Fern Park and came to Flagship in 1981 from Southeast
Bank.

Disciplinary Action Is Topic
A presentation "Reducing the Need for Disciplinary
Action" by Sturgis Hiller, president of People and
Organization Inc., is being sponsored by the Orlando
Chapter of the Administrative Management Society,
Tuesday, from 7:30 - 8:30 p.m. The presentation is open
to the public at the Harley Hotel, IS1 East Washington
St., Orlando. Contact Jim Eshelman for further in­
formation — 646-1280.

Real Estate Course
The Keys License Exam School is offering the com­
bined Principles and Practices I course in Orlando.
Classes are held Mondays and Wednesdays or
Tuesdays and Thursdays for eight weeks. A six-day
accelerated course is also available.
For additional information, please call 628-4821.

At a re c e n t e m p lo y e e m e e tin g , Barbara
C h a sse (le ft a b o v e) of F la g s h ip ’s T u sc a w illa
O ffice re c e iv e d T e lle r of th e M onth A w ard for
th e seco n d tim e . C h a sse re c e iv e d 950.00 in
re c o g n itio n of h e r o u ts ta n d in g a c h ie v e m e n t.
Bill tV \'ilkins (rig h t) w as a lso h o n o red fo r his
c o m p letio n of th e firs t p h a s e of F la g s h ip 's

Teller Cawer Program.

G en ie P e r r y , a seveny e a r e m p lo y ee, h a s
b e e n p r o m o te d to
a ss o c ia te b u y e r in th e
P u rc h a s in g D e p a rt­
m e n t of B ed L o b ster
Restaurants,
a
fam ily
seafood
d ln n e r h o u s e
wi t h
headquarters
in
Orlando.
Perry
Joined R ed L o b ste r as
a s e c r e ta r y in 1974,
a d v a n c e d to p u r ­
c h a sin g c le rk in 1975
and
h as been
a
p u rc h a s in g a s s is ta n t
sin c e 1977. S he will be
responsible
for
securing
office
supplies
for
295
restaurants.

apartment buildings.
"Ten years ago'when a tenant leased office
space, the landlord wanted a long-term lease
at a fixed rate," says Uchtigman.
"But today inflation in operating and
linancing costs has made a fixed rale lease an
impossibility for most landlords. Tenants
understand this, and leases with some form of
rate escalation are the rule — not the ex­
ception. These clauses take many forms —
Consumer Price Index Increases, fixed
escalators, and pass throughs of interest rate
increases. Ten years ago increases or ap­
proval of leases like this were unheard of in
most areas of the country."
Uchtigman says real estate in Central
Florida also has appreciated because many of
the tax shelters available before 1976 have
been abolished, inviting Investment dollars.
Also, the Reagan tax bill has enabled larger
depreciation write offs.
"Real estate is virtually the only game in
town for sheltering Income from taxes," he
says. "As a result, more money than ever
before has been invested In real estate. And, as
long as the demand continues, the value of real
estate will continue to be high."
Because properties in Central Florida are
still priced below other hot areas such as
California, Texas and South Florida, an in­
creasing number of major institutions are
placing their monies In our market, he adds.
"Insurance companies, pension funds and
even many of the banking institutions are
pulling a larger proportionate share of their
dollars Into real estate ns they see the values
of their fixed income security portfolios drop
precipltlously," he notes.
Foreign investment as well lias been
flourishing in the area, in both income
properties and land acquisitions. Uchtigman
estimates that 50 percent of the properties
Republic currently has under contract are to
foreign interests.
Typically, says Uchtigman, the foreign
investor may be a major institution such as a
pension fund looking to balance its portfolio, or
a merchant bank acting for its own account or
as a syndicator.
According to Uchtigman, despite recent
appreciation ol the dollar versus other
currencies, American real estate still looks
inexpensive to the foreigner. And we can’t
underestimate the fear tiuit many foreigners
have of leftist takeovers and the threat of
Soviet expansionism.
In an area like Orlando, modest prices make
Central Florida the best of the American In­
vestment.
"We will see more and more foreign money
coming into Central Florida because the area
now offers the opportunities offered by
California five to seven years ago," he says.

Three grants totalling
$667,913 have been awarded
the University of Central
Florida and the Florida Solar
Energy Center by the Florida
Public Service Commission to
undertake studies in energysaving methods (or con­
sumers.
Researchers from the
university and (he FSEC will
spend the next year in­
vestigating the pros and cons
of a variety of water heating
devices, and designing homes
with low energy features to
counter Florida's unique
climate.
The three PSC grants
represent the largest dollar
amount ever awarded by the
commission to a Florida
university
for
energy
research. The Solar Energy
Center is administered by
UCF.
The largest of the three
grants, (or $377,000, is for (he
study of passive solar and low
energy building design by a
research team under I)r.
Robert D. Doering and James
K. Beck of the UCF
engineering (Bculty. Their
intention is to select and
modify eight residences to
allow more efficient con­
ditioning for the environment.
Concepts they will adapt
include radiant heat barriers,
enhanced natural ventilation,
exterior Insulation, double

wall-roof construction, and
heat storage.
"Florida, because of Its
combination of high tem­
perature, high humidity and
relatively low summer wind
speeds, presents one of the
most demanding climates in
the country for comfort
cooling design," said Doering.
To assist (n Ihelr project, his
group of researchers will test
design concepts at the FSEC'*
passive test facility, which
consists of a reconfigureable
building shell that can be
easily set up to incorporate
various designs.

said Tim Merrigan, principle
investigator for the FSEC
grant.
Dr. Burton E. Ena,
chairm an of mechanical
engineering and aerospace
sciences at UCF, will lead a
third group of researchers
who'll study the relative
advantages of heat recovery
units and dedicated heat
pumps In residences. The
$85,196 grant from PSC will
permit them to collect suf­
ficient data to demonstrate
the energy conservation
advantages of utilizing MRU's
DRP's.

Researchers from the
FSEC, swarded $205,717, will
monitor 80 domestic hot water
systems to compare relative
performance of different
systems and coincidence with
peak demand on electric
utilities. Systems under study
are conventional water
(waters, waste heal recovery
units, solar hot water, and
heat pumps.

The UCF team will install
MRU's in three existing
homes in Central Florida, and
in three more homes, will
install both HRU's and DHP's. By monitoring Ihe units
in place, using BTU meters,
watt-hour meters and digital
data loggers and recorder
unila, they will be able to
determine the potential
conlributionsof HRU and DHP systems toward energy
savings and electric peak
reduction. They also will be
able to draw conclusions as lo
(he best possible system
arrangement and operation.

By collecting data for at
least a year, the dally,
monthly, seasonal and annual
averages for each of the four
methods of water heating will
be developed. The averages of
efficiency and time-of-day use
will be relayed to the PSC for
use In its study on the impact
of conservation technologies
on the state’s electric utilities.

All three research projects
are expected to wind-up by
late summer, 19S2, when final
reports will be made to the
PSC for analysis.

Florida Wasto Exchange Established

Priscilla Green, executive director of the MaitlandSouth Seminole Chamber of Commerce, was recently
appointed to serve on the Board of Directors of the
Florida Chamber of Commerce Executive's
Association. The appointment was confirmed at the
organizations Annual Meeting at Innisbrook. Mem­
bership of the FCCEA is made up of chief executive
officers from chambers throughout the state,

Phil Taylor, president of Sun Realty Sendee, Inc.,
has announced that William W. Ruland will be
manager of the firm's new branch office at 662 Palm
Springs Drive, Altamonte Springs. Ruland has con­
sistently been a production leader since Joining Sun
Realty three years ago, Taylor said.

ORI.ANDO — The meteoric rise in Central
Florida property values which has lured in­
vestors from ail over the world the past few
years can be attributed to a phenomena one
prominent real estate analyst calls the
"California Psychology" pervading the
marketplace.
Demand for Central Florida’s Incomeproducing real eslale has never been higher
with buyers readily willing to sacrifice cash
flow to gel a piece of it, says Charles S.
Uchtigman of Republic Funding Corporation
of Florida, a diverse Orlando-based real estate
brokerage.
I.ichtigman calls il the "California
Psychology” factor.
In Orlando up until approximately a year
and a half ago, buyers were return-oriented
when they purchased real estate, he says.
They not only wanted an Immediale cash flowon their Investment, they expected It. That is
no longer the case. Buyers are now purchasing
office buildings, apartments and other in­
come-producing properties at a negative cash
flow, looking at the appreciation potential,
which can occur over a surprisingly short
period of lime.
And they are getting il.
"Cash flow- is no longer as important as
appreciation to most buyers with whom we
now deal. They are more willing to lake an
early loss knowing that in two, three or four
years their investment is going to appreciate
tremendously In value and result In larger
profit yields when they sell," says Uchtigman.
“The stakes arc worth the gamble, although
the way property values have risen in Central
Florida the past 18 months, there lias been
very little risk Involved."
Graphically, he says, we're seeing apart­
ment buildings that sold for $19,000-22,000-unit
l 'i years ago currently re-selling at $26,00034,000 a unit. Ukewise, office buildings that
were selling for $30 a square foot 18 months
ago can today demand $45-65 a square fool.
And office land that 18 months ago was selling
at $80,000 per acre is commanding prices of
$160,000.
I.ichtigman
says
the
"California
Psychology" is just one of several (actors that
liave contributed to Central Florida’s rapidly
appreciating property values. Others he
credits include area growth, inflation, the
viability of real estate as a lax shelter and
foreign investment.
“First — Bnd foremost — we’re living in an
inflation-conditioned society,” he says.
"Inflation is becoming institutionalized in our
economy. The efforts of the Reagan ad­
ministration may succeed In reducing II —but
in the foreseeable future It will be a strong part
of our national psychology."
Perfect examples of the economic impact o(
this psychology are found in office and

Three Grants Aw arded
FSEC, UCF Researchers

Green Named To Board

Ruland Is Branch Manager

Sunday. S#p*. 4. m i- 5 B

VMewElectrostlcs Rental and Bales Co. Inc., located at SICCom Mercial Ave.,
Sanford, la holding a grand opeoing celebration through Sept. IS. Owner Is
Joe Going. (From left) Bob Coakley, rental specialist; Tim Strickland,
manager; Julie Arnold, and Ron Coakley, rental specialists; and Randy
Torbett, assistant manager. The firm will open a new store in Palatka in the
near future.

The
waste
disposal into • useful industrial
dilemma, a high priority Issue feedstock Is only one part of a
currently confronting the total waste management
State of Florida, has brought program in which valuable
about the establishment of a resources are recycled and
new aervice designed lo reused. It is hoped that such a
promote the recycling of program may be facilitated
hazardous as well as non- by information transferred
hazardous wastes.
between companies through a
In response to the need for ■ Waste Exchange.
system atic method of InThe encouragement of
formation exchange between responsible recovery and
c o m p a n i e s c o n c e r n i n g reuse provides cost benefits
possible waste transfers, the both to the seller, who may
Florida Chamber of Com­ now receive payment for
merce will begin operation of those waste materials which
a Florida Waite Information formerly represented a
Exchange (FW1X) this fall. disposal expense, and to the
Turning industrial waste buyer who may be able to

purchase these secondery
raw materials at minimal
cost.
The Florida Chamber of
Commerce will host meetings
throughout the state In late
August to Introduce this non­
profit, non- gover nment
related concept of a Waste
Information Exchange to
those Industries and in­
dividuals that might have an
interest In participating in
such a cleariiwbouae.
Direct all inquiries to: Dr.
Roy C. Herndon, FWIX,
Florida Chamber of Com­
m erce, P.O. Box 9497,
Tallahassee, FL 32301.

�w

♦ j^ E v g w jg j HtrgM, tifiH fd, FI.______ f a n d y J e f t M H I

--W

'T

CLASSIFIED ADS

A MATTER OF RECORD

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T FOR
S R M IN O LE C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
P R O B A TR D IVIS IO N
File Number SI 44f CP
Division
IN R B : E S T A T E OF
C E C E L IA T . H O L L IS TE R
Eugene M Brrquam and Gayle
Deceased
A. Woodley.
N O T IC E OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
1 tins*.............................. M e t line
Bernard
Deslardlns
and
David I Troy. 14. 140 L a iy C r.,
TO A L L P ER SO N H AV IN G
Jeannette M.
J c o n o o c v tlv g tlm o s . .M e * U r *
CB. % Sally R Campbell, J l
C
L
A
IM
S
OR
O
E
M
A
N
O
S
Stephen H Gordie and Patricia
Stephen E
W argo. 41, 404
7 c * n * * a iK v * tiiii* * .............41c
■ :00 A .M . - 3:10 P.M.
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
A , wl former name: Piter
George SI , WS. B Arcetle O
M O N D AY thru FR ID A Y I t c o m a cutty* 11m a t . j j c a lln*
A
N
D
A
L
L
O
T
H
E
R
PERSONS
Georg Hjelm Jorgensen and
Manselman. 31.
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E :
S A TU R D A Y f Noon
SI.10 Minimum
W ilbo rn 0
Side*. SO. 7010 Melinda Seeley
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
) Ling* Minimum
Daniel S. Lawrence and Kitty
Crest lake O r . O r l , 1 Ann M
N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
William James Morris Sr. and
DeCarlo. 47
m inistration ol the estate ol
German Balrett J r , I t , 714 Renee S
C E C E L IA
T.
H O L L IS T E R ,
Mary Catherine Nastasl and
Sandpiper Ln., C B, B Carolyn
deceased. File Number 41 404 CP.
Vincent Joseph Nastasl
Williams.}*. J700 Hughey SI . Sen!
Is pending in the Circuit Court for
Larry D cjulnn and Nadine M
Roger j
Bellow Jr , JJ, I I I
Seminole County, Florida, Probate
Joan C Simms and Donald J ,w l
W.lluw Tree L n , LW . 1 Debra E
Division, the address of which Is
prior name: Alexander
Stokes. J l, J40 Nob Hill C r., LW
Seminole County Courthouse,
Michael C
James, JJ, 1JI0
Santord. Florida. JJ77I.
Pelican Si . LW . 1 Laura M
The personal representative of
Carter. JJ. 1041 Willow Grove, AS
the estate 14 D O N A L D
B.
Mr A Mrs Me lor Wheeler, IfOl
Terence J Burch, 41. 147 S W. 14th, Demolish
K E S S LE R , whose address Is Post
t C aiii 'J* Thanks
t-C M M C m
Metlonvllle. Sent, t Cheryl A.
Office Boa J47, Altoona. Florida
Lo&lt;s N Perkins. J0J Palm PI .
Divider). 14. SOI Scott Ay , Sent
17707 Thenameandaddress of Ihe
rerool. 1.000
Day lime Babysitting in
I wish lo thank our Iriends and
Donald F. Beam. al. 101 N
personal representative's attorney
Harcer Aluminum, IJ0I Corn
my home No Weekends
neighbors lor Ih* many
are
set
lorth
below.
Amelia A v , DeLand. A Eleanor
wall R d . interior remodel. IJ.000
Have references. X I Oil*
wonderful expressions bl
All persons having claims or
M Coa. 44. same address
Santord D ry Cleaners. 113
sympathy end deeds ol kind
Norman J
Riddell. IS. 100
demands against the estate are
Palmetto, partial reroot. I.IS0
SPUR OF T H E M O M E N T
nest shown lo uf during our
required.
W IT H IN
TH R E E
Montgomery Rd . AS. A Angela M
M r T B Ball. X I W Jam SI .
B A B Y S IT T IN G
recent bereavement
The
Brackman, JO
M O NTH S FR O M T H E D A T E OF
remodeling, 10.000
111 4144
recent dealt) ol Thornes Clerk
TH E F IR S T P U B L IC A TIO N OF
Robert C Miller. JJ. JOS Marc
Marie M Pindar, 114 Terry Ln ,
Signed Mildred Clork.
TH IS N O T IC E , to tile with the
St . Sant. A Rita K Stockman, J7.
addition. 4.000
clerk ol the above court a written
John F Moehring. JJ. Rl. I,
W ANT ADS A R E B LAC K A
Furniture Games. Inc., f7l Stale
statement ol any claim or demand
114 Weklva Pk O r., Sant., A Debbie
W H IT E A N D R E A D A L L
S t . partition. 400
4—Personals
they may have Each claim must
A Wursler. JJ, same address.
OVER.
Calvin J. Clemen's. ISOf Prin
be
in
writing
and
must
indicate
the
Larry M Sampson. JS, JJJ7
ceton, alum siding. 4.144
basis tor the claim, the name and
Will keep children In my home
Ridgewood Ay , Sant, A Victoria L.
Tompkins Oev . 304 Beverly Ct.,
address of Ihe creditor or his agent
day. hr or week Monday thru
Bryant, JO. ISJO Sanford Av.
residence, 14.411
or attorney, and the amount
Friday 7 a m * p m
Hot
Charles R Cornelius, II. 44J
1st Trimester abortion 7 IJ w k i„
Dr Wm H Runge. DOS Park
claimed It Ihe claim Is not yet
lunches. J snacks m a i l *
David. WS. A Tracy 0 O ordk, 17.
4 1 4 0-M ed lceld 4110, IJ 14
Av., carport. J00
due. the dal* when It will become
Ba 711, Oviedo
whs. 1I4V-Medico Id t i l l ; Gyn
Santord Airport Author., Bl 400
Babysit enynour
(tot shall be slated It the claim is
George F. Policastro J r „ JL
Clinic 413; Pregnancy test,
Airport, metal b l . I7O.OQ0
in m y home
contingent or unliquidated, the
D o ravllle, Ga. A Pamela G
mol*
s le rllio tlo n ;
free
Cecelia F
L a m l, L f. 4 JI,
133 47*1
nature ol the uncertainty shall be
Slayback. JO
counseling
Professional
car*
Carriage Cove, shed A awning.
stated It the claim Is secured, the
John N Foersl. 17, JI7 Pheasant
s
B
p
p
o
r
tlv
t
a
tm
o
s
p
h
e
re
,
700
All or P arloltho Day.
security shall be described The
Run C l., LW . A Valerie A Led
confidential
Paulucci B ld g . 701 W 1st, In
School Pickupavallabla
claimant shall deliver sufficient
better, JO
C E N T R A L FL O R ID A
terlor remodel. 10.000
» ! JI4S
copies of the claim to the clerk lo
Ronald E Joslyn Jr , JJ. IJS
W O M AN'S H E A L T H
Freddie Young. U l f Mellonvllle.
enable the clerk to mall on* copy
Caracas. DeBary, A Patricia A
O R G A N IZ A TIO N
By Malur* Lady In my home,
complete a d n . 3.000
lo each personal representative
Padgett. JO
tot Colonial Or , Orlando
excellent references days
Favya Shoes. Jf4! Orlando Dr .
All persons Interested In the
Robert A Guirllnger 14. I l l N
IftO T JI
only JlJS JS f
remodel ln !r„ 4,700
estate to whom a copy ol this
Country Club R d , Lk M ary, A
Toll
F
re
t
1100
111
2344
R C A . JJ0 Hidden Lake Or.,
Notice of Administration has been
Diana L Hopkins. I I . same add
residence. X.40J. 333 Hidden Lake
Ransom E Brooks Jr., I I, JO! Dr , residence. I*.f 77; JI7 Bo rad a mailed are required. W ITH IN
T H R E E M O N TH S FR O M TH E
W HY BE L O N E L Y ? W rllf "Get
Woodmere Bv . Sant, A Cheryl K.
Rd , residence. IS.f77; 331 Bor a da O A T E
OF
TH E
F IR S T .
to
A Mole" Doting Servlet. All
Burch, Jl
Rd . residence. 13.477; 330 Borada
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
ages P O Boa 4071. Clear
George W Stanley III, JS. Moree
R d . residence. 13.47?
N O TIC E , lo file any objections
water, FI 1X 14.
Loop WS. A Deborah K Holeman,
773 Recipe Book for Ground Beef
David Lavine, I I I Anthony O r , they may have that challenge the
JO
only. SendS4 f 3lo Recipes SJ0*
fence. 4.000
validity ol the decedent's will, the
Lonelyi Write "Bringing People
John A Most. JO, Jl II Hunter PI
Indian Hills Rd Orlando. Fla
Harry Qulles. LI J X . Carriage
qualification) ol the personal
Together Doting Strvlcol” All
77401
Apopka. A Betty L Cowan. II. SJSI
Cove, shed A awning, MO
representative, or Ihe venue or
ages A Senior Cltlient. P.O.
Florence Av*., Orl.
Lee Parrish, LI 170. Carr Cove.
jurisdiction ol the court
1441, Winter.Havon, FI*. 114*0
Larry R Chenoweth, JJ, 1000
Bananas
Shed A awning. 1000
lib s 1 00
A LL C LAIM S. DEM AN D S. AN D
Elkcam Blvd . Deltona. A Karen
Cukes
7 tor l 00
Bob Rowe, I If Hidden Lake Dr.,
O B JE C TIO N S NOT SO F IL E D
M McLean, JJ, Star R l . Cyr's
Peppers
10 tor 1 00
pool. 3.700
W ILL BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Mob Pk, DeBary
Ice Cold Watermelons
Eliiabeth J Brown. LI JJI.
Date of the first publication ol
100
Wm G McKinney. II. I I II
Western Lopes
recti 74
Carriage Cove, shed A awning.
this Notice ol Administration
Quintuplet D r., CB. A R ow m e M
Green Onions
7 for 74
LOST Brown and Black mlatd
August JO. 1441
7M
Barlow. II. JISI Pioneer C l.
Reg Site Tomatoes
Donald B. Kessler
Breed, dog Resembles Foa
Petrea Quilling. LI J0I. Carriage
lib s 1 IS
Kissimmee
Jumbo Beel Steke
As Personal Representative
Cove, shed A awning. I X
Terrier. Tan cellar answers to
Christopher E McKinney, J4,
Tomatoes
of the Estate ol
Jeffrey L
Bersey. Lt 717.
lb
44
Hobo Vic ot Bahama Joe’s.
7S7 Grandbend A v e , Lk M ary, A
Peaches
X J tail or 111 4110 Eat Ilf
Cecelia T. Hollister
Carriage Cove, shed A awning,
lib s 1 14
Sharon A Ingraham, J4, same
Jonathan Apples
Deceased
300
lib s 100
add
Golden Delicious
A T T O R N E Y FO R P ER SO N AL
Martha Raborn. 101 N Virginia
Richard H Mower. 44. Rl. I, B&gt;
Apples
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
A v . reroot. J.47S
lib s 100
137 E Woodrull Spgs Rd., Sant, A
Red Delicious
Karen Almond. JI4 Hidden Lake Mack N. Cleveland. Jr.
Susan E Covington, JO
Apples
C
L
E
V
E
L
A
N
D
B
B
R
ID
G
ES
Dr , fence. 430
F IC T IT IO U S N AM E
4 lbs 1 00
Patricio X M uirragul, JJ. SS4
Muitu Apples
lib s 1 00
Notice is hereby given thot we
R L Harvey. 1704 E Tnd St , Post Olllce Drawer 2
Tiber on Cove. LW . A Brenda G.
X Lb Box Ga
Sanford. Florida JJ771
Are engaged In business *1 317
rerool, 1.400
Sheritl. JO. 401 G Fenton PI. AS
Telephone (303) J71 1114
Sweet Potatoes
Hickoryw ood A v e ., Altamonte
4 SO
LM
Phillips. JSJS Magnolia,
Glen F Jacobs. J l, Gainetv , A
Sweet Potatoes
Publish: August X . September 4.
4 lbs 4 00
Springs. F L . Seminole County,
carport, 400
Karen L Berry, JJ. S0J Wind
1441
Blue Ridge Applet J4 Lb.
t lortda under the fictitious name
Robert N Green. 104 Maylair
meadows, AS
« J iL I3J_________________
Boa All Kinds
etch I 30
of MGC P R O P E R TIE S , and that
C l , screen porch. 1.700
Anthony R Everett. JO. 44 Wm
w* intend to register M id name
Marvin Milam , J i l l Santord Av.,
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Clark C t , Sant A Rutha M
with the Clerk ol the Circuit Court.
rerool. 300
Nolle* Is hereby given that I am
Christian. 74. ISIS Sumrperlln Av.,
Seminole County. Florida in ac
Johnson Brannack. I X Country engaged In business al 1140
Sant
cordancewilhth* provisions ot the
Club Dr . reroot. 1.300
Orleans Way*. Apopka. Fla. 1770)
Hoy G Russell Jr., J l, I I I Laurel
Fictitious N am t Statutes. To Wit:
N .C .A .,
107 Borada
Rd . Seminole County, Florida .under
Dr . Sant,, A Becky A Levering,
Section 443 0* Florida Statutes
residence, I3.f77; X 4 Hidden Lake the fictitious name of A R C TIC AIR
I k lt&lt; Laurel O r
Or., residence. 10,403
test
E V E R Y O A Y I t B AR O A IN
c o n o i t i o n i n o
a.
t r a i l e r j . M aker. « . *01
T lm L e n t it y
D AY IN T H E W A N T ADS 777
R E F R IG E R A T IO N , and that t
Wbodrldge Dr . F P . A Sally J
M
e
ry
G
Chasey
7*11 or 4)1 fff).
inland lo register said name with
rareth, SI. Laurel Dr. Sant.
Publish
August
J
l.
X
A
September
tn* Clerk ol ID* Circuit Court,
(Ronald D Tanner. JJ. 1100 S
A IJ. 1*41
O E L 111
Seminole County. Florida In ac
in m r n a c u r r e o u f e T f o r
Willow A v ., Sant., A t i l l . L.
cordanc* with the provision* of the
S BM INO LR C O U N T Y , FLO R ID A
Cooper, If
Fictitious Nam* Statutes. To Wit:
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
P R O B A TE D IVISIO N
George
K.
R lm m e r,
!!,
Section 443 0* Florid* Statutes
tennis Instruction — U S P .T.X .
Notice is hereby given that w*
Statesville. SC. A Cynthia D File Number 41 414 CP
Certified Group or Private
are
engaged
in business al 100
1437.
Division
Williams. II. J07 Lk Gene. LW
Oatord Rood. Fo rn Fa rk , Seminole
lessons Children a specialty
Slg Robert W. Kemper
Gerald S R u tb rrg . 17. SJJ IN R i i E S T A T E OF
County, Florida under the Ik
Publish. September 4. IJ. 10. 17.
Devf M alkiow skl. 77! IN ? .'
FR ANK JO S EPH B LA IR , a k a
Orange A v , AS. A Anne E
lltlous nemo ol H A M B O N E S
Iff I*
FR AN K B L A IR , a k a
Richards. !7, Haines City
WHY SAVE IT . . S E LL IT
R E S T A U R A N T , ond thal w* in
D E M 77
FR ANK B LAIR JR ,
Wm E Robinson. JO. Rl. J, B»
Q U IC K L Y with a Fast Acting.
land lo rag later M id name with Ih*
Deceased
741, Miller Rd . Sant, A Cheryl R
F
IC
T
IT
IO
U
S
NAM
B
Low Cos! Classified Ad.
Clerk ot the C ircuit Court,
N O TIC E OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Sanderson. If. I l l Country Club
Notice
is
hereby
given
that
I
am
Seminole County. Florid* in ac
TO A L L PERSONS H AV IN G
Or . Sant
engaged
in
bustnes*
at
7104
French
cordanc*
with
Ih*
prevision*
of
Ih*
OR
DEM ANDS
William M
Bayes. If. JfOI C L A IM S
13-Spadal Nottcaa
Ave Santord Semi not* County.
Fictitious Nam* Statute*. To wit:
A G AIN S T T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
Casteel Or . Orl . A Leta G
Florida under the fictitious name
loci ion *43 01 Florida Statutes
AND
A
L
L
O
TH
E
R
PERSONS
Adams. Jl
of A U T O SO UND C E N TE R .a n d
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E :
1fS7.
To whom II may Concern:
Wm E Lerloua, 77. 141 Bedford
that I Intend to register said name
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
Sig James R. Hamilton
Eltectivo July I. I N I . Gerald B
Ct . Sant . A Altha H Matson. J l
with the Clerk ol ID* Circuit Court,
that
the
ad
Karen J. Hamilton
Alexander and Richard L
Theodore E Dietrich, 43. J07 N O T I F I E D
Seminole County, Florida In ac
m inistration ol the estata ol
Publish: August X . September A
Bred a rt no longer doing
Maid O The Mist D r ., F P . A
cordancewlth
the
provision*
of
the
FR ANK JO S E P H B LAIR , a k a
IJ. X . I f ll
business at J R '■ Dinar &gt;n
Pamela J Mills. J7. same add
Fictitious
Nam*
Statutes.
To
Wit:
FR
AN
K
B
LA
IR
,
a
k
a
.
FR
AN
K
O E L US
Senlord. rlortda. therefore,
M ichael J
M c k n ig h t. JJ.
Section 443 0* Florida Statutes
B L A IR , J R ., deceased. File
these parties will no longer be
Dunedin, A Angela L. From, If,
1*37
Number
41
414
CP.
is
pending
In
responsible lor any debts or
7SJ4 Winnebago C l., FP
IN T H E
C IR C U I T C O U R T ,
Sig Cindy Williamson
obligations incurred by any
Ernest W Vogel. 4J. 701J Cedar the Circuit Court lor Seminole
■ IfJN T E IN T N
J U D IC IA L
Publish: August JJ. X . September
County.
Florida.
Probate
Division,
other parlies under that
A v e . Sant, A Francisco C. Crui.
C IR C U I T ,
IN
AND
FO R
the address ol which is Seminole 4. IJ. 1441
fictitious name alter 7 11|
SO
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY , FLO R IO A .
County Courthouse. Santord.
f i l i J l i _________________________
Richard D Terebo, 44. JOS N
Signed G. B Alexander
CASE NO. I I ISM CA IS L
Florida. The personal represen
Alder wood St . WS, A Jean F.
M A R Y FR A N C E S F H IL L IF S . OS
R. L. Reed
N O TIC B U N D B B
tative ol the estate is LO U IS E w
Peters. JS
SucctSM
r
Personal
Represtn
F IC T IT IO U S NAM B S T A T U T B
B LAIR , whose address Is 311 Pine
Thomas E Campbell. If, 4 Plata
tolly* ol Ih* Estate ol W V.
TO W HOM I T M A Y C O N CER N
Avenue. Santord. Florida 33771
Oval. CB. A Sharon F Shuler, 14
P H ILLIP S Dec to a d
Notice is hereby given thal the
The name and address ol the
Plaint IH (s).
Donald R Scott. J l. FP O NV . A
undersigned pursuant to the
personal representative's attorney
Sigrid L. Allen. If. 107 Ford Ave .
Y.
OAK H A V E N R E S T
"F ic titio u s
Nam e
S tatute",
are set forth below
M AR Y D Y E . D A IS Y C L E M E N T ,
AS
HOM E D ELAN O
All persons having claims or 'Chapter 443 0*, Florida Statutes,
Donald M Anders. If. SIS S Lk
M ONA BROW N and JO H N K.
Small home Ilk* A C LF facility
demands against the estate are will register with the Clerk ol the
Triplet Dr . CB. A Tina L Mel
WILSON.
situated very pleasant location
Circuit Court, in and tor Seminole
required.
W IT H IN
TH R EE
tadri, II
Defondantlsl.
short dislonco Irom city. 14
County, Florida upon receipt ol
M O NTH S FR O M T H E D A T E OF
Stanley M Vihltn. 37. 470 Vlhlen
N
O
T
IC
E
O
F
A
C
TIO
N
hour
supervision
moots,
proof of the publication ol this
TH E F IR S T P U B L IC A TIO N OF
Rd . Sant . A Joyce E Marlin. JJ.
TO
M
A
R
Y
D
Y
E
,
D
A
IS
Y
laundry, assistance with bath
TH IS N O T IC E , to file with the notice, the ftclllious Name, to wit
C L E M E N T . M ONA BROWN and
A
personal
grooming
Largo
JIS Seminole B lv d . CB
P
A
L
M
T
R
E
E
S
TA
M
P
S
und
e'
clerk ol the above court a written
JO HN K. W ILSON, it Olivo, and If
Michael T Keele Jr., II. Man
fenced In yord. air con
statement ol any claim or demand which Kerri Levin* intends lo do
dtod their unknown spout**, hoirt.
Chester. TN , A Karen L Kiley. 17. they may have Each claim must business at II11 Sonoma Court.
ditiw ing
Privaio A semi
devisees, grantees, creditors and
HI J. Ba JS4. Sant
private rooms Call 77**431
be in writing and must indkatelhe Longwood. FI J1730 That the Mid
all other portlet claiming by,
Stephen C Odiorne. Jl. Rome. basis tor the claim, the name and person interested in M id business
tvough or ogointl thorn; ond *11
NV , A Rosemary R Hartnett. J4. address ol tha creditor or Ns agent enterprise is a i follows:
* ★
★
« * * ★
* *
unknown natural persons It ally*,
Edwards Ca
Kerr I Levin*
or attorney, and the amount
and
it
dead
or
not
known
lo
Dr
dead
Louis W Schatt. If. Rl I. Ba claimed It the claim is not yet
sol* proprietress
or o llv t, their s ovtrol and
I74JJ. Sant. A Terri L Smith, I I
O a ltd *1 Seminal* Counts
due. Ihe dale when It will become
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
respect ivo unknown spouse, heirs,
Rent A Thermmos, I I . Ba 14. due shall be slated It the claim is Florida. August 14. I f ll
devisees, granites and creditors,
, LW . A Dianne E Hill. JJ. 400 E
contingent or unliquidated, the Publish August X . September A
S
E
M
IN
O
LE
County
Head
Start
or other portlet claiming by.
Org St . AS
nature of the uncertainty shall be 11. X . I N I
Program welcomes 7 yr. olds
through or under those unknown
stated It the claim Is secured, the D E L ISO ___________________ ____
Reg now tor Ih* loll lorm.
natural
portons;
ond
all
security shall be described The
Centers or*
located
In
F IC T IT IO U S NAM B
cloimontA persons or pomes,
claimant shall deliver sufficient
Notice Is hereby glvon that I am
A lta m o n te ,
S o n lo r d .
natural or corporal*, or whose
copies ol the claim to Ihe clerk to engaged In business al 1*10 N.
Book»rtown, end Midway For
eioct logoi status It unknown,
enable the clerk to mail one copy Orlando Av*., Maitland. Fla.,
more information contort Mr*.
claiming under any of Ih* obey*
to
each
personal
representative.
n o t ic i u n o ir f ic t it io u s
11731, Seminot* County, Florid*
Wynn or Mrs Jibber son. at
named or described Defandanlli)
All persons interested In the under ihe tlc llllo u i name of
N A M « LAW
J77 0040
or per I lot Yog and tach ot you or*
estate to whom a copy ol this R E N T A W H E E L , and that I in
N O TIC E IS H E R E B V G IV E N
hereby notified thal on Action lo
Notice ol Administration has been land to register M id name with the
* * * * * * * *
that the undersigned, desiring to
Q u it! T ill* on Ih* following
mailed are required. W ITH IN C lerk ot the C ircu it Court.
engage In business at P O Boa
described property in Seminole
T H R E E M O N TH S FR O M TH E Jem mole County, Florid* In ac
1101 Rl the City ol Altamonte
County. Florida, to aril:
O A TE
OF
TH E
F IR S T cordanc* with the provisions of the
Springs. County ol Seminole and
L o ll I and I . flock D . South
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS Fictitious Nam* Statutes. To W it:
the State ol Florida, under the
Altamonte Haights, according to
N O T IC E , to tile any obiections Section 443 44 Florid* Statutes
name
of
"U N IL E A S E .
A
AVON REFREIENTATIVIt
plat tharaof recorded in Flat Book
they may have that challenge the l f » .
D IV ISIO N OF U N IT E D I EA S IN G
Th* Port Tim * Carter
A Fog* *, Public Records of
qualifications
ol
the
personal
CO M P A N Y O F IL L IN O IS ", In
Slg
TH E
V -N O T
COR.
*44 J474 - Collect *33 *70*
Semin*la County, F lor Ido;
representative, or the venue or P O R A TIO N
tends to register the said name
ho* boon lllod against you and
jurisdiction ol the court.
with the Clerk ol Circuit Court ol
Publish August 14. JJ. JO. A
LFN 11 J port llmo. J 1| part
ooch of you ond you or* required I*
A L L C LA IM S . D E M A N O S , A N D September a. Iff I
Seminole County, Florida.
lim*. Apply Lokovtow Nursing
III* a copy of your written
O B JE C TIO N S N O T SO F I L E D DEL If
B V ; s James S. Barry,
Cwdor.fltE Jnd I t , Unford
rasponaas l o U . i l any,on R O B E R T
W ILL B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
President
C.
F
R
O
S
T,
Attorney
for
P
U
in
F
IC
T
IT
IO
U
S
N
AM
B
Date of the flrel publication of
Publish: August JJ. X . September
FM Waitresses, Experienced In
I Iff I I I . whoa* address it I D Luaf l*
Nofke Is hereby glvon thal I am
this Notice el AdmMteireiion:
A II. If ll
lln* dining Apply In person
Court, DeLand. Flaridd. 1J7JQ. and
engaged In business al J i t Elm
August JO. 1441
D E L IIS
Monday thru Friday l a p m
Ilia tha original with tha Clork at
A v ., Santord. F I., JJ77I g*4l,
s Louise W Blair
r tttf v ^ Mil, Dolton*.
tha above alyladCaurlanor before
Seminole County, Florid* under
A t Personal Representative
September |7, I N I . Otherwise a
the ftclllious name of L E E
of the Estate ol
Judgment may ba antarod agatnat
FRANK
JO S E P H
B L A IR , B R O TH ER S , and that I M end la
★ *** * ★ * ★ ★
tot the
register M id name with the Clerk
aka
of the Circuit Court, temlnof*
F R A N K B L A IR . O k a
Witness m y hand and seal of this
County. Florid* In accordanco
F R A N K B L A IR , JR ..
Court on Ih* 11th day of Auguat.
with the provisions ot th* F k IN I.
tltiou* Nam* Slatufas, T o w it:
a tto r n e y for p er so n al
IS C A L I
Section *4314 Florida Statutes
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
A R T H U R H . B E C K W IT H JR .
Ito .
TH O M AS A. S P EE R
C L E R K O F C IR C U IT C O U R T
Slg. H arry Lao, Jr.
CLOSED LABOR OAY
of S P E E R A S P E E R . F A
II
C ap it an, gu ardian o f
S B M IN O L R
C O U N TY,
Individual
CORNIBOP MN
P O Boa IJ44
t h t g n trin c a to Y o s s m it*
FLO R ID A .
H arry Lee J r . T T E B Far
AND PRBNCN
Santord. Florida 33774
V a lle y , l i th e laryest e is M a
B y: Cynlhla Proctor
E O H arry Loo
Telephone (JOS) 11104*1
granite ro c k In th * w o rld . It
Ooputy Clork
Publish August IS a I S i
Yaw totoraopri
Publish August X . A September 4.
PwbUM) August IA IJ. JO. A Sop
its 3 7 0 0 foot u p fro m
September 4, Iff I
tf41
* * * * * * * *
I ember A I N I
DEL N
O C L fJ
flo o r o f th a valley. | D E L ISI

MARRIAGE
LICENSES

831-9993

322-2611

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES

1 or 7 bdrm apartments, clean
and quirt No children or pets
Coll X ) 3411 otter 4 p m
FU R N . or unlurn apt J Ddrm
tISOmo Nopets
Call X ) 4X4

JO B IN F O R M A TIO N
Alaskan and Overseas em
ploym enl.
G reat
Income
potential Coll 407 *41 10 14
Dept
4400
Phone Coll
Refundable

H O U RS

in la y csvntry living? 1 te rm
A g ti. O ly m p ic s i. Paal.
Shenandoah Villa**. Open 4-4.
1712411
_____

TELEPHONE SOLICITORS

Santord — t Ddrm t dan.
ceramic
bath,
furn itu re
available, adults. X13 mo. 1
M l 70*1__________________ ___

DEADLINES

Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday

U

bbdiad M RM M * nL|W

J BDRM. I Bath. Large Living
Dm , corner (tn and Elin 3X33
mo « 1330 dep 114 7310 days
or 111 3143 evenings

Ijy lu a

n c u n y TTOJf p w i PwTTWl

01323-2*11
C IR C U L A T IO N D E P T .

J BDRM . J blh cen A C. W W
carpel wash dryer, pool *J10
No pets X J 4411

BUILDING PERMITS

• ABORTION 9

9-OoodTNngi
Eat

S-LortAFound

legal Notice

Wa Taka Food Stamps
LEROY FARMS
SR44
Watoon'tOM Farm

L tg o l N o tlc t

n-rlmtrurtions

legal Notice

'D

1917 FRENCH AVI,

RN Full Time 7 J Shill Apply ol
Lakevlew Nursing Center. 414
E 7nd St., Sonlord
A T T E N T IO N Housewives Kids
back In schoolT Want to tarn
eatr* money? Olan Mills is
looking for enthusiastic people
lor telephone work Contact B
Tinsley Days Inn I 4 and S.R
44

C O M M U N IC A TIO N Specialist I
starting salary t i l l per week J
positions available
High
school grad with I year radio
dispatching experience in
public safely or lew en
lorcem ent. A pply Seminole
County Personnel, Court
House. N Park Av* Santord
by Sept. II. I N I . Applications
accepted Mon Frl. I X a m
to noon E O E M F H V .

RN OR LPN
4 11 and 111 Shllt Full time
Apply In person Santord
Nursing Convalescent Center,
430 Mellonvlll* Av*.
Experienced R .N . Executive
position usual hours I to 4
weekends oft. Apply In person
Sanford Nursing Convalescent
Center, 430 Metlonvllle Av*.,
Santord See Mrs. Hollenbeck
S E C R E T A R Y IV starting salary
1141 per week high school grad
J
years
experience
in
secretarial clerical
work
Ability lo type *3 words per
min shorthand, or dictaphone
100 words per min Apply
Seminole County Personnel,
Court House. N. Park Ava
Santord by Sept. I L IN I.
Appllcettons Mon. F rl. *:M
a m to noon E O E M F H V
H O U S EW IV ES . Orandmolhers
for part time and full time
telephone sales No experience
necessary. Harbor Lighting,
401 Cornwall Rd X I 4X7.
Immediate opening Dey Shill
Night Shllt tor taw operators
and general labor. Apply
American Wood Products Mill
O lllce 100 M a rv in Ava.,
Longwood
H A IR S T Y L IS T wanted
with following Immed
Cell Delores X J 7310
R E G IS T E R E O N U R S E
Two positions available with
leading home health agency at
stall nurse Home health
experience helpful excellent
M lary and benefits For op
pointment JJI MOO or 114)707
E O E ___________________ __
IN F O R M A TIO N on ALASKAN
and O V E R S E A S employment
Excellent income potential
Call 1)1)1 741 47)0 Exl 4X4
Open 7 day*.
Security O ilk e r
Phone 17) *74?
Semi not* County Area
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
SKILLS
For growing firm in Santord.
Musi be able to type 33 word)
per minute. Writ* Box 111 C O
Evening Herald. F O Box 1437
Santord. Fla 3377*

• sp v tv *. n * .Y . ■

to -

M tllo n v llit
Tra ct
Apt*.
Spacious, modem J Bdrm. 1
Bath apt. Carpated, kit
equipped.
CHAA.
Near
hospital L lake Adults, no
pets 4770 1 X 41SJ
PARK AVE J bdrm, kids. air.
«1S0 dn *343 mo 114 7100
SAV O N R B N T A L 4 R E A L T O R
I B DR M Wall to wall carpet.
Cent H A
Convenient to
downtown 1143 mo 111 7747 or
X I t**l_______________________

LUXURY

A P A R T M E N 4*

F a m ily A Adult* soctlon.
Poolside 1 Bdrms. Master's
Cove Apts. I X 7400. Open on
weaken*.

Lake Mery Cleon Fum Apt.
Rellabled M an only. No
children, pels X ? 1410

1 Bdrm with Balcony New
furniture, Cent H A. Well to
W all carpet convenient to
Downtown 1X3 mo X I 77*7
or 111 1441

SANFORD

O R A N G E C IT Y - 17 ft, 1000 tq
II business condo. New,
beaulilul. in Whispering Pines
Ideel tor professional offices
or restaurant 1X3) X ) 14)4

17-B—RwtUI OffiCM
SA N FO R D
7000 tq It. II. Industrial or
Commercial Building on 17 4).
1.000 ft. in office ipace Coll
X I 1310 or *14 414).
Ottict Spec*
For Loose
410 7X1

40— Condominiums •
Condo lor rent 1 bdr. I' i bath
In Sanlord
__________Call 17) 0443________ .
Condo 1 bdrm. I'-j blh washer
dryer. *400 mo 4 month leas*
min immediate occupancy
Call I X 3310 a m or alter 3

4l-Houses

Santord I Bdrm. Kids. Pets 1100
Down 1700 Mo X 4 7X0
SAV ON R B N T A L t R B A L TO R
Furnished apartments tor Smior
Cilifens 111 Palmetto Av*., J.
Cowan No phone calls
I BDRM Wall to Wall carpet.
Cent H A, New furniture,
fireplace, screened balcony,
convenient lo downtown 4730
mo Call 1J1 7747 or X U 1441

31A—Ouptoxes
S A N F O R D new 1 b d rm .

7 D#th Lake Av*
444 Ilia
SANFORD — J bdrm . carport,
kids, 443 wk. 114 7X0
IA V -O N R B N T A L t B B A L T O B

Rag. R a il Estate I
H I 4471
Bv* D i m a
A T T E N T IO N G O L F E R S ! II you
want lo live close lo Ih*
Beautiful
M a y la ir
C o ll
Course, this 1 Bdrm . 1 Bath
Spacious home Is ID* location
lor you Large fenced yard.
Fam ily Rm, Cent. HA are
some ot th* lectures Add Ih*
assumable m ortgage end
Idyllwild* Elementary tor tn*
children end you've got a
Super buy at 131.700 HAA
buyers warranty

Harold Hall

Lake Mary new 1 bdr . kids o k.
1100 X4 7100
SAV O N B B N T A L S B B A L TO B
| 1 bdrm. 1 B 7341 Ridgewood
Ave , Senlord Kit. turn.. SXS
mo ♦ dep No pets. X I 1X1
eves 741 0071 days. Call
Colltcf.
N E E D A S E R V IC EM A N ? You’ll
lind him listed in our Business
Service Directory.

SENIOR CITIZENS
Two M , two both
Mow k a g u U DaMmim

S32S MootMy
CriLM o Jo,
574-4414

SANFO R D - Idyllwild* School
- Newly painted m * out 1
BR. I I . li m rm . C H B A . Ig
tinted yd. no pets. 1171 mo. O
tec X I 4X1 or I X 1*44
Now J Bdrm. Oellona Country
Setting S17S Microwave &amp; sell
cleaning oven* JOS *44 *447.
J bdrm. ? bth enclosed garage,
cent, htat a ir, carpet, all
appliances U K mo lit si ond
teat m o , plus deposit, ref.
required, no pets. J X 1404.
C L E A N ) bdr. new carpet,
central heat a ir, p riv a cy
tenet, no pets. DSC plus
depotii. 17* P in ecre tt D r.
Santord.____________________
J BR. In Ground Pool. Country
Chip Manor. Santord. F anted,
U M mo. 1st. last and 4 WB
Deposit 4471

P - H bww Furatotad

SPVTW'

For rent or least — I0.XO tq ft.
industrial or warehouse 414
W 1st SI., Santord X ) 1100

N E W L Y turn I Bdrm. Full
vqu.p Kit. Pool. Itl. last 4130
Security I yr lease 374 1731

Casselberry 1 bdr, J b. kids, pets
*373 dn 4113 mo I X 7700
IA V 041 R B N T A L t R B A L TO R

Wo have apartments and
dupiaiattorani.
Juno PooigRaoMy
Realtor J X *47*

17—Business Property

I BDRM. I Blh A C
W Wcerpet.niceSJIO
No pets X I 1441

Ibdrm . I B with
double cor garage, in
Deltona CollSia 1411

SANFORD - Reas wkly. A
monthly rat**. Util Inc. Kit.
300 Ook. Adult* 141 7NJ

New Smyrna Beach Luxurious 1
Bdrm ) Bath Townhouse. Pool.
Tennis, Sundeck, Color TV.
l o w oil season roles X » 10*4

1 BR. 7 BA 1X0. 1 Br. I Ba 3770
Pool B club house All appl
plus wash dryer. 1st. last mo
404 7*7 4747 404 JS7 7346

it you don’t bet lev* that want ads
bring results, try one, and
listen to your (t&lt;ont ring. Dial
X ! J* ll or 4JI 0441

C O M M U N ITY
B U L L E T IN
BOABDS ABE O B E A T CLASSIFIED A D I ABC
EVEN BETTEB.

14—Resort Properly

Santord t oar , util Included, kids
S40 wk I X 7700
IA V ON R E N TA L S R E A L TO R

For rent — nlc* retirement home,
with encloaed garage In
delightful D e B a ry. Alao J
bdrm, J ■ mobile- home In
Meodowtea By th* River. Four
Townes Realty Inc. Broker.
444 47M
_________________

SANFORD - Condo J DC. Uy
blh. wash dryer, lo share
immediolo occupancy, no
loose 4700 mo X J 3300

G E N E V A - Secret. 1 bdrm. air.
kids. pets. X U X * 7)00
SAV ON R E N T A L S R B A L TO R

7.000 sq. It It Industrial or
Commercial Building on 17 41.
1.000 tt. in office space Coll
X ) 5310 or 4J4 4I41

T w o question*'“ W lff you be
imane tally Independent in ) to
S years? A r t you paid what
you are worth? It not call X I
4404

Santord — Female wants to
shore Dor homo with mature
working temal*. X 14I4J

14-Mobile Homes

Beautiful large 1 Bdrm In city,
quiet area
*343 mo. ♦
Security I M » M M

Winter Springs J J . Fam ily Rm ,
inaideutility, woodod tot. I47S
444 0017.

To S t a r t

574-1040

Commercial Building for rent.
1300 tq tt 1400 m o .
1st k te tt X I t4lt

bdrm from 1330. J bdrm Irom
U N Located 17 43 lust South
ot Airport Blvd in Santord All
Adults X J 1470

I

D E L T O N A — 7 bdr. carport, tool
shed, wall air conditioner
Newly decorated No Pelt
mo

Ridgewood A rm s ? B drm
Apts from S37S J Bdrm also
avail. Pool, tennis court X J
4470

Mariner"! VlTugPOn Like Ada. 1

R e g itttre d Nuraes Charge
position f o r ) II and I I 7 Shills
Casual Stalling available.
Excellent Benefit Plan Apply
Americana Healthcare Center
1414 Bedford R d . Orlando
EO E
D IS TR IB U TO R S H IP Available
Reliable, ambitious, person lo
represent respected Company
locally Excellent earnings:
good luturel Call tor ap
pomlmenl al 374 X34

CAUUM Ut

'V v r ^ t x s e

B4m booCoveFrom ll40
I Bedrnsm Apts Available
Shown by Appt Only. X I 1340

Eaperienced Cooks oil snitfs.
needed Foxfire Restaurant.
Hwy 17 47 Santord

CaM Mia P iu e ria oI Santord.
Waitresses wanted apply in
person

11— Houses Furnished

U n fu m iitad

P M Cashier Hostess must hove
pteoMnt personality Monday
Thursday I p m . lo l i p m
Apply In person Monday
Friday I 00 p m lo f p m
Deltona Inn 374 44*1

Orlando-W inter Park

Sem inole

DIVORCES

10-Apwtrmnh

tt-Hth&gt;Vttrrtri____

Legal Notice

SANFORD cozy cottage, air,
kids, Sal dn SIM mo. J X 7M

SAV-ON RENTALS BBALTOB

REALTY, INC.
REALTOR

MI-5774

WE H A V i B U Y E R !
W up 10 310.000 Cash down

MR. INVESTORCheck these toll
CO M PLETELY remedeleg J
unit apt heuse w-farg* reams,
peddle Ians, imaka alarms +
positive cask flew I 447.4*411
A separate guest heust ter
year teenager cemes w this
IlM s q ltlk d rm h e m e w ^ a t.H i !
kitchen. Dining Rm. large
bdrms. f tovely fenced yard ,
tor *nly 447.4*411
EAS Y A S S U M P TIO N an this 4l ' i CB spill plan w Cen H A.
W -W cpI, Drapes. Rge,
Dispasal. scr perch -f fenced
earner toft Best price in areal
Call quick at 444,71*11
CLEAN ,
CLEAN ,
CLEAN
dtscrlh as this a n y livin g
heme and its netphbarhapdl
Panelled Fam Rm, aal ln kll
w R ge + Ref. B*p I
nd
utility kWgs ♦ 4* ■ I I I land
scaped tot lar 4X .4N

•

NEED PRIME EXPOSURE?
Wx have tore separate parcel!
with eicallent franlag*.
RMO I lined I bdrm tn i l l p
744 parcel w po*stole *wiser
I maneIng at 1*4.444 and • RC-I
tanad I tanad J bdrm w *a ■
III tot tor II4.404H

_____ CALL M l-J 774
Lit a ClassMlod Ad help y,
more room ter *ti
Classified Am find I
last

CONVENIENCE
Good salary, hoapttoliiotien. 1
week gold vacation every
fhontna. E ip e ritn c o
no'
necessary F o r interview:
Phone Ih* manager of:
Airport Bled.

U ) -* ! lt
1X1771

Calory Av*.
Lake Mary

ix -a ix
ix-tsai

xfwdgj - -

�41—Houses

41—Houses

41—Houses

A LL FLORIDA R EALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

Custom built J ) w great rm ,
garage, on dbl wooded tot
ill,to o w assume 10' I S mtge
JJ ) J t )J alter $

O W N ER W IL L F IN A N C E
Large ] RR. IB Fam ily Home in
(Mrn but very private E i
cellent condition Including
brand new roof A painting
Yours tor tse.eoo Must lee

Excellehl Butinet* opportunity
in good location Complete
Hock included m thli price ot
* ' iiw o
Alter Hour*.- x t toco i l l 477*

O S TE E N Smait j Barm nome
. Newly remodeled, new ap
pliances Fenced lot 72x139 )
116 soo 31* s m , jay sail

*7 000 B ELO W F H A Appr$&gt;i$l. )
bdr. I ' i btn. brick, carport,
tented yard
Completely
renovated, new root
At
tractive financing 1)000 dn
ills mo Open Sun I a I lf
Bethune C r l, Sanlord
' __________ j j j u i i___________
C U STO M
built
homes
remodeling
A
additions
Johnny Walker Const L T D
M ) aUT

S TE M P E R A G E N C Y
OW NER A N X IO U S Must sell J
Bdrm, l Bath Walt to wall
carpel, fireplace.
Above
ground pool Large lot
Asking
IJJ.SOO
1 ACRES C L E A R E D Fenced on
It'd** Good pasture and farm
land Nice location, for house
or Mobile Home llt.SOO
B U IL D IN G LO TS $ lots In
Beautiful Geneva close to
schools, shopping, church, and
Post Ollice Good Terms Only
*4,000 Ea
R E A L TO R J U s t l l Day or Night

Roiiirs
MALTY

R E A L T O R . MLS
J i l l t . French
Suits a
laniard

24 HOUR 0 322-92*3

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

LABO R O A Y SPECIALS
I Acre Z G C J Sewer and water
Priced tor Quick sale Term s
IJJ.SOO
1 9 Acres Z A ) J Br. Home, J Br
Mobile Root cellar Fish tank,
100 FI Walerlront Terms
M 1,500
Like New a 2 C A H, Carpeted,
screen
porch
Enclosed
garage. Owner financing
Good Terms Asking SSI.500

B A T E M A N -R E A L T Y
Lie. R tal Estate Broker
J$ao Sanlord A v t

321-0739

332-7*4)

Large Nam e home In Lake Mary
on beautIIul wooded acre. J
bdrm, Fla rm or ath bdrm, I'y
B. C H A . carpel, drapes,
garage, carport llt.fOO 111
Ilia

HAl COLBKRT REALTY
lac.

323-7132

JU S T FOR Y O U ! } bdr, U y bth
home, on large landscaped tat.
completely fenced! Nice tat in
kit. dining rm . largt patio,
utility rm and moret D f.fM t

10 ACRES W O O D E D R O LLIN G
H IL L S IN G E N E V A A R EA
usoo p e r a c r e , s e l l e r
F IN A N C IN G , M A Y O IV IO E .
J ' l A C R E S . T A L L P IN E S .
G E N E V A . ItJ.ttO . LOW IN
TER EST
ASSUM ABLE
M O R TG A G E
*

S UP ER t j bdr. 1 bth home In
great condition! Largo eat ln
kit. porch, utility rm A morel
sal. leg

J A C R E S C L E A R E D L A N D 14
P AO LA 111.000

W H A T A B U Y i j bdr. l bth. can
H A, split bdr plan, dining
arta. patio, lanced, convenient
areal
Good
investm ent!
&gt;11,104

i c l e a r e d d u p l e x l o t s in

S A N F O R O 112.S00 E A C H .
ZONEO f o r q u a d s o r o f
F IC E S
700 ON t i n . n e a r n e w
W INN D IX IE C E N T E R COM
ING A T L A K E M A R Y BLVD
ZONEO
C O M M E R C IA L .
S1)1.00

R iO O R W O O D A C r t S t ttvpfai
tell Zoned, all utilities, peved
reads. Naar
SHSt
W ill
subordinate far bwlldars. Airy
newt Build new er later I Just
It leftl Freni IU .1 M I
M A Y F A IR V IL L A S ! 1 A 1
Bdrm .. 1 Beth condo Villas,
n a il to M aylalr Country Club.
Salad your lot. I H o t plan A
interior decarl Ovality can.
itr u d td by Shenmaktr tar
Mr,taa A upt

322-2420

tu t

P art

O P E N H O U S E 10 4
Osceola A El Portal J br. 2 ba.
cent a ir heat, eat In kit,
*49.500 Owner will carry mlg
with 110.000 down at 1) % In
teresl lor tl mo or FH A , VA
Michael fi Capko
Lie Real Estate Broker
aae t no, j j j m s

4 H O M E S ITE S IN O R AN G E
G R O VE A T U M A T IL L A . 17100
e a c h , c r a z y ter m s
4 r a c r e s w o o d e d l ik e a
P AR K, ON T O P O F A H I L L IN
G E N E V A . &gt;40,000. T E R M S
A V A IL A B L E .
7 'i A C R ES W O O D E D ROAD
F R O N T A G E IN O S T E E N .
SD.SOO

S i lG L E R R E A L T Y B R O KER

EMMS

42—Mobile Homes
77 Tamarack IJ&gt;40 J bdrm. I B.
cent A M 110 E ie ttr Crl,
Carriage Cove. $7,J00 llnan
clng pottlble tor right buyer
by owner 1)1 j e u
New 14 a 70 Royal Oakt. ) bdrm.
1 B, 114,441. or 14 a 44 I bdrm.
IVy B. I l l . f t l delivered A u l
up within ISO milee. We have
VA I Inane Ing, no money down
or conventional 10 \ down
E a iy financing only at Uncle
Roya Mobile Home Salee U l .
ail Leetburg (4041 747 0)74.
open w e tk n lp h lt 'til 7:10,
. Sundayl 11$ p m

D O N 'T S TO R E IT . S E L L I T with
a low cost Classified Ad
A S S U M A B LE - No qualifying
14% 2nd mlg can b t held by
owner $41,000 7 br, 1 ba. tal in
kit, family room A reading
room
Mlchaal R. Capko
Broker Owner
i$e m a o r m u s s

T H IS If NO M IS P R IN T
New 14 x $0 Royal O a k t) bdrm. )
B. fireplace, cathedral calling,
great room , garden tub.
completely lurnlthed A many
more extrae, only 1)1,710
delivered A ft* up wllhln 110
milee. VA no money down,
conventional 10 \ down Shop
Uncle Roy't Mobile Home
Saiet in Laetburg. on aai
South. (4041 712-0)4. Open
weeknlghtt 'III 2:10, Sunday!
12 4 p m.____________________

Alger A Pond

)

bdrm, I bth. living dining
room, kllchen equip! Drape*
and air included Screened
oorch, located Carriage Cove
Park Alter 5 p m 1211441

l i e our beautiful naw BRO AD
M O R E , front A raar A R 't
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E HOM ES
jaoi Orlando Dr
1211)00
VA | F H A Financing_____

C A LL

323-7843

D H W
' Sal W. Lake M ary Blvd
JJ4 D R IF TW O O D V IL L A G E

\ IS | |
i(l

Luxurious Home W ith A ll
Amenities. 1 Bdrm, a Bth. Pool,
a Acres, Great Financing, One
Year Warranty 1111.000

C a ll P r i n k

r

32J-EW O

---------------------------

i

{
* &lt;

I

H P R iding M ower 1700
M encan Bar a r t 4 Bar Chair*
1110 S lrtl File Cabinet, 1
Drawer S10 1)1 lei*

When you place a detained Ad
In The Evening Herald. Hay
clo u lo your phone became
tomelhlng wonderful I* about
lo h a o n e n . ____________
N E W F A T IG U E P AN TS 111 44
AR M Y N A V Y SUR PLUS
IIP Sanford Ave_________ D ) S741
4 S TR IN G banjo 140. trumpet
120. new elec guitar SS0. new
twing u t ISO Will bargain
_____________222 7247
Ceramic Mold*
And Kiln
Altar S, 1)2 4447.

51—Household Goods
U P R IG H T piano. che»1 iretje r.
wait unit bookceu, vectional
tola, recliner chair, cotlee A
end table. B W TV A cedar
cheat ) ) ) ) 1 4 )
ST ER EO — Combination, lot* ol
extra*. 10 gal aquarium, with
all accettorlet, detk chair, ]
pc vinyl living rm tet, dining
table chair*
See lo ap
predate Santord Crt Apt leal
apt. lar rear ol complex 4 4
Sat . Sun A Mon 1)41 S
Sanford Ave Apt 44

D E R A R V 1 Br. f B, Ig. reams,
lovely lot semt turn, washer
and d ry tr 1)4,404.
O W NER M O T IV A T E D I E r, 2 ■
Lg. kitch. Owner financing.
s o ,ta t.

■ E L -A IR J Br. ) A, remadeled
New appl. A carpets. F P L .
Lovely yard. D I M M .
r ea lto r

After hrs. SIMMS and m ilt*

CASH FO R E Q U IT Y

W t buy equity In H o u ttl,
apartment*, vacant land a r t
Acreage
L U C K Y IN V E S T
M E N T S . P. O. BOX 2100, San
lord, Fla » 2 7 ) I D 4741

&lt;74 fold
We pay ta th toe 1st A 2nd
mortgage* Ray Lagg, L k .
m no*.

S3-Boats fcAccRssortes

Animal Haven Kennel* boarding
A grooming Needed L h a u
Apto A tmatl tllver poodle for
itud Mate owner* call 12)
STS)

66-Horses
Appaloou regittered Hud. black
with while blanket Alto 17
month old filly, u m e color
17)471$ alter $

_ 1_

•4' liberal*** boat
F u lly
ju t ta b t f f ra m e r j j s o
Bred th aw A y r ) ) ] IS«$

H aving trouble telling your
norte? Call Bob Sleight 404
141 taoi______________________

ad
jo j

67—Li vestock- Pou Itry

Piano for tale Lirtm a n A Son*
upright with bench, clr 1410
good condition *710 Call ) ) )
4)01 alter S p m
Like New Mutefle Player Plano
Can be played m anual,
Electric, or Pump US Roll*
included 11700
Yamaha E S Concert Organ with
) Large Letlie Speaker* 1)400
1)1)041 ____________________
1440 THOM AS Playmate
organ with bench
1)1 1)7$
U P R IG H T
Piano (TOO
12) 1411 alter Sp m

Wile# Sale* N U T R E N A Feed*
Hwy 44 W. — 1)14470
Hog F iniiher Pellet*
IS 41
Layer C
*140
Cattle Fallener Peltelt
*1)0
Brel Kwik
|4 45

M FT
T R A V E L IrAller good
condition and furnilh ed
Ta rto m axle 12) TK1

17) 1$4I

Are you a full lime driver with a
part lime c a r) Our ciatiilied*
are loaded with good buy lor
you

7) BUICK Air. till
wheel, clean 47S0
1)1 4140
Hey Kid*- Looking tor an extra
dollar) A ik Mom A Dad to let
you have a c ia tiilie d ad
garage tale
l ^ A Y t O N A A U T O A U C TIO N
Hwy 47. I mil* weal ol Speed
way. Daytona Beach, will hold
a public A U T O A U C TIO N
every Wedneidayat I p m 111
the only on* in Florida You w t
the reierved price Call 404
m i n i lor further detail*

Uied Car Part* all make* a r t
model* 17) 7*4} We buy Uied
Cart and Truck*

* B &amp; H Auto Sales*
*339-7989*

CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
____________ 1)4 4444____________

1471010* Regency
$1477
1474 Bulck LaSabreCultom 119*4

77— Junk Cars Removed
B U Y JU N K CARS A T R U C K ! '
From 110 to IJO or m or«
______ Call 1)7 1414,1)7-4440
Too Dollar Paid tor Junk A u**d
cart, truck* A heavy equip
menl 31) 5440

'40
Bonneville
drougham .
D ie u l. loaded. 41444
•tl Pontiac Sunblrd Like new.
1)111
'44 Pontiac Firebird, a clatilc.
41)11
Bank financing available
U N . Hwy. 17 4)
C a iu lb e rry
■74 C U TLA S S P5. PB, PW, A T.
Air. $1)30 or bett otter or ac
cept trade 111 17)0

XL 7) Honda
t)7S
1)11714 alter 4.
Honda CM 700 E tc Cond Low
milage 70 mile* per gallon
Pleate call )7t 0444 or 171 SSll
Honda 14)4 CB4S0. 4 cyl. 5S00
Mile* Look*, run* like new SJ
mpg *1400 12) 7111
M oving to a newer home,
apartment) Sell "d o n T need*”
fait with a want ait

G O A T S \O R SA LE

1444 C A M A R O 417 4 Ip d .
header*. H olly carburetor,
candy apple red. run* itrong
Price 11130 Day* 144 53*7.
eve A weekend* 17) 4344
1410 P O N TIA C Sun Bird 4 cyl
17.000 mile*, auto Tran*., air,
AM FM cattctle Sler exc
condition Takeover payment*
*1*4 or relln $1400 17) 4171
^ 24 Hr Wrecker S e r v ic e ^
Hlghett price* paid for |unk or
uied cart A truck*

+

7IA-Mopedi

68— Wanted to Buy
Antique* Diamond* Oil
Painting* Oriental Rug*
Bridge* Antlqua*
111 7401
Aluminum, cant, copper. lead,
brat*, tllver. gold Weekday*
4 4 10. S it 4 1 KoKoMo Tool

co 4ii w iii si m noo

1474 M O TO B E C A N E (top ot the
line) SOCC Recently rebuilt
engine Very good cond , in
elude* teddle baikelt A,Xing
4400 All 4 p m 1)1 a55)
Ciatiilied Ad* will alwayt give
you more
Much , Much
More than you expect

DM 4W i f

74 VW Rabbit - 4dr . 4tpd. air.
tlare o. good cond. atklng
1)100 1)1 0400. eve* 1)1 4)1)
71 T B IR D Loaded. New Tire*.
Blue with White Top. or 74
Cutlat* Supreme No money
d o w n tl) mo 1)4 *100.114 440)
Dealer

CONSULT OUR

BUSINESS SERVICE USTING

SlA-FwnHura

AND LET AN EXPERT DO TH E JO B

KWg d ie bod. (N o fra m tl MB.
Good Condition
___________ * 0 2114,___________

To List Your Business...

Sofa Bed. plaid, like new
Firtt ADS oiler can have It
Call 1)0 40)1

Diol 322-2611 or 831-9993

W ILSON M A lE R F U R N IT U R E
I I I 111 E F IR S T ST.
___________ 111 *41)
N IC E Tw in Dbl recondition
bedding StO Sel Santord
Auction 1)11 A French. 12)
7)40

Air Conditioning
C h ru will itrv lc a AC'*, ralrlg,
ire e ie n , water cooler*, mi*c.
Call 11)47)7.

52— Appliances
Ken mure part*, ttrvlca , uted
wether* M O O N E Y AP P LI
ANCES 1)1 0**1
STO VE - electric. Whirlpool,
bronie Eac cono U&gt;*&gt;
177 3497

Good Uted TV'*, 12S A up
M IL L E R S
)4 lt Orlando Fr
Ph 17)0)17

54—G in g t Sites
BIG rerd talc — 107 Driftwood
Ln O ' i mile behind Jack
Proller Ford on Lake Mary
Blvd I Turn lett Sat Mon 4 1
no early arrival* Clothe* all
tile*, li t 14 in radial lire*,
mite
Cietitlied ad* u r v e tho buying A
tailing community every gay
Read A ute them oil an

M O V IN G E v e ry th in g goat,
make oiler Baby clothe* A
(urn. ate Call 1)147)7 Hidden
Like*

Baauty Cars

AUCTION

Animal Haven Boarding a r t
G room ing K enneli Shady,
■ntulated. tcrerned. lly proof
m var. outndr runi Fani
Alio AC cauei We cater to
your pel*
Starting tlu d
regufry Ph ) } } 573)

1

i

tains • Highway Frontage • Peved Roads • Paved Parking • 5 Executive Homes • Two Office Bldg*- *
| • 7 (1 to 2 acre) Lots • Excellent for Corporate Headquarters • Corp. Training or Mfg. Facilities. |
|

j

(305) 339-4333

|

Tomorrow Roalty It Auction Co.f Inc., Broktr

i

P.O. Box 1930 •MalUand, Fla- 32761

i

\

I

»

\ * »

Paddle fan* inttallad.
rttidenllal alectrical work,
call 111 4)45

H andym an

Painting, carpentry, all typt* of
homt rapalr* Call tor Ire*
animate 11) 1*75

Building Contractor

W n iU -L o c k

N EW Concrata Building!, all
lilt* 470 A up Al 1 4 A SR 44 1
4 Influilrlal Park, 1110041

N u r s in g C a n la r

O UR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
Lakevifw Nursing Center
f i t E. Second St.. Santord
M l 4707

tte u lln g t
Y a r d W o rk
Little wanl adl bring big. big
retullt Ju tl try one ) ) ) ) 4 I 1
or 4)1 944)

Rtmodtling Specialist
We h artielh *
Who I* Ball of Wax

9. E. Link Const.
822-7029

N E E D A S E R V IC E M A N ) You'll
find him Hated in our Butina**
Directory

O d d Jo b s
P L U M B IN G .P A IN T IN G ,
H A U L IN G
) ) ) *311

Vacation llm* I* her*,, get w tnl
you n ttd for a happy llm* with
a C lauiliad Ad.

J A R Home Improvement —
Carpentry wor* of Ony typo.
Root repair*, gutltr work,
painting (inltrlor or extarior),
plumbing, tpaclalita In moblt*
horn* repair* A root coaling,
and wood pallo decks Froa
animate ) ) ) *044

Financing Ay*(labia

Rost Homos
• Oak Haven Rett Home a
•DeLanda
Small hom t Ilka A C L F facility
tifu iltd very pleetent location
thort dittanc* from city )4
hour tu p tr v itlo n , meal*,
laundry, attitlan ct with bath
A per tonal grooming L a rg t
fenced In ya rd , air con
dillonlng P rivate A t t m i
private roomi Call 71*4451

M in t in g

A lii C o rio . Slat* Certified
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r.
Rttidenllal or Commercial,
New or Remodeled T il 0444

Hom s

O a a n ln a

R EN TA L C LEA N O U TS
From l i l
C a ll)))* )))

CanmlcTIte

H o m t Im p ro v s rra n t
It

you are having difficulty
finding a place to live, car to
drive, a |ob, or *omt ttrv lc o
you have need ol, road all our
wanl ad* every day
Ciatiilied Ad* are tha tmaIleal
big new* iltm t you will find
anywhere

Hallman Painting A Repairs.
Quality work. Fro* Eat, Disc,
lo Senior* 114 $490 Refer,
T E R R Y 'S IN TE R IO R S
W allpape ring, painting. Lota
price* Ouar work R IO t M

M in t in g 8 s r
P r e w u r e C t e a n ln g

ROOFS, leak* repairad. Rapiaca
ratten earn art iMnglt work.
Ilcanta'd, Iniured. bandad.

Miu m a n .

Chr 1*1lan Roofing If yr*. tap.
144 S7S4. tree e*t Rarootlng.
ipacla lllt in rapalr work A
now rooting___________________
S O U TH E R N R O O FIN G tl yr*
exp. roroofing- took ipaclal
144. OepfnaabI* A honetf
price Day or night 111 111]

No fob too larg* or $m*ll.
Quality a mutt Call M l 0071.
Reference* Fr. E tl

Clock Ragalr
SARPiLASTIWR
•Avisarf loima

H o m s R e p a ir s

% 22 ( ± ) Acres • Zoned IR • Sewer &amp; Water • 41,500 eq. ft. of Bldgs. • 1VS acre cement Lake w/Foun-!

Write or Call Today for your FREE Color Brochure

Quality alectrical work Tl yrk.
experience Minor rapalr* to
COmplalt wiring 12)0114

Snow Hill Ktnnal otter* Cat A
Dog Flea Bath* IS up )4
Hour. Full Service 143 3717

G W A L TN E Y JE W E L E R
104$ Park Ave.
1)14)04

a

30V. Down • Bel. &lt;tt 14% Interest Only • 14 Montha

io y n . tap a h
type* of titc lrlt l work at fair
price* I D aiM.

e l e c t r ic ia n

Boarding AGrooming

M E IN T Z E R t i l e
New or repair, leaky ihowert our
tpecialfy,23yr* Exp M T V * )

3150 Polnclana Blvd. • 5 mllas south of KlMlmmoe, Florida on Highway 17-02
4 5 miles to Disnsy World

E le c tric a l

TO W E R 'S B E A U T Y s a l o n
F O R M E R L Y Harriett'* Beauty
Nook )IV E III St , 177 J74)

Complete Ceramic Tit* Sanr.
wall*, lloort, countertop*, re
model, repair Fr. eat. 114 0)11

PREVIEW: Sept. 2-3-4-5-8-9-10 1:00 to 6:00 P.M.

| TERMS:

M O V IN G Sale Houirhold good*,
clothing, book*, children *
Item* No advance tale*
F r i , Sat. Sun 10$ p m 70c
Vmewood Dr Loch Arbor.
Sant

It'l ea*y to place a C le m lird Ad
We ll even help you word
it Call ) ) ) » l t

M A T T R E S S a r t box tp rin g t not
matched M at tret* new 44S
tel ) ) ) J4IS.

53—TV Radio-Stereo

Wt can cleat inMhrt
CallBart Real Eitale 11) 7*44

Y A R D tale Sept 1 7. I Tool*,
lawnmower. furniture, rug*
and etc ISO) S Elliott Ave

59-taslcal Instruments

One wedding gown tire tl 12,
Southern Belle tlyle, never
worn P atltrn t and material
lor vail. Complete wedding In
tilk llower* Call alter J p m
and weekend* 177 0447

i - - 1 \ u

MLS

M O N D A Y . Sept 7. e t o a p m 104
Rabun C rt Sanore South.
Sanlord

Monday, Sept, 6,7 p.m.
Lots Of Furniture
TV's, Mlsc.
Brick A Brae
3$ Cash, Visa MC
Am. Express,
• Sanford Auction e
1215 S. French Ave.
More info 323-7340

76— Auto Parts

Tw o
P o m e ra n ia n
P up pie* .
R r g ille rr d M ale and Fem ale
Mad Snot* Ph 111 OK*

S4—G arage Sates

T

THURSDAY • SEPTEM BER 10th • 1:30 P.M.
Polnclana Executive Office Center &amp; Industrial Park i

| LOCATION:

I

321-4041

2 2 1 -4 4 4 1

S optnlne* IsH.

SO—Miscellaneous for Sale

47—Ba il Estate W»nttd

Relax And Enioy The Country
Lrte J 1 Lovely Home, Den, a
Acres. Great Buy. V A I ' i S
Assumable I Y r W rlv $11,000

S A L E S A S S O C IA T E S
NEEDED

\ i

14)4 E L C AM IN O . P Up. fully
equip Ic y l M utt tell
C a ll))) t ilt

75—R ecreational Vehicles

P U P P IE S
Alatkan Malamute
mom A m»*tery lather S wk*
old black A tan ai*o black A
white 111 tL C 111001*

43—LotS-AcrMO*
SA N FO R D Prime la Sf Acret w
opt km t for coning 141.WO t
Te rm t W Malictowtkl J ) )
7411, E vet 1)2 1)47

• Labor Day Auction •

•••••••••••••••••a

G rrm a n Shrpherd M ale 1 Y r*
Super w ith c h ild r e n exc
Watch dog 1 TOO 1J2 57S)

14 I Marvell Gold Side by *&gt;de
Whirlpool Cot! SalO 4 40 Will
Ilka 4J4S Receipt* available
1)1 JOBS

REALTORS

79— Trucks-Trelte.s

For E tta te , C om m e rcial or
Rttidenllal Auction* A *p
preiteit Call D a lit Auction
11) 14)0

65— Pets-Supplies

Ride gone, t u t the m ln g tet inthe back yard l i n 'll Sail II with
a want ad. Call » ) 2 4 l l .

ASSOCIATES, IN C , R EALTO R S^

N e w ] Bedroom ) Bath Custom
Biiltl Fo rm a l L ivin g And
Dining Room, Fireplace Don't
MitS This Lovely Home JJJ
IMO

Don I DripAir Or Pull Your Hair
U ie A Want Ad JJJ Jttt or
411 444)

5 A C R E S W O O D E D , JACKSO N
BAY
AREA.
O STEEN .
$14.500, S E L L E R F IN A N
CIN G

) BR . Pool 104 Country Club
Drive V A , FH A Cony 114.000
New Root $47 ai00 Broker
Owner

G R O V E V IE W V IL L A G E houses
lor rent I yr lease, 1st mo
rent and security deposit, in
advance J bdrm, ) bath and )
bdrm and J bath models
available From I J l l lo 1410
per mo

LAKE MARY

Lawn Mower Sale* and Service
We Sell the Belt and Service
the Rett Bob Bail Wettern
Auto M l W ttt St

J A C R ES . TA L L P IN E S , SOME
P A S T U R E , R O AD F R O N T
A G E . R IV E R ACCESS. G E N
E v a ij s o o o

LOTS OF C H A R M I Spacious 1
bdr. J bth. I story home on 1
lots near downtown areal
Remodeled, equip kit., lorntal
dining, sun parch up stairs.
Fla
rm, patios A ta lra i
galore! *49.100

LO W D O W N P A Y M E N T I J
bdrm split plan homt with
workshop and utility room
F e n c td ya rd , in Sanford
Ownrr will finance 124.too

11 Office* Throughout
Central Florida

• F IL L D I R T A T O P S O IL
Y E L L O W SAND ,
Call Clark A Hlrt J J ) 7110

the "Good Ole Days” have
never left the Classified Ad
s
The Buys are still The
Beslt

REALTY, INC.

Eve* 177 0414
K P E .H t h St,

62—Lawn Garden

43—Lots- Acreage

W E L IS T a n o s e l l
M O R E H O M ES TH A N
A N Y O N E IN T H E
S A N FO R D A R E A

72— Auction

111 171$ after $

Sanford's Sales Leader

CALL ANYTIME
¥ Distress fala 3F
a Bdrm ., IVj Bath on $&lt; acre, in
ground pool. 10% re mods Iad
I D . 000 Down A assume
payments ot V110 per mo No
Qualifying Total IJS.OOO
___________ 111 oast____________

SO lru»*e*.
SO' long

Don’t pile no longer needed
items high as an elephant's
eye Place a classified ad. and
pile tha money in your w allgtl

th e

N U M B E R IS J J } J i lt

Sunday, Sept. 6, 1M1—7B

Evening Harold, Sanford, FI.

61—Building Materials

r eal esta te
r e a l t o r . 12) 7444

o «E p h o n e c a ll s ta r ts a
C L A S S IF IE D A D O N ITS
end

with Major Hoopla

Cal I Bart

IMIS. French 111 *111

r es u ltfu l

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

P k m t in f
Did Tabby have a little of kit
Ian*) Sell them with a fail
action C lauiliad Ad Call n )
M il or i l l *44)

Concrete Wbrk
L a n d s c a p in g
Concrete Work, footer*, lloort A
pools Landscaping A sod
F ro * o il 12)710)
it looking for your
M rfa in Oiler II today In tha
C lauiliad Ads

I MAN QUALITY OPERATION
t yr* exp Patio*, Driveway*,
etc Wayne Beal
|jjt

u a e iT N S iiN s u u n r
L fn rtttp fn g . Old Lawn* A*.
M aced 145 l a 1.

Fredd ie Rabln$on P lum b in g.
R epair*.' tawcot*. W . C.
Sprinkler*. I D 41V0. H1R794
F O N S E C A P LU M R IN G . C4Rafrucllan. Repair*. ■ mar pan
ty . L k ., B a rt M . in* S I 4141
Plumbing rapair — all lypat
walar heater* S pomp*
D IIO I

L a n d c te e r in g

Acreage A l« l Clearing
Fill dirt top soil
lor talo 111 1411

h a r p r r it r ir iir v ic i

Trimming. remavMg a Land
tcaamg Fra* l a . X M M .

it

C L A S S IF IE D A D S -A R E F U N
ADS R E A D A U S E T H E M
O F T E N . Y O U 'L L L IK E T H E
R E S U L TS

you a r t R aving M tfk w tty
finam g a place. l g U v * . c a t t*
drty*. * io*. o r tarn* t a r v k o
you h*yo n * M o f, ra o d a ll p g r
want * d t a va ry R ay.

�Evanlng Htrald, Sin ford, FI._______ $qnday, $apt.

jggj

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
We Didn't Pay King George
And We Won't Pay You...'
B) I'nllcd Pres* International
Massachusetts motorists, who (eel they were
wrongfully issued $70,000 in New York City parking
tickets, are trying to solve their problem in a
revolutionary way - with muskets, militiamen and a
cannon.
Twelve of them, supported by cannon fire and 25
militiamen with muskets, marched with fife and
drums Wednesday to City Hall and declared the tickets
were issued by a wayward computer.
"We didn't pay King George and we won't pay you,”
they said in proclamation to Mayor Edward Koch after
they fired their miniature cannon.
The event was arranged by Boston radio station disc
jockey Dave Maynard, who stumbled onto the ap­
parent computer snafu, while talking with listener
John Kestuccia. Hesluccia said he last traveled to New
York on a bus in 1965. He said he was wrongfully issued
$26,590 in parking tickets from 1975-1978.
He was not the only victim of the deluge of tickets. An
82-year-old woman in a nursing home also got some
and so did the two-wheeled air compressor and a police
motorcycle belonging to the town of Natick, Mass.
Neither machines ever left the state.

Who Is That Man?
When Itonald Heagan was nominated for the
presidency, there was Jerome Zipkin by his side.
Likewise at the post-election celebration. And at offilial galas for visiting royally. Who is Jerome Zipkin
and why dies he get invited everywhere? That's the
question Town St Country addresses In the September
issue. Nancy Heagan calls him "a sort of modern-day
Oscar Wilde" and fashion grande dame Diane
Vreeland says, "He is that rare species: a man of
leisure who is an American." He also is a
multimillionaire whose fa'her made his money in New
York real estate. He was a close friend of Somerset
Maugham and through Maugham met Jean Cocteau,
Noel Coward, Ian Fleming and other members of the
international elite. And he’s a bachelor.

Scottish Scrambled Eggs
Someone threw a couple of eggs at British Prune
Minister Margaret Thatcher in Scotland. They were
thrown from a crowd of about 1,000 demonstrators
shouting "Maggie out" at a factory in Renfrew where
nuclear power components are manufactured. Mrs.
Thatcher said she did not see the eggs, or the flour
which also was thrown at her car. About 200 police
were on duty to hold back the crowd, some of whom
demonstrated for Jobs while others called for nuclear
disarmament.

Names In The News
A spokesman for the U.S. Health Department says
fumed children's surgeon Dr. C. Everett Koop, 64, of
Philadelphia, a noted foe of abortion, will be nominated
surgeon general within a few days... “Peanuts"
originator Charles M. Schultz, 58, is said to be in good
condition and progressing rapidly following quadruple
Iwart bypass surgery in Santa Rosa, Calif... Former
President Jimmy Carter is in Japan for a six-day semi­
official visit, after spending 10 days in China ...

a

Buster Crabbe At 72
HeStill Looks Like He Could Wallop Creatures Of The Universe And Jungle
Editor's Note: For the pa-I two years bu­ he tOO-nieter freestyle event in the 1932
rner Hollywood star and Olympic gold medal Olympics in Ins Angeles in a swim stadium
swimmer Buster Crabbe served as national next lo the Coliseum.
spokesperson for Sanford's (mldeii Vgc
Crabbe, along with 1972 Olympic swim
Games, a national sports Icstiial lor those 55
and older.
By ItlCH Tost lll .s
IAS ANGELES itIP li
Sitlim n.-x* in
Buster Crabbe brings on an uneasy feeling
You keep looking warily around for the
alligators and lions Or waiting to get zapped
by Ming the Merciless, the evil emperor of the
universe. Or anticipating the rush of Killer
Kane and his battalions of robots
For Crabbe. those were everyday oc­
currences. And it's hard to imagine lie isn't
fighting the fantasy foes anymore
But Buster Crabbe
who as Flash Gordon
fought Ming the Merciless, and Hu&gt;k Rogers
battle Killer Kane and as Tarzan warded off
daily attacks by wild creatures
is now 72
years old
And those television shows and mm n-s. 1 the
!&lt;nns ami '4ns are long gone
But don't get me idea Crabbe is some an­
cient relic, some worn-out actor on the
doorstep of the Great Stage in tie Sky
Despite his age, he's still a tan dynamo, with
rippbng chest muscles and powerful arm- and
legs. He sw inis 2 or more miles .1 day and look­
like he could still knock the lights ..tit . | the
creatures of the universe and tin jungles
And he makes it clear that when he
reminisces he'd rather talk less about acting
and more about the event that allowed him to
become an actor — the gold modal he won m

champion Mark Spitz, recently dropped bv the
stadium for the McDonald's Olympic Youth
Swim Meet. Sitting beside the pool brought
forth a flood of stories

Buster Has Marvelous' Memories

Audiences
Want To Be
Involved

lin e m

Actress Gena Howlands
does not think ol television
audiences
as
simply
"viewers."
Audiences want very
much to relate lo the story
and to the characters," she
said. "They don't want to !*bystanders They want to
share emotions, to be involy ed
in the problems and the joys
of a meaningful drama "
Miss Howlands stars with
Bette Davis in "Strangers:
Tile Story of a Mother and
Daughter," a motion picture
for television that explores
the conflicting emotions with­
in a fragmented family , to be
rebmadcast on Tuesday on
CBS.
‘As soon as I mention tlie
subject matter of Strangers,'
people confide their own or
some friend's experience with
a similar situation," she said
"It's as if know ing the story
is going to be up there on the
screen suddenly gives them
freedom to share a burden
they believed they were
carry ing alone."

T h e o n ly It.in k w h o r i’ y o u
c a n d o a ll y o u r l&gt; .m k iii|* x G ito w iile . M l o x c i tlu -t .iii Ml m u,
ILm k i n -t o n ic i- .i i v ili-t n \ v i i i n;
tll.lt tllvx ll.lW .IW IX - I ' l l 111 .Ills .111t.iitv \ \ li.it i- it - A tl.m tii It.iiik iI lo tu l i - i mix 1 1M i-n liil.iti il -t Hi \\ u li k in k
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u l out -vp.it.i l v h a n k n ii: o lf m - into
one -t ilvxx ulv &gt;\ Mem. A tl.m 111 It ink
h.lx also united it - i \ p i t t i-c in -p i i la ll/v d a lia -. 11- Im am i ll -H i n -ill
.m il it- lo n u u i't i i ll i a-h m .m .igi incut -vrx n c lo you. i *kiistvhtl.ititsii h tm g urvatvi 1-.in k my; m m i nn iit i
I verx A t la n iii l &gt;1tn i i and i \ 11 v
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xvr\ v you |iixt lik e \m u oxxn lio iu c to x x iih .iu k Sn no m a lle i x xlieii
von are ot \\ lu re n u ig u . \o u t in
i a-h a i hci k. m ake a depoxit. 01
take i .lie ut a m h m k iiiy : need
I veil it n m i i io v i yum A tla n iii
I tank at 1 1 mm it - and at 1 1 till it i in i i i herx i&gt;o lig h t \\ n il n m

IN THE SERVICE
T E O M C O LLIE
S&lt;jt Ti-d M Colli*, von ot Mr.
and Mrv Rut-b.-h L Colli* ol 140
I tilbury Drive lorqwood f i e .
1.4V br-rn drroratrd w.th lb* U S
Air I nr&lt;* Commi-ndAlion Mvdai til
Rnbinv Air force Have Ga
Tn* A.r force Commend*!&gt;on
Mrdal iv awarded lo ihove &gt;n
d-v.du*lv Abo demonvlr*tr out
viAnd.ng
Achievement
or
"4t-r.ior.ouv Very.ce .n Ibe per
. .
lormence ol Ibe.r dul.ev on beh*lf
of Ihe Air r orce
Coll.e 4 ir.rd.oil 4 dm.n.viral.on
vpec.4l.vl IV 4 ISO grAduAle ol
Wa 1ntAnd Senior High School.

Davfona f 14

E O D I E O NEWSOM
Senior Master Sgl Eddie O
Nrwvom. son ol Tom B Newsom
ot 100 Colombo. DeBary. Fla . ha*
arrived I or dutv al Kirtland Air
Force Base. N M
Newso
an adm inistration
superintendent with the ITaOth
Communications Squadron, was
previously assigned at Zaire.
Air ice
His wife. tear. ■* 'he daughter of
Mr and Mrs William Allen ol Los
Alamos. N M
Me is a 1*14 gradual* of William
Carev College. Hattiesburg. Miss
JO SEPH E FOX
Airman Joseph E Fo». son of
Doris S Fo&gt; ot SIT Orchid Lane.
Aium oni* Springs, has graduated
irom ihe integrated avionics
compulerued test station and
component specialist course at
Lowry Air Force Base. Cok&gt;
Graduates ot the course studied
fundamentals and application ol
electronic principles, circuit and
log.c diagram theory. operation ol
automatic lest equipment, and
earned creJ IS toward an associate
degree m applied science through
the community college ot the Air
Force
Foe wilt now serve *1 MacDUl
A.r Force Base with the S*th
Component Repair Squadron
He is a IT«0 gradual* ol Lake
Oranlley High School. Forest City,
Fla

P H IL L IP J C O R B E T T
Pr.vAle f.rv l ClAVV Phillip j
Corbel! von ol Mr And Mrv John
•’ Corbel! ol IIS Largo V illa
Boulevard Cavvelberrr. recently
relumed home on 1 days leave
Irom Parris island S C jlle r
lompiel.ng II tveeks ol recruit
training
During
fram ing
Corbett
received totmaI -nvtruction in tirst
a.d
physical
fitness,
m arksm anship close combat
techniques Marine Corps h.story
luvlomv and courtesy, drill and
nuclear, chem.cal and biological
w arfare
Follow ing Corbett's
leave he w.ll report lo M A IS O TO
NAS Memphis. Millington. Tenn
tor formal instruction as an air
t r a il power plants mechanic
There he will be instructed on how
lo inspect ma.nla.n. lev!, repair
JO H N D U N D E R W O O D
and perform complete repair ol
Airman John D Underwood, son
aircraft power plants and power
ot Mr and Mrs Jack Underwood
plants srsiems Upon completion
of IS00 Markham Woods Road,
of his formal framing Corbett then
Long wood, graduated from the
will report to the Marine Air
U S Air Force aircratt electrical
Reserve Unit. Cecil Field. Fla lor
repair course at Chanute Air
an additional 10 weeks of on Ihe too
Force Base. Ill
irammg and ioin this unit for duty
Graduates ol the course learned
as a member of the Marine Corps
how to inspect and repair aircratt
Reserve unit there
electrical systems, and earned
credits toward an associate degree
m applied Science through the
Community College ot the Air
Force
Underwood will now serve al
Egim A ir Force Bast. Fla . with
the H a th A irc ra tt Generation
Squadron
He is a ltie graduate ot Lyman
High School. Long wood

s

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Il y o u ' r e i n h i i - i m — . x n m
. m o u n t ix a ls o \ \ h c i c v c i

And

il

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hank
an

h iix iu e x - lia - m m i th a n

o n e ai i o m it m in t Ik i
h a v e l u l l ii i

ex-

trim i o l n i . i f o i m e t i o p o l i i a n h a n k lily: xi’ rx ii ex A m l i I k 1 1 mi-o | iila t i l l .
tVXO I’ 111It ill doll.lt .ix x c tx ot li l t
x\ hole x\ Mem prox ule im rc.ixi
lendiny: poxxei I lu t me I I I - v.t .h
Atlantis l H lii c l i. i- t in lending
xtTength ot ihe xvhnli torporat K&gt;n
I ..it Ii iif In e i- aide lo rc-p o u d
i|iin k l\ to am - i / r lin .iin u l n i|iiirem en t
A t la n iii Hank x -ta te u id e 10 11xo liil.ition ix Iv.ider-h ip in xei \ K i
A n d Iv.idvrxlup i - the tea-on \\ v ’ts'
I lie Hext Hank A t o u m l"

F U R M A N K. ('L A R K
F U N M AN R CLARK
Air Force Staff SffQPiinf Fur
man U CllMt. son of Manme
Car* 1016 Molly A » r
S**nforJ
ha* recently completed ;i4 hours
Of technical tram ng .n retruif.ng
i*f the United State* A.r F orce
Technical Tra in in g School at
Lackland A l B Texas and .* no* a
United Stale* A*r F orce Recruiter
The framing *as done under
E d »a rd O Young jr Colonel m
the United State* Air F o*ce.
Commander )7S0th Technical
Trammg Wing Sergeant Clark .*
married lo the former Helm**
Cherry of Sanford and lives *'fh
hi* *ife
and daughter
in
Alexandria. Va

Atlantic Bank

The BestBankAround
M ml i I | II l

R O O S E V E L T H OW AR D JR
Pvt J Roosevelt Mo*ard Jr son
ot Perahe Mae Mo*ard of IM t A
lath St . Sanford, has completed a
food Service specialist course at
Fort Jackson. S C
The course trams personnel to
prepare and serve loud m large
and small Quantities Student*
receive trammg m taking field
kitchen operations, and the
operation of an Army dmmg
facility
Mo*ard is a tfM graduate ot |
Semmoie High School

Edinburg, Scotland, it namad for tha 7th cantury King
Edwin, around whom tha Mttlamant of Edwin's Burgh
sprang up.

S m a ll lo w u -

to tin e n tile -p i i -

Atlantic National Bank of Florida
Springs l &gt;tliu*
I run Ii Avenue Mntoi Hank
Call 322-6211 for all locations
*Hankaround 24 Hours a Day, 7 Days a Week

£

k

m m i

o n e Im a t io n . m m i - t i l l n e e d o n ly

Sjiiluid Oilin'

IM IfUJP J . t’ORBKTT

See that gate over there
rahlv -aid
When I was a student at S- u'hcin 1 .1. 1 used
to 1limb that feme every day ,e -i\ :n the
morning and put in ,1 few hour* -■! training in
the prwl.
They had barbed wire at the top and that
made it pretty tough But now t| ey ‘ye got that
damn sheet nj metal and it's iihih.—ihle t.. get
over ”
Crabbe recalled the final- -d tin tort-meter
freestyle lie pointed out the Ian he was m and
the lanes his chief rivals were in and a wide
grin creased lus face
I had a 1lose call lor the gold medal, lie
said
The From hitiati almost l» ,e me I
watched him in trial- and In- ulwuy- slowed
down near the end and got Ix-at by one .1 two
guys
I ligured la- wasn't in shape But I found ut
that was all part of his act He pi-' wanted
everyone to think he didn't have anything left
In the last 5o meters, we were dead even
As I lut the wall. I looked ver and -aw his
head bob in In- final stroke and I knew I d
whipped him Got Inin by •• ...... of .1
second "
Crabbe said the biggest thrill ol his life 1atm
a minute later
I looked uji and -aw my father jumping
over the fence.' Crabbe said He fought hiway through the police and ran "\or and
hugged me
He just wouldn't let go of me It was the
most excited he'd ever been in Ills life
It still gives me goosebumps to ihmk - 1 11
It’s a marvelous memorv

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.

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                    <text>73rd Y e a r. No. 287—Thursday. July 23.1981—Sanford, Florida 32771

County To Get Ingeborg's Goats
In an unexpected move, Seminole
C ircuit Judge Joseph Davis J r .
Thursday gave Ingeborg “the Goat
la d y " Morris 10 days to dispose of the
16 goats she keeps at her Forest City
home In violation of county law or have
animal control authorities do It (or her.
Following a 20-minute hearing, Davis
told a visibly upset Mrs. Morris to get
rid o( the goats within 10 days. II she
doesn't, Davis ordered county animal
control officers to seize the animals and
house them at Mrs. Morris' expense. If,
after 30 days, Mrs. Moms still hasn’t
come up with a suitable solution to the
goal problem, the goats will be disposed
of “either by sale or we'U put them to
sleep,” said Assistant County Attorney
Robert McMillan.
“We didn't expect such a harsh ruling
now,” McMillan said. “ We didn't want
it, either. What we wanted was to have
her lined each day the violation con­
tinues. We felt that would coerce her
into getting rid of the goats.

"Animal control has noplace to house
It goats." McMillan said. “I don't know
what we’ll do if we have to go out there
and phy sically take them. 1 guess we'll
Just have to find a place."
Mrs. Morris received a prior legal
ultimatum on June 1 when Circuit
Judge Vernon Mize Jr. ruled that she
was in defiance of a county ordinance
which prohibits the keeping of livestock
In residential areas and gave her until
June 21 to dispose of the animals.
But on June 21, the goats were still
there and Mrs. Morris was ordered into
court to explain why. But the day before
her hearing, she checked Into the
Orlando Regional Medical Center for
hypertension. Alter efforts to arrange a
telephone conference between court
officials and Mrs. Morris (ell through,
the hearing was canceled.
Thursday's hearing was the latest
skirmish In a battle which has been
going on between the “Goat lady" and
the county for nearly a year.

F o r S e m in o le

Evening H erald—(U SPS 481 280)—Price 20 Cent*

H ig h

Hughes Recommends Wayne Epps
Wayne Epps, a 33-year-old Sanford
native was expected to be named prin­
cipal of Seminole High School today
replacing retiring William P. “Bud"
lay er.
Epps was recommended by Supt.
Robert Hughes at a special meeting of
the district's school board.
la y e r, after 28 years in the Seminole
County school system as teacher,
assistant principal, principal and school
superintendent, will retire July 3t.
A special nominating committee was
named to review the applications of at
least If persons who put in a bid for the
high school post. That list was whittled
down to five, and Hughes today
recommended Epps as the best qualified
“ Alter the Interviews it became very
apparent to us that Mr. Epps was the
best qualified to be principal of Seminole

No More

See NO MORE. Page 3A

High," Hughes said.
"We have high expectations for
Seminole High School and Mr. Epps as
principal.'' he added
The school board, by law, cannot
refuse the superintendent's recom ­
mendation except for proper cause.
“ I’m real enthused about this,” said
Epps, adding, “This school Is home to n e
and so Is Sanford. It has a lot more
meaning to tne than it would have to
someone coming in from outside."
Epps has been assistant principal at
the high school since 1972. He first Joined
the school system as a chemistry teacher
and (ootbaD coach at Seminole High
School In 1969. He also was chairman of
the science department
Joining the faculty at SI IS was no
difficult task for Epps, since he was
graduated from the high school In 1963.

C o x

For The
Road... ?

By BRITT SMITH
Herald Stall Writer
W inter Springs city councilmen
thought it was a textbook example of
preventive lawmaking; you know, an
ounce of prevention being worth a pound
of cure. Officials In some of their neigh­
boring cities, however, snickered that It
amounted to using a sledgehammer to
kill a fly.
'll' ‘Is an ordinance, unanimously
passed by the council July 7, designed to
close a loophole In Winter Springs' liquor
laws. The new statute will prohibit both
the sale and ronsumpUon of alcoholic
beverages in public bars and restaurants
between 2 * m . end 7 e-m. Stale law sets
a mandatory cutoff time lor only the sale
ot beer, wine, and liquor at 2 a m.
"But we've been having problem with
people buying several drinks Just prior to
2 and then silting around far the next few
hours drinking them,” Mayor Troy
Piland explained. "This new ordinance
should prevent that."
The problem centered on the city's only
bar — the Three Of A Kind on State Road
434. "It hadn’t gotten to the point where It
was a real problem," said Winter Springs
Police Chief John Govoruhk. ."We Just
wanted to take rare of a potentially bad

P rin c ip a l

A s

H t r H P ta li by Tom Vmttnf

It's I :.7.7 a.in. in a Seminole County bar anil a customer has just
bought four b rm to tide him over for the next rouplr of hours.
Winter Springs recently passed a law outlawing such activity.
Other area municipalities aren't so picky.

Epps was born in Sanford and lives at
121 larkwood Drive with his wife, Jane,
and his 7-year-old daughter, Kelly.
Mrs. Epps Is a dram a teacher at
Seminole High School and Kelly attends
IdyDwflde Elementary School.
Epps received a bachelor of science
degree in chem istry from Stetson
University In 19(7 and his master's
degree In administration and supervision
in 1971 from the same university.
A high school principal in Seminole
County's school district can earn bet­
ween 124,436 and $33,148 annually,
depending upon the number of years of
experience in the field, the number of
teachers at the school and other factors
such as possessing special degrees. Epps
has been with the school system some 12
years

S te p s

D o w n

H o u s in g

By DONNA ESTES
Herald SUll Writer
lew is Cox, who took over as executive
director of the Sanford Housing
Authority (SltA) when Tom Wilson was
fired last Novuiiber, has resigned that
post.
Joseph Caldwell, chairman of the SltA
Board of Directors, said Cux has
resigned effective July 31. Cox and his
family are planning to move out of state.
Caldwell said the move is the reason for
tho resigns Uon
CaUwoD H id Ora will not bo replaced
immediately with another execuUve
director until the Housing Authority
Board of Commissioners has an op­
portunity to review applications sub­
mitted for the position earlier this year.
In the Interim Caldwell said all major
decisions concerning the authority will
be made by the board. "And we expect
everyone will be doing his Job the same
as usual," Caldwell said.
Cox could not be reached today at the
housing authority office for a comment.
Caldwell said he will be conferring with
Cox today on various problems within the
housing authority.
Among them are the probability the

At an afternoon meeting today, the
board is scheduled lo vole on what action
to lake tn response to the commissioner's
announced Intention to renege on a
$473,000 allocation which was given
Seminole a year ago.
In letters to school board memben and
the superintendent, School Board
Attorney Ned Julian Jr. Mid It ts his
opinion that the board has a legal basis to
pursue recovery of the funds
The money was given in February as a

cost-of-living adjustment to funding
received by the district based on student
population. Bui Turlington now u y s the
money shouldn't have been given In mid­
year, that by law such adjustments are to
be made only at the beginning of a school
year. He wants the money back.
The problem: It's already spent.
Seminole County Superintendent ol
Schools Bob Hughes Mid the state won't
actually require repayment.
"What they’ll do is Just plan on
withholding that amount from 1981-82
funding," he Mid.
But that puts the school district in a
bind because planning and budgeting lias
been (airly well completed (or the

coming year and there'i no place to lose
almost $360,000, he Mid.
Orange County, which has been told it
will lose its $873,000 allocation o( a year
ago, voted Tuesday to lake legal action to
prevent the state's action.
Allhough three Seminole School Board
members Mid they would wait (or
Julian's recommends lion on the matter,
they indicated a willingness to pursue
legal action U so advised.
"I tend to think we have to take some
legal action," M id board mem ber
Roland Williams, "because we have that
money already committed."
Board Member Pat Telson said she
"doesn't see why not" tn regard to legal
action against the state.

Hughes Mid such action could be In the
lorm ol attempting to obtain a
restraining order to stop the state from
withholding the funds while the matter Is
pursued further In court.
Turlington Mid the cost-of-Uvlng ad­
justments should be redistributed to
counties that received less money. While
Central Florida counties received a
windfall with the adjustments, other
counties In the state lost money.
According to Hughes, protests (rum
those counties are what prom pted
Turlington's revcnaL
“ More counties lost money than gained
alter the adjustments," Hughes Mid.
"But they (the state) gave us the
money. It's been used. We should be able

C h ie f

S1IA administration will be moving out of converted to office space.
About three years ago, the Housing
the first floor space It has leased at the
Sanford City Hall for the past 21 months. Authority spent more than $30,000 In
Caldwell, appointed by the Sanford federal modernization funds to convert
City Commission lo the SHA, was seated space for the day nursery.
two weeks ago and immediately was
Caldwell said today he "personally
elected chairman by the other board would like lo see the day care center
members. He said his meeting with Cox reopened. I think wc need that."
will concern plans of the former board of
Of plans to move out of city hall,
commissioners which may no longer be Caldwell Mid he believes the housing
valid today. "But we do plan to move out authority administrative offices should
of city hall. We probably will move buck be within the public housing units
to the utd headquarters at Castle brewer the motives.
Court. It there la not enough spare there,
“1 have to check Into the lease
there ts arsUable office space in some of agreement to find what the effect would
the other public housing projects."
be If we move earlier than the lease
He laid he Is especially concerned date," Caldwell Mid.
about the dosing of the day nursery at
Assistant City Manager Steve Harriett
Castle Brewer Court, ordered by the
Mid
today the Housing Authority leases
previous board. The day ra re center,
operated under contract by IJIy Merthie 1,230 square feet of office space on the
for the past several years, was closed first floor of city hall for a total annual
fee of $19,630 including utilities (elec­
July I.
tricity, water and sewer). The current
Mrs. Merthie, who has operated day
lease remains in effect until Erb. 28,1982.
care centers for the past 31 years, said
she received a letter from the Housing The original lease was signed Oct. 23,
1979.
Authority notifying that the lease for the
llaiTletl Mid the lease does not appear
facility would not be renewed on July 1.
Mrs Merthie said it was explained that to provide for termination earlier than
the day care center space would be that date.

Seminole School Board May Sue To Keep State's $473,000
At least three members of the Seminole
County School Board don't think state
E ducation
Commissioner
Halph
Turlington should be an Indian giver.
And they may hope lo prove it In court.

WAYNK KIM'S
. . . new SIIS principal?

to keep it," he added. "We definitely
should explore what legal avenues are
open to us."
School Board Chairman William Kroll
said Wednesday at least a lew attorneys
have already given the opinion
Turlington's action Is illegal.
But II his action should be upheld,
"we'U have to make adjustments In the
budget, that's all," Kroll M id. School
board members Nancy Warren and Allan
Krelh were unavailable (or comment this
morning.
Other central Florida counties
receiving adjustm ent bonuses were
Osceola, $132,000, and la k e , $49,OCT. DIANE PETRYK

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World

Property Tax Hike For Schools 99 Percent Certain'
By DIANE PETRYK
Herald SUll Writer
The Seminole County School Board's proposal to hike
property taxes by $2 per 11,000 ol assessed valuation Is "99
percent certain" to win (Inal approval, said School Board
Chairman William Kroll.
KroU M id school board members Allan Kccth and Nancy
Warren, who were absent when the tax proposal and 1981-82
budget were lenUtively approved on a M vote Monday night,
are in (avur of the Lai hike.
"They have said so at public meetings before,” he said.
Keeth and Warren were unavailable for comment Wed­
nesday.
The board U scheduled to finalize IU budget and ta k e «, final
vote on the U s proposal after a public hearing Sept. 9.
Kroll and board member Boland Williams voted for the Ux
hike Monday. Board Member Pat Telson voted against It,
despite having encouraged a similar lax hike last year when a
new state law went Into effect giving school boards authority to
levy up to 82 per 11.000 of assessed valuation far construction.
Property Ux rates to pay salaries and other school operating
costs are set by sUte formula for districts accepting sUU
funding and are not discretionary for the board.
Seminole County Superintendent of Schools Bob Hughes,
who recommended the board Uke advantage of the
discretionary Ux, u id the ex'/a $2, which would generate
approximately $3 million, would be used lo construct a new
elementary school tn the TtucawilU area and exceptional

educational suites at Sterling Park, Idytlwilde and Altamonte
elemenUry schools. Those construction projects top the school
administration's priority Hal, Hughes said.
He Mid the construction U needed to relieve crowding and
said he views the 82 tax hike as "absolutely critical, crucial" to
any plan to meet student housing needs.
He added he (eels tl would be a bad business derision to try to
put off construction of needed classroom space.
"Building cosU are Increasing about 1 percent per month,"
he u td . "The longer we wait, the more tl will cost taxpayers tn
the long run."
In addition, he esplained, Seminole County Schools wlU be
receiving about $1 million (ra n the state (or construction for
the budget year beginning net 1. But 80 percent ot sUU
construction dollars to be allocated to the county tn subsequent
years will be retained by the state until Seminole pays off an
$113 million loan granted by the state (or the construction of
lake Mary High School. '
Therefore, it t l million per year continues lo be allocated,
only $200,000 would be spendable each year (or the next 11
years or so, Hughes said.
So the Lme to build la now, he said, with the state $1 million
and about $3 million fra il the state-alknred state Increase.
With a home aaaeased at $60,000, the $2 Its Increase would
coal the homeowner with a $3,000 Homestead Exemption an
additional $110 in taxes, Hughes Mid.
The homeowner with a $60,000 valuation who has been In the
state more than live years, therefore receiving the 120,000
Homestead Exemption, would pay $70 more In school property

taxes with the $2 hike.
Seminole Cbunty taxpayers paid $6.11 for each $1,000 of
asaesstd valuation (or the 198081 year. The $2 Ux Increase
would boost that rate lo about $1.11 per $1,000.
Kroll and Williams agree with Hughes that now is the time to
build.
"We need live elementary schools and one middle school,”
KroU Mid. "We need a middle school almost as much we need
an elementary. Rock Lake (middle school) will be opened only

The time to build It now.'
— Supt. Bob Hughes
Last year w a s t h e year to do It.'
_______ — Board M em ber Pat Telson
two full years and already we have five portables on the site."
The U s hike la the "only means of gathering the revenue we
need for new construction and renovation," Williams said.
"We have $23 million In construction needs right now.
"No one really favors a U a increase, but this la the only
thing we can do," he added.
Mrs. Telson, however, said the doesn't agree.
“There a n alternatives to mure and more construction,''
she tald.
For Instance, she said, In Palm Beach County students have
been attending school all year around aince 1(71.
“ And they love It," die said. Vacations a n taken any seaaon,
the explained.

“T here's no reason we couldn't do something bke that. All
our schools are air conditioned and heated for year round use,"
she Mid. "And there isn't any other business I know of that can
afford lo leave $14 million buildings (the cost of la k e Mary
High School) baaicaUy empty Iwo months of the year.
“ I think w t have to look at other than the traditional methods
of school operation to he fiscally responsible."
Mrs. Telson Mid she was In favor of levying 30 cenU to $1 of
the discretionary Ux last year because property owners were
getting and would still be getting Ux relief from the Increased
Homestead Exemption.
"Last year was the year to do it," she said "Then came the
mandate in November. People say inn We don't want anv
more U ses. We want you lo clean up your art, government.'
“I'm listening lo the mandate of the people. I'm not Mying
there isn't a need. We (Seminole County) a r t growing. But the
school administration's CapiUl Outlay Committee brought
forth no alternatives but to build more buildings."
She said she voted against the tax hike Monday because
alternatives were not explored.
KroU, however, said there are none.
“Mrs. Telson knew what the recommendation ol the CaptUl
Outlay Committee would be (our and a half months ago," he
said. "I asked her twice Monday night for specifics but she had
no recommendations.
He said it boils down to the stale Mying it won't give "one
red cunt" to ccunties that won't help themselves.
"T hat's what the law basically says. Any growing county
See TAX, Page 2A

�Thurtdiy, July 31. H it

)A—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
Israeli Planes Bomb
Lebanon Oil Refinery
Ily Called Press International
Israeli U S -made warplanes extended Iheir war
against Palestinian guerrillas to Ubanon's oil Jugular,
bombing a pipeline from Saudi Arabia. The United
States bluntly accused Israeli Prime Minister
Menarhem Begin of sabotaging peace efforts.
•Mr. Begin, without question, Is making It difficult to
help Israel." Deputy Secretary of Slate William P.
Clark said Thursday in some of the sternest language
ever spoken in Washington about a foreign leadrr.
In Jerusalem today, Begin called his Cabinet Into an
emergency session to discuss the fighting along the
Ubanese border and strained relations with the United
Stales.
In the seventh straight day of air strikes In lebanon
In retaliation for Palestinian attacks against Israeli
border communities, Israeli Jets bombed lebanon's
main refinery port at Zaliranl. 29 miles Inside the
country and knocked out parts of lebanon's TransArabian pipe line. Witnesses in Zahrani said huge oil
dump (ires burned out of control.

Prince Takes 'Refuge'
IjONDON (UPI ( — Prince Charles took refuge from
the war of words over Spain's boycott of the royal
wedding by joining his closest male friends In a stag
party that extended into Die wee hours in the tradition
of bridegroom bashes around the world.
While lady Diana Spencer was at S t Paul's
Cathedral Wednesday night for a full dress rehearsal
ol their July 29 wedding, the heir to the throne un­
corked at his (nvorite gentleman's club in town, and let
Ills hair down with 20 close friends.

Pope Assailant Gets Life
ROME (UPI) — Turkish terrorist Mehmet All Agca
was found guilty of trying to assassinate John Paul II
and was ordered to spend the first year of his life
sentence In solitary confinement, where he has
promised to starve himself to death.
Agca, 23, boycotted his sentencing Wednesday at
Home's Palace of Justice after bluntly telling the ,.wurt
be did not accept Its Jurisdiction on grounds he shot the
pope In Vatican City — a foreign slate.
In a 15-nilnute statement Monday, Agra said he
would give Italy and the Vatican until Dec. 20 to hand
him over to the Vatican for trial. He said it nothing
happened by then he would start a hunger strike, ap­
parently to draw world attention to his case.
Agra refused to attend the trial after the opening
day. Because of this and his flat refusal to answer
questions in court, the trial ripped through In three
days
11 took the two Judges and six Jury members ( hours
and AS minutes ot deliberation to reach their verdict.

Earthquake Rocks Iran
IjONDON (U PI) — An earthquake measuring 5.1 on

the Hi chirr scale shook east Azerbaijan In northwest
Iran early today, Iran’s officials Pars news agency
reported, quoting llie geophysical center at Tehran
University.
The rity of Oroomyeh is situated In the affected area,
about 400 miles northwest of the capital Tehran, Pars
said in a dispatch monitored in l raid on.
No news of casualties or damage was immediately
available.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT! Heavy rains lashed the Plains today
and tornadoes touched down In South Dakota and Nebraska.
Temperatures dipped into llie 30s In Wyoming but readied 107
degrees In Kansas. Oklshoma officials ssld Wednesday a 68year-old man died as a result of the heal. Hundred-degree
readings in the stale also killed an estimated 400 cattle In
feedlots In Cherokee and Buffalo, offldals said. A cold front
Wednesday blanketed much of the northern and eastern half of
the nation. But temperatures from the Central Plains to the
Mississippi Valley soared past the 100-degree mark. Tem­
peratures dipped into the 60s from the upper Mississippi Valley
through the Great la k e s and Into New York. Scattered
showers and thunderstorms stretched (rum the eastern
Dakotas to Florida. Heavy rain Wednesday soaked parts of
Cherry Counly, Neb., and hail ranging (rom pea sire to an inch
In diameter took Its toll on gardens and crops
AREA READINGS (» a.m .|: temperature: 79; overnight
low: 26; Wednesday's high: 94; barometric pressure: 30.05;
relative humidity: 90 percent; winds, csbn.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 1:59 a m.,
2:4] p in., lows, 1:03 a.m., 8:48 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 1:51 am ., 2:34 p.m.; lows. 7:54 am ., 8 39 p.m.;
BAYPOKTi highs, 7:22 a m., 8:18 pin.; lows, 1:09 a m , 2:18
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 Miles: Winds variable mostly southwest ID knots or less
Uirough Friday with seas 1 to 3 (eet. Winds and seas higher
near scatlered mostly afternoon and evening thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Friday. Chance
ol mainly afternoon and evening thunderstorms today
decreasing Friday. Highs in the mid 90s lows in the mid 70s.
Winds vsrlablr around 10 mph. Rain probability 50 percent
tonight and 40 percent Friday.
Zones 18. 19, 21 — Variable cloudiness with a chance of
thunderstorms through Friday. Highs in He low to mid 90s.
lews in Hie mid 70s to near 80. Winds southerly around 10 mph.
Rain probability Ml percent today Ju percent tonight and •'«
percent Friday.
EXTENDED FORECAST: - Partly cloudy and continued
hoi with scatlered, mainly afternoon and evening thun­
derstorms. lews In the 70s except near 80 along the beaches
and In the keys. Highs In the 90s

Man Arrested O ver Abduction Of Girl
The 26-year-old U k e Mary man charged with abducting a
teenage girl from her lather’s used car lot two weeks ago has
been returned to Seminole County to lace a half-dozen criminal
charges stemming from Hie incident.
Darrell Lynn Theophllus, of 163 Frederick Ave., was booked
Into Hie county Jail Wednesday afternoon following a flight on a
sheriffs office aircraft from Greensburg. Ind., where he
surrendered to authorities July 13.
Theophilus was being held without bond this morning on
charges of kidnapping, armed robbery, grand theft auto,
carrying a concealed weapon, aggravated assault and petty
Uteft
He is accused of abducting 17-year-ol&lt;l Angelina la s h from
her father’s used car lot — Jim la sh Blue Book Cars, 4111 S,
Orlando Dr., Sanford
Theophllus reportedly rode Into the dealership on a bicycle
about 3:30 p.m. on July 6 carrying a blanket In which was
concealed a ,22-csllber semi-automatic rifle. After taking a
lest drive In a 1973 Oldsmoblle Cutlass valued al $1,300. police
say he pulled Hie rifle and said, "I'll Jus! take it for free."
Theophllus reportedly look ti wallet from Hay lash,
Angelina's uncle who works as a salesman at the cor lot,
forced Ihe girl Into Hie car and sped away.
Nearly seven hours later, Miss la sh was released unharmed
in downtown Tallahassee.
CHURCH BURNER Pl-EADS
A 21-year-old Geneva man laces up lo 15 years In prison alter
admitting In Seminole Circuit Court Wednesday to burning
down a church last summer.
Barry le e Barnes pleailed guilty to a charge of second-

Street in Sanford about 4 p.m. Feb. 5 when she was approached
by two young males who asked her If Hie Salvation Army was
open.

A c tio n R ep o rts
★ Fires
* Courts

She said "no" and continued walking. The two men then
knocked her down from behind and grabbed her purse. The
pair then Jumped into a car waiting nearby and fled.
Two men who had witnessed the theft pursued the car and
stopped it behind Goldsboro Elementary School. The male
bandits escaped, but Tucker was captured.

it Police Beat
degree arson tn connection with an Aug. 24 blare that com­
pletely destroyed the Oak Grove Missionary Baptist Church on
Old lak e Harney Hoad In Geneva.
Judge Joseph Davis J r , dderred sentencing lor Barnes
pending an investigation into his background.
Barnes was accused of breaking Into the church Uirough a
window and using rags soaked in lighter fluid to start the fire.
He then reportedly walked back to his home nearby and fell
asleep until he was awakened by his parents who Informed him
that the church was on fire.
According to court records, Barnes apparently had an an­
tipathy for Hie church. He admitted to past incidents of
slashing deacons' tires and pouring carburetor cleaner on the
pastor's car.
In other court action, a 19-year-old Sanford woman was
convicted of complicity in the robbery of an elderly woman on
a downtown street earlier this year.
Novella Nora Tucker of 1702 Roosevelt Ave. was charged
with robbery for her part as Hie driver of the getaway car used
after two male accomplices stole r, purse belonging to 66-yearold Evelyn Bruhn of 824 Clayton Ave., Sanford.
According lo testimony. Mrs Bruhn was walking along 24th

Mrs. Bruhn's purse — which had "Happiness Is Being A
Grandmother" stitched on Hie front — contained 126
Shortly alter Hie Jury returned Its guilty verdict, Tucker's
brother, 18-year-old Willie I&gt;ec Tucker, went on trial as one of
Hie men who assaulted Mrs. Bruhn. Testimony was continuing
in the case this morning.
The second purse snatcher, a 16-year-old Juvenile, has been
convicted fur his part In Hie crime and incarcerated in a state
Juvenile facility in Marianna. He testified against Miss Tucker
and is scheduled lo do Hie same In her brother's trial.
Also Wednesday, other persons pleaded guilty to various
criminal charges. They are:
—Thomas Stephens Green, 21, and his brother John David
Green, 28, both of 107 Salsuma Drive, Altamonte Springs,
grand theft and robbery respecUvely. The two were accused of
robbing Donald Cappetta of 1500 at knifepoint outside the
Circus Circus go-go bar on U S. Highway 17-92 in Casselberry
on April 21. John was charged with holding a knife to Capetta's
Ihruat while his brother took the money from the victim's
wallet.

Chrysler Corp. Reports $ 12 Million Profit
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
Celebrating Chrysler Ccrp.’i first
profit In more than two years.
Chairman I-t-e A. lacocca called
governm ent critics "intellectual
carp etb a g g e rs" and declared
American cars superior to popular
Japanese imports.
"In the second quarter, Chrysler
earned a net profit, after taxes, of
$12 million," lacocca (old a National
Press Club luncheon Wednesday.
“Our pre-tax profit was $21 million.
We've got our act together, and

we're on our way back."
The announcement marked Hie
first time since Hie last quarter of
1978 Hie atiaklest member of Hie
"Big Three" automakers had made
money.
lacocca noted Chry sler lost more
than $3 billion In Hie last two years
and was forced to apply for federal
loan
guarantees
to
avoid
bankruptcy. It has received $1.2
billion of the loan guarantees.
The Chrysler chairman described

as "intellectual carpetbaggers"
those governm ent officials who
urged the company a year ago to "do
the proper and noble thing" and
declare bankruptcy
In the same three months last
year, Chrysler lost $536 million.
lacocca said overall losses for 1981
may exceed $200 million. But he
dismissed speculation the profit was
a fluke or Hie result of Chrysler
"Juggling Its books."
He said the profit was achieved by
cutting costs $2 billion a year

...Tax Hike
(Continued from Page I A)
Dial won't help Itself won’t gel any money from the stale,"
Kroll added If he or Williams had voted with Mrs. Telson
Monday, the board, fay law, would have had lo meet In con­
tinuous session until it adopted a budget.
"She would have had to change her vote," he said. "There Is
nothing to lake out (of Hie budgetj. She should have known
Uml three months ago, as Hie 'only full time board member' by
her own quotation."

through belter management and by
producing Hie "best product Une for
the best price."
However, he added, "We've got
plenty of tough times ahead. I’m not
trying to make it sound like we're
out of Hie woods. Chryiler Is not, and
the US. automobile industry Is not.
"But we're beginning lo find our
way out of Hie woods, and we're not
about to hire a Japanese trail guide
for the rest of the trip,” he said in
reference to suggestions Chryiler

STERCH IS SUPER

J

Y O U R OLD FO R B R A N D NEW! I

But Seminole County Coinmlsslnner Robert Feather, an
eight-year veteran of the school board, told board members
Monday he agrees with Mrs. Telson that alternatives to s tax
increase have not been fully explored, Included some which
tiave been used in Hie past.
"In Hie past eight years we built eight schools, kids tested in
the top percentages on statewide and national teats ,ind
leathers’ salaries were kept among Hie highest In the sta te all without tax increases,” Feather said.
"Why can’t we do that now?” he asked.
Feather did not, however, as reported earlier, question
Hughes's motives tn recommending the tax increase.
Hughes said a new elementary school would cost about $3
million plus Hie coal ol land. The site will be purchased Irom
Tuacawilla area developers, by prior agreement at Hie price
the developers originally paid lor the land, la n d had been set
aside (or a school when the subdivision was planned.
Hughes said Hie new elementary would ease crowding al
Koslbrook. Hed Bug, Sterling Park and Winter Springs
elementary schools.
Together the schools are housing about 500 students mare
than they were designed lor. A new elementary, Hughes said,
would Improve conditions (or Hie more than 3,000 elementary
pupils lhat attend those schools.
The planned exceptional education suites would remedy
"m akeshift operations" (or between 150 and 175 students, he
said.
Hughes said Hie suites are definitely needed.
"It's hard lo meet the special needs of exceptional students
whtn housing Is Inadequate," he said.
The $2 tax hike could not be used for teacher salaries or any
other purpose beyond cspltal Improvements, he explained.
Keeth and Warren remained unavailable for comment early
Thursday.

MRS, OLGA POWERS
Mrs. Olga Helen Powers, 57,
of 517 Seminole Ave.,
tjongwood, died Tuesday at
Florida
Hospital
in
Altamonte. Bom In Helena,
Ga., she moved to Langwood
from Tampa In 1930. She was
a homemaker and was af­
filiated with the Church of
Religious Science. She was a
member of Hie Order of
E a ste rn
S tar
Pioneer
Chapter.
Survivors Include a son,
Albert Powers, A lU nonte
Springs, and two grand­
children.

OAKLAWN
MONUMENT CO
R» 4 Boi J»4, Sznlotd
Ph 111 47s)
• All T,pf&gt; Menummlt
•
• ijhonie* Marker*

u
U)
■
u
5
a

I

I

MSWV bSS
W M 040 s i n e ^ l

Baldwin-Fair child Funeral
Home Orlando, la In charge of
arrangements.
MRS. RUTH MARTIN
Mrs. Itulh FI. Martin, 96, of
507 Oakcreit St., Altamonte
Spring!, died Tuesday. Bom
in Baltimore, Md., she moved
to Altamonte Springs (ran
there tn 1957. She was a
housewife and a member of
the Church of the Annun­
ciation, Altamonte Springs
Survivors include a son,
Joseph F. Jr., Balltmore;
d au g h ter, Mrs. Delores
O'Brien, Altamonte Springs;
brothers, Archer and Wilson
Wood, both ol Baltimore:
sisters, Mrs. Iva Page, Mrs
Carrie I-awlon, Mrs. Edith
Betkey, Mrs. Roberta Sears,
all ol Baltimore, M rs Adcla
Adelsberger, Emmittsburg,
Md.; two grandchildren and
(our step-grandchildren.
Colonial F uneral Heme,
Orlando, is In charge of
arrangem ents

C

We ll buy that old sofa or sofa sleeper Irom you
when you purchase a beautiful new Sofa or SofaSleeper from S terchis! Any old sola will bong
you up to 5100 OO and any old Sofa Sleeper
will bring you up to $ 5 0 OO. regardless of age or
ctxidiUont Why give your old furniture away or
even pay someone to haul it off? Why not turn
it into dollars a t SterchTs!

A R EA DEATHS
MRS. HAZEL VAUGHAN
Mrs. Hazel V. Vaughan, 87,
ol 1460 Guinevere Drive,
Casselberry, died Tuesday,
Bom in Piedmont, W. Vs., she
moved to Casselberry from
HyaltsviUe, Md . in it77. She
was a secretary and a Baptist.
Survivors
include
■
husband,
Cornelius P,
Vaughan; daughter, Mrs.
Connie Lybrand, Orlando;
sister, Mrs. Naomi Bennett,
HyattsviUe.
Baldwln-F'airchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
In charge of arrangements.

should
Imitate
Japanese
automakers or merge with them.
He went on, "Americans have
forgotten Hie major technological
breakUiroughs have come from
America. Americans have forgotten
how great their own products are."
He said Japanese autos usually
have better patnl Jobs and cosnieUc
touches than American cars, but “ ui
term s of overall quality, American
cars can't be beat by anybody.
They're more durable and cheaper
to repair, maintain and operate."

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Buy on Storchi'i Crodit
with a Personal Touch!
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Thursday, July » , IWI—1A

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NATION

June Inflation Rate Under 10 Percent

IN BRIEF
Pregnant

Prisoner

Files SI Million Suit
INDIANAPOLIS tU PI) — A woman who got
pregnant in prison and filed a *1 million lawsuit against
the Department of Correction says her case is not
unique — male penitentiary employees often trade
favors and luxuries for sex with female inmates.
“ Honey, you Just wouldn't believe what goes on in
these places," said Carol Ann Wilds, 26, an Evansville
woman serving 15 to 25 years at the Indiana Women's
Prison for the 1977 murder of her husband, who. she
claimed, forced her to work as a prostitute.
"1 was approached by guards for se* almost since
the day 1 entered prison, at the age of 22."
The thin, red-haired Kentucky native became
pregnant at Westville Correctional Center in Laporte
and gave birth to a son, Joey, last August. She said the
father of the child was a prison employee there.
On April It, Ms Wilds filed a $1 million federal suit
against Cordon Faulkner, commissioner of the Indiana
Department of Correctim ; Cloid Shuler, executive
director of the department's adult authority, and
Robert Heyne, former superintendent at Westville.

Washington Star Folds
WASHINGTON (U P I I - The 129-year-oia
Washington Star will fold Aug. 7 because of "mounting
(inancisl losses," Time Inc., owner of the evening
newspaper, announced today.
The Star, once the capital's dominant dally
newspaper, has been steadily losing circulation since
Tune bought it from owner Joe Albritton in 1971 (or 920
million.
"Despite our substantial investment, the newspaper
continues to lose money and shows no prospect of
financial improvement," Richard Munro, Time’s
president and chief executive officer, said in a
statement.
"Regrettably, we have no choice but to close it."

Unable To Find Titanic
BOSTON (U PII — Crew members of the research
vessel Gyre said today they were not able to locate the
Titanic In an 11-day search of the North Atlantic, but
the explorers did photograph small objects that may
have come from the luxury liner that sank 69 years
ago.
"1 can't say we found the Titanic," said Mike Harris,
the leader of the expedition. "I myself feel it's still
there. I think we missed it. It might be that the Titanic
has broken into many pieces."
“Wc didn't find the whole Titanic. We found small
manmade pieces," said John Farre, a crew member.
He said the crew had pictures ol a hook, a piece of
cable, a cup “and maybe a skull and skeleton."

the new era of cheaper luel that has
been bringing down inflation for
several months.
More expensive housing was the
m ajo r factor in the June
m easurem ent, with some mod­
eration in the home prices offset by
climbing interest costs for mortgage
loans.
Gasoline became still cheaper
nationwide in June, with the average
gallon down 0.1 of a cent to 11.362.
Fuel oil also declined the same
amount to $1,259 a gallon.
Electricity was sharply higher,
continuing a steady string of

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
nation's inflation rate stayed under
10 percent in June foe the fourth
straight month, despite a sharp
Increase in housing costs, the
government reported today. Con­
sumer prices climbed 1.9 percent at
an annual rate after seasonal ad­
justment, according to the lab o r
Department. The monthly rise in the
Consumer Price Index was 0.7
percent
June's rate was a slight increase
over May, when consumer prices
went up I t percent at a yearly rate.
But the moderate pace still reflected

since June i960 declined to 9 6
pea-ent. At annual rates, April had
shown an only 5 1 percent increase
and March a 7.5 percent rise,
Ttw Consumer Price Index before
seasonal adjustment reached 271.3
in June, which means it cost $271.30
to buy items that cost $100 In 1967.
The government said e n te r­
tainment expenses in June were up
0.4 percent.
In a separate report, the 1-abor
Department found paychecks did
not stretch as far in June, with real
gross average weekly earnings
down 0.2 percent. Over the past

monthly Increases. The cost of 500
kilowatt hours went up II 86 from
May to cost an average of $34.96.
Food prices, which many analysts
feared were poised to take off, failed
to do so (or another month. Food and
beverages went up only 0.2 percent
in June, far below the 1.1 percent
increase in housing costs and the 1
percent rise in medical expenses
The only major component ol
consumer Items that went up in
price more slowly than food was
clothing, up only 01 percent lor the
month.
The year-to-year inflation rale

year, real weekly earnings have
gone down 0.3 percent.
The amount of money the
government ftgures the once typical
family of four, with une wage e ar­
ner, had left to spend after taxes also
went down 0.2 percent, more of the
same for workers who have lost 2
percent of their spending power In
the last year.
Today's CPI report followed
Wednesday's broader measure of
inflation contained In the gross
national product figures.

...No More For Road?
(Continued from Page 1A)
situation before it got out of hand The only
complaints we had were from people In nearby
Indian Ridge who didn't like the traffic coming
out of the place at 3 ,4, 5 o'clock in (he mor­
ning."
Also, "the city is growing and we didn't want
other bars that might come into the area to get
the idea that they could start doing the same
thing," Govuruhk added.
“ I’ve already talked to the bar management
about the new law and 1 don't anticipate any
problem with compliance," he said. "It was
just a few employees who were allowing
customers to drink after 2 a m. Some changes
In personnel are going to be made whlrh
should set things right,”
Despite the new law, Govuruhk said his men
are "not going to go goose-stepping into the
place at 2:01 a.m. and arrest anybody with a
beer In their hand. We’ll be making spot
checks to make sure everything is O K." If the
problem persists, “then we'll arrest the owner
for selling and the customer for drinking after
2 a.m ." Violators could receive up to 30 days in
Jail, a $100 fine or both.
“What a joke,” laughed one municipal of­
ficial who requested anonymity. “ I don't like
making fun of the way other people run their
dties, but this was a bit of overreaction. Why
go through all the trouble of drafting an or­
dinance, taking It before the council, and
holding public hearings when live problem

probably could have been solved by just going
to the bar owner and saying, 'lley, state and
local Uw says you have to stop selling at 2 a m.
You're out on a limb when you sell the stufi
just prior to 2 and then let people sit around
and drink it till the wee hours of live mor­
ning.’ "

y j Ladies' Shoes

I t

A survey of Seminole County's major cities
shows tlial only one — Altamonte Springs —
has an ordinance similar to lh.il of Winter
Springs. Rut strangely enough, Altamonte
Springs is also the only municipality with a

DRESS - CASUALS - SANDALS
LIST PRICED '30 TO 'SO

lounge that routinely slays open past the
generally recognlied 2 a.m. cutoff — the
Hotline bottle club, located at San Sebastian
Square on State Road 436, which doesn't cork
its bottles until 4 a m.
The Altamonte etty council passed a law
earlier this year outlawing the sale or con­
sumption ol alcoholic beverages in com­
mercial establishments between 2 a.m. and 7
a.m., but nude an exception for the Hotline
which had threatened to fight Ihe law in court.
The ordinance also harmed any more Ixillle
clubs in the city.
Other Seminole municipalities follow the
statewide 2 a.m. cutoff for the sale of beer,
wine, and liquor, but not everyone is as picky
about it as Winter Springs and Altamonte
Springs.

MEN S COMFORTABLE

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�E ven in g H erald

The Seminole County unit of the American
Cancer Society la In desperate need of volunteer
drivers lo transport Seminole County cancer
patients to Orlando for radiation therapy.
Right now the local cancer society unit is down
lo five volunteer drivers, but they need at least 10
more, according to Mary Jo Cochrane, office
secretary.

I U I P I *11 KOI

300 N. FRENCH AVF.., SANFORD. FLA. 22771
Area Code 30M22-26I1 or 831-9993
T hursday, July 23, 1901—4A
Wa^ne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising end Circulation Director

Home Delivery: W eek.il 00; Month, R S ; 6 Month), 124.00;
Year. itJ 00 Uy Mail Week. $123; Month, 13.23; i Months.
r» 0 0 ; Year. 137.00.

Time To Bring
Back The ABM
In mid-l‘J79, President Jimmy Carter cornmilled his support lo the MX missile system
t missile-experimental"). The MX was per­
ceived as the cure-all to the growing vulnerability
of the United States' land-based strategic nuclear
missiles to Soviet attack.
Two years later, the MX is the cause of deep
divisions within the otherwise unified Reagan
administration as well as the Congress. Last
week. Ihe House of Representatives over­
whelmingly defeated an amendment to a defense
appropriations bill that would have eliminated
funding for Ihe MX. Almost simultaneously, it
approved an amendment offered by James V.
Hansen (ll-Ulah) to delay the plan to base the MX
in shelters around the Ncvada-Utah desert.
The key lo the MX system" Is that by scat­
tering some 200 missiles among 4,600 shelters
throughout the desert of Nevada arid Utah, and
moving them periodically, the U S. could prevent
Soviet surveillance satellites from pinpointing the
locations of enough of them to overcome the
certainty of devastating American retaliation,
should the Soviets venture a nuclear attack
against the U S.
Hut the MX run into n buzzsaw of opposition,
from conservatives and liberals. Sens. Jake Gam
(R-Utahl and Paul I-axalt (R-Ncv.) announced
they wouldn't support it. The environmentalist
opposition to massing a huge construction force in
Ihe West to build the 4,600 shelters and the
thousands of miles of road &lt;or rail) to connect
them is formidable.
Perhaps it should lie. The concept of a giant
shell game played with nuclear missiles is not
only weird and impractical: it is also un­
necessary.
In 1972 the United States and the Soviet Union
signed a treaty limiting the defensive systems of
each country, in order to prevent the buildup of
anti-ballistic m issiles. Both countries were
limited to two ARM sites. In 1974, the number of
site s was reduced lo one. The Soviets built theirs
near Moscow-, th e US. o p te d lo r Nekoma, North
Dakota, lo protect its North Dakota-based ICHMs.
In February 1976, the Nekoma ABM site was shut
down, less than a year after it was completed. The
Soviets have one ABM, the U.S., none.
It is obvious that building newer and bigger
offensive nuclear missiles will never provide the
U.S with genuine national security. There is
always the possibility that the Soviets will build
one still bigger. That is what they have done with
IlieSS-lH; but the MX is not the answer. Rather,
the U S. should reopen and rearm its ABM site.
Seymour L. Zeiberg, deputy undersecretary of
defense (or sjuicc and strategic systems has
drafted a p ro p o s a l for reopening Nekoma. His
plan would deploy 70 long-range and 30 shortrange defense missiles at the ABM site.
According to Zeiberg, reopening the Nekoma
site would cost $3.5 billion. The MX would cost $33
billion, according to the Air Force, and as much
as $60 billion in other estimates.
The Air Force and the Reagan Administration
should give serious thought to Mr. Zeiberg's
proposal. His is not the only one. Lt. Gen. Daniel
Graham (U S A., Ret.), former director of the
Defense Intelligence Agency, believes that the
U S. should take advantage of its long lead over
(he Soviets in space technology, by developing an
orbiting space station capable of destroying
Soviet missiles as soon ns they were detected
leaving Ihe earth.
The traditional enemy of the ABM has been the
worried liberal who thinks that an ABM would
make nuclear war more likely, since national
leaders would believe they were invulnerable to
retaliation if (hey attacked. But it's more likely
that defense missiles held by both sides would
maintain Ihe nuclear deterrent.
'Die ultimate puprose of weapons in American
hands is defensive, not offensive. The ABM, not
die MX, should be built, for reasons of strategic
effect, cost, and common sense.

BERRY'S WORLD

II

‘'Frankly. I DON'T CARE IT
Diana only
going lo love and honor, but nol obey Prince
Charles “

t

What volunteer drivers do Is to collect
Seminole County cancer patients at their homes
and take them either to Orlando Regional
Medical Center or Florida Hospital, also in
Orlando.
The average age of these patients is 30, some

To 0

By TOM GIORDANO

are older and some younger, according to Mrs.
Cochrane.
Drivers are needed five days a week, Monday
through Friday, usually from 9 a.m. until noon.
Cochrane explains each driver takes two or three
patients in his or her (the volunteer’s) car lo
either of the two hospitals, about a 20-mile trip
each way, early in the morning and generally
returns them to their homes by noon the same
day.
II the Seminole County cancer society unit can
drum up 10 more drivers or so, that will mean
each volunteer’s services would only be needed
about once a month...not much to give a lellow

human being.
So, tf ydu have an uncommitted morning to
give someone help who truly needs it, and you
can cope with a trip lo Orlando, you can contact
Mrs. Cochrane between 10 s.m. and J p.m. at 3220849, or Mrs. Clara Lee. transportation chair­
man, at 323-7027.
By the way, Mrs. l*ee says volunteer drivers
are paid some to help defray the cost of gasoline
Drivers get $3 for the first patient, and $2 each
for each additional patient. So if you take three
patients lo Orlando, you get $9...if you want It.
That’s voluntary, too. Some need the money,
others decline it, according lo Mrs. lee.

WILLIAM 5TEIF

EDUCATION WORLD

Diplomats
Have
Big Ears
By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Every so often,
the State Department releases a brickalzed
volume in Us aeries "Foreign Relations of the
United Stales."
The heavy tomes, made up of some 1,600
pages of secret cables, memos and notes that
are aU more than 23 years old, make great
door-stops. Far the history bull with stainless
steel eyeballs, the collections of declassified
documents can also give an insight into how
foreign policy was made and how dull all
those closed-door diplomatic conferences
really are.
The latest volume, from the Geneva conferences of 1932 and 1934 dealing with
Indochina and Korea, iaa grinding eserctie in
(utility. But, almost accidentally, the
collection of documents has a lesson in it lor
Journalists.
Diplomatic correspondents tend to think of
themselves as collectors of Information,
gleaners who can put hints and opaque
statements together to make a meaningful
view of foreign policy in action.
Several of Ihe documents Just declassified
show that the reporters, to a degree they will
find surprising, are themselves the source
and channel of Information that is collected
and used by the diplomats.
For example, one "conftdenlial" cable to
the State department from U.S. diplomat U.
Alexis Johnson reported in 1934 that "several
knowledgeable American correspondents"
had talked with an American press officer
about their belief that the Chinese communist
leadership was taking a role increasingly
independent from that of Ihe Soviets.
The cable quotes "well-veraed observer*
such as Edmund Stevens of the Christian
Science Monitor, Ed Kerry (Uwn with United
Press and later U2t. ambassador lo Chita)
and Joe Fromm of US. News A World
Report."
The Johnson cable says II was the conaenaua of the correspondents, based on the
cloae observation of Uny hints such as the
guest lists of diplomatic dinners, that Chou
En-UI "has been making obvious efforts to
forge (his) own foreign policy In the Far
E ast.”
The Johnson cable endj with a diplomatic
cop-out; "1 do not entirely share these views
but p a n them on aa of possible interest.”
Ironically, another 1*34 cable, this one from
Secretary of State John Foster Dulles at
Geneva, gives the official US. Une: "There
has been nothing to date indicating any dif­
ferences of opinion between the Soviet Union
and communist China.”
Dulles ftally ordered that no official U S.
source should even hint that there were major
SlnoSovet differences. Bui six years later,
when Russian advisers were pulled out of
China, the State Departm ent officially
recognised whal had been apparent to a small
group of reporters in Geneva: There were
real differences between Moscow and Peking.
Another memo from Johnson recounts in
detail a dinner table conversation between J.
Kingsbury Smith of International News
Service and a man named Zhukov, a Soviet
correspondent from Pravda.

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ROBERT WALTERS

Who Can Afford It?
WASHINGTON (NF.A) - The good news
from the savings and loan Industry is that
"today’s savvy home buyers" are “no longer
faced with a limited choice of mortgage
plans" because they can select uinong VRMs
, HHMs, ARMS and GPMs

1979, was the industry’s first attempt to un­
dermine the fixed-rate mortgage — although
accompanying federal regulations required
that institutions offering VRMs also make
available traditional mortgages to those
preferring them.

The bad news is that millions of families are
being denied the privilege of home ownership
because all of those alphabet-aoup plans
concocted by the industry are exorbitantly
expensive when compared with Itxadwete
mortgages

The VRM plan also included mandatory
disclosure of the "worst case" scenario eg
future monthly Interest payments, a feature

"The industry has tried to shift the entire
risk of lending onto the borrower — the home
buyer," says Robert 1. Gnaiida. an attorney
with Public Advocates Ind., a San Franciscobased public-interest law firm.

By 1980, however, the industry was
promoting the renewable rate mortgage.
Both "w ont case" disclosure and mandatory
availability of fixed-rate mortgages were
quietly abandoned with the introduction of the
RRM.

"Only the rich and those with a gambling
streak can now qualify for mortgage loana,"
adds Rep. Benjamin S, Rosenthal, D-N.Y.,
chairman of a i louse subcommittee on con­
sumer and monetary affairs that lias
examined mortgage lending practices.
Soaring interest rates In recent years have
produced financial setbacks for ihe savings
and loan Industry, but il remains con­
siderably healthier than its leaders claim
when constantly appealing (or federal
regulators’ approval of lucrative new mor­
tgage plans
Of the more than 1740 billion worth of funds
held at the beginning of 1980 by savings and
loan associations and mutual savings banks,
approximately fltO billion — almost 23*
percent — was in passbook accounts paying
depositors a pitiful $.3 percent in annual in­
terest but producing substantial profits for
the thrift Institutions.

Zhukov, who apparently was more than Just
a Soviet newspaper report*-, laid out for
Smith (who then passed It on to Johnson, who
was head of the American delegation) much
of (he communist strategy in the Indochina
conference.

Those Institutions also held reserves —
accumulated profits from earlier yean —
totaling more than $44 billion. Finally, the
federal tax code allows them to offset current
lasses against past profits to qualify for
government rebates, estimated to exceed $2
billion this year.

Smith, now national editor of Hears!
Newspapers, says he had already written for
INS what he passed on to the American
delegation about the Zhukov conversation,
and he had no idea that Johnson was
meticulously paving on his dinner table chit­
chat to the State Department.

Yet Ihe industry has convinced federal
regulators lo author lie a succession of selfserving mortgage schemes, including three
floating-rate variations in three consecutive
years.
The variable rate mortgage, introduced In

necessitated by the tact Uwt in tern ) chargee
could increase aa much aa 0 » percent an­

nually tnd 2.3 percent over ihe life of the loan.

Although the maximum yearly increase
allowed in the interest rate remained at 0.3
percent, the total potential increase during
the life of the toan was doubled to 9 percent.
The industry’s 1901 offering, the adjustable
rate mortgage, allows a maximum annual
interest rate Increase ot 2 percent. The ARM,
(or the fin t time, Includes no ceiling on the
interest rale increases that can be Imposed
during the lull term of the mortgage.
Another option, the graduated mortgage, la
known within the industry aa the GPM but
referred to hy some cynics as the "gyp'em’’
because its initial payments are deceptively
low but escalate rapidly in later yean.
The economic ol contemporary mortgage
lending have virtually eliminated home
ownership lor middle-income families who
abide by Ihe traditional rule of thumb that no
more than 23 percent of their monthly income
should be allocated to pay tor mortgage
principal, interest and taxes.
A $50,000 home requiring • 20 percent down
payment of $10,000 would carry a $40,000
mortgage. To qualify for a JO-year 16-pevcent
mortgage, however, a family must ram more
than $32,000 per year.
Rut 73 percent of the nation’s families don't
make that much muney. The "typical"
family, earning the median income of $21,000
annually, can no longer afford lo accept a
mortgage on a house priced higher than
$31,230.

Wild
Horse
Adoption

j

The recent announcement that the federal
government will begin killing thousands of,
"excess" wild horses and burros has caused
an emotional tidal wave of interest in how the
animals can be saved.
•
Hunted for dog food until 1971 — when;
schoolchildren petitioned Congress to stop the
practice — wild horses and burros are legally
protected as "living symbols of the historic
and pioneer spirit of the West."
But if* U S. Bureau of Land Mangemcnt
argues that there are too many animals for
the grazing land available and that the
rangeland in the West is deteriorating. The
BLM says there arc 50,000 wild horses and
17,000 burros, figures disputed by groups such
as the Humane Society of the United States,
which is suing BUI.
The Reagan administration says the cost of
managing the wild horses and burro program
is too high — $0 0 million has been requested
(or one year. The administration says 44,000
animals must be removed — 6,000 In the next
year — and destroyed if necessary.
Since May 1976, it has been possible to adopt
wild horses and burros nationwide for free
(not counting transportation costs). Begin­
ning this autumn, however, the government
will start charging $73 in "adoption fees" lor
each burro and $200 for each horse. Tran­
sportation costs of up to $63 are additional.
Since 1976, 29,000 animals have beer
adopted and are living aU over the country,
from a childrens' ranch in Oregon to actor
Burt Reynolds' farm tn Florida.
About 14,000 people asking for 36,000
animals are on a waiting list. But they all
have lo be notified the government is now
charging for the animals. BI.M thinks most
will cross their names off the list.
I’eople who adopt the animals don't get
legal tltl* lo them lor a year &lt;and only then II

a veterinarian certifies they’re being well
taken care of.
If you want to adopt a horse or burro, you
must be a U S. resident of legal age and have
a ptank, pole or pipe corral (six feet or higher
for a horse.).
After you submit an application, you are
placed on a waiting list. If you want aM o S year-old animal, you probably will get it
within a few months. If you want a younger
one, it might take a year or two.
The animals can be picked up at
distribution centers in California, Nevada,
Oregon, Tennessee. Texas, Washington or
Wyoming. Temporary centers are sometimes
M l up in the East.
Your pick-up vehicle must have sturdy
floor* covered with land, a smooth interior
and adequate ventilation.
Because the horses are wild, you will have
to break and train them. And, of course, you
will hgve to learn how lo feed them. Some
families have returned their animals because
ol the cost of feed.
There are two government pamphlet* that
are free and lell you the procedure for
adopting a wild horse or burro and what you
should know about taking care of them. A
qualified individual may adopt four animals a
year.
Write for "Getting Acquainted” and "Jo
You’d Like to Adopt a Wild Horae . . or
Burro?" and an application form from the
US. Department of the Interior, Bureau ol
Land Management, Washington, D.C. 20140.
If Americans do not want —or can't afford
-Ih e animals, Robert Burford, the new BLM
director, says the government is prepared to
destroy them in a humane way.
The adoption fees are necessary, he says,
because it costa $4.4 million a year — about
$400 an animal — to run the adoption
program.

JA C K ANDERSON

CIA: China Sent Nuclear Fuel Abroad
WASHINGTON—Topeecret CIA reports
claim, astonishingly, that Red China has been
shipping weapons-grade uranium to South
A fina. Tin agency iiu reports that China la
selling weapons-grade uranium to a I a tin
American country, probably Argentina.
l a s t year I reported that Israel, South
Africa and Taiwan were secretly cooperating
an Ihe development of a nuclear bomb. Thai
the Communist Chinese would be dealing with
South Africa In the same way u Taiwan is
surprising enough; that It would do so in
secret, while regularly crltkiiing the United
Sts tea for nuclear proliferation and ties to
Taiwan, la Incredible.
Diplomatic source* say that Secretary of
S&gt;ate Alexander Haig was concerned about
Ihe CIA reports before his trip lo China, and
that the issue was raised with the Peking
leadership.
The reason for Red China’s uranium trade

with South Africa, intelligence analysts have
concluded, Is mutual benefit. The South
Africans have plenty of uranium ore; the
Chinese have the enrichment plants ta tarn
the raw product into weapons-grade uranium,
which South Africa doesn't have.
Red China's meteoric rise as a nuclear
power is chronicled In lop-secret CIA reports
shown to m&gt; associate Dale Van Atta.
According to one of the Intelligence
estimates, China has spent more than $4 3
billion on nuclear weapons development since
the mid-1950s.
"Slightly more than halJ the total ex­
penditures have gone Into the production of
nuclear materials," one CIA report slated.
"B asic nuclear research , development,
fabrication and testing account for the
remainder."
China's mid ear progress made Us grealesl

advances between 1904 and 1979, according to
ihe CIA.
"China progressed from its fint fission test
in 15C4 to the succckJu! deter-tten of a
thermonuclear device in December 1906,"
une report says, adding: "The UJL5.R. took
four years and France more than eight years
to make a similar progression."
What makes the Chinese advances in
nuclear weapons development particularly
noteworthy ta that the work tarns unaffected by
(he political unrest that reduced the country’s
economy to near-chaos.
"The Chinese nuclear program has had the
highest priority, and China's rapid progress
reflects the (act that it was protected from
political turmoiL"
Another CIA rvport states that "China’s
nuclear program has absorbed a Urge por­
tion c4 the country’s best manpower,

machinery and materials." It
that
although the program takes only about onefourth of 1 percent of China's gross national
product, “it ccnstlfutcs a sabstantial cost tn
foregone opportunities for industrial and
technical advances In other fields.”
China’s two moat secret nuclear plants
went into full operation In 1914, tfw CIA
report*. These are a uranium ore con­
centration plant at Hong-yang and in enrich­
ment plant at Lan-chou.
So far, the CIA reports, there Is no evidence
that the Chinese a re shipping superior,
weapons-grade plutonium to either South
Africa or the Latin American country.
Footnote: A spokesman for the Chinese
Embassy here vehemently denied the reports
of nuclear trade with South Africa. "We have
no reUlions with them," he said. "We have no
business with them. This!* pure fabrication."

• -v -

/*&gt;

-

-

• f

IVr*

�Thursday, July]], lMt—SA

E verting Hers id. Sanford. F I.

Prostitute Gets 10 Years

Rita Jenrette
Obtains Divorce

LOU1SVUJ.E, Ky. (UPI l -

The leader
of a high-priced call-girl ring which kepi
a neat list of patrons and their sexual
preferences was sentenced Wednesday to
10 years in prison. Two other defendants
were placed on probation.
Jefferson Circuit Judge Benjamin
Shobe sentenced Barbara Stroud of
louisville on her guilty plea to charges of
promoting prostitution and criminal
syndication, similar to a count of running
an organised crime ring.
Her husband, Mike Stroud, and co­
defendant Barbara Hobbs Mills each
were placed on probation (or five years
on their guilty pleas to similar charges.
After the sentencing, Assistant
Commonwealth's Attorney James Metry

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Kila Jcnrctle. who bunt Into
notoriety when she posed nearly nude tor Playboy
magazine, has gotten a divorce from her husband, John, the
former South Carolina congressman convicted of A bram
’.charges.
•‘It's over," declared Mrs. Jenrette who was granted a
divorce Tuesday after a brief hearing in the District of
Columbia Superior Court.
"1 feel no elation or victory, just a sense of great satisfac­
tion," Mrs. Jenrette told the Washington Post.
Mrs. Jenrette’s lawyer, Frances Rogala, said the former
Texas beauty queen and aspiring country singer, and the
former congressman both appeared in court for the un­
contested proceeding.
Mrs. Jenrette, who Is now living in Beverly Hills, Calif.,
announced in January she wanted a divorce from her
politician husband after finding 125,000 in cash stuffed in
one of his shoes.
Jenrette and a co-defendant, John Stowe, were convicted
last October of conspiracy and bribery charges arising
from the FBI’s undercover operation where agents posed as
representatives of fictitious Arab sheiks and tried to bribe
politicians.

said Mrs. Stroud's harsher sentence re­
flected the fact that she "definitely was
in charge” of the prostitution ring.
In addition, Metry said, a pre-sentence
report showed Mrs Stroud had a
previous prostitution-related conviction.
The convictions were the first for her
husband and Miss Mills, who likely will
be allowed to report to a probation officer
near her home in the Pensacola, Fla.,
area.
Both Strouds were arrested by police in
Atlanta while Miss Mills surrendered to
authorities in June as part of a plea
bargain, according to defense attorney
Ed O'Connor.
The prostitution ring — shut down by
police last year — gained notoriety when

SAN FO RD P LA Z A -

Investigators disclosed the existence ol a
loose-leaf book filled with the names,
addresses, phone numbers, suggested
prices and sexual preferences of about
800 patrons who included judges, police,
politicians and attorneys.

O P E N 10 4 MON S A T.

C h a n g e yo u r
PEARL EARRINGS
W ITH DIAMONDS,
— RUBIES AND =
SAPPHIRES AS
O FTEN
AS YO U R MIND
IT S A SNAP
ATZALES!

Police seixed the book during a raid but
a Judge barred its use in court because
the search warrant was ruled invalid
when a lesbian tipster reversed her story
to authorities.
At roe point the ring employed eight
prostitutes working out of a luxury
apartment but willing to travel anywhere
in the country upon demand. One
prostitute claimed she made {5.000 in one
weekend.

More Indictments Probable
O ver Atlanta Child Deaths
ATI .ANTA (UPI | — Prosecutors have
left open the possibility that another
indictment might be sought Friday for
Wayne B. Williams, already indicted in
two of 28 murders of young Atlanta
blacks.
W illiams,
23,
a
Iree-lance
photographer and talent scout, was in­
dicted last week in the murders of 21year-old Jimmy Hay Payne, the 2fith
victim, and 27-year-old Nathaniel Cater,
the oldest and last of the victims.
A computer Tuesday night randomly
chose Judge Clarence Cooper, roe ol two

Stroll With Spy
Led To Probe
BUFFAIjO, N.Y. (U Pf| — The FBI began investigating
accused spy Joseph llelmich when they saw him strolling at
Niagara Falls in August 1910 with a Soviet KGB agent the
bureau had under surveillance, A Buffalo newspaper reported
Wednesday.
In a copyright story, the Buffalo Evening News quoted
sources as saying that Helmich agreed to work as a “safe
drop” or "go between" who would transfer information be­
tween Soviet spys.
Helmich, 44, was Indicted last week in Florida an charges he
sold top-secret codes to the Russians for 1131,000 while in the
U-S. Army Signal Corps and attached to the US. Embassy in
Parts in 1963 and 1964.
The News said Helmich allegedly met with the KGB agent
while living in Niagara Falls to discuss additional espionage
work and arrange to receive final payment far the codes he is
accused of selling to the Russians in the 1960a.
Niagara Falls, which attracts hundreds ol thousands of
foreign tourists each year, is recognized as an excellent
location for espionage activities, the News said.

black Judges on the Fulton County Welcome served as city solicitor.
Earlier Tuesday, Ms. Welcome said
Superior Court bench, to try WiUtams’
case. Cooper, who was out ol town and the past few weeks have been
"devastating" lor Williams.
could not be reached for comment, has
Ues to both the prosecution and defense
She added that "things have been
in tiie case.
easier for him because of the decent way
Cooper, a Superior Court Judge for 10 he's been treated."
months, was the first black to s e n e as
Williams is being kept in a 6-b)-lMoot
assistant district attorney under District
Attorney l.ewis Slaton, who will cell under around-the-clock surveillance
prosecute Williams. He also is a close by closed circuit television and a guard
acquaintance of Mary Welcome, stationed outside the cell. His food also Is
Williams' lawyer, having sen'ed as a being prepared separately from that of
Municipal Court Judge while Ms. other inmates, officials said.

Ti.rre in one Farting Set Rubies, sapphires
and diamonds snap on and oil It Laral gold
Cultured pearl earring lockets The set, SUV

=

ZALES

The Diamond Store

-

141114 B in t ptftltNNt WUMftlAH l*Mt *14 11*4

Mwm «*4*MM - *****a*I sP-w

an* tM*.he*iMm4V*

Fugitive Cuban Arrested
UNION CITY. N.J. I UPI I - A Cuban
refugee wanted in a double slaying In Dade
County, Fla., was arrested in a Union City
apartment by police armed with shotguns and
wearing bullet proof vests

Miami, was also wanted on rape and robbery
charges.
He was being held at Hudson County Jail
Wednesday on a fugitive warrant issued by
Florida authorities, who were expected to try
to extradite Uira for prosecution, said Union
City Detective Sgl. Antony Sauchclli.

Acting on a telephone tip Tuesday night,
detectives converged on Mario Lara, 25 — also
known as Mario Albo—inside an apartment at
314 27th St. Lira, who gave his address as

l-ara was free on bond in the rape and
robbery cases when the slayings occurred

1-D A Y ONLY! N O T H IN G H ELD BACK!

C le a r a n c e
Clearance
Savings on
Group of
Ladies’
Fashions.
Misses’ and women's
assorted print blouses.
Orlg. to 10.00

THURSDAY ONLY!

M isses’ and juniors’
summer slacks.

BARGAINS GALORE! BE HERE EARLY AND SAVE!
INCREDIBLE SAVINCS OF

SO R R Y , N O A D V A N C E SAIESI
CLOSED T H U R S . A M T U I N O O N .
EASY CREDIT TERMS ARRANGED.
N O RHONE ORDERS PHASE]

U P TO

66%

OFF

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

UNITEDFURNITURE SALES

MO
MM
5211
1279

'

SALE

t$f t«

4

TIU 1 U FM ||

pc

R E C L IN E a a

Durable .d ia l w.ih 2 yr guarantee
c c .a rt
SALE
$2*9 KroeWe* blown recline* Atlrat
l» a nylon llbnc
SALE

IM S quilled total. traditional l londi
cotton ponit
S A IF $ 3 2 B
1449 M and Queen sleepers Various _
p in e n i t co-cat
SALE $349
S l t l K r o e n ltr p tu in q u ie n to la .
beepers
SALE $ 4 9 9

SALE $759

$379
$299

China

$748

sa le

cocktail or eng tables
rarely ol styles1 finishes

Lonowood SpwcIMi Only
199 brass boor lamps

U

n

i)*in

n

SALE

Ml

SALE H I M
.SA LE 129

169 bookcase 24.9S.6C

SA LE S 3 !

Odd ftliitUKlt

SALE | 4 |

AHratt»nI tt.wtttf

m p tw $ iu ,is n tn

d

U

u

r n

it u

JUE
30C w ■“ 821.26
ifJkMiM «»

4 a 4 drawer chests
1ft 9 beniwood hail bees
149chrome/glets end labies

20% OFF

Ml

it e

r e

H

------ 4615 S. ORANGE BLOSSOM TRAIL • ORLANDO
VISA 1 550 N. HIGHWAY 17*92 LONGWOOD
SERVICE OR EVERYTHING
—
WE SELL

”**

mi—
N iM M

ITOttl

A iit. shirts, slacks,
lacketa and skirts.

Orlg. to '40"

Illustrations ara representative ol selections
on sales. Style* may vary,

Shoe Clearance
Women’s dress, casual, sandals.
Reduced again.
G rO U p I

Orig. to 24.00

ODDS 4 ENP8

All (TIES SVIKCTTB SIN! AVilUlIUTT

20* OF.
sa le

l

Orlando Specials Only

SALE M l

eras tafn f t s jw **e

$99

A lt $ 5 9

$99

A LL C E R A M IC LAMPS • BUY 1, G E T
S E C O N D FREE!

l i l t ) alag an i ft-pc dmmg room
■bushed what oral table with budwood lop * theirs ft cTwn® — SALE \$ 8 9 8

179 bookcase 24«17*80

A wide
SALE

$679

CHAIRS 4 ROCKERS

TABLES AND LAMPS
I1 4 f

$599

1349 Calnapp ei rocker r e c lin e d . . . .
Durable labncs
SALE $&lt;29
1299 r e lr t l ladiea sw ive l c h in a
DelubMKtoehlet Sw
issdo» tabnc Sale $|/4
1119 bentwood rockers Vou Assemble

In d u d n to la , lo v a tta l and rtc lln e r

PININQ ROOMSETS
SJ4S 4-pc Singer dmmg room Frurlwood o&gt;ai table w 4 chaws
SALE
$49* matching china
SALE
1949 Uaditarrcnean ft pc dmmg room
Paean o&gt;sl ta b le 4 c h a irs , m d

$169

t a n Banatl 4p c Bedroom Todays
look Pacer oaktm.th Dresser m-rrot 4
drawer cdetl A headboard — SA LE
S99* Singe* 4-pc bedroom Oak with
braes bun dresser, mirror. S drawer
chest and headboard
SALE
1 I4 » double pedestal. Sik drawer
bedroom desk
SALE

$ 13 9 9

.
$o4
.
S lu 9
. . . .
$319

Misses' and juniors'
summer coordinates.

$219

BEAUTIFUL BEDROOMS

PWfiTTi . g i i a

Now 4 "
to 6 "

Now 27"

|3 )9 muil'posibon Kioehier leclma*

SOFAS 4 SLEEP SOFAS

111* 4-pc fl-nette f canoe a top w.th
piam ot dotal Diana
SALE
12*9 7-pe tfinatt# Mi so lotm-ca latxa
• Ih ft cha-rs
SALE
1479 4-pc 4 7 'round )iaa* labia with «
nylon covered ch in a
SALE

2

17**detu r. 7-pc living room beeubtut
pine sot« cheir. rocker otromen
cocktsii table m d 7 end tablet
SALE $ 4 9 9
11)99 3- pc colonial living room Sola
loveteat and ractmei All Inmmed m . . . q
wood Ouiabif nylon Moral cow* SA LE O 7 3 3

1 2 NOON

All covered mismetcned se ll Isold in sets only)
1179 twm s irs

Orig. to 18.00

C O M P L E T E L IV IN G R O O M S

M A TTRESS SETS
Choose bom King Kod Spring Aw a
Engender 10 y&gt; warranty beds
1279 twm sets
1)09 M l sue sets
1)99 queen
sets
1649 kmg sue sell

Belled &amp; pul lorn

DUE TO THE GREAT
REDUCTIONS,
PRICES DO NOT
INCLUDE DELIVERY.

15V 20V 30% *W o

Now 7 "

HITES

a

le

1 4 '

^*|l«14ie*
n
—

1Jp,r~
§§§
rtZ"

tay-A-wm
This Sal.

l5 S ®

I

ocuaoo

s *

V 1 *% HP A* 4*

I t Ml 10 all*

4

GroupII
GrOUpIII

Orlg. to 19.99

Orlg. to 12.99

Now 7"

5"
Now 2"

Now

Broken sizes.

Of course you can charge it

m m m

•

JC P en n ey
SANFORD PLAZA
Hwy 17-924 State St
Open Monday thru Saturday. 10 am -9 pm
Open Sunday. 1230-5 3 0 pm

�/

SPO RTS

Franklin's Fizz 'Relieves' Sanford Indigestion
Bruce Settles Sanford Stomach, Juniors Whip Holly Hill
By SAM TOOK
Herald Sparti Kdltnr
Plop, plop F lu , fin . Oh, what a relief
Bruce Franklin is*
After Sanford starter Glenn U ndress
and the Junior all-stars suffered a bad
case of indigestion with the first five
Holly Hill hitlers Wednesday night.
Manager Alvls Whitted went to his rightlianded stomach relaxant
The easy-going Franklin turned tough
on Holly Hill, dissolving its bats on two
hits and two runs over seven innings of
sparkling relief for an 11-fi Sanford
victory in the District 4 Junior Majrr
league tournament at Chase Park.
Sanford continues its march through
the loser's bracket tonight at 3 agalrat
New Smyrna Beach. In the B p tn. game,
unbeatens Ormond Beach and the Pori
Orange S.P 0.R .T 5. collide fir a step
closer tn the title.
While Franklin settled the Sanford
stomach with a remedy of moving
lastballs, the young (’rooms three-sport
standout had a queasy feeling of his own
when greeted with a check-swing single
on his first delivery.
"I thought I was going to get rocked,"
smiled Franklin while icing down a sore
elbow after the game. "But after that
inning I started pouring it in.”
Franklin entered the first frame with

the bases loaded and Sanford three runs walked, stole second base, went to third
in pain. After Matt Henderson fluked his base on an errant throw and scored when
single, Franklin walked Nick Pratt to the center fielder’s return loss was wild.
Carr, most valuable player In the city
reload the bases.
Steve Sweeney dropped ■ nice bunt for series won by Knights of Columbus,
another Bill anti Chris Rivera grounded swiped the first of what would be It thefts
to lirst base to drive in Henderson for a 3- against Holly Hill’s left-handed catcher,
Dave Johnson.
0 advantage.
Franklin and Kevin Smith worked
It was then that Franklin's tin look
effect. Bruce fanned David Harney for Holly Hill starter Chris Rivera lor walks
the final out. It would be the first of II to open the third. A wild pick-off attempt
strike outs over the nest 19 outs in which allowed Franklin lo score after a stolen
he allowed only three balls lo be hit out of base and Smith scored on Donald
Grayson's liner up die middle.
the infield.
The speedy Grayson easily pilfered
Two of those balls were grabbed by
U rry Thomas on fine-running catches second and Ih rd, then scored on Carr's
near the right field (oul line. Franklin RBI grounder to pull Sanford within, W
finished with a flourish, retiring the final after three frames.
Holly HlU came back with a run in the
eight batters tn order and whiffing Ihe
top of the fourth on a walk by Terry
last two.
"We just slopped hitting alter Franklin Johnson, a wild pilch, another walk to
came on," moaned Holly Hill Manager John Moak and Dane Johnson's Infield
Mel Moak. "But I guess a lot of that h it
When Moak attem pted to score,
might have been due to him.”
While the Holly Hill aluminum went the however, first baseman Carr rut him
route of the Franklin sedative, Sanford down at the plate as catcher Lee
peeked away at the five-run disad­ Frederick blocked the dish and made a
vantage with at least one run evtry In­ perfect tag.
Sanford pulled with one at W in the
ning after a scoreless first.
• Once we got behind we started fourth when Tuesday's pitching hero
smacking," said Whitted about the Fred Miller singled, stole second and
local*' steady recovery i d . William Can* scored when the throw got past the
set the lone for things to come when he second baseman and the center fielder

H olly H ill's Jo h n M oak slid e s s a f e ly in to th ird b a s e a s S a n fo r d 's th ir d s a c k r r
D o n ald G ra y s o n lu n g es to m a k e th e ta g . Left fie ld e r S le v in D e n n is b a c k s up the
play a s u m p ire H e n ry D e b a se ( r ig h t) m o v e s in fur th e c a ll.

uncorked another wild one.
Whitted's crew settled Into an 8-6 lead
with three runs in ihe filth inning. Smith,
Thomas and Grayson each stole a base
and scored a run, while I undress
slammed the key hit — a two-run double
down the right field line off lefty reliever
Moak.
Franklin, Thomas and Grayson added
runs and steals in the sixth. Grayson's
two-run two-bagger to right center
chased home two runs and CarT plated
his second with a shot to left field.
Grayson led the quick-footed crew with
four ltesls. Franklin chipped in three,
while Smith, Thomas and Carr had two
each as every Sanford player swiped a
base except Slevin Dennis, who dropped
a nice sacrifice bunt lor his donation.
Thomas, laindress and Grayson had
two hits each. Grayson drove home three
runs, while Carr and landress collected
two 'Tibbies" each. Johnson paced the
by now ill Holly HiU with two hits. The
visitors were the first team eliminated
from ihe tournament.
And a few hours later, Daytona Beach
headed back to the sand when New
Smyrna's Mike Atkins shutout Daytona,
t o on a one-hitter, striking out It while
walking six.
Alan Huskey belted a pair of triples for
New Smyrna Beach and drove In half of
Ihe team's six runs. John Haggard had a
pair of KOI singles. John MerTkk also
had two hits for the winners.
New Smyrna Beach scored two runs in
the top of ihe first. Bryan Span walked
with one out and Huskey stroked his first
triple. Huskey scored on a single by
Haggard.
John Merrick opened the third with a
single for New Smyrna Beach and stole
second. Span struck out on a wild pitch
that the catcher couldn’t handle and he
beat the throw to first base. Merrick, who
advanced to third on the wild pitch,
scored on the throw to first base, and
when first baseman Dwane Hall fired
late to the plate, Span tried lo go to
second. A perfect throw by catcher Tim
Smith nailed Span al second.
Daytona Beach'a only hit, and best
•coring effort, came tn the bottom of the
third. Mika Hank led off and d m a walk.
Mike t.ynch draglted a bunt derwn the
first baae line for a hit.
AB
)
1
)
2
1
1
)
2
2
2

H O LLY H ILL
terry Joevnon. M
John Moak. lb p
Dene Johnton. t
Brute Bentord. ct
De»‘d Herbert, Cl
Mrnerd Pff men. ph
M S I Menderton. lb
Nict Preit.rt
Sieve Sweeney. &gt;b
Chru N i.ere.p lb

R
2
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
0

S a n fo rd r ig h t-h a n d r r H ru c e F ra n k lin d isso lv ed th e H o lly H ill b a ts
a f l e r co m in g on in th e f i r s t in n in g w ith the b a se s lo a d e d , F ra n k lin
s tr u c k out II b a ite rs in S a n f o r d 's 11-fi v icto ry .
Oe&gt;-d Harney. t l
TOTALS
SANFORD
eruceFrtniiiin . 1 1 p
Kevin Smltn. lb
t i f f f INOVYIBI* ft
Donald Crayton, lb
William Carr, cl
G lenLrndreu. p u
Lee Frederick,!
41eve Denme.ll
Fred M-Uer. 1b
TOTALS

N ■1
1 0
0 0
2 1
1 2
0 0
0 0
1 1
0 0
0 0
0 1

1
2)
aB
)
2
i
)
1
4
2
2
3
25

0 0 0
* 1 5
H 1
H Bl
2 1 0
2 0 0
2 2 1
3 2 3
1 1 2
0 1 2
0 0 0
0 0 0
1 l 0
11 t 1

500 100 0
*
41] 113 B — n

H illy Hill
Senior*

Game winning RBI — Tfnomii
£ — D. JGfcnvjn 1. Bmford 2. Sweeney.
A iv efi. L*n d rtu . Denmt LOB — HoMy Hill 4.
Unford S 7B — Thome*, G rty*cn. L a n d r m
SB - T Johnum, Mender ton, Ffin k i.n X
Smtlh t* Thomi* 2, Grayton 4, Carr 2. Lan
a r m . Frederick. Miller See — O. Jotwiwjn.
»*r**rv«y. D«rwi» MRP
t»« Matk (ThomMI
WP — Franklin 1 PB — D Jonnton
H O LLY H IU .
IP H W EH BB SO
R iv f f d U
4 S I s a s
M ud
2 4 2 ) 1 2
B ivtra laced fhrat barters tn tn* 5th inning
U N FO R O
IP H R Eft BB SO
L a n d rm
0 ) 4 4 t 0
Frankhft ( W)
7 2 2 2 S II
La n d rm fa c td toy* barter* inlh# ttt inning
NEW SMYRNA BCACH
aOhn Merrick, t* tb
Bryan Span. 2b

AB H M Bl
4 2 2 0
1 2 10

4 7 i 2
4 0 7 2
2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
3 0 1 0
7* * 1 5
AB H H Bl
3 0 1 0
1 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
7 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
7 0 0 0
14 • 1 •
701 070 0 - *
000 000 0 - 0

AienMuiber. I* i t
John Meg»ard, c
p«» M frrie Lc t
Tony Plummer, ph cl
jjm e * M e ff«k , 1b
Donnie Moore, ph I*
Mike Aikln*, p
CeneVerano, r&lt;
Icon Merrick. ph rl
Docg Tester men, 3b
TO TA L S
D A Y TO N A BEACH
MiKe Lynch. 1 , )b
Ionia Harvey, t*
Wayne M inn log, cl
Dwayne Mall, lb
H,&lt;hard John. Jb
F rin k F re pB lA , pr* ta
Chrn wood, p
f im Smlfft* €
Rod William*, if
Stoll Foiler. 7D
Mike Rink, rl
TO TA L*
New Smyrna Beach
O iyfoni Beach

Gama emmng RBI - Hirskey
E — Haggard. J im e t Merrick, Moore.
Freeman 1 LOB - New Smyrna Beach 4.
Daytona Beach * 36 — H u U t y 2 SB — John
Merrick. Span, Hut key. S- Merrick, Lynch 1,
Manning 1. Hall. Wood- Smith, williams.
Potter PB ■* Smith
NCWSMYRNA
IP M R EH BB SO

AtkmtlWI

7 I 0 0 * 14

DAYTONA BEACH
Wood (L I

IP H R E R BB SO
7 1 * 5 7 *

BFGoodrich SALE
1 American Playoff
321-0920
Hopes Flickering Gnat mileqgeat.

Tire &amp; Muffler
1441 FR E N C H A V I . (17-fl)

PHONE

SANFORD

ALSO SO UTH SPRINO OARDEN A V E.

O P EN
M O N .T H R U 1 A T

15 A DeLand

la.m.-iiMp.m.

PHONE

736-8005

LIFETIME GUARANTEE

M U FFLE R S
M fT A U tt 1

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PACKS

COMPLETE DUAL JO BS *135
H EAVY DUTY SHOCKS BRAKE JO B
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$ 9 9 5

U.OO
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FRONT OR REAR
DISC OR DRUM

* 3 4 95

REPACfc BEARING! U.M PER SIDE

COMPUTER BALANCE

$ 3 9 5

ALIGNMENTS
MOST CARS .......

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Per Tire.,

PICK-UPS A VANS

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TWIN I ...............

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^1 4 * 9 5
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INCLUDES POINTS, PLUGS, CONDENSER

DAYTON

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RADIAL-POWER CUSTOM

4 PLY POLY WHITEWALL
A7U 13- U 4.44
B7l s l3- U I.lt
070114—130.34
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The OrUmk' Americans, despite an unhealthy 3-5-0 record,
can still redeem some semblance of self respect by making the
AFA plnyolls. The Americans are in a mutt win situation for
the balance of the schedule.
The first foe in the playoff drive will be stale rival
Jacksonville, 4-3-0, this Sunday In the Gator Bawl. A win here
plus a Jacksonville loss to West Virginia on August 1 would
give the Firebirds 1 losses.
The Virginia Hunters face Dallas, Shreveport, and West
Virginia and any two looses combined with Orlando victories
over Jacksonville, San Antonio and Dallas would put Virginia
out of the running.
An Orlando victory aver Jacksonville coupled with a
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�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, July 33. IMl—7A

Altamonte Paradise Not By Dashboard Light
This corpulent crooner that looks more like
a meatball than a singer once theorized that
two out of three ain't bad. Of course, he
makes his living as a singer and not a
grammarian.
C oincidentally, that singer, named
Meatball is a big fan of the New York
Yankees. He once had a tape recording of
broadcaster Phil Hirruto doing play-by-play
spliced into a song called "Paradise by die
Dashboard Light."
This missive, nevertheless, is not about the
paradise one finds by dashboard lights, but
the paradise that is found by baseball field
lights.

In the past three days, Altamonte Springs'
baseball teams pulled oft Meatball's two out
of three, and came within one out of nuking it
a perfect ihree-for-three in Division 11.
District 14 competition.
Veteran Manager Gene tetteriu's Major
league (11-12 year-oldsi team whipped
Eustis, 10-0 Monday night (or number one.
Htght-hander Anthony “A" Laszaic, )ust an
ll-y^ar-o'd, fired a three-hitter and struck out
II.
le tte n o 's crew enters tonight's District 14
title game in good shape. Altamonte plays
Apopka at 7:30 p.m. Apopka beat Winter
Garden 2-0 on a passed ball and a balk
Tuesday night, but had to use its best pitcher
to do it. Apopka needs to whip Altamonte
twice to capture die trophy since it has lost
once already in the double-elimination action.
lettcrio runs a disciplined program which
has paid big dividends the past few years. He
works his squad out at Rollins College and
believes in throwing his pitchers every day.

A lta m o n te M a jo r L eague M a n a g e r
(lent* L e tte r lo s e n d s his hoys a g a in s t
A p o p k a to n ig h t a t 7:30 in O coee f» r
th e D is tr ic t I I ch am p io n sh ip

"I dunk it nukes them stronger in die later
innings." said I^ttrrio about his philosophy.
Each pitcher throws 25 "warm up losses,"
then throws a set of 25 pitches, fir sequen­
tially hurls three fastballs and two curves
until he reaches 25. Then he "warm s down,"
While a rain delay usually throws the best
pitcher's rhythm off, tuszaic was not
bothered one bit by a 65-minute Intermission
Monday. In fact, he responded with si* K's
over the last three frames and didn't allow a
ball out of the infield. He finished with three
whiffs.
(.clterio doesn’t treat his players as pre­
teenagers, but does keep a relaxed at­
mosphere around the dugout. When Rob
Cohen, an Liming Herald photographer, was
asked to leave the dtigoul l-elterin cracked,
"We finally get a guy from Spurts Illustrated
here and the umpires run him off."
But lettrrio is straight forward with his
crew. Wien the Altamonte bats were anemic
Monday, tie challenged his team in the fourth

tfy tO E L E C T R O ^

light in Ocoee. Follow that road all the way to
the ball park.
Altamonte's Senior le a gue all-star squad of
Manager Hn*s Whittington and assistant
Cook
coach Rodney Meta Sr. picked up number two
in Meatball’s trio.
Sport* Editor
Six-foot-1 Craig Bolton fired a three-hitter
as the Seniors ripped Eustis 9-2. Altamonte’s
"Fearsome Foursome" — Scott Underwood,
inning, "We've got five pitchers on our team Scott Eusepi, Bolton and Greg Shatto — did
better Dun this guy, let's start hitting the the damage offensively,
"That's why they're hitting one, two, three
ball."
and four in ihe lineup," pointed out Whit­
Four halters later catcher Dan Beatv
tington whose big four combined for nine hits
cracked a line drive over the right field fence
and scored seven runs.”
for a two-run home run and a 4-0 bulge. The
Shatto had 'he big blow, a two-run shot to
message took on stronger results when
Altamonte blew open the game with five runs left center. Underwood cracked a double,
while Bolton slapped three singles and Eusepi
in the sixth Inning. Infie’le r Neal Harris rose
rapped two. Bolton fanned 11 batters
to the occasion wim a three-run roundThe Altamonte Seniors travel to Eustis
tripper.
again tonight to play unbeaten Ocoee, winner
letterlo moved to Orlando (nun the Pitt­ of Division 1. Whittington’s all-stars must
sburgh area and was immediately caught up lum the tables on Ocoee twice Just as they did
in I title league through the Orlando Optimist against Eustis. Right-handers Marty Coffey
Club. While in Orlando, he took a team to the it Mark Cochran will start Thursday's 7:30
finals of the state championship a few years p.m. game.
back.
Altamonte's near miss came at the Triple A
He hopes right-hander Mike Sehmit can level where Manager Vance Ambrose's 13lake tills year's team one step closer tonight. year-olds dropped a narrow 7-6 verdict to
Ttie call (lame thrower has 204 whiffs In #9 Oviedo at Eustis Tuesday evening,
Ambrose had his ace going, right-hander
innings and a spotless 17-0 record.
Son Shane U tlerio (second base, .6151, Kenny Chapdelaine, but young Dons Terry
Jimmy Koi (first base, .556), faistaic (third Gammons and Craig Duncan rapped clutch,
base. 000) and Bret Marshall (shortstop, seventh-inning singles with two out to plate
.112) round out the infield with Beaty (.111) the deciding runs.
Rallying for two runs of its own In Ihe top of
doing the catching.
left fielder Ryan Lisle, center fielder Steve the seventh, Altamonte seemed on iho verge
Sliakar ( .0001 and right fielder Neal Harris of a Springs sweep when Kyle Brubaker and
(.4001 complete leltcrio 's solid nine. Jeff Chapdclrino Induced walks to open the In­
McGeath, Bruce Carlson, Sandy Hovts, Gary ning.
Gammons wild pitched the pair to second
Nuss ami Todd Dcery supply the bench
and third where Dave Martin accounted lor
strength.
"We're having a lot ol fun," said lelicrio Brubaker with a sacrifice fly to left field and
who took in Tuesday's A|Hipka- Winter Garden Jeff Jackson expertly squeered home
match with his players and their parents. "I Chapdelaine for a 6-5 edge
But the Gammons-Duncan connection
just hope It keeps going."
Directions to the Altamonte-Apopka game ended Altamonte’s dream of a clean sweep of
are as follows: 1-4 to west 50 | Colonial Dr.), District 14 competition. Oviedo will play Wesl
north i right) at Scotty's l-umber at the first Oak Ridge at 7:30 tonight at Eustis

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Reen Stuns Benjamin
ORLANDO, Fla. (Ul’l » — Aided by a coaching Up from the
host pro, Alice Reen of Orlando came from behind Wednesday
to upset No. 1 seed Camille Benjamin ol Bakersfield, Calif., in
the National Girls’ 16 Clay Courts Tennis Championship, 2-6 6-4
7-5.
The unseeded Been, a semifinalisl In Ihe recent Florida
Championships, said lleclor Villarroel, pro at Orlando tennis
and Racquet Club and a former Bolivian Davis Cupper, gave
her a key Up during the 10-minute rest alter the second set.
He told her to cut down the angles on Benjamin's passing
shots by hitting deep down the middle, she said.

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Legion Drives 'Wood'

J

ft

t\te

Stake Into Wildcats
Altamonte toyed with the Winter Park
Wildcats Wednesday altemoon, and the
Wildcats were drooling (or some sweet
revenge.
However, Post ID used a three-run seventh
inning (or a comeback 5-3 win to beat Winter
Park for the fourth consecutive time.
Ace right-hander Greg Stake was handed
his third defeat In as many decisions against
Altamonte. The University of Florida-bound
pitcher struck out 13 but walked nine and
gave up eight hits including three In the
seventh.
Jeff Kerr ju rie d the rally with a blast over
the left-field fence to erase a one run Wildcat
lead.
Center-lielder Rob Reich drew a walk off
Stake and moved Into scoring posiUoo by
stealing second. Stake regrouped to fan the
next two b a tte n before lecond baseman
Benton Wood singled to left scoring pinchrunner Gary Smith with the winning run.
Wood scored the third run of the inning
after stealing second on a single to center by
Jutm Reich.
Winter Park Jumped ohead with an
unearned run off Smith in the second, but
AlUmonte answered with an unearned run of
its own in the third.
Shortstop Jim Chickowski worked for a
walk ami moved to second on another free
pass to Smith, Stake tried to pick off
Chickowski but the throw sailed Into center.
Chickowski scored all the way from second
for the 1-1 tie.
Altamonte took a one-run lead in the fourth.
Wood reached on a bunt single and swiped
second before catcher Brent Smartt drilled a
run-scoring single to center.
Winter Park reached reliever Billy Stnpp
for single runs in the fifth and sixth innings to
lasle possibly its first win over Altamonte this
sunirncr.
A two-out, bases-loaded walk to Randy
While scored left-fielder Kurt Beavin with the
lead run in the sisth for • short-lived 3-2 edge.

After Altamonte's rally, Stripp struck out
the side in the bottom of the seventh to notch
the mound victory and give Post 183 Its 11th
win in 13 league outings. They are 17-4
overall.
Right-fielder Cecil Holt and backstop Rusty
Conway had three and two hits respectively
for the losers. Wood rapped three singles In
(our trips to the plate to lead Altamonte.
Post 113 finished Us regular season at home
Sunday afternoon against league-leading
Orlando. The two clubs will face each other In
a two-out-of-three series to determine the
league champion with the first game slated
for 4 p.m. July 31 at Sanford Stadium.
Game two will follow the Saturday, at II
a m. and if a third game is necessary they will
meet Sunday morning at the same time. All
the games will be held at Sanford Stadium.
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...Sports Festival Goes On
SYRACUSE. N.Y. fUPlt — R’a almost uoAmcrican to say it. bul the major-league
baseball strike is the best thing that could
have happened to the Third National Sports
Festival.
The 3,300 athletes and coaches par­
ticipating in the Olympic-aiyle competition,
which begins today with a torch-lighting
ceremony, probably will benefit by the lack of
cumpctiliuti (rum baseball.

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I don't believe the strike will contribute so
much to the tn-aile coverage, but to the use of
it (in newspapers and television newscasts),”
said Mike Moran, press services director for
the games.

SANFORD PLAZA
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Auto C enter O pen Monday thru Saturday • a .m.-6 p.m .
Auto C e n ltr Open Sunday 12:36-1 p.m .

Moran, with a flair for promoting the
Festival as a training ground (or the 1964
Olympics, sent personal letters in January
inviting sports editors to attend Ihe Festival.

vi
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Bonnett Wants Talladega

Thursday, July 11. 1*11

IA-Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Repeat For Purolator

SPO R TS

TAU-ADEGA, At.. - A win m the August 2 Talladega 500 at
Alabama International Motor Speed way (AIMS i (or Neil
Bonnett anti the Purolator Baling Ream would enable the
team to do what has yet to be done In 12 previous races That is
lor the same driver to repeat his trip to victory lane at the 2 66mile super speedway

IN BRIEF
Inhospitable O-Twins Foil

The Wood Brothers put together a string ol lour straight
Winston 500 wins at AIMS. Their first Talladega 500 wm came
in la s t) ear's event.

Fuson's Homecoming, 1 1- 8
Don't leave it lo the Orlando Twins to roll nut the
welcome mat for former Valencia Community ColleRe
hurler Hobin Kusnn.
The Twtni roughed up Fuson's homecoming wtih
lour lust-inning runs by sending 10 halters to the plate
and chasing Fuson in Just one-third ol an inning en
route loan H-8Tinker Field victory Wednesday night.
The young hurler wasn't tagged with the loss as
Chattanooga rebounded with fuur second-inning tallies
to lorge a 5-5 deadlock The O-Twins, nevertheless,
added lour more runs in the middle innings ot a 9-5
bulge.
Gary GactU continued his hot streak fee Orlando
with his 23rd home run and runs batted in 76 and 77.
After tin- lookouts closed within 9-8. designated-hitter
Scott Ultgcr drilled a ninth Inning two-run triple to
insure Orlando's victory ami climb to .500.
Jack Hobbs picked up the victory in relief ot starter
Bob Mulligan. The Twins (ree spirit hurled live anil
one-third innings, allowed four hits and one earned run,
while tanning live laaikouta.
The series renews tonight at Tinker Field at 7:30.

|»rior to the 1980 TalladeRa 500 win, the best finish for the
Purolator Team was a 2nd place in 1978
Bonnetl's first Winston Cup start came at TalladeRa He ran
51 taps in the 1974 Winston 500 He finished 45th and won 1950.
If the Team is able to Ret It* share of Rood lurk, Bonnett and
the Wood Brothers could become Uie first team to have two
wins in the TalladeRa 500. The wins coming tack to back.
Maybe at TalladeRa the tide will turn.

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Rogers Back To Kinghill Work
WIIJJAMSBUHG, Va. (UPI) — Bill lingers' victory
Sunday In the Brittsli Open put his name among golfs
elite as the winner ol u major tournament.
The celebration was shortlived, turnover, and he's
Itack at work this week in the $300,000 PGA tournament
beginning Thursday at Kingsmlll Golf Club.

I.AGRANGE, III. (UPI) - Donna Caponi,
probably the hottest Roller on the women’s
tour, thinks "high-ball hitters" have the
advantage in the 29th US. Women’s Open
beginning today at the I j Grange Country
Club.
Caponi, winner ot (our I.PGA events this
year, classifies herself as a "fairly good high­
ball" player but says others like Joanne
Camer and Beth Daniel are more suited to the
6,2&lt;H-yard site of the premier women's golf
championship.
•*I can play well either way, but the high­
ball hitters are going (o have an advantage,"
said Caponi, who won back-to-back Opens in
1969-70. "This course is magnificent. But It's
difficult to know exactly how it will play
because ol the weather."
Amy Alcott, the defending Women's Open,
said long hitters, such as the leading money
winner on the lour, Nancy Iiprx-Mclton, may
tnjoy the edge.

Begtstratlon for the Seminole Youth Spirts
Association ISYSA) football season takes place at
lakes’lew Middle Sellout Saturday, July 25, Iroin 9 a in.
until 12 noon.
Chcerleading registration will also take place at this
time. The fee (or football players Is $35.

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"I don't like to be compared to others in the
field. II I do my best this week. I'll be satislied.” Alcott said "The person who wins this
loumament is the person who will hit the ball
stratghtest. Big hitters like U&gt;pez have a good
chance because they are good hitters."
lupei-Melton lias never won the Open and
her chances lor notching her lirst title this
week may have suffered a blow when she
sustained a right shoulder Injury earlier Uus
week.
But she was determined In compete in the
event, which has a 1150,000 purse and ,i $22,000
check lor the winner
‘i'U play if It kills me," die said. "I don't
like to even talk about it because I don't like to
nuke excuses."
Known known lor her long drives, sbe
disagreed slightly with Alcott and Cu|&gt;onl by
predicting precise putting would help win the
championship.

KARNS INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
1 1 0 E. C O M M E R C I A L
SA N FO RD

3 2 2 -5 7 6 2

ENGINE TU N E UP
\\i l| IIBvVilll fM M f l Atxlut

|»lutf«. t#nil»**n |M»$nt %
d m l T u ttilfiix r f. d«l|U*i|
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lll« f I r n n if ig n itio n
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FIRESTONE

26

00
4 C»l

322-0244

1st &amp; 17 92 Sanford

Greyhounds

fl g ’^ F l

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A U T O M O T IV E p E R M A R K E T

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A u to S u re
J»UHE STOP NEW

W D riv e

fOR AMERICA^ CART

ANOUGHt TRUCKS

10 Piece
I Socket Set
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Ph. 322 4417, Sanlord

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR INSURANCE?

Caponi Looks For High-Ball’
Hitters In U.S. Women's Open

Lakeview SYSA Registration

HISMwy. 17 (Orlando D r.)

M ark 0$*irr ( le f t) a n d S iev e llg ie r ( r ig id ) o f l.ongw ood receiv ed Ih e c o v e te d
M ark ( la r k A w a rd J u ly I d u rin g g r a d u a tio n e x e rc is e s co n clu d in g th e firs t 1981
sessio n of T h e C ita d e l S u m m e r C am p fo r H oys. Till* p re s e n ta tio n w as m a d e by
14. Co|. J o h n l \ S m y th . I’.K .I)., p ro f e s s o r of p h y s ic a l e d u c a tio n a t T h e C ita d e l
and d ir e c to r o f th e C a m p . T h e M ark C la rk A w a rd is p re s e n te d on th e th e b a s is of
e x c e lle n c e in s p o r ts , p h y sic a l fitn ess, t o u r n a m e n t s , m a n n e rs and a ltitu d e . M a ik
and S te v e a r e th e so n s of M r. and M rs. ( i c r n ld It. ttg ie r , -’H’&gt; Knob H ill l ir c le .
lain g w o o d .
______

Honor Roll
Through R # d n tl4 iy N»fht
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P r i c e s Rood th ro u p li
S u n d a y , J u l y 26.

For your convenience....

Monday-Frlday

Saturday-Sunday

OPEN 7 DAYS 9:00-7:30
APOPKA
in W M aia St

886-8820

M ELBOURNE
Sara* Plata

254-1722

A Parts City
A u to S u re

AUTOMOTIVE
SUPERMARKET

Mi05LSpKURNE
MERv?!
1J ISLAND
W Hibiscus
ISNCMitaaiy
723-5417

9:00-6:00

452-8820

M T D0RA

TITUSVILLE
U S I at Hopkmi

267-8820

SANFORD
605 W 25Ui Si

323-4470

ORLANDO SA TELLITE
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Golden Tnanglt Cu WOf W Ctloaial Dr

383-8135

295 6090

773 8800

J

�OURSELVES

,

Lori

I? &gt; / C l f t -

Madi

James Ferry

:jrs

Repeat Vows
■
«rjA

LOOKS O F ELEGANCE — P U FFED HAIR FOR F A L L -WINTER 1981-82
11iiir fa slt iurrs f o r fall and winter lake on a new
lirii'lit in the Looks nl Klrgancr collection
disiuni'd Its the National Hairdresser* and
' ( iis in e lo lo n is ts Associalion (nr cosmctoloRists to
o ile r to their clients throughout the country. The
c o l l e c t i o n , which feature*
upward hair
m o v e m e n t. received its national premiere at the
X sso ciu tio n 's X nnual Show and Convention in
New Xo rk at the New York Hilton. Sunday
th r n u u h T u e s d a y . Inspired hy the elegant hair-

\LENDAR
I I I I HMI.VV. JULY 23
Greater Scmlnolr (hambe-r o( Crmimrrrc new

ii.. tuber mixer. 5 30-7 p in.. Chamber ollice. 291
Maitland Aviv, Altamonte Sprints.
FRIDAY, JULY 74

Seminole Sunrise

Klwanlv, 7 a in., Jerry"* Airport

Restaurant.
Seminole South Itolar), 7:50 a m . D&lt;rd Chumley's

Pub, Altamonte Sprint*.
South Vnlusia Sertoma, 7:30 a m , Deltona Inn
Wright Wan her*. 10 a.m., Scar* Altamonte Mali,
t .mgU wood AA, i fused, 8 p.m., St. lUchards Cluirch,
U h Howell Itoinl

lungw unit AA. dosed. I p m., Hotting Ihlls Mnravum
Cluirch, State Hoad 434
SATURDAY, JCI.Y2S
Alltnlt) Singles I S and oven dance canteit and
party, I X p n i . F.i Greco Studlut, 333U-A Frlgewster
Drive, Orlando.
SUNDAY, JULY**
n.illri .ni and round dancing, 8 p m , Temple
.Slialom. Providence and F.lkcam Boulevard*. Deltona.
.Srmlnole AA. 3 p.m , open. Crossroads, 591 faike
Minnie Drive, Sanford.
Saniord Big Hook AA, 7 p.m., Florida Power and
Ught, Saniord.
"Yuung-arHeart" dance, I p m., DeBary Com­
munity Center, Shell Hoad, DeBary. Instruction. 7:X
p.m.. Open to public.
MONDAY, JU I.Y I 7
Hr Ilona Public libruiy Summer Program, 10 a.m..
1091 Providence Boulevard, children 8-12 year*.
"Message* by Hand and Sign language.”

TUESDAY, JULY »
S em inole AA, I p m , open discussion,

591 lake

Minnie Drive, Crossroads. Saniord.
Winter Springs Serloma, 7; 30 a.m., Big Cypress.
I.migwoud Itolary Club,7:X p m.. Dmgwood Village
Inn.
TOPS Chapter J7I. 7 p m , First United Methodist
Church, Sanford.
Sanford lions Huh, noon, Holliday Inn on U k e
Monroe.

stretch jeans
,J

BY WILKINS

FANCY PRO P i — Misses
B U M B LE S E A T * -J r * .

211-220 E. F IR S T ST.
S A N FO R D
PH . 322-3S24

I L
U
*Mnr M e

fashion leadership of the nation'* First l.ady.
Nancy Iteagan. the 1-ooks of F.leRance collection
is created lor women of all aRes and backgrounds
in a variety of l e i i R l h s . There are also Looks of
Klegance styles (or those who wish to follow the
hair fashion inspirations of American media
personalities such as Victoria Principal,
Stephanie Powers and Dionne Warwick as well as
(.real Britain's Lady Diana.

Pastor Has
No Right To
Censorship
By ABIC,AIL VAN BUREN
DEAR ABBY: My brotherin-law killed himself (our
months ago. He put a gun to
his head and blew: his beams
out. When the police found his
body, they also found five
individual notes written to hts
wile, daughter, son, mother
and mother-in-law.
A very good Irtend ol the
wtie was m the scene with the
police, and she took all the
notes and gave them to her
minister! He never gave them
to anyone. Four months later
there ts still no mention o(
these notes. Only a lew o( us
know that notes had been left,
but no one wants to say
anything about them. 1 think
those notes should be given to
the people they were ad­
dressed to, regardless ol what
they contain, don’t you?
The children are 18 and X.
and they’re having a difficult
lime adjusting to their
father’s death. What should
be done?
NONAMES, PLEASE
DEAR NO NAMES: Con­
front the m inister and
demand that be deliver the
notes to the parties for whom
they were intended at ooct!
The Irtend had no business
pirklag up the notes and
giving them to the minister.
And hr had no right to
withhold them from the
family. I rratirr that both the
friend and the minister may
be trying to spare the sur­
vivors pain, hut they have no
right to art as censors.
DEAR ABBY: You’ve
helped waitresses, teachers,
policemen and many others
who have
encountered
problems on their Jobs. Now
please give us cobblers a
break.
1 have a small *hoe-rcpair
shop and Uke pride In turning
out good work, but some
people come into the shop and
demand that I lla their shoes
right away, even though 1
may be backlogged a week! II
I don’t drop everything and
accommodate them , you
wouldn’t believe the abuse I
vet*
A Hrst-class re p a ir Job
Ukes time. The laster a
(T alism an works, the more
money he makes, but as soon
as he sacrifices quality In
order to lum out more Jobs, he
la no longer a craftsman.
In my sUte land many
othersl the law requires every
business that accepts per­
sonal possessions (ram the
public lo be repaged or
cleaned (clothes. Jewelry,
shoes) to Issue that person a
claim ticket. And no article
can be surrendered without IL

&amp;

Lori Jo Madison and Jam es Thomas Ferry were married on
July 11, at H a.m at the St. Mary Magdalen Catholic Church.
Altamonte Springs. The Rev. Father Patrick J Caverly was
the officiating clergyman for the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W.
Madison Jr.. 875 Hermit’s Cove. Altamonte Springs. The
bridegroom is the son ot Mrs. Eluabeth Taylor, Casselberry,
and Isaac Ferry. Claymont. DeL
Given in marriage by her father, the bride chose for her
vows a formal gown of white r» embroidered Chantilly lace
fashioned with a natural waistline and open neckline embetlished with Venise lace and seed pearls. The full skirt,
accented by a deep inset ot white crgaiua, cascaded into a
graceful chapel train. ,
A lace and pearl headpiece secured her walti length
scalloped veil of tUusion. She carried a Colonial nosegay of
lavender orchids, stephanolis and white roses showered with
lavender silk streamers
U sa Jo Madison of Altamonte Springs, attended her sister as
maid of honor. She was attired in a lavender Qtana gown
featuring a yoke of English net and a mandarin collar edged
with (even-Inch ruffles of scalloped SchtffU bee. She carried a
nosegay of yellow silk roses, stephanolis and lavender orchids
tied wilh matching streamers.
Bridesmaids were Joy Ferry, sister of the bridegroom.
Casselberry ; and Dianne Gooslln, Orlando Their attire and
flowers were idenUcal to the honor attendant's.
Robert MulUns of Forest City, served the bridegroom as
best man. Ushers were John William Madison, brother ol the
bride. Altamonte Springs, and Jam es Gowan, Forest City
Flower girl and ring bearer were cousins ot ihc bride.
Michelle Jaies and Christopher Jones. Springfield. Va.
The reception was held at the Maitland Civic Center.
Following a wedding trip to Daytona Beach and St.
Augustine, the newlyweds are making their home at Sandpiper

Getting Married?
Engagement and wedding firm s are available at the
Herald office to announce those events. The forms may
be accompanied by professional black and white
photographs if a picture is desired with the an­
nouncement. Wedding forms and pictures must be
submitted within two weeks of the wedding.

Art By Benini Set

f

Jam es kenrob
&lt;-■
....... ..... i "#

At Grand Opening

Dear
Abby

You wouldn't believe the
lights we get Into when people
demsnd shoes without a claim
check!
Please print this, Abby. The
cobblers will love you.
TBOUBIEDSOLF.
INSEATTLE
DEAR TROUBLED: Here’s
your letter. I’d left Uke a beet
II t didn't!
C O N FID E N T IA L TO
DONNA SMITH IN THE
HHONX: Please lend George
Hoemlsch'i
perm,
“ Forgiveness,” hi Its entirety
to me at my new address:
ItOM Hawthorne Blvd., Suite
50M, Hawthorne, CaUI. 90250.
Thank you!
Getting married? Whether
yon want a formal rhurrh
wedding or a simple, "doyourow tv thing" reremony,
gel Abby’s new booklet Send
ft plus a long, self-addressed,
stamped (15 rents) envelope
to: Abby's Wedding Booklet
120(0 Hawthorne Blvd., Salto
1000, Hawthorne, CaUI. 98250.

The public is invited to the prand opening ot Halsey’s, a lun
eatery and drinking establishment, located at 216 South Park
Ave., Winter Park, Friday, beginning at 5 p.m.
During the champagne reception, from 5-7 p m., the pain­
tings of artist Benin! will be unveiled. This unuiual exhibit will
be an display through Aug. St.
Halsey's Fine Arts Program wlU feature monthly
exhibitions by nalionaUy and Internationally renowned artists
for the enjoyment of the public, according to owners Ermanno
Ketrva and Richard CafarrlU.

James Kemob
brings you soltty tailored
knits for 1*11
Solid color
V-neck pullover twesler

Solid color
craped# chine long sleeve
shin with separate be.

Mathleux Reception

Solid color
pull-on pant with
separate
elastic waistband

The children of Mr. and Mrs. Orte (Grace) Mathleux will
honor their partnU on their 50th wedding anniversay at a
reception on Sunday. July 28, at the Geneva Civic Center.
Friends are Invited to call between 2 and 5 p.m The couple
request no gilts. They were married July IS, 1931 in Sanford.

COLORS
PUWPKINOR
BARLEY

Medical Records Training
An expanded program her choice.
Classes will meet Monday,
designed to tram persons
desiring employment in one of Wednesday and Thursday
four Medical Records fields ts from 8 a.m. to 1:X p.m. in the
scheduled to begin Sept. 9, at medical records laboratory Seminole Community College. J0Q3. Cost of the program ia
The first term will consist ot 830 per, term, plus book- snd
baste course material ap- uniforms, where applicable.
To apply lor admission go to
plicablc to four MedicalBusiness off ice specialties. the admissions office in the
(H ospital Ward Clerk, administration building. For
Medical Records Tran- inform ation call 323-1450
s c r lp tlo n ls t,
M e d ic a l (from Orlando 843-7001),
A saliU n t-A d m ln litratlv e, Extension 227.
Medical Assistant-Clinical).
The student then progresses
to the socially training (one
or 2 additional terms) ol his-

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FINAL DAYS

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SANFORD-2994 ORLANDO DR.
Z A T 8 I P I A IA AT A lt P O It BlVD.

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Ladies', Mens',
Childrens'
All Pamovf Nome Makers

PIECES

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8224104

_________

^0

M

M il. A N D M R S. JA M E S T H O M A S F E K H Y
Apartments, Casselberry. The bride Is employed at Maitbnd
Auto Parts and the bridegroom works at Altamonte Town
Garage.
_____

► w w e •

�BLONDIE

1B ~ Evening H freld, tentord, FI

Answer to Previous Pu/rti

31 long curt ot

ACROSS

T h u rv liy , July j j , m i

Slow Heart Rate
No Cause For Worry

birr

I Rk h i
S BiMbtil
official libtx |
8 Ruth hour II
llM dinar
13 Blrd'tfntf
13 Author ot

39 Ov*t ipoiticl
40 Mottrhty
41 Discussion
44 Charged
pirlJClt*

4 B Clum
49 Card gam*

DEAR DR. IAMB - When
I was pregnant I developed
Jaundice. When my son was
born he was born without
Jaundice, but when he was
about 7 years old I was told be
34 Pronoun
10 Song! ol
had a heart murmur but not to
p ru u
35 Anammant
worry about U. He Is now
11 Tiding!
37 Ditaa
married and has no problems
19 Chum
31 Brown
30 Indian maid
but the doctor said his heart
40 Famrninily
33 AgH
was slower than average. I
41 Raputlhon
33 Non How
don't understand. They
34 Opara prince 43 Kiln
haven't given him any
l i l t out
35 Babylonian 43 Shady
Patriarch
Catchers
medicine or put him on any
daily
33 Flying lauctr
44 Shataipair
n»td (3 wdl | 36 lea ertam
libbr |
restrictions. What does it
am villain
Shot pin
holdar
33 Srgh
mean to have a slower heart
45 Graat tattn
Scottish huth 37 Cratcant
34 Hllf tCOTH
46 Sthrat
beat? Is it better than a fast
3 B Hewti
Ciraii
35 Pay on*1a
47 Wiler bimet* beat?
Arretted
39 Pirtomi*
t h in
Otiigmoui
31 Navar (conir) 49 Dog * toot
3B Promt loot
DEAR READER - It all
9
1
4
6
7
*
10 11
3
3
5
boils down to the fact that
your son’i doctor doesn't
14
13
13
think he has anything wrong
with his health. A slow heart
17
IS
16
rate Is often an Indication of
good health rath er than
30
19
11
something being wrong.

Tin Rivun* 50 Fiiod iu r
14 Staff o4f««f 51 Bm I
15 Sit'*
S3 Tima of lit*
IBCoNm
53 Sourta ot
dupiMif
17 Sounded Korn 54 Companion ol
II Pull min
odd!
30 Gulf
55 Conquered
31 Normil
SB Coflaan
33 Orb
33 Conclvlnr*
DOWN
36 Meld
30 AduSnttd HI
1 Put &gt; on
T ill
3 Racecourse
31 Biblical

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45

•: ARCHIE

by Bob M o n ta n a
I)

BOV, D AD , DID TOU READ
THIS NEAT ARTICLE ABOUT
THE BUILDING OF THE

S PACC BM/rri£ r

HOROSCOPE
By BERN ,C'K IIFDF 054)1.

For Friday, July 24, 1981
YOUR tllHTIIDAY
July 26, 1961
Many new Interests will be
developed this coming year.
Your thinking will be more
progresalve and futuristic in
areas where you were
previously traditional.
I .KOI July 23-Aug. 23) Your
possibilities (or fulfilling your
amblttant are apt to be batter
today than they will be
tomorrow. Be a pusher, nol a
procrastinator. Romance,
travel, luck, resources,
possible pitfalls and career
lor the coming months are all
discussed in your AstroGraph that begins with your
btrlhdsy. Mail tl tor each to
Astro-Graph, Box &lt;89, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
sure to specify birth date.

by Stotful A Heimdahl

■
: BUGS BUNNY

5

I JUST SUPPED INTO
F U O O S S iR C E N ^R A
M D N 6 H T ^C K J^]

NO.TUSNEAR HEWANTED
ONIONS WHERE HE
L6UAU.V PLANTS CA02JT5

ANDtU FEEL
SUIL1V ABCVT
•5TEAUN6

PBDM
PUDD?

v -u l

by Bob Thaves
I

W A N T

ONE

o f T H q jfi

O S M J wHffRB You

VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. 31)
You could by In tor a pleasant
surprise today when you
discover that someone who
apparently didn't like you Is
really quite fond of you.
UBRA (Sept. 13-Oct, 13)
Investigate further any In­
vestment
or
business
proposals brought to you
today. There’s a good chance
you might be put on to
something profitable.

CAPRICORN (Dec. H Jan.
19) Don't be timid In matters
of the heart today. If there la
someone you are fond of, let
him or her know exactly how
you feel.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 10-Ftb.
19) You can be quite per­
sistent when situations
demand IL This admirable
attribute will be the rnejee
reason [or two successes
today.
PISCES (Feb. 30-March 30)
Find outlets today for your
artistic and creative skills.
You could do something
worthwhile dial will give you
pride of performance.
ARIES (March 31-April 19)
If you're Involved In
something now that could
make money for you or
enhance your lecurity, try to
tie It down today while con­
ditions favor you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 30)
Your peer* will find much to
admire in you today. You
know how to get things
organized properly and,
what's more, you'll do so with
a special flair.

SCORPIO (Oct. 34-Nov. Xb
Siluatlons today where
partners are Involved should
prove lucky for you. You
could be fortunate with two
different people.

GEMINI (May 31-Jtine 20)
Your Insights regarding ways
to achieve personal gain
should be very Ingenious and
accurate today. Be a doer,
rather than watt for things to
happen.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 11Dec. 11) In areas where you
exercise your talents and
in d u strio u sn e ss, m a jo r
achievements are possible
today. You could score both
careerwlae and financially.

CANCER (June 31-July S )
Fortunate are those who have
you for a friend today. You'll
be ready to play a supportive
role without being asked U
they need your help.

Endurance athletes tend to
have slow heart rates. Roger
Bannister had a heart rate of
only 36 beats a minute when
he was in training to break the
four-minute mile. Before
training his resting .Kart rate
was in the 70s. That should tel)
you th at developing high
levels of physical fitness can
produce a slow heart ra'e.
I think the resting heart
rate Is one of the most
neglected simple Indicators ot
health. It a person has a
resting heart rate much above
80, it usually means that he Is
anxious, has bad habits such
as smoking cigarettes, drinks
loo much coffee or other
beverages containing caf­
feine, Is in poor physical
condition from lack of
esercise or may have an
underlying medical problem.
The most common cause of
high normal heart rates In
adults Is poor levels of
physical fitness accompanied
with being overweight and
having bad habtta.
You’ll appreciate the
number of things that can
affect the resting heart rate
better by reading The Health
L etter number 9-8, Your
Heart Rata: What U Means,
which t am sending you.
Others who want this Issue

can send 75 cents with a long,
stam ped,
self-addressed
envelope for It to me, in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Now, heart disease can
cause slow heart rates. This is
most commonly seen in
middle-4iged or older people
with h eart disease that
produces a form of heart
block. These are the people
who often need a pacemaker
to maintain their heart rate at
adequate levels. So the ex­
tremes of the meaning of a
slow heart rate vary from
being a champion athlete to a
person with a serious heart
disease.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
wife and 1 will be trying to
have children In the near
future. We need to know
whether taking regular hot
baths can affect a man's
fertility by killing sperm.
DEAR READER - Studies
show that heat will decrease
the number of live healthy
sperm cells. That will Include
hot baths. It includes Jockeytype shorts th st prevent
norm al descent of the
testicles away from the body
to maintain a lower body
temperature. It Includes a
varicocele (varicose vein to
the testicles that prevents
normal temperature control.)
If a man produces a lot of
healthy sperm cells none of
these things may prevent him
from fathering a child. If the
number is marginal, any of
these can be a significant
factor In causing male In­
fertility. The tower tem ­
p eratu re of the testicles
enabled by their location
outside the body cavity Is
essential to their ability to
produce adequate amounts ot
healthy sperm celts.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

7 SS4I

41954
• K T5
•KJtl

4 Q 1I 1

arm

EAST
4QI7I1
•JI4

♦ K11
VQian
♦T l

♦ Al

♦ K74 J

4111
SOUTH

4AJ
• A ll
• Q 1154 3

4A J6
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer South
Hnt

Nwth

East

Pass
Pass

I NT
Pan

Pats
Pan

l NT
I NT

Opening lead 43

By Oswald Jacety
aad AlaaSaatag
There Is a simple, but
Ineffective wsy to play this
Reese-Dormer hand South
wlna the heart lead. He can t

afford to bold up ind let
East shift to i spade.
Now South knocks out the
ace of dlamoods. East gets
In and U East returns a
heart. South Is In fine shape.
If East returns a ipsde.
South's fine shape becomes
lopsided to the extent of at
least one trick. He will go
one down If he cashes out his
eight sure tricks, but may
wind up two short If be tries
to make his contract with
the dub finesse
Now let's look it the
effective way to play the
hand. South wins the first
heart in dummy and leads
the queen of clubs for a
Unease If It works he will
make 10 tricks, but it loses.
It doesn't hurt the game
any. South has used in avoi­
dance play to keep East out
of the Immediate lead A
spade lead by West can't
h u rt South will have two
sure stoppers.
So West clears the hearts
South knocks out the see of
diamonds and scons the
gams.
Suppose West held five
hearts, the king of clubs sad
ace of diamonds South was
doomed to defeat no matter
how be played
(NiwwaMji ENnnraoc assn i

by Laonard Starr

ANNIE
YE&amp; ANGELA AfC HER
K 0 M 3 WMAfiE RIGHT,
THE OCflICAL BASTE FROM
The liKTheftSTHN PLANT
HA» LEAD® INTO T)€
m tk

CAN W RITE c h e c k s
FOR MORf THAN roo
R fa lu y h ave.

THEN 1*55 -IN S m tS C N H E ? tt&gt;
PEAsE hA3

UkEXIfe ALOtt TO

JUSTiREEL TOKaWUT 1 H W IN-1
YXJ W ?

me-

HM1 H I

TU M BLEW EEDS
ft-

W HY.FUSS VOU, MYCHILW
HOW NICE OF YOU TO GIVE
M E A SACKOf= COOKIES!

I'M

SELLING
"THEM

FORA

NICKEL,
SIR .

"THERE!.. MY, HOW
ENTERPRISINCr!

Y

by T. K. Ryan
UH,THERE'S A FIVE CENT
CHARGE FOR PEOPLINGWITHOUT A LICENSE, PEAR..

• t i e *

by Doughs Coffin

FLETCH ER 'S LANDING

...AND C*£mtJD OF 1UOOSANDS
Of LXMLN. V

m

# • « I (

— r

�t •» •

I * '

1

Evening Htrikd, Sinford, FI,

Thu rid* r. July 11. 1M1—3 B

TONIGHT'S TV
THURSOAY

8

CVtNINO

0:00
r JO ® B *W
351 k n o t

o u tfitm

( 10) THE TOM COTTU SHOW

Q

OiyOft* A CMda Paraoactivi CNMran talk canto)v, abovl tm
(mgacl ot maw p a n i divorca

7 :3 5
BASEBALL RKRmond

(17)

IV ivalrt SyiacuaaCNlto
0 (3) MOVIE

0:05
0:30

0 0 MSC HEWS
ill O CBS NEWS
I Q/LBCMEWS
n 135) CARTER COUNTRY
ffl 110) SUM CUISINE
0:35

3J ( 17)TMATOmt

O d O ) SNEAK PREVIEWS Mora
(hairy Ptaaauraa' Rogar EMrt and
Oana S&gt;u« i r m ton* monaa
thay ra ambartiaaad to admit thay1
■had
9 :0 0

0:00

Two-Mmutl Warnmg " (IBIS) CKartton Maalen. Jofm
CaaaavMaa To dw rl tnantien
Rom a pMnnod art Naval a gang o4
iNvnaa pomt a trap* m IRa Loa
Angaiaa Coataum during a aad-ovrt
foovpal gama |R)
(D O THE WALTONS Roaa a a&gt;
Aanca comaa lo Walton a Mouniam
aaarcNng lor a nan Ra and htdwg
Via lad mat ha haa not baan man-

32 ( IT) FATHER KNOWS HST

(D O UAONUM. HI. Magnum
bahianda had Hovocaual aurvhnna

la*r aaa (R)

7:00
0 0

6 :3 0
0 O BOBOM BUOOCS Amy and
tup try to gat Sonny romanticnfy
mtaraalad In Hanry |R)

7 :3 0

W r e TAC DOOOH
□ 150.000 PYRAMID
Q FAMILY FEUO
(35) RHOOA
(lO )o cK C A v rn

0 O WORK ANO MMOY UorV ■
Ovan haro : arko baama to Earth
marrl on taang ovar Mork i pb at
omaaV wanai ooaanar (R)
W (35) MOV*
Farawa* U,

n ew s

0 O PU MAQA21NC A (ON)
OROI K lim wftoaa horn* Ml wIt,
dirt*art hom tor cbarado'i, •
HUM* Jamaa Bond. CAM Tai pra.
p an t t cotorkj vagal tbi* planar.
Judi M ntitt lu iarcu ai anlH
W o n Joyca im u aA dwcovan *

LovaRr" to (IB FSI Rooart Mitchum.
Chadotia Rampkng Saadr ’F*Oa
prtvaia tya Phiap Manoaia n draan
w o unforaaaan mtrtgua and dangar
■vhanhaiaaaionthaaaaignmani ot
locating a lough hoodlum a iraaamg

O JOKER'S WHO
(351 BARNEY MIUER
(10) MACNEJL / LIMBER
REPORT

( 10) FLORIDA FOCUS Hod

KCOUfil Of tn« ml*&lt;n*1kon*Jt|
t*mou» Wifiltr Part «r*No*

$9
4 5(
CAVALIER

MOTOR INN
3200 S. Orlando Dr.
{Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
311 o m

9 :3 0

(Z) O TAX) Tony a lachiutiar bat­
ing caraar t aami lo ba di twang la a
doaa whan hM bating Icanta a
ravokad (R ig

10:00
0 O KNOTS LANOtNQ Oary i
ambrtien la gal anaad land! iwn
S50 000 W dafct lo mob-camadad

»» |R|

35) INOEPENOENT NETWORK
m (101 THE DUCHESS OF DUKE
STREET Trout* And Stfito ' Tha

.

(10)

Hit m il

-

AOMCE ON All AFFAIRS

905
12 (17) FAMILY AFFAIR
9 :3 0
(U (3 5 ) a n o y q i «fttth
9 :3 5
0 (17) I DREAM OF JSANNM

10:00
1 I ! O RICHARD SIMMONS
I t 135) I LOVE LUCY
0 1 ( 10) MISTER ROQCRS (R)
1005

POSTSCRIPTS Hoal

35) WCK VAN DYKI

11:00

8 0 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
J O THE PRICE * RK1HT
Q THREE* COMPANY (R)
(35) QIEHN ARaaCTTl
( 10) IIUOIOBEE

ON MOmAlt It MOta

too* HJfl TMI ai It tntt HH-OtBt
L f«n TV* I h m r**m the AK !.*&gt;-*

PLUS
a0 ®O *PASSWORD
THREE S COMPANY |R)

aft’0 ) COVER TO COVER

0

12:00

12:05

TOMORROW Quail amgar
J

0 O NEWS

h cw e

THE YOUHQ ANO THE

2.00

D tM tftM lIM B
~) A U MY CMLDREN
S) MOV*

a uoi
WORLD

0 ( 17) MOV*

■ 0 OAR.Y ORVOTTONAL

a i io"

500

5 :6 0

(Q (17) WORLD AT LARGE

G

3 :3 0

flj (35) THE FUNTSTONEE
f t 110) OVER EASY

9 :0 0

3 33
0 ( 1 7 ) THE FUNTSTONEE

0.00

a ®

) DULY DEVOTIONAL
1 DAILY WORD

6.04
0 :3 0

STREET (R |g

Of Your Printing Needs

BARBS

60S
0 O 0 0 0 0 MORFMQ FLOROA

O m ni till It hurts reveab
a very low pain threshold In
many of us.

7.00

KLEULT

t QOOO MORMMG AMERCA

Keep y««r a w e to the
fria d itM f Bad eveatually
you 11 m ake sam e plastic
i i r |r o n happy.

%*• M W

VACATION
UNTIL

Ph. 322-2501
Show us • fellow with hat
In hand and wt'll bet h t'i
e ith e r u ltr s p o lllc or
ranters thy.
P iM e e rla a , ' l i t style:
b e k f le ered ta eel i p ta d
r h a i f f rh a a a e ls h e rtB se the
remPle-cBBtref c s d |« t b
kSpEl.

r“ n- O cean G e m s .— *--------

FRIED SHRIMP • FRIED PERCH
BAKED FISH a SHRIMP CREOLE
CLAM CHOWDER a CRAB CAKES
FRIED CLAMS
CRAB ROLLS • HUSH PUPPIES
CORN-ON THE COB a FRENCH FRIES

i c h

c

:

5 PM Till 11 PM Children Under IJ -’A PRICE

EN JO Y YOUR FAVORITE

COCKTAIL

P IA 1 A M I

IN THE

/.WLAJT
Ml I t

MASIf ftOM FOMO II

D o w n to w n S a n fo r d

NELSON &amp; CO.
Serving The Area Since IMS

FARM HARDWARE
PH. - 363-6634

WHEELER

221MagnoliaAvo.
DowntownSanford

Manufacturers Since m i

PHONE 365-6632
Wheeler F v r1 l!l» r Company
Is an original dsveloper
ol special formula ♦•rtlllier
scientifically correct for
Florida soil.

LO O K TO WHEELER
FERTILIZERS FOR HIGHER
YIELD CRO PS.
O V IED O , FLO RID A

MEL'S
GULF
SERVICE
*"» CAR WASH

to

101
S» Fren ch A ve.
*

RAIDERS olttM
LOST ARK

BUCCANEER LOUNGE

Phone 322-2432

N ITtLY

T/y.\&gt; &amp;y.&lt;

M S I . OB U N D O OB.

' Si

FOR

A UG UST 10

7.03

ALL YOU CAN EAT $4 0 4

K a M ir r ii

CLOSED

10) V U A ALEQR*

FRIDAY SBBfDDd BUFFET
APPniII« 4 0 UP AND SALAD BAB

M a m b n F D IC

FERTILIZER C O .

0:40
0 ( 10) ALL WEATHER

"Y our F irst Stsp To E v e ry w h .r."

Atlantic Bank

O V IED O , F L O R ID A

Phil Pastoret

0 0 ( 0 ALLEN

2311 S. French Ave. Sanford
Ph. 3 2 3 *4 6 3 0

Prinfing Co., he.

For All

(35) SUPERMAN

O (17) HOUYWOOO REPORT

) TODAY

/ Cehiuj City

e

400
m ov *

110)

0 1 (35) J

n

Future

1 Q JOHN OAVDEON

1TOGAY WFLORIDA
) HEALTH FKLO

SUNA GTRAVEL
ENCY

Salu te

303

0 o SUMMER SEMEST1R

Part of the

To A g rl Business

H2 | 17) funtm *

0 :3 0

INCLUDES: AIR F A R E , HOTEL,
TRANSFERS, SIO H TSEEIN O PLUS
EXTRAS, DOUBLE OCCUPANCY.

SEE U S I

3 .0 0

0 O MARCUS WILBY. M a

*415“
Mexico City
Taxco
Acapulco

* 1 . 8 9

0 0 I A&gt;
ANOTHER WORLD
I ONE l If E TO UVE
) FOOTSTEP*

a ® TEXAS
! Q OUONQ UQMT
7 Q OEHERAL HOSPITAL
I t (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
a ( l 0) POSTBCRWTt

8 DAYS FROM 0 R U N D 0

An Important

101 E a s t F ir s t S tr e e t

m

J fr d a y

Lb“

. t r - n lo n o wood
»4 M lb North P( De« Trsck Road
PH. Bll-1245 or 3J» 173E
H ourtt M on.-lat. P-tiM; Ion. i n

1) O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
)(T o ) dickcavett

0(17)1

Agribusiness. .

hw y

2 :3 0

4 :5 0

-

Q U A L IT Y P L A N T S
1.00

200

3 '3 0

.• * .*

T h e Best B a n k A r o u n d *

0 O AS THE WORLD TURNS

0 O MOV*' "My Pal Qua"
(B/WI |t*M | tochard WUmark.
Joanna Dm

Santord
•P

Rkoifio &amp; Stm LANDSCAPING

1:30

3 .0 0
( 0 0 NEWS

IMOW. F irst St.

V

CYPRESS
M ULCH

JUST ARRIVED
N EW TRU CKLO A D
C IT R U S 4 F R U I T T R E E S

100

1:40

Ph. 323-6630

FROM 1 GALLON TOOIANT SHE
LARGE VARIETY OF PALM TREES

5) FAMKY AFFAIR
10) FASTFORWARO

0 O MOV* Raquram For A
Haarywvghl IS/W) (IMF) Amhorty Oumn. Jacata Graa aon

O P E N D A I L Y I A .M .-l P.M .

PURSLANE 4" POTS *1.10 EACH
ALL LANDSCAPING MATERIALS

REPORTS

RYANS HOPE

1:10

a ( 17) MOV* -to Pirn Burn­
ing t" (IM l) Laaaa Caron. Oraen
WaOaa

1 Gal. lit*

12:30
®
n

u

1:00

[

35) THE WORLD OF PEOPLE
110) SAJLJNQ, EABJNQ
fr eem a n

K IL G O R E SEED

HIBISCUS
S&amp;
*399

SINESIS

Extra Lsrga t .
an
1 A 4 0.1. 9 1 . 9 * 4 9
Rm P.M

1CARO SHARKS

w

BLOOMING

VARIEOATED

1 LIGUSTRUM

AFTERNOON

a (U |

12:30

I

f

a 110) COVER TO COVER

II

GardenLand

miL Ran* %1i NOW * 6 49

11:30

1200
® O STARSKY ANO HUTCH
J O CHARUTS ANQELS Tha
Angata ara hwad by a man who
baaaraa ha la tha nail largat ot an
ti u m n who h u already lakan tha
kvaa ol aavorM o( ha wartima buddrat |R)

»H»« ivsOiwo M H M*Hh Tims Ctrl

s

MYSTERY GARDENIAS

11:45

Q ( 17) MOV* Tha Tkm-Flam
Man" ( IMD Oaorga C Scon, Sua
Lyon

I SI OCRS NORTH OF DOGTRACK RD.

c

FARM IT SAFE

&gt;BLOCKBUSTERS
(ALICE (R)

11:35

HOURS 8 A M • 9 P.M. CJoard Sunday

831-4405

Start today to
practice good farm
safety rules. Spot check
danger-prone areas, keep
all m achinery in good
shape. The hazards you
remove m ay save your life.

11 (35IOOUCR PYLE
ffl 110) SESAME STREET (R) g

11:05

BEEN IN B U S IN E SS F O R 5 0 Y EARS
IN PRIV A CY O F MY H O M E

(305)

900
g0HOURM AOA2M (
( T O DONAHUE
m au o v*

110) CIECTM C COMPANY (R)

• LIFE -LO V E • M A R RIA G E • BUSIN ESS

f

JU L Y 2 5 -3 1 ,1 9 8 1

0:38
a (17) MY THREE SONS

Kathy Nath tawt about haw cantor

F u tiv ra

It's Time To Prepare
For Fall Gardens
Fumigate Soil Now!

SAFETY WEEK

0 :3 0

1 0 TODAY
O QOOO MORFENQ AMCIBCA
j (35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
CD110) MISTER ROGERS (R)

10:30

O 0
TONTOHT Moat
Carton Ouatit Mantua H a » i.
Oaorga Sagal and tha Banriy HRa
umatad J a a Band
□ m -a -S - h
U ABC NEWS NKSHTUFiE
(35) TALES OF THE HAUNTED

5:35
O (17) BEVERLY HKLBKLJES

AGRIBUSINESS

FARM

0 :2 5

J0 O N EW S

11:30

P ra a a n t

0 Q CAPTAIN KANQAAOO
f t 135) FRED FUNTSTOHE AND

35) behny hkl

HAIM . CARO ■CRYSTAL BALL READING

o k l j q a n s isla n d

( H O M-A-S-H
0Q N EW 8
4 ) (TO ) ELECTRIC COMPANY (f*

W e S a lu t e
S e m in o le C o u n ty

1 2 (17) mov*

11:00

MADAME KATHERINE

530
O ®

6:00

a tU E U L L E C Y E

Q ( 17) NKJHT QALLIRY

H aa I -

CltpHOQANE HEROES
n 135) WONOtR WOMAN
a ( 10) MMTER ROQCRS

Q QOOO MORFENQ AMEWCA
t (35) EAHAfiA SHUTS
) ( 10) SCSAMI STREET (R) g

m e rscoocSetion lor the Conhd-

onto H ein egetnei an obttmat*
Congraaa

• Ipoclal Diicewnf On
Monthly i A t t i

(ON LAKE ADA)

4 :3 0

505
Q (17) O EM AND HARRIET

I 0 TOOAY

■ 0 TODAY IN FLORIM
0 O QOOO MORNMO FLOROA

10:30
I I (35) PORI OOE3 THE COUN­
TRY

• 11 Cfianntl Cobit TV
• L ift Enitrlainm tnf
1 Mtfhtt In Lown«o
• Family f o itiu r in t
Efficiency a pfi Available
At fltf fifty Higher Raft

5 00

4 :3 0

fa"Tha(10Laat
) SANDBURGS
LINCOLN
Oaya" UnenOv tnaa lo

10:09
0 ( 1 7 ) NEWS

• M root Pm )
• M f d Vorvico
• 10 Hovr Phono Servlet

0 ( 17) MAUL

a (35) I DREAM OF JEAFPEE

7 :3 0

005
|I()7 )L A S E W

Bantinch a hal partar and Na dog
I tad bacoma tamad mambart ol
louwa&gt; trail although attia la
known about hnpaat (Part II (FA)

I W EEKLY
’ F U R N IS H E D BED R O O M

0 0 TODAY M FLOROA
0 O 0 0 0 0 MORFWa FLOROA

7 O BARNEY M IUER Bamay a
)aaad tor ratoamg to nama an
Merman: during a mat (Part tj |R)

Kathy Naan praaanta a dataJad

Q 1 17) AU. IN THE FAMILY

7 :2 5

pan tan I H uil |R)

J K I K

h

7:05

( 305)

who haw feaesma targcti d «nr»-

----------------- m
-------------a (17) THE ADOAMS FAMILY

12(17) FUNTIME

»V-'vT

bH0 m rw-k '

p

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ENERGY SAVERS

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S y n th e tic T u rf
DOOR M A T S

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With W hite bent glass ^ ^ " 7 5
shade No SL-123
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No. SL-715-7.

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STAINLESS STEEL SIN K
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s e lf-rim m in g .
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CEILING FAN
Four wood blades with 5 speed
motor. In White or Brown enamel
finish. 4 8 " dia. sw eo p .(Accepts
optional light kit.)

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mouldings. In White
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800W V

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not included)

CEILING FAN
Brass finish housing, canopy and
shaft. Four reversible wood blades
with 5 speed motor. 52" dia sweep
(Comes with light kit.)

TRIMLINE

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No. 409

Each

Reg. Price
Each
Venice................ 5 9 59
Mediterranean. .61 95
Madrid................ 62 49

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Latex paint for masonry or metal_
surfaces.
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Lifetime guarantee. No. 100-1
(without pop-up).

In te rio r-E x te rio r
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LAVATORY FAUCET

H o u s e -C o te E xterio r PA IN T. ' T w o
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surfaces In White.

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.. 1 . 1 5

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S o u th e rn iz e d WOOD STAIN

Reg Price (eachI 8 95

Cartridge

•The higher the Rvalue, the greeter
the In su la tin g
power. Ask your
Scotty s salesman
lor the /act sheet
.on R values

'
G a llo n
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Sav«M %

CARTRIDGE GUN

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C o v e n try In te rio r
PA IN T
Washable latex paint
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’ White and colors.

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10' x 25*................................&lt;

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1 2 x 5 0 ' ............................ 1«
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PRICES GOOD FRIDAY THRU
— OPEN T i L b K M -----SA N FO RD
700 French Ave.
Ph: 323-4700

ndSave!

ALTAMONTE S P R IN G S
1029 E. Altamonte Dr.
(Hwy. 436)
Ph: 339-8311
Scotty's stores open at 7:30 a m
Monday thru Saturday
Closed Sunday

UNTIL 7 P M ----------------------------O RAN G E C IT Y
2323 S. Volusia Ave.
Hwy. 17 and 92
Ph: 775-7268

P r r » . rjo n lw l •*&gt; ih ij
based on customers picking up
merchandise at our store De­
livery is available lot a small
charge
Management reserves the right
to limit quant.nos on special
sale merchandise

ALTAM ONTE S P R IN G S
875 W. Hwy. 4 3 6
Ph: 862-7254
'j'.A th w f c

�</text>
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E v e n in g H e ra ld — ( U S P S 481 210)— P r ic e 20 C e n li

73rd Y e a r , N o. 31 0-W edoe»d ay, A u g u s t 19 ,1 9 8 1 -S a n fo rd , F lo r id a 32771

Judge 'Grabs Bull By Horns' To Rid Toxic Chemicals
B y B R IT T SMITH
H erald New* Editor
In a move he described as "grabbing
the bull by the horns," Seminole Circuit
Judge Kenneth l&gt;elfler has given at­
torneys from the city, the state, and City
Chemicals Inc. until Thursday to agree
on a schedule (or disposing of 3,264
barrels o( toxic wastes located on a twoacre site in Sanford
U H l e r sa id the 12-week period
previously suggested by the city "would
be Ideal." but conceded that “ this will

have to be a compromise. It may take
longer than that."
The state Department o! E nviron­
m ental Regulation has said the site could
be cleared within six months. City
Chem icals, however, m aintains it w ill
take nearly two years — 88 weeks — to do
the job.
D u rin g a late afternoon h earing
Tuesday. la ffle r ordered law yers o( the
city o l Sanford, the D E H . and City
Chem icals to get together and come up
with a timetable for removing the wastes

which have been the subject of con­
troversy since they were first discovered
on a tw oacre site on Jewett la n e and
Airport Boulevard eight months ago.
Leffler has set a 4:45 p m. hraring for
Thursday to hear what schedule they
have devised.
Saying he didn't know "whether we re
making any headway or not," le ffle r
added, "a t least we have some people
thinking. I want to put some monkeys on
the backs of these people to move."
The Judge indicated he plans to put the

D E R in charge of removing the chem ical
wastes from the site with City Chem icals
paying for the clean-up. However, if the
companv can show it cannot shoulder
such a financial burden, le ffle r said he
w ill direct D E R to expend funds from the
state's Hatardous Waste Management
Trust Fund.
" If somebody doesn't like that idea
they can take their case to the F ifth
D istrict Court of Appeals," he said
In a letter to le ffle r, D E R attorney
Doug M cLaughlin reiterated the agen­

cy's position that no trust funds monies
should be spent without It first deter­
mining whether C ity Chem icals can
afford to finance the clean-up, and 21
assurances that the company would be
held liable for the repayment of public
funds spent on the project.
A hesitant le ffle r noted that " if we
wait to make a determination that City
Chemicals is capable o l paying for
removal of the wastes, we could be here a
long time. I'm not sure we should w ait."
le ffle r has also expressed concern that

if he places a lien against City Chem icals
for the cost of removing the hazardous
wastes, "that could be sufficient to put
them out of business and then we'd get
now tie re.”
While law yers for the city, state, and
City Chem icals haggle over a timetable
for rem oval of the chemical drums,
le ffle r directed work on a staging area
where the wastes w ill be analyzed and
repackaged begin immediately.
City Chem icals attorney Royce Pipkins
said construction is already underway.

lo n g wood's C ha cey Says:

Save ’Gray Water/
Solve Shortages

eh** Of Ttm V i m h I
N e w M u r in e C o r p s e n lis t e e * J a n ic e C lo o d w ln ( le f t ) a n d N a n c y D K ’o s te a d m ir e
th e J a c k e t o f t h e W o m a n M a r in e s ' u n if o r m . T h e S a n f o r d w o m e n h o p e to h e in
u n if o r m b y e a r ly n e x t y e a r .

Women Find Marines
Corps Of Opportunity
By D IA N E P E T R Y K
t in aid News Editor
What does a young woman do when she's intelligent, but
caught in a baring, dead-end Job? When she wants to further
her education but finds the cost prohibitive? When she
needs a little erlf-conftdMreT
The answer (or three area women was to Join the Marine
Corps.
And that fit right into the Marine Corps plans because,
according to Sanftrd Marine recruiter SgL Ike Moan, the
corps plans to double Its female m em bership in three to
five years.
Janice Goodwin, 18, and Nancy DrCoste, 19, both of
Sanford, arc two of Moon's female recruits.
Nancy departs for boot cam p in December, Janice is
scheduled to leave early next year. Recently the two met
with Diane Ward. 28, of Orlando, a new graduate of Marine
Corps bool ra m p at P a rris Island, S.C., now on VUUy
recruiting assistance leave.
The women discussed their motives for Joining the
m arines and each agreeed they view it as an opportunity to
further their education, obtain interesting, challenging
work and to become financially rn d emotionally in­
dependent.
They also each have friends who think they're crazy.

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School But Schtdultt,

Page 6A-7A
Elephant G ets Support
I jOS A N G E L E S IU P I) — The Board of
Supervisors is often criticized for acting
tqo slowly on matters of government but
the county politicians moved swiftly
Tbesday giving emergency approval for
•in elephant to water ski In M arina del

r

See WOMEN. Page 8A

Rey.
,
"T h is is s t in t m the lounty — to let an
elephant use the m arina," said Super­
visor Kenneth Hahn. "II shows the board
cgh do something tl we try ."
The 1-ton pachyderm named But*bin" was towed behind • boat on giant
&gt;$* as a promotion stunt lor the upr « n lr g motion picture llc n k y Took
ftc e w a y ," w hich w«s film ed in M L
Dora. F la .

new method from 17.50 monthly to 86 and
a reduction to homebuilders connecting
to the sewer system from $47} for initial
hookup to 878. Chacey said he has met
with several developers concerning his
proposal and the Immediate reaction has
been very favorable
To get approvals from various state
and federal agencies. Chacey said would
entail a good deal of work lobby ing But
this hasn't discouraged him.
"I'm prepared to go to Tallahassee and
testify before any committee&gt;tlu t bath­
water. shower water and hand washing
water is not going to harm l«ngwood
ecologically," he said. Chacey said, "We
haven't found that septic tank systems
are doing anything harm ful to the water
table" in longwood.
In fact, Chacey said the idea of the
gray water disposal could be taken a step
further. It could be retained on a home
site Ui such a fashion that it could be
re c irc u la te d an d uaed (or lawn
sprinkling, saving even more the use of
fresh water. And conceivably it could be
pumped back Into the home to be uaed (or
Hushing toilets.
A s yet he has not gathered statistics
together to determine what the coats of
any of the proposals would be, he said.
G ray water pumped into systems (or
lawn sprinkling would be purified by the
tune it got to the roots of plants and grass
and should encourage growth, he said.
C hacey said the H om ebuild ers
Association ol M id-Florida, in its quest
lo r relief from the inconvenience id
having to use sewer systems has been
discussing the concept.
"In Longwood we don’ t necessarily
force someone into the sewer system if he

his
can show good percolation
property. In some areas full septic
systems ought to be allowed."
Chacey said he is a strong advocate of
the idea since it would accomplish two
Important goals of today. F u s t would be
water conservation, he said. By this
method 60 percent of the water normally
entering a sewer system would be
retained on premises for re-entry into the
e co lo g ica l w ater cycle . Secondly,
re d u ctio n
in
sewer
treatm ent
requirements would mean only 40 per­
cent of present rapacity at sewer plants
would tie used, leaving capacities for
growth.
Along the line of lax relief given
homeowners w ho have converted to solar
water system s, Chacey said the federal
government could be asked, and it should
approve, su nilar tax relief for those
using this concept to conserve water.
Chacey used lo g w o o d 's two sm all
sewer system s as exsmples of w hsl the
conservation could accomplish.
H r said the city's Skylark sewer plant
currently has the capacity to treat 200,000
gallons of sewage daily. The plant can
serve 600 fam ilies, he said. If the new
concept were used that plant could serve
1,200 fam ilies.
The Colum bus Harbour plant now ran
treat sewage for 110 families. By using
the water conservation plan the plant
could treat sewage (or 220 families.
"I think m y plan could work," he said.
Noting that the effluent (treated sewage)
from most regional plants ends up in the
sea, he said by using the gray water
concept, half of that water could be
percolated bark into the water table.

U.S. Jets D o w n 2 Libyan Pla nes
W ASHINGTON (UP1) - Two U byan
warplanes attacked a pair of U S . F-14
fighters over disputed waters of the
Mediterranean Sea early today, and
w rre downed by the Am erican Jets in a
minute-long aerial battle, the Pentagon
said
T he U S . governm ent fo rm a lly
protested what i l called the "un­
provoked" attack by the two Soviet-built
SU-22 Jets, which it said occurred “ in
international a ir space over international
w a te rs
in
the
so u th-ce ntral

Mediterranean Sea."
However, a U b y an diplomat in I/mdon
charged the U S . fighters violated his
country's a ir space over waters in the
Gulf of Sidra covered by a broad
territorial claim that is not recognized by
the United States.
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger
said a formal protest of the U byan attack
was being lodged through diplomatic
channels in Belgium
The Pentagon said the F-14s were
taking part in a 6lh Fleet exercise about

CO nautical m iles off the U byan coast
when they were approached and fired
upon by two U byan Soviet-made SU -22
fighters. They downed the U byan planes,
and no U S . casualties were reported.
Weinberger, relying on the o fficial U.S.
position on the lim its of U byan
s o v e re ig n ty , insisted the 6th F le e t
exercise was not intended to provoke
U byan strongman Moainm ar Khadafy,
who the Reagan administration has
labeled a ringleader of international ter­
rorism.

y j,

Tesfimony Reveals

TODAY
Action Reports
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Around The Clock
Classified Ads
Dear Abby
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Why would a woman want to Join an organization that
prides itself on its macho image, Its "rough and tough"
reputation, friends asked Nancy.
"Y o u 're too sweet and Innocent for the big, bad Marines."
they told Janice.
" Y o u 'll never make it, you're too fem inine," friends of
Diane predicted.
But Diane did make it, graduating from boot ram p Ju ly 8.
"Some days I asked myself 'Why am I here?'" she said of
her boot cam p experience. "B ut Fve never been as proud as
1am now. It's a teriffic feeling when you get out,” she said.
She's helped Nancy and Janice gain confidence. They
now say they have no reservations about their enlistments.
There's only excitement written on their fares.
Janice is determined to succeed because, like Dune, she
is hoping (or a career ui avionics — working with the
electronic equipment un aircraft.
Janice's father. W illiam Qoodwin, of 702 East 29th Street,
Sanford, is an electrician wurking on the space shuttle.
"When I was a kid m y father would give me things with
wires to take apart," she said. "I guess that's hew my in­
terest in the field got started."
lookin g even further ahead, Janice ares the possibility of
pursuing another interest — veterinary medicine —

B y DONN a ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
1-ongwood City Admmistratoi David
Chacey has a suggestion that c tv ld
c o n c e iv a b ly solve F lo r id a 's w ater
problems.
" It m akes sense to me,” Chacey said
today. " I'm not an engineer. But, I'd like
to try the concept in Longwood.”
Chacey said it's a simple idea. Instead
of channeling a ll waste water from
homes into sewer systems, "g ra y " water
from baths, showers, laundry facilities,
and kitchens (except garbage disposals)
would be directed toward a special tank
and drainfield on site and percolate into
the ground.
Chacey said if this were done, at least
half of the water used by a fam ily would
be returned to the water table after
purification by percolation. At the same
time, sewer plants would have to treat
only about 40 percent of the waste water
now generated by each home. T h is would
be from garbage disposals and toilet
facilities.
Then, Chacey said, sewer plants would
be able to serve more than twice the
households they currently serve, cutting
coat of serving households with sewer
service by more than half. In addition,
sewer plants would no longer have to
contend with detergents from laundry
water, providing another savings, he
said.
M eanwhile, Chacey has encouraged
the Irmgwood City Commission to adopt
an i f dins nee providing an incentive to
homebuilders to try the idea. The in­
ce n tiv e the c ity a d m in is tra to r is
suggesting is a reduction in the city's
m onthly sewer rates for those using the

Murder Victim Was
Beaten Before Being Shot
Tw enty-Iour-year-old
Ja m e s
C.
B ullock - fatally shot in a Fe rn P a rk
motel last winter — was beaten
repeatedly prior to the shooting, but one
of the men involved in the k illin g testified
in Seminole Circuit Court today he didn't
know the reason (or the thrashing
Opening the second day of testimony in
the murder tria l of Columbus "Sonny
B o y " Edwards, IS-year-old Jackie Lee
Poole said that he, his brother. Homer,
and Edwards a ll punched Bullock on that
fateful night on Feb. 7 In Edw ards' room
at the dak Ridge Motel on U S Highway
1792.
"D id you have any idea what the
fighting was about?" Assistant State
Attorney Alan Robinson asked.
"N o ," Poole replied, shaking his head.
"W hy did you hit B u llock?" Robinson
quizzed.
"H e and my brother were fighting and
I Just wanted to break it up," Poole said.
The scuffle did stop momentarily,
Poole aaid, but added that li began anew
when Homer, 16, h it Bullock In the head

with an aerosol spray can. Edwards
j« nrd ui, hitting Bullock In the head
several lim es and swearing at him, Poole
aaid.
At that point, Homer placed a 25csbbcr pistol Edw ards had given him
earlier to B u llock's head u U to shoot
him. "B ut he put it down and said, 'No
man. I'm Just Jiving,'" Jackie Poole
quoted his brother as saying.
Bullock was Inter shot once in the
forehead. Both Poole brothrra pleaded
guilty to m urder charges last month in
connection with the slaying and are
awaiting sentencing. They, like Edwards
if convicted, could receive the death
penalty. A ll are from Altamonte Springs.
Hamer Lee Poole itmfesaed to being
the actual iriggerm an in the shooting,
but said he thought (he gun Edw ards had
given him was empty.
The p ro se cu tio n contends that
Edwards — angered by Bullock's ap­
parent failure to live up to premises
about getting Edw ards a Job, a car, and
an apartment - instigated the light and

planned the subsequent shooting so one of
the Poole boys would be the gunman.
Jackie Poole was expected to conclude
his testimony this afternoon and be
followed to the witness stand by his
brother.
D uring testimony Monday, Seminole
County s h e rilf'i detective Ja ck Cash said
that im mediately following the shooting,
E dw ards told him that he and the Pooles
found Bullock's body after returning
from a party in Orlando.
E dw ards later changed his story,
naming Jackie Poole as ihe k ille r, then
saying Homer Poole shot Bullock, Cash
said. Edw ards denied involvement in Ihe
slaying.
A n g e re d at E d w a rd s ' schem ing ,
Homer gave police a statement and
directed divers to nearby P ra irie Lake
where a ,25&lt;aliber pistol and a box o(
am m unition were found.
T im o th y M osher, a paw n shop
operator, testified that he sold Edw ards a
box of ,25&lt;*lib*r bullets Ihe day before
B u llo ck 's murder.

G IV IN G BLO O D

He*»u

a* T in Vincent

lim e Alexander, realtor associate, takes time off to donate blood
when Ihe Blood Mobile stopprd at the Seminole ('ounly Board o(
Realtors office in Winter S p rin g Tuesday. Drawing blood Is
phlrbolomist Jeff Marlin.

I
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�3 A -K v » fitn g Herald, tonlord, FI.

Wednesday. Aug, 19.1991

R egistration O p e n In S e m in o le

'Nickel Days' W inners

Program F o r M ig ra n t C h ild re n

WORLD

Registration for 3 and 4-year-old children participating tn
Seminole’s County's m igrant education programs Is being
held now through F rid a y in the tra ilers at the three M igrant
E a rly Childhood elem entary schools, Lswton M idw ay and
Goldsboro.
Due to cutback In state funding, there w ill be only one 4year-old program at Goldsboro. Both Lawton and M idw ay
wiU have J and 4-year-old programs, according to program
officials. At the present, there w ill be no E a rly Childhood
program aI Hopper.
Children of current m igrant workers w ill be given first
priority. Children w ill need to bring some proof that they
have traveled either out of county or out of state in the last
12 months, in addition to birth certificate and physical
examination forma.

IN BRIEF

Government
Publishes Papers
W ARSAW , Poland (U P I) - Authorities won a
p s y c h o lo g ic a l v ic to ry today a g a in s t S o lid a rity 's
national newspaper strike by publishing abbreviated
editions o( the Communist P a rty and Polish army
newspapers.
I/fig lines stood in Iron! ol the lew kiosks offering
editions of the party paper T ry buna Irjdu and the
m ilita ry paper Zolnlerz Wolnosd to get the single copy
allowed each customer.
In a box on the lower right hand com er of the front
page, Trybuna Ludu thanked those who helped print
and distribute the 3p * ria l four-page edition and
claim ed a minor victory over the first newspaper
strike in Cast Bloc history.
"These days are not without Trybuna Ludu despite
the Intentions of the organisers of this action," The
newspaper said
Solidarity called the strike to protest an anti-union
media campaign by Die government.
Solidarity had vowed to block printing or distribution
of every major dally newspaper In the country, but
recognised authorities would make a concerted effort
to put out the party paper.

O P E C Divided O n Oil Price
G E N E V A , S o lllc r liA d I U P ]) - O P E C ( ip c r li met
through the night in an attempt to resolve a deep split
over a proposal to lower o il's official base price and
w in back customers enjoying a global surplus of oil.
Industry observers said failure by O P E C ministers
to agree on a unified price during their tnulllbllllondollar haggle In the tightly guarded Intercontinental
Hotel could touch off a price war among the 11 nations.
Saudi Arabia, which has been charging M a barrel
below the official OPF.C reference price of fM a barrel,
said Tuesday It was w illing to Increase its price to t l i if
the rest of the price-fixing cartel cut their prices to the
same level and (rote them for a considerable lime.
Venezuela, however, said Its clients were happy to
pay W for a reliable supply and vowed not to cut
prices despite a worldwide oil surplus that has hurt the
h igh est-p riced producers — e s p e c ia lly A fric a n
members.

Jury Aw ards
$25,000 In
Arrest Case
N ancy

M c M illa n

(ce n te r)

is

a w a rd e d

a

ja r

c o n t a in in g 153.45 In n ic k e ls f o r c o m in g c lo s e s t to
g u d x s in g th e w o rth o f th e J a r ’ s c o n te n ts d u r in g
N a n f o r d m e r c h a n t 's N ic k e l D a y s ' p r o m o t io n A u g .

H oyd

C o le m a n ,

p r e s id e n t

of

th e

D o w n to w n

M e r c h a n t 's A s s o c ia t io n a n d M a t h a Y a n c e y , D M A
p u b lic r e la t io n s r e p r e s e n t a t iv e . T h e n ic k e ls w e r e
d o n a t e d b y F la g s h ip R a n k o f S e m in o le .

13-15. H e r g u e s s w a s 153.25. P r e s e n t in g th e j a r a re

Action Reports
♦ Fires
*

Iran Hijack Dram a Ends
M A R S E IU .K , Franc* (U P I) AnU-Khomelnl
guerrillas surrendered a pirated Iranian m issile boat
today in exchange for an offer ol French asylum to end
a six-day sea hijacking.
“ We don't want a battle in front of the port of M ar­
seille,” Defense M inister Charles lie m ou warned the
20 armed hijackers who Thursday sailed Ihe Tarbtian
Into the harbor and threatened to blow up the 249-foot
vessel and n hostages.
In tense negotiations, the hijackers released JO of the
hostages, but kept Ihe commander and his first officer
on board, vowing to k ill them by exploding ammunition
on the vessel.
French naval vessels, including a 150-foot fast attack
boat, manipulated the Tabarxin to about 4 m iles off­
shore, an offer o l political asylum was made, then a
navy vessel lowed the darkened Tarbixan to Toulon, JO
m iles to the southeast as French helicopters hovered
overhead.
Iran, already bristling at France for granting
political asylum to deposed chief of state Abolhasaan
Ranl-Sadr, assailed France for the latest offer of
political refuge, saying it was "tantamount to
legalising piracy.”

S e c o n d P r f x e w in n e r M a r y J o h n s o n ( le f t ) r e c e iv e s
n 150 s a v in g s b o n d d o n a te d b y th e A t la n t ic H a n k o f

b a n k is R o n D y c u s . o w n e r o f L o is ! P la c e , 201 E .
1st S t r e e t , w h e re th e j a r w a s d is p la y e d d u r in g th e

S a n fo r d . M a k in g th e p r e s e n t a t io n o n b e h a lf o f th e

co n te s t.

Troops Accused O f Massacre
A R M E N IA , E l Salvador (U P I) — It started with a
soccer match and ended with the massacre of 42 fans
and players of a small-lown soccer team apparently by
troops of E l Salvador's U S . - backed Junta, residents
charged.
The Defense M inistry refused to comment Tuesday
on the massacre charges made by the Salvadoran
Human Rights Commission and confirmed by wit­
nesses who asked not to be identified.
Peasants said government Uoops roared into the
town of Arm enia in (nicks on the night of July JO, ap­
parently Intent on taking revenge against members of
a soccer team who hrawlcd with troops after a match.

W EATHER
N A T IO N A L R EP O R T: Torrential rains that left up to 1 4
feet of water in Florida lashed the Gulf Coast today and moved
Into the lower Mississippi Valley. A tornado w u reported
Tuesday In Alabama and 70 mph winds overturned an air­
plane. Tropical Storm Dennis moved out over the Atlantic
Ocean Tuesday, Just off the coast of northern Florida. Heavy
rains prompted tornado warnings In Georgia and South
Carolina today. Scattered ahowers and thunderstorms also
dampened parts of the Pacific Coast, New Mexico and central
Montana. There w u flash flooding In the Aritona communities
of Kingm an and Bull!&gt;cad City,
•
A R E A R E A D IN G S (I a.m.|: temperature: 71; overnight
low; 74; Tuesday’s high; 82; barom etric pressure; 29.17;
relative hum idity: 97 percent; winds: Southwest a t 9 mph.
T H U R S D A Y ’S TID ES; D A Y T O N A B E A C H : highs, 11:29
a m , — pm ., lows, 3:31 a m ., 9:21 p m ; PORT
C A N A V E R A L highs. 12:19a m . - p m ; lows, M 2 a m , 1:12
p m ; R A Y P O R T : highs, 3 04 a m ., I.JO p m .; lows, 11 :J4
a m , 11:44 p m .
B O A T IN G FO RECAST: CL Augustiae la Jupiter islet. Out
M M iles: Sm all craft should stay In port until winds and m m
subside. Southwest winds 20 to 1} knots today decreasing to
around 19 knots and Thursday. Seas I to 9 feet offshore
decreasing slowly tonight. Showers and thunderstorms north
today. Otherwise, widely scattered thunderstorms.
A R E A FO R EC A ST: M ostly cloudy through Thursday with
thunderstorm s likely today and a chance of thunderstorms
tonight and Thursday. Highs in upper 90s. Lows in the 70s.
W ind southwest I) to I I mph but stronger near thunderstorms
R ain probability 70 percent today, JO percent tonight and 30
percent Thursday.

Evening ttcrakJ

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Wednesday, August tf. IfOl-Vol. 7J. No .H0
re auuwe D**» mt M r . i. c t r i sa iv ru v to Tto
Herat*. IM . M lH . Freat* A r t . Stater*. Fit. m il.
Ittaa* Cleat Petleee PeM el Sealer*. FWrt*a Itm
Year, MSS*. I f A
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Still

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IUIj S

It was a three-pronged legal assault — a 31-year-old D eB ary
woman claiming she was wrongly arrested, assaulted in the
process, and falsely imprisoned over three years ago when
Seminole County sheriff's deputies seized her two children
during a custody battle.
A fter hearing two days of sometimes teary testimony, a fiveman, one-woman Seminole Circuit Court Jury apparently
believed most of Christine F e rrara lovering's story and
awarded her (23,000 In damages as a result of the incident.
The Jury, however, cleared S g l Howard Mullen and form er
deputy John Riggins on assault and battery charges lodged by
Lovering.
W illiam Colbert, attorney for the ih e riff’s office, sa id the
verdict may be appealed. Should an appeal fail. Colbert said

H t r a M P M M t Ay T m h VU m m I

T h ir d

P r lir

w in n e r

Jo a n

G ilb e r t

( r ig h t )

is

a w a r d e d T h ir d P r is e — a c a n n is t e r s e t d o n a te d b y
G i f t s b y N a n , 22H E . 1st S t r e e t . M a k in g th e
p r e s e n t a t io n is N e llie C o le m a n , o w n e r o f th e

s to re .

O th e r

m e r c h a n d is e

p r is e s

d o n a te d

by

S a n f o r d m e r c h a n t s w e r e a w a r d e d to r u n n e n i- u p
in th e c o n te s t,

Japan Begins Temporarily Blocking
All California Fruits, Vegetables
By United Press ta te re stio u l
Ja p a n , fe a rin g Im ported produce
m ight start a Mediterranean fruit fly
o u tb re a k , today began te m p o ra rily
b lo c k in g a ll C a lifo rn ia f r u iu and
vegetables despite reassurances from
the Reagan administration and Gov.
Edm und G . Brown Jr.
Texas also setsd to keep the Medfly
out, tiling suit Tuesday against the
U S .Department of Agriculture to force it
to quarantine a ll California produce.
Faced with losing (wo of the state's
biggest produce customers, a (action in
ih e C a lifo r n ia L e g isla tu re was o r­
ganizing to impeach Brown for his
h in d ling of ihe Medfly eradication
program.
Brown disputed today's New Y o rk
T im es story that said he had threatened
retaliation against Japanese Lmporta if
Japan imposed the quarantine on all
California produce.
Japan Last year bought mere than t i l l

million worth of the state's vegetables
and fruit.
‘"There w u no talk about • trade w u ,"
Brown told U PI after his telephone
conversation with Japanese Ambassador
Yoshio Oka war a tn Washington, D C .
“ I had a very positive conversation
with the ambassador and unfortunately
the New Y o rk Tunes a rticle gives it a
negative twtst of trade w u which wasn't
there," he said.
Japanese o fficials were expected to
meet a g iin today with Deputy Secretary
of State W illiam C la rk and Agriculture
D epartm ent e t llc ia la
to discuss
restrictions on C alifornia tru ll, which
went Into effect i t 1 a m EO T .
A U S . Embassy o fficial in Tokyo said
the JapaneM request w as lo r restrictions
- not an outright ban. But tt nevertheless
would temporarily halt aD Imports of
California fruits and vegetables.
Officials of the Japanese M inistry of
Agriculture, Forestry and Fish eries said

they would not lift the restrictions on
C alifornia produce until the Import crop
could be disinfected — either by
fumigation o r cold storage
Brown and h is federal allies Tuesday
urged Japan to ban only fruit from areas
Infested w ith the crop-killing fly and only
fruits and vegetables that are hosts to tt.
After meeting lor nearly two hours
with U S . officials, however, Oka war*
gave no Indication if Japan would change
Its position.
In a telegram to Japanese P rim e
M inister Zenko Suzuki, Brown said the
eradication effort "Is well in h in d and
our sta te an d fed eral q u u a n t lM S
completely protect the nation of Japan as
w ell as other areas of the United S t a t u ."
R e p u b lic a n s u i t IcgtsU tor C a ro l
H a lk tt said she would introduce a
re so lu tio n T h u rsd a y to begin Im ­
peachm en t of B row n u n le u h is
leadership in Ihe Medfly war changed
radically.

Courts
W Police

the Judgment win be paid by Ihe office's liability Insurance
company, Law Enforcem ent Co., Ltd.
The case began on M a y II, 1971 when Mullen and R iggins
showed up at Lovering's F e rn P a rk apartment to take custody
of her two children — M a rk and Annette.
According to court records. Lovering had moved w ith the
youngsttrs from Pennsylvania to F lo rid a in violation of a court
order. Her ex-husband, M ark F e rra ra , was then granted
custody of the children, and Mullen and Riggins were in­
structed by Seminole-Brevard Circuit Judge Richard M uldrew
to seize die youngsters and return them to their father.
1-overing testified that she knew nothing ol Muldrew'a order
and raaieud atUmpta to toko hor children until ahe could
confer with an attorney. However, since It was late in the day,
the was unsuccessful, and became upset and began arguing
with deputies.
The problem was further exacerbated by Mullen's attitude
which Lovering described as "rude," "abusive," and "uncom passionate.”
Not prepared to relinquish custody of her children. Lovering
told Mullen that M ark and Annette were somewhere outside
when In (act they were later found hiding in a closet in the
apartm ent Lovering also asked M ullen what the consequences
would be If the refused to com ply with Muldrew'* order. At
that point, she w u arrested for (ailing to aid a police officer.
She w u also charged with resisting arrest, but both charges
were is ter dismissed.
In her lawsuit, Lovering claim ed Mullen had no rig h t to
arrest her for simply questioning his authority to take her
children.
Mullen and Riggins said Lovering had to be forcibly placed
In a patrol car, but they denied using excessive force in doing
tL
Following her arrest, Lovering w u held for several hours in
the old county Jail in Sanford, an experience she said fe ll like
"liv in g in another world. It w u dark, dirty, (he amelia were
atrocious They pushed food under the door. It w u lik e a
dungeon," ihe said.
Because her arrest w u unlawful, she maintained her im ­
prisonment w u also improper.
Lovering claimed the a ffa ir w u so traumatic that the could
not sleep (or months, had recurring nightmares, felt compelled
to move out of her apartment, and suffered great hum iliation
and mental anguish.
M AN S E N T E N C E D ON F IR E A R M S C H A R G E
A 24-jear-old Lake M ary man w u sentenced in Seminole
C ircu it Court Tuesday to one year in Jail ter his part in a
December hold-up at a Longwood service station
Charles K . SUnaon, of Palmetto Street, pleaded no contest to
a charge ol carrying a concealed weapon in connection w ith a
Dec. 30 Incident at a Sunoco station at U S . Highway 17-92 and
State Road 431 In which Stinson reportedly stole several
gallons of gasoline at gunpoint.
In other court action, F ra n cis B. Slone w u convicted of
drunk driving, fleeing or attempt to elude a police officer, and
driving without a valid license.
Slone, 23, of Ihe M idw ay T ra ile r P a rk in Longwood, w u
acquitted of a charge of aggravated assault
Stona's lagal trouble* started on June 1 when he w u warned
by deputy ahcrlfl O.F. Damrow not to drive u be appeared to
be drunk. St-xw Ignored the warning and began to drive home
from a Longwood bar.
When Damrow triad to atop the car, Slone reportedly fled
and w u c h u c d by three police officer*. He w u B n a lly stopped
when, according to a police report, he rammed into a patrol
car.
S K A T IN G R IN K S U E D
A n Orlando couple are suing a Csautberry skating rin k for
damages in excess of (3,000 u the result of an acrident at the
rin k over a year ago.
In a lawsuit filed M onday, Charlotte and Michael V arh o l
accuse the S e m i n Skateway, 1199 E . Sonoran Btvd., of
negligence lor providing M rs. V arhol with a hat the suit cla im s
were "defective" skates.
The (salty skates “ caused Varhoi's right foot to bear to Ihe
right which resulted in Vexhoi toeing her beience and fa llin g ,"
the n i t said. She sustained a leg injury.
N o tria l data h u been act In the case which h u been
assigned to Seminole C irc u it Judge Robert McGregor.

BIKERBEATEN, ROBBED
A H-year-oid Sanford m an w u reportedly beaten and
robbed Monday night u he rode hta bicycle down a Sanford
stree t
A llan U . Combs of JO IE -M h St. told puiic* that h* w u rid ing
down Kb Street about • p m . when two men Jerked M m off of
his bicycle, b u t him . stole ( M tram him a id his bike.

�E v e n in g H e r s id , S a n f o r d . F I.

NATION
IN BRIEF

Veterans Groups Studying
Nuclear Blast Exposure
W ASH ING TO N (UPI) — A national veterans group
Is try in g to locate former servicemen who may have
suffered health problems as the result of exposure to
m ilita ry nuclear tests.
The National Association of A to m ic Veterans an­
nounced Tuesday It a ants to com pile m edical histories
of these estimated 250,000 veterans, complaining the
government has refused to conduct such a study itself.
"W e w ill find all the atomic veterans or their widows
and children," said national coordinator Andy
Hawkinson. “ We estimate that totally, we are looking
tor alm ost 1 million men, women and children.”
Hawkinson and other spokesmen for the association
said the government is not checking the conditions of
the ex-servicemen Involved in atom ic tests because It
does not consider their health problem s to be servicerelated.
T he Defense Nuclear Agency repeatedly has refused
on privacy grounds to release the names of those who
participated tn the atomic tests in the Pacific and
Nevada, Hawkinson said.
George Mace, Maryland coordinator for the veterans
group, said the National Center for Disease Control
studied 2,JOO exposed veterans and found the incidence
of leukem ia to be 300 percent higher than normal.
Hawkinson said there is growing congressional support
for legislation that would direct the government to
locate and provide any necessary ra re for the atomic
veterans.

Dennis Heads Out To Sea With Vigor
M IA M I ( U P I I — Tropical Storm
Dennis headed out lu sea today with
re n e w ed v ig o r, leaving south
F lo rid a swim m ing in nearly 20 in­
ches of rain, and forecasters warned
residents along the Carolina coast to
prepare for a possible hurricane.
No injuries were reported tn
D e n n is ' three-day v is it,
but
forecasters warned Die tenacious
storm could become more of a threat
to life and property in the next few
days.

Highest sustained winds were
estimated at about SO mph as it
moved off the northeast Florid a
coast, but forecaster John Hope said
“ conditions
fa v o r
slow
strengthening of the storm ."
" If this occurs, the storm could
approach h u rric a n e
stren g th
W ednesday," Hope sa id la te
Tuesday. A storm becom es a
hurricane when sustained winds
reach 74 mph.
At midnight, Dennis was centered

about K) m iles cast o( St. Augustine,
Fla. It was m oving north-northeast
at about 10 mph.

the s t a t e ’ s months-long w ate r
sh o rta g e got m ore than they
bargained for — flooded streets,
power outages, evacuations and
snarled traffic.

Hope urged residents along the
coasts of North and South Carolina
to "m onitor the progress ol tlie
storm closely a s a threat to those
areas will develop today if U»e storm
strengthens n m l m a in ta in s Its
projected n o rth northeasterly
course."

O ver the three days, Dennis
dum ped 19.83 inches of rain on
suburban Honda 1c lake s and 18 61
inches on the farming community of
H o m e ste ad . Roth are south of
M iam i.

Many south F lo rid ia n s who were
hoping Dennis would help alleviate

F o re c a s te r s , m eanwhile, w ere
w atching a new tropical depression

Military Might Reagan Aim

that formed Tucsd.ty in the centr it
Atlantic, 1,20ft miles east of I t
la c ward Islands Hope sa id
depression, with highest u inds nf 35
mph, was expected to move west U»r
several days and could Intensify Iran
a tropical storm.
Dennis, which became a trop ical
sto rm in the eastern A tlantic Aug. J5.
p a rk e d itse lf west o(
Lake
Okeechobee and spawned a down­
pour Monday night and Tuesday
m o rn in g .

Four Persons Named To Senior Citizen Board
B y KAT H YG R AN T
Herald S t ill Writer
T h e C a sse lb e rry City C o u n c il
approved four nominations to the
B oard of Directors of the new Senior
Citlxen Center. They will join three
c o u n ty appointed m em bers tn
guiding the centers policies.
In oilie r business Monday night,
the c o u n c il approved a p o lic e
re s e r v e
appointment a n d
a
nom ination to the Planning and
Zoning Commission.

The four Casselberry mem bers o(
the new Senior Citizen board arc:
M rs. Evelyn Ray, 620 Diane C ircle;
G eorge Hofm ann, 426 B ritta n y
C ir c le ; Donald B o eh m e , 1001
Esplande Way; and Stanley Trebnn,
216 Shady H ollow . C a s s e lb e rry
G ra n ts
C o o rd in a to r
I,eona
Cadenhead recommended the four.
The county appointed members
Include: teo Ware, 402 E a st St.,
Altam onte
S p rin g s ;
W illia m
Hamilton, P.O. Box 427. Oviedo; and

Elizabeth Itedmon, 801 Dcbby Dr.,
Casselberry.
The council also approved rules
and regulations for the center. A
handbook provides guidelines for
safely, food and drink, conduct,
dress code and sm oking. The council
unanimously approved the hand­
book and noted that it ts still In rough
item, open to future improvements.
“ It gives us something we can
work with until wc open our doors
the first of S e p te m b e r," said

Councilm an Tom Emltree.
In other business, the council
a p p ro v e d the appointment of
Yvonne Sue Mellon, 441 Spanish
Trace, Altamonte Springs, to the
c ity 's police reserves.
The reserves are a volunteer
group vested with police powers,
designed to (ill tn for nlllctrs when
manpower Is short. Traffic duties
are the only area where the police
reserve has no jurisdiction.
M ellon was a member of the

C a ss e lb e rry reserves fo r litre
months in IBM and served on the
p a tro l for the San ford P o lic e
Department f ir six months in 19(1.
In other business, Die council
approved the nomination of Adolph
V o gc.
2117
1nagua
W ny,
C a ss e lb e rry . The new bo a rd
m em ber replaces I'rimk l.iirn d a iilo ,
who resigned In July
Voge's appointment was effective
immediately after co u n cil's
proval.
|

C

SUN G LASSES

Hinckley Transferred
W ASH ING TON (UPI) - John W. H inckley Jr., the
m an accused of trying to assassinate President
Keagan, is back in a Marine b rig in V irgin ia , having
undergone a battery of psychiatric tests in North
C arolina.
A t the request of his attorneys, H inckley, 28. was
transferred Tuesday from a federal prison cell In
llu tn e r, N.C., to the Marine base at Quantlco, Va.
H inckley first was taken to Quantlco on March 20,
hours alter his arrest following the gunfire outside a
Washington hotel that wounded Reagan, White House
press secretary James Brady, a Secret Service agent
and a policeman.
Justice Department spokesman Tom Decalr said
H inckley was accompanied by four U S. marshals
Tuesday on his hour and i i m inute trip aboard a
M a rin e helicopter from Butner to Quantlco.

W e d n e r d s y . A u g . I f . i * l l — 1A

The

Preset iptton
Centct

C r THI GOOD HEALTH HASH

The
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Photo C e n le t
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IXJS A N G EI.E S (UPI) — President Iteagan, war­
ning the United States is falling dangerously behind the
R ussians in m ilitary might, says he can achieve a
m ajo r defense buildup anil a balanced budget by 1M4.
Reagan also told reporters he can hold the fiscal 1W2
budget deficit to M2 5 billion and scoffed at news
reports, emanating from adm inistration sources, that
next yea r's deficit could go as high a s 160 billion.

“ We don't know where these stories come from si
a ll, " he said Tuesday after a three-hour meeting on
budget matters with Cabinet officers and fiscal ad­
visers.
W h ile House spokesman L a r ry Speakes said the
president " is committed to achieving the goal of a
balanced budget In 1964. He also ts committed to
rebuilding the nation's m ilita ry cap a b ility."

Personal Income
RegisfersHighest
Rise In A Year
W ASH IN G T O N (U P I) - Personal Income rose 1.1 percent tn
Ju ly — the highest rate of increase in a year — mostly beesuse
Social Security recipients received a cost-of-living hike, the
Com m erce Department reported today.
Pqraonal income went up by IJ7 billion , figured on an annual
rate a fte r seasonal adjustment T hat w as more than twice
June's Increase and the highest a n n u m since last year's costof-living boost showed up in Social Security checks, also in
July.
T h is y e a r's Social Security Increase was 11.2 percent,
reflecting the heavy inflation that was typical until a few
months ago.
The big increase was good news fo r retailers, who expect to
see a lot of the additional money turn up at their cash registers.
" E v e n if we take out the Increase In transfer payments,
personal Income has continued to stay at least constant tn real
term s o v e r the last few months on average," said Dave Ernst,
a private economist with Evans Econom ics. "I think the
recent performance of consumers wtU continue. In other words
(hey w on't stop buying," he added.
The Com m erce Department's measure of personal spending
for J u ly showed the biggest Increase since January - 1.11
percent — reflecting in part the incom e received tn June,
which w as up 0.7 percent after revision.
The total personal consumption expenditure category ac­
counts for about two-thirds of the nation's gross national
product. Economists in and out of governm ent have generally
predicted a fist or slightly declining current quarter for GNP,
indicating a nearly motionless economy.
Even without the 117.7 billion increase in personal income
attributed directly to (he cost of living hikes for Social Security
and some other government payments, the monthly growth
would s t ill have outdistanced June's figure.
The government's measure of personal outlays, a rough
m easure of qwnding. has shown steadily Increasing strength
since hitting this year's low point tn A prtL On an annual basis,
the increase for this category In J u ly w as 111-* billion.
Helped by the Social Security Increase tn Ju ly , dbpoaahle
personal income climbed to 18828 per capita in July, $131 more
than tn June.

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300N. F R E N C H A V E .S A N FO R D . F L A .37771
A rts Code 305-322-2811 or C l -9993
W ednesday, A u g u s t 19, 1 9 I1 -4 A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovtnbury, Advertilin g and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week. $1.00; Month, $125; 6 Months. $34.00;
Year, $45 00. By M ail: Week. $1.13; Month, $5 23; « Months,
$30 00; Year. $57 00.

Bending In

By BRITT SM IT H

t t 'i an all too comm on situation - a medical
patient, frightened by what a iti him and awed by
the physician who ran cure It, doesn't quite
understand what ca n be a contusing, technical
explanation of the m alady and the treatment for
It.

— the drugs you a r t taking, your allergies,
whether you sutler from any chronic illness, and
whether you regularly d rin k alcohol, etc. The
doctors of Florida urge you to be a full partner in
maintaining good health.

But the F lo rid a M edical Association t F M A l
contends that t i no excuse for you to leave your
doctor's office without a fu ll understanding ol
your particular problem , what is to be done
about it, and the chances f t r full recovery.

“ In order to do this, you m ust also understand
what the doctor is saying. D iscuss your diagnosis
and plan ol treatment w ith your physician. When
you are given a nrescrlption, ask whal it Is, what
the side effects might be and how and when you
should take II

And while the doctor-to-patlmt dialogue is
Important, the reverse also is true. According to
the FM A, “ You have a responsibility to tell the
physician everything about your health picture

“ Don't leave the doctor's otftce without asking
when you should (eel better, how long before you
should caQ bark it you are not improving and
should you curtail any of your lifestyle habits.

Physicians welcome better inform ed patients
interested in the options offered by modem
medicine.
“ Since it is Impossible for your physician to
m onitor your health 24 hours a day, you should
brie f your spouse, relative o r a close friend on
what Is going on. Should you be the victim of a
life threatening situation, be it Involvement in an
accident or otherwise, the m ore inform ation that
can be furnished immediately to an emergency
physician, the better your chances of survival.
“ It ts your responsibility to take care of
yourself as best you can - be a full partner with
your physician!"

JEFFREY HART

DICK WEST

The Wind
When the governors got down to passing
resolutions at their conference in Atlantic City,
most of the Democrats joined with the
Republicans in pledging to work in partnership
with the President” toward reducing the size of
government under a new concept of federalism.
The Democrats did not have much choice. For
one thing, Congress did not pass President
Hcagan's tax and budget cuts solely because of
salesmanship by the White House but also
because members of Congress sensed that the
public is on the President's side. As politicians,
governors know which way the wind is blowing.
Moreover, governors have been complaining
for years about the way the bureaucracy in
Washington tells them what to do. Mr. Reagan's
aim is to begin transferring power back to the
slate and local governments. Vice President
George W, Bush, speaking for the new ad­
ministration at Atlantic City, made it sound even
better when he hinted that some of the tax
revenue now going to the federal government
might also be diverted hack to the states.
Yet there was an undertone of uneasiness
among the governors as they mulled over the
implications of a shift in decision-making from
Washington to their state capitols. This means
that they and their legislatures would have to
wrestle with some of the demands for services
which Congress, in its more expansive mood in
the past, was eager to satisfy.
It is not likely that the states can scrape
together the resources, from federal grants and
their own luxes, to take over federal program s
without reducing their size and scope. The special
interest groups that besieged Congress to defend
their programs during the recent budget-cutting
exercise would then be camped on the lawns of
slatchouscs.
Thai is the flip side of Mr. Reagan's federalism,
and with it the Democratic governors have sniffed
an issue which could save them from abject
mc-tooism in their support of the aims of n
R epublican p re sid e n t. They have chosen
b a l i t o m l a 's G o v . J e r r y d r o w n , a n e x p e r t a t b e in g

on both sides of an issue a t the same time, as their
spokesman.
So it is left to Mr. Brown to acknowledge that
the President’s lax and budget cuts are bringing
popular acclaim, but to say that Mr. Reagan is
also playing a shell gam e" which will only
transfer the costs of government to state and local
budgets. That proposition may not l&gt;c os easy to
support as the glib Mr. Brown made it sound in
Atlantic City.
Whal Mr. Reagan wants to transfer to the states
is not the cost of various federal programs, but the
power to devise the state's own solutions to
problems that need not be a federal concern. How
much the stales spend on their own program s is
something for their governors and legislatures to
decide. They will be as cost-conscious as their own
voters and taxpayers demand.
Gov. Brown has been n maverick and loner in
national Democratic politics up lo now. Ap­
parently he has decided, in becoming chairm an of
the Democratic governors, that he will fare better
politically as a team player. His effort to
denigrate a Reagan policy that most Americans
seem lo support m akes us wonder how many
governors are going lo stay on his team through
jthc whole season.

Please Write
letters to (he 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 their nam es in print. The Evening
Herald also reserves the right to edit letters'
to eliminate libel or to conform to space
requirements.

BERRYS W O RLD

r f'it

while you on, honey! Before you
it. the big deal will be collecting shells. "

Bt

New
Sense
Of Mission

Good
Men
And True
W ASH ING TO N ( U P h F ro m the
American Bar Association convention in New
Orleans last week cam e word of an alarming
Increase in the number of lawyers in
America.
ABA head-counters reported a 30 percent
Jump in the attorney population in the East
decade. So steep w as the rise, one Jocular
convention speaker was moved to quote the
wellknown tine from Shakespeare: “The first
thing we do, tet'a k ilt a ll the lawyers.”
The pertinency of that quotation started me
to wondering what other applicable com­
ments the Im m ortal Bard m ight have w rit­
ten. So, on the advice of m y attorney, I ob­
tained a Shakespearian deposition. The
transcript follows:
q Mr. Shakespeare, why do we need so
many lawyers?
A. “ To gild refined gold, to paint the lily, to
throw perfume on the violet, lo smooth the
Ice, or add another hue unto the rainbow.
“ I hare perhaps, some shallow spirit of
Judgment; but in these nice sharp quillets of
the law, good faith, I urn no wiser than a
ilaw .”
Q. I tee. And w hal has been the chief upshot
of the growth of the legal profession?
A. “ There liv e not three good men
unhanged in England, and one of them ts (at
and growi old."
q , I hope more su rvive over here. How can
so many lawyers m ake a living?
A. “Good counsellors lack no clients. God
give them wisdom that have i t ; and those that
are fools, let them use their talents."
Q. Speaking of «&gt;rntng ■ living, what
renumerstlon does the average lawyer
receive these days?
A. “ Itrnumeration! O! that's the I a tin
word for three farthing s."
Q. How much e re they actually worth?
A. "A Joint ol mutton, and any pretty little
tiny kickshaws."

Q. It recently urns alleged that tome
lawyers deliberately prolong cases In order lo
collect higher lees. H as that ever happened to
you?
A “ So far u m y coin would stretch."
q What types of ca w s require the most
legal work?
A. "Malice dom estic, foreign levy,"
Q. The adm inistration is cutting back funds
(or legal services to the poor. How w ill
lawyers who take Indigent cases get paid?
A. "Evermore thanks, Ihe eichequer of the
poor."
Q. Will they continue to provide high class
service alter federal funds are withdrawn?
A. "None w ill sweat but for promotion."
q, How would you characterise the current
crop of practicing attorneys?
A. "learned and authentic fellows. Almost
as like as eggs."
Q. And what w ould you any Is a lawyer’s
biggest liandicap?
A. "H is face is the w o n t thing about him ."
q. Finally, how can we laymen help
generate enough legal business lo keep
323,000 lawyers busy?
A. "Let's choose executors and talk of
w ills,"

W ILLIAM STEIF

Knowing How To Do It
D e sp ite
the
A m e rica n
B a n k e rs
Association's TV commercials, it 's difficult to
f r e l friendly toward a bank. A ll that marble
and brass and all those form s are in­
tim idation—and they are designed to be.
A woman in federal government, however,
ha s given herself the Job ol taking the gobbledygook out of banking by explaining to
bank customers what their rig hts are.
Jnsie Downey, who works for the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.—but who speaks
E n g l l t h - h a i started a fre e m onth ly
newsletter (or consumers. She otters carulid
and concise explanations of sticky financial
situations people get (seed with when dealing
w ith a bank.
What happens, (or example, if your bank
credit-card slatemrnt bills you for an Item
yo u never bought?
W ithin GO days of getting the b ill, ca ll the
cre d ito r's telephone number or w rite lo ex­
plain your verxian of the m istake. W hile the
problem is being resolved, you do not have to
p a y (except toe the legitimate, undisputed
amount you owe on the b ill J.
Under the F air Credit B illin g Act, you may
withhold payment (or detective merchandise
un til It Is replaced or repaired if the amount is
o ver $30 and you bought the goods In the state
where you live or within 100 m iles of your
home.
What happens if you leave a bank account
dorm ant for a while?
There m ay not be any money left. The bank
has the right to assess service charge*—as
m uch as its rules permit—and you m ay find
your account is empty. The term s are written
In the sm all print that most people fa il to
read.
In some cases an account 1* dormant if
there has been no activity for a year. And in
some stales, the money then m ay become
aU te property.
What happens il you are demed a loan?
Banks must tell you within 30 days whether
your application has been accepted or
rejected. It It reject! your loan request, the
bank must tell you in w ritin g -w h y and
whether Information It received from a credit
reporting agency or third party led to the
denial of the loan. You ran then contact the
cre dit agency lo find out whal it says about
your cre dit record.

One of the most popular features In Ms.
Downey's four-page newsletters, which she
started in Ja nuary, was a three-part series on
mortgages. It explained what the difference
is between a few tenths of a percent interest
($7,000 more over 30 years If you get a $30,000
mortgage at 13.73 percent instead of 13.23
percent, (or exam ple). And she eiplalned you
must be told a ll costs of settling on a house
before that awesome day arrives.
One feature la a summary of the most
frequent questions asked by customers about
banking, and the answers. Ms. Downey gels
the questions by reviewing live calls made by
consumers lo Ihe FTltC consumer hotline
(800-424-3408),
Many people want (o know If the F D IC
insures m oneym arkel funds Just as It does
money-market certificates. The answer la no.
One service Ms. Downey offers is to let
people know o l w ays they can be victim ised.
One popular fraud is (or dishonest sales
clerks to run several sales slips with your
credit card and later present them (or
collection. Don't let your card out of sight.
She also w arns consumers never to give out
their credit card numbers over the telephone
and never to perm it a credit card to be
photographed.
To llioee w ith electronic fund transfer cards
to get ra sh from electronic tellers, Ms.
Downey w arns never to give the secret code
to anyone— including their children.
She also tells consumers to guard the
computer keys from the sight of those stan­
ding In line behind them while they are
punching out their secret code.
Also, be w ary of anyone who asks for help
with a m achine. Sophisticated thieves can
steal hundreds of dollars from you in a minute
and you won’t even be aware of il until your
monthly statem ent comes.
One of the moat difficult tasks Ms. Downey
says the does Is to read consumer protection
laws over and over until she understands
them and can translate them into ordinary
language. She also offers a column each
month in Spanish.
It you would like to get her m onthly
newsletter, w rite to: Josie Downey at the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., 330 17th St.
N .W . Room 31340, Washington, D.C. 20429.

NOTE: Greg F o sie d al graduated from
Dartmouth College last June and was a leader
of the ronservallve movement on the campus,
lie has been admitted to H arvard, Yale and
Stanford law schools, and he Is also an active
journalist. Here be reports on the demise ol
the (Os' ethos among m any other members si
his generation.
ByG R EG FO SSED A L
AND REW S A IR F O R C E B A S E , VA: The
sun sets, the (lag comes down, and the sound
of taps cracks out across the green lawns of
one of the nation’s first m ilita ry a ir fields. All
over the base, bodies snap lo attention and
hands salute. Cars stop.
G L E N V IE W N A V A L A I R STATION, ILL. .
Cleanshaven re s e rv e o ffic e r s , operating
under the Navy's new and stricter rules of
personal appearance, report for weekend
duty. Fo r the first tim e In years, many of
litem w ill be paid fo r Uteir service — paid
wages they should have received a ll the time,
but never complained (or lacking.
WASHINGTON, D C . : A group of officers is
In f r a n the Pentagon for a day's work in the
capital. They are in fu ll uniform , again under
new ordera. Through most of the 70s, they
were not allowed to appear in uniform here
for fear they would project too high a profile
in an era of anti-m ilitary sentiment.
Uniforms, salutes, closely trim m ed hair —
the Reagan adm inistration la allowing, in­
deed encouraging, the re-m ilitarization of the
United States m ilitary. To date, the effects on
performance, morale, and even recruiting
have been stunning.
In the sis months since Ronald Reagan took
office, the services have met their recruit­
ment goals (or the first tim e since the end of
the draft.
There haj been quality, not Just quantity:
only 32 percent of this yea r's recruits are high
school dropouts, as against 87 percent last
year.
Re-enlistment figures are up nearly 10
percent. Most of those re-enlistees dte an
"Im proved a tm o sp h e re " a s the prim e
motivation (or their decision.
To understand fully the Importance of such
symbolic matters, one m ust go back lo the
late 1980s, when the assault on America's
m ilitary was peaking. As the radical campus
movement gained steam , Its leaders grew
less and less content w ith m erely criticizing
U.S involvement in V ietnam , more and more
determined to strike at the root values of the
m ilitary: values of leadership, sacrifice,
obedience. The re spo nse of A m erica n
political and m ilita ry leaders was to retreat
— a decision that has undermined efforts to
maintain a competent all-volunteer defense
effort ever since.
As the psychology of the '60s filtered down
through the officer corps after Vietnam, the
services lost all sense of mission. Even the
language began to reflect a deterioration of
m ilita ry values: systems management, task
integration, and peer support were the code
words, replacing duty, honor, and country.
Richard Nixon's rearguard action against
these forces was dnsuccessfuL Modem
youths, the theory went, w ill not tolerate the
old, stuffy rules of the services. And so hair
regulations were
re la te d ,
uniform s
disallowed in Washington, and so on. The
focus of the m ilita ry became not Its team
mission, but catering to the individual
youngsters i l now had to attract without a
draft.
No one questioned the assumption that
young Americans would participate only in a
m ilitary that became more and more civilian.

JA C K A N D E R S O N

ABSCAM:TheReal Reason For Conviction
WASHINGTON - A t a recent dinner, a
group of well-read Washingtonians was
asked: What c rim e was Sen. Harrison
Williams, D-N J „ convicted of in the FB I's
famous A BSC A M case? Alm ost In chorus,
they answered: "T a k in g money from an Arab
sheik."
That these educated people, who keep
abreast of what's going on In the world,
should be so w oefully misinformed about
a headline operation like ABSC AM is not
altogether surprising. It la a tributt lo the
F B I's press agentry that people believe an
undercover o p e ra tio n of auch dubious
m orality was actually a brilliant, legitimate
Job of law enforcement.
In Iact, W illiam s d id not taka a bribe, nor
was he accused of doing so. lie did not taka
any money, nor did the government
prosecutors suggest he did. They couldn't:
Their own secret videotapes showed that
when he was offered money by the FB I's
undercover A B S C A M operative, be reacted
with a horrified "N o , no, no, no!H
Williams' Indictment — and subsequent
conviction - stemmed from an attempt to

induce a fictitious Arab sheik to invest $100
m illio n in a titanium mine. The senator also
listened to suggestions that he should help
obtain government contracts fo r the mine.
Senators routinely seek government con­
tra cts that w ill benefit their constituents. He
explained under cross-examination: "M y
friends asked me to perform a role that they
M id w as Important to them and their
f in a n c ia l w ell-being. I p e rm itte d those
feelings of friendship to override my
Jud gm ent"
It was suggested - but never proved - that
W illia m s owned a hidden interest in the minr.
O n videotape, he said be was Intereated In the
m ine, not that he owned an Interest In IL
He also boasted on videotape of his
Washington Influence. But he w as coached to
m ake the boastful statements by the F B I's
undercover "sting" man, M e l Weinberg, who
insisted this was the beat w ay to im press the
A lte r a 13-monlh investigation, F B I of­
fic ia ls admitted In a memorandum that they
d id n 't have ■ cast against W illia m s. This

exculpatory m em o reviewed by my associate
Indy Badhw ar was withheld (ran W illia m s
and his atto rneys
The m em o also showed that the A B S C A M
Investigators were counting an a final trip to
catch W illiam s. F o r this purpose, one last
meeting w as arranged with the phony sheik.
The F B I hoped W illiam s would be induced
to make som e Incrim inating move before the
hidden cam eras. The trap was sprung, but It
came up em pty. W hile Ihe cameras ground
(ulUely, the senator emphatically refused the
FB I undercover agent's offer of a bribe.
When W illia m s started to explain Utat he
didn't lake bribes, he t u cut of! by a
telephone c a l l What he didn't know was that
another F B I agent and a Justice Department
attorney were monitoring the etc venation In
a hidden room.
They would use the telephone to w h ia e the
phony sheik how to manipulate the coovenation. They »t«» Interrupted the —
when he started to make a statement that
might have exonerated him.
Conceded Assistant U 5, Attorney E dw ard

Plaza under oath: " It was our Impress
after watching that tape that he (WUUaz
was going lo go on and ta lk about the
(ereoce between his pub lic and his priv
activities u a senator but was, in fact, cut
by the agent"
A t the trial, W illia m s' attorney, Geo
Kocber, accused the government of faring
the senator back for another, final visit s
the phony sheik because the Justice Dept
men! knew i l couldn't m ake a case sgsl
him.
In response, F B I agent John Good, wtu&gt; i
in charge of the W illia m s investigiti
claim ed Uiat ihe government already had
airtight esse against the senator and met
wanted to improve on I t Y e t Good altendc
previous strategy meeting, w h e n it i
admitted the F B I had not case.
Footnote: An F B I spokesman sakl t
Good's testimony a t the tria l " w u t
sistent" with what Good penonaU y better
It w u Good's own opinion a s an InvtsUgi
that ha had a case against W illiam s, •
though Ihe prosecutors m ay have thor
otherwise.

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Evening H tr ild . Senlord. FI.

Wtdnotday. Aug. It. l t l l - S A

Federal Inquiries Aimed A t Air Traffic Control Safety
W A S H IN G T O N &lt;UPI&gt; T hree
inquiries are under may o( the nation's
a ir traffic control system strikin g con­
trollers contend is unsafe and has drawn
private expressions of concern from
pilots.
Although the government m aintains
the skies are as safe now as they were
before thousands of controllers walked
out 17 days ago, the N ational T ran­
sportation Safety Board said Tuesday it
plans a comparative study of pre-and
post-strike conditions.

evaluate w orking conditions many con­
trollers have long complained create onthe-job stress.
1-ewis also said the Federal Aviation
Administration has asked the Flight
Safety Foundation, a non-profit in­
ternational organization supported by
the airlines, to do an independent safety
study. le w is said he has confidence in
the system, but "w e Just figure It would
make the public more comfortable" to
have an outside review.

Safety has been a recurring issue since
A t the same time. Transportation the Professional A ir T ra ffic Controllers
S e c re ta ry Drew L e w is announced Opt so lu tio n began its illegal strike Aug
creation of a three-member task force to

The N T S B , responsible (or in ­
vestigating c iv il aviation accidents, said
it w ill study the air traffic control system
td gather data for use in future probes.
Although it w ill not specifically Judge
whether the system is safe, the board can
m ake sa fety recom m endations, a
spokesman said.
“ It's going to be an informationgathering project which w ill provide us
with data on pre-strike and post-strike
a ir tra ffic control operations," he said.
In an other development T u e sd a y ,
internal documents from the A ir U ne
Pilots Association said fatigue and insim proper qualifications" of ccntrnllen.

have undermined a ir safety.
The memos were prepared Iasi week
by an AI.PA committee. Copies of the
memos, the contents of which were first
reported by the Washington Post, were
obtained by United Press International.
An AI.PA spokesman contacted late
Tuesday said many concerns in the
memos have since been addressed to the
group's satisfaction.
"A s of now, we're still in the position of
saying the system is indeed safe," said
the spokesman, who asked not to be
identified.
In an Aug. 10 memo to A I.P A President
J.J. O'Donnell, com m ittee chairman

Tom Sheppard said three trends had
emerged "w hich indicate a decreasing
level of safety in the present modified air
traffic control system ."
The (a c to n listed were: "fatigue and
im proper qualifications" of controllers
now on duty, increased m ilita ry and
general aviation flying under visual
flight ru les (requiring no guidance by
controllers) at altitudes below tS.OOO feet
and the closing of some airport towers
"w ith levels of activity which norm ally
require towers."
Since P A T C O began its strike, the F A A
has operated the air traffic control
system at reduced capacity with supervi­

sor) and m ilitary personnel and non­
striking ronb dlers.
Domestic com m ercial flights have
been reduced to about 73 percent of
normal levels, costing the airlines about
330 m illion a day and forcing them to
order widescale layoffs.
Trans-Atlantic flights today returned
to normal following a two-day boycott of
U S flights by Portuguese controllers.
The job action, in sympathy of striking
U.S. controllers, forced about 100 U S F.uropean flights to take a more noriherly route to avoid Portuguese air
space, resulting In some delay s of up to
four hours.

IN THE SERVICE
St of at M a rm a C o rp t G o o d m a n
J A C K L i t M A R T IN
w ill d tp a r t S tp ttm ta r 25 to r 11
‘ J a r . L e e M a r lin , te n of M r
• n o M rs Ja m a s N eal M a r tin of l i i M t t t of rocrw«f fram in g at tho
R o a n n O r ly e . M a it la n d , h a s M a r in a C o r p t R t c r u lf D r p o t ,
m l lt l a d
In th* U nited S l a i n P a r r lt Itiand. S C U pon co m
of
r t c r w il
t r a in in g .
M a r in a C o rp s M a rtin m i l o r s a r i p lo tio n
So p i am b ar IS lo r II n a r k s oC G o o d m a n w ill ba homo fo r a ten
r e c r u it tra in in g a l t h t M a r in a d a y la a v t b a to rt gomg on for
C o r p s R t c r u l l D r p o l, P a r r i s fu rth e r te ch n ica l fra m in g in a
is la n d . S C Upon te m p ta tio n o i f o r m a l M a r in e C o r p t t c h o o l
r a t r u il tra in in g . M a r tin Mill ba G o o d m a n t a in t e d for th re o y e o r t
h o m a to r a !«n o a r ite v * b a to r t w ith a guar ant ta d a u ig r v n m l
g o in g o n to r fv rth a r te c h n ic a l w ith in tho com bat tw ppon fie fd
tra in in g In a to rm a l M a r in a C o rp s P r io r to o n lls fin g . G o o d m a n
scho o l M a r t in m in t e d to r to u r w o rk e d fo rG u tta tto n t and n a IfT t
g ra d u a te of Sem inole C o m m u n ity
y e a rs M lt h a guaranteed a ssig n
m a n ! In t h * Com bat S u pp o rt Colle g e A d u lt H gh School
p ro g ra m
P r io r to a n lls t ln g .
M a r t in m o rk rd tor L u c ia n P o tt as
T IM O T H Y S U T T O N
a B ra K r r p r r and is a IW»
T im oth y Sutton of S a n fo rd h a t
g ra d u a te ot L a t a H o w e ll H ig h
been
te
io cte d by the U S A r m y
School
R e c ru itin g Com m and to p e rfo rm
th irty d a yt of tpec al d uty h a r t a t
O tR W A R D F .M c K IN N C Y
S p a t S D rew ard F Me w in n e r, p a rt o f tha hometown R e c r u ite r
A id e P ro g ra m (R A P )
to n o l M r and M rs O e w a rd F
The R A P ty tte m enable* new
M e W in ne r Sr ot L a t e M a r y . F la . ,
h a t a rr iv e d to r duty at Z im d o rt. A r m y p e n o n n e l to re tu rn h o m e
W r it C orm sni
and d &lt; tcu it th o ir recen t A r m y
e v p a rte n c e t and a d va nce d in
M c K in n e y , s
co m p u ttr
d iv id u a l t r a in in g w it h
a re a
r * p * if m#n,
* i t p r t v lo u t ly
r e tid e n tt
r n ig n t d At fo r t B r«gg. N C
A I N I g rad uate of Sam m ole
H# i t « IfT I gr*duA*f of H o n d o
H ig h S c h o o l. P r iv a t e S u tto n
C o n tro l A cod o m y, Sorrento
r e c e n t ly g ra d u a te d f r o m th e
A r m y 't P e rto m e i Record* School
F R A N K J B O N O IO R N O
A ir m o n F r in k J Bong tor no. to n at F o r t Ja ck to n . South C a ro lin a ,
and
w ill be att«gned to G e r m a n y
Of M r a n d M n F r o n t Bong tor no
of Rout# l, O votfo. F lo . h o t upon com p ia tio n of m e h om etow n
R A P a tiig n m e n t
gro&lt;X&gt;otod from tho U S A ir F o r c o
T im oth y i t tha ton of R e io tg h
m itt il# ly lf o m t o n o ly tft c o u rt* of
and
L o r on# Sutton of S a n fo rd
ChorHft* A ir F o rco Bo to. i l l
N C O S T C P H C N S JR
G ro d u o to t of tho co u rt* It o r nod
how »o in tp te f ond r t p o ir m ito il#
ty tftm t
B o n g io m o w ill now t t r v t ot
M in o t A t f F o rco B oto. N D . w ith
th# f l t l F lo Id M ittilo M om fononco
SQ uodron

T A M A R A L . H A R R IS O N
T o m o ro l
Mo trito n , d o u g h to r
of Ahr
ond M r t
H o w a rd H
M o rr.to n of IM F S W ork A v o ,
Sanford , rtc o fv o d p ra c tic a l w orn
in m ilit a r y Irodtrtn&gt;p of tho A r m y
R O I C A d v a n c 'd C o m p o t F o r t
B ra g g . N C.
Th*
w r i t tra in in g in clu d e*
• a ttra ctio n in fir t t o.d, com
m u n ic o lio n t ,
m o r K t m o n t h lp ,
o rio n lta r in g , woopont, w o o p o n t
tfW tv m t. t ft fv m iy t and o tfo n tlv o
t o c l k l . roco nn oito nco t t c h n iq u t t
a n d o th a r or oat
M o r n to n &gt;t a ttud an l at F lo r id a
S to tt U n iv t r t lt y a l T a lia h a tta a
R A Y M O N D SCO TT 6 0 0 O M A N
R a y m o n d Scott G o o d m an, to n
of M r. and M r v LO ym o n R o y
G o o d m a n of M SI V ia B a lia D riv a ,
Sanford , h a t a n lit ft d in tha U n ita d

Ned Stepnent J r , ton of M r and
M r t N ed Stephent Sr. of 2421
H f l U f St . S a n fo rd , r e c e - v e d
p r a c t ic a l
w o rk
In
m i lit a r y
le a d e rth ip at tho A rm y R O T C
A d v a n ce d C a m p at F o r t B ra g g .
N C
The tia week fram in g in c lu d e d
•nt tru e lio n in fir t t a m
com
m u n t c a t ia n t .
m a r k t m a n t h ip .
or iantear mg. weepont. w e a p o n t
t y t t e m t . d e fa n tiv t and off a n t i ve
t a e t k t . re co n n a itw n c a ta ch m g u e t
and o the r areat
Tha tu c c v ttfu t com p le tion of tha
a d va n ce d cam p and g ra d u a tio n
fro m the«r re tp e ctiv a c o lle g e or
u n iv e r t it y w ill r e iu lt In tho
M udant % being to m m ittto n e d a
ta co n d itautenant in tha a c tiv a
A r m y o r tha U S A rm y R e s e rv e or
N a tio n a l G u ard
Stephent It a student at
U n i v e r t it y
of
F l o r id a
G a tn o tv ilie

2 0 % o ff B o d y L in g o :

Save on the cords
that speak
your language!
sale 13.59
IA. Reg 16.M . B o d y L in g o ”
corduroy | t in s In plain English, a
great looking pair of (eansf Body
curving With sm ooth back pockets
snd Ironl coin pocket Sm ooth on
your pocketbook. too1 Cotton/
polyester in favorite lilt colors for
juniors'S to 15

the
at

H it w ifa. JecQvetm e. &lt;t the
daug hter of M a r* G u y o f ta
C a t t le b re w e r C o u rt, a t t o o f
Sanford

REALTY TRANSFERS
F i C L a n d in g . M u x
L id t c
E iv in d P Gundeeton. L o t SI Th a
L a n d in g s. 1111.000
M a r ia S V esta l. a id to C hart**
M Ca m e ron S w l M a r ia n D . w
M S’ of L o t I. B it r , Tier }. E R
T r e iio r d . M a p ol So nlord. SIS.000
R C A to W hitney J D ough A ml
K a lh lo o n N . Dn tS. E sco n d id o .
Sac V I . s n .re o
R C A to C la ra M W a lle r, t g l .
l l n IS E tce n cic o Cond Sac V I.
saa.aoo
Ja ko b H o r K h i ml t i l l . K M C .
S m ith A ml N an cy. S IIS’ o l L o r &gt;.

eik o f . ca. trsaoo
U n iv e rs a l U ru c lu ro o . Inc
is
L o r r y E Neely S *1 M a r ily n . Loro
a S a n t Souci. S I M M
E ug a na W. R a lly S ml M a r y lo
C h a r loo C. F a t d a n a A w l M a r y O .
L o t M l D oyo nthira. sn.OOO
C a n o a r y .lly t O e n . Inc. la N a a l
W ue
L a i JT. O r a n a o a S o u th ,
usooo
P a i n e . J R e n a n S ml G a ll to
P a u l W M eredith J r S ml P a u lin a
A ., L o t &gt;4. S I . 1. Sabal P o m l
A m e n d e d P la t. S lir a o o
E
G o r y S a m p u n A ml L .
b a n a n a Is E e a ly n v. F o r d
(m a r r I. lo r H . A ik • . S k y L a r k a
d. SST.SOO
T a y lo r E . B a rte r j r A ml C lo r o
J to R ic h a rd T G reen A w l H a ia n .
L o r t. B i t E . L a t e R a lh e y n P a r k ,
o n A d o . , C B . HOOD
B a rn a rd G H a a rl A ml M a r in a
L . Id Onneka M S h o rtly . L o t I I .
• I k A R e p l i n I A ! . No O rla n d o
T o w n tn a . &lt;lh Addn. SM 000
J a m * . R. E t . ie t A mi Ire n a lo
E lla e n M C o rlitlo (m a rr I. E 10’
o l l o l 1 l W W oT L o l A B lk R.
t N o n h g a la . SIS000
( A lt a L Tm dail A w l C la r a F ••
B R o b e rt A M a cL e o d A ml P e t r k le
T A L e o n ard M
H o llit A w l
!&gt; L o n a ro F . L o t R lo t . E J 'y e c r e t

•1C.. O P Snope L a n d C o P la l
B la c k H a m m o ck. SM 000
IO C O I CyW hia S F r l u h . t g l to
C y n th ia S F n tc h . m l A J o y c o
A n n A lro n g . w i , lo t 4, B lk C.
S k y la rk &gt;d. SIOO
P e g g y L S u it e to J a m e s M
B ro w n A w l k a lh lte n J .. L o t SO.
B lk a. re p l Sh I 1 I N o rm O rl
T o w n tn a l l h Addn. sat OOO
E m p lo y e e T r a n ile r C o r p to
R o b e rt W W h llo A o l M e lin d a C ,
Lea J. B lk C. How ell Coy*, la l Sac .
USOOO
J t n n A S p a rk , t w l J o v c a lo
G a o rg a W O arrow A w l D ia n n a .
LOl IS. w a . lr a Hunt C lu b FO&gt;
Hunt Sa I. MI.SOC
G a r a Id R M a r . w in A w l M a r y
lo H o w ard C M a r t e l A w l B
Ju a n ita . Lo) 4. G r a m v illa g a a d .
SIOS.OOO
l a t h s E Sene) A wl A A a rg a re l Is
R o n a ld L M a g ta A w l A A a rg a re l
F . L o t J. B it B. Sw eetw ater O a t l.

trail b la z e r s , 3 9 . 9 9
Classics thatll take you from head of your class to head of your corporation.

The blazer A core coordinate in c o n ­
tem porary fashion With s k irti or pant*
Ovar a th in , sweater or dress For th«
c la s tic look that lets them know you
alw ays m«an business in blends o l
w ooi/nylon and other libers

Sec a. sioo.m

Son to t R G s m a ie t A ml J i l l to
G le n n W N e w h a n A w l O e b ra C ,
LOl I . Vern e Chaney a d. Sa) WO
L m d a C. C io r t la A n g st J
T o rre t A w l A da. L o t lla . R a m
biaw ood. SS4 100

IOA. S ty le t and co lo rs that work well
w it i your wardrobe Blazers in herring­
bone o r tweed patterns O r so lid Itannal
in assorted co lo rs C h o o ta conven­
tional patch pocket style, or (lap pocket
with converlib&gt;« collar. Ju n io r sizes.
S p e cia l 36 .M

J a c k G n t te i A w l N o r m a lo
■ a lly J 0 a crid (m a r.). W f t t r o l
L o t A. B lk 4. Sonlord F a r m s .

SUM
L a m a r T Gaorga A w l B a rb a ra
lo C h a r las C G a m to n A w l Susan.
N NO- o l l o l IS. Das P m a r A c re s ,

sizs aoo

IOB. Tweed or herringbone p a tte rn i a r t
Iraditional favorites’ These blazers are
styled so beautifully, loo. Flap pockets,
two button closing M isses' sizes.
S p e cial 3S .M

V a n Hom a B i d r i . Inc lo R a im
S R m l A w l G a il. L o l Z). B lk B.
P a r o d is t P o m l F o u r t h
S e c.

saa.soo

W ayne SchoaNiaM. T r. tg A lb e rt
H C a t t y J r A w l E l l l . L a l I.
W oodland E t t t . ULSSO

IOC. For the busy woman w ho loves
the sm art lo o k We added flap pockets
lo update the blazer Halt s iz t i
S p e cial 3 S .M

♦25 REWARD
O STEEN A R E A

For Information to the
Residence of
Mr. M.L. Reynolds age 53
M. L REYNOLDS GIVEN NAME (MADISON)
AGE 33, WEARS HEARINO AID, DRIVES
BLUE PICK-UP TRUCK, DEALS IN HORSES,
LIVES IN OSTEEN AREA, TO OIVE INFOR­
MATION, CALL 333-4463, YOU MAY REMAIN
ANONYMOUS- INFORMATION WILL HAVE
TO OIVEN IN PERSON.

XPenney

SANFORD PLA ZA
OPEN )«a.m .-»».m . MON.-SAT.
SUNDAY 13i30-SiM

�t A -E v t n lng Harakl, Santerd, FI.

Wtdnssday, Aug. II,1 W I

F a ll B u s
S c h e d u le s
Fo r S e m in o le
S ch o o ls
Here are bus schedules for som e
Seminole County schools. Remaining
schedules will be published In the
Horald as soon ai available.

LA K E M ARY HIGH
l^nlngi I no* lor uludtrrll fflroiled m i pm iod*
Tim*
■s t i l l

1
I
4
4

A cad em y M anat i in to lit N# i f M i
Havana P t r k L e cfe lia rf
*1 A c f d s m y A w A C ir v H A v t
44 A if p o rt Dive) k Trum an B ivd
41 JOlh St l M c C a r th y A w
SO S o v th w e tt Rtf k D u o g ito a B'yd
■M i l l

Th« C r o t t iflft C R IS

4 4V Ornttmood fllvd 1 Dftntfal Avt
4 U
4 M
4 SI

I 00

V d St
O ft C R IS
C R IS k B ro a d m o o r St
C R IS A C a lic o Ret

CM IS A Continental Rlvd
• m in
Lon g wood H ill! Rd Lati* E m m a Rd

I! C Wilttimion ltd iSoulhtaitl

L a l y A t r n L n f f i k L w g w o o d M illt R d
L a tie E m m a R d k f r t y r r D r
4t E E W tiH a m to o Rd i S ia n H D r
SI M a r ir t D r A E I W ilUam ton R d
SI E E r v iif ia m io n Rd A Sandalw ood W a y
S4 E E W iit ia m to n Rd A H arbour D r
SS E E WHHam^on Rd A T b aron C o v e D r
S4 E E W illia m s o n Rd A P arso n D ro w n W a y
$» O ra n g e A v f A AM m a St
f 07 C R 477 A 14th A v t
104 114
Waodtandv D a v o n tlitr a
4 44 T o lto a te T r A M aadow C fM * Cev*
4 44 T o t lo a t t T r A E a V t r n foe*
4 SI T o lif a t t T r A Cedar O at Tr
4 S1 M o r e y B iv d A E a ttr rn Fo rk
4 SS
E a t f a r n F o r A S o e ttb ria r
B ra n c h fltv d
4 54 S w t e th r.a r B ra n ch B**d A P o p la r P i
I Si ipovonihift B iv d A P r n t o n Rd
B u t f« l
W inter M anor M e a d o w t W r it
l l t t p y HaNew M a r k h a m W ood* R d
4 1) S la d e D r A Rocfe t a k a Dr
4 SS D * it w ood D r A Sheridan A ve
4 I t S h c p h tr d T r O tl P f f t M m A ve
4 40 C o lo n ia l L n 1 Tarrytow n Tr
4 4 1 R a v e n M oth L n
O ft B ro m B o n e f L n
4 47 R a v e n R o ck L n A icnaked Tr
4 4f M a r k h a m W ood! Rd A S p rm g t L a n d in g B iv d
4 SO M a r k h a m W oed t Rd A E E W i H U m w R d
4 St M a r k h a m Wood* Rd A P e rto n t R d
4 57 M a r k h a m Wood* Rd A O len E t h e l L n
6 51 M a r k h a m W o o d i Rd A H u n te rt T r
a M M a r k h a m Woods Rd A Old P ost R d IN I
4 SS M a r k h a m Woods Rd A Oak L n
4 S4 M a rk h a m ' w oods Rd A Stonegafe Sooth
4 57 Markham Woods Rd A W indsor lif e
■ us 104
Spring Oak M South M o n tg o m e ry Rd
The I p r m f 1 1 a nla n d o f s ta t *%
4 JO O re e n O fia r B iv d A M tckoryw ood A v t
4 77 G r w m o r if f B ivd A M o c k in g b ird L n
4 11 G r e e n b f ia r m .d A O ahcrest St
4 IS M o n tg o m e ry R d A Cascade D r
4 17 M o n tg o m e ry R d A C le a r C h a n n e l O r
6 47 Spr rn g i B iv d A Autum n O r IW)
4 41 S p rin g s B iv d A P rim ro se D r IN )
4 44 S p rin g s B iv d A Hidden O ak D r
4 45 S p rin g * H lv d A R a rd re e Dr
4 44 S R 414 A O ak St
B us It*
Spring O ak 1 1W est A N o rth )
4 17 O ak v ie w st k L ittle W ekiva Rd
» I t L it t le W afciva Ra A Sprue m o o d C lr IS)
4 40 L it t le W e k iv a Rd k Woodland St
4 4j L it t le W e k iv a Rd 1 W iilo n o o d A v e
4 4a L it t le Wekiva Rd A Lem on w ood Ct
4 4S L it t le W e k iv a Rd A O rcm d L n

4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4

II

3 W

B lif l t M o c lin g tK ft f L n
11 O t k c r n l 11 1 0 »&gt;»ood Ct
11 M o n tg o m rry H i 1 C l K I d * Of
l i M o n tg e -n ffY Rtf i Cltftff C h tfn n tl Or
M J g u n g i i l x l 1 Autum n T f 1*1
X
S p r in g i B 'w J l P rim e *** O r IN )
1 &lt;} s o n n e t B in t * M tftfm O a k O r
7 u
S e n n e t B in t 1 R t m r r t D r

M o rn in g T rip s to r SludenN e n ro lle d «n S p e rio d s
T im e
B us 111
A cad e m y M anor L a c k f ia r f (N o rth )
7 40 A c a d e m y A v e A Tuskeegee $t
1 *7 B e th u n e C lr A C a rve r A v t
7:44 H th St A M c C a rth y A w
7 44 S tr ic k la n d A v e A TOlh Si

m

7 41
l 44
1 44
1 44

1 44
7 SO
7 S3
7 Si

7
7
7
7
7
7
7

45
47
at
ao
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Kids With Learning
Disabilities G et Special
Attention In Seminole
B y liK E G A T R E I X
Special To The tlrrald
Jasrm, a brown hnireil, blue rynl, ten yeur
..Id, is one o! five children sitting In a specific
learning dnuiblllty I SIX)) classroom with a
picture of u turkey on (lie desk and a colored
pencil In his hand. He trie* In trace the lines ol
llic turkey without turning the |«per about, lie
finds it difficult to do and Is beginning lo get
frustrated. Ills k n e h e r walk* behind him and
k i l l him riot lo press down so hard and etplains how to truce on the lines without moving
the paper uround. He tries again
Jason is one of approximately 1300 children
In Seminole County schools,
Iriitn kin­
dergarten through grade twelve In M J )
classes. He is o( potentially average or above
i r r mid-trrtetHgenre, who ikes not perform
**n In 'K b ffli bei a p M .m d io m k rt i» w or
HiSre ol ibe u d r ptwexse* Involved In tm‘dersiiitilling or using i|«ken or w rllten
language.’ 11
He m ay exhibit disortlen In thinking,
talking, listening, Trading, writing, spelling nr
math. He m ay be- hyperactive, poorly coor­
dinated, Im pulsive, dlslractible, withdrawn,
immature or uncooperative. He may tiave
tfthavlur p ro b k iiw , but lie is not prim arily
emotionally or physically lisndirspped or
mentally retarded.
“ I call my children with learning disabilities
the most m aligned children in Ihe school
population,” la id K a lb) Driggera, Coor­
dinator lo r Specific learning Disabilities in
Seminole County. "T o liave a learning
disability Is lo luivc a hidden disability," she
u ld .
Mrs. D riggers Icels children
attend SU&gt;
classes are just as tuindlcapped as children
who are legally blind or otherwise disabled.
Stir says the team ing disabled child's brain
cannot use t lx Information it receives.
"He aees it, but he didn't see II correctly, so
therefore lx 's wrong. So many people do not
understand that. I’ nrenti and teachers both
get upset with the iIntel," she said T lx parrnln
will lake Ihe child to an eye doctor When he
can find nothing wrong, they wilt go to an ear
doctor. When everything looks okay, they
ullen think Ibe child Is being stubborn, she
said.
•
Many parents find that wlxn they tell a
person their child Ivnau learning disability, the
person often says t lx child looks as though
there is nothing wrong with him. They tend to
confute learning disabilities with retardation.

1a

• u s 111
L»*ce!*Me*«hH R a v e n n a P e rk
Lockha rt (S o u th )
T r u m a n B ir d A H a rd ng A v e
H a rd mg A v e A Hughey St
r tn d St A M c C a rth y Ave
Southw est R d A Bungalow B iv d
B u s 141
CR t m e u t h )
3rd St
O tt C R IS
C R IS A B ro a d m o o r SI
C R IS A C a lic o Rd
C R IS A C ontinen tal B*vd
B u s 147
C f W illia m s o n R d
Ifo u th e lL e n g w o e d Hilts R d )
E E W «lham sen R d A Loch L o m o n d A v e
E E W illia m s o n R d A Sa ndalw ood W ay
E E W illia m s o n R d A H a rb o u r D r
E E W illia m s o n R d A T.beron C o v e O r
E E W illia m s o n R d A P a rso n B ro w n W ay
C h u rc h A v e A W&gt;lma St
C R 477 A 14th Ave
■ us 111
W oodlands ( N a r ttie a ith T ib a r o n Shadow H ill
L a k i Em m a R d L o n g w e a d H illl Rd
E a s te r n F o rk a Aspen PI
E a s te r n Fork: A M a te r B iv d
M a r c y B iv d A Rosebriar D r
E E W illia m s o n R d A Sunset D r
L a k e E m m a Rd A F r t y t r O r
Lon g w o o d H ’ llS R d A La«y A c re s IW I
L on g w ood M m R d A l a t y A c r e s L n ( E l
B u t ISt
W inter Manor W o o d la n d s ( South
Sla d e D r A Rock Lake Dr
S h e rid a n A w A Glendale D r
T a ilg a te Tr A Meadow C re e k C o v e
T o ilg a te T r A W illow C reek Covo
T o ilg a te T r A E astern F o rk
B u s I4S
Devonshire W o o d la n d s (N o rth )
D e vo n sh ire B ivd A Preston Rd
S w e v tb ria r B ran ch 8&gt;vd A Stony R id g e D r
S w e e fb ria r B ra n ch Bivd A T o ilg a te T r
T o ilg a te T r A Old H i l a r y Tr
T o ilg a te Tr A E E W illiam so n R d
B u s 144
Sp ring O aks (Southeast) M o n tg o m e ry Rd
The Springs San la n d o I sta te s

SO H i &amp; 0 *» St

B n lit
U i H n l w r i t S u r e r H a ll* *
M ara a am W m tft Otf TN a C m i i e g i
t 11 s n a e n rrtf Tr - O ff P r n » » i* » * » •
/ 7* C o fe n a l Ln S T a rryto w n T r
f x
H a r m B t x k L n — Ott B r o m B o n e t L n
I II O a * m B o ra L n k icnaboO T r
I la W a r t ham *0041 Rtf L S p r.n e t L a n o n g Blvtf
f J7 W a r t ham Wootft Rd i E E W .llla m te n Rtf
1 M W a r t h im Wootfl Rd k P a rs o n ) Rtf
r 3* w a r t ham Wood! Rd 1 D iu m R d
1 X W a r t h t m wootft Rtf 1 C la n E th tfl L n
1 at w a r t h a m Woetft Rd at " L .p t o n t " Slop
t « W a r th a m Wootfl Rtf k M u n ttfft T r
&gt;X
W a r th a m vyootft Rtf k O ut P o tt Rtf IN I
f u
W a r th a m w ootfl Rtf k O a t L n
t is W a r th a m Woods Rtf 1 S ro n a e a la South
1 11 W a r th a m woods Rtf 1 W in d s o r I t la
1 !0 C r a m o o o d B ird 1 D o n rg a l » . t
B u t III
Sprtae O a t i I W a t ll
I M G r r a n e r.a r B ird l S p r « g O a t t B ir d
1 X O a ty .r w S ' 1 L .ttla W r t .» a Rtf
3 1 J L i l t i r W f t iy a Rtf 1 Sprucew ootf C&lt;r (S I
t 11 L im a W t t ir a Rtf k W o o d lan d SI
B u t lH
Sp ring O o M ( N o r m )
t f} Sp rin g O a t t B ln ) t A p p ip w n o e N va
3 u
L i l l t t W ta iv a Rd k L rm o n w o o tf C l
3 i i Little W f t iv a Rd k O rc h id L n
A tttr n o o n
T im e
7
1
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7

77
7t
77
11

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7
2

71
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trips

lo r i l l S t u d e n t

B us 1)1
S H iC k lo n d A v t - Off » f h SI
l|»h 51 A M cC arth y A v e
B e ih u n e C»r A C a rve r A ve
A c a d e m y A v t A Tuskeegee St
B u s 2)4
L o c k h a rt&lt;So uth)• L in c o ln H eig M sR a vo w a P a rk
Southw est R d A B ungalow B iv d
77nd St A M cC arth y A v e
H u gh e y St A H ard mg A ve
H a rd in g A v t A Trum an B iv d
B u s 144
C R -IS &lt;South I
C R I I A Continental B iv d
C R IS A C a lic o Rd

7 77
7 74

C t m t in a r d on P a g e 7 4

YOU'RE GOING TO LIKE ECKERD'S

Back to School
Savinas

Thomas Kdtson, Albert E instein, and Nelson
Itorkefeller all had learning disabilities.
In pre-school years it is Important for a child
lo learn tu Irate, paste, cut, learn songs and
rhym es. While it may seem like child's play. It
a ll relates to developing his gross mid fine
motor control. Some other im |xirtnnl tilings
f ir a child to learn ir e putting together Jigsaw
putties to see how parts fit. That teaches eye-'
hand coordination. Putting together Uncoln
logs and bkeks ran help a c h ild with reading
readinesa, as it trachea u child how to read
from left lo rigid. When a child airings beads
In a pattern lx begins to see relationships in
reading patterns. A child must have tilings in
order W o re lx ran leant to read. F irst he
must have something concrete, like a picture
of a dog. N«xt cumes something semiabalract, a p u u k nt a dog. Then comes ab­
stract, the spelling of the w ord d-n-g Some
children find it hard to progress from purr lea
to aym bolk language.
If u child rntrtaachool and hasn't developed
h it gross and fine motor controls, he may need
to t x tested for the SU&gt; program. The
procedure fir tlx testing is usually a referral
from the teacher or parent to U x guidance
office. T lx guidance department does the
Initial screening. In grades kindergarten
through second grade testing Is based on preacademic skllla which include listening,
cutting ami pasting, tracing, and repeating
sentences and words. The person giving the
teal even watches how the- child holds his
pencil,
II it la an older child, he'U be gtven the Wide
Hnnge Achievement test which is math,
reading word recognition and spelling. If tlx
child scores too high tn this test, that
automatically eliminates htm (men the S U )
program. In the lower grades the tester will
look at U x nxmory testa d ia l are given to Ux
child.
After the screening is completed there Ls a
sta ll meeting where the parents and teacher
talk and decide what should be dune.
Sometimes the teacher decides lo change the
c h lld 't seal, nr tiave a volunteer study with the
child. If this approach doesn't work, the next
step is for the child lo be letted by the school
psychologist.
Hrcauar Ihe psychologist only comes to Itx
schools once every eight cUys. tills purt of Ihe
testing lakrs the longest. When a ll the tests »re
completed, there Is another meeting with the
See I J \ A H N ING, Page 7A

*
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ALLSHOES

PEDESTAL
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40044*4 LlmJl 1

You're Going to Like Eckerd's
Pharm acy Service.
Janet Kittens, specific learning itNnbllit) teacher at Sterling Park
Klenienf.tr&gt; School, gives individual attention tu 9-year-old SLI) student
Doug (latrell of Winter Springs.

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Eckerd Optical.
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...Bus Schedules
(Continued from Page (A)

LA K E M A R Y
1 8
1 IT

CR t i A B ro a d m o o r St
3rd St - O tt C R IS
■ us 141
L o n r o a o d (W est) E E Williemse&lt;i Rd

liw n N d l

2
1
7
2
7
7
2

1 11 CR 417 a U t h * . «
1 1. C hu rch A * , a W ilm a SI
I X
E E W illia m s o n R o a P a rso n Brow n W ay
1 11 E E W illia m s o n R d a Ttb eron Cove D r
1 8
E E W illia m s o n R d a H a rb o u r Or
1 X
E E W illia m s o n R d a Sandalw ood W ay
Bus 111
la n g w a o d H ills R d L a s . E m m a Rd
Shadow H ill T ib o ro n H if M end H ills
1 II Longwood H ills R d a L a t y A c re s L n I E )
1 11 Lengw ood H il ls R d a L a l y A c r . s L n IW)
1 14 L a s a E m m a R d a F n y r r O r
I X
E E W illia m s o n R d a S u n t* Or
1 JJ M a rin O r a E E W illia m s o n Rd
1:14 E E W illia m s o n R d a L o c h Lom ond A v .
B o s III
W oodlan ds I N . r lh * a il A C m i r a ll

1 14
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2 17
2 14

Marty Bird a Rosabriar Or
Marcy Bivd a Eayttrn Fork
Eastern Fork a Aspen PI
Eastern Fork a Tollgate Tr

2 10
2 12
2 14

B us 111
W o o dlan ds I South) W indsor M a n o r
Tho Moor M fs
T o llg ate T r a P ost a R a il Rd IS1
T o llg ate T r a M e a d o w C re e k Cove
Sh erid an A r e a D H lw o o d Tr
R o ck la k e R d a Sla d e O r
B us III
W o o dlan ds I N o rth) D e r.n s h t r .
Tottgete T r — O tt E E W illia m so n R d
T o n g a !. T r a H ic k o r y T re e Rd
Tollgate T r a E a s te r n F o r k
F o r ! A Sfony Rstfgt D r
D tv p m h tr# B lv tf A P r r t f o n Rd
B u i 1)7
M t t t f o w f W a tt S iit p y H ollow
Shtphartf T r - O ff P r t M v f f W Av*
C o lo n ia l L n A T a r r y tow n T f
R lv a n R o c k L n — O ff ft ro m Ron#! i n
R a ve n R o c k L n A ic h a b o d Tr
B u t 16!
The C ro s sin g s M a rk h a m Woods R d
C re e n n o o d B&gt;vd 4 D o n e g a l A vo

2; 12
2 14

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Oak Ln
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H u n te rs Tr
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W in g fie ld Dr
k DJaon Rtf
A P a r io n s Or
4 tb it Rtf
4 Spring* Lan d in g B lv d
B tft MS
$#nler»do E»1*l»s Th# Springs
G u m $t — South of S R 4)4
S p rin g t B lv tf 4 A u tu m n D r (W)
S p rin g ! B lv tf 4 P rim ro s # D r (N l
Spring* B ir d 4 R a d Coder D r (N)
S p rin g ! B tv d 4 H id d e n O a k Dr
S p rin g ! B tv d 4 R#d C e d a r D r fSI
S p rin g ! B tv d 4 R a .n trt# Dr
B u i if !
R iv e r R u n (N o rth ) Spring 0 t h t
(N a r ltw e tl)
M on tg o m ery Rtf 4 C le a r Channel D r
Trekw ontf D r 4 O rc h id L n
O rch id L n 4 L it t le W e t iv a Rtf
But l l !
Sp rtng O a k ! (N o rth C e o tr a ll
L ittle W e k iv a R d 4 Lem oruvood Ct
Spring O a h t B lv d 4 A p piew ood Ave
Sp ring O a k ! B lv d 4 W ildw ood St
B u t IS?
S p r in t O a h i ( North W e lt)
L ittle W e k iv a Rtf 4 P a r k wood A v f
L ittle W * k iv * Rtf 4 W oodland St
L ittle W e k iv a Rtf 4 Sprue evrood C«r I SI
B u t 10)
S p rin g O aks ( South West)
G ftftn B riB f B lv d 4 H ic k o ry wood A re
G re e n b rie r B lv d 4 L it tle W ehiva Rtf
Bus 10!
R iv e r R u n (South) Spring O aks
I South E ast |
M on tg o m ery Rtf 4 C a scad e D r
O akcrest Sf 4 O akw ootf Ct
M o c k in g b ird L n 4 G re e n b rie r B lvd

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Health &amp; Beauty A id ^
Specials for
Back to School

O ra n g a i f
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H ig h la n d St
) 14
A ip tn a St
) IS
O a A h u rtf St
I It
R o b in M ill D r
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41 Car off on St 4 V ir g in ia A v e
3 Ifl
4S R a ym o nd A v e 4 B a rto n St
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3 42'
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$2 Oakn^rst St 4 G ro v e A v e
3 12
$1 L ak e St 4 A lp m e SI
3 10
SS A lp in e St 4 S e m in o le A v e

I 41

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Sprang!
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Spr tngs
Spring*

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But i n
N o rth St (W est) V irg in ia Avo
N orth St 4 C o u n try C lu b R d
V irg .m a A v e A W h ite O a k C r
V irg in ia A v e 4 S h e p p a rd St
O akh urst Sf 4 W illo w G ro v e St
B u st))
H eathertp n V illa g e S p rin g O a ks Woods M e n ig n m e ry R o a d
B r ia r w ood D ouglas A ve
Spring O a ks B lv d 4 Ind ig o R d
M on tgo m ery R d 4 C e n te r St
J4 y D r 4 O a k D r
Jay Dr 4 SR 414
D ouglas A v e 4 L o r r a in e D r
D ouglas A v e 4 H .g h ia n d St
F r a n k lin A v e 4 B a y b e rry R d
F r a n k lin Av# 4 C a ndfruirick Rd
D ouglas A v e 4 N o rth St
B ust

I 4!
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3 10
3 32
114
114

! 11

I M
I 40

I 41
• 44
I 44

I 47
I 50

3 34
3 3)
3 10

W e atherstieltf A v e 4 C le m s o n D r
C lem son D r 4 L y n c h tie id A v «
T rin ity A ve 4 N o ir e D a m e D r
T u U ne Dr 4 L y n c h tie ld A v e

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parents, te ach er, and psychologist. If
everyone t i In agree men l, the child is then
placed In an SI.I) class

I Q. tests aren't alw ayt an accurate testing
of the child, M rs. Em ens said. She said she
knows of one case where the child showed a
very low I Q. but did very well in the
classroom The teacher felt the child was
ready lo go back into a regular classroom, but
had to wait for the child to be retested. When
the psychologist tested the child, once again
the child tested very low. The psychologist
wanted the c h ild placed In an educable
mentally handicapped class because of the
test scores. The teacher, on the other hand,
knew this child could do quite well and Insisted
ihc child be placed in a regular classroom,
Mrs. Emens said she believes sometimes a
teacher may have more Insight Into the child,
being she spends so much lim e with him and
believes some children freete during testing.
Once she was testing some children and
showed them a picture of a doorknob. She
asked them If they had ever seen one of these
before. Many of them said no.
It is found that It a child can’ t skip, he m ay
have a reading problem. Skipping, bouncing a
ball, walking a balance beam, all these things
relate with being able to leant. If a child
doesn't know his right hand (rom the le ll he
won't be able to conceive which way a letter
goes. Sm all children very often haven’t
developed rig h t or left handedness so they
don't know which side is which. But han­
dedness nr dominance develops with body
muscles In coordination with the brain.
"When I was a child I was told that 1 would
be punished at home 11 I w s i punished in
school," M rs. D riggers said. "Whenever I did
something w ith m y left hand I was hit and my
arm was lie d down. To me that was punish­
ment. When I got home 1 got the hairbrush
used on me. Then I went Into stuttering and
began hating school. When my parents went to
school lo find out whst the trouble was, they
were h o n ille d . 1 was left-handed end a ll the
ink wells were on the right side of the desk.
They all agreed (hat I could keep w riting with
my right hand but I was not to be punished
whenever I d id something with my ta il hand.
So this Is part of m y learning disability," said
Mrs. Driggers.
Diane Nye teaches an S ID class at Bed Bug
Elem entary. She has twenty-four students
with twenty for reading. She tries to keep the
younger children In the sm aller classes
because she believes they need the most In­
dividual attention.

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W t M i W V t TH I TttOHT TO LUirT OU W T IT III.
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...Learning Disabilities

Mrs. Em ens said she believes leachers w ill
sometimes put a child from S ID class Into a
lower category ln all his other subjects,
because o( a m istaken feeling lie or she cannot
do well In other areas II he or she Is considered
to have a S I D in one area But In actuality,
quit* ottan a c h ild who does poorly In reading
may exert In math.

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Mrs. E mens’ classes range (rom two to
til teen children at a time. They overlap
because of all the Individual schedules An
S ID leaclwr has to work around all the other
teachers' schedules in order to gel the children
Into her classroom.

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Janet Emens la an S I D teacher a( Sterling
Park E lem entary, Slie has thirty-one students
In Individual program s. Only three o( her
students are there for math, the rest have
reading problems.

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I 44 Spring V a lle y R d 4 S a tiu m a D r
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If a fam ily can afford the tuition fee of f S 3 a
month, there is alw ays the choice of sending
the child lo H arbor School, which is located
across the street from Red Bug Elem entary.
Harbor School consists of a whlta concrete
block building trim m ed ln blue, set w ell off the
main road. There are six classrooms, a
c a fe te ria , k itch e n , diagnostic an d a d ­
ministration office. The school was started In
m i by concerned physicians, educator*,
civic leaders and people interested in children
with learning problems. It is ■ non-profit
organisation. They maintain a s is to one
student-teacher ratio.

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" A ll the children here have experienced
difficulty in the public schools s y itrm ," said
M ark Brown, director of H arbor School.
"They met much failure and frustration. One
of the big reasons is the U rge classroom
situation. These children Just can't function in
a cUssrooin of JO to 10 children," he said.

'H you could get m ore people
to tee thoto kids and to
w ork with them, (hey would
nof have fhe Idea that all
learning disabled and slow
learners are retarded.’
A ll the cUsset at H arbor School are sett
contained. Harbor School does not believe In
the pod system where children and teachers
can hear other students and leachrrs.
According lo Brown, C a lifo rn ia has tftrd the
system and 11proved lo be a complete (allure.
He said he believes the children Just can't
handle hearing other students, other teachers
and much distraction. They haven’t learned to
block out the inappropriate stim uli around
them and to focus on what they should be
focusing on.
"When the children who suffer (rom the pod
system become adults, then society sulferi
because they won't be able to take care of
themselves as well as they should," he said.
Harbor School has all adcadem lc studies In
the morning when they feel the children are
alert and u v e subjects such as music, art and
physical education (or the afternoons.
“ If you could get more people to see these
kids and to work with them, they would not
have the idea that a ll learning disabled and
slow learners are retarded," Brown said.
The school isn't governed by any federal
granU or sU le monies, so they feel they ran do
what's best for the child without any red tape.
Each child is given an individualised program.
It is believed that each n lld team s best when
his or her strengths and weaknesses are
recognised. The child la then challenged at his
own level in all academics.
"Children realise they are slower than moat
children if they are put in a large classroom.
By each child working on h is own level, it
lakes away the frustration of trying lo keep up
with the class," Brown said.
" If a child raises his hand several Umes and
has the wrong answer and another child
makes fun of him, of c tu ra t he won't raise his
hand again. They become turned off to school.
If they go through year* and y e a n of failures
and frustration, after aw hile they Just say the
heck with this, I don't want to go to school," he

The average s U y at Harbor School la two
years. The goal of the school ti to help a child
remediate his problems and to go beck into the
regular classroom and be able to cope,
progress and team. They have to teem to be a
good independent w orker, to ignore the
behavior of others and lo block out variables.
"These are sk ills they'll have to have in life.
They have to tra m to cope with distraction
and numbers of people a l sometime in their
lives," Brown added.
Seminole County has ■ new chapter of
A sso ciatio n for C h ild re n w ith Learning
Disabilities, which was chartered in June,
1N0. A C ID was founded (or the purpose of
"defining and finding solutions far tha broad
spectrum of learning problem s." Membership
is open lo parents, professionals (educational,
medical, psychological) and other cltixens
inter; jted in promoting the education and well
being of Iheec children. A ry a n s Interested in
getting more inform ation on this group can
w rits A C ID , P.O. Boa « a , F e rn P a rt, Fla.

am.

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Wednesday, Aug. It, W t

W om en M arines

l

iC ontintiH From Page I A)
through the M arines' veterinary school. But to qualify she
must first attain the rank of Sergeant.
E ith e r way. she said, she knows the Marines w ill offer
mGre interesting work then she found at Burger King and
D a iry Queen — jobs she held following completion of her
high school equivalency work.
Both Janice and Diane enlisted for four years to obtain
the schooling of their choice.
Nancy, who enlisted for three years, said she was going
from Job to Job "just not happy."
Site said she tried working as ■ cashier and as sn
assem bly worker for sn electronics firm , among other
things.
Diane had a sim ilar experience. H aving worked In low
eschelon jobs s i IBM and General Motors and selling
electronic equipment for a printed c ircu it company, she
found there was no room for advancement without a college
degree.
"B u t I couldn't afford to continue m y education." she
said, "It's too expensive." At the same time, It was getting
tiarder and harder to live on the salaries she w u being
paid, she said.

PEC. DIANK WAItl)
tn the Marines, she said, she’ ll be studying mathematics
and computer systems and has a guaranteed job in
avionics. The corps pays 23 percent of the cost of schooling.
Meanwhile, a new recruit earns $301 per month while
housing, food, medical care and m any travel expenses are
all paid by Uncle Sam. And according to Moon, Congress is
expected to increase m ilita ry salaries "substantially"
before the end of the year.
The women think its a good deal.
But why the M arines-w hich advertises Itself as an outfit
that "b uilds m en "-ove r the A rm y, Navy or A ir Force?
"The Marines builds men, but not out of Its women,"
Moon said. "The corps is a stickler for women maintaining
their fem ininity.”
From her experience, Diane said it's true.
"In boot camp you're told you’ re not a woman Marine,
you're a Marine. But remember you're a woman too.
"In fact. It's mandatory (or women to wear eye shadow
and lipstick when in uniform ."

N a ll polish. U worn, must blend with the cord on the
M arine 's hat, she added.
The three women said they don’ t object to the make-up
requirement and don't see it as an extra burden not placed
on men In the corps. Having "shopped around" im ong the
other branches of service, they agreed the Marines offers
women the best deal.
"T h e Navy offers no training In cosmetology and treats
you just like another m an," Janice said.
They said they prefer the M arines especially over the
A m y , becauK Its entrance requirements are higher.
"Therefore you're associating with a more intelligent
group of people,'' Nancy said.
W ithin the Marines, entrance requirements are higher
for women who must score three times higher than men on
the A rm e d S e rv ice s V o c a tio n a l A ptitude B a tte ry
Exam ination.
Moon said this Is because the women Marines are a
"s m a ll, very elite group."
"W e lake only the upper-crust,” he said.
Additionally, to join a woman m ust be between the ages of
i7 and 28, have a boniflde high school diploma and weight In
proportion jo height.
In contrast, men are accepted into the Marines tf
they have completed the 10th grade, he said.
Janice said the high standards of the corps helped con­
vince her dad her joining the M arines was a good Idea.
"B efore he didn't like (he idea," she said. "But now he
thinks IU great. If you have to be so good to get in, it must
re a lly be something."
" H e even offers to go jogging with me to get in shape
before bool cam p," she added.
Nancy said her parents, E dw ard and Mary DeCoste, 213
Forest Drive, Sanford, at first suggested she try the Navy
or A ir Force. But after she explained the Marines, "now
they're really netted about It," she said.
Diane assured Nancy and Janice boot camp isn't as
horrible as many say, although women do some of the
things men do Including learning how to fire a rifle, use a
gas mask, march and keep up equipment
"A n d you'd better learn to make those t i degree comers
when making your bunk,1’ ahe said.
"W h ile there's rigorous physical training," the added,
"boot camp Is actually can be be more demanding m entally
than physically.
________________
-------------------------------

R E C IP E
Coiiteot
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
★

SIXTH WEEK’S CONTEST ★
Recipes for...

wm

The Marine Corps
builds m en,
but not out of Us
w om en.'

SOT. I K E MOON
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P R I C I t $ 0 0 0 AUQ. I t T H R U AUO. is , test
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IN DOWNTOWN SANFORD

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BEEF
EXTRA LEAN
Center Cut SIRLOIN
CLUB,
T-BONE
STEAK

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DELMONICOI or NEW
YORK STRIP
STEAK
TINOIR IUCSD

C O U N T R Y STYLO

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"They don't yell at you all the lime, Uka In the movies,"
■He 4*Id. "But there It discipline. They break you down to
build you up again, At firs t you don't see the reason lo r It
but It all falls Into place after awhile and It help* you
become a better, stronger person."
Janice was philosophical about It:
" I f they make me do puah-upa until I collapse, they make
me do push-ups until I collapse,” she said.
"I need discipline and strictness," she added. "So fa r I
haven't done anything in my life that's been demanding."
Diane, Janice and Nancy agreed women probably go Into
the service with less trepidation than m tn because they arc
barred from combat. And they said they like it that way,
although they wouldn't object to a woman tn combat if she
wants to. And they don’t think a woman's presence In
combat would distract m en so they couldn't perform their
duties.
" After awhile they'd be just another Marine," Diane said.
"I don't feel I would be competent In combat,” Janice
aaid. "I'd be scared to death. But If a woman thinks she can
put up with it, let tier go."
Although neither of the three la id they enlisted to serve
ih e lr country, they said they think a unlversaldraf t—of both
men and w om en-would be n good idea
"Everyone can give at least one year ol their life. Women
can serve in lotsofcepacities even If not tn combat," Janice
said.
But If the Equal Kighta Amendment passes, Diane said
she thinks it w ill be impossible lo bar women from combat.
"B ut I don't worry about that," ahe u id . "I don't think It
w ill happen while I'm in the service. "The Marine Corps
w as the last to allow women In and w ill be the last lo pul
women Into combat."
The Idea ol women tn the M arines In the first place, she
said, was to free men fa r combat.
The three women u i d they don't worry about losing their
freedom in the service, either.
" I t's like a I to 3 job," Diane u id . And although one can
be ordered to go anywhere, she u i d she feels the M arines
would be reluctant to send a woman lo a haurdous post.
Janice u id she thinks the economic security of the ser­
vice w ill offer her more freedom than she has now.
" It's better than burger-flapping," she u id .
Allhough neither Dtane, Janice or Nancy know yet
whether th e yll stay In the M arines longer than their initial
enlistments, i l l said they are looking forward to lile-lcng
careers. AU want independence.
" I want to be able to ca re (or myself and not be dependent
on anyone," Nancy u id .
WhUe neither ruled out future marriage, Janice and
Nancy u i d right now they'd prefer to be free to travel and
not leave anyone behind. (Janice would like to sec
Australia; Nancy Europe)
Diane, who la divorced, u i d both parties in a m arriage
have to be independent.
And once a woman has had a career, they agreed, H
would be hard to be without one.
" U he's working * lo 1 and you're sitting home doing
housework, I think that's the most boring thing
im aginable," Janice u id . "The best way to keep a
relationship going is to be busy. It wouldn't work it I felt the
guy was holding me back.”
When they enter boot cam p, Janice and Nancy w ill join
between 3,000 and 1,000 women currently serving in the
Marines. This population is expected to jump to about 10,000
in a fete yean. Although the number ol males in the
M arines w ill Increase also, Moon u id he, (or one, thinks
women are a great asset to the corps.
“ They can do a lot o f things better than men," he said.
"I'v e been in the adm inistrative field for It years and I'd
much rather work w ith a woman.
•They're more ccusdcnUous, Dealer and easier to train.”
Nancy and Janice couldn't attest to that But Nancy
summed up thetr excilm ent about enlisting:
" I want lo leave tom orrow ." she said.

■-irk

**

■ t'&amp; - * '«• • •»

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O N L Y 3 W E E K S ...3 C A T EG O R IES LEFT
Don't Delay...One o f Y O U R Recipes Could

VZ 7DC10
1st - 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
W eekly winners are eligible 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 Y O U LIKE
Food Categories Coming Up In The Next 3 Weeks O f The Contest:
MEATS — DESSERTS — MICROW AVE
So send In that special recipe your family ond friends like so well
...It could be a w inner I

RULES:
No limit to number of racipes submitted but each
recipe must include your name, address and
telephone.
TYPE or PRINT your reclpa giving full In­
structions for preparation, cooking tim« and
tRmparatur*. (Approximate number of servings
alto helpful.)
Anyone can enter except Evening Herald e m ­
ployees and their Immediate family.
Mall Entries to: EVENING HERALD
C-« COOKBOOK
P.O. BOX 1SS7
SANFORD. FLA. 12/n

DEADLINE FOR

A panel ol three expert |udges will review all
entries and winners will be notified at the end of
the contest In September tor e taste oft” to
select, the Grand P rlie winner Decision ol the
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All recipes received will be published In October
for th* Evening Herald'* first annual cookbook
contait.
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First, Second and Third p r i m will be sw arded In
each ol Ihe nine food categories. You may en ter
as many of th t weekly categories as you like.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 23
Next Food Category MEAT —

�SPORTS
Wednesday, Aug. It, IM t—9A

B a s e b a ll G o e s
E x tra

AFAYETTE SIGNAL
m in o le M a n a g e r R ic h a r d C o f f e y , w h o s e B ro n c o s c o m p e t e In th e
o r ld S e r ie s In l a f a y e l t e , L a . a t H p . m . F r id a y , lip s h is c a p to s t a r t
Is s ig n a ls in S a t u r d a y 's 8-t v ic t o r y o v e r M ia m i.. .

In n in g s

NEW YORK ( U P I) B ase b all
eiecullves have gone into e xlrn innings
in their attempt to establish a new
playoff system.
It was evpeeled a new form at would be
announced Tuesday, but Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn continued to hold con­
versations on the m atter.
A spokesman far the commissioner's
office said It was likely an announcement
would be forthcoming today.
Kuhn met Tuesday w ith American
league President l e e M a cP h a il and
National league President Chub Feeney
to review the present playoff structure
and the options for a new one. A revised
format became necessary because the
original plan seriously challenged the
integrity of the game by encouraging
f 'o f f e j th e n m o v e s to I h r le ft s h o u ld e r ...
teams to lose intentionally In order to
qualify (or the playoffs.
N o rth r o n e r e p r e s e n t a t iv e O a k D a r k . 111. m e e ts n in e host S t . B e r ­
"When they gel It a ll sorted out I'm
n a r d P a r is h a t 5 p . m . T h u rs d a y In t h e t o u r n a m e n t o p e n e r. E a s t r o n e sure it'll be right and I feel when that
P u e r t o R ic o p la y s l/ if u y e t t e at ft p . m . S e m in o le p la y s th e w in n e r o f happens, it'll take some of the pressure
Ihe f ir s t g a m e , w h ile R ic h m o n d , C a l. , w h o b e a t H a w a ii t w ic e f o r th e off us,” Chicago W hite Sox Manager
Tony laltussa said Tuesday night.
W e st t o n e s p o t , m e e t s th e w in n e r o f t h e s e c o n d g a m e .
Any proposal to change the approved

format for a sp lit season and playoff
series between first-half and second-half
winners w ill have to be approved by the
M ajo r le a g u e P la y e r s A ssociation,
which represents baseball's 6J0 players.
Under the current plan, the winners of
the first half of the season —
Philadelphia and I/is Angeles in the
National le a g u e and New Y ork and
Oakland in the A m erican - are assured
of spots in a “ m inl-aeries" against the
second-half winners.
The part of the plan that must be
changed is die selection of an opponent if
season each division with the best overall
percentage would qualify. The flaw is one
team would end up in a position where it
would be advantageous to lose a game tn
qualify for the playoffs. R ill Murphy of
Bellows F a lls , V t„ lias the Idea the
second-place finisher In the first half
should play one game against the secondplace finisher In the second half to decide
who plays the division champion.
Since it's revenue to the owners' and
players' pockets, don’t be surprised II i l ’a
ncrepted.

Hello
Bucs Acquire Steelers' Furness
TAM PA. Fla. (D P I) - The Tampa
Ray Buccaneers moved to strengthen
their defensive line Tuesday, sending
un undisclosed d raft choice to the
Pittsburgh Steelers for veteran tackle
Steve Furness.
Furness, 6-t and 255 pounds. Is one of
the strongest players In the N F L nnd
led the Steelers in quarterback sacks in

1977 and tied for the lead In 1979 despite
missing some playing time.
He injured an ankle during warmups
prior to the opening game In 1978 and
missed five games, lie did not start for
the Steelers that year until the lllh
game and then broke on ankle in Ihe
Super B ow l gnm c against Dallas.

Goodbye
phins Trade Howell
MIAMI lU P I) — The M ia m i Dolphins
traded third-year fu llb a ck Steve Howell
to Philadelphia Tuesday and put two
others on waivers, bringing the team
down to the 60-player lim it.
Howell, of Baylor, was traded for an
undisclosed draft choice, said team
spokesman Charlie Callahan
»efore s w it c h in g o v e r to h is r ig h t s h o u ld e r to h e g in w ip in g o f f th e
Ig n...

Ihil on w aivers were Jeff Allen, a
defensive eom erback In hla second
year from the U niversity of California,
and Bob Hasp, n free agent linebacker
(ruin U fa y e tt* College
Hasp was hurt last year and was on
the D olphins’ injured reserve Hat.

f i n a l l y , h e f in is h e s th e jo b a n d w a it s f o r th e o u tc o m e .

Playboy Reveals Kentucky
Schedule A s The Toughest
L E X IN G T O N , Ky. t U P l) - A national
nagaiine I Playboy) has rated the
Jniversity of Kentucky's 1981 football
chedule among the nation's toughest,
ind W ildcat coach F ra n C u rd would be
he last person to disagree with that
lotlcn.
It's been said we have the sixth
oughrst schedule in the country," C u rd
aid. "A n d I believe that. It will be Ineresting far the fans and rough lo r the
ilayers and coaches."
The W ildcats, who began two-a-day
-ontact d rills Tuesday, have less than
hree weeks to prepare lor their Sept. 5
eason-opener against North Texas State
it Commonwealth Stadium.
A lter a week olf. the pace quickens
nsiderably as Alabama and Bear
try ant come to town before U K makes a
rip to steam y I-awrenee (or a game
igitnst Kansas. The Cats return home lo

tangle with Clemson and South Carolina
then take to the mad once more (or
m atch es w ith L o u isia n a S la te and
Georgia.
V irginia Tech is the homecoming foe in
a night game O ct 31 before Kentucky
winds up the campaign by going to
Vanderbilt and Florida and hosting archriv a l Tennessee in the annual season
finale.
F iv e of those squads — Alabam a, South
Carolina, I.SU, Georgia and V irginia
Tech — were bowl teams a season ago.
Kentucky, as C u rd Is painfully aware,
went nowhere alter a 3-0 year which
featured four losses in the waning
momenta.
"On paper. It looks very hard " said
C u rd , who enters his ninth season with a
44-43-2 record at UK. “ We don't seem lo
have any breathers. The tram s we're
playing have had tremendous success In

lie past.”
Indeed, Alabam a is picked as the
Southeastern Conference favorite and
Bryant w ill in a ll probability beeone the
all-tine wmningest coach in college
history. G e o rg ia re tu rn s Heisman
Trophy candidate lle rsch e il Walker and
quarterback B uck B clur. Clemson is
ranked second in preseason Atlantic
Coast Conference polls and Florida and
Tennessee are alw ays toughEven the hom ecom ing opponent,
Virginia Tech, la no patsy. The Hokies
return 43 lettcrm en off a team which
appeared in Use Peach Bowl after an 8-3
campaign.
The Wildcats opener with North Texas
State also prom ises to be a struggle. NTS
is coached by form er Mississippi State
boss Bob T yle r who became very
fam iliar with U K during hu ye a n in the
SEC.

dFi Roundup

Bergey's Career in Jeopardy
Follow ing Ihe Tuesday cutdown in N F L
raining camps, B ill Bergey's name
emained on the Philadelphia E agles'
osier. Sort of.
With teams having to trim their rosters
o 10 players, Bergey was placed on the 4reek injured reserved list by Coach Dick
fe rm e il to sa lv a g e the vete ra n
inebacker'i career. Bergey Is trying to
vxne back from a bum knee, but the
ituation is not encouraging.
"H e 's just not physically ready to play
ootball yet," said Vermeil. "B y putting
in i on the four-week Injured reserve list
ow, It gives him time, I hope, to work his
ray back tc where he is physically able
9 play m i l . "
On Injured reserve, Bergey will m iss
e first (our weeks of the regular season,
then must clea r w a iv e n before he can be
rcacUvatrd.

A number of other Eagles were not as
The Atlanta Falcons cut running back
fortunate, however. The team waived 10 Bubba Bean, their No. 1 draft choice in
players, including fullback M ike Hogan, 1978. They also cut defensive back Steve
wide recelvei Luther B lue and quar­ I/ike, who started for Green Bay before
terback Steve E u im ln g e r.
coming lo A tlanta, in a trade for
Hogan started far the E agle s until he defensive b a c k F r a n k Heed and
was cut tn 1979 tn the wake cf drug linebacker Dewey M cClain. The Falcons
charges that were eventually dropped. are lo receive a high 1982 draft choice If
The team re-signed him last year.
either Reed or M cC lain makes the
In other news. A ll-Pro tight end llu ss Packers — but Reed was cut Tuesday.
F ra n cis announced his retirem ent last
Wide receiver Roger C a rr signed a
month, but the New England Patriots
mulli-y _ar contract with Baltimore after
officially placed him on the reserve-dul
a weeklong absence from training camp.
not report lis t This gives (lie Patriots
Denver signed free-agent kicker Fred
first claim if Fra n d s decides to return to
Steinfort, who h it 24-of-M field goals last
the N F L The Patriots also traded
year (or the Broncos,
linebacker Hay Costlrt, who missed the
In other moves:
1900 searon with a knee injury, to New
Buffalo ru t quarterbackpunter Johnny
Orleans for a draft choice. Among those
cut were quaitcrba-ks B ria n Buckley of Evans, leaving incumbent Greg Cater as
the only punter on the team.
H arvard and Dave Rader of Tulsa.

TIRCUSS T A S K
Lake Mary offensive coordinator
Fred Atman runs the Kami
through so m e agility d rills
above, while below, the football
players lake a drink from the
hose. They're not hungry, it haa
holes in it. Thursday at 5 p.m.,
Lake Mary'a Roosters Club will
have a Har-H-Que followed by an
open house" at the new high
school.
H « r iM S IM M S *» T im V m s s h S

�10A~ t . y g n I n q H t f lM . S a n t o r d . F I ,

W e d r u id a y , A u g , H , p t l

Major League Roundup
T o d a y'! F r o M b i i P ilc h e r !
1*11 T it n t i E D TI
Chicago ( D o lto n I II *1 N r *
Y o rk I Jonn I 41, I p m
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Iviis A n jte li'H D o d d e r r ig h t - h a n d p r H u r t llo o t o n h u r le d h is W ill c a r p e r s h u t n u l
T u c s ilu y r iig lil, T h e k n u c k le - c u r v e a r t is t b la n k e d tin* C h ic a g o C u iis , .V0 a s
D u s t) M a k e r a n d K e n l. iin d r c u u x d r o v e in i t t n r u n s a p ie c e .

Ily United Press International
Wlmn Dave Kingman was reacquired by Hie
New York M els List spring, many baseball
observers felt the d u b 's management had lost
its senses.
Kingman luid a reputation with his previous
team, the Chicago Cuiis. as being "poison," a
ilw m c u p u tiU * M

W tsg I n a n e

r u n s fa u l u v v n

longer sulks
Manager J hc Torre ins Isled, liowrver, he
could handle Hie muody slugger and, so far he
lias managed logel quality performance oul ul
his big first baseman.
Kingman hit Iwo noire twine runs — giving
him IB (or the season — and added a run­
scoring double at Atlanta Tuesday night to
spark the Met* to a 4-0 triumph uver Hie
Braves.
" I 'v e been pre tty consistent la te ly ,"
Kingman said. "K o r Uie t a il 20 gamrs or so,
I've been pretty productive H ill-w ise ami
Ihat's Ikiw I gauge my success tn helping the
team "
Kingman ire d d s llie ncqutsIHon ot K ills
Valentino (ur gelling him lietler pitches to hit.

It) United Press International

Hiram Pi*i« b* t(g*l tnuN

Detroit's Kick l-e»i'h smacked a
Ihr re-run homer lo heal Minnesota
Tursday. It w a s the first majorleajiue luuiid liipper for Iht former
^tlehlKiin quarterback.

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OPENS

F o r Thd

C O O L E ST
D e a l In T ow n

General

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E lectric

AU GU ST 20th
DOORS OPEN AT 6:00 P.M

m a il
Plum bing a
IT A 4 L L
H ealing Inc
1M) Senlord Aye ))) 4) 4)

U n it 3, I 'h lllir l I
At Cincinnati, Totn Scavcr, 8-2, allowed four
h ill in 8 1-3 innings and Sam M ejtai drove in
two runs with sacrifice (ties in leading the
iteds to victory.
Dodgers S, Cubs 0

O u r M o st P o p u la r Light Truck Tire Lines
X
PRICED TO SELL!

tn C h ica g o , Dusty tinker a n d K e n lam*

ilrrauk drove in Iwn run* each and Hurt
llooton, M , pitched his 25ill career shutout.
Giants 4, Pirates I
M ill Ma&gt; luid too HHI tingles and three
pitchers combined on a six-hitter as Die
Giants, In Pittsburgh, dealt the Ihrates their
third straight loss.
Astros t, Kxpu* 2
Cesar Cedeno had three hits and drove In
three runs in lilting the Astros lo victory, at
Houston. Rob Kneppcr. 6-2, who was the
victor, was one out sway from his tilth shutout
when L a r ry Parrish drilled a two-run homer.
Padres I, Cardinals 1
In SI. I/iuis, Luts S u la u r drove in two runs
with a p a ir o| singles and it upper I Jones went
J-iie-t and scored twice in helping the Padres
snap a lourgam e losing streak.

LIGHT TRUCK FAVORITE
THAFSALL MUSCLE!

M ill W ilcox, 8-5, pitched a six-hitter over
eight innings and struck out five in helping the
Tigers win their fifth straight. It was Hie
Twins' fifth consecutive loss. K e vin Saucier
pitched the ninth to notch his 10th save of llie
season.
The T igers' bullpen has not given up an
earned run in 301-3 innings in the second hall
ol Hie season
le a c h , who turned down a shot al
professional football lo sign with the Tigers,
rem ains confident he msdc Hie right decision.
"I know I have major-league ab ility," le a c h
said. " I know I can play here. 1 know I can help
the lean) to win, but I haven't much of a
chance to do it.”
Yankees 4, White Sox I
Hon G uidry, 7-3, and George KrarW r, who
pitched the last three innings lor his second
save, combined on a m -h ilte r in New York.
Je rry Muinphrey singled home a p a ir of runs.
Steve Trout, 6-4. absorbed the loss.
Blue Ja y s 5, Hoyals )
In Kansas City. Mo., Barry BonneU knocked
in three runs snd Greg Wells and John
M ayberry each scored twice to lead Toronto,
th e B lue Jays best Hie Royals for 'he first
time in four meetings this season.
Rrrw ers 54, H a s te n 1-8
At Arlington, m a s , doubles by B ill Sletn
and Buddy Bell highlighted a six-run sixth
inning and rallied Texas over Milwaukee for a
split of their double-header. Ben Oglivte, who
reached hix c a rte r 1,000-hit mark, blasted a
three-run homer In the opening inning of Hie
first game to ignite Hie Brewers.
Indians 5, M a r ia m !
Andre Thornton's pinch-hit seventh-inning
homer carried Bert Blyleven, 8-5 and the
Indians over Seattle. Thornton's solo shot
broke a 1-1 lie and pinned the loss on reliever
Rryan C la rk, M , In Seattle.
Orioles «, Angels S
In Anaheim , Calif., Gary Hoenlcke doubled
In two runs in the second and Doug DeCince*
tingled in what proved to be the deciding run
in the thud.
A’» 3, Red Sox I
B ill Campbell uncorked a wild pitch, in
Oakland. Calif., with none out and the bases
loaded in the 15th, to score Je ff Newman for
the w ia

LONG. LOW COST MILEAGE.
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Natural High Lifts Leach, 3-0
lim a ) not Itave been as esciting as throwing
a touchdown ia s i to a streaking wide receiver
but the thrill wa&gt; there Tuesday night lor Rick
leach.
"It's such a natural high I don’t believe it,”
said Hie lorm er U niversity ol Michigan star
quarterback alter belting his first majorleague twiner, a Uiree-run blast in the s lilh
inning, lo lead the Detroit Tigers lo a J-0
victory over the Minnesota Twins. "The only
thing Hial can com part lo It Is beating Ohio
State for a chance to go to Hie Hose Bowl."

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SALE! HUD &amp;SHOWTRUCKTIRES!

WITH P U R C H A SE OF 4
W RANGLER RADIALS
Fo r A lim ite d tim e o n ly g « i this goodlooking * e il* m v e il fb v o M e iy bee The
t u e d e - lik f I m u h u b u c k sk in tin . sn d
the v e il h u a lu ll th e p h e td lin ing * im
e itx n e d ln m o n bom pockets Ih e d e c m a
liv e b u n d in g p a tc h is d f ik brown, with
matching s lilc tu n g G e t r o u r t h e * * ilh
purchase oMou* WRingtoi R e d o tt O buy
two W angle* R a d w is and p*y iu*i t «D 95
Stop i l an* p a t R ip a lin g G o o d y e * Store
Of dealer lo r com p te !* d e la .li

nuEfiT

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Jirn Hemphill. Manager

SA N FO RD

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Wadnttday, Aug. if, I M I - U A

LaRussa Accused Of 'Premature' Throwing
N E W Y O R K IUH1 1- Tony LaRussa
had Just readied the top step o( the
dugout when he got it full blast from a
loud middle-aged (an in the second row.
"Y o u bum." the guy hollered at the
h arried Chicago White Sox manager.
"Y o u said you were gonna throw one of
the last games, not 11115 o ne!"

game with one on tying the score and
that was when the fan let loose at
laRussa.

I-aRussa heard the blast and saw
where It came from but gave no sign,
lie was too busy with what he had to do
H is White Sox had scored four runs in
the top of the ninth to go ahead of the
Orioles, 7-5, and la R u ssa had brought
E d F arm er in from the bullpen to pilch
the bottom half of the inning.

In the 10th, White Sox second
baseman Tony B e m a ia rd put mem in
front again by singling home Harold
Raines and afte r IaH ussa called in
Kevin Rickey and the rookie lefthander
set the Orioles down one-lwo-three in
the last of the 10th to wrap up an S-7
v icto ry, L a R u s s a couldn't resist
walking up to the top of the dugout
again and addressing the same fan.
"floes that look to you like a club
that’ s trying to throw games’ " he
called out.

E ddie Murray, the Orioles' long-ball
hitting first baseman, unloaded on
F a rm e r for his second homer of the

The fan h e a rd LaR u ssa . He
acknowledged tie did by tipping his hat
to him.

Greyhounds

What precipitated that outburst by
the fan was taRussa's published
rem arks along with those by some of
his White Sox players regarding what
course of action they might take to cope
with the poorly thought out split-swa;'"*
form at adopted after the strike.

Milton
I

Richman
U P ! Sports Editor

Under lhat format, a dub lik e the
W hile Sox could knock themselves out
of a playoff berth by winning one of
their senes late tn the season If it came
down to that, LaRussa was quoted as
saying, he'd tell his team to lose the
games. And some of the W hile Sox
players said they'd throw the games.

was written by Bob M arkus, an ex­
cep tio nally capable new spaperm an
w ilfi the Chicago Trtbum e. Besides
being an able w riter; M arkus is an
accurate one. L iltu s s a elaborated on
his remarks Liter, saying the best way
to handle the situation if it ever came
up would be for the W hite Sox to refuse
to take the field ami forfeit the games.

F o r those who don't know Tony
LaRussa, he's straighter than a plum b
line.
The original story involving la R u s s a

for writing what he did ."
" If someone were to ask me the same
thing today," he went on. “ M aybe I'd
try to be sure the entire picture was
presented so everyone understood a
little tietter. I don't want any taint on
our game and I don't want any taint on
our rlu h It has a lot of character and
I'm proud of that."

nouncement out of the commissioner's
office today to the effect the format for
the m ini-series has been changed.
In all likelihood, if the same team
winds up first in both halves of tl*season, it w ill meet the team finishing
second in the final half c l the season
Instead of the team with the best everd!
record. T h is ... eliminates the problem
taR ussa w as talking about.

LaRussa made it a point to c a ll Bowie
Kuhn Monday to explain his position.
He told him the same thing hr told
everyone else.

Before Monday night's game with the
Yankees. I a R i u m was still answering
questions about ‘ throwing" games.
"It's a terrible word," he said. "I
don't think Bob M arkus should be
faulted, though. When we talked about
the subject o riginally, 1 was so strong
and so determ ined about explaining I'd
do anything I possibly could to get my
team into the playoff, I don't blame him

Undoubtedly, there w ill be an an­

■'We'll never do anything tn jeopardlre the Integrity of the gam e,"
L i H u ssj said. "N aturally, I want our
d u b to win, but ... I have to say the
game is more Important than the White
Sox'chances this year,"

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�U A -tv e n ln g Herald. Sanford. F L

Wednesday.*u«. t*. I N I

Police Free 7-Year-Old Captive, Arrest Seven
Police said they moved in when it
M IAM I i U PI I - P o lice cracked a
seven-day-long kidnapping case in was learned the kidnappers intended
spectacular fashion Tuesday night, to k ill the boy and his grandmother
freeing the 7-year-old captive un­ even if their ransom demand of
harm ed and a r re s tin g seven noo.ooo was met.
The Iasi two arrests were made at
suspects, wounding two of them In a
a Miam i home, where the men were
fierce eschange of gunfire.
Police spokesman John Jones said apparently holed up.
Detectives following up on in­
two men were arrested at a west
Dade County home and 7-year-old form ation they had acquired
Andrew M a rtin e z of
nearby knocked on the door and announced
Sw eetw ater. F la . , w a s found they were p o lic e ," Jones said. "The
at
unharmed in a bedroom. The other subjects inside began tiring
arrests were made at two other police. O fficers returned the fire,
locations and officers are looking for wounding the two subjects."
"There w as numerous automatic
more suspects

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Miami Man, N e p h e w Face
Murder, Kidnap Charges
MIAM I (U PI) - A M ia m i man and his nephew are
being held at the F e d e ra l Correctional Institute south
of Miam i on charges they abducted and murdered a
federal witness in a counterfeiting case.
Raymond !&gt;eon Koon, 49, was arrested aboard a
houseboat near M ia m i's Uaulover Park Monday by U.
S. Secret Service agents and North Miami police.
Joseph tester Koon, 31, was arrested last Wednesday
by agents on charges contained in a scaled indictment
returned by a federal grand Jury.
The elder Koon, who was not Indicted but charged in
a warrant, is being held without bond. Bond was set at
$300,000 lor his nephew, Joseph.
Both are charged with kidnapping federal witness
Joseph Dtno in Novem ber 1979, killing him and dum ­
ping the body In a C o llie r County lake
Dtno, who lived in north Dade County, disappeared in
Hialeah where he had gone for a Job interview. He was
scheduled to testily against llaynw nd Koon in a M iam i
counterfeiting case, authorities said.

Launch M a y Be Postponed
C A P E C A N A V E R A L Fla. (U P Il - Chances of
launching the space shuttle Columbia lor Its second
mission on Sept. 30 seemed a little less likely today, but
there has been no o ffic ia l postponement yet.
The Columbia's roll-out to the launch pad was
delayed four days until Aug. 31 Tuesday, and Space
Agency officials and engineers began discussions to
determine whether to postpone the launch itself.
"There are no big problem s with the shuttle, Just a
lot of little ones,'' said D ick Young, a spokesman for
the program. "Testing is taking longer than we cxpected, putting test program s in computers aboard the
Columbia is taking longer and the mating of the arbiter
to its eslem al fuel tank went over schedule.”
An interlace test on equipment fw the reusable
rocket ship's second m ission began Monday but was
running nearly 11 hours behind schedule by Tuesday

ransmn.
"D uring the investigation it was
learned the subjects intended not
only to estort the money but also to
k ilt the victim and the grand­
m other." Jones said.
•When police arrived at one home,
one subject surrendered and a
second subject was subsequently
convinced to surrender.' he said.
"B o th subjects were arm ed with

During its Monday work session, the
Casselberry C ity Council agreed In prin­
ciple with a resolution to increase the city
employee co n ve n tio n allow ances per

said.
Tw o m en also were taken into custody when
o ffic e rs found them trying to clean the filthy
room where Rafelia was forced to stay.
M anuel Castillo, 27, and Alphonso Rodriguez,
21, were arrested on charges of trying to
destroy evidence.

person.
The resolution would allow an automobile
mileage increase from 17 cents to 20 cents
per mile and an overall meal allowance
increase. B reakfasts would go up from $3
to $5. while lunches increase from $4 50 to
$650. Dinner allowances jump from $6 to $6
said Councilman B ill Grier.
The resolution, titled Ordinance 386, is
designed to replace the expired ordinanac,
which was adopted two years ago. The
proposed ordinance w ill abolish the former
requirement that city employees pay hotel

F iv e other children in the West Side home,
ranging in age from 5 to 13. were placed in the
custody of Juvenile authorities. Police said
they appeared to be healthy.

Ralelia was taken from her mother's home
Tuesday when a social w orker discovered her
to be "estremely em aciated." Police were
called to the home of Caroline Ortiz and
compared the rooms to a "c ity dump.”
Ms. Ortiz, 3t, was arrested on child neglect

F o u r days later, on Saturday. Mrs.

Social worker Patricia Cook told police the
fa m ily la d been under investigation by the
C h ild re n 's Protective Services unit of Social

*

.

Assault O n Medfly Resumes
TAM PA ( U P I ) - A Huey helicopter lifted off shortly
alter dawn today and resumed the aenal assault on the
Mediterranean fru it fly.
The chopper was spraying a layer of malathion-laced
bait over a 14-square-mile area in which five of the
voracious crop-eating bugs
tiave been fo u n d FloruU J first infestation ol M tdflies since 1963.
Spraying began downtown, to beat rush-hour traffic,
and moved Into the other areas of the zone, state
Agriculture Department spokesman Frank King said.
Plans were to f intsh spraying the area today but King
said the weather could put the helicopter in the a ir
again Thursday.

.

.

u ... ...... i __i* n n . i

M a c T A V IS H

lilt and
that prevented a safe binding.
"W hal might have been a page 20 story
about a balloon crash became a page I
tragedy."
D on Connor, of Anderson, lnd. director
of the Great lakes Regional Balloon
Cham pionships, sa id the balloon
probably was overloaded and the weight
problem prevented the pilot from flying
safely.
" I never would have taken that many
people up in that su e balloon," Connor
said. "Maybe two or three and a p ilo t
F ro m m y experience, taking six up there
is cra zy."
C a rl Dtnmddie, an investigator with
(he N ational T ra n sp o rta tio n Safety
Board said Monday F A A weather of­
ficia ls received a c a ll about an frnur
before Ihe balloons takeoff and warned
the caller of an approaching storm.

. . . . .
don’ t understand it.'
M a ria was asked what she wanted
most, now that she was home safe and
sound. She was unable to form the right
words and her lather answered. "She
wants Donnie ih e r twin brother)."
The M artin s wept and Mrs. M artin
halted the news conference with. "T h a t
w ill be a ll."
When the kidnapper demanded $5,000
cash ransom Monday night, officers
provided money from their pockets and
notified their wives to make withdrawals
from automated bank tellers until the
ransom money was accumulated.
Then. I I Coronado policemen, re lie f
officers and civilian personnel were
rushed to the drop site at the old ferry
building, where they posed as drunken
sailors and winos. Some hid in trees.
P o lice Chief Jerry Boy d, posing as a

M aria had not been phyaically abused,
although she had been on a die! of
crackers and water.
The Martins, who had pul up a $5,000
reward that was swelled to $12,700 by
other contributors, said they never gave
up hope that their daughter would be
(ound sale.
D O N 'T

Hwy.lT-W — P a m Parti
T

T O N Y
R

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LO W

I. - - f l "

l

4 M a m

1. la w

h n M M U

Sat FPa. a* Ptfa. Tea In n tap

Why F R E E ? Thousands of area residents have spine
releted problem s which usually respond to chiropractic
care.
This Is our way of encouraging you to find out It you have a
problem thet could be helped by chiropractic care It Is
also our way of acquainting yog w ith our stett end
facilities.
Exam ination Includes a minimum of 10 standard tests for
evaluating the spine end a contour analysis photo as
shown above.
While we are accepting new patients, no one need feel any
oblige tlon.
Moat Insurances Accepted

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R O B E R T

Boyd then asked h im lo r a cigarette
and as Edwards moved from the girl to
hand it to him, one o l ihe hiding officers
scooped up the girl " lik e a football" and
moved her to saletv.

Display Yard
Ph. 139-4 tM

I lle O iv a S e p te m b e r I, 1*SI S tm iba i* C a v n ty w ill imp#** a
w rit * a l new « ,* ! « ♦ « •»» la tp e ctie a lee* te r c a r t a in cateearte* t l
approved la n d d e te la p m e n l v t ilil, c a n U r u t t ia n . and w a it
a u ttw rn e d b» p e rm it in t e u n l, read rt» M a l w a y Inclu de d in
l«w*« le t* w ill be a c b * r« t a l I I I t l lac r a .ie w , iit u a n c a a l p erm it,
and im p a c tie n a l a ll r e tid e n lia l d n r e w a ,* m a t w O l c t n n t c l la Iba
rd p t t l a t a u n t , raad w itbm Iba ce u b t, n p b t a l w a y . H l U d la r
c a m m t r c ia l d r ln w a y t .
P t r m i l a p p lica tio n * m a , be a blam pd and la a t p a id a l Iba
Sem inal* C o u n i, P u b lic W trb * D e pa rtm e n t. I S M Se u lb O rlan de
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Sanlord F o r in la r m a llo n . Itlepbone H I 1*0*. a e l )«*

13* N. COUNTRY CLUB ROAD
ACROSS FROM THE NEW
LAKE MARY CITY HALL

..Intii-W
sP li't fuiri'f
relative nl
ol U
Maria’s
parents. Look Ihe
money and met a man w ilh a ski mask al
the site. Boy d landed over only 11.000
and demanded to see the g irl befwe
delivering Ihe remainder. The suspect
went to his car two blocks away and
returned with Marta, siltin g her on a log
several pacts away from Boyd.

Hunt M o n u m e n t Co.

DISCOUNT C A R P E T S
HAS M O V E D TO
197 M A G N O L IA A V E
SA N FO R D
PH. H I «*««

expenses trom their own pocket tl the
convention site is within twenty-live miles
It w ill be presented for final vote Aug 21
Councilman Jim L iv ig n e said the old 25m ile radius proposal should be maintained
and added. "I'd go for 50 miles. I ran see
some potential for abuse."
Councilman Tom Em bree disagreed. "I
think 50 miles is unreasonable with gas
prices the way they are."
The council voted four-to-one in favor ol
the resolution with l-avignc dissenting.
II approved, the resolution would be
adopted in time for the F lo rid a leag ue ol
Cities convention, to be held at the Sheraton
Twin Towers in Orlando, Oct. 21 to Oct.
25 - K A T I I Y GR AN T

P U B L IC N O T IC E

’Mom, Don't G et Lost Again/
Begs 3-Year-Old Kidnap Victim
CORONADO, C a lif. ( U P I I - Threeyear-old M aria M artin , rescued from a
kidnapper after 10 days by a daring
police ploy, sobbed in her mother's lap,
"Mom, don't get loal ag ain!"
Donald and M z rja n M artin of Provo,
Utah, frequently broke down In tears
while trying to explain their gratitude
during a news conference at police
headquarters Tuesday. They became so
emotional they had to leave.
Maria was kidnapped Aug. 8 when Mrs.
Martin, 40, left her alone briefly behind
their motel. She was rescued by police at
a ransom drop site and Robert Gene
Edwards, 46. was arrested lor kid­
napping.
"O u r p ra y e rs w ere answ ered,"
Martin, 65, said. " I'm breaking up We
w e Just ordinary people. R ich people —
sometimes people want their money —
but we are Just ordinary people. I just

The liv e su sp e cts who were
identified im m ediately were Rafael
Eusebio Ramos. 21; Albert. Her­
nandez, 30; E lm e r Arango, 23; Juan
Jose Arango; and Eduard.) II
Medino. A ll were believed to be
M iam i residents.

REGARDING DRIVEWAY PERMIT FEES

iKw
tsll/u tfi hhad
i d f?(l
m i i n i l i oof
f (ret
the Kballoon
270rpounds
free

cralt w as caught in a sudden updraft and
forced into power lines.
M rs. Com stock, of Ann Arbor. M ich.,
said the accident probably would have
been m inor If the balloon's pilot had been
able to land quickly. Mrs. Comstock,
founder of the Balloon Federation ol
Am erica, said it is not uncommon for
balloons to hit power lines.
However, the sudden weight loss ex­
p e rien ce d when E vans, an e x p e rt
p a ra c h u tis t. Jumped made lan d in g
unposstble and lorced the balloon into a
second set of power lines
" M y im pression is that the reason for
(he fa ta l accident was the lact that the
passenger jumped out and put the
balloon in a hazardous situation," M rs.
Comstock said.
" I f you h it a power line, the first thing
you do is get the balloon to the ground.
Alter they hit. the nassenger Jumped and

Tuesday.
The Federal Aviation Administration
was expected to release an official
reason for the fatal Saturday crash later
in the week.
Tucker Constock. a licensed FAA
balloon examiner, said when Harry
"Rocco” Evans. 29. D e U n d , Fla.,
Jumped from the burning balloon gondola
he hampered the ptolot's efforts to land
the craft.
Evans was in stable condition at
Evanston Hospital. He sulfered second
and third-degree bum s on his legs, arms,
hands and face.
Evans was one ol six men out
ballooning Saturday night, when their

night.

one was hit.

S e rvice s since April.

Survivor Of Fiery Balloon Crash
May Have Doomed Companions
BARRINGTON H llJ J i. 11L (U P II—A
man critically burned in a weekend
ballooning accident m ay have been
responsible for the deaths of his five
companions, a ballooning expert said

Jones said police then tried to
arrest two men in a blue van. but
they sped away. He said during the
chase, the men lire d at police but no

Casselberry M ay Hike Allow ances

charges. R afelia also had been forced to sit on
a potty c h a ir lor as long as 10 hours, officials

Ralelia Ortiz was in serious condition today
at Children's Hospital
Hospital officials said the normal weight ol a
3-year-old Is between 36 and 40 pounds,
depending on the c h ild 's stature.

rifles and other lire arm s The
victim was located in the bedroom ol
Ihe residence in good condition."

iif li.

D iaz contacted police and told them
the kidnappers were holding her
grandson and demanding $700,000

bystanders.”
Jones said after the gunbaltle,
police surrounded the building and
the suspects surrendered. T heir
names and the nature of their in­
juries were not known.
Jones snid the case began Aug II
when lour arm ed men kidnapped the
Hernandez boy from the residence of
his grandmother, Gudelia Diaz. 45.

Emaciated 3-Year-Old Found
D ETRO IT ( U P II — A 3-year-old girl who
lived in a home described as looking like a city
dum p is s u ffe rin g
fro m
advanced
malnutrition. She weighs 14 pounds — almost
25 pounds under what her normal weight
should be.

u who
t v i i ■ish his
is lat-x
l im
a r d ia n .
legal
guardian.

__■i
• il .
tii
weapons
lir e —at
the location andt itwo
injuries to the perpetrators,” said
Sw eetw a'er Police officer Casim ir
Piw o w an ski, who assisted in the
arrests. "N o police officers were
hurt and there were no injuries to

II

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( 305 ) .323 1222

4

�OURSELVES
Evoning M«r»ld, Sanford, FL

Wednesday, Auv 1». tt*1— IB

Cook O f The Week: Darcy Bono

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H f f i K Photo by Tom voicoet

SURPRISE B IR T H D A Y CAKE
K o n a J o h n s o n , KOI H a y A v e . , S a n fo r d , a p a r ­
t i c i p a n t in t h r M e a ls - O n - W h e e ls P r o g r a m ,
r e c e iv e d a s u r p r is e — a c a k e — w h e n h e r m e a l w as
d e liv e r e d o n h e r b ir t h d a y , A u g . 12. T h e b ir t h d a y
c a k e w as m a d r a n d d o n a te d b y J o a n C a m e ro n ,
p r e s id e n t o f t h r C a k e A r t s S o c ie t y , S a n f o r d . M r s .
C a m e r o n s a id o n e o f th e f u n c t io n s o f t h r s o c ie t y is
tu p r o v id e f r e e b ir t h d a y c a k e s to m e a ls - o n - w h e e ls
r e c ip ie n t s .

Birth

Mr. and M rs. R oger &lt;Debra) Buurma, 1505 W. 25th St.,
Sanford, announce the birth of a ton, Troy Christopher, who
weighed In at 7 lb*.. 7 o .i, oo Aug. I, at Seminole Memorial
Hospital.
('.randparents are M r. and Mrs. Benny Buurma and Mr. and
Mrs. Art Garrison, a ll of Tampa.

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Thr Herald welcomes luggrsUevas lor Cook Of The
Week. Do you know someeae you would like to see fea­
tured la this spot? There to something lor everyone to
Iht line o l cooking.
Novice cooks, as w ell as master chela, add a dllfrrro l dimension to din lag.
Please contact O U R S E L V E S Editor Doris Dietrich
■boat your news aad views aa reeking.

IOWA
MEATS

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Wo te ll Only
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U.S.O.A. Choice V I
1
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Naturally Aged A M
W A
Western Baal
OLD FASHION B U T C H E R SHOP S E R V IC E E Q U A L IT Y
U.S.O.A. Choice

CHUCK
ROAST

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By U )IS SMITH
Herald Correspondent
When you think of a kitchen, do you imagine good smells,
warm feelings, happy times and a place where the fam ily
gathers? If so, you are In agreement with D arcy Booo. "M y
kitchen is the heart of m y home," she says.
Darcy and her husband John live on Abbott Avenue. They
have been m arried six years and have no children. John is a
construction foreman with the Fred George Concrete Cor­
poration and D arcy describes herself as a homemaker and a
iaretaker of children. "I say caretaker of children," Darcy
esplained, "because I really do care for them.
"Unfortunately In the a ll years John and I have been
married, we have been unable to have children. So, when a
friend of mine needed a babysitter for her children, while she
worked, it seemed only natural (or m e to keep them. Then
other friends heard about It and I now keep their children
also," she said.
"I enjoy the children and I take pleasure In being a part of all
the special things they say and do. They help fill a certain void
I have, not having m y own,” she added.
"The kids feel very Important when they get to help in the
kitchen. 1 let them wash vegetables, stir, m ix and set the table.
They are so proud of themselves when they see something they
have helped prepare on the table for lunch," she smiled.
"I like to cook and both John and I enjoy eating. Casseroles
and desserts are my favorites. I'm always looking for new and
different recipes to try ," Darcy said.
In their spare time John and Darcy enjoy boating, skiing,
fishing and camping. "W e try to take the boat out every
weekend and every chance we get," she said.
Darcy suggests involving your children in the kitchen. "You
will be surprised at Just how much fun it can be," she said.
DUM PCAKE
1 package yellow cake m ix
l can cherry pie filling
I can crushed pineapple (No. 1 can)
I cup flaked coconut
1 package sliced almonds
I sticks butter
In an I " x 12" baking dish pour pineapple and Juice; spread
evenly over bottom of dish. Pour on top of pineapple cherry pie
filling, spread evenly. Sprinkle cake m ix over fruit and spread
evenly. Slice butter and place over cake m ix covering it well.
Sprinkle coconut over butter; sprinkle almonds on coconut.
Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour and 15 minutes or until bubbly.
C H IC K E N AND R IC E R A K E
1 can cream of celery soup
I can cream of chicken soup
14 cups rice
I stick butter or margarine
1 cut up chicken
Cook rice; when done m ix in bowl with cream of celery and

O f H o m e
bread crum bs until moistened by m argarine. Pour into cream
of chicken and sour cream. M ix well. Grate 1 carTot and m ix
in. Gently m ix in squash and pour into casserole dish. Sprinkle
rem aining bread crumbs on top. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 to
35 minutes.
PISTACHIO C A K E
1 package yellow cake m ix
1 package pistachio pudding (3 o r.)

H tftte Phot* a * Lon Smith

D a r c y B o n o s a y * c a s s e r o le s a n d d e s s e r t s a re h e r
f a v o r it e s .
cream of chicken soup. Pour into casserole dish. Melt buttrr.
Dip each piece of chicken in butter and pack on top of rice.
Bake at 350 degrees about 1 hour and 15 minutes of until
chicken is done.
SQUASH C A S S E R O LE
1 package yellow squash
1 sm all package Prpperldge Farm s bread crumbs
I can cream of chicken soup
I I ox. container sour cream
1 carrot
1 onion
1 stick m argarine
Wash and slice squash. Boil in water with onion until lender.
Drain well. M ix in large bowl, cream of chicken soup and sour
cream. M elt stick of margarine, sprinkle in »« package of

3 rgg*
1 cup club soda
4 cup oil
1 teaspoon almond extract
4 cup pecan nuts
M ix alt above ingredients well Pour into greased Hwult cal &lt;■
pan B,ik» at 350 degrees for t5 minutes Frost when rake i*
cooled.
PISTACHIO C A K E FR O ST IN G
1 package Dream whip
I package pistachio pudding
1 ieasp&lt;*'n aim nd extract
1 4 cups m ilk
M ix a ll tngrrdlr ' ■ •'ll f p iln :
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' ■••r eR A K F liU V B t S C U n H A K E
2 pounds ground ' &lt;■(
1 can of ten biscuit*
1 can tomato saute 18 or. 1
1 medium onion
1 4 cups medium or sharp Cheddar cheese
1 egg
1 5 ox. container sour (Team
Brown beef with onion; udd dash of garlic p *dcr, salt a id
pepper. D rain grease off beef and add tomato sauce. Simmer
In bowl m ix beaten egg with sour cream and 1 cup ol ch ce v .
add to beef mixture. Split biscuits in half; place 5 of the halves
In bottom of casserole dish, (tour !&gt;eef m ixture over spreading
evenly. Place remaining bi: utts t.n top to form a crust
Spiinkle remaining r t- - v &lt;n Inp Hake nt 350 d* greel for Xi
minutes.
G R E E N J Kl.lt&gt; M O l I*
1 package lime Jello (sm all)
1 package lemon Jello t sm all i
6 drops green (ood coloring
1

cud

m a y o n n a is e

1 cup sweetened condensed m ilk
1 number 2 can crushed pineapple (do not drain)
1 package 1 or. cream cheese softened
2 heaping teaspoons horse radish
1 cup chopped nuts (pecan or walnut)
Dissolve both packages of Jello In 2 rupa of boding water
Add food coloring and let cool. In targe bowl combine
mayonnaise, condensed m ilk, cream cheese, pineapple,
horseradish, chopped nuts. M ix with hand mixer, cream
cheese w ill stay lumpy. Carefully pour In Jello, m ix together.
Pour into mold. Refrigerate until act.

Husband's Month's Leave Smells Fishy
DEAR
ABBY:
My
husband’i Job require* him to
b* out of town quite a bit.
Everything was going (Inc
with our m arriage until last
month when he telephoned
long distance to say that hia
company physician had ad­
vised him to spend a month
away from hia work and
without any contact with hia
family!
1 tried to reach the company
physician to aak him about hia
advice, but h is office In­
formed me that the doctor w ill
not be beck until the end o( the
sum m er! I suspect m y
husband la having an affair.
Abby, would a doctor make
such a suggestion? Do you
think a man of good con­
science would follow such a
suggestion? I need your
opinion.
U R G E N T A N D AN XIO U S
D E A R U R G E N T : Yea give
me very few lacta la ge on, bat
If y*a suspect year hatband *f
hating aa affair, yea mast
kavs good reason*. The whole
thing sm ells fishy la ate, ton.

Every responsible phyilrtaa
has a s e b stlln te d t c ls r
covering lor him la his ab­
sence. The only "covering" I
see here Is the company
physician covering lor a pal
who needs aa e te a se to
disappear lor a month.
D E A R A B B Y : P m 104
years old, and m y problem is
a neighbor boy I ’ l l c a ll
"M ik e ." H e's i M ike keep*
coming to m y house and he
lings our doorbell, about 15
times! Then ha'U ask if I'm
home. If I am , I have to go out
and play with him , and If I’m
not home he Just sits out in
front and w aits for me.
Sometimes M ike w ill go in
our backyard and play on my
sw ing set w ithout asking
anybody. I I 1 tell him he can't
swing on m y swing without
permlarion, he says he can
because his mother said so.
What should I do?
P O O P E D W ITH PESTS
D E A R PO O PE D : Yen may
need some cooperation from
your mother aad M ike's sa

this m e. F irs t e(plain to Mike
that you ra a 't p liy with him
whenever be feels like It If be
rings your bell wbea you're
not la the mood to play with
him, say sa. Then have your
mother te ll his mother that
your swings should not be
ased w ithout sep ervlsln a.
Better yet, they shonld be
locked up, because U snysoe
to Injured aa them, the owner
eonld be sned.

house key and our extra car.
We figure it's their vaction,
and ihey should (eel free to
get up, eat, sleep and come
and go aa they please.
The question: When friends
and re la tiv e s in v ite our
houseguests to dinn er or
whatever, I don't think they
should (eel obligated to Invite
us, too.
M y sister disagrees with
me. What do you think?
F IR S T -T IM E W R IT ER
D EAR
W R IT E R :
II
depends on what the Inv Itation to (or. II It's a larger
p a rly
to
honor
y ta r
houseguests, you should be

tour, too, art gallery and
museum. There Is no "ru le ."
And where no rule exists,
rommon seme should prevail.

Invited. Rut yoo need not be
Invited to accompany them to
every code* Match, ten, beer
bust, tour ol the rtty, shopping

BACK-TOSCHOOL

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CHECKUP
FOR STUDENTS UR TO AGE 14
w ith
t h is a o

Ortw (*0d
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Howes By Ayoo-atmyal

• E X A M IN A T IO N
X -R A Y
• C lE A N I N O
# P L U O R ID E T R E A T M E N T
|

. VSOS H IA W A T H A A V S .t A W &gt; 0 » O

S IS S IM s e M IS IS S

D E A R A B B Y : When we
have house guests, we give
them their own room, bath.

cP r c s c r t b e d
cI f o d i n g

By M EDCO
£

CHUCK
STEAK

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U.S.O.A. Choice

ENGLISH
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From Tha Rigors O f
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Sessions At Play,
You'll Bo
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From LOIS' PLACE |

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A V I . (1 7 -9 2 )

F R IK D C H IC K E N

323-4528

DOWNTOWNSANFORD
USA BARKER-Mgr.
LOitDYCUS- amor

If you develop a vudden pain
in the t h in while running,
should you "run it oil* or
rent? II th at pain is caused
by a stress fracture, the
answer from physicians,
trainers and professional
runners a lik e in r e s t . . . and
that rest should probably be
of several weeks duration.
Stress fracture* ra n occur in
the bones of the foot and in
the tw o bones of the lower
leg. and are caused bv ab­
norm al o r rep etitive forces
on bone structures. They
ty p ic a lly occur early on in a
p ro g ra m
of
v ig o r o u s
• x t r e is e ,
or
a lt a r
a
s ig n i f i c a n t
c h a n g e In
routine, such as wearing a
new p a ir or a different make
o f sh oos,
in c r e a s in g
distance, or using a different
route o r surface. Stress
fractures arc quit* often not
detectable by routine in itia l
x-raya and m ay only be
noted when healing begins.
A short rest and a change in
ths exercise program may
save a lo t of tim e • and pain la the long run.

M ID C O DRUOS
1 7 -fJ A T 3 7 th S T .
SANFO RD

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COWART (d«fc purple)

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BOTH NURSERIES
ROW OPEN SUN0AY 12 5
OPEN DAILY 9 30 5 30

771 W. IX. MARY IIVO.

LAKE MARY

323 6133

�16— Evening Herald, laniard, FI.

Wednesday, Am. It, Itll

TONIGHT'S TV

CALENDAR

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Broadcatling Nttetik (CSNI

W E D N E SD A Y , A U G U S T 1)

Sanlord Sertnadcrt irnlor ritl/rni rlanrr. 2:30 p.m.,
Civic Center.
Sanford AA llrgtnnm, 8:30 pm., 1201 W. First St.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 20
Snund-nf-Sunthlnr Chaptrr Sweet Adelines. 8 p.m ,
S Andrews Presbyterian Church, Bear Ijike Road,
Forest City.
Wright Watchers, 7 p.m., Quality Inn, I/mgwood; 7
p m., Good Shepherd l.utheran Church, 2917 Highway
17-92, Sanford.
Ovrrratrrs Anonymous, 7:30 pm . Community
United MrtlNxllat Church, Casselberry.
Sanlord AA. 8 pm , 2101 W. First St.
At-Anon. 8 pm , Crossroads Halfway House, lake
Minnie Drive, Sanford.
FRIDAY, AUGUST21
Singles of Sanford, 7 p m , First United Methodist
Church Fellowship Hall. Covered dish supper and
games. Interested welcome.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls, 7 a m., Jerry's Airport
R estaurant

SATURDAY, AUGUST22
World's Prrfect Bacardi Pina Colada contest bet­
ween Central Florida lounges, II a.m. to 4 pm ,
poolside at the Orlando Marriott Inn. To benefit the
Ronald McDonald Rouse In Gainesville. Open to the
public.
TUESDAY, AUGUST!!
Seminole AA, 8 p.m., open discussion, Ml lakr
Minnie Drive, Crossroads, Sanford.
Winter Springs Srrtoma, 7:30 a.m.. Big Cypress.
l^ingwiHKl Rotary Club, 7 30p m., Inngwood Village
Inn.
* T O PS Chapter m , 7 p m., F in t United Methodist

Church, Sanlord.
Sanlord I Jons ( lull,

noun,

Holiday Inn on Imke

M o n ro e .

laingwood.Serioma, noun,Quality Inn, 1-4 and State
Ituuii 4,14
Al-Anon, noon, Mental Health Center, Robin Road,
Altamonte Springs.
Weight Watchers.
7 pin., Sununit Apts.,
Casselberry.
Overeaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m , Florida Power A
light, Sanlord.
Suund-ol-Sunshlne Chapter Sweet Adelines, I p.m.
St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, Bear lake Road,
Forest City,
Sanlord Toastmasters, 7:30 p.m., Rich Plan aiders
second floor, Third and Magnolia, Sanlord.
Heart ol Florida African Violet Club. 7:30 pm ,
ionic of Jo Wornilngtcm, 2088 Grandview, Sanford.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2*
Sanlord- llrraklasl Rotary Hub, 7 a.m., Sanlord
Airport Heslauranl.
Casselberry Rotary,
7:30 a.m., Cauelherry
Woman’a Club, 2S0 Overbrook Drive, Casselberry.
Oviedo Rotary. 7:30 a m., the Town House.
Sanlord Klwanls, noon, Sanlord Civic Center.
Sanlord Seranadcrs sroior ritlirns dance, 3:30 p.m..
Civic Center.
Sanlord Optimist Hub, noon, Holiday Inn.
Kerovery, Ur., 11:10 p.in.. Scars Altamonte Mall.
Sanlord AA Beginners. 8:30 pm , 1201 W. First St.
Starlight ITomrnadrri, 8 p.m., Detlary Community1
Center, Stiell Road.
Ovrrratrrs Anonymous. 7:30 p.m., Altamonte Mall.
Sears.
THURSDAY, AUGUST27
Senior Cltlirni tour to SI. Augustine lor ''Cross and
Sword," Inis leave* Ireds at Seminole llaia,
Caaselbmy, 3p.tn.i pick up Sanlord Civic Centrr, 3:X
p in. Call 323-7434 lie rrservationi.

SUMMER SIZZLER

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BUCK S RESTAURANT &amp; CATERING
O PE N T H U R S D A Y , F R ID A Y A SA T U R 0 A Y F R O M ! P.M . T O M S P.M.
111SS. SAN FO R D A V E . (COR. 11th4 SANFORD) S A N F O R D ,H M tS I

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Buy 1 FISH and SHR1IV1P Dinner
at Regular Price and
Get 1 Fish &amp; Shrimp D inner FREE!
Each Fish and Shrimp Olnnsr consists of
3 Golden brown shrimp, 1 Crunchy North
Atlantic Whltsfiah Filial. CrlBpy Chips,
2 Hushpuppins and Cola Slaw.
B a » e ia i) a a n d In* n e t I n c lu d e d

Expires: 17511

SEAFOOD

Not valid with any other duco unt oiler

CLIP COUPON

Buy 1 All-You-Can-Eai SALAD
BUFFET af Regular Price and
Gel 1 Salad Buffet FREE!

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FAMOUS RECIPE'S R E 0 U L A R DINNER

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Each Chlckan Dlnnar co n sists of: 2 piacaal
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�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Southern Cooking

Wednesday, Aug. i», H D — 18

If It Ain't Got Squirrel, It Ain't G ot Soul'
The most creative, delectable cuisines o( the world result
when one people's cooking influences another's. Many of the
distinctive dishes of the South are perfect examples.
For instance, the original settlers of the South were
prim arily B ritish whose simple cuisine could be described as
"meat and potatoes." However, the adventurous slaves from
West A frica — Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria and S ie n a Leone in­
troduced their fla ir for bold and flavorful fare and developed a
new, exciting cuisine, known today as Southern-style.
A widely celebrated dish with a fascinating history (and one
that every Southern stale now claim s as its own i is Brunswick
Stew.
E a rlie r versions of the stew called far a great assortment of
ingredients; native African elements such as okra and hot
pepper sauce were introduced by slave cooks. Squirrel was
also a comm onplace meat in the pot - a s one Southern cook
remarked. " If it a in 't got squirrel, it a in ’t got soul."
To boost your repertoire of exceptional robust fare, request
the free consum er booklet, "Sarah B a w ls' Down-Home
Recipes." It also provides helpful flavor and dollar-stretrhing
food tips. Send your name and address to: "Down-Home
Recipes," A c'cent Brand Flavor Enhancer, 131 East Street,
Westwood, M A 02090.
BRUNSW ICK STEW
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 chicken (3 to 4 pounds), cut in pieces
2 cups sliced onion
I can 11 pound) tomatoes, undrained
I cup chopped celery
I cup chicken broth
1 teaspoon flav o r enhancer
I teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon dried leaf marjoram, crum bled
I I teaspoon dried leaf thyme, crum bled
4 teaspoon dried leaf basil, crumbled
1 can (1 pound) whole kernel corn, drained
1 package &lt;10 ounces) frozen lim a beans
1 package ( 10 ounces) froxen whole okra
1 tablespoon cornstarch
• 2 tablespoons w ater
/ 4 to 4 teaspoon hot pepper sauce
In large saucepot melt butter; brown chicken on a ll sides.
: Remove chicken and set aside. In same saucepot saute onion
. until golden. R eturn chicken to pot; add tomatoes, celery,
broth, flavor enhancer, salt, marjoram, thyme and basil.
;Cover; sim m er 33 to 43 minutes until chicken is tender. Add
com, lim a beans and okra; simmer 10 m inutes longer. In small
cup blend cornstarch with water; add hot pepper sauce. Stir
:into stew; cook 2 minutes longer until g ravy boils and is
slightly thickened. Yield: 4 servings.
HUSH P U P P IE S
I cup white cornm eal
I tablespoon flour
I teaspoon baking powder
I teaspoon flav o r enhancer
4 teaspoon baking soda
4 teaspoon salt
two-thirds cup butterm ilk
1 egg, beaten
4 cup finely chopped onion
Vegetable o il
In medium bowl combine cornmeal, flour, baking powder,
flavor enhancer, baking soda and salt. S tir In butterm ilk, egg
and onion. In a deep saucepan or deep fat fryer, heat 3 inches
ot oil to 373 degrees K. on deep fat frying thermometer. Drop
batter by tablespoons a few at a time, Into hot oil. F ry until
light brown, about 2 to 3 minutes. Remove and drain on paper
towels. Y ield : About 24 hush puppies.
S A V O R Y FISII C H O W D ER
4 cups water
2 teaspoons flavo r enhancer
3 pounds cod or haddock fillets, cut in 1-inch pieces
4 pound fat sa lt pork, diced
3 large onions, thinly sliced
3 cups thinly sliced, raw potatoes
1 ra n (11 ounces) evaporated nulk
1 can ( I ounces) tomato sauce
4 teaspoon white pepper
In large saucepan combine w alrr and flavor enhancer;
bring to a boil. Add fish; reduce heat; sim m er 10 minutrs.
Drain fish and reserve poaching liquid. In deep kettle fry salt
pork until golden. Add onion; cook until tender. Add potatoes
and reserved poaching liquid. Sim m er until potatoes are
lender. Add fish, evaporated milk, tomato sauce and pepper.
Simmer 9 m inutes; do not boil. Y ield : S servings.
T U N A -C R EO LE P I L A F
4 cup butter or margarine
14 cups uncooked, long-grain rice
1 large onion, sliced ( I cup)
I cup diagonally sliced celery
2 medium-size green peppers, sliced
3 cloves g a rlic , minced
14 teaspoons flavor enhancer, divided
I can (11 ounces) whole tomatoes in puree
1 can (1 3 4 ounces) chicken broth
4 cup water
2 bay leaves
4 to 4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
2 cans (1 4 o r 7 ounces each) tuna, drained
In a flam eproof 3-quart casserole m elt butter; add rice,
onion, celery, green pepper, garlic and 1 teaspoon flavor
enhancer; cook, stirring frequently, u ntil ric e is golden brown.
Add tomatoes, chicken broth, water, rem aining 4 teaspoon
flavor enhancer, bay leaves and cayenne pepper. Cover. Bake
in a 372 degree F . Oven 40 minutes. Remove from oven, stir In
tuna. Cover. R eturn to oven Bake 10 minutes longer until
heated through. Yield: I servings.
O R IE N T A L PO R K AND V E G E T A B L E S T IR -FR Y
2 pounds boneless pork shoulder, fat trim m ed and cut In 1inch strips
2 tablespoons dry sherry, divided
• teaqxxm s soy sauce, divided
2 teaspoons flavo r enhancer
4 teaspoon ground ginger
4 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided
2 cloves g a rlic , crushed
2 cups diagonally sliced carrots
2 cups diagonally sliced celery
4 scallions, cut in 1-indi pieces
) caps shredded f'.tah spinach
4 cup dry ro a r&gt; d peanuts
4 cup w a le '
1 4 teaspoons cornstarch
4 teaspoon sugar
In large bowl combine pork, 1 tablespoon sherry, 2 teaspoons
soy sauce, fla v o r enhancer and ginger; m arinate 19 minutes.
In wok or larg e skillet heat 2 tablespoons o il with garlic. Add
carrots; stir-fry 2 to 3 minutes. Add celery and scallions; stirfry 2 m inutes longer. Add spinach and peanuts; stir-fry 1
minute longer. Remove (ra n wok and set aside. Heat
remaining 2 tablespoons oiL Stir-fry pork until lightly
browned, 9 to 7 minutes. In sm all bowl combine water,
remaining 4 teaspoons soy sauce, 1 tablespoon sh en y, corn­
starch and sugar. Add to wok. Cook un til sauce thickens
slightly. R eturn vegetables; heat through. Serve with rice, if
desired. Y ie ld : I servings.
B R A IS E D C H IC K E N IN LEM O N -O N IO N S A U C E
1 4 cups chicken broth
1 4 cups chopped onion

4 cup lemon Juice
3 cloves garlic, finely chopped
3 tablespoons chopped chili peppers
4 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided
1 tablespoon flavor enhancer
4 teaspoon ground ginger
teaspoon ground cardamom
4 teaspoon salt
2 chickens ( 2 4 to 3 pounds each), cut In pieces
4 teaspoons cornstarch
4 cup water
In large bowl combine broth, onion, lemon juice, garlic, chili
peppers, 2 tablespoons oil, flavor enhancer, ginger, cardamom
and salt; m ix well. Pierce chicken w ith a fork; add to broth
m ixture. Cover. Refrigerate overnight. Remove chicken from
m arinade; reserve marinade. P a t chicke n, dry. In large
sauce pot o r Dutch oven heat rem aining 2 tablespoons oil;
brown chicken on all tides. D rain fat from sauerpot. Add
m arinade; bring to a boll. Boil ra p id ly 3 minutes. Cover;
sim m er 20 minutes or until chicken is tender. Remove chicken
to serving platter. Dissolve cornstarch in water; add to
saucepot, stir until mixture boils and thickens. Pour over
chicken. Y ie ld ; 4 servings.

lirunsw lcl^lPw andlliishpup|H enTm ^!rrs!m !TM rIcati culinary roots

filler paper
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up your n oteb ook
3 SUBJECT
THEME BOOK

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70 S H E E TS
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SCHOOL
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CRAYONS

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Hershey M ilk Chocolate,
Hershey Almond, Kit Kat,
Hershey Whatchamacalllt,
Nestles $ 100,000 Bar &amp;
Crunch Bar, Reese Crunchy
or Reese Peanut Cup

SCO PE
MOUTHWASH

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EVERYDAY LOW PENNY PINCHER PRICES

�t S - I v e w t a u H f l M , tantarU, H

W « i&gt; w 4 r , * in . H , 1 H )

Olive Oil Gives Salads Gourmet Touch
Pure, virg in olive oil as packed today, has been a secret
Ingredient for gourmets, dating back to Roman days.
Salad dressings made whn olive oil can vary am azingly.
Fro m sweet or tangy, cre am y or clear, thick or thin, each
dressing adds new flavor, new character, new excitement to
any salad. Its unique ab ility to blend without rooking gives
olive o il Us magic.
E a s ily stored, olive oil can q u ick ly become a cooking habit in
alm ost any food preparation. You can work m agic for
everyday salads too.
C H IC K E N , ORANGF. A N D H K D ONION SAIJUT
4 cups diced cooked chicken
ta cup diced water chestnuts
ta cup sliced pitted black olives
4 cup olive oil
3 naval oranges, peeled and sliced
3 red onions, sliced
Ju ice of 1 lemon and of 1 lim e
3 tablespoons chopped chives
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon paprika

A lm ondt add cru n c h to san d w ich .

olive o il evenly over slices. C h ill for I hour. Combine lemon
Juice, chives, salt and paprika. Pour half of m ixture over
chicken and half over orange and onion slices. Toss Ughtly,
lin e platter with bite-size greens. Heap chicken m ixtu re in
renter. Surround salad with alternating orange and onion
slices. Chill until ready to serve, i Serves 4)

i , teaspoon each minced garlic, ground cloves, ginger,
coriander, ro sem ary and tarragon
&gt;■ teaspoon salt

M U S H R O O M SPIN ACH SALAD
3 quarts trimmed young fresh raw spinach leaves, washed
and drained
pound raw mushrooms, sliced
2 hard cooked eggs, sieved
1-3 cup olive oil
i cup lemon juice
6 anchovy fillets, chopped
6 strips bacon, fried c ris p and crumbled
Combine spinach and mushrooms. Chill. Com bine sieved
eggs, olive oil, lemon Juice and anchovies. Mash into smooth
mixture. Before serving, pour oil mixture over salad and toss.
Sprinkle salad with bacon. (Serves 4)

Peel asparagus sta lks if desired Tie into a bundle. Bring
water to boil in steam er or bottom of double boiler. Stand
asparagus upright in pan. Cover and cook until tender about 4
to S minutes. D ra in well. Set aside.

Combine chicken, water chestnuts, celery and oUves. Pour
half of olive oil over chicken salad and loss. Place orange and
onion slices in single layer In shallow pan Pour rem aining

A Sa nd w ich

M

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‘P ride

NO STAMPS,

It's nice to know, loo, that this sandwich scores as high on
nutrition as It does on good taste. Because the filling contains
almonds—a rich source of protein, vitam ins E and B t
magnesium, phosphorous and other Important nutrtents-you
can be sure that you and your fam ily w ill get an extra serving
of nutrition with every bits.
A LM O N D

S A L A D DRESSING
2-3 cup olive oil
1-3 cup wine vinegar
ta tap. salt
ta tsp. pepper
ta tsp. g a rlic salt
I tap. oregano
Mix all ingredients thoroughly. Chill before using. Makes 1
cup.

PANTRY
SAVINGS

Extraordinary
T ired ot the u m old aandwich? Here'* a quick and easy
recipe, Almond Beef Sandwich Pocket, that transforms an
ordinary sandwich Into som ethin! extraordinary.
The recipe is really an updated version of the conventional
Sloppy Joe—only better. It c a lls for many of the same
Ingredients—ground beef, tomatoes, onion and p r ilc - b u t It
gets IU j pedal new taste and appetite appeal from flavorings
like cum in and cloves and the addition of raisins, Cheddar
cheese and crunchy California almonds.
Serve hot and steaming In a pita-bread pocket, Almond Reef
Sandwich Pocket is an eaxy-to-handle meal-tivone that's sure
to satisfy even the heartiest lunchtime appetites.

Combine lemon Juice, vinegar, garlic, spices rosemary,
tarragon, salt and pepper in large bowl. W hisk in oil. Add
asparagus and toss to coat thoroughly. Cover and marinate in
refrigerator 30 m inutes D rain and arrange on platter. Garnish
with red pepper.

M A R IN A T E D A S P A R A G U S WITH R E D P E P P E R
2 pounds baby asparagus, trimmed
h cup water
ta cup fresh lemon juice
ta cup Champagne vinegar

Bite-size salad greens

A lm o n d s M a k e

Freshly ground pepper
*i cup olive o il
Thinly sliced red bell pepper igarnish)

SW E E T C A LIFO RN IA

C H IC K E N O F T H E SEA

TUNA
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ELSEW H ERE 8 9 '

all
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V A R IE T IE S
M L M V
E L S E W H E R E 39 ' PER LB

BEET SAND W ICH P O C K ET

ob

1 pound ground beef
h cup chopped onion
1 cloves garlic, crushed
1 can ( HVt ounces) whole tomatoes, undratned
l beef bouillon cube
ta cup w arm water
cup raisins
1 teaspoon salt
ta Uaipoon each cumin, cloves and pepper
ta cup blanched silvered almonds, toasted
4 pocket bread rounds, or 4 onion rolls
1 cup grafted Cheddar cheese
In large skillet, brown meat with onion and garlic. Dissolve
bouillon In water; add to meat w ith tomatoes, raisins, and
seasonings. Sim m er about 30 minutes, stirring occasionally,
ta U l liquid is almost absorbed. Stir in almonds. Serve hot on
pocket breed, w open faced on onion roUe, topped with gran d
cheese. M akes 4 servings
T O TO AST ALMO NDS: Spread almonds in an ungraded
baking pan or sk ille t place In a U ddegree oven or over
medium-low heat on the stove top for 4-10 minutes (depending
on the form of almonds that you are using) or until almonds
are a light golden brown. S tir once or twice to assure even
browning. Note that almonds w ill continue to brown'slightly
after being removed from the heat.

Older Kids
Can Prepare
Easy Snacks

SW E E T C A L IF O R N IA

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Cooking with a microwave oven la so simpit and safe, older
kids can create plenty of taaty treats all by themselves.
Aa with any appliance, It's wise to teach your children the
basics of safe operation before kiting them use the microwave
oven. Oather them together for a mini cooking clan in your
kitchen and review the fundamentals of microwave cooking.
Begin with • "dxro and tall" demonstration that will
familiarize them with ell the features and controls of the
microwave oven. Then p an along (heae smart pointers:
1. Always gat permission before using the microwave oven,
and ask questions U you're not sure about how to use IL
1 Use only the appropriate dishes and utensils. Do not use
any metal containers and be aura to remove any forks or
gwom before you turn on the microwave oven.
3. Read the recipe carefully and follow It exactly. Check the
power aetting, cooking time, suggested arrangement ot food
and Racial instruction before you bqgtn.
4. Gel In the habit of uaing a pothoider when turning a dish or
removing (ood from the microwave oven. Even though i dish
may not be hot to the touch, this la e sensible practice to follow.
5. To avoid Ihe possibility o( burns, alwayi UR covers on hot
dishes with the opening AWAY from you, so the (team c m
aacapa aafaly.
g. Never put nonfood Hems in the microwave and never run
it while U'l empty.
7. Keep Ihe microwave oven dean. Wipe It off when you’re
finished cooking.
Give your children an A+ education In microwave cooking,
and k t (ham discover for themeclvea how oeay, fast and fun II
k to create their own medal treats. Here are two lim pk
dkhaa that a n perfect for young chela. They're from an exd tii« cookbook, Cooking With Confidence in Your Microwave,
by the Microwave Cooking Canter of The Campbell Soup
Company. Ta order your copy of ibt cookbook, send a duck or
money order for |7.M for each copy, along with your name,
addraaa and dp la; Microwave Cooking, P.O. Box 1401, Maple
Plains, MN MStl

"•«
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g English muffins, apUt
I c m (1M ounces) condensed tomato soup
1 e rs ahrsdded m ooanlla cheeao
L
muffin half with 1 tahkapoon soup.
1- Spread
apreaa each
tarn E^Mab
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Spdnkk with oregano and
i cheese. Place t muffin helves in a
*“ tadlta*
lV^quartobkng gkwa baking dkh.
paper taw eU
I M t u u n a C j a t a time, on HIGH 2 ta 3 minulaa or until
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ORLANDO ROAD

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�Labor Day

Evsning Herald. Sanford. FI.

Wsdntxday. Aug. IS. tell—SB

End Summer With A Cheer-Up Party
A luscious poach layer

A holiday is alw ays a pleasure since it means a break in the
daily routine. But the I .ahoc Day weekend m arks the unofficial
end to summer, a slightly sad goodbye to tlie languid and
casual pace of the w arm weather, and to summ er friends at
the beach or lake.
A perfect time to have a party! Call it a Closlng-the-House
party and no one w ill expect you to have matched paper plates
or fancy glasses.
Rut what you ca n supply is a great menu. Barbecue, yes, one
last one for the su nuncr. and use that special m arinade y ou've
been saving lo r your tasty charcoaled chicken or ribs. And
then something different - a delightful pasta and vegetable
salad, with eggplant, green olivrs and tomatoes, eolorful ami
lively with lemon juice and olive oil.
The blessing of this pasta salad Is the ease of preparation
since it ran be m ade a day or two in advance and safely stored
In a sealed bowl in the refrigerator. The exciting flavors get a
chance to mingle together. And you get a chance to read on tlie
day of the party.
You ran use the same smart pre-preparation routine for
dessert, which could be a most luscious thrre-Inyer cake built

cake, right, salutes the
end of the sum m e r
season. Eggplant and
Pasta Salad Is a tasty
m ake-ahead dish for a
porch or patio buffet.

PRIDE
ARE IN CASH
NO GIMMICKS!
GREAT
GROUND

TURKEY
DRUMSTICKS

B E E F P A T T IE M IX

.

_ r } er yj

over

. UBS,

3 LBS

ELSEW H ERE SB' P E R LB

SLICED
BACON

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oven

MARKET STYLE

SLICED
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ELSEW H ERE 11.28 PER LB

E LSEW H ER E » I. 2 B PER LB

.V J I U
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* inches from source of heat 4 minutes. Turn, brush xrith glaxe,
broil * m inutes longer, on each side. Cool. Store in a
container with seal. Serve hot or at room temperature. Yield:
About 14 appeUxer pieces.

M K a m m l n i S I S t l « I I I r SM T IN * m *Q I t I N I M I I O M a i M P M a i l i a i M M l I M K a l l O U R l I
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P A B t lT PRTDC W i l l S A V E TOO H O BC O N TOUB TO IAL F O O D B i l l O B » t B r i ll

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Chances are when you travel on the weekend, you’ll c a n y .
luod along. You m ight want to bring recipe tngrtdlenU lor a
special party or barbecue you’r t hosting.
It m ight be necessary, sometimes, to transport various
cheese, meats or breads which you can’t find easily tn the
country.
SPICY DOGS
I pound klelb ata
I cup vinegar
't tu p chopped onion
G cup sugar
I teaspoon dry mustard
*i teaspoon ground turmeric
‘ i teaspoon celery seed
‘ «teaspoon salt
teaspoon hot pepper sauce
I tablespoon cornstarch
1 tablespoon water
In m edium saucepan cook kielbasa tn boiling water 20
minutes; drain. Slice Into ‘ i-inch rounds. Place tn a plastic
container with seal. In medium saucepan combine vinegar,
anion, sugar, mustard, turmeric, celery seed, salt and hoi
pepper sauce; bring to boiling Reduce heat. Cover. Sim m er 10
minutes. M ix cornstarch and water; stir Into saucepan. Cook
until m ixture botls and thickens. Cool. Pour over kielbasa.
Seal. Serve hot or at room temperature. Y ield ; IW cups.

Cut aw ay Up of chicken wings at ftrat Joint; discard Up*. Cut
remaining wing secUons apart at center Jo int In small
saucepan combine lemonade concentrate, teriyakl sauce and
catsup; bring to a boil. Combine cornstarch and water; stir
Into lemonade m ixture. Cook until glaxe boils and thickens.
Arrange t hicken pieces on broiler pan; brush with glaxe. Broil

m t f t C N . ITAtlAN . 1000 IS LA N D
OB C A f A llf lA

DTL.

Foods Travel !
Well To And i
From Picnic »

'• cup truren lemonade concentrate, thawed, undiluted
3 tablespoons teriyakl sauce
1 tablespoon catsup
l &gt; teaspoon cornstarch
1 tablespoon water

KRAFT
DRESSINGS

2 UNIT

[w ]

t cups sifted confectioners' sugar ( l* j pounds!
I to 2 tablespoons m ilk
In large m ixing bowl cream butter; beat tn eggs, almond 'L
extract and salt. Gradually add confectioners' sugar, beating !•
constantly. If necessary, add milk until frosting U of spreading
8.
consistency. Y ield ; * cups.
E G G P L A N T A M ) PASTA S A U D
1 large eggpUnt, peeled
Salt
cup olive o il, divided
'( cup chopped onion
2 Urge cloves garlic, minced
2 U rge tomatoes, cubed (about 2li t
2 cups cooked pasta (shells, bows, etc.)
I cup chopped parsley
*i cup sliced stuffed olives
3 tablespoons lemon juice
*t teaspoon salt
teuspoon pepper
Slice eggplant 'x-tnch thick; sprinkle with salt, let stand 10
minutes. Press out liquid; cut into S-tnch rubes. In Urge |
skillet heat ’ t cup oil; saute eggpUnt, onion and garlic t* ,
minute*, stirrin g , until vegeUlite* arc U ndterG U ot to voetss.,
lure. !ri L ir ’gc’ p lis tiiB b w l wtth'ifeJT W fhblne cggpttm (
tcmiierafure.
mixture, tomatoes, pasta, parsley, olives, rernafnlng 4 c lt\
elite oil, lemon juice, aalt and pepper; m ix W ill. Seal. Chill
several Itours, stirrin g occasionally. Y ield; 3 quarts.
;

O R IE N T A L CH IC KE N WINGS
14 pounds chicken wings

C U t B M K B C 44*

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S K IN N E D t D E V I IN I D SE L E C T E D

t.| langy grnhan H T »ckrr&lt; rum b Uyer* and alm ond-IUvorfd
bultercrtam . and sparked with fresh peaches. Put the cake
together the night before. II you itore it In a large, sealed
plastlr'cake la k e r and refrigerate, it w ill s la y fresh and
gorgeous-looking until you're ready to serve it.
Wltat to drink w ith this late summer bounty? How about oldfashioned lemonade, healthy and refreshing— a perky way to
lead into an after meal stng-alwg with at) good friends
together.
G O N E w r r t l T1IE P E A C H C A K E
I cup unsifted, all-purpose flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
*t teaspoon salt
l 1. eups graham cracker crumbs
*t cup butter o r margarine
I ' i cups sugar
} eggs, separated
P i cups m ilk
I'] teaspoons vanilla
j
•t teaspoon cream o( tartar
1 peaches, peeled and thinly sliced
' i cup chopped pecans or w alnuts
S ill together flour, baking powder and salt; s tir in crumbs.
In large m ixing bowl cream butter and sugar; add egg yolks, l
one at a lim e, beating well alter each. Combine m ilk and
vanilla; stir in alternately with dry ingredients. In targe
mixing bowl beat egg whites with cream of tartar until still
peaks (onn; (old into batter. Spoon batter Into three tMnch
greased and (loured cake pans. Rake in a 350 degree F . oven 23
minutes until cake tests done. Coot Uyer* in pan 10 minute*.
Turn out onto w ire rack; coot completely. Spread very thin o
layer ol Almond Buttercream Frosting over one cake layer. ^
Arrange peach slices over (resting. Repeat with second cake
Uyer. I’ lace third cake U yer on top ol second U yer. Frost top &lt;
and sides ol cake with remaining frosting. Press nuts around J l
side ol cake.
?&gt;
AI.MONI1 IIL T T K R C R E A M FR O S T IN G
»
f.
t cup butter or margarine, at room temperature
1 eggs
i*
4 teaspoon alm ond extract
I;
Pinch ol salt

P i i j s t f p t a*
r« H 4
K M U l M f M ai ova
I K
M U m an pn m i

O f P C B GOOD AGO 20 THBU AU O 2 4 . 1441.

M L S H R O O k IS A N D A R T IC H O K ES V IN A IG R E T T E
2 cans (4 ounces each) mushroom cap*, drained
1 can (*‘v ounces) artichoke hearts, drained, quartered
one-third cup olive oil
2 tablespoons wine vinegar
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
h tablespoon chopped caper*
l i tablespoon chopped chives
*&lt; teaspoon Dijon-style mustard
l t teaspoon salt
In a plastic container with seal combine a ll m g ra lk n ta Seal.
M arinate 4 hour* or overnight Serve at room temperature.

uarum

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�Evening Herald, tBnford, FI.

Q L O N D IE

Wednesday, A m If, 1991

by C hic Young

_______________ __

Anioror to PretiOul Pujr't

40BeHd,«g
nJd'tion

across

I Cut of meat
! 0*f«i**t
II Former
German com
12 Polo* l-ghts
13 Nautical rope
14 Jepanete

0«n|0

To Treat Hernia
D E A R D R IA M B - 1 am a
43-yearo ld male. Four years
ago I quit sm oking and
have gained 38 pounds I'm 6
feet tall and weigh 188 pounds.

SO lacquered

15 Variety of
metelwire
ippU
SI loop*
1 7 Bibytomm
S2 Celled
derty
S 3 1'tt
IS P lo t
54 Dm * (Fr|
I t Police
(col loo)
DOWN
21 Mother cheep
24 long time
1 Wince
25 Roman
2 Pul* lw&gt;
lUtetmen
edge on
28 Hymn’e finale 3 lrnJ*ftnrto per21 U M itch u
wnt
sett! ctpo
4 Mr Kettle
21 Bubbled
S Auto club
30 Indefinite pot- 8 Remote!
ion
fooling
33 Com poll
7 City In
point
Ponniftvimo
34 Europoon fith
I Korin
35 MetdimeS
tollowerl

11 Motion
picture light
14 Freckle
15 Bllketbell
leegue (ebbr|
IB Grtek echooi
20 Own
22 Tiny
23 Concluiion
25 Vote igim it
28 Summer drmk
27 Corn ipito
29 Nicy Ihip
profit libbr)
30 Scoring point
31 Hockey
leigue (ibbr |
Itbbf)
9 Angtr
37 ill bred potion 10 AuuSary verb 32 Christmas log
1

2

■

■

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■
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24

■
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40
43
47

ARCHIE
LOOK AT Th i s , ARCHIE •
• TEN POINTS FORAfANtMG
A Will IOW P O u A R S

ONE - PO SOWE THINS
T O U IN J C N '
TWO* F tN P A N E E P
AND Fill IT--

THPEE - BE PREPARED TO
WORK IONS HOURS
AND MAKE PERSONAL
SACRIFICES

10

"

T r

22

23

"

38

39

”

46

i

"

49

48

"
;

32

34

by Bob M ontana

9

■

51

52

53

SI

SO

H O RO SCO PE
By BERNICE BEDE 060L

For Thursday, A ugust 20, 1981
YOUR BIRTHDAY

EEK &amp; M E E K

by H ow ie Schneider

PRISCILLA'S PO P

Should I have an operation
to repair the hernia, or does
the hernia repair itself w ith a
proper diet and medications?
Would losing the weight I
gained relieve the hernia’ I
have followed all the dire c­
tions of rny doctor but nothing
has helped much.
D EAR READER I'm
sure you understand that y our
hernia is through an enlarged
hole in your diaphragm. We
a ll must have a hole for the
esophagus to pass through
and Join the stomach. A
portion of the stomach slides
through the hole Into your
chest and that Is the hernia.
T he pain you have Is
probably related to a reflux of
acid digestive substances In
your stomach backward Into
your lower esophagus. That
area Is not protected with a
thick mucus cover, as Is the
stomach, and the a d d causes
the burning. Now, you can
have a reflux and not have
any hernia at all. The reflux
m ay be related to a faulty
closure mechanism at the
junction of the stomach and
esophagus.

*

►

August 29, 1981
T ry to establish some type
of program tor saving this
coining year. Tuck a Utile
away each week. You'll be
am ated a l how much you can
accum ulate by year’ a anl.
t.F.0 (July23-Aug. H ) Once
you act your mind on a
specific goal your chances for
success are very good today.
However, you're apt to waste
a great deal of (line getting
motivated. F in d out more of
w hal lies ahead for you in the
year following your birthday
by tending (or your copy of
Astro-Graph. M all t t (or each
to A s tro -G ra p h . B o i (19.
R a d io C ity Station, N Y .
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. H i
A v o id m a k in g Im pulsive
decisions In your business
dealings today. They could
prove expensive. When you
la k e lim e la sire them up,
y o u 'll do well.
L I B R A (Sept. O O ct. 23)
T im in g Is extrem ely Im ­
portant today where your
goals are concerned. Failure
Is lik e ly If you're loo Im­
p u ls iv e , but success is
assured when you're patient
and persistent
S C O R P IO (Oct. 24-Nov. H i
D on't m ake decisions today
based
upon
emotional
p re m ise s. They could go
a w ry . Jud gm ents derived
from p ra ctica l ana lysis w on't
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 13Dec. 21) Unexpected changes
could tem porarily throw you
oft course today. Fcrtunstely,
you adjust well to shifting

conditions and you'll quickly
get back on track.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Y ou're very adroit today
at managing situations w hich
associates find too complex.
T here's a good chance your
talents wlU be required.
A Q U A R IU S i Jim KT-Frb
19| Your Initial assessment of
a situation at work today
could be erroneous. A lter you
lake a hard second look,
however, you’ ll uncover the
flaws.
PIS C E S I Feb. 20-March 20l
Once you settle down to the
tasks at hand today you'll be
q u ite productive. U n fo r­
tunately, you may waste m ore
time than you should before
getting started.
A R IE S I March 21-April 19)
Y o u r possibilities (or m aterial
gains todsy are promising,
but they are not apt to be too
large, considering the energy
and e lfo ri you'll expend.
T A U R U S I Apnl 29-May 20)
Unfortunately, you may not
find reliable helpers today to
assist you with a sm all but
s ig n ific a n t task. Pro ce e d,
rather than wait for aid.
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20)
Word very carefully financial
commitments you make to
others today. You may have
one amount In mind, w hile
they'll be thinking of a la rg e r
sum.
C A N C E R {June J U u ly 23)
N orm ally you're the type who
treats others as generously as
they treat you. Today you
could, uncharacteristically,
su rp rise them by b e in g
lightlisted.

f

t

F o r the past three years I
have been bothered by a
hiatal hernia and constantly
burn alter eating.

|ibb»)

1

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1 5
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38
■ ■
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27
31

of time

49 Curly litter
S2 Tarheel itete

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15

30

38 Pugl
37 Fuelcirrymg
•hip
31 Carrying guni
39 Of God (let |
4 1 Either |llt|
42 Otmmvbve
being
44 Jirdmiero
48 Mormon Stele
47 Ginetic
mitiml
41 long period

12

13

by A rt Santom

s

S

4

3

tl

THE DORN LO SER

Lose Stomach Fat

41 Burmin
currency
42 Inpirtuntti
home
4] 4c:r»ti Gebor
IST idilw irt
47 Toll*

You also can Itave a hiatal
hernia and not have any
reflux. Many people liave
such hernias and have no
sym pto m s from them , it
fo llo w s that If you have
su rg e ry and c o rre c t the
hernia you may still have the
reflux and the burning. No one
can promise you that the
su rg e ry w ill solve y o u r
problem. In some cases It
does tie Ip but usually con­
servative measures are best.
The things you should do
are discussed In The Health
t e lle r number 4-8. H iatal
Hernia, Eeophegeal H r Hun.
which I am tending you.
Others who want this issue
can send 75 cents with a long,
stam ped,
self-add ressed

envelope (or It to me, In care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
One of the things you can do
Is lose weight if you have any
rxcess abdominal fa l. Fat
inside the abdomen w ill help
push the stomach through the
enlarged hole, so It you have
accumulated abdom inal fat,
losing weight w ill help.
D E A R DR I A M B - Do
facial exercises re a lly help a
person look younger? 1 have
been frying to exercise the
Irmporal muscle by Joining
my teeth In a firm bite,
flexing my Jaw and tem poral
muscles hard. Then I place
my fingertips on the temple
&lt;m each side of my face and
force my temporal m uscles to
move In a c ircu lar motion.
Instead of helping m e look
more youthful, could they
a c tu a lly m ake m e look
worse? The results have not
been very satisfactory for me.
D E A R R E A D E R - About
the most y ou can hope for Is to
maintain the sire and strength
of the muscles of the face.
That does help some. The skin
w ill stretch with age anyway,
but If you let your m uscles
deteriorate the loose skin w ill
look even more like an emptysack.
I doubt your routine is the
best. T ry to ra is e your
eyebrows
a g a in s t
the
pressure of your fingertips.

Clench your Jaw and open and
close while those large Jaw
muscles are under tension.
T ry to work your m uscles
over your cheeks and under
your eyes. Whatever you find

that enables you In work
fa c ia l
m uscles
a g a in st
resistance is the way to do It
lor whal good you w ill g e t No,
they w ill not make your face
worse and may help some.

W IN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
B Q J lO t

» IMt

f AK81
*4
WEST

♦ AQ44
EAST

♦ K 14 1
V Q J I 51
*J|
♦ 91

«]
Y 10 7 14

9 Q 9 I7
♦ J 1017

SOUTH

♦ A 7 1S
f....
♦ A K 105)1
♦ K ll

Vulnerable Fast-West
Dealer South
Well NwtS Cat!
Soul*
IB
Pan
If
Pan
IB
Pan
l*
Pan
IB
Pan
J*
Pan
IB
Pan
4 NT Pan
if
Pan
44
Pan
Pan
Pan
Opening lead f Q
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alia Soatag
We have not seen Gener­
ous Geeryo in action for

some lime, but b r rr he is
bark with us again He stud­
ied the hand a while before
playing Irom dummy and
played a small heart. He
rufled in hu hand, proceeded
to lead a sm all spade and
remarked. "I'm going to let
you make your king of
spades"
West ducked lie knew he
would score hu king la te r on
and didn't want any part of
George's generosity
Now G ro ra e w as in
dummy He rufled dummy's
Iasi low heart with his ace of
trumps and led h u last
trump West could lak e his
king then or la te r but
George was going to get to
dummy to discard his four
small diamonds on the last
two trump* and the ace king
of kearts to come to l !
tricks with five spades, two
hearts, two diamonds and
three clubs
There are other w ays for
South to make his stam. but
George was playing in a
team match The other
South lack ed G e o r g e 's
gene rosily He tried to make
seven and managed to make
only five
is r e u - v r w x N m im u K assn &gt;

ANNIE
FRANK AND E R N E ST

U

TH t

WITH

by Ltonird Starr

BARK PEASE? TO* AH-DIO THE CHAO

HE DID HAVE A LIT R E
GIRL WITH WM NHEH (C
TOOK O F f - P O d O V
TOO- • T M r r l l

SEERTOBE-

T W m sUPSST?

A M t f tC A I f T H * T
A U - THB WEALTH »J
CO N CEN TR A TED i n

HECH,NO? TH’ PORE
LITTLE TYKE NAS ALL
TUCKERED OUT/ NElER
OPENED HER PEEPERS
W MtOLE MULE HE
CARRIED HER ABOARD/

HERJSTHAVE

FLED FU6HT
[_ PLANS. WAT
|
HASH*
I DESTINATION?

M eanwhile

—* STAY COOL, |
FEU A ' ANNIE I
HILL BE WAKING
UP SOON-WE’RE
ALMOST THERE/

THB HAND* OF
non

FLETCHErSLANOINO

TUMBLEWEEDS
f I'M OFF ID SHOP N
FO R M Y T R O U S S E A U
i FOR O U R H O N E Y V

MOON,

POLL! y

-B u m ; .

j

' WHAVP \
you l ik e

TO S E E M E
IN A T
N IA G A R A
F A L L S ? .' (

H I, H IS S

]

C M ! YO U

Ra n da ll!

j

s tA ftn tD

HE.tUAgBtN

YOU U t C f c \ A H H . . . N Q I
1A U JN ' T O
W A S N ’T ...

Y O U a S tL F ./^ p _______"

t WAS THlNlCJNCq
^
_ COT LOUO

�Evening Htrald, Sanford, FI.

Plan

A Beautiful And Bountiful Buffet

Give your guests something really special at your next
party: you. Instead of shuffling back and forth to the kitchen,
plan a beautiful, bountiful buffet, a ll m ade in advance. Enjoy
your party and your guests.
A few suggestions and recipes from those world-renowned
experts on hospitality, the people of Puerto Rico, might help
t h is menu should serve eight to ten.
AVOCADO BOATS:
1 can 113 ox.) red madrilene consomme
I envelope unflavored gelatin
4 cup cold water
1 envelope instant beef broth
4 m edium ripe avocados
U n io n Juice and wedges for garnish
Heat consomme. Soften gelatin in cold water. Stir into hot
cosomme along with instant beef broth. Pour into shallow pan
and c h ill until firm .
Halve avocados. Remove pits and brush surfaces wilh lemon
Juice. Chop firm consomme finely and heap into avocados.
Garnish with remaining chopped consomme and lemon
wedges.
Other easy and tasty appetirers m ight include an assortment
of cheeses and crudities (various cut-up raw vegetables) with
a dip com bining yogurt and mayonnaise flavored wilh Puerto
Rican rum , Tabasco, grated horseradish and curry.
A hot dish should be the star of your show. Se ne one made
with brown rice and a generous assortment of fish and
shellfish.

Heat oil In skillet. Stir In garlic, onion, parsley and green
peas. Stir-cook three to lour minutes. Using a slotted spoon,
remove Ingredients from oil, draining well. Reserve oil in pan
for later use.
SU r sauteed Ingredients, pim ientns and jarred clam s into
rice. Spread rice m ixture in a greased 14-inch paella pan or
U rg e, shallow casserole.
Dredge fish cubes in seasoned flour and brown in reserved
hot oil. Drain on paper towels. Add fish to rice. Add clam s (or
mussels) and shrimp. Sprinkle with saUd dressing and pepper
flakes. Cover. About 20 minutes before serving, pU ce In a 350
degree oven until heated through. Makes 8 to 10 servings.
Use cod, haddock, snapper, sole, or foe richer flavor,
mackerel, lobster, crab nr crayfish may be used, according to
U ste and budget.
Assorted muffins and a crisp saUd may accompany the
m ain dish.
M O C H A H U M P IE
1 envelope unflavored gelatin
one-third cup golden Puerto R ican rum
4 cup m ilk
3 eggs, separated
one-third cup sugar
4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilU
4 cup semi-sweet chocolate morsels

N EW W ORLD P A E L L A
1 teaspoon salt
I bay leaf
1 cup beef ur chicken broth
2 4 cups water
1 4 cups natural brown rice
2 cloves garlic, chopped
4 cup chopped onion
4 cup chopped parsley
4 cup olive oil
1 cup cooked green peas
2 whole canned pimientns, diced
1 Jar ( U ‘ i or.) whole clams
2 pounds firm white fish filets, cubed
Seasoned flour
10 sm a ll liard-shelled clams, steamed open (or use to to 12
mussels)
1 4 pounds large shrimp, cooked, shelled and cleaned, tails
on
4 teaspoon crushed red pepper
Combine salt, bay leaf, broth and water in Urge, heavy
saucepan, firin g lo a rapid boil. Stir in rice, cover, reduce beat
and sim m er about 43 minutes until ric e U tender and liquid
absorbed.

I teaspoon instant coffee
4 pint coffee (Uvored yogurt
1 cup heavy cream, whipped
4 teaspoon cream of tartar
I i-tnch baked pie shell
Sprinkle geUtin on rum to soften. Heat m ilk in top of double
boiler, over sim m ering water. Beat egg yolks, sugar, salt and
vanilla until very thick and creamy. Beat a little hot m ilk into
eggs, then stir m ixture Into remaining m ilk. Cook, stirring
constantly, until thickened (about five minutes). Blend in
softened gelatin, rum and chocolate bits. S tir until chocolate
melts. M ix in Instant coffee until blended
Remove from heat and chill Just until mixture begins to hold
Its shape. Beal rggw hites with cream of tartar until soft peaks
form.
Fold yogurt and whipped cream into chocolate rum mixture.
Gently fold in egg whites. Spoon into pie shell and chill until
firm. Garnish with chocolate curls and extra whipped cream,
II desired.
Keep thirsty guests happy with refreshing Rum Runners. To
make one drink, combine in Jar ol electric blender; four Ice
cubes, 2 ox. 151 proof Puerto Rican Rum, 1 ox. Triple Sec, Juice
ol half a lime, dash of grenadine and a teaspoon of sugar.
Process until loamy. Strain into glass filled with crushed ice.
You can be a graceful and gracious hostess with a made-in­
advance menu like this one going for you;

Wodnowfay. Aug. ». 1WI-7B

Serve New World Paella as Hie main dish for an
rleKaut buffet. A medly of Hsh and shellfish
makes up (lie spicy dish that will please the most
discriminating palates.

Publix
Now For The First Time...

Ite rl S a u c e R a se to p s g r ille d c h ic k e n .

Basic Sa u ce

Now Publix helps you make learning tun lor your
children with tms brand new senes of The Sesame
Street library In each colorful volume. Big Bud.
Ernte and Bert, Cookie Monster. Oscar the Grouch

For Barbecue,

riddles, reopes and crafts, these books will intro­
duce your children to letters, numbers, and many
other important educational concepts You'll be
heipeng your children to acquire the good learning

Sa n d w ich e s
A basic red sauce for that apeeUI barbecue flavor m ay be
used with chicken and meat and even added lo a bean dish.
Ja zz It up a b il for chuckwagon chicken by adding some
currant Jelly, g a rlic and lemon Juice. It makes a different form
of Sloppy Joe that we’ll call Lone Star Joe. These are hearty
sandwiches that Include potatoes and green pepper in addition
lo the m eat or chicken base.
CHUCK-W AGON C H IC K E N
1
I
1
I

recipe Red Sauce Base
Jar (10 ounces) currant Jelly
tablespoon lemon Juice
clove ga rlic, crushed or 4 teaspoon garlic powder

1 chicken (3 to 4 pounds), cut in pieces
M ake Red Sauce Base. Add currant Jelly, lemon Juice and
g a rlic) (U r over low heat untd Jelly melts. Place chicken on
g r ill over hot coals; cook 20 to 30 minutes, turning chicken
every 10 minutes.
Brush with barbecue sauce; cook 10 to IS minutes longer, or
until tender. Heat any rem aining sauce and serve with
chicken. T h is kitchen-tested recipe makes 4 aervings.
L O N E S T A R JO E S
1 recipe Red Sauce Bate
i t cup butter or margarine
1 m edium onion, sliced
1 m edium green pepper, seeded, sliced
2 cups slivered, cooked beef, chicken or ham
1 cup diced, cooked potatoes, drained
4 ham burger buns, spin
M ake Red Sauce Base ; set aside. In large skillet m elt
butter; saute onion and green pepper until soft. Add meat,
potatoes and Red Sauce Base; s t ir until heated through. Serve
over hamburger buns. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 4
servings.
Bed S in c e Base
1 tablespoons salad od
1 medium onion, chopped ( 4 cup)
I can (6 ounces) tomato paste

MAKE L E A R N I N G ^ y FOR YOUR CHILDREN WITH

1 cup water
I tablespoon sugar
) teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce

THE SESAME STREET LIBRARY FROM PUBLIX!

4 teaspoon salt
Heat o il in medium saucepan; saute onion until clear, about

Volumes 2 through 15

•ublix where shopping is a pleasure

3 minutes. S tir in tomato paste, water, sugar, pepper sauce
and salt. Sim m er IS minutes. T h is kitchen-tested recipe make*
about 2 cups.

‘-■sgouCT-''-.**: n

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*6 4»r-"*r w K|r Or n r

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iinpur *ftp' S i ryw nw iA

$ 2 .2 3

each

�10— Evsning H«rs&gt;d, tontovd, FI.

W*dn*id*y, Aug. If, ttll

Kids Find M a gic A t Hom e O n The Range
F IR S T IN A SERIES
When a dulls cook, it can be a creative experience Often,
however, It is merely another chore.
But to children, cooking is more. It's magic!
A toddler's favorite play area is usually the kitchen; pots
and pans his favorite toys. As they grow, youngsters rem ain
entranced by the putting together of meais...the way gelatin
gels and puddings go from liquid to semi-solid, the way crisp
pasta softens in boiling water, and dough becomes bread after
baking. It's entertainment, and it can be educational.
Kxperts in the field of child development indicate that there
is a grealy deal to be gained by having children participate in
the meal-planning and producing process. It can enrich the
fa m ily relationships and encourage creativity, boost selfconfidence and improve coordination. In the kitchen, a child
can learn to develop organizational abilities and a cooperative
spirit.
Menu planning can be an e arly introduction to the science of
nutrition and the importance of eating well balanced m eals,
(irappllng with measuring cups and spoons ran lead to a better
understanding of the form idable fractions that plague most
fifth graders. The study of recipes and labels can help im prove
reading skills. And even the tiniest of tots find learning how to
tell time easier when they're watching the clock's big hand (or
the moment that the cookies can come from the oven. Nourish
m inds as well as bodies.

Of course, your child's age and sk ill level are the keys. Even
a two-year-old is able to try a hand at stirring and adding light- •
weight ingredients to a bowl. A three-year-old should be able to
pour liquids and to stir a cheese u u c e mixture Into macaroni
w hich you have cooked, for exam ple

team ing to read opens up a whole new world to a d u ld —and
is a big step toward cooking independently. When a child ran
read sim ply-written steps of recipes, he is on his way to
preparing a whole dish on his own.
By age 12. or sometimes younger, a child should be able to
prepare a sim ple m eal completely on his own, if you have
rooked along with him since childhood. He has learned many
techniques from you, enjoyed the experience, and now has the
confidence to strike out on his own. As your child moves into
the teen years, the rewards of your efforts can begin to be
measured in term s of the easing of your own time in the kit­
chen. Many teens m ake a valuable contribution to the family
work load by having dinner started when parents get home
from work and by cooking some weekend meals.
This series on cooking with children Includes a lesson on
measuring, kitchen safety, and four recipes specially designed
by the K raft Kitchens as ideal for fam ily cooking projects. The
tasks handled by children w ill naturally depend upon the age of
the particular child and his level of cooking sk ills. But the idea
is to have fun, be creative, and then enjoy eating a nutritious
meal.
I continued next Wednesday)________________

Also, starting children out with nutritious foods, rather than
the typical cookie projects, sets an excellent example at the
beginning and encourages an appreciation fur a variety of
wholesome foods. And cooking is a valuable experience for
both boys and girls.
By four or five, children can peel oranges and eggs, tear
lettuce (or salads,wash vegetables, shape hamburgers and
cookies, and even stir m ixtures on the range. T he ir hand
coordination and attention span is Improving at this age. and
they can accomplish m ore advanced tasks.
At about age seven a nationally-known children's cooking
school begins accepting youngsters for its classes. B y this age,
children should be able tocut and chop ingredients, with adult
superv ision of course. They can also learn to measure and can
follow instructions with several steps.

M c C a lls
C O O K B O O K C O L L E C T IO N

Of course, there are negatives, loo. It is generally faster,
neater, and le u demanding of one's patience to do It oneself.
The rewards, however, are there, and supervision of in itia l
efforts ran reap them.
"Y e s, I know It would be good for m y child to learn to cook,
but I d&lt;n't think he can handle things carefully.” You m ay
ask, as do many parents, "H ow do I begin to teach him to
cook?"
K id s can do much more than their parents think, report
children's rooking school teachers. Unfortunately, most
parents underestimate the a b ilities of their children. With
patient instruction and encouragement, kids ran learn to rook
at a relatively early age.

This week’s feature

Free
lo w ( m l
(iN ilin g

Publix Photo Center
THIS AD EFFECTIVE
THURSDAY, AUGUST 20
THRU WEDNESDAY
AUGUST 2 0 , 1 0 0 1 . . .
CLOSED S U N D A Y ...

NEXT
.••l

The time to start is before the magic fades. The experts
advise parents to start encouraging children to do sim ple

V I,/

things when they are very young and eager. But how do you
know what your child is ready to do?

OOZ.. B R E A K FA S T
C L U B FLA. GRADE A

1-LB. PKG .
GW ALTNEY C H ICKE N

10-CT. C A N S
B A L L A R D 'S

Large

Great
Dogs

Butterm ilk
B isc u its

E g g s
With On* P u t'll Stamp

With O n* Put'S ■ Stamp

P rtc * S o n B o o t 111 . .

Pnc* S*.*&lt; BootM

smitin
Publix

With On# P u b *« Stamp

Prkc# S m f Booklet . .

Send them back to
school and save a
pocketful of change
with Publix lunchbox values' From
fresh, npe produce and hearty sandwich
fixings, to cnsp Ddi salads and ddoous
Danish Bakery treats. Publix does more
to save you lunch money!

WITH PUBLIX

THE PLA CE FO R

QUALITY MEATS
MtUshiro F a rm S m o ked or

Swift Prem ium O v e n R o a s t
Mild or G a rlic

Corned B e e f .. •'

*2»

Switt Prem ium S iz z le a n
or Firebrand

Sw itt Prem ium S lic e d O live
L o a l. P tc k lo L o a l or

Breakfast
Strip s.......... ’i ;

B o lo g n a .......V*
* 1 4*

Armour S ta r B o n e le s s
(3 to 5 lb A v g )

Ham............. 7
L ig h t d u m p lin g s h a v e c h e e s e c e n te r.

125»

(PVrt too #«tr# SAM O h a Stamp# arth coupon
f l»t*F&gt;#r« m A d )

75*

Sunnyland B ee t or Regular

Jumbo
F ranks.........

*1*9

R ath S lic e d Regular or T ftc k

B a co n .......... !»*

*159

S e a lo o d Treat. Frozen

L y k e s S k ce d M u .it or B eet

Dum plings

Polish
S a u s a g e ....... •* *2°®

Cod Fillet..... 7

B o lo g n a .... ... Ml
Tennessee P rid e M ild or Hot

Whole Hog
Sa u sa ge ....... *

1479

*249

S e a fo o d T reat. F E et

Spanish
M ackerel...... 7

TH E PLACE FOR
DAIRY FRESHNESS
B re a k fa st Club

Soft
Margarine..... .'»*** 59*

S w is s .......... I V *1»9

P illsb u ry (S erve with M ilk )

K ra ft's C a sin o B ran d C h e e s e

THE PLACE FOR
PRODUCE

Cinnamon
R o lls............ S i

S w is s .......... 'SV

California Large Slza

K ra tt's Onion

59*

B re a k sto n e 's

*1 "

Ready D ip .... XV, 79*
W isconsin C h e e s e B a r
Shredded S h a rp C h e d d a r o r

Cream
C h e e s e .......

N ectarines. 10 tof M
For B reakfast or S nacks

B a n a n a s .... 7
23*
79‘ M ozzarella... *£ *1 '9 Minute Maid
O range
B re a k sto n e 's T angy S ty le,
*1 '9 California S ty le or S m o o th &amp;
Juice.......... ' £ £ »1»»

K r a lt Ptam

Cheez Whiz..
S e a lte st Light 'n Lively
A ss o rte d

*2°*

K ra tt's Individually-W rapped
S liced C h e e s e F o o d Am erican.
Pim ento. W hite A m e rica n or

Y o g u rt........ 3 tV. *1

C ream y

Boil, Fry or Mash T hese

Cottage
C h e e se ........’£*

White
Potatoes.. 10 *t« »1»»

Interesting
U .S D A C H O IC E B E E F
S E R V E C H IL LE O

Side Dish

B o tto m

R IP E . T A S T Y W E S T E R N

i

Jum bo
C a n t a lo u p e

R o ast

The puffy, lender goodneai of dumplings has long been a
favorite In Southern homes. Moat often served lopping chicken
or another favorite m alrw llsh casserole, Cheese Dum plings in
Tomato Sauce is an interesting variation of this long-time
favorite.

each

per pound

69*

The dumplings, with a surprise center ol melted Cheddar
cheese, are steamed In a ric h stewed tomato uuce. They are a
perfect accomplanlment w ith fried chicken (hot cr cold), pork
chops oe u a nice change of pace with barbecue.
To gel out of the hot kitchen fast, make the dumplings from
biscuit m ix which has butterm ilk in the mix. Sim ply s tir in
m ilk and shredded cheese, knead and roll out Cut dough into
rounds and wrsp around m ors shredded cheese. Steam fo r IS
minutes in tornito m ixture (or a deliciously different side dish.
C H F J 3 E D U M P L IN G S IN TOMATO SA U C E
3 tablespoons m argarine or butter
J tablespoons chopped onion
3 tablespoum biscuit baking m ix
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon sugsr
Dash of pepper
1 can ( It ounces) whole tomatoes
3 cups biscuit baking m ix
Two-thirds cup shredded Cheddar cheese
4 cup m ilk

Heat margarine In 1(Finch skillet over low beat until melted.
Add onion; cook and stir until Under. Blend in J tablespoons
baking mix. Mix in salt, sugar, pepper and tomatoes with
liquid; break up tomatoes with fork. Heel to boiling; rwtote
heat. MU 3 cups biking mix, 3 teaspoons of tht chsssa andllhe
milk until soft dough forma. Gently mooth dough Into ban on
(loured cloth-covered board. Knead I to It times. RoUjtou^
about 4 inch thick. Cut with floured Wnch cutter. PUce 1
uU gM on cheese on center of each round. Moisten edge with
coWWtUr gather edgs and pinch logethtf to seal wcurtty.
forming a ball Drop dumplings onto boiling tomato mixture.
Cover and simmer II minutes. I to I serving*.

Tatty FranKIm or

of th e S e a to n "
"i N orthw sst

Beef Cube Steak..

Genoa
Salam i..........
Flavorful

American
C h e e se ........ I f M 09
D eboous

Health S a la d . . 7

89*

Prune
Plum e........ 3 £ go

T H E P L A C E FO R
U.S.D.A. C H O IC E B E E F

Plump, F resh

B lu e b e rrie s. C

U.S.D.A. C M ie . Bm I iW h o i. in t h . B«g)

Rib Eye.................C »4‘«

Zesty F la v o re d

Bar*B*Qua
Chicken........ 7

Medium S u e

T o m a to e s.... 7

S A V E 1 4 (.
KRAFT SO FT

»3”

’ *

Parkay
Margarine

Italian B r e a d .. ** 59*
Fre sh -B a ke d

Dutch Apple

1-lb t w in pack

PI#.................. T *1“
• b « e ««f

"T H E N A T U R A L S N A C K "
W HITE T H O M P S O N

Seedless
Grapes
iu

69

Hot from the Deb!

*24»

39*

P erfect for Salad, Crisp
G retn

Fre sh M a d e N a tu ra l W heat

B«#f S t o w .... 7
Potatoes
AuGratin...... 7

Apple Juice . ,K
J 1 «1e&gt;•

M 4*

Ready to-take out Southern

Fried
Chicken........ XV.

go

It'a Delicious - Publix Brand

P U SH I
M S I AVI 1
NK.HT
T O ttM tf
O U A H T lT .il
SOLO

X I wesraouwe

*1M

Cucumber# or
P#pp#rs..........3

Mushroom#. *y »1«*
T ender, F resh

Broccoli....... £&amp; gg«
P erfect for Cole Slaw, F resh
Hard G raan

C a b b a g e .....

» is #

Florida Juicy, F resh
U m # s ................. 2 0

_ ----------- -

___
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Top Your Grilled S te sk s with
Country S tan d Brand Fresh

* *1

�E vening H e n Id, Slnlord. FI.

Wednexda y, Aug. 19, H U —9 B

Serve

Up
A Tasty
Dessert

Custard M acaroon Dessert a n d Citrus

,

Sunburst Pie, right con be m ade quickly
on the busiest summer day with dessert

mixes w hich cut the preparation time.
Elegant Strawberry Party C ream Puffs,
left, are suitable for a bridal party or

Nothing can cool o il a w arm sum m er evening like a dessert
•served chilled from the refrigerator. Here are two delicious
ideas that are sure to please.
F o r a heavenly treat, try Custard Macaroon Dessert, M oist
coconut is baked Into the cake A smooth pudding is spread on
top and then crowned wilh a ric h chocolate, whipped cream
frosting.
Pie lovers w ill find Citrus Sunburst Pie tastes as refreshing
as its name sounds. It combines a crunchy nut-and-coconut pie
crust with a light as a cloud fruit-flavored filling of whipped
gelatin and yogurt.
Developed in the Betty C ro cke r Kitchens, both desserts can
be made quickly on oven the busiest summer day. They start
with dessert mixes which ru t preparation time.

other such event when fhe p e a k of
perfection Is the order of the day.

CUSTARD M A C A R O O N D ES S E R T
1 package Boston cream pie m ix
&gt;j cup whipping cream
4 cup flaked coconut
1 egg

2 tablespoons shortening
1 tablespoon water

12a Of BOT ,
ASSORTED FLAVORS
FLAVOR PERFECT

Prepare Filling M ix i s directed on packet. Mix whipping
cream and Glare Mix in sm a ll bowl; refrigerate 1 hour. Heat
oven to 350 degrees. Grease square pan, 9x9x2 Inches. M ix
Cake M ix (dry), coconut, egg. shortening and water. Spread In
pun. Hake until light brown, 15 to 20 minutes. Cool about 20
minutes. Spread filling over baked layer. Beat whipping
cream m isture until stiff. Spread evenly over filling.
Refrigerate until chilled, at least I hour. 9 servings.
High Altitude Directions (1500 to (500 feel): Heat oven to 375
degrees.
CITRUS S U N B U R S T IMF.
1 package pie crust m is or sticks
cup finely chopped nuts
4 cup flaked coconut
1 cup boiling water
1 package (3 ounces)Ifm on-flavorcd gelatin
1 can (11 ounces) m andarin orange segments, drained
(reserve syrup)
I carton 16 or g ounces) pineapple y ogurt
Prepare Baked Pie Shell, 9x1 1a inches, as directed on
package except — add nuts and coconut with the water; cool.
Pour boiling water on gelatin In medium bowl; stir until
gelatin ia dissolved. Stir In reserved orange syrup. Refrigerate
until slightly thickened, about 45 minutes. Beat gelatin m ix ­
ture on high speed, scraping bowl occasionally, until thick and
fluffy, 3 to 5 minutes. Cut up enough of the mandarin orange
segments to measure 4 cup. F o ld cut-up orange segments and
yogurt into gelatin mixture. R efrigerate until mixture mounds
slightly when dropped from spoon, about 13 minutes. Mound
into ptc shell; refrigerate u n til firm , 3 to 4 hours. Garnish with
rem aining orange segments and, U desired, toasted coconut.
Refrigerate any remaining pie.

32*OZ.
D EL MONTE

Fruit
Drinks

a.

With O n * P u b m S U m p '
Price S a * * &gt; B o o a let .

Ice M ilk ...... ‘,r

Del

M o n te

E a r ly

’
j

G a rd e n

P u b lix S p e c ia l R e c ip e
S esam e

D e l M o n te H a lv e d o r S lic e d

Peaches.....69e

With On# PubNa Slimp
Prtc* Saver Booklet

Salad
Dressing ......

S t y le G r e e n B e a n s . C re a m
S t y le
C o rn ,
or
S p in a c h

3 for 88*

G u ld e n 's D e lic io u s

D e l M o n t e S lic e d Y ello w *
C lin g
P e a c h e s . U n p e e le d

K r a f t D in n e r D e lu x e

Mustard ....'T

D e l M o n te H a lv e d o r S lic e d
B a rtle tt

A p ric o t H a lv e s , P e a r H a lv e s ,
F ru it C o c k t a il, L im a B e a n s

Pears.........t T

o r S t e w e d T o m a t o e s ( 8 4 to

T e n d e r le a t

In N a tu ra l J u ic e , D e l M o n te
S lic e d , C r u s h e d o r C h u n k s

Pineapple

59*

II
JL

*1”

SAVE 12c,
ASSORTED PAPER

SAVE 60e.
MAXWELL HOUSE

99*

G a la

In s t a n t

Towels

C o ffe e

Dill Pickles . "S

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese...... 'A;*

59*

o r t h er n

H e in z G e n u in e

( 7 4 - o z . to 8 4 - o z . C an)

Sandwich
Rolls.......... 2 AV. *1

N

tw j

W is h - B o n e R o b u s lo Ita lia n

S w e e t P e a s , C u t o r F re n c h

»1”

V'

T ,s s u e

With On* PuM i Stamp
P ik a Sa&gt;*&gt; Booklet. .

jL

A s s o r t e d S e a lt e s t L ig h t
N L iv e ly

Bathroom

Tom ato
C a tsu p

79*

«

99*

2 for 88*

( 1?C Oil Label). Liquid Cleaner

D e l M o n te

Pine-Sol ...... s IXZ s 1'°

Fruit
Cocktail.....','i*

( 15 c O ff Label). D ry B le a c h

D e l M o n te S lic e d o r
1 2 -C t. W h o le

Fam ily P a c k

Beets.........

( 2 0 c O ff Label). W ilh S p ra y e r

BONUS P A C K : BUV 3 0 2 ,.
OET 1 0 2 . FREEH

Gala Napkins

79*

Spinach,... 2

Spray 'N
W ash..........’l;/ * 149

D e l M o n te

(2 5 c O fl Label). Refill

Lima Beans.. ’&lt;«

Fantastik
Cleaner.......*1 ,#

D e l M o n le

D el M o n te C r e a m S t y le or
W h o le K e r n e l G o ld e n

9 4 -o t.p k g

N estea
Tea Mix

D el M o n te E a r ly G a r d e n

IB-ot. $

39*

C o ffe e
R in g s

2

5

THE PLACE FOR
FROZEN FOODS

9

Mmuto M .n d F lo rid a
C o n cen trate

SAVE 30c. HELLMAhJN’S

Orange Juice \’7 99*

M a y o n n a is e

Green
B e a n s ..... 2

88*

32-oz.

99*.

BONUS PA C K BU T 32 0 2 .,
O ET 6 * 0 2 . FR E E H
SUGAR A LEM ON FLA V O R ED

C o r n .......... 39*

D e l M o n te C u t o r F r e n c h
S t y le

SAVE 50c. SARA LEE
FR02EN ALMOND. BLUE­
BERRY OR RASPBERRY

N estea
100% Tea
4-o* $ - | 9 9

Clorox 2 ......'7,7 *1 39

P e a s .......... Vm

$339

59*

Tea B a g s....*1™

B 4 o z . Can)

10-02. Jar

large roll

S e rv e w ith S y ru p , E ggo
II os

Waffles

jar

D e l M o n te A s s o r t e d

Mg

69*

D onuts........ V*V

79*

M orion Je lly

P u d d in g s.... 99*

L e n d e r's E g g , Pum pernickel.
Onion or P la in

THIS AD EFFECTIVE B a g e ls.... .
THURSDAY,AUG 20 C e le s te D e lu x e
THRU WEDNESDAY Pi22a ......
AUGUST 28, 1081 . . . B irds E y o
CLOSED SUNDAY . . .

(Lim it 1 F l e e t * . W it h O t h e r

j

P u rch a se s of |3

o r M o re ,

8 1 e lu d in g all T o b a c c o h e m s )

11 Of

O ra n g e , L a k e , S e m in o le ,
A O s c e o la C o u n t ie s O n ly !

REGULAR OR LIGHT

Schlitz Beer
ll o i C IM $

4

8 9

Mealtime Smzll Crunchy
Bite*

Hearty Burgundy, Chabllt
Blanc, Red R ose, Rhine,
Pink C hablit

Gallo Wina...US' »4°*
Red

H aw aiian

«3»*

THE PLACE FOR
HEALTH ft BEAUTY AIDS
Disposable

Punch......... »1«»

Bic Razors.... 77 69*

Tree T op Natural

6 ph c l n

D o g F o o d ... UJ

14 o f

M in ts ,

CANDY:

S ta r lig h t

B u tte rs c o tc h

D is k s ,

S to keiy A s s o rte d

Sunbeam

International
Vegetables

S p a r k le s ,

M in t

A ss o rte d
C o o le r s

( 7 V o z . to 8 - o z . B a g )

Publix

7 UP. O IIT 1 U P O R T H I S !
C AN AO A D R Y D R IN K S : CLUB.
SO D A, C O L L IN S M IX E R ,
GINGER A LE OR SU G A R
FR E E G IN G ER ALE

Miniature
S h r i m p ' iV * 2«

Soft Drinks

3

1 -llU r Q
b o ttle s W

Q

C

W

6 4 - o z . tu b e

$ 4

M s n s t a * . O f a n j* .
O t c a o u . B a s te .
P in a ila v Pern.
S a ia s o t a . A
S a ia rn o t*. u n ia ts

•

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
L0NGW00D VILLAGE CTR.,
LONGWOOD

10

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l orgo Su •. A«40rt»4

Jatt-0 Pudding
S jn « ii, iiN f a i) 0 ‘ H i*an

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.... ...

—
I

Unci* Ben's Rica
let
&gt;4 1441)

1 cup uncooked rice
2 cups water
2 cups m ilk
1 ii-aspum salt
1 tablespoon butler or m argarine
2 eggs, separated
1 cup half-and-half (cream and intlk)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 can (16 ounces) crushed pineapple, drained
4 cup flaked coconut,
Combine rice, water, m ilk , salt, and butter tn a 3-quart
saucepan. Bring to a boil, cover, and simmer about X m inutes,
sllrn n g occasionally. B e a l egg yolks; add half-and-half. S tir
into rice misture. Add 4 cup sugar and vanilla. Cook about 3
minutes. Cool. Beat egg w hites w ilh remaining sugar until stiff
but not dry. Fold Into pudding. Spoon into serving dish. Spread
pineapple over the lop. Sprinkle with coconut. Serve cool or
chilled. Makes I to I servings.
MRS. I IK F .U .L .S I I I KK S F L A X K
3 eggs
1 4 cups sugar
12 ounces 114) Ricotta o r cottage cheese
4 cup mtlk
2 teaspoons grated lemon peel
5 cups cooked rice
Heat together eggs and sugar about a minute. M a ih cheese
slightly and mix with m ilk and lemon peel; add to egg m ixture.
Beat or proceai in blender until imooth. Stir In rice. P o ur into a
buttered Finch square baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees for 1
hour Serve warm. Top w ith lemon sauce, If desired. M akes 9
serv ings. Or use grated orange peel N O T E : leftover cake m ay
be covered with foil and reheated at 250 degrees about 30
minutes to restore Its o rig in a l fresh moist leiture and delicious
flavor.

^WfireenStamps[ 3 [HTO4tfGrVenStamps[ 9 [01]^WGreenS*tamps0

IS S R

M a r . Mia,
3 I M*t lii • A*gw«l If

Duracell
Battery........ *?; «18®

□Ihaiaie* nolsd

( P lu s T»« A O s p o s it)

*--•■

O ne 9 V o lt o r 2-pk P k g cA
DCeU.C C e il. A A Alkaline

le ke . lee.

Aqua-Fresh
Toothpaste

8 9 *

Fish S tic k s ... ht *119

T H IS AO
E F F E C T IV E IN
TH E FO LLO W IN G
C O U N T IE S
B ra ia rd . C h a * * * ,
C lt iu s . C o lltsi,
H e r n a n d o . H»|h*
la n d s M iiu b o to

T R O PIC A I, R I C K PUDDING

4 cup sugar
6 ^ 69

Treasure Isle Breaded

S a lt ............. 4 ’77 M

S A V E 55c.

bX

S1

M rs P a u l's

Appla Juica. KSt •1M Baby
Morton Plain or Iodized
Sham poo.....*1*®

(2 5 e O F F L A B E L)

14 oi
Cherry Pie
Mg
Lemon Crunch
Pie............ 14oi
HI

S o u r B a lls . C in n a m o n D is k s ,
K is s e s ,

bowl *1 09

Llo yd H a rrts s

THE PLACE FOR
CANDY TREATS
B R A C H 'S

*1

» o#
• »*g *3“

Cool W h ip .

STRAW TtF.RRY P A R T Y C RK A M P U FFS
C re am P u ffs;
1 cup water
4 cup butler or margarine
1 cup original pancake m ix
4 eggs
Straw berry Filling:
I package (3-4 ounce) v a n illa pudding and pie filling m ix
2 cups fresh strawberry allces
2 teaspoons orange flavored liqueur (optional)
Straw b erry Sauce:
2 tablespoons sugar (optional)
2 teaspoons orange flavored liqueur or orange Juice
1*4 cups fresh strawberry slices
Heat oven to 275 degrees. F o r cream pulfs, bring water and
butter to a boil in medium saucepan; add pancake m ix. S tir
vigorously until mixture leaves sides ol pan and forms a ball;
remove from heat.
Add eggs, one at a time, beating well alter each addition.
Drop by rounded tablrspoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheet.
Rake for 25 to 30 minutes or until golden brown; cool.
Fo r (tiling, prepare pudding according to package dire c­
tions. S tir In strawberries and liqueur. O iill
F o r sauce, sprinkle sugar and liqueur over strawberries; let
stand about 1 hour
To assemble, slice tops off of each cream puff. F ill w ith
pudding mixture; replace tops. C hill. S e n e with straw berry
sauce and whipped cream , if desired. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes 30 cream puffs.

j

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)OOt 4 It. Bo*.

Dow Handi Wrap
4 * i m M l i t « I N n. IS* 11

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1 5 5 ; , ^ -------------------------It - o t C M .

N s s tla 'a Sem i*5 w s s t
C h o c o la te M o rsels
S llltMSM *o*»4t M ' M I«*I|

| J ™

Hot Shot Flying
Insect Spray
I

J*

IM I|

Oitrith egu may be tight Inchts long and weigh three
pounds. The naw born chick can ba a foot tail.

r*

4

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I C R — E v e n in g H t r s i d , I s n f o f d , F I ,

W ed nesday, A u g . It, t K 1

Homilton Fights Imoge

There He W as
In His Suit, Tie'
HOIJ.YWOOD (NEAl-An
image dies a slow, agonizing
death. Consider George
Hamilton, for years the Image
of the perfect gentleman, the
gloriously stuffed shirt, the
upper cla ss snob with
delusions of grandeur.

But there was a real George
Hamilton, and he was
diametrically opposed to the
on-screen Hamilton, the Inthe-society-pages Hamilton.
His close friends knew the
real person.
" I always played the—well,
the George Hamilton type of
role,” Hamilton says, “but I
wasn't like that at all."
He did impressions. He told
Jokes He spoofed and laughed
and kidded around. Hamilton
wasn't a stuffed shirt to those
who knew him and worked
with him; he was more of a
clown.

Not long ago, Hamilton was
a guest on Johnny Carson's
show. He showed up for the
show Impeccably drtssed.

"There I was," Hamilton
says, "in my suit and tie. And
there was Mac Davis in blue
Jeans and an open shirt. I had
had enough. Finally. I ripped
my Jacket off, ripped my shirt
off and stood there, bare­
The crews laughed with
chested."
him, and It was Hollywood
I Put he couldn't gel his crewmen who first suggested
cufflinks off so he stood there to him that he ought to try
bare-chested with the shirt being funny on screen, os well
dangling from his wrists. as off
Images Uke a lot of killing.)

He took their advice—it was
something
he wanted to do,
Through all the years ol
that earlier, stuffy Hamilton anyhow—and th at led to
Hamilton's second career. He
im age, the actor says
is
a comic actor these days,
everybody had the wrong
and very successful at i t , too.
Impression of him.
There was "Love at First
"I believe," lie says, “ that Bile," the Dracula spoof, very
perhaps the public wasn’t funny, very successful at the
even sure there was a real bos office. And now there is
me."
“Zorro, the Gay Blade," Just
as funny and probably
destined to be another bosoffice winner.
N est, for Hamilton the
comedian-lie lias one script
written with a great title
Isince the title hasn't been
legally cleared yet, il can’t be
printni). Then tlwre may be a
"Love at Second B ite."
Maybe a Zorro sequel or a
Zorro TV w rits.
One tip-Hamilton says if a
Dracula sequel Is made, this
lime Dracula will be in la s
Vegas

(iKOIffiK HAMILTON

W h a t p e o p le a re s a y in g ,. .
" I t 's
much
more
dangerous to drive to the
beach (turn It is to go into the
w strr with sharks."
—

E u g e n ie

C la r k ,

ef

a

M a r y la n d

le o lo g is t , c la im in g t h a t m o s t
sh a rk s

a re

m le s s —

n o r m a lly

h a r­

a n d e v e n t im id .

Susan

S a ran d o n ,

ac­

d o n 't

r e c e iv e

te tte r

at

le a s t

a s k in g

me

h a p p e n e d to D a v e o r H A L . ”
—

A rth u r

C.

C la r k e ,

a u t h o r , o n w h y h e d e r id e d to
w r it e a
Space

se q u e l to " Z N I i
O d y s s e y ,"

MARGOT Kll)l)F.lt

one
w hat

A

w h ic h

"An actor’i Job in to die
tuning explored as much of
life as he can."
—

M a rg o t

K id d e r ,

w ho

s l a n a s la r is l a n e in th e n e w
h it H im " S u p e r m a n I I . "

fe a tu re s D a v e , i n a stro n a u t,
and

H AL,

H a rh 's

a

new

O dysw y

c o m p u te r.

" N il:

book.

T w o ,"

Is

to

be

p u b lis h e d In N o v e m b e r I t n .
( D e l H a y B o o k s i,

d is a p p e a r ."
f ir s t

N ancy
la d y ,

ro y a l
P rta e e

K r a n li,

of

e q u ip m e n t m a h r r , o n p u b lic
s k e p t i c is m o v e r a n ln e - d lg ll

H r ig id ,
on

th e

th e

C h a r le s

IK S .

k in d

p a g e a n try

su rro u n d e d

Eugene

P it n e y B o w e s I ’ n r p ., a p o s t a l

" I w o u ld h a le to e v e r s e e i l
—

"The postal wrvice did a
pore Job of explaining the
new code."
—

and

t i p r o d e t h a l g o e s In to e l f e t l

of

tn IM 3 , l i e s tr e s s e s th a t It’ s

th a t

o n ly f o r b u s in e s s m a i l — n o t

w e d d in g

ol

f o r p e r s o n a l le t t e r s .

la d y

D ia n a .
" O n c e th e p la y e r s w c n l o n
s t r ik e , t h e o w n e r s s a id t h is
w i l l b e t h e la s t p la y e r s s t r ik e
In h i s t o r y . "

Brent Musburger, sportw aster, to the IN I majorleague bawbaU strike. |CBS
Radiol
• i pay people to say 'no
comment* to questions Uke
lh a l."
— P ie rre Trade* u, prime
m inister of Canada, u ltra
asked about a rumor that he
was thinking about resigning
la order to spead more time
with h it children. (People)

"Whether we Uko it or not,
our country is nut now, nur
will It ever be completely the
master of Itn destiny."
- J. Paul S lirh h chairman
of R.J. Reynolds Industries,
on the Inler-dependenee of
world rronom ks.

With passage ol the ERA,
men can be assured they all)
find no woman in the men's
room - unless she's there to
fix the plumbing."
— A r t o r A la a A lda,
countering charges thal the
Equal Rights Amendment
w ould le ad ta unisex
bathrooms. I People)

"You should pul the
perfume an the hot spots. I
can tell you a few of thow.
Bui others — It'a Im­
possible."
S o p h ia Lores, an h a w
woman m ould a w her lin e af
perfume. i T l m e Magazine)

"Since I've been able to
talk, that’s a ll anybody ever
asked me.: W h a l'i It Uke to
be the daughter of l-ucilte
B a ll? "
- L n rie A m a t, N , an her
famous mother.

lW

V v i

.

1

C IR C U IT
COURT.
N TH
JU D IC IA L
IN
AND
FO R
C O U N T Y . FL O R ID A
II l i n C A M K

VS- iW C M *

O U A R A N T Y
in s u r a n c e

CO M PAN Y
OF
C A R O L IN A
a s*
GUARANTEE.

NORTH
U N IT E O
P ia m iiH .

V?

J A M E S R O C L L A V A L L E and
JC R I S D E L I A V A L L E .
O ffender* I
N O T I C E O F A C T IO N
*0
le r i S D e lla v a n *
I1FEI C a ri i* Court
S liv e r Sp ring s. M a ry la n d XJ?0i
Vau a re n o lih e d that an a ction to
e s t a b lis h
and
lo r a c lo s *
an
• g u ila b i* lie n o n m e p roperty in
Sem inole f o u n ly
F lo r id a d t*
c u b e d on E s h ib .t A attached
hereto has been tile d o g a .n il you.
and you a t* r t q u . r t d lo sere* a
copy o t yo ur w ritte n defense* II
any, t o Sant a c tio n on Thom as c
Turn er. Turner A F o rd . P A .
P ia m t ilt s a llo t nay. whoa* ad
d rass * a I* r.uH L it* to w e r.
J a cls o m M I* . F lo r id * 1UQT on or
b e lo r* August I I . IT«I and III* th*
or ig in a i w .ih th# CNe k o l I t u i court
m iher b e fore s e m e * on P la in t if f s
a iia r n a y
or
im m a d ia ia i*
f h e r r a n r r . ofnarw .s*. ih o default
w ill b * e m t r t d age net you lo r th*
retie* d e m a nd e d *i the C o m p la int
or P e titio n
W I T N E S S m y hand a m in* seal
. ot H us Court o n Ju ly t l . I N I
i S E A L&gt;
A r th u r H B rc S w ilh . J r
C le r k o l Iho C irc u it Court
■ v E v o C ra b tre e
in p u t , C lerk
| IA copy o l Iho C e m p lo m l or
P e titio n tile d h a re m •* a ita c h o d to
Ih.* N o tic e w h ic h ■* m a ile d to each
D efendant tor whoiFi the resid en cy
m ore sp e cific than a sta l* or
cou ntry w as g iv t n in Ih* sw orn
vlatam erU l ied h * n m b y Iho
P ia e itit l. fu* agent, or a n o fiw y .)
P u b lis h J u ly 1* A August S. I L IT.
ITtl
O E K 111

BARBS
Phil P a store t
Be optimistic. If the hone
ts stolen, locking the barn
w ill prevent you from tak­
ing a loss oo «hat feed
remains

The beanery's coffee are
Is filled with a ll thoM last
drops that a famous brand is j
good until

i 'l e . T f M r f " .

BO OKKEEPER

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

N O T I C E O F S H E R I F F 'S S A L E
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
Inal 0* v ir tu e ot lh a l c e rta in W rit
or E x e c u tio n Issued o ut o l and
under tn * se e l o l the C O U N T Y
C o urt ol Sam ,not* Count*. F lo rid * ,
upon • f in t i lodgem ent rendered
in the a fo re s a id c o u rt o n th* ism
0** of M a r c h . A D 1*01. m m at
te rtft.n c* s* e ntitled . RoPeet M
M o r n s . P la in tiff, «t Joseph R
Sapp. D e fen d an t. w hich stores* d
A r . t o l E lo c u tio n w a s d a ilv a r t d t o
m e as S n e n tf ot Sam ,not* Count*,
F lo r id a , and I h a v e le v ie d upon the
f o llo w in g d e s c r ib e d p ro p e r!*
owned O r Joseph * Sapp, sa d
p ro p e r!* b e in g lo cated In Sem inole
C o u n t* .
F l o r id a , m o r t p a r
t ic u iir l* d e sc rib e d as follow s
AM ot in * .n lr r e s i, title , and
o w n e rsh ip o l Joseph R Sapp in
and to the re a l p ro p e rly and
d w e llin g lo cate d at lrO* W illow
A venue, Sanford . F lo rid * , m ere
p a r t ic u la r ly d e sc rib e d as
An
m d n i d a d ' t in te re st in th* S i o l
l o t H a n d a llo t the Lot IT. S A N F O
P A R K . P ie t Book S. Pag* *1.
P u b lic
R e c o r d s a f S e m in o le
Count*. F lo r id *
and i t * u n d e rsig n a d a s Srw ritf ot
S a m in o lt County, F lo r id a , w ill at
It 00 A M on th * K l h da* ol
A ug ust. A D H i t . o tte r lo r sale
a n d sat) t* th* hig h e st b id d er, tor
cash, s u b ia o t to an* and a ll
e e ls t ln g H a n s, a t in * F r o n t
I W e st I D o o r o t tk a S e m in o le
Count* C o urtho use m Sanford.
F l o r id * . I h t * b o * t d e s c r ib e d
R E A L p ro p e rl *
That s a id sa l* is Oemg m ade to
s a ils !* th* te rm s o l Said W rit o l
E lo c u tio n
John C P o lk . S h e riff
Se m ino le C o unt*. F lo r id a
P u b lis h A ugust S. II, I*. I L w ith
Ihe sa l* on A u g u s t II. I t l l
D E L 1*

r e s io e n iia l

t r e s s , o n b e a u t y t ip s .
" N o t a d a y goes b y th a l I

Seminole

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o t * * is t . f t r o , g iv e n tn*1 I *m
m q a g e d Ml b u i n m e l H H w , u
R i* I B o r HO Sen lo rd f l J W I
Sem m oi* Count*. F W ru U u n d ff
m e Le t if tout n * m * ot E U L A
S A L V A G E . *nd th d ! I intend io
re g is te r s a d n e t w ith In* C le rk
ot tne C ir c u it C o u rt. Je m m o ff
Count*. F lo r id * in *cc« rd *nc*
• in tn* p r o v is io n o l tne F it
lilio u s N * m * sta tu tes, t o AM
Section B*S©* F lo r id * Statutes
it s r
S g C u t* B ro ck
Pub LSh lu t* J* a Aug ust S. II. I*.
•TO I
P E if 1)0
__ _______

IN T H E
E IG H T E E
C IB C U IT ,
S E M IN O L E
CASE NO I
D IV IS IO N
U N I T E D

"1 do spur of the moment
things like steam my face
over spaghetti whenever I
make it."
—

CLASSIFIED ADS

f i Ciit io u s n a m e
H i,lie a is h e ra b y g i* - n that I a m
engaged in b u sin e ss at C ran e s
Roost. A lta m o n te Springs. F la
H U * S em ino le C o u n t,
F lo rid *
im def th* I t r illio n s nam e ol
• U f B IC k H
D W PAU I
IN
T E R N A f iO N A l INC #IW lh a i I
■n u n d lo r eg t ie r s a d n a m e with
th* C le f a o l Ih o C irc u it Court.
Sam m ol* C o u n ty . F lo r id a in ac
lo r d e n e t w . ih ih * previsio n * td ih*
* .f t ilio v s Nam# statutes. To W i I
Se ctio n li s p * F lo r id a Statute* I
iv sf
Sig Steven H Love
P u b lis h Ju ly 1* A August S. 11 A
it IT* i
H E a III

QUOTi/UNQUOTE

U n iv e r s it y

NOTif f
o f
IN T IN I
ro
s e c u r e * f ic t it io u s h o m e
N O T IC E is H E R E O Y G IV E N
lh a l tn* u n d e rsig n e d . d e s irin g 10
m g# g* m b u sin e ss under Ih#
L e in mu? n a m e of A B U I T V IR O N
W O R K S . at &gt;101 E )tm Street.
Uxntord. f lo r id * . H H 1 . m lend* te
re g is te r fh * v et) rv*m* e t h in*
C le rk o« me C ir c u it C o urt ot
Setnifw i* Count*, f lo r id *
O A T E D true K i n de* ot J u ly . A
; 0 HOI
ACCURATE
F A B R IC A T IN G .
INC
B* ( M B C r w t M e
P u b i'in
J v lr 1? A u g S. IT ’ *
tto i
D E F i JO

N-H ilpW inNd

ift-Ueip Wanted

Legal Notice

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT

RATES

HOURS
0 00 A M - S 10 P M
M O N D A Y th ru F R I D A Y
S A T U R D A Y 0 Noon

1 t in s *
1 c o m a c u t l e t t im o s
T c a m t c u t lv o t lm o o

M e a lin o
M e a lin *
t ic

I S c o M d c u t I v a t lm d s

i l e a lin *

11 00 M in im u m

★

M in im u m ] V r s
e x p e rie n c e
Stron g a c c o u n t.n g s S ills IB k e y
c a lc u la to r b* touch, a c c u ra te
ty p m o s k ills E le m e n t s a la r y
a n d be ne fits C a ll C a rl Sa n d e rs
m ia u

6—Child Care

W H Y B E L O N E L Y ! w rit * "Get
A M a t t " D atin g S e rv ice A ll
ages P O Bov M i l . C le a r
w ate r. F I )U I S
L o n e ly C h ris tia n Singles
M a rt C h r is tia n Sin gles us y o u r
a re a W r it* So uthern C h ristia n
Sin g le * C h ip . P O B o i I t l l
S u m m e rv ille , S C i n n or
c a ll i
n tv s

Bonn sold

L o n e ly Writ# " B r in g in g P e op le
Together D e lin g S e r v ic e '" A ll
ag es A Sen ior C illr s n s P O
1*11. W in te r H aven. F la u*B0
U n a tta ch e d ? Lon esom e? Start
T r ia l M e m b e rs h ip ius* IKS
C o n lid e n iia l
D ig n ifie d
0*
c re e l D iffe re n t C o untryw id e
L ite ra tu r e D a l mg a t P restig e.
W lllla m s t o w n M a s s t l l s l
Tel a lia s * sett

SPUR OF TH EM O M EN T
B A B Y S IT T IN G

n s tms
W e e k ly .d a y B a b y sittin g m
m y horn* H a v a
R e fe re n c e s H I B a il
B a b y sit tin g m m y home
ev p er lenc *d m o lh er
»] KM

&gt;1—Instructions
Tennis in s tru c tio n
U S P T A
C e rtifie d G ro u p o r P riv a te
lessons C h ild re n a sp e cia lty
D e v t M a lic l a w t li
H I I I lf
M u sic L e sso n s P ia n o . G w ila r.
b a ts o an lo . d ru m s, b rass.
w oodw ind H I I N I

H jO rtE Found
R e w a rd
to a n y o n e fin d in g
sun g lass** w ith G o ld in itia ls
(M S I p o ssib ly Sanford P la t*
171 &lt;*tl o r H I ITS*
Found
w ith

- S ilv e r A fg h a n hound
g ra y co lo rin g , ie m a la .

II N e e d ie c ra ti ,t your hobby,
t a r n i l l 110* day C H I S h irle y
H I la t a
S e c re ta ry b o oh tyyp e r U n io n )
DeMona a re *
E n p a re n c e d .
good p a y A good w o rk in g
con d ition s 111 l l l l

c a ll t ie oaa* f.i J SO o r » ) f i l l

R e w a rd — C a l lo sl in to y iiw .id v
a re * R e d d u n brow n A w hil*.
b o b la ilt d a n d s lig h tly c ro » l
t y a d W ear mg c o lla r w ith on*
o ra n g t b e ad 111 n i l

6—Child Care
C h ild c a r t m m y hgm a Svnian d
E sta te s
fenced y a rd , ac
liv ilia s . hot m e a ls H la tM S

Legol Notice
F I C T IT IO U S N A M E
N g tic a is h e re b y g iv e n thet t i n
engaged tn b usin e ss at t i l SR O r
C e n te r L o n g w a a d . F la
] | llb
Se m ino le C o unty, F lo r ida under
m e I k IH io u t n a m e gt S H O W T IM E
D A N C E S T U O IO . and that I intend
tg re g is te r sa id n a m e w ith th*
C le r k of Ih * C ir c u it C o u r t.
Se m ino le C o u n ty , F lo r ida in ac
to rd a n c e w . lh t h t provision* St the
F is lilw u * N a m e Statutes t o w n
Se ctio n BBS 0* F lo rid a S ta tu'e s
ITU
Stg C a th y J G . M a ip t
P u b lis h A ug ust 1. 11. IF. J*. 1FBI

K in d e r g a r t e n
t
p rrtc n o o l
te a ch e r
E a r ly
c h ild n o o d
d e g re e
I JO I M F . T n *
G in g e rb re a d House, 111* E lm
H I I Sal lo r Ap p l
F u ll c h a rg e doubt* e n lry b kpc
P le a s * send com p le te resum e,
in c lu d in g address and phone
no a n d re fe re n ce s lo Boa Ida
C 0 E v e n in g H e ra ld . P 0 Bov
la st, Sanford . F la
AD O RE SSEO
ENVELO PES
N E E O E O I I F o r info rm a tio n
m a il s a il ad dressed , stam ped
e n v e lo p *
lo
BOX
111,
O U R A N O . M l f la it

F I C T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * iT h t f f b y g iven lh a l I a m
engaged in busm esa at ITS N
H ig h w a y II FI lo n g w w d . F la
Sam m ole C o unty, a io rid a under
the lic lit io u t n am e o l p I R A U T O
S A L E S , a n d th a t t in la n d lo
re g is te r ca d nam e w ith Ih* C la rk
of th* C ir c u it C o u rt. Sa m iiud a
C o unty, F lo r id * hi acco rdance
w ith m « p ro v is io n s at th* f i c
litm u s N a m e Statures
To W it
Section l a i 0* F lo rid a sta tu tes
ITS!
Stg A n n R a sa
P u b lis h A ug ust IT. H Septem ber

I. *. ITBI
D E L Ida

24—Business
Opportunities

E le c tr ic ia n
1*00 mo
P re fe rs m a ch in e e le c tr ic ity but
w ill tra in w ith g ood hous*
w if-nq background

27 Investment Opportunities

t l E ■p e r i*nc td R oof t n I I
O w n toots I* H r

E ip e fie n c e d R e a l E s ta te in v e s
for o ffe rs Jom f P a rfic ip a t'O n
lo s m a ll m v e cto rs la s east

LI D r iv e n I I
L o c a l and Long
D is t a n c e
S e v e ral P ositions

L P N I I 1 p art tune. S II p a r?
lim e A p p ly L a s e v ie w N u rtm g
C e nte r »W E Ind SI . Sanfo rd

IS Phone O p e ra tor I I
F o r t e m p o r a r y p o s it io n *•
per t«nctd .n d Im m Sion phone
system No It* here

29-Room s
SAN FO RD ,
R e ts
w k ly
1
monthly ( l i f t U t il IfK H i!
*00 o a r A d o lfs §41 r u i

St C a sh ie rs I I
W o rk any hours W ill tra m lo r
I h is l

H a ir t l y l i t l . exp erienced to r
p ro g re ssiv e talon in L a k e
M a r y H I U U . eves M * F i l l

S S S a le C t r r k ll
G ood lo c a l shop F u ll and p a rt
lim a

N o C a sh o utla y H o m e m a k e rs
beat th# td u e e ie If you a re n t
m a t in g SaOO per m g and a r*
w o rk in g m o r t than 11 h r t p e r
w h Y o u can I p a st m is up G e t
in to m « A C T II C a ll P e g g y
H I B M I or P a l H 1 I F I )

1 » u FREN CH AVE
123-5174
ASSOCIATES. INC . A t A LTO R S *

e a rn e r *1 J t t h I F r e u d s
Y o v r future evr c e n c e rn

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

Ih* B e il Buy in Town
c o il C la ss? r d Ad

B o ys a G irh sa g v II IF t a r n e x tr a
m o ney a tly r school C a ll 111
1*11 C irc u la tio n Dept E v e n in g
H e ra ld

12 O ffK « Throughouf
C tn tr il F lo rid *

★

U K E MARY

A lo w ,

I2U94Q
9ISW L a k e M a r y B lv d

)N D R IFTW O O D V I L L A G E

Cook - exp e rie n ce d in fin *
d inin g , bre a kfa st B d in n e r
F u ll lim e A p p ly in p e rs - n I *
p m D eltona Inn s n s a ? l

TW O M U S IC P O S IT IO N S
P a r? t im e p it n it l. and p a rt lim e
c h ild re n s c h o ir d ire c to r a B
h r t p e r wk C a ll S a n ia n d o
U M C . M B IH *
__________

New A ll Cedar. Q u a lit y B u itl a
I H om e Split P la n Sunken
TuO.
C a l In K ilc h a n .
In
la r c o m
S lo n e
F ir e p la c t .
Wooded Area M a n y E i i r a s 1
G re a t lo c a tio n !

W HY SAVE If
S E L L IT
O L H C K L V w ith a F a s t A c tin g .
L o w Cost C la s s ifie d Ad

AVON h EPR F S th f A T I V t l
Th* P a r t T nr# C a rte r
a m so/e - C o llect U S I ' M

Fa n ta stic C o u n try E s t a lt . S
Bdr. f nth P o o l. Sauna, a
A c re s l H as E v e r y t h in g ! H
Muss
t o U C F W e slin g h o u s*

CONVENIENCE

STORE

P e s t co n tro l technic Ian w a n te d
lo r rou te w o tk Sanford
t r e t C a ll H U M S

Ull.OOO

CASHIERS

Cedar C o m e m p o ra r y O n Ab ou t
( A c r e s 1 Bdrm . 1 B a th . E a t in
K ilc h e n
w I s la n d ,
S ig n *
F ire p la c e L g S c re e n e d P o rc h
A ssum e M P e rc e n t M lg

Good. M llif f a N5lp»f*'l«f AL'dfl. I
*++R p*-d v » (ll&gt; o n * » r r r 4
m o n th !
t a p t r it n c *
no t
n r c f iia r i
fo r
io t « r v i« w
pnon# tn# m *n#gcr si

R ig h t n o w w t need a le w good
t a le s people who h a v e the
a m b itio n and d e d ica tio n lo
su c c e e d II I n a ls you. m e n
w e r e p re p a re d lo o ile r FPU
r e a l rtw a rd s A Iht m e th o d s to
get th e m F a r in te rv ie w p le a s*
c a ll C t n t u r y 11 H a y e s R e a lty
S e rv ic e s me , Sanford
H I SOSO

SALES ASSOCIATES
NEEDED

m int
m im

A irp o rt H a d
C lt lH N r r f
C t U f y A t#
t a i l M ir y

S o p e n in g s l«M

m

a im

ui

m s

Call Frank

321IBBO

M l

Air Conditioning
C h ris w ill s e fV 'k t a c t r e rn g .
fre e re rs. w ater coolers, rm sc

caii m tm

u n c l u t ie m

your

clo set

Sa il m o s t things m a l a r t )usf
ta kin g u p space w ith a w an t t o
m I h t H e r a ld H I 1*11 o r 111

Concrete Wbrti

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 a r r ie t t s B e au ty
Noo* SIT E 1st S I . H I H a l

Boarding A Grooming
A n im a l Havxw Bean) ng and
G r o o m in g K y n n a lt S h a d y ,
in s u la la d . screanad. ft* p ro o f
mold*, outs id* r u n t
Fans
A lt a A c cages W* c a te r lo
y o u r p e lt
S t a r lin g
s tu d
re g is try Pn H I S i l l
Snow H il l K yn n e l o ile r s C a l B
Dog F le a B a m s t l up la
H o ur. F u ll S e rv ic e ! t t S i l l

to m o rro w m ay be th* d a y you
t e ll lh a l r o ll a w ay bed y o u 'v t
n o w h e r e io r o ilt w t y
It you
p la c e a C it t t ilia d Ad to d a y

a r Repair

Som ebody K lo o king fo r y o u r
b a rg w n O ile r •! today in th*
C ia s t d ia s A d t

Ceramic Tilt

Plumbing

Hypnosis

C o n c re te W ork, to ofsrt. I lo o rt a
p o o ls
L a n d s c a p in g a sod
w ors F r t o r s l H I M U
I M A N Q U A L I T Y L lF k R A T I O N
f in
t ip P t ld t , D nvFw ays.
etc W ayne Beat n r i j j .

Electrical

Beauty Cara

H Y P N O S IS I!
Stop Sm oking. L o t t W oifgit,
B u ild C onfidancos. Im p ro v e
R e la t io n s h ip s ,
and
m uch
m a r a ll
A M tr
y e a rs
of
rrso o te h . D r C a s r y . on# ot ih o
feeders in hyp nosis, h a t w on
Ihe E v a n s A w a r d fo r h it
p r o t t n t e c h n iq u e s
O ft t c *
downtown S a nfo rd t * m S
pm
C a ll H i J I M fo r a p
p o ailm e n t o r in fo rm a tio n

E l e c t r i c i a n is , r s t a p a ji
type s ot t lo c lr ia l w o r t o t lo ir
p r ic o t H I a l ft

Q u a lit* H e c ir n a i w o rk n y rs
e x p o n t n e o M ino r re p o trt I*
com p le te w -rvig i l l 01 Ik

Cam M e t* C e ra m ic Td* S te v .
w alls. Ilo o rt. (ouruer-eps. r *
m odel, re p a ir F r t s l U F B l i t

Latest Hits

It you don 1 1*11 people, hove a r r
Ihey g o n g f* t r o w ? T a ll them
w in a c ia ts .fe d ad. be c a l l u s
H I 1*11 o r g ]l N FS

Utt

better

Rtmodallng

Mini-U-Lock

A ny km d of M a s o n ry w o rk —
slon*. b f k k . b lo c k s B con
c r if a I H 1JB1. Jo hn M a s o n ry

N E W C a n c rtf* B u iid .n g s. alt
t i i t t i n a up a m a a s a ** i
* I n d u tin a i P a r k , 1M OMI

Ramodaling Sptciallit
We h a n d i t fh*
W hole S a il of W as

&gt;■ t easy la pla ce a C la s u t ia d A d
W t 'il e .e n h e lp ^
if C a ll i n M i l

Handyman
P a m l in f. c a rp e n try , o il ty p e s ot
hom e re p a irs C a ll lor tre e
a n im a l* H I IF1J.

B. E. Link Const.

222-7029
F in a n c in g A v a ila b le

Nursing Cantar

Roofing

Hauling A
i-iM Y a n n £ rk ^ ^
H a u lin g a Y a rd W o rk I* \ * N
w ith Ad l » I t l l n o a n s H I
MF1 L a r r y . JO rce B ry a n t

E V E R Y OAY 11 EAR g a i n
B A Y ■*»t h e w a n t a d s ^ J T
M M o r U l BBTS

Horn Improvtnwd

OUR RATES A R E LO W ER
L a k e v e w N u rsin g C e n te r
t l * E Second S f , S a n fo rd
n i a io i

Writ# Way R o o fin g o nd P a in
,lo O G u tra n to o d w o rk . F ro o
E stim a te s P h H J a B I J

Odd Jobs
J B ■ Hom o Im p ro v e m e n t C a r p e lt r y work of a n y ty p o
Reef repa.r*. g u tte r w o rk .
P* m l mg ( in fe rio r o r e a te r I w l,
u b in g , t p o c la llle In rndbH*
n t re p a irs a roof t o M u w .
and wood p a lm d e c k s F r e e
e s tim a ft U S l u l

C

C E N T R A L F LO R ID A H O M E
im p r o v e m e n t s

H e ilm a n

r ea d

fO S

a

ARE
use

O F T E N . YO U L L U K E
RESU LTS

a

R e p a irs

OuaWy -ark Free
ftSanitrs ISalafO Rafee.

O U A L IT Y A T A F A t a P R I C il
G an R e p a irs B Im pFdv IT y r v
lo c a lly S o n a r 0&gt;sc H U M S .

ads

P a n t in g

aw st F a m 'e e lil

c m

v.

-1

ROOFS, leeks r e p a ir e d . R sp rees
ranee save* ta d sMwgi* w*rk.
INfKSPd. i h t e r t d . b e a d id

MW* m « n

Chrrsikan H o o fin g l i y rs . exp
SfTSISG fre# t s l R e ro o fin g ,
s p e c ia iiit m r e p a ir w o rk a

SOUTHERN ROOFING IS yrs
•xp. f# roofing, leek special
1st Deprndaol* a honest
price Da, or wight m i t t )

h in t in g

Era* (sNasafts HS-ltfh

Sandblasting
S A N D B L A S T IN G
D A V tl W E L D IN G
W M IF F . B A N F O R D

* WoiB .

re a so n a o it pr.ee*
IS y e a rs
ta p
uennefh H a lf
H I S1SF
- d n y lid w a (I xt a

T r*tStfvk»

FUN
th em

THE

H A R P E R 'S T R E E S E R V IC E

T t R R Y 'I I N T E R I O R S

w a iip a p e r in * , a a m ii n g
t r ie s *

G u ar

« g rk

m

lo w

in j

P k 'M

.
. .\r

w afer h e a le rs a p u m p s
H I *411

A ll t h t H its d e liv e re d td you
P o p C o u n tr y R o c k G o s p e l
Soul To o rd e r c a ll L a r r y i l ?

C O M M U N IT Y
B U L LE T IN
BOAROS
ARE
G R EA TC L A S S IF IE D
AOS
ARE

P a d d i* tans MsfaifatS.
re tN W n tia l e le c tric t l w o rk ,
c a ll H I t i t s

C L A S S IF IE D

■

P lu m b in g r e p a ir - a ll ty p e s

M oOile Hom es. H ouse*. Roots.
Trucks. T r a ile r. E tc P o r la b H
___U nit H a ro ld R

L A R O f T R IE IN S T A L LS *
L an d sca p in g . O ld L a w n s R *
p ric e d M S S S I.

ev en

Oodc Repair
G W ALT N EY j e w e l e r
S I S . P a rk Ay*
H I BSDt

FO N SECA P L U M B IN G
Con
stru clio n . R e p a irs . E m e rg e n
cy L ie , Bonded. Ins H l a B M '

Masonry
H e y K id s Loo kin g fo r an r u fr a
d o lla r ! A t k atom G Dad t o lot
you h a e o o H a i t i lie d ad
g a ra g e sal*.

Homa Rapaln
M E t N T Z E R T IL E
F lo w e d r e p a ,r , leak * Showe.-S o u r
I P M ia n y , H y n . t a g B M BSd l

F r e d d ie R o b in s o n P f V m b ln g
R e p a ir s , f a u c e t s .
W
C
S p rin k le rs i n U IB . H S B iM

Prussur* Gaining

Landscaping

Painting. Roofing. Carpentry
L K Bonded a Guaranteed

.

.

__

I t M an a ge r T r a m e e lt
R e ta il p osition E x c e lle n t c a r e e r
o p po rtu nity

F I R S T CO O K
E x p e rie n c e d o n ly need a p p ly
A p p ly in person H o lid a y in n on
in * L a k e lro n t

R N F u ll T im * 1 ) Shift A p p ly at
L a k e v ie w N u rtm g C e n te r * l f
E In d S I . Sanford

an

F lu m t, i«i f l l ?
H a r d w a re and
E le c tr ic a l r e ta il and r e p a ir
BuSines? W WO R e a l E s ta te
Best Term s. SlalO O O
Wm
MaiiCTOwssi R E A L T O R H I
r s u E ves H I S M I

Diol 322-2611 or 831-9993

V \j* fe O r^ F '^ V \ i.

■

T ag questions
W ill y o u b e
l.n a n c ia ity ind ep end ent in 1 lo
S ye a rs? Ar# yo u p a d w h a t
you a r t w o rm ? II n o t c a ll H I

To List Your Business...

People w ho lik t m oney u s* tow
cost c la s t .le d acts I* b u y . se ll,
o r tra d e

LET KDR SPONSOR
YOU IN A NEW CA­
R E ER . START PART
T IM E AND BE IN DE­
P E N D E N T IN TWO
YEA RS OR LESS. SUC­
CESS D E T E R M IN E D
BY YOUR EFFORT.
EARN INO POTENTI­
A L IS U N L IM IT E D .
call m -n n today
FOR AN A PPO IN T ­
MENT.

W ork t t hom e J o b s a v a ila b le 1
Su bstantial e a rn in g s p o s s ib le
C a ll SB* AH BQ01 E d
i l l to r
info rm atio n

★

AND LET AN EXPERT D O THE JOB

•H I C # ft* . I t a ly C e r t if ie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r
R e sid e n tia l o f C o m m e rc ia l,
N ew o r R em od eled H I Bad*

KEYES
DISTRIBUTORS
&amp; RETAILERS

★

CONSULT O UR

Building Contractor

S o f a r , o u r lo n g t it lived pftiidant was John
A d a m s , w h o lit a d to
be neatfy 91 ysart old.

★

IS Se creta rie s SI
G o o d C o m p a n y lo o k in g to r
tra in e d and e ip t n r n c e d and
c a r t e r m m ded people P a r t
tins* and F u ll t.m e

111 and t i l Shift F u ll lim e
A p p ly
m p e r te n S a n t p r d
N u rs in g Convalescent C e n te r.
ISO V e H o n v ill* A VO

M l a ______________ .
N O T I C E TO P U E L I C :
N o lle * it heraby g iv e n that in*
B o a rd of A d iu t lm a n t ot in * C ity ot
S a n lo r d w ill h o ld a r e g u la r
sch e d u le d m eeting an August II.
I N I m fh# C ity H a ll a i II M A M
m o rd e r '« consKFer a request tor a
v a ria n c e in Ih* 2onmg O rd in an ce
a t it p*r!*&gt;nt lo re a r yard set b a m
r e q u ir e m e n t s In P U O to n e d
d it t r k t In
L o t *1. Ram btew ood. a cco rd in g
t* th* p la t thereof a t reco rded In
P B &gt;1. p ages I a I o l th* P u b lic
R e c o r d s o t S e m ln o la C o u n ty .
Flo* Ida
B e in g
m o rt
s p e c if ic a lly
d e sc rib e d a t located *1 111 W ild
wesad D riv e
P la n n e d us* o l th* p ro p e rty It
tor p o rc h a d ditio n
B L P e r t .n s
C h a irm a n
B o a rd * t A d liw lm e n l
P u b lis h August II. IF. ISBI
DEL M

★

i t O ffic e H e lp SI
S k ille d And E .p e r le n te n
IS Book keeper SSI

S a le s m anage* — e x p e rie n c e d
or**. « u * M l* d re sid e n tia l A
c o m m e r c ia l
e x p e r ie n c e
n e c e ssa ry
F a r I n t e r v ie w
p le e se c a ll C entury I I . H * * e s
R e a lty Inc . Sanford I I I SOSO

RN OR L PN
♦—Personals

★

BEST BET IN
TOWN NO GAMBLE
.H E R E

S e c u rity Su p e rv iso r
lu ll t im e
lo r
in d v s t r la l
s e c u r it y
o p e r a t io n R e llr t d m i l i t a r y
p r e fr r r e d R e p ly lo Bov N o
M G c 0 E v e n in g H e ra ld , P 0
Boa l*SI. Sanford. F L H T1I

Sunday-N oon Friday

★

AAA EMPLOYMENT

----------------------- 1 L ln * s M in im u m

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

★

_

trimming, r amoving a Land
scaping Fre# (s f m in ts .

R R 'i V f lL V R V F k

-m p - dr

�33-Houses Unfurnished

39-Rooms
R o o m lo r &gt; rn t. d o v b l! ot
c u p a n c y . ] w o rk in g i«d r s or
m t a J li a g e d &lt;pi K it prm

poet r H f f t r u f v

CASSELBERRY
iw t - m jn
o r i a i s i l l ta b I K m o
S A V O N J F N T A I C R I A lt O B

yy.g

5 6 -A p e rtm e n h

HAL COLBERT REALTY
me

'

U niurnishu)

,0 n o p u s

U l ) mo, * sac*
J » ! M 1 or M l l M l

F S .O V Slog
I Badroom A pts A « ..ia b t .
SAOwn by Appr Only U 1 I M
M illo n r illa
T ra n
opt |
Spot t a lk , m o d .r n I Barm , I
S o lt i
opt
C o r p t io o
o,|
r p u ip p r d .
CH4A
t t tir
tD t(h lo i 4 lo o t
Ad ults no
pot* , t i i o i n « s j

So" loro
C tro m .c
f e l .l i b i a

#0 hava oportmontt 10 root
Juno Po rtig B ro lly
_________ B ro llo t M i l a n

D ELTO N A

O ly m p ic

it .

Bool

r e a lt o r

ocre. A C . pool 12some

13—

— »—

LO TS
1 a re a M l
W a la rlrp n l
I k M a ry a ra a
On (a n a l
M a r k h a m R d a ra a

CASSELBERRY
1 barm ( ,r.
s-d% p*ts- t m mo m n o o
SAV ON R E NT A t S REALTO R
Cfe» tu tl e v p c s u re
»e»r fUel
F o r S e le ‘ s«grt d o a n L run «
c te s s .tie d ed C e lt W ) * lt or
M l tffl

111 C a rr it w a n S f , Deltona*! mil#
o lf I 4 7 b d rm . I B. ad vil k only,
a p p lia n ce * &amp; la u n d ry fa c ility *
tu r n ith e d . C H S A WW Car
pet mg, m o n th ly runt from
1197 r or fu rth e r «nto ce ll 1)0)1
K JA M t

C O M M E R C IA L
P R O F E S S IO N A L o f f i c e
L a*e M a r y ) bdrm , 7 B house
w ith p o o l ISOOsq ft. a v a ila b le
fo r o ffic e use tea on L a n e
M a r y B lv d
O w ner t e rm s '
tlS t.0 0 0

37—Business Property

G R E Y H O U N D K E N N E L S 12
A c r e s w ith 21 runs 2 ke n n e l
bu iid -ng s. spy .nf help «nd (I I )
B d rm m o b ile hemes P ro f
ita b te o p e ra tio n IMOOOO

S A N F O t tD
(OCD sq
It
it
in d u stn e i or
C o m m e r c ia l BuildM ig on IT VI
1,000 tt in o ffic e ip a c t C e ll
m SS10 o r M i 4142.

3 1 -A p a n m trT ts F u m ta h sd
1 b d rm . atf, t ig*.

) C O M M E R C I A L B U IL D IN G S
fo r one lo w price* Use 1 to r
y o u r b u sin e ss, rent one and
liv e m one L a k e M e ry IW.fOO

H a v e a ro o m to rent? L e t e
c la s s ifie d a d !&gt;nd e tenant tor
you'

P»»» »2*0 mo 1M 7700
) A V ON K I N T A L S R E A LT O R

f u r n is h e d a p trfm e n ts tor $«uor
C m ie n s ) i i P a lm e tto A v e . J
C o w a n No phone ca lls
Sanfo rd 1 B d rm . R id s, P ets ItDO
D ow n 1700 M o 22V / 200
S A V ON R E N T A L S RE ALTO S
SAN FO RD
J rm , a * u til inc .
1100 Cin 13)0 m o MV 2200
SA V ON R E N T A L S i t ALTO S
i

CALL

O t iic v Space
F o r L e a se

L oo A in o Fo e a New Mom#*
C h e ch th e W a nt Ad s tor houses
ot e v e ry s u e and prtce

323-7843

MOmi

F o r rent o r le a se
10.120 sq It
in d u s tr ia l or w arehouse VII
W 1st St
Sanfo rd 17)1100

REALTORS

41—Mobile Homes

STEM PERAG ENCY
GAS S A V E R
This 7 b d rm
fo w n h o u st condo &lt;s w ffh in
w a lk in g d'Sfanca to shopping,
has C H A , M M C . A club p o d
O n ly Sil.lO O

D U P L E * - (1&gt; 7 bdrm units,
tve fo cal ion, good »rivfll m#nt,
S47 WO
H A N D Y M A N S P E C IA L
Par
fla t ly rtfw rb itn e d ) bdrm . t ft
on N w y 44 M a i l
O w nar
fm a n c m g av ailab le . SM.VOO

A i l i t f o r e g o — p a rle y t lor
t in g le s , e n e rg y e lllt lt n l
t lu d ia t . re a d y to m o te In. coll
n i l X I 111 p m

SAV ON R IN T A L 1 R R 4 L T 0 R
7 B d rm a(f« fre s h ly painted A
c a rp e te d , stove, re triq , no
pets 177) w ith Lease 222 7*7

D o n 't p ile n o longer
n e m t h,gh o t en elephant t
e y e P ie c e o d e t t li N d id . erxi
p ile ih o m o n e y in your w e ile il
S A N F O R D - 1 bdrm . ce rp o n .
k ld i. U l erk ))• I M

SAV ON R iN T A L S R EA LTO R
B g T B d rm . I&lt;i Both, cetpei.
Atr M o d e rn N ic e A re a l i t !
m e I t t l e t l IT) m i f t M e t k

for C o rl.
. S b d rm . I B. k ilc h equipped. e,r
4 hoot M o n e o k O r . U n lo c d
t i n m o . I t l lo t i, leote 11» 1
e tO L j U lo r E d

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS

41 — H o uses

Sanford's Sales Leader
B e a u tifu l ) B d rm , 2 Bath Marne
la r g e F am R m , Cent HA.
O u tsta n d in g shady lot and a
m o st p re s tig o u s lo cal ion O nly
SS4 SOO Th is you m ust set

W R L IS T AND S I L L
M O R I HOMES THAN
AN YO N E IN THE
SAN FO RD A R IA
C O U N T R Y LIV IN G I lO rm . )
Bath ham# an ttacad I + Acra

CallBart

B U Y OF TH E W E E K — At
tra c tive 1 bdrm Cancrafa Bin
w Drapas* ftge. R tf, A D n k
washar an lavaly IS ■1 * fat in
tap area Only lll.V M ii
CA N O PY OF T R E E S lurraunds
This ip aciam 4 bdrm ) bath w
Fam R m . aat in kite ban a Scr
porch O w ner wtll cantidar 2nd
m t f i saa.vMf
M A Y F A IR 'S CHARM g ra c e s
♦b«s beautiful 4 bdrm l bath
bam * m av'Rf H R i f If nn a lift

• 1)1 picturesque lat C all lar
yaur parsanal faur.. i n , 1*0

C R E A T IV E
F IN A N C IN G
• v i i l a i l # an rbit immacwlafa 1
bdrm * b vfa M l in kitchan,
b*« b d rm iu panallad F am Rm
a I f yard w fraai fa ia ra t

N e p e t c o th to, I t t 4 in d
m o r t g e F ' “ i t 4.aqg. E tc
M o rtg e g r Broker I X M * i

G e rm a n S M a t t ) Y r s Super
w ith c h ild re n t i c M a t c h dog
1700 S27S7S7

D e a l w ith D ean
T o p t p a &lt; d fo r
1st o r 2nd m ortgage you h o ld
P ho ne quotas gtyan E d D e a n
SI) W C o lo nia l D r . O rla n d o
42 ) 0000. p h a nsw e rs 24 h rs

A n im a l Haven Kennels b o a rd in g
k g ro o m in g A L S O S T A R
T IN G S T U D R E G I S T R Y M a le
ow ners c a ll 222 S7S2

•

if f # «had par c h it , vquippad
k iH ftv n w ith pantry, and t o il
m a r t H a r i a l w ttea mad Ju st
I7V.VN

f r r r to proper hom e Y o u n g ta
m ate K e tth o n d ih o t i fo ves
ch 'd ie n )7)4)S2 a il S JO

331-075*
h r* . 333-7643

B E A U T IP U L tpeciewi I Bdrm ,
t Both home to Drove M in o r
on I or to land! coped tel. Cent
MA. W w carpel, equipped eel
m kitchen. F ie rm . tcreonod
poho. on o quirt Cel Do Sac
Yo u r* tor P I . t R

VA C t n l
1 I
C o m p le te ly
r e d r c o r o ie d
N e * c a rp e l
th ro u g h o u t
G ood I m ooting
I M KO
H o m e w iln in c o m e
Owner
I m e n c in g 1 B R b l * ,tn IBM
R e n ta l c o tta g e p lu t outre M
a i i in n l i e odd

JU S T FO R YOU I Bdrm, I Both
home with tote el e e tre tt
Fenced yard, playroom, eel le
kitchen. Cent HA w w carpel,
porch, and lo ll more A buy tor

l i k e M ary
Lot I M t lW . I
duple* W ill trade SI4MB

M A Y F A IR
V I L L A SI ) 4 1
R d rm , 1 B o th Condo V it la t ,
n o i l lo M o y to lr Country C lu b
So lo c i yo ur I t l. Hour p it a ft
■ M a n o r O v e r t O uoltty c o p
t lr u c lo d by S k o um tkur toe
S 4 M M B up i

R O B B IK ’S
RKALTY
REALTO R. M LS
l i l t I. F re o cb
S oiie «
Sootord

A S S O C IA T E S N E E D E D ! New
or euperienced Cell Herb
S le n tire m or Lee A lb n g h l
today 4 ditcever tu cce ttl

C A L L A N Y T IM E
IM S
re rk

M HOUB (B 32M2I3

322-2420

REALTORS
Multipb Listing Srrvic*

W IL C O S A L E S H W Y I I W 4 M l
W O F I 4 S A N F O R O )77 4471

*t« our U H u h fu t new BHO ks#
M O R I ,, front A re a r IIH i
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S
w a O rlan d o Dr
m S200
V A k F H A F inan eing

HI

\ l

i

N r * 14 ■ 70 R oyal O a ks ) b d rm .
7 B .I1 4 WS or 14 ■ 44 7 b d rm .
I*# ft. H J WS d rltr e r e d A u i
up w ith in ISO m&lt;let M e h a v e
V A fin a n cin g no m oney dow n
o r conventional 10 % d ow n
I d l y financing o n ly at U n c le
R o y ’s M ob rtt Hom e Sates U S
441 Leesburg ffO n 717 0174
o p e n w e e k n ig h ts ’ III 7 J0,
Su n d a ys 174 p m

n n il s o n

111 l l ) E

S T A T E L Y I B r, I B. | H e r e
N a m e . poel. fe m e r m . n ic e
» *!« . e i t r i let. l e i w e

ft" cam p er fr a ile r S e lf con
la m e d spare H rt. c a n be
p ulled w ith com pact c a r f »t
tend, r o ll up aw m ng |14*S
32) 04)7 after 1 p m

75A Vans
7f VW B u t 1 ow nar
New f ira t. a ir. 7 1 000 m i
U )0 0 444 0077

s t n m e i p arts, s a r v k t , used
•e sh e rs
MOONEY A P P LI
A N C C S J J ) 0497

A re you a fu ll tim e Urtvee w ith «
p a rt tim e c a r? O ur c f a iir t ie d i
a re leaded wrth g o o d b u y for

S3—TV RadidSIcrvo

,o u a re nee.ng d ililc u l ly
Imd.ng a piece, la l,* e . c a r lo
nriee. a 140, o r com e s e r v ic e
yog K le e need ot, r e a d a l l o u r
n a n ! a d ! le e r y dee

b A Y TO NE A U T O A U C T IO N
J* » e II. 1 m i ll w a it c* Sgaad
w a r. Day Iona d e a t h , w ill hole
a p ublic A U T O
A U C T lO h
l i t r e W ednesday a l I p m 11 1
m i only ona in Flo e Ida Y o u sal
ih t ro te rvo d p ric o . r a i l on*
m u l l lo r lu r ih o r u t t a ils
II P lfm o u ld F u r y III. I d o or
h a rd to p . P S A P B , g o o d
running cond. ISOO M l f o i l
# 24Mr W r a c k r r S o r u m #
M ighasl p lic a ! paid lo r lu n k or
used c o r i A I r u c k i
y

111* L in c o ln C o n lin a n lo l M a rk
IV C a rlla r S ib ® m , la i S U M
Good con d ition *11 w C r y s la l
Dr Locn A tb o r M 1 B 1 M
----------i--------- ------------------------.■
‘ lk * lF * itD trt&lt; to o rn a r(|iu p '
R u n t good. n * w it le k or
i
404 4110

GARAGE
SALE
M .M E M I L E S , L O A O E O

*3595
1973 hick
j *.m o m i l e s

j

h o m e s it e s

in

] 5 S a a ri B o a l m a lo r, good m a p a
S IM 14 Jon boat, a lu m in u m
|JS 1 H P W isco n sin ang.na,
t o m p U t t le t r K a u la d — list
i ' e H R Comer a n g in a , com
plate o y erKaulad
H IS
1S
Br m i S S lra llo n a ng m a. A I
ta ap a - SI® A ll K a m a n in
eng n a i.
4S11

o r a n g e

G R O V E A t U M A T I L L A I2S00
Ea c h CRa/ y TCAMS
le e m m *

N E W L I S T I N G 1414 E lm A u e
S im p le levele T im 1 B d rm
no m * nee C e n ire i H 4 A a n d
u r a e n a d porcT, G re a t ne.gr,
t o r ro o d toa F o t it o la o w n a r
__ i i n w n m g m e®
I M .M
S p a c ta rk J B R . |V| la i n . F A ,
N e w Root, N ew ly p a in te d ,
n e a r P m e c re il Scfo o i. la r g e
fe n ce d back yard
A. A M c C L A N A H A N
L ie , A e a lE U a it B ro k e r

B e A C R E S W OODED L I K E A
P A R K . ON TO P O F A H I L L IN
G E N E V A S40.000. T E R M S
A V A ILA B L E
i’ . acres

w ooocxi

fr o n ta g e

in

in

57 Guns A Ammo

r o ad

G u n A u il d n Shotgun*, R ifle * k
Handguns Sunday A u g u t l 30 I
P M Sanford A u c tio n 123 7)40

o s e e e n

111 SCO
S A C R E S W OODED JA C K S O N
BAY
AREA.
O SIEEn
S IE S W
SELLER
FINAN

5* Musical Instruments

c in g

Low ary M a g ic G a n .a O rg a n
R y tn m buttons L i t a no w t*SB
4101009

SIIGl IR RIALTY BRO KER
h u m

m ye ll

2 9 5

1976 Hornet

C A SH FO B C A R S
R u n n m g o r not

M A1CM B A C K

))9 19*4
i'io v m c w itr rT » T C K r

55—Boats &amp; Accessories

100 O N IF *1 N E A R
n ew
W IN N D IX IE C E N T E R C O M
ING A T L A K E M A R Y B L V D
JO N E D
COMMERCIAL.
SUE®

iii2« i*y

II M an ia C a rlo E * c c o n L o w
m ,laaoe A s k in g S4O00 C a ll
Oalwren 1 1 1 p m
M l 40C4

Fro m Bio fo 110 o r m o r e
C a ll 111 l i l ^ m 4400
Top -to U if P i * tor J u n k E U lt d
c a - l. tru c k ! L K aq u y aq u.p
m a t M l SOW

7S -M )torcycles

$2395

1979 Concord
1 DR.
AC

b ia l t o b

A lt e r kr-. I l l H M end 111 i H l

111 t o l l

e ftank fin a n cin g avat le o lo •
f) N Hwy 17 91
C a s s e lb e rry

1177 Q Can ho

77— Junk Cars Removed

f ic e s

331-0041

*4495

SANFORD
MOTOR CO
AM C JEEP

n H o n d i Tw in S ta r
1ISCC Per fact * W m l.

194 S F r i n c h A v t
111 4111
r

tm H1 «n)

GET BETTER MILEAGE
Cbmputor Englnt Anatyill On Th#
FUTURESCO PE
SBOS Pinpoint!
Probltmi That Cawtq Poor 041
Mltoagt.

SPfCIAl

$ 9 9 5

JIM LASH'S

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER
•ut H w y. II 91 f t . t w 00a la n ia r d

4 Langwaad, P h a n , n 11 14 1
0**« U t . 4 a &lt;d I p to _ _ _ _ _
H o o d 1:441.to.
R a t o a lC a r i
t o liM p * .
W V W M
A u a ila b ta

L o n g w ^ o d L in c o ln - M e r c u r y

w

% W

C o n lr n l F lo r id a 's a 1 V o lu m e L in c o ln M n r c u r y D » a l# r

S S S S H I G H W A Y 1 7 41 L O N G W O O D • I I ' B 0 4 0 • 111 4 1 1 4 a O P E N N I G H 1 L Y TILL 4 0 0 S A T

ISD N

TI L L 4 P M # O P E N S U N

S B v

IJK

SALE ENDS

SALE ENOS
U M 1

BRAND HEW

I t t t LINCOLN TOWN COUM

GIGANTIC LUXURY CAR SALE

^

n

U P TO

f i u

V *

A

^ 2 0 %

STK. *1446

KS. *12,931 °°

S-25
BRAND NIW
1 *« 1 MARK VI

v

DISCOUNT OFF STICKER
A la * u « i m i M b * t t y r a t a l* b 4 p r lc a a a w U H . L y m , C a p r i, X a p h y r , « » ■ ) , C a s e g a r a n d M ae a u la

All cart tutyOCt lo rtwaiar ii«nQi,ng !t«.q,,| laa 6 laq

if

•0
f t o n n e y ilif
B ro u g h a m
0-#w». loaded l h r »
'77 Pon tiac S u n b ird L ik e new .
U 14I
7f f o r d V an % ton ! ( t i l
l l Pon hac F ir t b if d , j• e la s tic .
11)11

a G M X 14 be I led1wh if tw a 11f i r t i
Like rttw. MO I Ifm
•)1 1274

F r id a y a n d S a tu rd ay 1003 S
P a rk A v t
T ia r a , d o t h e t ,
d o lli,
r a f r ig a r a t a r .
r lif t .
K a w a sa ki M o to rcy c le

E k l o t i in
S A N F O R D S11.SM e a c h ,
j o n e o FO R q u a d s o r O F

s c l e a r e d d u p l

9 B &amp; H Auto Sales
★ 339 7989#

Van Bench feat, brand new
1100. 7 b a m for from %eai%
new 110 ea )77 74)0

M o v in g %att
H a rt* S a tu rd a y
f o r l o a y k Open 9 4 Item * fa r
ta t I ie c t r k fan. tool*. Cham
hot ft , r le c t r k e tro llin g m o to r.
'73 M e rc u ry TO H P fr o llin g
out b o ar 0 , a d d in g m a c h in e ,
law # taw . hand g r a i l * g u m .
c to t h t r i k m u c lla m a ] ] l t w
l i t 31 I B r r a lro ad f r a c M I

IN

M o v in q lo a n e w e r h o m e .
# p*Hm enl» San " d o n 1 naadc
l*» i m th a »»•. i d

76— Auto Parts

M—Garage Sales

» acres, tall
p in e s ,
G E N E V A I I I too t o w IN
TERESI
ASSUM ABLE
M ORTGAGE

t P m to i P in t e i P in t o i 1
I7»S
77 Autom atic
77 Autom atic § if
sites
71 Autom atic
4001
1119)
7* 4 Speed a ir
l) * f)
79 Auto I f
«)1 1274

74 Dga Van . aufo, P S , P I , c a r
pet. ite re o , naw p a m t, c h ro m e
bum per? 11*00 1)4 U t O

Good U i* d T V I . IIS ft up
M IL LE R S
l e l i O rlan d o Or
P n M l 0SS1

M LS

sis.no

75-Recrwlional Vehicles

J1 1 M 1 1

iJ - A p p lia n c e s

H I L L S IN G E N E V A A A ( A
S lv d F t R A C R E
s e lle r
F IN A N C IN G m a y d i v i d e

pao la

F I B S ? ST.

ONE PHO NE CA LL ST AH TS A
C L A S S I F I E D A O O N IT S
R E SU L 1 i UL
END
THE
N U M B E R IS l l l l i l l

D&gt;n,ng A m Set Table, i c h a ir !.
(b ,n a c a b n e f E i i r a L a r q e
D M 1111411

It

J ACRES CLEARED l a n d

A lA ie * F u # N i T u « e

Fo e E i l e l e , C s i n m u r c i i l o f
N e tK ie n iia i A u c tio n ! 1 A p
c u a iu li Cal! D e ll'! A u c lto n
M l SilO

in i»i*._________

jo a c r e s w o o o e o r o l l i n g

B E L A IR ) Br. ) B. rem o de le d
N e w A p p l i C ir p e ll F P L .
L t e e lv yard, n i i . i i e

71-Antiques

F iito m e bea iN e i r i m e ) u ;
Good Condition

TH IS IS NO M IS P R IN T
N e w 74 ■ 40 Royal O a k i ) b d rm , 2
fi, fire p la ce , cath edral c e ilin g ,
g re a t ro o m , g a r d e n tu b ,
com p le te ly furnished A m a n y
m a r t t a t r a t . o n ly t i j . t s o
d e liv e re d A I f f u p w rth in ISO
m ile s . V A ng m oney
c a n v tn Jio fia l 10 % dow n Shop
U n c le Roy s M o b ile N o m e
Sales in Leesburg, o n *41
South
(4041 717 0)74
O pen
w tfk n ig h ls til 7 » . S u n d a y s
17 4 p m

i

A lu m in u m , cans, cop p e r, le a d
b rass. S ilve r, g o d W e e k d a y s
I 4 30 Sat 9 1 K o K o M o Tool
Co 911 W 1st St 37) 1100

D in in g R m Sef F ru itw o o d Can#
B ack C h a t n . lik e new , 2 L iv in g
R m sets, cam p le ft w ater b ed
w ith D raw ers, b ra s s flo o r
la m p s, b ra ts and g la ss fa b le s,
an m uch m ore
1174

51-A— Furniture

w nen you p la ce a O a t i i f i e d Act
m The E v rn tn g H e r a ld , f la y
close to your p h p n r b e c h r t r
to m rth m g w o n d e rfu l •) about
to happen

Antiq ues D ia m o n d s O il
P ain tin g s O rie n ta l R u g s
B rid g e i A ntiques
12) 7*01

SI— Household Goods

» » d i gone, but th# sw m g set m
the b ack yard is n 't? Sell it w ith
a want ad C a ll 277 7411

ST O P D O L L A R )
Fo r vour C4r or tru c k , re g a r
d i n t of cond P r e fe r T u rn in g
Fre e towing H I l l l i Agaml#

6 8 -W a n le d lo B u y

111 IM 0

S A C R E s . T A L L ,P I N E S . S O M E
P A S tU R E
ROAD FRO N 1
A G E . R IV tH ACCE1S. G I N
E v a n s ooo

L A K I M A R Y I Id . I B . F if f l
■ r * . F ire p iic e , C iilw q F e n
Fe n ce d L f e L e t t l l . B H

l e t a t l a t i i f i e d *d h#ip y o u fin d
m o re ro o m fo r H o r a g e
C la c tih e d Ad» fm d b u y e re
fa d

GLASSWARE

’ .S T V I

131-0041

Caff., A p p ro * im a te ly
12 S pounds
I22 41VV

Q u a lity W estern Boots t)4 *$
ARM Y NAVY SURPLUS
110 Sanford Ave
327 S7f 1

Concord 14 s u ) or ) b d rm . fir#
r a s itla n t w a ilf, wood vd&gt;ng A
sh in g le roof only S17
14 ■ M only I l f VV)
14 • 70 .only I D M i
No m oney down V A . 10% dow n
f 'MA Shop U ncle R o y 's M ob , It
Mo me
S a la t U S a l l
S
L e e sb u rg IV04I 717 0174 O pen
Su ndays 12 4 p m . weak n ig h ts
M 7 30

7) T ft rd Loa d e d N r * T ir e s
B lu e w ith W h ite '
No
money down. 17) m o 324 4100
| ) i 440) D e ale r

67—Livestock Poultry

K m g S if t hand cro ch e te d bed
ro ve r
W h it t
w it h
b lu e
rosettes tlOO « K 4 7 ) I

41— L o lv A c re a g e

IM A M
C o u n try E l t e i e m town — I t ,
AC r e t h e o v lly wooded coned
p g r k I 1 b e d rm t. I" y bethk.
eat m k itc h e n , e,n,ng room,
h y in g ro o m . Centre! H e e l 4
A ir . tc re e n e d perch. I w ellt.
b e a u tifu l la n d K O p m g . goroge
• 1 t p o c e carp o rt. 1 u tility
b u ild in g * , and ) tp oce thed
a w a y H o rn h o vte B r
tIH O O O i l l 172*

C H IL ­
D R EN I I I % aff a ll B iu *
Denim Jeans Liberty Bibb
O vtralls and Boats E a rly bird
gats latfctiea at sites.

1974 Caddy I ic e tle n f c o n d itio n
A T. P S P B . A V F M rad-0,
green, m u ll te e 1)491 177
7444

M u s i Sell Pon y u r e a l w ith K id s
Saddle and B rid le 4100 )22
M l) or )77 MIS

M E N 'S . L A D I E S ’ A N D

C A L L 131-5774

Kjsi.r

66-Horses

M o v in g to a n e w e r h o m e
a p a rtm e n tf Sell "'dorvf needs"'
Vflbt with a want art

Th# weather •% p erfect lo r a
h a c k y ir d
s a lr
s e ll
e v e ry th in g t a il w fh a w a n l ad
C a m 177 2411 or 4)1 W tf

i:

S U P E R « id em , i le m home
Cent HA. W w carpel, e e l in
kitchen. Flo rm , peb*. lanced
end m ere Only SIM M

b ro w n R&lt;ver Rock. W in do w
S ilts. Ready M u C o n cra ta .
Pat*o Stones. C o n crete Steps,
G re a se Traps M ir a d a C o n
ir a t e Co » V E lm A v e .

R E A O THIS TW ICE
24 tS *
C o n c o rd o r t d 'b S I '
H a rtfo rd Both )b d rm , 7 B w
s h i n g if ro o f, w ood sid * n g
d a f u t r carpet, d ra p e s k *p
D lid n e t s
Y o u r c h o ic e a '
SIV TVS O n ff at u n c le R o y s
M o b ile
Nom a
S a it s
in
I r a s bur tf N o down pay men*
V A . a il other f-narH»ng 10%
down
Snop U n d e R o y t
M P b i# Mom# S a in , US *41 S
le e S b u r g HMt 717 0)74. Sun
davS 17V o m w k n iq h ts * . t »

D V .ftf.

M all Carpat. B raakfail B a r . 1

R e a l E sta te Broker
7*40 Sanfo rd Aye

aft.

b a m i. Can. M A a la rf# b d rm s
an l i t ■ f lit Wt a v a M a a b in f
ho r i a l I G re a t V trnttt l l l e f f f .

w « r M f k iv a C m I MA, W a ll I*

R E A L ESTATE
R E A L T O R . M l 7avk

S U IT T H I N K . IF C L A S S I F I E D '
A D S O IO N T W O R K . T H E R E
W O U L D N 'T B E A H V H
N e w 1 b d rm . I l e i i r A , e .table
new
I t l. le t ! « te c u n ly
Show n by o p p i l * h P ie re .
S o x io rd
I I I I H I t p m l|
p m . I l l 11*1 10 * m 1 p m .
o ik t o r Dov&lt;d

H IGH R A T E S GOT
YOU DOWNY
Call at far Ownar
F inane ad Hamas

POOL P A R A D IS E — I I ■ ) |
s p a r h lin f p tt l w ilid a a
d iv ifif board cam* w 4 bdrm }

L&lt;

lO N G W O O D L K F R N T
J rm .
k « lt . S l® d n . | » O m o » * l* »

INC. R EA LTO R S,M LS
333 5774 Day or Night

SAN FO RD
IJM t q ft II in d u tfriA i or
C o m m e r c lo l B j id o g o n i m
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B A T E M A N REALTY
IIA -D u pleies

Harold Hall Realty

N t E O A S E R V I C E M A N ’ Y o u 'll
b n d h t m b tte d -n our 4 u t.n e tt
O ir e y io r y

D A Y IN T H E W A N T A D S M l
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R E A L T Y , INC.

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F I L L D I R T 4 T O P S O IL
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ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

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T H R IF T Y M A ID

ARM A H A M M IR LAUNDRY

S U P I R B R A N D G R A O I 'A*

5* 89

TOWELS

SUGAR

65&gt;oi.
BO X

DOZ.

®

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 AUOUST 20-21. I N I

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD AUOUST 20-22, I N I

B IG

ROLL
WITH ONI FILLED SUFIR BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 LUOUIT T a i l , m i

W1TH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 AUOUST 10-11, IN I

Vi-C* 1'

PLU S D E P O S IT
DIET PEPSI. M O U N T A I N D E W OR

M A X W E LL H O USE M ASTER BLIN D —

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W - D B R A N D 100** P U R E

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13-oz.
BAG

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_____________

WITH ONE FILLEO SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 AUOUST 2022, IS tt

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how it works!
Pick up tree Sopor Bonus Certificates
at our checkout counters

H U M M h TAM I*

“

1 -LB.
PKG.

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER (ONUS CERTIFICATE
0 0 0 0 AUGUST 20-21, IN I

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 AUOUST 20-22, I N I

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BOllUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD AUOUST 20-22. I N I

$149

—

tooo »■

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Ybu get t Super Bonus Stamp to&lt; every
»1you spend Paste 36 Super Bonus
Stamps on each certificate
When you check exit, present one filed
Super Bonus Certificate for each Super
Bonus Special you select

-

PRICES GOOD AUGUST 20-22, 1961

U S D A CH O ICE
B O N E L E S S U N T R IM M E D
(2 0 T O 28 LB. A V G .)

W-D BRAND USDA CHOICE
BEEF ROUND BONELESS
BOTTOM

BO TTO M ROUND

ROUND ROAST

U tO A CHOICE UNTRIMMED WHOLE
■ONILISS (B &gt;• 11 LB. AVO.)

IRISH OR SMOKED ECONOMY

T O P SIRLOIN

S BLADE A S SIRLOIN

U S D A O R A D I ‘A*
W -D B R A N D
(10 TO 16 LB. AVO.)

P O R K CHOPS

HICKORY S W in BONELESS SMOKIO
(FUU Y COOKED 1 to B LB. AVO.)

LEG QUARTERS

BUFFET H A M

rise
- 'O il.

$1Jl!$3
I

TAc

TAc

EACH

LB.

ARROW

■

S U P IR B R A N D

^

a sso r t ed flavors

DETERGENT

4 9 -o z

CANS

ICE CREAM
HALF
GAL.

W -D BRANQ NIDI BASTED

ALL VARIETIES

16-ox.

•

W HITE GRAPES

W INGS

® ? ? P r a G R E E N UBEANS

BOX

SAVE 10* • ALL FLAVORS

SAVE SO* • WHITE f

CHEK DRINKS

ARRO W PLATES

*

CANTALOUPE

THREE J O I N T T U R K E Y

TH RIFTY M A ID

24-oi,
BTL.

HARVEST FRESH
SEEDLESS

\

&gt;

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PKO.

airrit
1.1 " i

PREMIUM GRADE

* G O V E R N M E N T IN S P E C T E D

TURKEY BREAST

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$ 2 2 9

T B rn fU T l

BEER

_ .

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PREMIUM ORADI FRESH
BRIASTQUARTIRS AND

P A B ST
BLUE R IB B O N

v^S

GROUND BEEF

69°

olG ATO RAD E

.

W -D B R A N D lOOfifc^
(10-LB. H A N D I- P A K )

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SUPIRBRAND
ASSORTED FLAVORS

u u n

SHRIMP DINNER

SWISS STYLE

or

I S T seafo o d pla tt er

YOGURT

$119 ...$129
9-ox.

8-ox.

PKG.

SIZE

M B.

CUP

l

IJ i

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34r.V :

- A V . T A W . . .V- 2

,£ .1 ?

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�</text>
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                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, August 19, 1981; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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                    <text>Seminole To
Fifteen persons employed In the stite
motor vehicle Inspection ( MVI) program
in Seminole County are to be notified that
their Jobs are being abolished.
In a work session Monday the Seminole
County Commission instructed County
Administrator Roger Nelswender to
notify employees of the county’s three
MVI stations the service will go out of
business Sept. X .
Two weeks ago Commission Chairman
Rob Sturm and Commissioners Robert
F e a th e r and S andra G lenn told
Nelswender to gather Information on the
possibility of the county continuing on a
six-month trial basis a voluntary MVI
program at the Sanlando Springs station.

MICHAELGRAY

However, Commissioners Bill Kirchhoff and Barbara Christensen, absent

Pink-Slip'15 MVI Emplo

'

from that m eeting, both voted “no"
Monday on the idea of any type MVI
program when the service is no longer
required by state law after Sept. 30.
Nelswender forced the issue Monday,
saying th e co m m issio n ers had an
obligation to the IS employ ees operating
the program to give them at least X days
notice U their Jobs were to be eliminated.
Nelswender said if the program were
going to be halted, the employees needed
time to seek new Jobs and the county
administration needed time to place as
many as possible in other positions.
"We would retain the most qualified If
you decide to keep one station open,” he
said.
The
co m m issio n e rs
agreed
unanimously to notify the employees that

their Jobs are being eliminated.
Mrs. Glenn said she would not want to
give the employees false hope that their
Jobs m ay continue. She also said since
the sta te did away with the program she
doesn’t w ant Seminole County taxpayer?
subsidizing it.
Sturm said earlier a movement existed
among Insurance companies to give
persons obtaining voluntary safety In­
spections a break in their insurance
rates He a i d Monday, however, the
company at which he is employed—
Sentry Insurance Co.—is applying for
permission to give a rebate to customers
for inspection costs.
He said the application being filed with
s ta te In su ra n ce C om m issioner Bill
G unter's office asks permission to refund

G ray Appointed

to Sentry's clients the
voluntary inspections.

The commissioners agreed to accept
proposals from persons wishing to lease
the three inspections stations at Sanford.
Casselberry and Sanlando. If the stations
are leased, the commissioners decided,
the leases would be for no m ore than two
years and m ajor alterations would not be
permitted.
Nelswender said this would give the
county the ability to go back into the MVI
business if the state should charge its
mind about the program .
Don Mattoon, director of the county's
MVI program, said m any persons, while
getting their vehicles inspected recently,
have said they would like to see the

Michael G ray, an associate in the
Sanford law firm of Cleveland and
Bridges for the past 1$ months, has
been appointed by Gov. Bob Graham
to the St. Johns River Water
M an ag em en t D istrict Board o(
Directors.
G ray, 33, a resident of Sanford since
his youth, is a graduate of the Cum­
berland Law School of Birmingham,
Ala. He has been actively Involved in
the G reater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce St. Johns River Task
Force. He and his wife, Mary Lynn*,
son, T yler, and daughter, Jessica,
make their home in Sanford.

Altamonte Residents Help

Stricken
Child Will
See Disney

Since his story first appeared in
newspapers, scores of donations have
flooded into bank accounts In Altamonte
Springs and St. Petersburg. A Winter
Park father of three has also offered to
contribute $4,000 if needed and to host the
Geringer family.
" I'v e got three kids of my own who I’ve
been very fortunate to have come up fine
and very healthy," said Solomon Schick,
a W inter P a rk financial consultant. " I
think each kid should be able to fulfill his
dream s ... this kid needs a break."
Scott Simmons, of the Sunshine City
Jaycees in St. Petersburg, said travel for
Franaie's family will be handled by the
Sunshine Foundation, a non-profit group
In P h ila d e lp h ia th a t specializes in
fulfilling the wishes of children In h a rd ­
ship cases.
Simmons M id Fransie, his parents, his
10-year-old brother Paul and a nurse will
probably nu ke the trip in October or
December.
itinerary will include
stop* a t Disney World, Sea World and St.
Petersburg in central Florida and m ay
swing out to Disneyland in California.

program continued on a voluntary basis.
He said a voluntary program would
cost the county about $44,000 annually
and five employees would be necessary.
Even though the inspection program is
to rem ain in effect until Sept. 30, Mattoon
said business at the Seminole stations
was off last week by 30-toJ7 percent. The
county still m ade a profit of $671 for the
week, however, he said.
Mattoon added he expects business this
week to be about 30 percent lower than
the sam e period last year, lie said he still
expects the county to make a small
profit.
"The final week in August can be ex­
pected to be very busy," he Mid. —
DONNA ESTES

Hospital Plan
Still Underway,
G roup A ssu res

To Water Board

With the help ol Altamonte Sprtnga
volunteers. Fransle Geringer, an 8-yearold South African boy suffering from
prem ature aging, will get to v isit
Pinocchld at Disney World after all
V o lu n tee rs in Altamonte S p rin g s,
Winter P a rk and St. Petersburg have
raised m ore than $3,000 to bring F ranaie
and his fam ily to the United States th is
fall
F rail and bald, Franaie has progeria, a
rare disease with an unknown cause th a t
ran age victim s 10 times faster than
normal.
Expected to live only to age II or 17, he
is considered a hopeless case. His father,
Herm an, M id last week he couldn't a f­
ford to bring Fransie from their home in
Orkney, South Africa, to see Pinocchio
and the other Disney characters.

cost of the

IT'S OFFICIALLY 'BUSH BOULEVARD'
C o u n ty E n g in e e r H ill H u s h p o s e s w ith h is
n a m e s a k e , "H ush H o u le s a r d , ” a t th e e n t r a n c e to
t h e c o u n ty 's s e r v i c e c o m p l e x a t F iv e P o i n t s in
s o u t h S a n fo rd . T h e e n t r a n c e d r i v e to th e c o m p l e x
w a s o ffic ia lly n a m e d d u r i n g c e r e m o n ie s M o n d a y
a f te r n o o n . T V S e m in o l e C o u n ty C o m m is s io n
v o te d r a r l i e r to n a m e t h e r o a d Husb H o u l e v a r d "
t o h o n o r t h e i r 2 0 - y e a r v e t e r a n e n g in e e r . F o u r of
t h e fiv e c o m m i s s i o n e r s — C h a ir m a n H ob S t u r m ,

xSstSi

H ill K irc h h o ff, S a n d r a t i l e n n a n d R o b e r t F e a t h e r
— p a r t i c i p a t e d in r ib b o n c u ttin g c e r e m o n i e s
M o n d a y to f o r m a l l y o p e n t h e r o a d . In a d d it i o n to
c o m m is s io n e r s a n d c o u n t ) s t a f f s p e c ia l g u e s t s a t
t h e c e r e m o n i e s i n c l u d e d : S t a te I t e p . R o b e r t
lla lta w a v , C ir c u it J u d g e K e n n e th L e f f le r .
Ix in g w o o d
M ayor Jo h n
l l r p p , O v ie d o A d ­
m i n i s t r a t o r H ill P i n c h a n d la n d d e v e l o p e r s H u sh
h a s w o rk e d w ith o v e r t h e y e a r s .

Casselberry Council Approves Rules
For N ew Senior Citizen Center
February. 1981 alter a 1971 census
By KATHY GRANT
determined a growing senior citizen
Herald Stall W riter
The Casselberry Senior Citizen Multi­ population and a need for a central
purpose Center was the sta r of the show location (or already-existing services for
a t the city council meeting Monday night. the elderly.
Ninety percent of the center’s $2.94
The council approved unanimously (our
nominations tor the c en ter's Board of million construction cost was provided
Directors and gave final approval o( 111 by a federal Housing and Rehabilitative
Services grant. Mid Casselberry's grant*
rules and regulations.
During the council work session, which coordinator 1-eona Cadenhead. The city
followed the regular m eeting, the council and Senwvole County paid (or the rest
diacussed the city's contract with two with matching funds
Casselberry assum ed $23,372 of the bill
social service groups - the Seminole
County Mental Health Center, iuc. and in cash and labor costa, while Seminole
the Federation of ths Senior Citizen Clubs County assum ed a cash match ot $12,300
Because ol the heavy federal financing
of Seminole, Inc. The two groups will
provide for severs) needs of the elderly at of the center, Casselberry is obligated to
the center. By moving Into the new meet federal obligations until the year
facility the groups will offer their ser­ 3001, Cadenhead Mid.
"In essence it’s a federal building,"
vices at one convenient location and meet
the H id. "A fter 20 y e a n the building is
federal guidelines.
Construction of the center began In turned over to the local government (of

Casselberry J."
P a rt of those federal obligations in­
clude an agreement to provide the
elderly with at least two social service
ag en c ie s. Thus, a ccording to the
proposal, the County Mental Health
Center, Inc. will rent out space In the
renter for no more than $90 a month (or
services provided during weekday? from
9 a m. to 2 p m.
And the Federation of Senior Citizen
O ubs of Seminole County, Inc., will rent
space (or no more than $60 per month to
provide meal programs, legal assistance
and employment services to Casselberry
and Seminole County residents aged 60 or
over. The county Seniors’ club will serve
the community during weekdays from
9 30 a.m . to 1:30 p.m.
Both services' contractual agreem ents
will be on the agenda lor council's Aug. 24
meeting.

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall W riter
Despite its pending acquisition by
Hospital Corp. of America, Hospital
Affiliates International will move ahead
with proposals to construct a $23 million,
130-bed hospital In Ixmgwood off State
Road 43$.
Jim Ryan, a development and planning
consultant and field representative for
Hospital AffiUates (HAD told Ixmgwood
city comm ission^* Monday night the
proposed "CalooH Medical Center"
would be built, if state approval la
granted.
Ryan Mid at this time HAI is still an
independent corporation. He Mid he was
told to proceed with the project in a
telephone conference with IIA1 and
Hospital Corp. of America (IICA) of­
ficials exrly Monday.
*‘HCA doesn’t feel th e proposed
Longwood hospital would be competing
with the HCA hospital In Sanford,” Ryan
HCA is currenUy constructing a $23
million, 226-bed hospital at U S. Highway
17-91 and Mangoustlne Ave. In Sanford.
While l/wgwood city commissioners
adopted a resolution some weeks ago
stating their position that a new medical
facility is both needed and desired in
Ixmgwood, they did not Monday night
specifically endorse the HAI proposal on
advice of City Attorney Marvin Rooks.
Rooks Mid II would be Improper for the
d ty to endorse a specific hospital unless
they gave public notice of their Intent.
"It Is not the d t y 'i b u sin eu to endorse
one pdvate enterprise over another,”
Rooks told the commission, "If you are
going to endorse one, put it on the agenda
and allow everyone to speak," he u ld .
Despite Rooks’ reservations. Mayor
John Hepp H id the commission at Its
meeting next Monday night will consider
endorsing Ihe HAI propaMl. "We will
extend an Invitation to anyone Interested
to come before us," Hepp Mid.
Commissioner J.R . G rant Mid that he
personally Is not interested In seeing
F lorida H ospltal-A ltam onte receive
permission from the state to build s 30bed addition rath er than the new HAI
ladllty being built in Longwood.
"The distance from here to Altamonte
la further than it waa a few y e a n ago,”
Grant Mid.
Grant explained that ti became traffic
problems on State Road 436, where
Florida Hospital la located, a rt severe.
He u l d it would be better (or longwood
citizens to have a hospital In their own
camnuir.tty.
C om .niulonen Tim O'Leary, June

lo rm a n n and Stev en Uskert also voiced
their so p p trt of a hospital for longwood
and the Hospital Affll'ates proposal
appeared to be iheir favorite.
Meanwhile, City Administrator David
Chacey h ts posted on the d ty hall
bulletin board an open letter to the
citizens of l/xigwood urging them to be
present at a public hearing scheduled by
the Health Systems Agency of East
Central Florida (HSA-ECFl for 7 p.m.,
Sept. 2 a t Lyman High School The USA is
part of a nationwide network of health
advisory groups.
“ If possible, please attend this public
hearing and also inform your neighbors
and m em bers ol your association ol Ihe
public hearing to you can all keep in­
formed on the progress of the hospital,"
C haccy'i letter Mys.
At the public hearing before the USA,
not only will ihe application of HAI for a
hospital to Izmgwood be considered |pit
also a n a p p lic atio n from H ospital
M anagement Aasodales to construct a
100-bed hospital which will include
psychiatric beds and also be located to
i/mgwood will be considered. On the
agenda for that meeting as well will be
Florida Hospital's request for a 30Jwd
addition
The USA m akes its recommendation
on new hospitals and additions to the
slate Office of Community Medical
F a c ilitie s, w hich m akes Ihe final
decision.
HAI several months ago announced tta
intention to Ihe Longwood City Com­
mission to build the hospital within the
city. Ryan, a s representative of HAI told
the commissioners the medical center
would be a three-story structure built on
26.1 acres on the north side of SR 434
a d jic en t to West la k e Avenue. He Mid
the facility would have 117,000 square
feet. He Mid in the hospital's first year of
operation it would employ 211 persons,
most of whom would be from the local
area.
Ryan Mid the hospital would include
24-hour emergency services, in-patient
medical-surgical care with 126 beds;
intensive care with six beds; intensive
cardiac care with six beds; obstetrical
care with 12 beds and newborn nursery
with 14 bassinets.
Services a t the hospital would be
enhanced by the intended HCA
acquisition of HAI, Ryan Mid.
The combined corporations will be the
largest operator of hospitals to the
world, Ryan u ld .
"In the hospital Industry, It will be
comparable to IBM to the computer
industry," he u id .

TODAY
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CAR
RECOVERED

k

Larry Monti, Sanford Pallet
diver, (left ptostal waits for
erase to botil up car be
Ise a te d Id L ake M sirse
M onday. S e m la sle C tualy
sh e riffs deputy Gleaa Trom­
bley pilots boat. Minutes later
| right phots) Ihe Dodge Omul
is pulled out t t the drink. The
driv es by Beverly Seekof Sanford, swerved Into
the lak e about 2 a m Maw
day. She waa treated far
e x te n siv e fa c ia l cats at
Seminole M em orial Hospital
and released the same day.

a

School Bus Schedules,
Pages 2A-3A

Metals f M*a* *» Taw Viaeeol

■i

e-«e

•

-

________

U

______i i ?
------------ A -

• v %

1

r» * r

;a r
J

;

�l/L -E v an ln q HaraM, Sanford, PI.

T u n ., Aug. II, 1M1

Fall Bus
Schedules
For Seminole
Schools

W O R LD
IN BRIEF
Poland's Produce Merchants
Announce Nationwide Strike
WARSAW, Poland (U P !) — L r a than 30 hours
before the Soviet bloc’a first threatened national
newspaper strike. Poland s fruit and vegetable m er­
chants announced their own nationwide shutdown
today.
In the sudden announcement Monday night, the
private vendors said they were closing their stalls
across the country Tuesday to protest government
pricing policies.
The vendors said they a re being forced to sell their
products below what it costs them to buy from farm ers
a t wholesale prices. By law, private merchants have
price ceilings on all their products.
The most they can dem and for apples, for example,
Is i t cents per pound, but the average wholesale price
from the farm ers Is 69 cents per pound.
Uniformed miltlamen patrol the market places
dally to enforce the law. Violators can be sentenced to
five years in prison.

Here a n but schedules for some
Seminole County tchoolt. Remaining
scbedulet will be published In the
Herald at soon as available.

TEAGUE MIDDLE SCHOOL
?Im i

PLENTY
OF PENNIES

OPEC Oil Ministers Bargain
GENEVA, S w itzerlan d (U P I) - OPEC oil
m inisters privately bargained today to establish one
bate price for oil, but two m ajor producers publicly
vowed not to cut Uvelr prices to the level apparently
wanted by Saudi Arabia In the face of a glutted market.
Both Saudi Arabia, which has kept production high to
force down prices, and Libya, which has last customers
through Its high prices, predicted Mcndsy there would
be agreement to unify prices. Industi7 observers
predicted the new benchm ark price would drop to $34
from the present tM p e r legation barrel.
But both Venezuela a n d Indonesia said they have no
Intention of reducing their charges of |t t , saying
customers are willing to pay extra for tellable supplies
and stable long-term prices.

Wave Sweeps Away Scouts
RONG KONG (U PI)—A mammoth wave crashed
onto a remote beach, engulfed seven Boy Scouts on a
camping trip and swept them out to sea, police said
Tuesday.
They said the freak w ave drowned one 17-year-old
and two other scouts a re m issing and presumed dead.
The campers were with the 7th Hong Kong Scout
Group and were on a n outing to Tai Mong Tsai, a
remote beach in the New Territories where they were
watching IMoot waves pound Ihe beach when the giant
wave cam e up.
Rescuers llahed out tour of the youths and one body,
but abandoned the search for the other two.
“There Is almost no likelihood that they i r e still
alive. We presume they a re dead," a police spokesman

A* part of S a n f o r d 's r e c e n t "N ickel D a y s " F l a g s h i p Rank o f S e m in o le
o f f e r e d to p a y 55 c e n t s f o r e v e r y 5 0 -c e n t r o l l o f p e n n ie s t u r n e d i n . T h e
r e s p o n s e w a s so g o o d t h a t F l a g s h i p Is e x te n d i n g I h e o f f e r lo th e e n d o f
A u g u s t. A ll F l a g i h i p o f f ic e s in ( h e c o u n ty w ill c o n ti n u e to pay a p r e m i u m f o r
p e n n ie s if th e y a r e p r o p e r l y r o l le d . A b o v e , F l a g s h i p t e l l e r s J o y c e W ilso n ,
l e f t , a n d C a r o ly n M o o re , d i s p l a y s o m e o f t h e m a n y r o lls of " c o p p e r s "
r e c e iv e d .

He Loved The Gam bling Tables
But 'Lady Luck' W as Against Him
FRESNO, Calif. (U PI) - John Birges
S r., a natty dresser with an eye for the
ladies, loved the gambling action of the
l,ake Tahoe cast not but seldom was a
winner. Re was the sort of gam bler the
casinos Ukcd to see.
Birges, 59, also enjoyed tinkering In hit
home workshop and often boasted about
his knowledge of explosives. In that
workshop, the FBI said, he rigged a
bomb with which he hoped to extort (3
million from Harvey's Wagon Wheel —
one o( his preferred gambling spots in
Stateline, Nev.
He was arrested and charged with
masterminding the 1M0 plot, which
ended with Ihe bomb exploding In the
hotel a s police tried to defuse it. There
were no Injuries and no money changed
hands.
Birges was arraigned Monday and
charged, with three other people, with
commercial extortion and conspiracy.
His band was set at $3 million.
H it sons re p o rte d ly furnished
authorities with details of the extortion
plan that led to Birgea' arrest.
Birges, with gray sideburns and an
knack for telling intriguing stories about

his life, was known to have hired planes
(our or five times a month to (1y to
Harvey’s or H arrah's.
From Ihe standpoint of the casinos,
Birges was a "good player" — he lost,
said Harvey's Manager Lee Francovich.
"He dropped a bundle," Mid Mfnden
County, Nev., District Attorney Mike
Rowe. “He w as a player and apparently
a very unsuccessful one.”
Asked whether B lrgta plotted Harvey's
extortion to get revenge on the casino.
FBI Agent Joseph Yablonsky H id: "I'm
not a clinical psychologist. All I have to
go on is * U million ransom note."
Birges and his wife, Elisabeth, came to
America in 1167 as Hungarian refugees.
Re was later lo regale acquaintances
with stories about his career as a Luft­
waffe pilot for the N ails In World War II
and serving Ume In a Russian Labor
camp In Siberia. He alio said he served
UiS. intelligence agencies in Austria
after the w ar — a claim FBI agents say
they know nothing about.
When he settled in the Fresno area in
the 1960s, Birges began a landscaping
and sprinkler business. He won contracts
for local schools, (he federal building and
Ireewar shoulders He was a hard

worker and m ade money.
In 1972, he bought the Villa Basque, a
popular resisurant. At this tim e he
turned his attention lo gambling and
business a t the villa began lo slip.
Friends said he enjoyed sitting a t the
bar with a woman on each arm.
Ilia landscaping business folded in 1974
— the u m e tim e he was divorced from
Elisabeth.
His wife was found dead In a field in
July 1976. A coroner's report said she
died of a self-ingested overdose o( alcohol
and Valium, a tranquilizer. Deputies said
she had twice before she tried suicide.
In 1971, the Villa Basque was ruined by
an a n o n fire. I j r r y Krogen. an In­
v e stig a to r for the Mid-Valley F ire
Departm ent, said Birges was considered
a prim e suspect for the blaze from the
start — despite hia alibi he was gambling
at Harvey’s at the time.
Krogen said he did not have enough
evidence to bring criminal charges
against Birgea and he tried un­
su ccessfu lly lo block an Insurance
payment lo him. The Investigator said
Ihe payment waa "well In excess" of
1100.000.

South Dade County Hit

NATION

Dennis Brings Torrential Rains;
Dozens Evacuate Their Homes

IN BRIEF
U.S. To Resume Shipments
O f Warplanes To Israel
LOS ANGELES (U P I) - Having decided to end a
two-month embargo prom pted by Israeli air strikes
against Iraq and lebanon, the Reagan administration
Intends to resume shipm ents of warplanes to Israel
" a t the earliest possible m om ent."
Secretary of Slate Alexander
President Reagan’s decision to
Monday alter the president m et
Security Council in a Los Angeles

Italg announced
UR the embargo
with his National
hotel suite.

The planes will be deUvered without an official
finding on whether Israel violated terms of an
agreem ent governing IU use of American weaponry,
Haig Mid
Reagan first suspended deliveries of F -lt lighterbombers to Israel after Israel used such planes in its
June 7 raid on Ihe Osrlak nuclear reactor near Bagh­
dad, Iraq.

Weapons Decision Expected
LOS ANGELES (U P I) - President Reagan la
nearing several key decisions that will shape Ihe
country's strategic nuclear forces for decades lo come,
and s top aide u y i coat will not be a limiting factor.
White Houst counselor Edwin Mecse said Reagan
will announce verdicts within three to five weeks on
basing of the MX m issile system , the B-l manned
bom ber and other highly advanced strategic systems.
"The strategic decisions will be based upon Ihe
strategic needs of our defense capabilities and not upon
fiscal decisions," Meese told reporters Monday.
“Obviously, fiscal decision a re not totally precluded
but they will not be the driving force," tie said.

E v r n in g lle n U d

iu im

«««»

Tuesday, Au*uet i t itg l-V o i. 71. No. 30*
Pehhthed Dee* m e
«&gt;&lt;sa&lt; Sahwdey »t Tte Iu
Hereto. m s , M S . Fresco * » s . lenient. Fie. a m .
leti»o c u n Fed*#* Few ai l » V t Fiends u m
-

m

MIAMI (UPI) - Tropical itorm
Dennis had dumped more than 16 Inches
of rain on south Dade County early
Tuesday, forcing dozens of people lo
evacuate their homes and apartm ents
and putting rich farm lands under three
feet of water.
An evacuation center w as opened at
the Sacred Heart Church In Homestead,
a south Miami suburb, shortly a lte r dawn
and Red Cross workers said people were
stream ing in to escape the rising water.

“We've got 10 people here now and
we've got calls from IS more people,"
Mid Mias Agnes War hurst, Red Cross
coordinator a t the church. “Some people
In an apartm ent complex have called
Hying their rooms a re flooded. We've
sent people to pick them up."
Parts of um Redlands, a rich
agriculural area of sprawling (arm s west
of Miami, was under leverat leet of
water and aome people were leaving
their (arm s for refuge on higher ground.

"W e've got volunteers In (our-wheel
drive vehicles going out there now,” Miss
W arhurst H id. "Some people don't want
to leave. They Just want ua to help them
pump their water out."
By 10 a.m . Tuesday, U .l inches of rain
had fallen in Weal Kendall and 16.36 in
Homestead, both zubur ban communities
south of MlamL The storm had pumme led Miami and Miami Beach with 3.6
inches.

AREA DEATHS

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S w ill

MRS. EVA CADY
Mrs. Eva Cady. 90, of 400 S.
H aw thorne C ircle, W inter
S prings, died Sunday a t
Lucerne General Hospital.
M rs Cady was boro March
23.1191 al Herkimer, N.Y. and
moved to Winter Springs from
DanzvlUe, N.Y. in 1979. SI*
w as a seamstress and a
Protestant.
Survivors indude a brother,
Arthur Downs, Amsterdam,
N.Y.f two grandchildren and
live great-grandchildren.

Winter Park F untral Home
is In charge of arrangements.
MR.
MYRON
ISAAC
KFJJSEY
Mr. Myron Isaac Kelsey, 00,
of 136 Sprlngwood T ra il,
Maitland, died Sunday at
Florida Hospital South in
Orlando.
Mr. Kelsey waa born In
Wellington, Ohio, S e p t 20,
1100 and moved to Maitland
from Bradenton In I960. He
w as an e ld a r (or Ihe
Reorganized Church of Jesus

WEATHER
AREA READINGS ( I a.m .): tem perature: 77; overnight
tow: 71; Monday's high: ■ ; barometric pressure: 21.71;
relative humidity: 13 percent; winds: northeast at 12 mph.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: high* 10:64
■ A , 10:12 p.m ..; lows, 6:03 a.m ., 9:10 p m ; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, ! 0 : « ■ m.. 10:40 p m ; tows, 1:64 a m ,
6:10 p m RAYFORT: highs, 3:22 a m , 3:30 p m ; Iowa, 0:«3
a m , 11:06 p m
BOATING TO RECAST: S t Augustine ta Joptter Islet, Out
SO Miles: Small craft should stay In port south of Panes da
Leon and not venture (or from poll elsewhere. Gale warnings
In tffect from Ponca de Lean Inlet southward. Shifting winds 30
to 60 knoli south part aod stronger In aquaUs sod 13 to 10 knots
rem ainder c&lt; area today with soma Increase possible knight
and Wednesday. Seas up to 13 feet in ( t i e a rts . Thunderstorms
and squads south. Scattered thunderstorm* north.
AREA FORECAST: Cloudy tonight through Wednesday
with some periods of rain and scattered thunderstorms. Right
In the upper IQs. I a n In the 70s. Wind easterly naar 16 m ph but
stronger near thunderstorm s. Rain probability 70 percent
today, 41 percent tonight and 70 percent Tutedsy.

Christ of latter-d ay Saints.
Survivors Include hit wife,
A lice; d a u g h te r!,
M rs.
C harlotte
K.
Downing,
M aitland, Mrs. Ja c q u ely n
C hapm an, Independence,
Mo.; 13 grandchildren; one
groet-grindchild.
Baldwln-Falrchiid Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangem ents.
MK&amp; MINNIE E .H E T T S
Mrs. Minnie E. Melts, 64, o&lt;
1401 Celery Are., Sanford,
died this morning (Tuesday)
at a Sanford nursing home.
Mrs. Metis was born In
Pearson, Ga., Dec. 29, 1091
and moved to Sanford 66
y a a rs
ago
from
bar
hom etow n. She w aa a
m em ber of the Lake Monroe
Baptist Church.
S urvivors include th ree
daughters, Mrs. E thel Matter,
of Osteen, Mrs. Evelyn Woods
of Tucson, Aril., Mrs. WsnneU Ray bun of High Point,
N.C.; ant ton, Morris Metis,
of L ske M onroe; th ree
b ro lh e ri, D sn M o rris of
Georgia; two lis te n , Mrs.
Vera Metis, of Orlando, Mrs.
Mamie Bryant, of Ft. Pierce,
F la .; 11 grandchildren; lour
K nat-gnnddteldren.
Briaaon Funeral (tome of
S aniord la la c h a rg e of
arrangements.

MRS, MARIE GRIMALDI
Mra. Maria Grimaldi, 17, of
1034 Weathered Wood Circle,
Winter Springs, died Sunday
a t Shands H oiplta! in
Gainesville.
Mra. Grimaldi w as born
Aug. 9,1914 at Brooklyn, N.Y„
and moved to Winter Springs
from Long Island, N.Y., In
1977. She was a m ember of (he
A n n u n c ia tio n C a th o lic
Church.
S urvivors Include h e r
husband,
Vincent
J.
G rim ald i; two d a u g h te rs,
M rs. Ann M arla E u se p l,
A ltam onte S prings, M rs.
Isab el V a in e r, Longwood;
son, John, Long Island; tig h t
grandchildren.
Scmoran Funeral Home,
A ltam onte S prings, la In
charge of arrangements.

F u n r o l Notlcw
M in t. m s i . m in n ib b . Funersl service* tor M n
Minnie S. Mem. u el 1«l
Celery Ave . tenters. whe died
Tinhut w*ii he et 1 p.m.
Thunder at ihe Brueen Fimerei
Home, m Laurel Are.. Senior d.
with Rev Lm King, setter et me
r im Un. led Methodnl Clurch,
ell ic idling
Burial Will he In Get Venn
Memorial Pert, hr men Funeral
Heme It in charge al

I il
( 44
• 41
Si
1-11
a 51
• U

TreUwesd (West) -Oaklead HItls-Oreen Acre Campground
Balsa Dr . A Fir Ct........................
. J:)l
Arlene tl AOrlando Terr (Turnarawd)
in
SR HI el Graen Acres Campgrounds
] It
MiiirlewOr. A entente Way
............ ....... .... j n
EnclnoWay AOaklandoDr.......................................
I ll
Oak lends Dr A Acapulco Way
1.11
Bet lie

1:45
1 4)
a 41
• 4*
1 «
1 »

Bet Aire Alta memo Tre lin e d ( ta il I

Weathers Held Ave. AOukeAee ..................................
1 41
Weetherslield Ava. A Her lord Dr
. .. 1 al
Hanford Dr. A Northwestern Aye.....................
Northwestern Ate South o« Menogeny Ln
il*
Northwestern Aee A Treltwood D r.. . ,,
1)5
Bene Dr A Yew Cl..................................
.. ) IT

...l:d

RED B U G ElEMENTARY
Bw III
Feresl Creel • Steer Tree
II Allen Rd ACord Wey
U Alton Rd AMockingbird L n ........
11 Shore Rd A Pearl Rd
................
IT Pearl Rd A Hayes R d .........................
•Travel le school yip SR da. |R eft A TuskSwille Rd)
—• Ramp)
Ret 111
^
_
Tko RewchleMl IHermi
CMphMRd Just on Hayes Rd
Tides Or AMerlin R d ............
Se.iMheo A H trtt Ro
Hayes Rd A Stoner Rd ........
Bahama Rd A H aiti Rd (W)
No 111 Rename Rd
...................

P.M
....... 1:1
........ 1.9
11
...... IS
(Bed Bin

Obi ti t *................ ............... 1
The Beetklaeat U ke Dr
Bed Rd JI Dunmar Estates H P S P B M P *&gt;i V
........... • - *
No 11 Morten Ln
............
J:
Williams Rd A Sunrise Are *'*** ‘ **A' » *.**■»eeeee•a*•**. )
Sunrise Ave A Morten Ln
........ .................. \
Ne i ll TredrwtndeOr
No HI TredewmdsOr
Ne Tit Trede winds Dr
e
.
.
.
).
Cdgemen Are A Jackson Clr IW&gt;
• •ettifeeeeeteee,|iil 3
Lake Dr A F Nr Ida Rd
. _____
(Cdattemcd (to P a g t 3A)

�Evening H o n Id. Soniord, FL

T uts.. Aug. II. 1TII-1A

...Bus Schedules
RED BUG ELEMENTARY
(Contianrd From Page !A |
I 70 Loko Or B L BM Low
I n E L U i Or B Ctnltf Or
111 ho 4SSIE Lok* Dr lot Curvol
Rk ) Bug Rood Romp)
I n 1M
RM Bog |E t u i . Miklor R l SR-470. D oor R«
T oU omiio R l (SoatRl
• 01 R td6ugR datM .lbo&lt;N o 1771 (Approi •• milm
W ntotSR 47*1
I 01 Miklor ROB "O lllf V S'op
• w w.tior R d B ’ ScoOo’ Slop
jo g
l «
Miklor R dB "VonWormor'i" Stop
111
III
SR 47*B Eoglo PaitRd
111
I I I SR 470B lit HoutoonngMpotlMiklor Rd
lapproi 10 0 ra il
I II WottonSl B South St I Jomntown)
IM
1:1* SR Oil B ’’SowyorT’ Slop (ikpproo onolifin mllo
Poll Socurlty Avoon Right)
j pg
•
Doon Rd B Carotin* SI ITurnoround)
j ;|)
111 OoonRdB Dirt RoodonigM lull South ol SR470
).))
111 SR 47* B Starwood Dr (Alom oAcm )
J:I4
l : n SR 41* B Whit* Homo on io«» lull botart
Tuikan ila PrnbriirianChurch
j II
I IS T uikowllia Rd at Maiipoi No IISonRlght
1 ||
(Rod Bug Road Rampl
I n II*
SR ait Tnkaortlla R d IN arM l. Oak F a rm
I IS SR 41* B "Wood1*- Slop lApproi 700 yard*
ooitotinttnoction with SR 4141
j gr
I I * SR 411B t a il Drtvowoy on loft baton Wognor Cur vo
10*
I II SR 411B nad Mailboy on Lafl botaro TuikatvillaRd
104
• I* TutkowilloRd Juitb*tor*” H&gt;ghFlovorM*ott’&lt;
] 0)
• 10 Tutkowillo RdB TutkowiMo Stobiot
] I)
in
Oak F o r m Dr B Form Co I SI
J M
I I * Sapling Or BChokorhorry Dr
111
I H Chokothorry Dr B Oak Fornt Dr
I 14
IRtd Bug Road Rampl
■n l t l
Tatkawilla Rd I SaotRI ■lia r Oylloy Rd ■Dadd Rd ISoolhl
DIR* Hd UN*III
I M Tuikowtllo Rd B M&gt;ily iNay
j ij
1:11 Tuikawllla Rd B Gabrlollt Ln
} ||
114 B*ar Gulloy Rd B "Johnten'o” Stop
j o*
1:11 Dodd Rd B Traitor Park on Right allyr
turning oil Howoll Branch Rd
] 01
I II O oddR dB"Jarr*tlvS loponL»fl
] |4
I I* Altar Dr B Shaila Cl (Cordon lako E tiaioi)
7 n
171 Ailar Or B Cardan Lakagivd
7 11
114 Oiko Rd B Yotlow Maiiboa No Id (North o* Howoll Eitalail 111
IT * Oika RdB Tan MouioonLalt lull botoro Dodd Rd
Id ]
(School Rampl
m ill
Diko Rdl l a i l l Oadd RdlNanhl •Howoll Cov* Svttor’i Mill
B Btktlfy
a r i i l i . it ••
uU bw .II* Rd ft
"lion
Stop
I: IS TTulkao.lla
3 Of
1 U T uvIib « 4II« Rd ft
Rd
3 Of
1:1? Oik# Rd ft Br*ck HoMMonleff
3.1?
• H D'k# Rdft Whift HovMOh R»q M
3 Of
li lt Dk* Rd ft Cheryl Dr
i n Dodd Rd ft Lett Movteoff R -gM before Bf dge
3n
•: * Mer tvkie Dr ft Deerfield Run (Howell Cove)
1 S)
i n Medford Rd ft Jerkho Dr
MS
$ 2f Medford Rdft Seefood Ln
7 Sf
M l Red Bug Rd ft Suffer*t Mill Dr
3M
(School Romp)
Bo* III
SvkrlitHomoi PraokiLn
M S Ay*nu* Dol Sol B V .d r &lt;j no »
i so
1:15 A.m u*OolSotB Ponttd*Lron Blvd
is*
1:1* Brookt LnB HI Driyowoyon Lttt South or D M Bug RO
3 tl
* n Brook* Ln ft (Inck Mom800 Left
3 0)
M l Brookt Ln B OoubK R Ln
3 Q4
1 77 Brook!LnB BrucoLn
3 OS
1 1) Brook! Ln B Gobri.lt* Ln
3 Of
1 2S G obrl.il. Ln B Cooor Cl
3 0?
(School R*mpl
But 111
T.tkoutll* H im .i ( St.th 1
• 14 Citrut Rd ft
Slop
1 *4
I I ? Citrui R dB Sh.ll.nd A «.
1 07
1 19 Shotl.nd A y. B Dyion Dr
3 01
* n Dyvon Dr ft Pinto Ct
3 00
Dyion Dr B Morgan SI
in
1 It
* i) Dyion Dr B Howoll Crook Dr
1:5?
114 Dyion Dr B Block Acrotr (E l
3 Sf
• ii Dyion Or B Dov* Ln
1 ss
• H Devon Dr ft •leek Acre Tr iw&gt;
1:54
(School Rim pl
•in III
Tir6ki will* H im n ( S« m?M
• U NortK'rn Way ft Mer cut Cf
3 03
• 30 Antelope Tr ft Wolverine Tr
1 If
3 S?
S 71 Wotyortno Tr B Ooor Run
M 4 Otcotot T r B Gator Ln
3 Sf
(School Romp)
But IIS
Totkowtllo Homo* IW n ll
I IF Door RunBLopkrp Tr
101
• 70 Door Run B G o n llo Tr
IT *
S O Howoll Crook Of B O iti'o tTr
. ..
ill
I 14 OKoiot Tr B Elk Cl
1 S*
• 71 Ooor Run B Oktoo Ln
111
(School Romp)
Rot 111
TnkowtHo Homoo (Contrail
I I* Wlnlor Spr irgt Bird S kugutlo Not kmol tlv*
101
lit
Tu*cor*DrBNorln*fhW»v
IS*
1 11 Northorn Way B Oo«r Run
11*
(77 Northorn Way B TorpcnOf It)
17*
111 North«mW»yBF*ftrlOB*Clf IS) .
1 SI
I IS Arabian Ay* B Pony Ct
7 S*
(School Romp)
■ m il*
Tolko.HI* Horn*. | N*rth)
1)1 No 111) Wmt*f Sprlnpi Rlyd
III
• H Chootoh Tr B logvor Cl
I U
I I* Cho*tohTrBNorthornWoy ....
IM
IT* TrotwoodliydBSybihm adCIrlE)
. ...
7 00
(School Romp)

Plain pockets-jeans.
The big difference
between u s and them
is the pocket
and the price!
Reg. 13.50. Plain Pockets* jeans sport the
same great fit. fabric and styling as the big
best seller. These terrific western style jeans
are of tough indigo polyester/cotton Denim
Extra.'* For great strength, little shrinkage
and wrinkling Assorted leg styles in
men s sizes
Corduroy Reg 15 00 Now 11.99

Plain Pockets'shirt.
Reg. $15. For le ss money, you get the same
great style, fit and fabric as the famous
name. But nothing on the pocket! Take a look
at these handsome plaid shirts. He'll love the
rugged western styling and the comfort of
woven polyester/cotton. Choose regular or
tapered fit. MenS size s.

sale 11.99 to 14.40
U . S A Olym pics: Everything yo u want in an athletic shoe. A n d great savings, tool

GENEVA E1EM EN7ARY SCHOOL
•«* ti«
Oowo.a Sh.m o-Oonoi* (Wtatl
Tl m .
t.JJ
7 71
7:10
7 11
i n
7 7*
7 7*
| 47
I a
7 44
7 47
1ST
7 17
7.SI
7 71
7 IS
7 it

t-V
I.1B
7 7*
7 40
!:* l
7 47
I 47
7 *4
I a*
1 a*
j.a*
&gt;»
t S3
7:13
7 71
1:14
in
1:1*
I P
!:M
1:1*
1:41
1:41
1 41
141
1 aa
1 as
l a*
147
I aa
111

J S'
7 17

I U
7 Si

/

Can*** Elomanlary School
SR— 4* at Noioron* Church
Cochran Rd *• "BoUng’f Slop
Cochran Rd at "Horborl'i" Slop
Cochran Rd at ’’Stoko’*” H op
Cochran R* at "Cochran*” Stop
SR a* B Rldga Rd
SR— 4* at ’'Rotunda'*" Stop
SR— ** at ’’Ro o v o t ’ Stag
1R-4* at “ Blochard*” Slop
Old Otcaoia Rd B Ruuatl * Coy*
(Waal o* Mull** Lakt Park Rdl
SR 4* B Swamp lano
SR— 4* at 'CotumauV “ Stop
SR— 4* at "ProtootyV Slap
Irn I II
Oaoaoa Shvttto-©*#*** ISoathwtti)
G*n«ya Elamantary School
OKI Otcaoia Rd B Sawmill Rd
Otd Otcaoia Rd at Cadar Traaa
Otd Otcaoia Rd at "Ha*dan,i ' ’ Slop
Otd Otcaoio Rd at "Catdan't” Stop
Otd Otcaoia Rd at "Waliacot" Stop
Old Otcaoia Rd at "Phmtp’V Slap
Old Otcaoia Rd at "Thompaaaft" Stop
Old Otcaoia Rd al "Drtgpor'a" UoP
OM Otcaoia Rd at "Sumptact" Stop
Old Otcaoia Rd at "Kattht" Stop
Mutlat Laky Park Rd a* " V a ta 'f Step
Mutlat Laka Park Rd B Parch Rd
Mutlat Laka Park Rd B la w Bird
Mutlat Laka Park Rd al Cadar Dr
Mutlat Laka Park Rd B Shady Ln
■at 1*7
Oaaaya I Caotral B NarTkaatl I
Oanava Elamantary School
Laka Ganava Rd al ” C l4 rk l" Comor
Laka Gan*. * Rd at Cadar Tra*
Laka Ganara Rd at "ChUdarf* Stop
Laka Ganava Rd al "Oatgar’t " Slop
Laka Ganava Rd al •'Burk*'*" stop
Laka Ganava Rd al "Pltaidtlon'i" Stop
Itt SI B Ganava Mrightt Rd
Ganava tt*t*htt Rd B Old Ganava Rd
Old Oanava Rd al "Mekong Wo" Stop
Otcaoia Rd al ’ Parttnt" Stop
Otcaoia Rd a t " * " Rood
Otcaoia Rd at ' Gatin t ■ Stop
Otcaota Rd B "C" Roaa
Oocaot* Rd at ' y a a to f Stop
Otcaol* Rd *1 Samtnol* County Gun Ran**
Otcoola Rd B 7 1th Camp Rd
Otcaoia Rd
"Diamond - F Ranch"
Otcaota Rd al "Tatum-r
Otcaota Rd at “ E h e y V Stop
Otcaoia Rd al Fattura Gata
Otcaota Rd al "Cr*ot'*’’ Stop

sale 1279

sa le 11.99

SA. Rag 16.99. U S A O lym pic*"
hi-cui basketball gho* C olton
canvas upp*rs. vinyl p a d d ed cottar
Terry lined cusbiondd insole
with arch support Boy*' s u e s
Men's su es. Reg 16 99 Set# 1169

68. Reg. 14.99. U S A Olympics'*
lo-cut basketball shoe All the lec­
ture* o l ht-top model Padded vinyl
collar Terry lined insole Cotton
canvas u p p ers And more1Boys' s u m
Me n ’s t l i M . Reg IS 99 la te 12.79

S d i e I 4 .4 U
SC. Reg. t i l . U S A Olym pics'*
nylon/suede lo g g ers Vinyl padded
collar, sponge ru b b er c u sh io n ed
insole and arch su p p o rt R ubber
outtole Women's s u e s

sale 1199

sa le 15.99

sale 15.99

sa le 15.99

IE . Reg. 111. Spilt a u ad a S u n b e c k tr"
with cushiony K raton* bottom s
IHcot luted c u sh io n ed m nertoi#
Boys' su e s Youth s u e s ,
Reg 111 le i* 1 1 9 8

I F . R d f. $20. Sm ooth leather
S u n b e c k e r" with padded loam vinyl
cottar. B oys' sizes.

IO . Reg. $21. S m o o th toather step-in
with kicky kilt C o m p o sitio n bot­
toms. Qlrls' s u e s
Girts' leather oxford
Reg $21 la id 11.99

IH . Reg. $20. Athletic style o xlord in
s i e d e d leather on Kralon* bo tto m
C o n trast stitching Girls' Bizet

Youth s su e s. Reg 123 ta le 17.99

OPEN is a .m f p .m .
MGR. THRU SAT.
$UN. tliM -li^t

SANFORD PLAZA

m

1

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s * • •

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;&lt;t.i
j*

'*

• •

-V ;

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■• I
**5

SD. Reg. 111. U S A Olympics'*
n y lo n /su e d e loggers wilh m esh
q u a rte r m sa rtt. Vinyl padded collar,
p a d d e d nylon tongue Cushioned in­
so le with e tc h suppoit Molded
ru b b er outeraoie M ens end b oys' s u e s .

■
*

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■,

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.

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5. •

�Evening Herald
IU JP S « I &gt; R I

MON FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD, FI A . 32771
Area Code 30M22-26U or *31-9993

Tuesday. August 10, 1991—4A
W ayne 0 Doyle. PubllsU f
Thoms* Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, II 00; Month, M S ; 0 Months. *24 00;
Year, MV00. By Mail: Week. S1.25; Month, $5 15; 0 Months.
0 0 00; Year. $57,00. ___________________________________

Hunger In
Thin! World
The annual report of the World Bank, jast off
the press, offers two possible scenarios for how
llie poorer countries of the world may fare In (he
coming decade. Neither is very encouraging.
Under the more optim istic
high-case"
projection of economic trends, the number of
people living in extreme poverty could fall from
today's 750 million to about 630 million by 1990.
Hunger would still be stalking much of the Third
World.
Under the more pessim istic
low-case"
projection, the number in the depths of poverty
would actually rise to B50 million. And in cither
case, the World Bank secs only a widening gap
between living standards in the richest and the
poorest nations.
What actually happens will depend on a host of
variables - from the way developing countries
handle their own social and economic problems,
to the economic performance of the industrialized
nations that provide the trade, investment
development loans and other aid on which the
Third World must rely.
An important variable Is what happens to the
World Bank itself as a source of credit for the
have-not countries. The latest annual report is the
last to be signed by Hobcrt W. McNamara, who
has been president of the World Bank for 134
years. He was succeeded on July 1 by A. W.
Clausen, the former president of the Bank of
America — an appointment made late last year
by the departing President Carter with the in­
formal approval of President-elect Hcagan.
Thu economic future of many Third World
countries will be affected by the direction taken
by the World Bank under Mr. Hausen. The
assumption is that this veteran banker from
California will pursue a less ambitious lending
|x&gt;licy than the one pursued by Mr. McNamara in
an era which saw a steep rise in the bank’s out­
standing loans.
The assumption comes not only from Mr.
Clausen's record us a cautious financier but from
skepticism within the tteagun administration and
in Congress toward the effectiveness of the U.S.
aid being channeled through the World Bank. The
United Slutes provides about 20 percent of the
funds for the bank, which has been making
development loans at the rate of $12 billion a year.
Mr. Clausen stoutly defends the World Bank as
an institution, but has not revealed how he would
avert the kind of criticism that was heard
frequently during the McNamara years. Under
Mr McNamara the bank often was accused of
Iwlng lax in assuring that its loans went into wellmanaged projects.
At a time when domestic spending programs
are being cut back, it Is all (he harder to convince
the American taxpayer that appropriations for
the World Bank and other items of foreign
economic aid are justified. This does not alter the
fact that our own national interests are served
when impoverished Third World countries make
economic progress and become more active
trading partners with the United States.
Mr. Clausen has the task of renewing
Washington's confidence in the World Bank. If he
can keep it on a sound footing as a source of
development aid, there is a better chance of
seeing the high-case" projections for the coming
decade come to pass for the Third World.

Please Write
Letters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. AU lellen must be signed, with
a m u ll i n g address and, If possible, s
telephone number so the identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening Herald
will respect the wishes of writers who do not
want their name* In print. The Evening
Herald also reserves the right to edit letlen
to eliminate libel hr to conform to space
requirements.

BERRYS WORLD

-

"I represent $ new. well-funded political action

tty SAM COOK

Seminole'* Broncos take the trip of a lifetime
this week (or anyone that's ever pulled on a
glove or strung a bat. Manager Richard Coffey's
team is going to the Bronco World Series in
la fa y e tte . La.
The Broncos took care of a tough Miami team
this past weekend. It was the Lake of two rallies
concerning the two contests between the team s
In the first encounter Thursday night,
Seminote rallied lor eight runs to take a 1CM lead
Into the last inning. Miami, however, ra n up five
runs nnd had the potential tying and winning
runs on base when Sean Flaherty got Raul
Cendnya to ground out.
Saturday m orning's championship gam e was a
different story. This time Miami held a 4-0 edge
going into the last inning. The Broncos, though,
broke loose (or eight runs with two outs to grab
the title and a trip to lafayette.

"t told the kids this Is a chance in a lifetim e."
said Coffey about the World Series. " I t's
something they'll rem em ber the rest of their
lives."
To m ake that lifetime trip, Seminole needs
some cash. Maybe a s much as $5,000. feels
Seminole Pony Baseball Association President
Bill Riordan.
It seems every way you turn nowadays,
someone is asking you for money. Well, here's
one more you can add to the list. Bui, anybody
that has competed athletically can pretty m uch
tell you the thrill of competing in a World Series
would be a tough one to match.
Riordan can be reached at UI-1541.
Just as 1Jttle le a g u e baseball is easing from
the picture, high school football teams begin
their annual, grueling workouts.
Seminole County schools are in the m idst of

gett ng in shape without the pads for the r .n t
couple of days, ta k e Brantley and Seminole
began work Saturday. Oviedo's first look ..as
Monday.
Lion Coach Joe Montgomery received a
nuidvoceded fullback-linebacker this summer
when former Lyman player Dean Preising
moved back to the Oviedo area.
Preising and his father. Glenn, were both at
Lyman two years ago. Then a promising
sophomore linebacker, Preising has ballooned to
a well-muscled 6-fool-l and 210 pounds.
"He sure looks like he c an play," said Mon­
tgomery about his welcome addition. "1 think 1
can find a spot f ir him ."
Preising's father coached at P rindpla College
in Elsah, III. last season. The ex-football and
track standout played on Syracuse's 1957 Cotton
Bowl squad

D O N GRAFF

BUSINESS WORLD

Used
Car O r
N e w Car?
DETROIT (D P I| - Here* another good
reason why new r a r sales should be belter
than they a re : the used car m arket is
beginning to boom.
In conventional auto industry wisdom,
strong used c a r demand means higher used
car prices, and when used car prices a re high
it becomes a m ore attractive proposition to
buy a new car.
Under those conditions, the prospective
buyer gets a bigger trade-in allowance (or the
old boat, effectively lowering the new c a r
price. Alternatively, someone looking (or a
late model used c a r discovert it’s only going
to cost a lew dollars more a week to buy a new
one.
By all m easures, used car prices have
moved steadily higher over the tost few
months. W hether that will give Its usual boost
to the new c a r m arket — which has fullered
through m ore than two years o( depression —
is uncertain.
T he tra d e Journal Autom otive News
reported the average used car price at
wholesale auctions in July was M.J90, up 33.7
percent from 13,209 in the same month a year
ago.
One industry report complied from a
variety of sources said the average retail
price of a used c ar between one ami five years
old — those most frequently traded for new
cars — Is about $5,250, up 20 percent from
$4,100 last year.
"P ric es of late-model used cars are up
substantially (rum last year and that has cut
the coat of trading lor many new car buyers,"
said Philip E. Benton, vice president oI sales
operations Ior Ford Motor Co.
Buyer interest Isn't confined Just to small
cars, a frequent situation the past lew years.
Used car dealers say Just about every
clean, welVmalntatned second-hand cor la
(etching a good price, regardless of alxe.
The im pact la doubly important in com­
bination with other factors that influence a
car purchase.
U.S D epartm ent of Commerce figures
show the average-equipped new c a r cost
$7,600 The average new car price this year is
around $9,500 or about 13 percent higher than
last year.
New r a r prices thus have risen m ore than
the increase In average family income. The
Commerce Departm ent listed median family
income In 1900 at 121,050, while Ford's
economics departm ent calculates tt rose only
about 10.0 percent this year to $24,000.
Ford'a argum ent is that the disparity
between income and new car prices is more
than oflaet by higher used car tradein values.
II anything, the company said, buying a new
car should be more attractive now than last
year.
T here's no sign yet consumers (eel that
way. New car sales continued at deep reces­
sion levels through July.
The used car business is live great un­
derpinning ol the new car nurkeL At least
three used c a rs are sold for every new model,
and roughly 97 percent of new car sales In­
volve the disposition of a used car, either
through trade-in to a dealer or sale to an in­
dividual.
But the growing strength o' the used c ar
m arket was only one (actor that m ade the
latest auto Industry sale* downturn in midJune seem balding. Car financing ratea
hadn't changed from earlier this y ear and
prices have been steady since early spring
Car scrappage rates remained high, normally
railing for replacem ent buying.
All those factors seemed to dictate a
recovery course fur the industry.
But auto industry analysts acknowledge
economic uncertainty as the greatest In­
fluence on today's car market.

IT’S

What
Price
Indexing?

BONZO!

a » c*y

Mr*.

Nlwt,

ho

BOB W A G M A N

Feds

Bug' Lawyers

WASHINGTON — Court documents filed in
two widely separated cities have revealed
new tools in the federal government’s fight
against organired crim e: the bugging of
lawyers' offices and the tapping of their
telephones The use of these techniques has
outraged some law yers and made others very
nervous.
The first known incidence ol law-office
tapping and bugging cam e to light in papers
filed in federal district court in Kansas City.
They concerned n series of indictments issued
in a case Involving the alleged skimming of
funds front t-is Vegas casinos.
The documents disclosed that lawyers from
the Justice D epartm ent's Organired Crime
Strike Force had obtained a court order that
allowed the FBI lo tap the phones and bug the
offices of Quinn and Peebles, a Kansas Q ly
law firm.
One of the firm 's clients la said io be Nick
Civtlla, the reputed bass of organired crime
In Kansas City and m uch of the Mklwest.
Cl veils ts a leading target of an investigation
into Ian Vegas skimming.
The documents revealed that 10 wiretapa
and "surveillances" fa b u n word for
bugging) were ordered as pari ol a massive
undercover operation code-named “Straw
Man." Silei Included Clvella's home, allice
and car, the homes of his associates and the
offices of Quinn and Peebles.
No transcripts of conversations were filed,
so it is not known what Information might
have betn intercepted or overheard at the law
lirai.
'A similar though unrelated case ol lawoffice bugging has since came to light in
Providence, It. I. The target ol this Organised
Crim e S trike F o rc e investigation was
Raymond P atriarca, a reputed New England
' crime boat. The bugging occurred at offices
shared by five Providence lawyers; one of the
five Is John F. CtriUine, who represents
Patriarca.
The bugging w as rev ealed when the Justice
Department notified the live lawyers and
about 30 of their clients that it had overheard
some ol their office conversations over a twomonth period. The departm ent will not tell
(hem sh a t il heard.
The ITovidence lawyer* and their clients
have retained William Kunstler, the New
York constitutional lawyer, to sue the
government in an effort to obtain tapes of all
of those conversations.

The Justice Department will not comment
directly on either case or on law-oflice
eavesdropping In general But departm ent
sourers say that this tactic is necessary
because crim e figures have started to use
their Lawyers' offices as "sanctuaries" from
which to conduct business.
"T hese guys know that we a re bugging
th eir home and business phones and
overhearing conversations on the street and
in c a rs ," explains one departm ent source.
"So, what they are doing la going down to
their taw yers' and borrowing an office and
plume and conducting business a s usual. That
is whal we are out lo stop.”
This has quite a few lawy ers up In arm s.
Says Kunstler, "I don't think you can ever
authorize a tap on a law yer's office, because
you c a n 't guarantee that you can protect
innocent thiid parties."
R ichard Gerstein, who was district a t­
torney of Miami for 3) years, la among the
others in the legal profession who a re uneasy
about law-office bugging and lapping. G er­
stein form erly headed the D tstrict Attorneys’
A ssociation and c u rre n tly c h a irs the
Am erican Bar Association's Section on
Crim inal Justice.
"This idea bothers me a lot," says Gerstein.
“ It seem s to me that even before the Justice
Departm ent applies for such a U p It should
have clear proof that illegal activity ii Uking
place in the lawyer's office and that the
law yer ts aware of it. 1 would hope that any
court issuing an order allowing a lawyer's
office to be tapped would hold the Justice
Departm ent lo that sU ndard."
As a form er prosecutor, G erstein raises
another reservation: "A lawyer whose office
was bugged coukl move (or a m istrial based
on the possibility that critical defense
strategy sessions were overheard or some
privileged lawyer-client conversation was
intercepted. A prosecutor m ight be hard
pressed to refute such a claim , and a
prosecution may have lo be abandoned."
T he
Ju stice
D e p artm en t
source
acknowledges this possibility but says that
the current mode of operation of various
organized-crime figures has m ade law-office
bugging and Upping necessary. "Hopefully it
will not be necessary lor very long," he sa y s
"W ord of thl* will spread quickly, and we are
hopeful that it will have a d eterrent effect."

Unless a wave of mind-changing sweeps
Washington In the next four years, American
taxpayers a re going to be indexed.
Did someone out there ask what that
means? Sham e on you. Where was your a t­
tention when President Reagan was ex­
tracting his tax-bill victory from Congress?
All right, all right — so there was a royal
wedding. But that was a one-shot deal.
Indexing ii going to be with us for a long time
(you know what they say about death and
Uses I and will affect not only our annual
settling ol accounts with the IRS but much,
much more about the economy in which we
will have to live for the foreseeable future and
how well m ost of us will be able to live in it.
The indexing provision Is one ol the briefest
in (he tax bill but the most far-reaching. It is
designed to end bracket creep, that son of
inflation that deducts more and more from
paychecks a s the effort to keep up with thr
climbing cost of living moves a wage-earner
up to higher and higher tax rates.
Briefly, Indexing provides for automatic
adjustment of U x brackets, based on changes
in consumer price indicators, to offset in­
flation. As inflation continues to cheapen
dollars, the w ogc-eam er able lo do no better
than keep even with the increase may still
pay more of them to the IRS, but not as many
more as before. R ates will be fine-tuned to
assure that the loss in actual purchasing
power rem ains constant.
The tax bill calls lor Indexing hi begin in
1905, following the phased three-year tax cut
of 25 percent In effect, il will be in­
stitutionalizing the effects ol that cut.
Sounds great, right? Well, maybe. It wifi
free the taxpayer from bracket creep and
Congress from the periodic and sometimes
politically unpleasant necessity ol legislation
relief in a faddon that does right by the
conflicting interests of ail of its constituencies
and also the requirem ents of the federal
budget.
But also m aybe not. It may also in­
stitutionalize something else - inflation it­
self. Theoretically, it government is denied
the windfall tax revenues generated by in­
flation and non-indexed rates, il will have to
be accordingly more modest in its ex­
penditures.
But whal if it is not, or not enough so? That
means continuing and larger deficits. Since
budget deficits a re a contributor to inflation,
if not actually the potent one as some
economists believe, that means accelerated
inflation. And even If not, by making it easier
fur Am ericans to live with inflation il may
make them less Inclined to undertake the selfdenying effort necessary to control It.
Evidence from countries that have ex­
perimented with Indexing suggests as much.
Also, there m ay be some question whether
Congress should be let oft the tax-adjustment
hook. Il can be argued that the problems ol
the economy — and inflation and burdensome
taxes are certainly that - a rt moat ef­
fectively dealt with by measures specifically'
tailored to the conditions of the time.
Politically unpleasant though that may be, it
is • responsibility inherent in the concept If
not always the practice ol repreaentative
government.
We are not without experience in the effects
of indexing. It lias (or some years been a
feature o( the other side of federal financing
- the outgo. It is Indexing of Social Security
benefits a n d re la te d public a ssista n c e
programs that has contributed heavily to
their present fiscal Insecurity. The prospects
that indexing could simultaneously increase
outgo and decrease relative Income has the
makings of a budgetary nightmare.
Congress and the administration have
another three year* to give thought to the pros
and coni of tax Indexing and there m ay well
be to m e m lnd-changlng.

JA C K AN D ERSO N

Memo Could Have Cleared Sen. Williams
WASHINGTON - A crucial government
document that might have won acquittal (or
the sta r ABSCAM defendant. Sen. Harrison
Williams, D-N.J., was withheld (rom him and
his attorneys by U.S. District Court Judge
George P ratt.
This astonishing document — a high-level
FBI m em orandum — has been reviewed by
my associate Indy Badhwar. II stales in
unambiguous term s that, after U m onths in
pursuit of ll»e veteran senator, the ABSCAM
prosecutors had lo admit they had no case
against him.
Instead of dropping the investigation of
Williams, however, the ABSCAM undercover
men laid one last trap for him. They nad
hoped to im plirale him in • briberyconspiracy involving a titanium mine. Bui

apparently, despairing of getting Williams to
make an overt act before the hidden cam eras
on this original scam , the ABSCAM in­
vestigators offered the senator a bribe to help
with an Im migration problem.
Williams comm itted an overt act, all right.
B el i t wasn’t one the FBI wanted. The
videotapes showed hint saying (irmly, "No,
no, no, no!" as he refected the offer of money.
Unt'tlerred by this monkey-wrench In their
plans, the ABSCAM prosecutors proceeded lo
bring Williams to tria l on tom e of the very
charges they had earlie r decided he w u
innocent of. The Jury, unaware of the
government's exculpatory admissions con­
tained in the suppressed FBI memo and
caught up in the theatrical atmosphere ol

ABSCAM, found the senator guilty of the
titanium mine caper.
Yet here’a what (he FBI m em o says about
that trap: “ It would be necessary to recontact
Williams to obtain an overt action on his part
..." the prosecutors had decided. "Attempt*
should be made to elicit from Sen. Williams
whether or not he wanted his shores (in the
titanium mine) hidden."
The "shove Information" hod to be ob­
tained "to prove that Sen. W illiam s" had
broken the law, the memo explained.
Thus, by the date of the m em o — Nov. 27,
1979, or 13 months a fter Williams was
U rge ted for ABSCAM — the government
adm itted it lacked proof of the senator's
willingness to accept shares is a supposed
titanium mine in return for his influence in

gaining g o v e rn m e n t contracts. In fa c t,
Williams had shown such reluctance on the
titanium mine deal that (he ABSCAM
operatives had to keep changing tactics in
mid videotaping in an attempt to trap him.
So the "reco n tact" between Williams and
the FB I's phony Arab sheik — shorn the
senator believed to be a businessman who
wanted lo Invest to the mine — was arranged
lor Jan. IS, I960. As the hidden cam eras
rolled, the FBI "sheik" tried once more to get
the necessary " o v e rt" evidence that Williams
cnuld be bribed for s h a m in the titanium
mine. Falling in this, (he agent then olfered
the senator cash to help with an immigration
problem — and get Williams' em phatic
rejection of the bribe attempt.

�SPORTS
EvtnJng H e ra ld , Sanford, FI.

Tug*., Aug. I I, I f l l — )A

No Go' On Dream Match

Seminole Title Shot
Echoes In Lafayette
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
When Sem inole's Broncos Southern
Zone C ham pionship sh o t exploded
Saturday afternoon at the Five Points
Baseball Complex in W inter Springs, it
had some far-reaching reverberations.
Sem inole's com e-from -behind 1-4
victory over Miami Avanti stunned the
powerhouse from the South and also
shook a tew h ead s a s far away as
lafayette, La., the site for Thursday's
Bronco World Series.
"Miami is alw ays so strong, we were
lure amaied to h e a r th at Seminole had
beaten them ," draw led Tournament
Chairman Danny Fabacher. "Seminole
sure must have a strong club."
The Broncos open play Friday night al
8 against the w inners of Thursday
night’s matchup betw een the host region,
St. Bernard P arish I just outside of New
Orleans), and the North representative.
The North team had yet lo be decided
Monday night, b u t Oak Park, 111. was
undefeated and needed just one win to
wrap up the tournam ent. A simitar
situation existed tn the West Zone where
Hawaii was unbeaten and awaiting a 5:30

Seminole Stats
Aft
1
10
4
1
1
t
t
1
1
1
1
|
0
0

5f«*ii IFlabor fy
Etfd't Event
Greg EbM ft
m o n Br »y
V4rk Coffey
Dele Sfevent
Terry Miller
Eodie Tawbemee
Kirk Poiefc
JW Wenrvg
Kelly Myiell
Trocy Turner
Mickey Mtfrm
Scott Bowen

RM
1 s
1 J
3 3
0 1
4 1
4 3
3 3
3 1
0 0
3 0
1 0
0 0
0 0
0 0

Bl AVE IB
554 1
3
500 1
3
0
500 t
I
500 0
4
350 7
3
777 7
7
777 1
3
135 1
7
OR) 3
1
000 1
0
ooo 1
0
ooo 0
0
ooo 0
0
ooo 0

p.m. clash between host Richmond, Cal.
and T erry Hills, Cal. Hawaii played the
winner a t 8:30 last night.
In gam e two Thursday night, the E ast
representative, Puerto Kico plays the
host tea m , l^ fa y ette at 8. All gam es a re
scheduled f ir 5 p m. and 8 p.m. Thursday
through Tuesday.
It Seminole wins its Friday gam e, it
would play Sunday at 8 pin. A victory
Sunday would pul Seminole one gam e
away from the World Series cham ­
pionship and into Tuesday's 5 p.m. title
tilt. A loss Tuesday would force a second
gam e a t 8:30 p.m,
_____

The Five Points en try proved its
strength by downing the M iamians, who
Fabacher believes won the World Series
last year, not once, b u t twice.
On both occasions, the Broncos rallied
from deficits in ihe final innings.
Saturday, Seminole pushed across all
eight runs in the top of the seventh.
Thursday, it took eight ru n s in the last
two timings to withstand a furious Avanti
five-run seventh which fell short, 104,
Sanford right-hander T erry Miller
turned in a sparkling flve-hll per­
formance against the hard-hitting Avanti
club in the title contest. M iller struck out
seven. Miller also picked up Seminole's
first win sgsinst San Antonio with a fourhitter, ltd . Sean F lah erty was the
winner in Ihe first win over Miami. He
pitched three innings and struck out six
in relief of Msrk Coffey.
And Flaherty is also swinging the
hottest stick for Seminole. He has five
rap s in nine at bats for a 556 m ark. The
wild Irishman has driven in three runs.
"Steady Eddie" E vans, the U-year-okl

Herald Photo by Tom Vincent

F O O T B A L L U P S Sf,n'n(,' p’8 football team experiences the "ups ami downs" of high school footJ hall Tuesday morning al th e high school. Coach Jerry I’osey's Tribe has a frw
A M D n r tU f M C day* left of shorts and shirts conditioning before putting on the pads later fills
A N D D O W N S week. Tlie Fighting Seminole* open the season. Sept. II at home against
Titusville Astronaut,

See WORLD SE R IE S, page (A

Remarkable John Shakes Off Rust,
Adversity, Pitches Like $1,000,000
NEW YORK (DPI) - Tommy John
has to be one of the most remarkable
players around today.
Never m ind he was told he’d never
pitch again seven years ago after un­
dergoing surgery In which they p ra c ­
tically m ade him a new felt elbow by
using a tendon from his right forearm.
Forget th at lie won 22 games (or the
Yankees last year, 21 the year before
and al 38 cam e back (ra n a strike and
pitched like a million dollars.
His Im m ediate concern right now is
not baseball, but the welfare of his 2Wyear-old son, Travis, who is in critical
condition tn a New Jersey hospital
following a fail from a third-story
window Thursday.
Baseball aside, whsl makes Tommy
John even m ore remarkable la his
general thinking about the game, his
ideas, lie doesn’t go by others’ theories.
He creates his own. And most of them
are well thought out.
At this stage of his rsreer. h e 's
naturally thinking about what he'll do
when he can 't pitch anymore although
it's h ard to conceive that time will ever
come.
The Yankee lefthander says he
wouldn't mind staying in baseball when
he's finished playing. Most players who
say th at think In term s of managing in
the big leagues.
Bui, Tomm y John is different. He’d
rather work tn the front office and
anyone can tell you there isn't any
glam or or th a t much money there
The obvious question is why.

The Cal" Miller gels set lo fire a fastball In Saturday’s 8-4 Southern Zone
llronco championship over Miami. Miller, from Sanford, held the heavy-hitting
At null team to five hits and struck out seven. Seminole Manager Itichard Coffey
is expected to throw his ace Friday night when the Broncos open World Series
play in LafayeUe, I.a.

Te rry

" B e c a u s e I think I u n d e rstan d
enough about what free agency is all
about now and how to cope with it,"
John says. " I think I know bow not to

Major League Roundup
Standings
■ y Un.itd Prakf Inlariutiaiul
ISettl'd Hall)
Rat,anal Laagu*

■ att

7 3 777 4
Wetf
4
Sail! la
7 350 mm
4 7 U1 1
i Oakland
Cmcago
5 1 .435 1
kan City
S 4 554 I1!
T o il
3 3 500 3
M, m
3 4 313 H*
Cai.f
1 1 &gt;43 4
i Fu ll sail dfvittoci winner
Mandiy’i Rttvitt
Mo* al T n n . ppd , ram
Chicago 4. New York I
Drlrp.t I?. M'Onetofa 1
Kansas Citv I. Tor onto )
Tadar's Probakla Pitchari
IKII Tunas C D T)
Milnlutr*
(Haas 4 4 and
VuckovKfi I I I at taias (Mat
lack &gt;| and Jink in* as), I.
4 11 pm
Chicago (Trout *11 at Haw
York (Gu&lt;dry S I ), I p m
Mmnttata I Jackson I I ) at
DrlrO't (Wilcak M l . I p m
Toronto icta l a at al Kansas
Citp I Jonas I 01, I IS p m
Saltimort (McGregor I I I al
CiMernie (Frost
I II,
IS M
am
Cirvtlnd

w L F tl
GO
I 1 41) —
SI lQV»
Ne* York
s 3 314
Montreal
4 3 443 1
4 4 500 3
Chicago
t Pnui
3 s 344 )»1
3 4 350 4
P.Mtaurgn
T.
W tlf
^Atlent4
5 1 .314 —
Vi
S 3 43J
t Moulton
4 4 500 I 'l
■ Loi Ang
4 4 500 »*&gt;
54n Frtrt
3 4 43f 3
Cinct
4'|
Un D*go
1 f m
■ Ftrii sail Oiwtien u.nntr
MauAay'k Retell*
CMcago ), Lo* Angelas I
tan Fran t PttDgti I. II &gt;nm
, Monlraal A Houston 1
, S» L I. San D.ago I, I ) inn*
t taSay'i PraDakia Pilcher*
IAll Tune* B O TI
Lot imgeiet (Mooron J 41 al
CMcago l Marti 1)1. I IS P »
BoVon iTorttl SS) al Oak
■ San Francisco IWtufon X51 land (Horns * II. 10 JO p m
al Fttliourgn (Tlant B l), f IS
Clevttand llW In to I SI al
pm
team# ICiar 041, I t : IS pm
New York (Lynch I ) ) at
AMlnli (M l Mat ) )), M S pm
PtulaotipMa ICarllon a i l at
:CmcJnni&lt;&gt; (Saavge f 11. f 11

i/nescores

ISecsMl Mad'
American League
M
liti
W L Pet
ill
4 3 oaf
M ’twfeke
S ) 4JS
Detroit
4 3 Stl
b it
4 4 MO
Tororto
Bovtoo
3 4 47*
3 1 If)
i N r « York

E

L—

OOO COO 100 0 4 - S II I
PtsS
010 000 OM 0 0 - I a I
Birr. M.nlon (IS ), Holland
III) and Wav- Solomon. Jack
son 101, Trfculve tt&gt;, S a m
(III and Pina Wf-Mmfcn |J

5). I — Scurry ( ] 41

Leaders

II

American league
Mmdn
ton. Oak If, CrvJ. Sea »
ijs a o s ie i-a i s
Ditone. CM IS. LeFlore. CM I*.
Or (Jutted Prrsa int*fnat,rnal
Hout
IDS 001 OOO 7 TS
Bumbry, Hal 11.
Batting
Burris.
Fryman
(II
and
Filching
Cattar,
Ramos
(J ).
Ruble, '
VKM rm
laCorlo If I. Sprourf (II and
Ninon al League
Nil,anal League — Carlitn,
Athar
W - Burnt ( M l . c
g as 4 pci. Ptil *1, Vilentvela. LA *4,
RuMa (I »
Daman. MM
Sf 111 31 334 Rogers. Mil • 4. Rulhvm. Phi
Ilf S f 11 its
Rata, hil
IS . five pilcheei lies wiifi f.
111 lamaeil
If 141 D J I *
Madlock. Pit
American Lvague — Horn*.
San 0&lt;rgo
1) Iff 4J Ilf Oek I J.
Brook*. NY
Morris.
Del (4 :
000 8IS OOO000 S - 1 IS
40)11 M 111 Forsch. Cal * S; elgfil pitcher*
Guerrero. LA
SI towik
Ho**. How
4i n i 4* 111 ned rv.lh s
000 001 000 000 &gt; - I SI
go n s ft 111
Rama*. Mil
Wild. Curtis IT ). LilMadrid Eatlar. Pit
Barned Run Arerage
si i*i 40 111
III). Lucas 1111 and Cnosdii fotltr. Cin
Ikated on I inning per each
41)41 II lit
tu rn * gam** playtdl
Sotansan. Suttsf III. SSwIay Mar. SF
St Iff II lit
(III, Kail I I I ) and Btummtr
Ha tiaoar League — Ryan.
Amertcea league
W -K ia t ( a l l L - Lucas (M l
Hou l i t , Knepper, Hou l i t .
g is k act
Riuts.
L A I t l ; Sandarton. 4411
Paciorak. Sea
4i n* II I4J
lOnty games tchtduMdl
40 114 &gt;1 H I I l f . Blue. SF I X
Snglfn, Sol
American League — lie*art.
4) m It ))*
Evant. Bo*
American Ltagva
Hndrtn. Oak
IS IS ) 1) JJI Sol )S f . McCarty. Oak 11),
Barkar, CM 1 St; HoneycuM.
44*lo at Tria s, ppd . rain
Almorv CM
40)1) fS H I
a i m If Ml T n 1 1). Trout, CM j as
Lantford. Bat
CM
Ml 001 100- 4 1 0
Olittr. Teu
41 154 1) 777
linkage tt
NY
EDO OOO 0 )0 - I 0 | Rymy. Bo*
41 It) II 111
Raim a! Hague Vann
Margrov*. CM
14 IS* 4) 111 ruetl. L A IIS. Carlton. PM y*;
turns, Pallrrson ( I I , M.ckty
44 IS) n 111 Solo. Cm *4. Ryan. Hou ft;
Care*. Cal
III and Flski R r u s c n a l .
Heme Bunt
Sutton. How S).
Arf.rme.tier I I I and Caron* w
Natianai
League
— Schmidt,
American League — Birkrv,
-turns 111) L -Rruschrl (O
Phi
II;
Dawson.
Mil.
Kingman,
CM rf;
BlyMren,
Cle Fl,
I). HR -Chicago, lujlrokl (III
NY
and Footer,
Cin 10. Flanagan. Bal 44. Davit, NY
Hendrick, Sll I )
41. lin ta rd . Kf. 41
ooo ocu ooo- ! u
American League — Thomas.
□rim i
M o o n o o i-1) i) l
S4U4I
44,1 If, Evans, Sol 14, A tm n.
NahaaaJ Laagu* — Sutlar,
c Dosman. Arroyo ID , Cooper
Oak and G ra y, Sea I ) ; Ford.
S ll 14; Minion. SF I t ; Lvcgt.
III
and
Wrnogar.
Prtry.
Col end Murray. Bel If.
SO M. AIMn. NY end Camp.
Rairma If) and Parrish. Fahay
Runs Baited l*
All t
III. Wt— Parry ISO). L -K o o t
Nelienal League — Fooler.
Amtetcoo Laagu* — Gotaaga.
man ( I II
Cm Sf. Schmidt.
*hl Of;
NY
If ;
Finger*.
4A.I IS;
Concepcion. Cm 4S. Buckner.
Toronto
JOO 100 000-- J 0 4 CM, Crui. How and Garvey. LA QwitontMrry. KC II; T Mar
linai. Bal. Farm tr, Oil and
Kan City
000 JOOOQv- l SI
40,
Saucier. Oaf t
Clancy, SomDack (fl and
American League — Armas,
WMI; Calf. Quisan Derry (|| Oak 40. Thomas, Mil 0 ), N il.
•nd Quirk W -G a le IS II L -F L O R ID A Tn
and S n le M .
NY 4)j
Ciancy
1)01.
MBS— Tgrwito.
Evans. Bos 41
Merberry HOI, Kernel City.
Stolon Basat
GBrefl 1)1
National Loagag — Rimes.
MM SI: North. SF 10. Icotl, MM
■ su asK rsn .
(Only gamak scJ.tduladl
and AAoreno, Pit I ) . Collins, CM
wm

,

ARRIVEAll

Milton
R lc h m a n
D P I Sporta Editor

sp e n d exorbitant p ric e s for free
agents,"
"How do you do that?" a radio m an
asks him, because lids is the answer the
whole baseball world is wailing for.
Tommy John shakes his head.
"O b, no," he says, m aking it clear
tie's keeping this one for himself. "It's
up here,” he smiles, pointing to his
head. "I'll tell you this, though. I take
m y hat off to George Steinbrennrr. He
has got more for what he has spent,
m ore per cost, than anyone else I know
of

John did an excellent job of
bargaining when he becam e a free
agent with the Dodgers and signed with
the Yankees in November of 1878.
Steinbrennrr says he has never enjoyed
negotiating with any other pU ycr more.
Would John use the sam e approach he
did If he was the general m anager and
hud- lo deal with a player Instead?
"Y ea,” he saya. "I think the moot
im portant thing you have to bear in
mind is to be honest with yourself and
with the guy sitting across the table.
You know what tike Bible say s — ‘Do
unto others.' I believe in that no m atter
what ... live up to your word."
"I remember my D ad's reaction
when I signed three years ago with Use
Yankees,” he says. "H e thought tt was
a lot of money, but he felt I deserved It.

My Dad mnde probably 812,000-816,000
maximum during all Ihe time he
worked. He was it Uncman and that
meant he worked hard. He worked his
back off in Indiana and never made
anywhere n ear the money 1 have, but
our Jobs are altogether different.
"The fans have a hard time un­
derstanding something like that. They
tiave to be educated to the fact we
aren’t people working on an assembly
line. In our work, there are only 650 of
us. Maybe som e of us a re overpaid, bul
is a Bruce Springsteen overpaid when
he gets 5500,000 for one ot his rock
concerts! Is M uhatiuuad AU overpaid
when he gets )5 million or so for a fight?
"Tike the m eal money we get. We get
around 530 a day. I've had people tell
me they can live like a king on 530 a
day. I guass you can if you go to ‘Joe’s
Beanery' or " Ilo rry 's Hash House’ to
rat. Rig league ballplayers are al the
top of their profession. Why should they
have to do that? You order a
cheeseburger, frftich fries snd a couple
cokes tn some of the hotels we stay al
and the bill cornea to alm ost 20 bucks.”
Tommy John h a s a point but there
are people in this country who will tell
him they eat for 5)0 a day and even less.
He has done it, too, he says, when he
had to. But now he doesn't have to
anymore and nobody can argue that.

Travis Unconscious
NEW YORK (UPI) - Travis John,
Ihe 2-yenr-old son of Yankee pitching
are Tommy John, w as still unconscious
early today, but hospital officials said
there is no evidence the boy suffered
permanent brain dam age In his threestory fall last week.

GET A
LUBE &amp; O IL AT
A SLICK PRICE
Lube &amp; O il Change
Includes up to
five quarts
major brand
oil.
Oil filter extra if
needed.
Includu* many imparls a n d light
If ucks Pluasn call lor appoinlmonl

G O O D Y EA R
SERVICE^STORES
JIM HEMPHILL, Monogar
SAHFORO

322-2821

�*
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N o Fret From Brett
Over .299 Average,

-BusinessReview

THE GINGERBREAD HOUSE
Child Care — Pre-School — K lndtrysrlsn
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C*rtil,«l Teachers

Royals Down Jays
fly t'nllrd P r n t In trm itlo n a l
G rorg* B rett lx down nearly 100 points from where he was a
y ear ago a t this time, bat like any blur-chip stock, his value Is
once again on the rise.
On Aug. 17 of last season, B retl becam e a household name by
surpassing the .100 mark In batting average.
He has struggled much of this season to regain his batting
{arm of a year ago and appeared to be getting it |ust before the
strik e began.
But although he had lost It by the tim e the season resumed, it
now appears he is finally back in the proper groove.
T he All-Star third baseman hit his second home run In a s
m any days and added a triple Monday night in sparking the
K ansas City Royals to a M victory over the Toronto Blue Jays.
B re tt’s two hits in four at-bata raised his batting average to
.299, to m ark (he anniversary of his 1900 achievement.
“ It's fust one of those things. F unny things always happen on
this day. Ju st like every May 1) 1 g et a year older," said Brett.
" I 'm very happy to be swinging the b a t good again."
White S o i 4, Yankees 1
In New York, Greg lauinakl singled in a run In the first in­
ning and slammed his tlth hom er in the sixth to spark the
W hite Sox to victory, Britt B um s, 7-2, pitched seven shutout
Innings for the White Sox for the win, with Rick Reuschel, (M,
suffering his first Al, loss.
T igers 12, Twins 2
Lou W hitaker's two-run single and a three-run double by
Alan Tram m ell keyed an eight-run first inning that sparked
tlie T ig ers' rout in Detroit. Dan Retry went the first six Innings
and gave up only four hits in raising his record to M .

'j T

PH. 322-8547
2SM ELM A V E.

!

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SA N FO R D

Evening Herald
Herald A dvertiser

Coll 322-2611 Wow!
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Bernard Fisher at testing console at Orange Hearing Aid Center in Casselberry.
MADAME KATHERINE
PA1M - ( A W )

CRYSTAL BALL READING

P a s t — P re e e n t — Future
H t l t f VI ADWCI ON A il AJMIHS

• tu t a o v t •

m arriage

• auwNtsa

BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR 50 YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF MY HOME

LoNawooo

HOURS 8 A M. - 9 P M Cloved Sunday
i a t o m * n o r t h o t d o g t r a c k ao

(3 0 5 )

ir
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*11«#,.#_)** **•#*•* t*n(&gt;4

..............................
GKOItGE BRETT
. , . down loo points

GREG MJZIN8KI
. . socks llth homer

V O LK S H O P
S p e c ia liiin g In Sarvlca A P a rts F o r
V .W .'s, T oyota and O altun
(Corner Jrtd A Palmetto)

...W o rld Series Bound

214 S. Polmetto Ave.

IWUHIJI SERIES, continued from page SA|
second baseman, is next w ith five hits in ten st bats for a 500
average. Evans hss two RBI. Both he and Flaherty had three
tilts In the Miami title game. Greg Ebberl and Jason Bray are
each hilling ,K» with limited al bats. Kirk R ouk, who turned
in the play of the tournament a t shortstop Saturday with a
diving stop, has stolen three bases.
K bbert h a t two hits In lour a lb a ta , while Bray laced s double
to left renter to drive in the final two ru n j and put the cap on
the last victory ovrr Avantl. Because of the strong showing of
his bench, Manager Richard Coffey m ay change one or two
positions.
"W e'll probably slay with pretty much Ihe same lineup,"
said Coffey Monday night while running his squad through (he
paces. "But I make one or two m oves.”
Speaking of moves, Coffey w as all for it, Altamonte Major
M anager Gene Lrtierio was already making phone calls, but
Altamonte Major t/ag u e President John Strott, unfortunately,
had to do his Job.
The "It" was a special challenge m atch between Altamonte,
the state’a second best IJtUe lea g u e team under the
Williamsport charter, and Seminole, winner of the Southern
Zone Bronco Tournament.
" I'd love to do it," said !&gt;eUcrio Monday night. "1 called
about five of my boys and they were ready to go. ft would take
some time to know the different rules, but I think the kids
would instinctively reset on the field."
After s few phone calls Tuesday morning, however, Strott
hod to turn "thumbs down" on the proposal. "As much as we'd
like to, we’re going to have to pass on the invitation," said
Stroll.
"Basically, It would leave us wide open Uibility-wise. W e're
a s tempted as we can be, but we could lose our charter. All we
can do is wish them the best of luck and hope they bring back a
championship to Central Florida. We came pretty close,"
pointed out Strott.*I4

SANFORD
PHONE

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u m

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m o b il e moms m o o il i on o i i P i a r

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ACCIDENT or INJURY
Do you. Have A Ctaim?
. FREE CONFERENCE

WALLACE W. HARDY
S4&gt;wtkract-4^Ti40.4l

323-6522

Harry Bowers, hearing aid consultant, is in
Sanford at Ihe sub-branch at Medco Discount
Drugs every Monday from 10 a m. to 2 p.m. He
has the equipment and expertise to test and ad just
hearing aids as well as provide service and
repairs.
The Orlando Center has been open for many
years, and the Casselberry branch was added
about two years ago.
Spacc-ago technology has come to the hearing
aid industry, and a hearing aid has been
developed that only costs pennies per year to
operate. This is a far cry from the $25 to $70-peryear ojM.*ration costs of the average hearing aid.
The newer, rechargeable aid also automatically
controls speech-interfering noises and can be
custom-adjusted" for correct hearing on the
spot.
Orange Hearing Aid has a full line of hearing
aids, with the most popular being the type fitted
entirely in the ear.
Through a program instituted by area L/ons
clubs, Orange Hearing Aid Center will do the
fitting without charge for needy persons requiring
hearing aids.
The centers work with most of the doctors and
clinics in the area.

A U nlqua C ountry Em porium

SA LES

. N O RECOVERY, N O FEE

G re y h o u n d s

If you are hard of hearing, you don't have to put
up with the inconvenience and embarrassment of
not being able to hear the sounds and conversation
around you. The specialists in cuslom-n.ade
hearing aids at the Orange Hearing Aid Centers
will be glad to help you.
In Seminole County, Orange Hearing Aid
Centers have well-equipped testing facilities at
120 S. U S. Highway 17-112, Casselberry, and at
Mcdco Discount Drugs, 2701-D, S. Orlando Drive,
Sanford.
Orange Hearing Aid Centers offer a special 30day trial period, satisfaction guaranteed, with
every hearing aid obtained at their office.
Everything they sell is unconditionally guaran­
teed for one year.
Their well-qualified specialists repair and
service their hearing aids on the premises.
Irwin Rensack, president of the Orange Hearing
Aid Centers, has a m aster's Jcgrec in audiology.
Bernard Fisher, a licensed hearing aid dispenser
certified by Ihe National Hearing Aid Society, is
al the Casselberry center, which is open from 9
a.m. lo 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
For the convenience of Sanford area residents,

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Lyman Schedules Volleyball
New Lyman volleyball coach Karen Newman has
scheduled the first organizational m eeting and practice for
anyone Interested In Greyhound volleyball Wednesday In
the Lyman auditorium at 10 a m.
Participants should bring or come dressed in shirts,
shorts, knee pads and tennis shoes. Ftret-linvt players
should bring their birth certificates.

'Guaranteed Satisfaction' Offered
A t Orange Hearing Aid Centers

ATTO R N EY-AT-LA W
D esignatad P e rso n a l In ju ry And
W rongful D eath.
JIT N. Eola D r.
O rlando, FI. J2M1

PHONE

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PH . 321-5044

P r e p a r e d by A d v e r tis in g D e p t, o l

• PUT TOUR BUSIN!!! ON THE MOVE •
ADVERTISING

ADVERTISING

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F O R RENT

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

Ca£E 322-2611 [fowl

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WEDDING GOWNS
WEDDING EQUIPMENT

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Gaynelle's Antiques
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Blair Agency Emphasizes

1 StaiUff Pun

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC

Friendly, Reliable Service
Professionalism"
and service" are the
key words to describe
the Blair Agency on
South Park and Oak
Avenue in Sanford.
Genic Blair owns the
agency, and Steve
Blair
is
office
loianager.
We don’t consider
our agency a selling
agency," said Blair.
We are a service
agency. We are in
business
to
help
people."
The
agency
specializes in writing
n o n -stan d ard
in ­
surance, the type of
insurance which is
difficult to acquire at
itome ag en cies; in­
surance for those who
have traffic violations
on their records, and
insurance for the
younger and older
dlizens of the com­
munity.
!&lt; It's a specialty
market, and Genie and
Steve
B lair
arc
specialists in that
field. But this doesn't
mean they cannot sell
Vou all other types of
insurance except life
and health, because
they can.
I One of the first
things Blair sees as a
necessity for people
buying insurance is
that they receive from
the agent complete
Information about the
various types of in‘Surance
available.
With this knowledge,
Clients can decide
jwhat is best for them,
k Trust between a
Client and his inranee agency is
ital. After all, the
gent,
by
his
ofessionalism and
ire to serve, will
ay an important role
the client's future.
/* I’m an advocate of
'making sure people
ore buying the right
kind of insurance to
protect their futures."
Blair stressed.
In keeping with the
agency's policy of
complete service to its
clients, financing is
made available for
those who need it.
' ‘Steve B lair has

H it t FftMHfc API . UMavd
(a c rtn fr#m F i l l * H UTI

323-5763

Cards Herr(y)
Past Padres;
Raines Bags 2
tty United I’r t n International
Tommy Herr, the winning run, stood on third base. Ken
Oberkfell took a lead off second, George Hendrick strode off
first. The scored was tied 1-1 and Glenn Brum m er, a rookie,
was in the b a tte r's bos (or the St. Louis Cardinals.
“ All I could do was look at the pitcher and relax ..."
Brum mer said Month.y night alter his fielder's choice
grounder drove in the winning run th at helped defeat the San
Diego Padres, 3-1. "I can't hit nothing if I'm shaking."
Brum m er swung at a Gary In c a s slider on a 3-2 pitch and hit
the ball into the hole in short. O u ie Sm ith snared it and went
(or the only play he had — an inning-ending double play. He
only got half of il and Herr crossed the plate with the winning
run.
B rum iner’s game-winning HBI was the first ol his majorleague career.
The victory went to Jim Kast, 4-1, who pitched the Uth in­
ning. In c a s ' record fell to 3-6.

Cubs 3, Dodgers I
In Chicago, Doug Bird pitched a six-hitter and Ken Reitz's
(ourth-innlng sacrifice fly snapped a l-l lie to give the Cubs the
victory. Bird, 3d), won only the third complete game by a
Chicago pitcher this year.
Giants 1, Pirate) I
Joe Morgan hit a three-run double with two outs in lite tlUi
inning s i Pittsburgh and Enos Cabell followed with an Bill
single to power the Giants. The victory went to Greg Minton, 33, who pitched 1-3 of an inning In relief of starter Vida Blue.
Expos I, Astro) 1
At Houston, Amlre Dawson drove in three run* and Tint
Raines and Hay Burris hod an RBI each, to lead Montreal.
Barnes also increased his league-leading stolen base total to
12 with two thefts.

Baseball Decides
Playoff Is Way Off
BIG SAVINGS
Office Manager Steve Blair discusses client ’s Insurance needs.
strong feelings about is financed.” Blair problems. Call either
PIP" (personal in­ said. I explain this to 323-7710 or 323-3866. Or
jury protection) in­ the customers. PIP is stop by the office,
surance. Currently, he cheap — and you get which is o|H&gt;n from 9
explained, state law what you pay for.'" a m to 5 p m. Monday
permits drivers to Blair, however, will through Thursday and
have either IMP or sell the PIP insurance from 9 a.m. to fi pm.
liability insurance on to those clients who on Fridays.
their vehicles, or both.
wish it.
Many drivers take the
The Blair Agency
PIP
ra th e r
than
offers a special in­
liability insurance,
surance package to
believing they then are
senior citizens, who
protected
from
arc considered to lie in
liability, Blair said.
the 50 to 80-year old
But this is not true.
bracket. The package
can include not only
It’s a terrible trap
automobile insurance,
people a re getting
hut also insurance on
into," he said. They
are lured into it by the the se n io r’s home.
Savings of as much as
cost.”
Sensational Hearing
Actually PIP does 20 percent to 30 per­
Aid Costs Pennies
not protect a driver
cent can he gained in
Per Year To Operate
c e r t a i n i nsur ance
against liability, and
Sptca *3» Mcluwicpf
packages for qualified
its cost is much less
mi com* lo tm
a-] wiPu Miy A
than liability
in­ seniors.
» d hat t*an ar.*'Wad
that actvai-r cotta pan.
Genie and Steve
surance.
nat pa* ytt/ lo opaiaia
Ova .a a &lt;f cry from **
Blair are willing to
The premium for
raoo to rooo a yaw
talk with you on the
IMP is equal to the
r a t.t- a jt naati'g *4
coata lo M alao awtelephone to help solve
down paym ent on
Kk-ij-ca’y
control
t o w n ,-i-ariat.ng no-tat
your
insurance
liability insurance if it

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# Vtbra Brush (Hire electric tooth brush) agitates
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NEW YORK (U PI) - A new plsyuff form at (or this strikeplagued season is expected to be announced today by major
league baseball, one executives hope will ensure the integrity
of the game.
Having been em barrassed by a lu stily created gimmick
playoff procedure that was lull of m ore Isotea than Swiss
cheese, baseball's top executives m et Monday to formalize nr.
alternate plan.
Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, American league
President l e e MacPhail ami National leag u e President
Charles Feeney were the principals Involved In restructuring
the playoffs.
Chuck Adams, a spokesman for the comm issioner') office,
said a decision would most likely be m ade today.
The playoH system was forced to tie overhauled following
revelations last week that some tesm s m ight intentionally lose
games to quality (or postseason play.
However, any proposal to change the approved Ior n u t tor a
split season slid playoH series between first-halt and secondhalf winners would have to be approved by the Major League
Players Asaoclatiun, which represents baseball's (50 players.
“ They can 't revise It unless we agree lo If," said Don Erhr,
an associate counsel for the association. "We'll wait to see
what they come up with."
The problem with the current spUI-aeason (orru.it, approved
by the owners Aug. 6, Is simple. Some teams theoretically
could lose games on purpose late In the season to help their
chances of making the playoffs.
M anagers Tony I-aRussa of the Chicago White Sox and
Whitey Herzog of the St. fouls C ardinals - whose learns
finished just off the pace in the first half of the season —
ridiculed the system and said they would either forfeit games
or ask their players to lose if that m eant a possible playoff
berth.
Under the current plan, the winners of the first tiali of the
season — Philadelphia and In s Angeles in the National league
and New York and Oakland In the Am erican — are assured of
spots in a "m ini-series" against the second-hall winners.
A posithie second-half scenario could have Oakland art!
Kansas City battling (or the second-half championship — with
the White Sox in third, substantially ahead of T essa and still
comfortably ahead of Kansas City In overall records.
By throwing the (our-game series against the A 'l In tale
Septem ber, the White Sox could help Oakland to the secondhalf UUe and get themselves a playoff berth as the team with
the second-best overall record.
“ If It turns out you have to lose a gam e to get in there,"
IjR u s s a said, “ I would not tolerate nor would 1 ask my
players to lose a ballgame. So the best way to do It is to refuse
to take the field. You accept a loss th at way."
Several Ideas possibly under consideration would be lo give
a team winning both halves a bye into the league playoffs.
Another would pit a doublewinner against the team finishing
second in the second halt — not the team with the second-best
overall record.

I'fJ

e S P E C IA L PACKAGE RATE
FO R P E O P L E OVER 10

• CMttwny Supply

ANY 3 BR HOUSE
LA. DR. 6 HALL
BR BA BR

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7A

M cR @ B ER TS
T IR E S m 1

NOUai! MON TkrvFll.ls.M .-I.N a.M .
IA T .ls.a-.il Nwa
r H .w t m e u
p H .tn M u
M tW .F IS S T ST.
SANFORD

L N IV lIa tu
O o u ftC H y

S a n lo rd , F la . 1177)

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�ilA -E vanlng Herald. Sanford, FI

Longwood

IN BRIEF
State Warned To Brace For
Further Federal Budget Cuts
TA1JJ4HASSEE, Fla. lU P Il - President Reagan's
budget ruts will have a sm aller impact on Florida than
once feared but Gov. Bob G raham 's budget director
warn; the worst is yet to come.
Testifying Monday before a state Senate select
committee studying the cutbacks, Tom Herndon,
Graham's director of planning and budgeting, said the
newest estim ate is th at the state stands to lose $(71.9
million in the current and next fiscal years, $458
million of it in aid to cities and counties.
In July, state officials projected a much higher
figure - $1.3 billion — but this has now dropped
because Reagan did not get the caps on Medicaid he
sought and education cuts were not as severe as ex­
pected, Herndon said.
The major cuts for Florida will be in sewage and
water treatm ent grants, various welfare program s,
transportation and the Comprehensive F.tnploytnent
and training Act ( LET A I Jobs program. Herndon said.
Because future cuts will be needed (or Reagan to
meet his pledge to balance the federal budget, Herndon
warned that the sta te should brace itself for further
bad news in the m onths and years ahead.

Jet Skids O ff Runway
FT. LAUDEHDAI.K. FU . (UPI) - Officials say it
was a collapsed landing gear that sent a Pan American
World Airways Jetliner skidding off a ralnsllck runway
and across a muddy field Monday.
The Boeing 727 cam e to rest on its belly with its nose
in the air. Three of the (5 passengers and crewm em ­
bers aboard suffered only miner injuries and were
treated and released at a hospital.
"The gear collapsed," said Ken Wallach, tower chief
for the F ederal Aviation Administration at Fort
Uuderdale-lfollywood Airport. "It didn't oppear there
was any (ire. . . the airplane looked Intact." Pan
American flight 953 w as in the process of taking off for
Houston and U s V egas when the landing gear buckled.
Wallach said the passengers got ofl the plane by
using emergency slides from one side of the plane.
They were taken to the air carrier's hospitality suite
where rrp trte rs w ere barred.

Shuttle Tests Late
CAPE CANAVERAL FU . (UPII - Testing on
equipment aboard the apace shuttle Columbia U three
days late but ofllclaU say they can’t tell yet if that
means s deUy of the rocket ship's second launch Sept.

Increases
City Fees
The l/mgwood City Commission Monday night adopted a
new (ee schedule for annexations, re-tonlngs and other sim ilar
activities In the city on the rtctnnmendalion of City
Administrator David Chacey.
But the commissioners warned Cliacey they will review the
fees In six months and reduce them If it Is shown that the city is
making a profit.
The commission's warning came after B.D. "Bo" Simpson,
a local realtor, admonished the commission not to attem pt to
generate general revenue funds from fees. "Have some
realistic fees so you don't make money from them,” Simpson
said.
Chacey recommended the fees be increased, saving the
actual costs (or the services are steadily increasing, tfe said
even though the current year's budget was increased from
11,000 to $2,000 for advertising sonings and annexations and
other legal m atters, actual costs through July were $2,231 39.
leaving a deficit of nearly $300 with two more months to go in
the fiscal year. At the sam e time, he added that City Clerk
Donald T erry’s office is running $73 in the red for postage
connected with the work.
He said the d ty 'a new lontng ordinance requires the city to
notify all persons residing within 300 feet of property to be
rezaned, annexed etc. and this requirement has become costly.
The following fees were increased: change in zoning from
$100 to $200; annexations from $300 to $300; variances and
special exceptions from $50 to $100; site plan review from $30
to $100; site plan review under 10,000 square feet from $30 to
$73 and requests for permit for trailer for constructionsecurity from $30 to $75. Where no (ee has been charged in the
past for review by the historic commission, constitutional use
authorization and requests for special permits, a lee of $30 per
request will now be charged. — DONNA F-STF-S

II

1
i
•
b
♦

MacTAVlSH
DISCOUNT CARPETS
HAJ MOVED TO
107 MAGNOLIA AVE.
SANFORD
PH. 312-44*4

Cm u m i A Lorncno and baby
boy
Patricia S Crvt. Dolton*
(m il S la'ow. Dotiona
Sutan A Black and Saby Say.
OtBary
Melody W Brown and Baby Soy.
Or lads

Eddie Cm Rob-man
Debr* W to w n
(ilen* V Turn**
Solan O Watlon
[lama Janat Seem
Marion C ftumak. DtBorr
jamei B Engl* Orange Cit»
F inter H Mutter. O , rdo
Mary Ann Wormutn. Or.eao
Robrrt A In W n . Tnutvlll*
BIRTHS
D n O M andOrftraW Town*.*
b*bv boy. Sanford
Sanford
ianicaD Whitley and Baby Olrl
Cart* D Cadi* and Baby Bay
Macgarof Barboc
May I Rga
Alica S Bemert. DoBary
M ar,m u Muttafam.tt. OcBary
Henry A F a t . Dolton*
Edward C Miliwt. Daffon*

H Ml | M Smith. Osteen

Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of His
LAKE MARY OFFICE
For FAMILY PRACTICE
By Appointment Only
leki Mery 321-0015 Attwonta 834-3093
#

1SV N. C O U N TR Y CLUB ROAD
ACROSS FROM TH E NEW
L A K E M AR Y C ITY H ALL

O NLY 3 W E E K S ...3 CATEGORIES LEFT
Don't Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

Bit 14. Tpwnc.1* *f No Cflwlubf*.

m wo

Wrnloc Legs Horn** Inc 10
Indian lakt« Comlr Crp Lot of
Wildwood. 1* 000
Bober I E H k M S wf In* to
Robert A Hick! 4 wf Barbor* J .
N m of t IW at 1W'. of ME»y og
Or* It &gt;1 » . W of Hwy t f t l.

ifoa ooo
Boilmgwoad Homao. Inc to
Robert A PoOtften 1 wf Dianna
C . Lot I. Slk W. Hawaii Coat *&gt;h
lac I to 0W
Savarly Ann Chin, ig l fa
ThaodaraR Mo,roach i Mary w
Boarattr, Lot I. Shad Gray*
Hamat. U« I. U ) 000
IQCDI W H Woodruff 1 wf
V*l* to William Beichar a wf
Ton1*1 R . rasemani — Sac. ft to
If SIOO
Arthur | PiHwefg tgi **
Gerald Wattar man a wf Judith l ,
Un t. Capistrano. S10 000
Warren l Gilmora. Ind 1 Tr t*
Fitder.ck H Catey. trust**. E
Wf of S .o* SW '.of SE . of Sac
o s jo. less n b * a is-. tias.oaa

CALENDAR
TUESDAY, AUGUST’II
Weight H a lt hors, 7 p.m., Suiwn'l ApU.
Caaaettitrry.
O vereaten Anonymous. 7:30 p.m., Florida Power It
tig h t, Sanford.
Seminole AA, I p.m., open discussion, 591 Lake
Minnie Drive, Crossroad*, Sanford.

ROBERT L. BEVIER# M*D.

Recipes for...

l* a M Poll
Sontord
Reynaldo Banaytdat
Rilhjrd * Rawlings. 0»B*r*
Wiifrod R Dupray. Deltona
Mmrr W Talk. Dolton*
• IRTHS
Michael ond Ctrl* D CMII*. «
Bob* boy, Sontord
OISCMARO(S
S*nford
je* Bononnon
Ralph K lonoo

ii

BUSINESS INSURANCE

SIXTH WEEK’S CONTEST *

Sanford
John Gamai
Pomelo J. Glenn

I

with y our insw rancel
-C A L L -

★

HOSPITAL NOTES

r at Lot M. Concord Weeds. Sac I. Club. Cond . Sil too
Samuel Zell ate tn Equity
MUM
Realty Inc . Un 111 Sandy COvt.
Earl H Meredith ta LIU S G
Marodith, Lot H a par In Sac ta SI00
10 n. 1100
Equity Realty Inc to Alan J
Amot J kirk a wl Ru'h I* Paul Gabrlolt. so' ■ Joachim J.
R Lovaitmd a wt Nma G , Lat it Gabriel# a Ann* L , wf, Un IIS
Oryontrurt. sai.100
Sandy Coy*. I l l &lt;00
DayidA Oamatra*. Tr to D a ,id
Equity Realty Inc to Br'ty k
A Domotra*. Tr far Thomas Pgiak, sgi. Un la. Capistrano,
Largen. Pranklm Clonty. Todd sit too
Pembar Ion a tcSard Garl. E I
linrwrt. N V to Carl Nxktl.
acres at N(&lt;« at NW1. ol n w . sgi Un a t Marbey* Club Con
Sac a n » . ate . SIOO
no SO too
Sam* to Damatro*. tr. Themes
Jamas R Knapton. sgi tc
laryen. frantlm Clontl. Alen N* Frederick G Marti* a wt Teresa
Kamo, Richard Garl. Padre H . N If0' if Ltf I. Eurtta Ham
Bachrach. tram SWcar o t S E ’ .o l mock. Slt.tOO
n w , sac s it lo ole. sioo
Charles C Gamson a wl Susan
Sianiay P. Townsand. tgl ip to Ebarhord Soutrlolg a wt
(sacutrans. Inc . lat t. Bit a. Gertrud A . Lot II. Bit H. Oakland
Greenwood l*k*S Un 1. Sft OOO snores S d 1st Aadn 100.000
Ereculrans Inc 1* Sidney P,
RMnrt T. Monica a wt v.r g.n.a
Or ill in. Lai t. Bis B, Groonwoad la Eranklin J Btrnbaum a wt
Lakes, un t. Sft.000
Francis. Lot Of. Sunris* Un On*.
Wrntte Spgs Day to Dalca. Inc , Sfaooo
Lot St, Tutcawill* Un t. SJO OOO
Lou s* O Grtst tg Joseph O
Dt'co Inc I* Louis R . Ogut a wt Smith. Lots i a » Bih B. South
Batty Arm. Lot St. Tutcawit'a. Un
Aitamenta Mts. toi .ooo
t lit 000
Y»onn* J Croyia. sgi to Alan G
Urban E tp Carp ta Chateau
Johnson a wt B*b&lt; M N , Lot It.
Builders Inc , lot J$ Waklya Coy*.
Bih O. Sem nole Sites SSJ W0
Ph On*. If*.too
Jud.th G Gras*, sgi to Wiisan (
Lmnaft, N V. It Anthony Bank it
Tamer Jr a wt Mary A . Lot (A
a at Florence I . Un B f Marbey*

DON'T GAMBLI

H eritage COOKBOOK

Orientation for l.ym an High School freshm en and
students who are new to Lyman will be Tuesday Aug. 25 at
l-.Jtp m. in the school's auditorium. Schedules will be given
nut at this time, said Lyman Assistant Principal Gretchen
Schapker.
Hetumtng sophomores. Juniors and seniors may pick up
schedules on Aug. 27 and 2$ between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. In the
guidance departm ent she said.

REALTY TRANSFERS

1

Special Edition of the

L y m o n O r ie n t a t io n S e t

Goard* I.indoor jr.

The Interlace test, which began Mnrxtiy, Is behind
schedule because of a number of minor problems that
have (Topped up with the shuttle this sum m er A new
series of tests will Include dress rrh etrsa U by
astronauts Joe Engle and Richard Truly and their
backups, Thom as Mattingly and Henry Hartafleld.
They will board the shuttle n ett Monday fur orbital
maneuvers and a dry run of what it will be like to re ­
enter the atm osphere.

for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual

TOPS Chapter 271, 7 p.m. Firxt United Methodist
Church, Sanford.
Sanford Toastm asters, 7 30 p m., Rich Plan offices
second floor, Third and Magnolia, Sanford.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19
Sanford- Breakfast Rotary Club, 7 a m Sanford
Airport Restaurant.
Casselberry Rotary,
7:30 a m .. Casselberry
Woman'* Club. 330 Overbrook Drive, Caaaeiberry.
(hied* Rotary. 7:30 s m .. Ihe Town House.
Sanford Klttania. noon, Sanford Civic Center.

W eekly winners are eligible for the GRAND PRIZE
N O LIMIT T O NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED
YO U M A Y ENTER AS M A N Y WEEKS AS YO U LIKE

Food Categories Coming Up In The Next 3 Weeks Of The Contest:
MEATS -

DESSERTS — MICROWAVE

So tend In that special recipe your family and friends like so well
...It could be a winnerI

RULES:
No lim it to n u m b e r of re c ip e s su b m itte d b u t e a c h
re c ip e m u st include your n a m e , a d d r e s s and
tele p h o n e
T Y P E o r P R IN T your re c ip e g iv in g full Ins tru c tlo n s fo r p re p a ra tio n , cooking tim e a n d
te m p e ra tu r e . (A p p ro x im ate n u m b a r of se rv in g s
a lso h e lp fu l.)
A nyone c a n e n te r e x ce p t E vening H e ra ld e m .
p lo y ees e n d th e ir Im m e d ia te fa m ily .

Mall Entries to: EVENINO HERALD
c-e COOKBOOK
P.O. BOX US7
SANFORD, FLA. 32771

First, Second and Third p r im will be awarded in
each of Ihe nine food categories You may/enter
as many of tha weekly categories as you like.
A panel of th r e e e x p e rt judges will re v ie w a ll
e n tries e n d w in n e rs w ill b e notified a f th e e n d of
fhe co n te st In S e p tem b e r for a t a s t e o ff" lo
s e le c t,th e G ra n d P riz e w inner D ecision of th e
judges Is fin ai.
All re cip es re c e iv e d w ill b e p u b lish ed In O c to b er
for the E v e n in g H e ra ld 's first a n n u a l cookbook
contest.
O r D rop OH At Our Offices
SOON. FR E N C H AVE.
(By th e la k e fro n t In dow ntow n S a n fo rd )
M O N .-F R I. 1:30 5:30 -

SAT. I ; 30 NOON

Sanford Optimist Club, noon. Holiday Inn.
Recovery, far., 12:30 p.m.. Seers Altamonte MilL
Sanford AA B e g te e m , 8:30 p .m , 1201 W. P i n t St.
THURSDAY, AUGUST »
Soundaf-Sunahinr (ha[Her S e tc l AdrUar*. I p.m .,
St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. Bear Lako Road,
Forest City.

SUNDAY, AUG UST 23
Next Food Category MEAT

�OURSELVES
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,S
a
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fo
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.

Golden Anniversary
Mr., Mrs. J.P. Wilson Honored At Reception

■'
.

'

;
;
;
I
1
:
;

Mr. and Mrs. J.P . Wilson celebrated their SOth a d d in *
anniversary with a reception at the W om an's Club of Sanford
Their son. David, and his wife, Rinny, of Orlando, were boats
for the happy occasion held Au*. 2. between 2 and I pm .
Julian and Frances met when they each went to McReynolds
Dru* Store, Sanford, on an errand in 1929 after he came to
Sanford from Hawkinsvllle, Ga.. In 1928. Frances moved to
Sanford from Tullahoma, Term , with her parents in 1925.
They were m arried Au*. 11.1931 in Ihe Baptist parsonage by
the late Dr. W.P. Brinks and have spent alm ost their entire
m arried life in Sanford.
Julian was employed by Ihe Crown P a p e r Company at the
time of their m arriage and stayed with the business unUl it
dosed. He then became associated with the Gulf IJfe
Insurance Company unUl his retirem ent in 196*.
Frances was employed for some y ears as receptionist­
secretary In the offices of Dr. A.W. Woodall, retlrin* In 1973.
She enjoys gardening and both enjoy home activities. She Is a
longtime m em ber of the Woman's Club of Sanford and both ore
m em bers of Sftnlnole Heights Baptist Church.
A meaningful part of the celebration was the prayer of
blessings given at the beginning of the festivities by Ned Julian
Jr., chairm an of deacons of Seminole Heights BapUst Church.
Alice Rountree, sister of Frances, greeted guests at the door.
Julian and Frances' only grandchildren. Jennifer. 12, and
Michael, 10, were In charge of the guest registry. They were
seated n ear the entrance at a table covered with a white floor
length cloth with a lace ruffle around the edge and centered
with an anniversary candle surrounded by flow en In colors of
yellow and white. The guest book and pen completed the gold
and white appointments.
Frances received the guests attired In a lilac Jacket ilress
with off white bodice and bone shoes. She wore a corsage of
rose colored miniature orchids and carnations and white
button pompons surrounded by gold flecked net and Ued with
gold ribbon.
Punch was served at two tables that were covered with lace
and linen cloths over an underlay of white. The tables were
placed on opposite sides of the room and each was centered
with a large crystal punch bowl surrounded by fern and white
daisies, pompoms, baby's breath and fern circled the candle
holders that were at each end of one of the tables.
The second table held silver and cry stal epergnes with
tapers and flowers Identical to those on the other serving table.
The epergnes were placed on either side of the crystal bowl.
I’unch was poured by Mrs. J Leo Carey. Othera serving
were Mrs. Al llimuston, Mrs. W.A. K ratrert, Mrs. Hubert
Pearce and Mrs. J.P . HolUclaw.
The three-Uered rake, surrounded by fern and baby’s breath
and topped with a nosegay of fresh flowers, was served frwn a
table featuring the same type cover as the punch tables.
Smaller decorated sheet cakes were placed on either side of
the wedding cake and created an unusually pretty effect.
The ra k e was served by Mrs. Carl G rundlcr, the mother of
Mrs. David Wilson, Mrs. Homer little and Mrs. Gcrdon
Sweeney. A sm aller table covered with a while linen and lace
doth was centered at the end of the serving a re a near the stage
and held crystal dishes of nuU and m ints. Flowers and other
appointments were almllar to those used elsewhere. Ferns,
palms and potted plants transform ed the stage area Into n
lovely background for the recepUon.
The m antel was covered with magnolia leaves, fern and
daisies, with tall yellow candles at either end The fireplace
was banked with magnolia branches.
Floating hostesses were Mrs. J . L Horton Sr., Mrs Robert
Dunmire, Mrs. John Rivers and Mrs. Philip Hapeman The

;
^
3

•

:

Hie Sanford Lions Club began a new season with a
new stale of officers. Retiring president. Jack
Hunt, right, congratulates president Wayne Westmark. Other officers are: Shorty Smith, first vice
president: Ray GatU, second vice president; Don
Rainier, third vice president; Jack Hunt, stcre* tary: Gordon Flynt, treasurer; Mike Koleff, lion
tamer: and Fred Neal, tail twister.

TONIGHT’S TV
TUESDAY
EVETdNO
800
P &lt; 4 )(J 1 O 0 O NCYYE
I t I35)AN0YMFRIH
0 110) NATVMAL OIOORAPMC
SPECIAL Iwng Tiaaauraa 01
Japan Nma Jipanaaa aria ana and
parfornung a t HI ahe keep lha
heartbeat el an ancanl ciAra
putting through a
l(Rl
605
0 (17) FATHER KNOW* BEST
6:30
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7 Q ABC NEWS
0 (75) CARTER COUNTRY
6:35
1X(17|thatoirl
7:00
0 ( 4 ) NEWS
(11 O PM UAGADNE A Mail M
the C*eedeoe Cemp. e he««n tor e
group 0» peyChct end meJadn*.
IruRle hunting *»eth p&gt;g« n Franco.
Steve Ceney meiee • hammock
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(75l BARNEY MRLIR
(10) MACNCA. I LEHRER
REPORT
735
0|17)AUmTHCFAMN.Y
7:30
0 1 4) TIC TACDOUGH
1 &gt;l O EOTHCENTURY WITHWAL­
TERCRONMTE
( 7 ) 0 FAMILYFEUO
11 135) RHOOA
0 j 10) DICKCAVETT

.Mil. AND MHS. JU L IA N I*. WILSON
yellow and white color scheme was used In all the refresh­
m ents. Those who served were presented corsages of yellow
daisies, baby's breath and net tied with gold ribbons.
Approximately 175 relatives and friends called during the
afternoon.
Among those attending from out-of-town were: Mr. and Mr*.
J . l e o C arry, Umatilla, sister and brother-in-law of Frances,
and Mr. and Mrs. E C. Wilson, brother and sister-in-law of
Julian, Jacksonville.
Also, Mr. and Mrs. John Rivers and Kathy, Mrs. Ruth lo rd ,
A tlanta, sister of Julian. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carey and
children; Green Cove Springs, Mrs. Irving Clark; Ormond
Beach, Mrs Hose Woodall. Mr. Ed T erry; New Smyrna, Mr.
Bill Carey, 1-aketaml, Mra. Robert Dunmire and Rob Dunm lre; and Daytona, Mrs. lo re n e Pope.
Also from Ocoee, Mr. snd Mrs. H arry Truett, Mr. and Mrs.
Al Niblack, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Grundlcr, George Grundlcr,
Mrs. Glen Jackson; Orlando, Mr. and Mra. Warren Herbal Jr.,
and children; Clearwater, Mrs. Philip Hapeman; Troy,
Michigan, Mrs. Deborah M ashbum; Crystal River, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Roundtree, Jeff and Brian, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Sassard; Winter ^ark, Mrs. David McNab and Mrs.
B arbara Swaggerty; Palatka, and Mrs. Harry Hanson of
Hollywood. - RUBY DAVIS

Adoptee's Love Extends
To Natural Mother, Too
DEAR ARBY; Thank you for saying that when adopted
children become adults they have the right to know who their
natural parents are, providing Ihe natural parents want to be
found.
I'm adapted, but I am not an adult y e t I love the parents who
raised m e very, very much, but I would like to know my
natural m other. I often wonder, do I look like her? Is she
happy? Do I have any half-sisters or brothers?
To my " M a n " : Wherever you are, U you bore a daughter on
Dec. 10, 1987, I love you.
SHARI (ADOPTED)
DEAR SHARI: Wherever your m other It. whether she reads
your message or not, I know she loves you, too. Yes, I do leel
strongly that adult adopted children have the right to know
where (hey ram e from, but I also believe th at ae adopted child
should Intrude on the Uft ot hit natural parent, nor should a
natural parent Intrude on the life of a child once given up lor
adoption.
However, If a reunion Is agreeable to both parties. It could
complete the lives of all concerned.
There a re two organisations where both natural parents and
adoptees may register. Cross-matches a re made, and Inform ilton Is exchanged only it both parties desire U:
ALMA, P . a Box 154. Washington Bridge Station, New York,

T
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Dear
Abby
N.Y. 10033.
CUB, P.O. Box 873, Milford. Mass. II7S7.
DEAR ARBY: I Just graduated from college snd really
treasured my diploma because I worked very hard for a l mg
tim e to get iL
My mother w u also proud so she decided to surprise me
and fram e my diploma Abby, Instead of taking It to a
professional fram er, she took scissors and cut It down to make
it (It an old |3 picture frame she happened to have lying around
the house! When I saw It I nearly fainted. The diploma Is
noticeably reduced In atse and looks terrible.
My mother refuses to adroit she did anything wrong. I want
two things from her; 1) an apology; 2) I want her to arrange
with the college to send me a replacem ent I know I could
request a replacem ent of that diploma myself, but I think since
she's the one who mutilated It, the should replace It
She reads you faithfully In Ihe Loa Angeles Times and
respects your Judgment, so please put your answer In the
paper,
BURNING IN RIVERSIDE, CALIF.
DEAR BURNING: I think your w rU -m ranla| mother awes
you: I) an apology Ik her poor Judgment; t ) ■ replacem ent
DEAR ABBY: Do you think It’a really possible to forgive and
forget?
*
VIRG
DEAR VIRG: I know It is. W ere It not so, we d aO be thing la
an awful kind of hell
DEAR ABBY: Was I ever relieved to ace Ihe letter from
M 0IJ.Y , whose husband can't h ear unless he has his glasses
on! For years I thought 1 w u the only person with this freaky
problem. I'm extremely nearsighted, and I can't hear without
m y glasses — especially on Ihe telephone. Thanks, that letter
m ade my day!
FELLOW SUFFERER
DEAR SUFFERER: According to my m a il you kave a lot of
fellow su ffrrtrs, but hero's a new ooe:
DEAR ABBY: Tell MOLLY her husband is not craxy. I
alw ays thought I was because I w ear glasses end (lis t teeth,
loo, and would you believe when I take out my teeth and take
off my glasses, 1 can't hear a thing, either?
DEAF IN WYOMING
CONFIDENTIAL TO " H " IN ST. PETERSBURG: Don't
turn up your aooe al a good m an because be kms a Imie dirt
unde r hH f h t g e m i k Maybe b e got It from burying money ta
b it backyard.

Monday
Night
Comedy
*' Measure for M easure,"
one
ol
W illiam
S h a k e s p e a r e 's
le s s
frequently seen plays, (ells a
story ol lust, betrayal and
deception in a c o rru p t
Vienna. The extraordinary
dark comedy will make Its
encore appearance i s psut of
"T he Shakespeare P lays"
Monday. (Local tiroes m ay
vary; check listings.)
S et in a corrupt and
browltng Vienna, "M easure
for M eaaire" tells of the
peculiar attem pt at m oral
reform undertaken by Duke
Vlncentki (Kenneth Colley),
Vienna's ruler. Pretending
to leave Vienna on a Journey,
he appoints a deputy to rule
In his place — Angelo (Tim
Ptgott-Smilh), a supposedly
upright m an "whose blood la
very tnow-bro h ." Then the
Duke assumes a friar's habit
and secretly remains In the
city.
Once In power, one of
Angelo's first acts la to en­
fo rce Ihe ancient law
prohibiting premarital sex
by condem ning C laudio
(C h risto p h er S tr iu ll) to
death. Hearing of Claudio's
death sentence, his c h u te
s is te r,
Isabella
(K a te
Nelligan), who Is about to
enter a convent, returns to
Vienna to plead for her
brother's life.
Angelo (alls In love with
the beautiful Isabella, and
tries to strike an unholy
bargain with her: If she will
sleep with him, he will (res
her brother.
T he Duke, m eanw hile,
discovers the plight of the
b ro th e r and sister and
resolves the conflict through
an involved, secret plot,
tricking and flnaDy exposing
Angelo tor what he truly is.
The production also sta rs
John McEnery as Claudio's
friend Ludo.
"M easure for Measure”
was directed by Desmond
Davis. Executive producer
for
"T h e S h ak esp eare
P lays” w u Cedric Messina.
Alan ShaOcross w u script
editor, with Dr. John Wilders
of Oxford serving u literary
consultant. Jac Verna is
e ie c u tlv e producer for
WNEThirteen, New York.
A
presentation
of
WNEThirteen, New York,
"T he Shakespeare Plays" is
a six-year series beginning
Its fourth season this fall on
public television. It la m ade
p o u lb le by g ra n ts fro m
E x x o n C o rp o ra tio n ,
Metropolitan life Insurance
C om pany and M organ
Guaranty Trust Company.
" M e a su re (or M e a su re"
originally aired In April 1CT.
-F L O R ID A

ARRIVEHIVE
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7:35
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12.00

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11(75) THE WORLDOR PEOPLE
0 I 10) COOKIN CAJUN (MON)
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(TUE)
0 (10) MAOC METMOO OR OR.
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(SIIO)ERCA(FRI)
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WITH PARENTS ABOUT SCHOOL
(WED)
0 (10) EVENING AT POPS (R)
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WEDNESDAY

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legol Notice

|

FICTITIOUS NAME
None# -t ntfror given mat I am
" " H W i« bul.net1 al *02 W J71h
St, Santoed Fla M77I Seminole
County, Flor.da undrr tha Ik
HtlbuS name ot S A N FO R D
R E A LTY . and that I mimd 10
registry laid nam* with the Clark
ol Iha Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florida m accordant*
nnih the provdioni ol f*&gt;t F k
iillowi Name siatuin. To Wit
Vtcllon las OF Florida Statutes
If U
Sig Walley l Burks
Publish August II. II, SrpOmbrr
1.1. IN I
DEL MS
f ic t it io u s n a m e

Norkt it htrtby g y m Inal I am
engaged in business al No S It land
Dr. Laaa Mart, Fla Siminrt#
County, Florida undar Iha Ik
IlllOin namt 01 DESIGN D EPOT,
and that I inland lo register »a,d
nama w in Iha Clerk ol tna Circuit
Court, Sammole County. Florida in
accordanca w in Iha provisions ol
iha Fktltiout Namt llatuttt. To
Wit. jrclior. IAS Of Florida
Strtrtrt list
Siq Sylvia V McNulty
Publish August II, It, IS 1 Sap
ttmbar I, IN I
DEL *7
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolkaishartbr Oman that I am
engaged inbusmasaat Sat W Last
Vary Bird Lata Vary. FI m a t
Stmrnoit County. Florida undar
Iha lieii»iout nama ol TH E
PERMANENT SOLUTION, and
that I intend lo rtglsttr said nam#
ititntnaCiartol ina Circuit Court.
Sammotf Count/, Fionda In ac
cordencrwllhlh* pro visions ol Iha
Fie Minus Nama Slitutas. To Wil
Sail ion las Ot Florida Siatulas
•IW
S,0 0 ana Burton
Publish Augusta. II. II. IS. IN I
OEl »

Tu t* ., Aug. I I, I t l l

Legol Notice
N O TIC E OF P R O C E ED IN G S
FOR TH E VACATINO, ABAN
D O NING ,
D IS C O N TIN U IN G .
ANO CLOSING OF R IO H T IO F .
WAY
OR
D R A IN A O E
EASEM ENT
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE
NOTICE that lh« Board ol County
Comnlisslontrs ol Somlnolt
CcAinty, F lor Ido. al Ig 00 o'clock
a m on Iht 4th day ol Sapttmbar.
A D , IN I, m iht Couniy Com
missonart' Matting Room af tha
C«m !y Courthousa In Sanlord.
F lot id*, will hold a Public Htarlng
•orontldtrtnd drtrvmtnr whpther
or not tha Couniy will vacola.
abandon, dlscontlnua. closa.
renounce and disclaim any right ot
iha Couniy and tha public m and lo
Iha loilowing rights ot way or
dra.nag, a .t.m r n l
running
through or tdlacanl to ih t
daserrbad proparly, lo wll
Abandonment &lt;4 Lata Hawaii
Road ly.ngbatwaan Lots 1.1, 1 1 14
on Iha Wail fight al way lino and
Lo* IS lying on Iha East right ol
way line, as rHorded m Trout
Last Subdivision. Plat Book A
Page a*, sad tract being situated
In Seminok County. Florida
And
Abtndonmynl ol Currier Street
lying between Lyman Road West
right ol war Una and Iha Eaat
properly line ol Tfoul Lake Sub
division. Plat Book 4. P4 ga t* ol
Sominota 'ounly. Florida am
between .nr Norm properly line ol
Lol 7 e.tended Wasterly lo L ympn
Road and Iha South property line
ot Lot II tiitndrd Westerly lo
Lyman Road ol above said sub
division, all being siluaiid In
Seminole Couniy, Florida
PERSONS IN TE R E S TE D M AY
APPEAR AND BE HEARD AT
THE TIME AND PLACE ABOVE
SPECIFIED
( Seat l
BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
BY Arthur H. Backwilh Jr

F liTITIO U S NAME
Not i(* is htrtby given ih tt I am
rngagtd in buslntss al 1001
cler k
Sapling Or Ira WiMar Springs Fla
Joann Mery
UFOt Sammola County, Florida
Deputy Ckrk
undar Iha llcM ioul nama ol Publish August II. tail
M OTIVAIION DYNAMICS, and D G LM
that I intend lo lagniar sad nama
a in mt Citrt ol tna Circuit Court.
n o t ic e
of
r e s o l u t io n
Sammola County, Florida in ac
cordanca ml h iha provts lor* ol tha CLOSINO, V A C ATIN G AND
AIANDONINO RIGHTS OF WAY
FkllliOus Nama Slalulas, ToWiI
OR ORAINAOI EASEM ENT
Sac lion ISSOt Florida Slalulas
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERNS
i*SF
NOTICE Is hereby glvan mat tha
Sig JAY CIUFIF
Board ol County Commissioners ol
Publish July It 4 August a. II, II.
Sammola Couniy, F lor Ida, al ill
tan
Ragtdar Matting held on iha lim
OEK lit
day al August, A D . IF|l, M the
County Commlitioneri‘ Meeting
Room In the Courthousa at San
FICTITIOUS NAME
lord.
Sammola Couniy. Fkrlda
Nolle# is narabr glvan lhal I
raped la angaga in businass al pursuant la Petition and Notke
Stal Rad Bug Last Road Stminolt heretolore given, passed and
adopted • Resolution closing,
County. Florida undar Iha Ik
vacating and abandon mg, ranoun
Minus nama al TH E BOOK
cmg and disclaiming any and all
SHOP PI and Ihtl I Inland Id
igni ol Iha County ol Sammola and
rtgisltr said nama with iha Clark rIha
oublk In and lo tha following
ol iha Circuit Court. Sammola
described rights el way or drain
Couniy, Florida m accordance age taiemtnl. lo wit:
with in* proysons ol i n F k
X II right ol way located on Iha
lllious Namt Slaluln, loVYit
Section Itsoa Florida Slalulas west ol Lol I I and east ol Lois IM
and IDt: and Iha IS It right otywoy
HW
toe .ird on iha South ot Lots 1ST.
Vg Wtnaa Pi area
IM, m mi Plat ol llaria Colony,
tJO lago Visit Bird
Pial Book ]. Riga It. Records ol
Cauttbany, l l i r n l
Srmmok County
Publish July N. Aug A It, 11
gy tha Board or Comity Com
missionars ot Sammold County,
DC k ijr
*
Florida, this I Ills day ol August.
A D . IMI
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR M EAL)
BOARD
OF
C O U N TY
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
COMMISSIONERS
p r o b a t e o iv is io n
OF SEIMINOLE COUNTY,
Flit Numbtr II I7SCP
FLORIDA
Olvlttan
By Arthur H Beckwim Jr
IN RE ESTATE OF
clerk
JOHN S EUBANKS.
Publish August II. IMI
Dactotad |
D E LIS
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
tha adm imUral ion ol Iha aslaia
FLORIDA STATUTES I d J44
ol JOHN S EUBANKS, dataosad. I
l ila Numotr i i i n CP, IS ponding , Notice at Application k r Ta« Daad
NOTICE IS H ER EBY GIVEN
m Iho Circuit Court lor Sammola
lhal C 0 1 Esther V Wilder Ih#
Comly. Florida. Ptobala Oivlskn.
holder ol Iha following carlilkalei
Iha address ol which is Stminolt
County Courlheutt. Sanlord. ' hat Iliad laid caaiilkalatlar a i n
dead 10 be issued thereon Tha
Florida U t il Tha namas and
addrtssis ol Iht
ptrsonat ■ ctflilicale numbers and years el
issuance, tha deter Iplkn ol Iha
representative and Iha partonal
progdrlyi and tha nemri in which
represmlrlivrt attornay ara sal
II was assessed ara as follows
lorth tit low
Cyrtllkale No m
All Inttrtsltd parsons art
Year ot lituanca If 11
fequiird 10 lilt with this court.
Description ol Property Let III
WITHIN 1HREE MONTHS OF
Midway FB I PG 41
I HE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
Namt m which assessed Millet y
THIS NOTICE tit all Claims
Herbert L 1 Al.ct M
against tha rtltia and 111 any
All ol said properly being In Iha
obitclion by an inlaraslad parson
Couniy ol Stminole. Stole ol
lo whom nutKt was moilad mat
Florida
chailangts Iha validity ol m t will,
Unless such certificate of car
iha uuaiiNcai'ona ol Iha parson#I
•ilketet
shall be redeemed as
rrp rrtrn a tlv r.
vanwt,
or
cording to law Ih t propdily
iurrsdktion el tha ceuii.
described m such certificate or
ALL
c l a im s
AND
OB
cerlilkalet will be told lo Iho
JECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
H.ghvtl bidder al Iht court house
FDH Evbh BARRED
Publication ol in.s Nollco nos door on I k 14th day ol September,
IM&lt; al II DO A M
brgun on August II. tail
Dated th.t fin day ol August,
Parson#! Repretmlertv*
till
PHYLLIS A EUBANKS
(SEAL)
t)0 AAartin Aytnut
Aiitmonia Springs, Florida
Signature Arthur H. Eetkwith,
jm i
Jr
Altemry tor Pvrsonti
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Rrpftsanniivt
cd Seminok County. Florida
William J Malty
By Cheryl Greer.
rt BRANNON. BROWN. NORRIS.
Deputy Clerk
V O C E llE H A lE Y . b r o w n
Publish:
August II. II. IS 1 Sep’
1 ROBINSON P A
I. IMI
DEL N
Poll Other Bos IW1
Lake Cily. Florida )» s s
Takphona [M il IS] 1111
FICTITIOUS NAME
Publish: August II, II. IMI
Notice is hereby given Inal we
DEL tg
ara engaged mbutmottol I 4 S0 SI
Rd 414 Sulk No I. Longwood
Springs Professional Canlra.
Seminole County, Fkndo under
me Iklitout name el TH E UP
PER CUT. and that wa inland lo
rag'Star 14 id ntma with me Ckrk
cd Iha Circuit Court. Seminok
County, Florida in accordanca
with Iha provisions ol Ih# F k
lilkut Nama Valutas, T o w n :
Section it s 01 Florida Statutes
Iftf
KAREN MARIE D lP lE R R O
SANDRA JEAN SMEROELL
BETH ELIZABETH M ATHIS
CARL ERIC EICHNER
Publish August II. II. 11 A Sep
lumber 1, Hal
OEL .44

legal Notice
IN THE C ltC U IT C O U E T FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLO E IDA
FEOEATE DIVISION
F.lt Numotr II H I CP
D im k a
IN E E : ESTATE OP
E TH EL C MOORE.
DactalM
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS H A V IN G
CLAIMS OR D E M A N D S A
GAINST t h e a b o v e E S TA TE
ANO ALL OTHER PERSONS
INTERESTED IN TH E E S TA TE :
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O TIF lE O
Ihtl
Iho
ad
mlnlsiraiion ol &lt;ha aslaia ol
E TH EL C MOORE, dacaastd,
Fdt Numbrr II I74CP. it ponding
In Iho CircvH Court lor Stmlnela
County. Florida, Probolo Division,
Iht adorns oI which Is Sammola
County Courthousa. Norm Park
Avanua, sanlord. FL Tha parse
ati.aat ih t . . . . . . u
r, T * T t « ! « ? ! .
iu «
W ILLIAM K E N N E T H
HYO
TLAINE. whose address Is Ml 1,
Bov IJB, Lakt Tovawoy. N C
J ill J Tha name ind address olthe
personal r foments Hue's attorney
ara sat lorth below
All parsons having claims or
demands against tha estate are
required.
W ITH IN
TH R EE
MONTHS FROM THE D A TE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE. Id lild with tha
ckrk of Iho above court a writtan
statement ot any claim or demand
they mar hove Each claim mult
bam writing and mull indicate the
basis tor iha claim, Iha noma and
address si Iha creditor or his agent
or attorney, and Iht amount
claimed II the claim s not yat
dut. Iht data wh*n II will bdeoma
Ara shall be staltd H tha claim Is
contingent or unliquidated, tha
ntlurt oI Iht uncertainly shall be
staled Hint claim Is secured, Iha
security shall ba described. Iha
claimant shall dtlivar lulfkknt
topiet ol tha cla m to tna ck rk to
•nebk Ina dark la moll ana espy
to each personal reprrtanrativa
All persona inlaraslad in Iha
aslaia is whom • copy ol mis
Hoiks or Administration has bean
mailed are rtguired. W ITHIN
THREE MONTHS f r o m THE
DATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
PUBLICATIO N
OF
TH IS
NOTICE, lo lilt any objections
they may have lhal challenge Iha
validity al ih* decedent's will, Iha
quallllcaiiant ol the personal
representative, or Iha venue or
lurttdicllon of Iha court
ALL CLAIMS, d e m a n d s ANO
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
WILL EE FOREVER BARRED
Data ol Ina Hast publication ol
this Molke al Admmittratkii'
August ll. Itll
s William Kenneth Hyoliama
At Far son# I Rapa rtenta I Iva of
tha Eitait ol
ETHEL C MOORE
Deceased
A TTO R N E Y FOR P ER S O N A L
REPRESENTATIVE
s Douglas Slamfrom
S TE N S TR O M .
M c lN T O S H ,
JULIAN.
C O LB E R T
1
WHIG HAM, P A
p o Boi mo
Sanlord. FI JIJJI
Telephone JOS UJ JIM
Publish August II. II. IM I
DELAJ

___Legal Notice
NOTICE OF NAMES OF PER,
SONS A P P E A R IN G TO E E
OWNERS OF A B A N D O N E D
PROPERTY
Pursuant to Section 11 Chapter
TIT, Flerlda Siatulas. entitled
"Florida Disposition ol Unclaimed
Property Act", notice Is hereby
given that iha parsons listed below
appear lo be Iha owners ol un
claimed personal or Intangible
properly presumed abandoned
THIS DOES N O T IN V O L V E
REAL ESTATE
n a m a j » , t i* (o
J l i ( l l t t l A t KILL VO
c u m i i M r i pi m o t
m i-it iu -o o o s
S irli, S •
BIJI-ltiO -OD OJ
lo ialva. a 1
e 4 101 its
lia r m e t, r i
o u i -is i .-o e o i
* 6 n le , sail
IS4e ■ 1 ) in r i
tt*it&gt;4, i i m u
iiiirtiiO 'b o o e
•&lt;•••' « t i i i 1
F 4 I I I ISIS
t i v i cep, Is
JI/I-IM J-G O O I
MOee, e ■
e « i n lit
l i t ! pei, *1
le tt'lflO 'D C fl
i u t i i l l , a t lia i
101 vfeoil eo
Illle tv tC Shelves, r 1
Jtl| -| tlS -«0 4 1
c u a i, »4 tiio
J48 r l l l l l . J ate
i l l i h i a k sets, r i
C l l l - l f 10-Ovjl
Cut r i hhf4 ng, S, e
e 0 l l r sot
m * r a n , ip w h o
81,4*1113*0014
84UCIIIIv r H car
IIS etltg el
it I anisic Shelves, hi 1&gt;T0!
ClJO-lllO-OOOf
r u t i n , vancc
■4i m o f i 1
ail le i, re l i l t s
M ia-i«id*goov
saivaa, a i m
TCI I . l l r ■&gt;(
Sivy l i t , ri
0 ls l* lf l 4 - « w «
, W ill. H H CI
■I I , 111 *11
tiv lp to , r i
c lil-ir tg -o ljr
H ii s ii , i m p c
« i a i ll toe i t ot
(H illlia a i, n ijio i
■K io-lfig-oooi
JOW IIV, J ap
h a i n j it s
! HVICtB, IL
O llt-ItlO -tik lO
tuna, m a s t t
*01 lM*elab ia
iltiv g v tt S 't l s t , r i
D ill* 1113-0091
l l t l , lo u li c caao iiv
Its l« * « ll Ba
| SlIIMVIC t 'a lv i s y Cl

n o t ic e o f s a l e

TOENFOECE LIE N
To
Oavk Benton
4001 W Short
Tampa. Florida JSOOJ
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
NOTIFIED lhal Iha lianor brio*
cltimi o lien for labor and terv kei
performed, and appilcabia storage
Charges, on the lolloping
described motor vehicle
Make and Modal
IS Monty Carlo 1 door
I 0 No IHSJHID 41JJI]
tha lien claimed hereby may ba
discharged, and Iha vehicle
redeemed Norm told lien upon
payment to ilk lienor el loial
charges duo In Iho omount ol
siooi si
The lien claimed hereby is
subject lo wikrctmtnt persuoni to
Iha provisions ot Section i l l M l
Florida lit lutes
Or Augulf ||, i n i ol 14 00 A M
laid motor vehicle will be off wed
lor public sole ot Iho following
location
Nick's Paint and Body
MO 0 Brian Road
Fern Park. Florida H IM
easiest prior lo said dale, Iha
vehicle lhall have bean redeemed
by payment ol Iht amount Sot form
Tha owner ol the vehicle or any
person claiming an Inlaresl In or
Hen thereon has a right 10 a
hearing al any lima prior lo Iho
scheduled sola by tiling a demand
lor hearing with Iha clerk ol Iho
circuit ceurl m the county in which
me sinkk it held end mailing
capias al iho demand For hearing
•0 ail other owners and lienors t t
reflected in llvt notice
tha owner ot Iha vehlck has a
right to recover possession at Iho
vehlck without inti,luting ludklal
proceedings by putting bond in
accordanca with Iha provisions ol
Section SIT 111, Florida Slalulas
Any Proceeds Horn Iha sak ol
the vehicle remaining altar
Peymmt ol Ilk amount claimed to
ba due and owning lo'helknor will
ba dapotilad with Iha ckrk ol iha
circvit court lor ditpaailion upon
court ordtr pursuant la ledum
III MS It) Florida H a lu m
Publish August 14 IJ. 14 |«g|
O f L 44
F l o r id a s t a t u t e s it? iaa

NftKaye Appiicitiew lor Toa Dvad

NOTICE I t H ER E B Y G IVEN ,
that CD 1 Esther V Wilder Iha
holder ol Iha following certtliciret
has llkdsaid ctrldkolas lor a lav
daad k ba Issued thereon. The
cw ill kale numbers and years ol
Issuance, tha description of Iha
properly, and Iha nomas in which
.1 w as m atted ara 01 tortuws
c m me ait No 1*4
tie r ol iMuanca ITTT
Description ol Property: Lol
n Elk A Grov* Ten oca F§ J Pg el
Name in which assessed i
HeMns Ruth S el. al
All 01 said property bemg in iha
County ol lommole, H a lt ol
Florida
Unless such ttflitkeia or cor
FICTITIOUS NAME
H oik! A her ear given that I Am , titicaiM lhall be rrdeamad bc &lt;
cording
It law Iha prgptrty
wsgagrd m but net I al I I 11 High
detenked in such ca n ilK a k or
IM F I I I )
longwood
lia
Sammola Comity. Florida under cgrlllicalM will bo sold 10 Iho
highest bidder al the court haute
Iha ! k " t » « t nama id BOB DANCE
door on Iha tern day o&lt; Sept, IM I
DODGE INC OEA. .BO* DANCE
al II 04 A M
PEUGEOT, a&gt;)d lhal I Inland lo
Da led IMS Fits day at
rattler said nama with Iha Ckrk
IN I
Ol me Circuit Court. Sarnmok
H EAD
County. Florida In accordanca
Signatory Arthur H. Beck
with me previsions at me F k .
with.
Jr
"*Pv» Name Valmas. To w n
0*4
al Circuit Court y tl 1
Sac1on las M Florida Slatuka

"

of sarnmok County. Pkrita

ty Cheryl Greer.
Deputy Ckrk .
PvMiSh August II. 14. 11 4 Sap
1ambar 1. IMI
DEL Si

|llt-IMO*fiGOS
eccasiil. a 0
c i ii-m o -o o o t
hCCt, vcw 1
I t i *1*
icvastiC, ci
OIJI*l*SB-OOSt
•I I I , IIW IC
•11 MlCllly 11
ttvioao, ri
B it M iii-D m
• icviertts, a h
I I I P*lcart ct
•l!4h4Vt| IF* I VIS , l l
im * lt ll* 0 0 l l
SCIVIS, h vlsiie a.
■I . I M l ISO
u s e oab, i s ,
01*4*1110'OOPS
ivu viit* , c j
•01 *11111 ti
l i v l t a l . Pi W lt |
!tt l* l* ig -o o il
l e t i i t a i , I I I , H it
c/a din* 1 catena*. * ,o.
SCklkOCC * Cl
B i l l *lt44*COOJ
Tvta F ltt, M a n
l/CJ • I lia 11
14*104, l l
0 l* &gt; -|flB -0 la !
yiv polls, vatay
Iti ill
lO klvtlO , Cl W H O
I» af *|*I0‘U0|*
i l H i i i l i ic o n
JOB a iif iiv t H I
i l liaB kli if 1 1v i s , Cl
IIJI.IM O -bO O a
tia g, a n , 1
ar| 11 a c ilv c i 4 F II
Fit* f i t . . Cl W H O
BIJ4*lflC*40?l
t c » i JOva c
I l f I sftoiikP ba
la viaai, n
4iio*ifi4*oaw
•t i n t . t .
IBIS thFIfl Fi
tIM If B , Fl
4%ii*iti4*aooa
Inlormatlon concerning tha
amount or detcription ol iha
property and the name* and ad
drat* o4 Iht holder may ba ob
rained by *"r person poMtsimg an
ml watt m the property by od
dr eti mg an inquiry te G ER A LD A.
LEWIS. State
Comptroller.
Abandoned property Section,
ATTN Harry B Corson, toot Slot#
Copter. Tenantstee. Florida JJK I
ifgai 411 I k ) Ea suet to mention
the account number BEFORE tha
nama at published in this notice
units* proof ol ownership It
praseniodlo the holder by October
14. INI. the property wit be
delivered lor custody to Iha
Complralkr
ot
Florida.
Thereeflw. oil further claims
must ba directed to Ih* Comp
Hollar ol Fkttde
GERALD A LEW IS
COMPTROLLER OF FLORIDA
Publish August 14. IS. IN I
OEL N

NOTICE OF APP LICATIO N
FOR TAX O l t O
Flartde lletw kt ITT 144
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN,
1not Faul N SamorvHk or Sheila
E Somarvitie tha holder ot Ih*
Following d rill katas has llkd told
corntlcakt ter 4 toa daad 10 ba
slued thereon. The ctrlilkol*
numbers end years OF Jtfuencv,
the deter ipf ton eP Iho property,
and tha namas In which It was
assessed are as follows
Certificate No I H . Yeat 0F
Issuance Ifrl
Description 01 Property C Iga Ft
el Lot A Amended Plat Einora
Square OB 111 PO J l l
Nama *1 which alies sad F k
Urban Dev Corp
All at Slid property being In Ih*
County *a seminok, Hat* ot
Flot id*
Unlatl such c e rM ic e it ot
cartRicaitt shall
according to law
otteribed in such cartitkata
cartRicoirs will La sow to
tughast bidder ot lit* court nous*
door on Ih* list N r oP September,
IfM al 11 40 A M .
Dated Mils lain day
INI
(Stan
Arthur H Backwilh Jr
Ckrk tt Circuit Court
tt Semuibk Cooky. Fkrw e
By Cheryl Groer
Deputy Ckrk
publish August 11. B . September
I. 4. IN I
DEL Ma

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF S H E R IF F ’S SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
that by virtue 0* that certain Writ
01 Election issued out ot and
wider ina teal ol Ih* Court ol
Orange County. Florid*, upon 0
tmot lodgement rendered W Ih*
aforesaid court on Iho 17th day oP
October. A D lf7f. m that certain
cost trained. Sun First National
Bans of Orlando Plamtilt, vs
William A Haynes and J acquit G
Haynes, his wit*, Defendant,
which aforesaid Writ* ol Eaacu
lion was dtlivrrtd lo m t at SheaHI
ol Seminok County, Florida, and I
hen levied upon the follow mg des
ended property owned by Jocgul*
or William Hey ne t to d property
bang toetied in Sem.nol* County,
Florida, more
particularly
described as Follows
One HT7 AMC Pecer. Blue In
Cokf,IDNo A7A44JE74IJMbeing
stored al Altamonte Yawing Sar
vie*. In A llo m o n tt Springs.
Florida.
and Ih* undersigned as Sheriff ot
Seminok County, Florida, will al
It.44 A M on the fth day ot Sep
•amber. A D lt d , offer for sal*
and sail la Iha highest bidder, lor
cash, subject to any and oil
renting (lens, at Ih* Fror* twasll
Door of m* Seminok County
CourRiowt* rn Sanford. Florida,
tha above described perianal
property
That said talc It being mad* lo
solisly me lar ms of ia.d Writ of
Eiycirtkn
Jonn E Folk. Shontl
Seminole County, Florida
Publish August II.* is. «. Sap
Iamber I. I I N I
DEL 40

* -H bIp Wanted

1

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sem inole
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

Orlando - Winter Park
‘

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES
1 time
lie a tint
) come cull vo tim e! J4c B Una
) c unit cull v r t im ti
4JC
ItcanM Cutlvf tlm a i I le a tin*

HOURS
I 40 A M - S JO P M
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
S A T U R D A Y * Noon

11.04 M inim um
------------------------ ) Linas M inim um

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

Full or Part Tim* Tool and Ok
Maher Inquiry at Kokomo
Tool 111 W 1st St.. Sentord
Housewives. Grandmothers tor
part lim a and lull time
triephona soles No riperienc»
necessary Harbor Lighting.
K l Cornwall Rd H I a m
A - Rooters te
E«P*ekneed Own Took. Up to
WOO Lott o4 Overtime
AAA E M P LO Y M EN T
L O W E S TF E E -T E R M S
Itll French Avt
7111174
TWO MUSIC POSITIONS
Part time pianist, and part timt
children s choir d&gt;rector a I
hrs per wk Call Soniando
u m c . l i t t)*a _ _ _

Sunday - Noon Friday

4VON R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S

6—Child Care

4— P e rs o n a ls

WHY BE LO N E L Y T Writ* "Gat
A Mala” Dating Service All
agas P O Bo* 4471, Clear
wattf. Fl 11JII

SPUR OF T H E MOMENT
B A B Y S ITTIN G
i l l tiaa

Lonely Chr kt Ion Singles
Meat Christian Single* m your
araa Writ* Southern Christian
5 ng'#s Club. P O B a 11)1
Summerville. S. C Man or
ceil taoiBM MSB J4_h»s^___

Weekly,day Babysitting in
my horn* Have
References 1JI04J4

lonely. Writ* "Bringing Peopk
Together Doting Servlctl" All
ages L Senior CIHiens P 0
tail.Winter Haven. Flo MOM

Unattached? Lon*tom#? Start
Cauatr Court
Trial Membership, juil SJO
Stminolt County, Florida
Confidential Dignlliad Ok
Case No J t t t J t P t )
creel D ifteran I Count ryw Ida
ComBank Cassaiberry. Plaintiff
Literalurt Dating al Prtitigt.
vs
Williemitown. Mass t l j t r
Raymond A Angle and Baity
TH 111 as* stir
Angle. Defendants
Ceuafy Ceurl
Orange Caunty, Plarlda
5-Lost A Found
CataN* SOraiPti
Comgana Cassolbarry, Plaintiff
vl
Reward 10 anyone finding
Bally Angle
sunglasses with Gold Inllloll
N 0TIC I0P S H ER IFF SSALE
IMS) possibly Sanlord Piero
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
1JJ4HI or JIT ItSF
lhal by virtu* ot Those certain
Wmi of E locution ot ttylod obov*
Fousd - Sliver Afghan hound
and mora parlkutarly that certain
with grey coloring, temol*.
Wt it oF E ■tcution issued out ol and
coll Ila 0044 tits H o r n ) 4SSI
under the seal ot tha COUNTY
Court OF Oiong* County, Florida,
upon 0 final ludgamanl rtesdtrtd
Reward - Cat lost M Idytlwild*
in ih* aforesaid court on tha nn
area Rtdd,sh brown A whi *.
d*r ol Morch. A D 147T, In that
bobkikd and sliwitly cross
tartan cast ant Iliad. ComBank
eyed Wearing collar with on*
Casselberry, a stale Banking
orongt bead I I I J ilt
Corporation Plaint,fl. vs Belly
Angie. Defendant, which aforesaid
Wntol E m otion was delivered to )
me at Sh»f .11 01 Seminok County,
Florida, end I have levied upon ih* THE ISSUER in th* dvnommelion
following described property ol 11,000, or integral multiples
owned by Betty Angle, said tharoof. lo motur* at such times as
property Ming located In Seminole wov'dfd by resolution ol the
Authority,
boaring
inltresl
County, Florida, moeo per
parfb'e semi annually from dale
ticulorly described as lollows
One 1T74 Ppnlloc Grand Fria uni .I pad *1 a rale or ratal not 10
Automobile. Brcewt In Color ID wired Iht highest rata aliowabit
by law, a mora particular
No UJIFVFPIUS*
bomg stored ot Oavo Jonas description ol said Bonds bemg
contained in th* Complaint Iliad in
wratstr .n Farn Park, Florida
■hast proceedings, to determmo
and tho undyrs.gnvd as SharllF of
Ih* legality ol th* proceedings had
Sammola County, Florida, will al
and m en in connect kn therewith,
II 04 A M on Iho Hh day ot Sep
and tha legol it y of In* provisions,
temper. A 0 I t ll . oiler lor sal*
covenants and ograamants con
and tell k the highest bidder, tor
lamad martin, and teasing *
cosh, sublect to any and all
iudgmant el this Court to vaiidafv
Milling liens, at ih* Fravo (West)
•ha proceedings for said South
Doer ol in# Seminole Couniy
Seminal* and North Orange
Courthouse hi Sanlord. Florida
Couniy Wastawalar Transmission
Ih* abett described personal
Authority Sawtr Rtvtnu* Bands.
ceceerty
Thai said 1*1* it being mad* 10 Senas INI. and said Bonds whan
talftly iha terms of said Writ or •ssuvd pursuant iharato, and sak
Complaint now having bean
E ■teuton
presmivd lo this Court, tor entry
Jofei E Folk,
ct an Order to SFMHv Cause pur
thorlll
tuant to Chapter 71, Florid*
Sarnmok County, Florida
Statute!, end th* Court being Fully
Publish August Ii, I L A Sap
Iember I. 4, with Ih# salt cm •dvited In Ih* pramkas
IT IS O R D E R E D AND AD
September F. I t ll
JUDGED that in* Siaiaol Florida,
d elu
through Ih* Slat* Attorneys ol the
IN THB CIR CUIT COURT OF N&gt;nih and Eighteenth Judicial
THE E IG H TE E N TH JUDICIAL Circuits of Florida, and Ih* several
CIRCUIT
IN
AND
FOR properly owners, lavpayert and
SEMINOLE C O U N TY . FLORIDA ciiliansolth* Slat* of Florida and
ct South Seminok and North
CIVIL ACTION NO. H i m C A tl
Orange County
Wastawalar
L
Transmission Authority, including
VALIDATION
OF li.4 H .H 4
nonrasdentt owning properly or
SOUTH S IM INO LE ANO NORTH
lubiKt lo total Ion Intrem. and all
o r a n g e
C O U N T Y
amort having or claiming any
WASTEWATER TRANSMISSION
right, title or inltresl In property
AUT HORI T V .
SR W E R
I* be aHrtlad by th* ktuanc* OF
REVENUE BON DI. S I R I E I IN I. Ih* above mentioned Bonds, or lo
SOUTH SEMINOLE ANO NORTH ba eitertad thereby, be and they
O R A N G E
C O U N T Y
are each hereby requited to ap
WASTEWATER TRANSMISSION pear and show causa. II any mart
ba. before this Court on the Jam
AU TH O R ITY , a public cor
puratien end -odr pal ilk at Iho act at AUGUST. ITtl, at I 0 clock
F M as th* Chambers ol Ilk un
Stele ot Florida.
Plaint HI, daetignad Judge at Ih* Sarnmok
County CourthouS* In Ih* City OF
VS
t h e s t a t e OP FLO R IO A. m l
Senforg, Floeide, why tna prayer
Itv* Toipiyers. Property Owners ol tad Complaint should nol be
and Cililtns iha rn t end ot South N #»*ed end why tha pr weed mgs
Syminoi* and North Orongt toe tad Sewer Revenue Bonds,
Couniy Wosloweter Transmission lariat IN I, and th* Bonds whan
Authority, Including nonreudtmt
siued pursuant tnaeato should not
owing property or tubltct la b* vai.ualtd and confirmed at
lauiion ihvrain. and all others martin prayed
having or claiming any right, litk
ANO IT IS FU R TH E R OR
or miarasl in proparty lo bo ot
DEN ED AND A D JU D G E D that
factadbylhaiSvuanceoltho Bonds mis Order lo Show Causa ba
harem deter lord, or to be Allotted published in the manner required
ihtitby. and also lomlitoi* by SecI Km 7S44. Florida Statutes,
Couniy. 0 political subdivision or m me E V E N IN G h ERALO. a
iha SIM* of Florida, tha Cttkt of newspaper ol general circulation
Casialkttry.
W irier
Fark. Published m Seminok County.
Maitland and Orlando, municipal Florida, and in Iha SENTINEL
carparallant ol Iha S ta ll of STAR, a newspaper of general
Florida, and Ganav#1 Walarwqrkt circuit 1on published in Orange
Corporation. * Delaware Cor
County, Florid*
purPun. yt at..
AND IT IS FU R TH E R OR
DEREDANO AO JU D G ED lhal by
WCh Publication 01 mis Order all
OROEi TO SNOW CAUSE
10 THE S TA Te OF FLORIOA. property owners, laipoyart and
ANO
TO
TH E
SE V ER A L ltd ciiitans of tn* State ot Florida
FROFERTV O W N ER S. TA X
and ot South Seminok end North
PAYERS, C IT IIE M S OF THE Orange County Woittwotor
STATE OF FLO R ID A AND OF
Transmission Authority, and
SOUTH SEMINOLE AND NORTH others having or claiming any
orange
Co u n t y w a s t e
rights, litk or inPerotl m Ih*
Authority, or th* taiabk proparty
W A TE R
T R A N S M IS S IO N
iharam. Including nonresidents
A U T H O R IT Y .
IN C L U D IN G
N O N R E S ID E N T S
O W N IN G owning proparty or tobteci lo
PROPERTY OR S U B JECT TO larflan 1herein, and all others
TAXATION TH E R E IN . AND ALL h* '.ng or claiming any right, litk
OTHERS
H A V IN G
OR or ln&lt;crest in proparty te bo al
1acted by ih* issuance at laid
CLAIMING A N Y R IG H T. TITL E
Sew* Revenue Bonds. Series IN I.
OR IN TER EST IN PROPERTY
TO BE A F P E C T E D BV THE or k be affected In any war
ISSUANCE OP T H E SOUTH thereby, be and they or* mad*
I* tm i
SEMINOLE
AND
N O R TH parties defendant
proceeding, and that thk Coca I
O R A N G E
C O U N T Y
WASTEWATER TRANSMISSION shall hay* lu fk d k tk n ot them 14
ma same entent as M named at
AUTHORITY.
SEWER
REVENUE BONDS. SERIES IN I. defendants in t n * Comptamt and
personally served with process in
H E R E IN A F TE R M O R E FAR
TICULARlVDESCRlfeEOOR TO mk causa
BE A F F E C TE D IN ANY WAV
DONE A N D O R D E R E D III
Chambers at Sanlord. Sarnmok
THEREBY
TtkAtovocous* coming onto bo County. Florida this Jrd oar or
heard upon Ih# Comptamt this day AUGUST, m i .
llkd harem by the South Seminok
(SEAL)
and North O ro n gt
County
S K E N N E TH AA LE FFLE R
W o itt w tlo r T r a m m i i i l o n
CIRCUIT JU D G E
Authority stating 10 Otiarmmt llw
Arthur H Backwilh.Jr
authority at so W Authority N OOut
Ckrk ot Ih* CfrcvH Court
ns kwer h tv antra Nando, series
Sarnmok County. Florid*
Hit, m Ih* omosatt of not 10 ricaad
By Cynthia Froclor
1 1 004.000 la bo doted i n AC
Deputy Ckrk
C0UDANCE
W IT H
SUB. PubHM. August a. II. » . IN I
SEQUENT R E S O L U T IO N OF OEL11

Legal Notice*o
lS

Child car* in m y home Sunland
Eitatas
fenced yard, oc
tivitiei, not moils IJtaAai
Baby silling In my hom*
••par lane ad mother
H I I4JI

&gt;1—Instructions
Tannk Instruct k n — U S F T A
Cartitiad Group or Private
1eltons Children • specialty
Deal Maiictvwtki » j ja r.
Music Lessons Plano. Guitar,
bats bank, drums, brass,
woodwind H I BJS1

U— H b &gt;p Wsttted
Erpenanced lull Im# grill cook
— Apply Forlire Restaurant,
mt Orlando Dr 117*1). Sanl
♦

Wel der ★

Will pay lop m
viper 1ante

lor Welding

*AA E M P L O Y M E N T
LOW LOW FEE -TE R M S
Itll French Ava
11)1114

Cook
nperlenccd In line
dming. breaklast 4 dinner
Full lime Apply m parson I a
pm Dalton* Inn 174 aaaj
WHY SAVE IT
SELL IT
QUICKLY with a Fail Acting.
Low Cost Ctassitiad Ad
LFN It 7 port time. ] tt part
time Apply Laktv.aw Nursing
C m k r .f ltE Ind S t. Sanlord
^ Manager Tra.nes ^
Ours,aiding Opportunity with
caraoe uruimifad
AAA EM P LO Y M EN T
LOW LOW FE E S — TERMS
Hit Francis Avo
JIFIIta
Saks manager — aipenanced
only, qualitiad residential A
com m ercial
aiperlenc*
necessary For Interview
pices* coll Century It, Hayes
Realty Inc . Sanlord US SON
FIRST COOK
Evperienctd only hard apply
Apply in parson Holiday Inn on
iha Lokalrant
^ Vault Balancer
Teller riparlenc* will OMNlce
working corvS.fiont
A4UI EM P LO Y M EN T
L O W L O W F E E -T E E M S
Itll French Av*

111 l i l t

RN OR LPN
t i l and I] I Sniff Full lime
Apply in parson Sanford
Nursing Convaiatcont Canter.
HO Meltonville Ava.
RN Full Tima J S Shift Apply at
lahaviaw Nurtmg Canitf tit
E Ind S I, Sanford

Th* Pari Tima Carter
aaa » t * - Collect ISSI7D4
Boat *t temblors needed at onea
tar our cruiser department
Steady work for real producer
Cobio Boat C o . 100 silver Lakt
Road. Sanlord
Right now w* need a lew good
tales peopk who nave in*
ambdion and dedication 1*
succeed II that's you. then
were prepared to oiler you
real rewards 4 th* methods to
get them For interview please
call Canlury 11 Hayes Really
Servictt Inc., Sanford
nnaso
te Bookteeper te
Entry
lava)
Eiptrianca
Bookkeeping. Plus Customrr
serve# Musi be good lor this
salary 110.104
AAA E M P LO Y M EN T
LOW EST F E E -T E R M S
111) French Ava.
US Sill
B OO KK EEPER
Mrivmum 1 Y rs ncerim ct
Strong accounting skills 14 krr
calculator by touen, atcueata
typing tklllt Evceitmt salary
and banalits Call Cart Sandies
JII44J)____________________
Secretary bookkeeper Santoro
Deltona art* Eiprrkncrd.
good pay A good working
conditions l i t t i l l
Kindergarten 4 preschool
ttacher
Early childheod
drgrta 4 14 1 M F Tha
Gingrrorrad House. ISM Elm
H I I Sat tor Appi
Full cnorpa doubt* miry bkpr
FSaata sand complatt rrlurny,
including oddrts* and phone
no and refer meat tg hoi 14a
C 0 Evening Herald. P o Boi
law. Sanlord. Fla
A D D R E S S E D EN VELO P ES
NEEDED1I For information
mail satf addressed. Hamprd
envelop# to
BOX
lit,
DURAND. M l 444J?
te Acct Clark te
Dream lob with outstanding to
Lots ct room for advanca.
don't mist Ihlsl
AAA EM P LO Y M EN T
L O W E S TF E E -T E R M S
Hit Franck Ava.
17) Ilia

II—Situations Wanted
’ Cleaning - D lv L ” '
pratar Dalton* era*

_____ M l 7D4______
Hay Kids: Looking tor an M ira
dollar? Ask Mam 4 Dad la kt
you h a vo a classified ad
garage sal*

CONVENIENCE
STORE
CASHIERS
Good toiary, hotp&gt;t«hlotion. 1
•fft P4*d vlU ltofl ovtfy I
mowlht
not
ntctttory
For Initrylt*
pnono in« m«n*Q*r
Ai rport Bl v d

in 111!
H I AIM
I ll IU I

C iu H M r ry
C H rfy A v t
Lokt Mory

N O TICE
BINGO

^ Tres Trimmer ^
Steady work with lots ot Over
time

AAA E M P LO YM EN T
LOWEST P E E -T E R M S
IFtl FroncR Ara.
nssita
Haw stylist, asparknead Fee
progressive salon In Lata
Mary )J1 a ll), aval U a it l)
Need someone with evpaylenct
In light clarlcal sacratarlal
work. JJ) 17*0 I a m noon
Fk Cash outlay
beei th* vqureia 11 you arm s
making 1400 par mo and ara
working mora than I t hr* par
•h You can't p a n th k up. Gat
wee tha A C T ll. Coll

m * x i or pot a s m .
te’ Warehouse ★
work 41 AM Eacalknl
tenet 1It good poy
AAA E M P LO Y M EN T
LOWEST P E E - T E E M S
IF 17French Aue
SISSIII

K N IG H TS OF
COLUM BUS
J SOI Oak Ae* .
Sanlord

Thursday 7:30
Sunday 7:30
WlnS25S100
D-d you knew mol your
club or organuotion con
appear in this titling tach
weak ter only U 10 pay
weak? This k an krai way
It inform Ih* public at your
club act iv it las

DISAtlEO
AMERlCAk
VETERANS
Chart a*
M
H a l It n

KEYES
DISTRIBUTORS
l RETAILERS
LET KOR SPONSOR
YOU IN A NEW CA­
REER. START PART
TIME AND BE INDE­
P EN D EN T IN TWO
YEARS OR LESS. SUC­
CESS DETERMINED
BY YOUR EFFORT.
EARNING POTENTI­
AL IS U N LIM ITED .
CALL m -r iO TODAY
FOR AN APPOINT­
MENT.

South 1-4 Sanlord
General Me elm*

111 Tuts F 10
Cue kleil Leung* open Mon
thru Sol II koontill?
Bngo
Early IS.rd
•vary Wad 4 Sa’
evening al 7 l i p fa
It your club or organ&lt;yai«n
would like to ba included &gt;nttat
liSImg coll

E t ^ n i n ^ H e tu ld
C LASSIFIED
UEPARTM EN !
m S4II

fw a c t*

tt .

�I I

32-Houses Unfurnished

34— Business

41—Houses

T h E HAMBURG BUN 1$ A D E Q U A TE

Opportunities

For rant — n.ce u t remmi home
will) ancloiad garage In
dalightlui OeBary Also 1
bdrm. 1 B mobile home In
Meedowlea By the River Four
Townes Realty Inc Broker
tag ana

Two q unlK »n a n you M
linancially mdvpmdmt In 1 to
$ yaari? Ary ,ou peg . m i
you ary worm’ it nm cm ] j i

HAL COLBERT REALTY
I AC.

323-7132
Evas m oett
MTE.TSihSt

Ibdrm, 1 B. family room.
utility room, wooded let

atagejr

WANT AOS ARE BLACK A
W H ITE AND READ A L L
OVER

29-Rooms
SANFORD
R f»t wkly l
menmiy raiat ut.l inc Kit
WO Oak Adults 111 rail

UNDtORDs
Qua Iitlad I anants a ait Ing
Note* 1) 1 7)00
M V -O N RENTALS, REALTOR

Room lor rani, double oc
tupancy. 1 marking ladtt or
middle agad cpi kit pri* .
pool, rtfarmcrt. )J3 7160

D ELTO NA -- I bdrm, air kids,
pelt. SlOO mo i n mo
SAV O N R lN TA L S R IA L TO R

The # n i Buy In term -- A low
cott Clauifiad Ad

Ib d rm .) B wild
double car garaga, In
Dvirone Call Stl Itl)

X-Apirtments
____ Unfurnished_____

W E M A N A O i RENTALS
HALL HALL REALTY. INC.
REALTOR 1)117)1

A t have apertmmrs lo m l
Juoa Port'd a ran r
Realtor ) ) ] itti

Whatever theecceuan. there is a
d a ll i ed ad to lalra it Try

II you Ira n i u*mg your pool
labia, taka a cut. and kail it
witn a Mtraid daisied ad
Call » ) jail

B o n man b e t h e a n s w e r —

3 l U LP T i3RS

1 Bdrm Apti from ju t t A l
Bdrm alao avail Bool, lannli
Court m a t 76
FROMtltg
I Bedroom Apli Available
Shown by Appt Only UJIM O
MtilonvlM*
Tract
Apia
Spacious, modern J Bdrm. I
Batn apt Carpalad. kit
aguipped.
cm *
Naar
hotpilai A laka Adviti. no
■pttt.lJJO JJJtJU
Santord — I bdrm a dm .
c a ra m lc
balk, lurnltura
available, adults. 17Jt mo I

ait rati
•«l*v cauntry llyiagt 1 Bdrm
Apia
Olympic i i
Paal.
Ikanandaak Villtga Opt* a I

m in i

Manner i village on Laky Ada I
bdrm from MSO. J bdrm Irom
UIO Located 17 TJ lust South
ol Airport Slid us Santord All
Adulli JJ) 1170
Beautilul Large I Bdrm Un
lurmihed Private paid In city
UIO Call l ate 4171
LUXURY
Fam ily a
Podilda I
Cove Apti
waakanoi
J

*p * » ! v l ic i%
Aduiia stolen
Bdrmt Mailer't
111 Ttoo Opm on

Bdrm . J Ball), kllchan
equipped, miher dryer, air.
pool. USD mo leete and
dtpoklt. Orlando t«t 1717

D E LT O N A V ILLA S
III Cart ibean S t. Deltona 1 mile
oat I a Ibdrm. I B. adultionty.
appbincet A laundry iKintiak
lurn.ihed. CHAA. WW Car
rwlina. menthly rent Irom
11(1 For twnwr mtocan Odd)
n itM f

31-Apartments Furnished
Sanford
J bdrm, air. kid*,
pad. 17*0 mo JTt 7100
IA V Otl R 1NTALS R IALTOR

13—Houses Furnished
Mouse for rant in Oe Bary —
lit,last • 1100
security ila ajaa

34—Mobile Homes

(SPANT5

Ort full »«po»ufo - ii** »Ni»
"'For S*ic 1'ifn down Is run &gt;•
d a u f ed id Cill 333 3111 or
131 m j

37—B usiness P ro p e rly
SANFORD
7DCO sq It It Induilnal or
Commercial Building on 17 T]
1.000 ft n ottica ipaca Call
m ssio or M4 all)
Hava a room lo rani) Let a
das til ltd ad find a tenant lor
row'
Other Space
For Lease
110 7)11
For rent or laaaa — IAD0 tq ft
industrial or warehous* t i t
W. Itl SI . Sanford 1)1 1100

SANFORD
7 000 tq II it Industrie I or
Commercial Building on I) 1)
1.000 ft m aHke space Call
H I SSIO or l)a ila)

Furtnlaaodwerlnwitt let Senior
Clatjan* I I I Palmatio Aye . J
Cowan. No pawn# catty
Sanford I Bdrm. Kidl. Patl 1100
Down IXN Mo HI 7)00
SAV ON R IN T A L I REALTOR
SANFORD — Irm . air.gl.l Inc.
S100 on SIM mo ))a 7)00
SAV ON R IN TALS R IALTOR
every

day

is

Lake Mary near HUdm Laka
Etlattk 1 Borm air. fmcad.
now paint and WWC BITS with
Vaar Laaaa 1)111*1
Don't pita no long* noadad
ilomi high aa an alapnanl't
aye Place a detuned ad. and
pile the money In your wallet i
SANFORD — 1 bdrm. carport.
kicn. s*s »k u t not
IA V ON RRNTALS REALTOR
Big 1 Bdrm, lly Bain, carpet,
air Modern Net Area IMS
mo luteal 171 Mil a S M at*
tor Carl
Ibdrm . I B. tilth tqu'PPtd. air
A neat Mohawk O r. Santoro
UtO m o . 161 leti. leew I M l
6004 tut lor Ed
Spec love new 1 bdr m duptoi
torrent. KHchentultr
•quipped H I DM
JUST THINK. IF CLASSIFIED
AOS DIDN T WORK. THERE
WOULDN T BE A N Y "
■ - ■■— — ■ "

Up

New Ibdrm . 1E w air. Ayeileble
now 1U. M l a tecvrlty
Shown by app* )« n Place.
Santoro 1)1 Itaa t p m 11
p m . m a ia s I0 am i p m .
etk lor D ir id

CAS SAVER - TN i 3 bdrm
towMouti condo it writMn
Milking cMlifKf 10 \hopp&gt;ng.
h it CHA, WMC. &amp; Club pool
Only U i W0
- 13) 1 bdrm units.
r*c location, good invi%tm«nf.
S43JOO

Harold Hall Realty
INC. REALTORS, MLS
323-5774 Day or Night
HIOH RATES GOT
YOU DOWN)
Call as I tr Owner
F i m m ad Hamas

Sanford - Idyihailde Schad Nawly painted in A Out. 1RR. I
t . lam rm. CHAA. Ig lanced
yd. no pelt UIS mo. &gt; tec
n i i i n o&gt; niia a t_________
CASSE l B E H RY - 1bdrm. 1 B.
air. t u t . BUS me IN I W
SAVO N RENTALS REALTOR

—— —

—

—

-

Will r ml w Lease wim opf to" lo
buy a Br ) B Soma turn.tu n
SSOO mo HW Sac dep
N Real Estate

ni-ooti

M#olc Cfnif Or gin
but font L ktnfwF 19W
130)0*9

e

CANOPY OF T E E E I srrrawnds
this spec revs a bdrm l bath wFam Nm. eat w hitcban * ter
parch Owner mil caiudvr )nd
mtgi ssa.aaai
FA IN 'S CHARM graces
IMS beevlilvl a bdrm 1 balk
Name w aver Itaa sq It an a IN
a 111 psetyresem lei. Call tor
year per tana I leer.. 171.Mb

may

PRICED BELOW MARKET —
Super I bdrm spill plan w Can
HP A, W W cpI. btg bdrmi. ter
parch * lanced yardi Oasd
aswmpiiaai S44.JMII
POOL PARADISE - II s I I
tp a ib lip f paal w uide a
diving heard came » 4 bdrm )
halhi. Can H A a laiga bdrmt
pa IH a III let evertoektag
heeseat Oraar laemal iH.asa
C R E A T IV E
F IN A N C IN G
available aa tola Immaculate &gt;
bdrm w kage eel to kllchan.
kig bdrmt. paaaltod F am Rm
a ig yard alraal gatoral
u a .M

K js ir
i : s i \ 11

New 3 bdrm. 3 B home in
D*SAry CHAA cif pet. ippl,
jntyme mloe Johnny W A llir
R til E tlitt Inc Bfoier 371
MS?. After i 6414)93

BATEAAAN R E A L T Y
Lie Real Estate Broker
liao Santord Aye
.

d f t . h r* . 322-7443
Vacant
1I
Completely
redecorated New carpet
throughout Good linancmg
114.soo
Home with Income Owner
linancmg I BR bl with 1BR
Rental cottage plus eatra lot
All this SSI 000
Laka Mary
Lot IMTilSO’, Z
duple. Will trade S1LSOO
Country Eslata in town — I'.y
acres hea xly wooded, toned
agrlc. l a b arms, tty baths,
eat m kitchen dmmg room,
living room. Central Heat fc
Air, screened porch, 1 wells,
beautiful landscaping, garaga
* 1 space carport. 1 utility
buildings, and 1 space shed
away from house By owner
tiaf.OOO 1)1 1)14

ROBBIE'S
REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
n il ! FrencB

Seltt a

SasMed

24 HOUR Q| 322-9283

M LS

RRL AIR 1 lr , 1 1, rtasadeled
Maw Appi. A carpet*. PPL.
Lrraly yard. HlLtta
S TA TE L Y 1 Sr. I I . 1 Mary
F*ol u r n rm. nice
area, aura M . lei.***
R IA L TO R

Altai Ar*. Jn-TIM and ITt-dMl

FOQV P A T R O N 6 OP T h e A R T * 7

S -‘t

SO—Miscellaneous for Sale
a*

ll'iSS* Concord or !4 ‘&gt;S1‘
Harltord Both Ibdrm 1 B w
shingle root, wood siding,
deiuie carpel, drapes K ap
ptlancee Your choice at
Sta.TTS Only at Uncle Roys
Mobile Hama Salas
in
Leesburg No down payment
VA, all other linancmg 10%
down Shop Uncle R oys
Mania Home Sales. US *41 $
Leesburg 11041 7I7«)14. Sun
days 114 cm »k rights - 7 30
Tha wraihar Is perlad lor a
backyard sue —
sail
rvertlhingletl nith a want ad
Call 11)1*11 or *11 toil

King Slia hand crpcnned bed
caver
Whitt with blue
r dial las t i n no if U

51—Household Goods

I POP O O LLA tt

f t r your cor or truck, regar

D&lt;nmg Rm Sat Fruitwuod Cane
flack Chairs. Hkt naw.l Living
Rm sals, campieit walHbed
with Orjwrrs. bra*k lloor
lamp*, brau and giait labia*,
an much mar* M l 1174

39 VW Bui 1owner
Nvw u rn ilr. 71 OOOml
USOO 1*9 00)3

Lawn ALwer Sate* and Service
W* Sari the Betf and Servlet
In* Re*t Bab Ball Western
Auto SOI W 1st St

Aft you 4 full flint drive* with a
Pir) fimt car? Our clittif»»dt
if* loided with good buy for
vou

When you ptace i ClitUf ied Ad
m The Evening Herald, if ir
close to your phone beciute
comeffnng wonderful I* ibouf
to hepoen
t Pmto 1 - Pifitoi ■Pluto* !
'31A ofomit ic
' 1391
'3J AutomiHCi iif
I I lH
*73Aufomif Ic
|f9S
'3*4 Speed, itf
II99S
39Auto, ilr
1)491
t i t 1334
Moving fo * newer home*
oportmenf ? Sell "don’t need* *
ti*f with o w&gt;M id

* B 4 H Auto Sales
★ 339 7989*

74—Auto Parts

Kiryj ilia bad (No frame) 1*0
Good CondlHan
))) foil

uitia*

'B U Y JU N e C A R IA TR ljrK S ~
From III la ISO or mgra
Can III H)4. S i 44*4
Tap Dollar Paid tar Junk A Used
car*, true** A heavy equip
m « I ) ) ) SIM

F rtt fo good hom»
3 yr old
ftm ili Engllih Whippof
Ntfdt tffxrd In ytrd Good
wit* children 373 0191

Kanmort part*, larvice. uird
wathar* MOONEY APPLI
ANCES Jiio a il

Good Used TV'S. MS A up
MILLERS
M il Orlande Dr
Ph 1D01S1

P9Hondi Twm Star
919CC Prrfict 400 ml.
1991 1*9 003?

79—T r u c k s T r a il e ti

Mult Set! Pony y rtif wilt'h fOdl*
Sidd'i ind Brldlf HOO 332
311) or 333 MIS

II Plymouth Fury III. 1 door
hardtop. PS A PA. good
running cond. ISM H U M )
16 J*Mr Wrechnr S rrv ic * e
Hiqhrsl price* paid lor |unk ar
uird car* A truck*
V

11)1 Chevy '* Ton Lonq Whyyi
base HI VI Straight t!Kh
Look5 good end run* good
l i m B)l 9334

67—Livestock Pou Itry

If vDU iff M vng ijiffitulty
finding 4 pi*ie fo hvt, Cif fo
Ofnrf* i lOD- Of s-om# ttrvlct
hiv* ntttf of, r«dd ill our
win! ids »v#ry diy.

* -‘ DAYTON A AUTO AUCTION
pfwy T). T mil* wall ot Spate)
way. Daytona Btach. will hate
a public AUTO AUCTION
ovary Wednesday at •p m It's
tha only on* In Florida You sal
Ih* rttarvad price Call M l
MS MU lor turthar art a lit

79—M o to rc y cles

64-H orses

T V R a d io S tereo

* lin k finiitciitg iviiliO l* •
H e y .li t )
C iliilb erry

CASH FOR CARS
Running or not

Anlmjf Mivtn Kfnrwft Poifdirig
k oroomtng ALSO STAR
TIHO STUO REGISTRY Malt
o»n»r» cill W S3S3

57—Appliances

Call. Approalmaialy
111pound*
11)11*1

Cliilitied Ad* wOl efwiyt give
you more
Much
Much
More then you «RpPCt

20 ACRES WOOOEO ROLLING
HILLS IN GENEVA AREA
UW0 PER a c r e , s e l l e r
FINANCING, MAY DIVIDE

+

10 ' Bonneville
Brough im*
D«ete). loided tltff
*33 Pontioc Synbifd L»ke new,
1)399
79 Ford Von
ton. WM»
if Ponltic F trtblrd 4 cli»*k.
H IM

4 G3IX14 billedwfnfewillflrtt
Uk# new, SfOflrm
•J) 1734

0#fmin S Mil# 3 Y r» Supif
•ntfi children tic WifcA dog
1200 132 S717

,im * y

43— Lots A c re a g e

S ACRES, TALL,PINES. SOME
PASTURE ROAD FRONT
AGE RIVER ACCESS, g e n
E v a t&gt;$aoo

dteu of cond Prefer running
Ire# lowing U l* U lt Agmla

77—Junk C a rs R e m o v e d

S3

Sanlord Prime Ii Si Acres w
options for toning SI7.SOO w
Terms W Mallciowski 1)2
fit). Eves m 1M7

FILL DIR TA TOP S O ll
YELLOW SANO
Cell Clark A Hlrl DDSA0

AKC A1.Hkin M ilim u 'f pup
p*n EactUinf Bfffding 13)0
ihoH i *orm«d (M iir i) 373
«441

M -A -fu m ltu rv

J U 1 U E fIR S TS T

Cnntard I4‘i *i ) or Ibdrm . lire
m utant walls, wood sidrng A
shingle root only SU ITS
i i « sa .aniySii.Ti)
14 «70 .o tllylU .m
No money down V A , 10% down
FHA Shop Uncle Ray's Mobile
Home Salts US 4el S
Leesburg U til 767 0))4 Open
Sunday* 1} Ip m . week nlghti
ill 7 M

75A V arrs

AKC Dobff m*r» Pup» BliCk and
T in • W kt. wormed #r&gt;d fait*
docked D00 ) 904 97$ 1095;
114 3791

w il s o ^ M a ie r f u r n i t u r e

nab our bnaulihil new BNOAp
MORE. Irate A rear BN t
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
Orlando Dr
H I )M
\*A A FHA Financing

42-La wn-Garden

6 5 -P L 'ls -S u p p lie s

D i tto* 4

r&gt; Vrye
*uto air, *aso I rm
1)11*4*
IDS Pontiac Sport Coup*, run*
good ISIS or bail oltar, Call
altar * p m ) n Mao

CONSULT OUR

Rag Rail Estate Rrakar l
111 lari
E v. m itaa

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

1 ACRES c l e a r e d l a n d in
p ao la t u r n
sc lea h eo o u p le* lo ts

NEW LISTING Ilia Elm Ava
Simply lovely This 1 Bdrm
home has Cantral HAA and
screened porch Grail neigh
borhood loo Foil bit owner
linancmg 141.100

SANFORD

IN
S I).SOO I AC M

REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader

B EA U TIFU L 1 Adrm 1 Balk
Cuitom belli taargy saving
M a t an large aaadtd Ml. in
Lnch Arberl SqinFpad ea« III
kite km . parch, fireplace.
Cant HA and lets mpre&gt;

kit.aaa

JU S T L IIT B D Farnltbad 4
Bdrm |t| Bath hama la
Weihlnglen Oakil Fenced
yard, Dining im. Wall-wall
carpal Cam H„ tend Can
ditlani Jail 141.144
JU ST FOR YOU I Bdrm I Balk
Hama la Rav. P*. LAI Cant M
A. Igwppad Rilchaa Palm,
naaly penned and carpatodl
Mutuits Iram Dell ceursal
Only IS*.IM
OUTSTANDING Catlim built 1
Bdrm. 1 l| (i lk huma an
bvautital landscaped earner
toll Vaar twn Paha and Peal
and avary ather Imaginahla
taatoral Taurt tor ite.lPt
M AYFAIR VILLASl I A 1
Adrm . 1 balk Canda Villa*,
nail to Maylalr Cavalry Club
Select year tot. finer plan A
inttrier decari Quality cam.
strutted by Sbaamakar tor
MI.1W A apt

C A LLA N Y TIM E

322-2420
REALTO RS

Multiple Listing Service
Panto — &gt; beam. I B. eel m
kllchan. Hying room A Florida
room On 1 tread tola, SB'klSO’
a* . I Q &gt;111._______________
m.joo
Spacious 1 BR. I&gt;q Each, F E .
New Root, Nealy painted,
near Pm eant SOwpL targe
Im-.ad back yard
A A MtCLANAHAN
Lie R n lE u M a Brener
»H W

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

XIO ON I II ). NEAR NEW
WINN DIXIE CENTER c o m
ING AT LAKE MARY BLVO
ZO N E O C O M M E R C IA L .
IDI.00
1 HOMESITES IN ORANGE
GROVE AT UM ATILLA SJIOO
EACH. CRAZY TERMS

STENSTROM

To List Your Business...

z o n e d for q u a d s o n o f
f ic e s

! « ACRES WOOOEO L IK E A
PARK. ON TOPOF A H ll L IN
G EN EVA 140.000. TE R M S
AVAILABLE
) 'r ACRES WOOOEO ROAD
FR O NTAG E IN O S T E E N
III.S00

ConcrtltWtertc

Air Conditioning

Cancrtto War*, iocvrrs. floor* A
pool* landscaping A sod
work Fra*til 17)710)

UNCLUTTER YOON CLOSET.
Sail Ihas* fh ngs that art |u*l
taa.nq up spec* wiih a wan) ad
in th* Herald » ] Jail or Ell

I MAN QUALITY UP tM ATIO N
• yrt rap P llq i. Driveways.
*4c Wayna Beet ))7 i j j i

S ACRES WOOOEO JACKSON
BAY
AREA,
O STEEN
siasoo. s e l l e r f i n a n
CING

Etodrtal

Buuty Cate
TOWER'S B EAUTY SALON
FORMERLY Harrieff* Baauly
Nook III E Itl If . Ml S74)

StlO LER r e a l t y b r o k e r
n i 1*41

I \

■

4 7 - R e e I E state W an te d
W* buy aqulty In tidutaa.
apartmaru*. vacant land and
Acraaga
LU CKY
IN
VESTMENTS. F. O Bern MOD.
Santord. Fla H IT) m « t l .
CASH FOE E Q UITY
Wr can dole into hr*
CallBart Rial Etlali H I )aII
Don't Drspi'i Or Pull Vaur Hair
Ula A Want Ad l ) ) l * l l p r
111 11*1

47-A—Mxlgigts Bought
4 Sold
W* par cji* lor i u A 7no
mortgagat Ray Lagg. lie
Mwtgagt Broket 111 Til*.'
Deal with Oran — Tap S paid tor
HI ar 2nd mgrtgegt you held
Phon* quoin given Ed Dean
111 W Calomel Dr . Orlande
41) 4000. ph an*walk 14 hr*.

Bo«rdlng 4. Grooming
Animal Haven Bearding and
Dreaming Kennels Shady,
maulaled. tertantd. fly proof
.red*, nuts da runt Fan*
Alto AC rages Wa caltr to
your pat* starting tlud
ryglitry Ph MISTS)
Snow Hill Kennel attar* Cat A
Dog Flat Bath* IS up 14
Hour. Full Service MS M l)

Building Contractor
Bill Cart*. State Certified
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r
Rttldanliai or Cammarclal,
Naw or Ramadtiad uioaer
Tomorrow may b* in* day you
•all INat rail a way bad you've
nownaratoreilawar
It you
ptoct a Clamlied Ad today.

M iscellaneous f o r Sri le

Brown Elvar Rack, Window
Alii. Readr Mia ConerPa,
Patio Storm. Concrete Slap*.
Grata* Trap*. Miracle Can
crate Ca m Elm Avp.,

Ptopia Who Ilka monay uta sow
coal dauitiad ad* to buy. m l.
or trod*

v •

F addIt lent milal'ed.
r mdmiiei altcir leal work,
call» ) *14)
II row don't tall paopta. how arrmay going I* know) Tall I ham
with a rieii-f.rd ad. by calling
m u n or p t m i

Clock Rtpair

Handyman
Painemg, carpentry. *11 lypt* al
homi repairs Call tor Ira*
etlimala OT IMS

M il Park A ,*
m *soi

e|C

LIROE T R IE IN S T A IL E E
Langicaplng. Old Lawn* Rt
placed US SMI

Mobil# Homtt, Mourn. Root*.
Truck!. Trailer. Etc Portable
Unit Haraw'NenkJn M l 1

R eco rd s —
L atesl H its

Erick flock and Siona All type*
et Masonry Quality work
manthlp Fra* Estimates
Anytime D i e m or M l* ))*

a

Ail tna Hit* PHivarto to you
Pop Country Rock Gqtptl
Soul To order call Larry *)Y

test

Rtmodtling
Any kind or Masonry work tlen*. brick, blocks A can
craft I D IMI John Mawnry.

NEW Cancral* Buildings, all
tim S M A up A ll 4 A SR ea 1
e Indutlrlal Park, i n OUI

Remodeling Specialist
W i handle Ih*
Whole Ball el Wars

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029

in

Financing Available

Nursing Cant*r
Roofing

Hailing A

Yard Work

every Day h b a rga in
day in the WANT ADS M)

Mil ar Ell Wtl.

Faulting. Real Ing. Carpentry
Uc. Bended A Guarani tad
Frog liHRsato* U A IM !

OUR RATES ARE LO W ER'
La* tv law Nursing Canter
Itf I Second S t. Santord
111 *10)

Odd Job*
J A R ham* Improvement —
Carper*ry work or any type.
Root rtpairt. gutter work,
pamtmg &lt;Manor or titer tor),
plumbing, ipecielllt m mpbila
home raptir* A root coal Ing.
and wood pei-o deck* Free
etlimala 1)* let!

QUALITY AT A FAIR FR i c i I
Gan E tp tm A Imprev IT yYA.
locally Sanier D M . U 1 1)0L

9 9

*w M T

t ‘

Painting

Will* Way Roofing « id Pam
ling Guaranteed work Iraq
Etiimait* Fk m a m .
ROOFS, Saak* repair ad, Raplac*
relit* tavat and ttongto stark,
licensed, insured, banded.
Mike DStolTI.
Christian Roofing 1) yr* tap
Sal DIE. tree t i l Rar oofmg.
spec-elite m repair work A
naw rooting
SOUTHERN ROOFING IS yrt
tap. r* rooling- lee* tpaciel
price Oat or night n i l M l

Sandblasting

Mailman Fainting A Repairs,
Quality m rb Free l u . O ltc.
to Santon. AM *4to Ralrr,

CLASSIFIED ADS AR E FU N
ADS READ A USE TH EM
OFTEN YOU LL L IK E TH E
RESULTS

g w a ltn ey je w e l e r

Plumbing repair all type*
ne'er heeler* A pump*

it * easy ta place * ClMvtiad Ad
■ We'll ayen halp yeu word
N Call
M il

HoftmRepairs
MElNTZEN TILE
Naw or repair, toaby tNowar* our
tgtctolly. JJyfl Eip ta its a i

p l u m b in g
con
llrutlton. Repair I, Emergen
cy Lie , Bondtd. ini SlleOIS.'

fo nseca

Prtssurt CUanJng

im f e o v v m e n t s

Campieit Ctrtm K Tito t a n .
wall*. Hoar*, counifdocn. r*
modal, repair f t tU M l Oil I

Freddie Noblnton Plumbing
Repair*, la u c tli. W
C
Sprinkler* ID ISIS. 2DM0A

Landscaping

MlnlU-Lock

CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME

•j , rV 1 ^ 4

HVPNOSISII
SHF Smoking. Lota Weight,
Build Confidence*. Improve
Ralalianthipi, and much
moral I Attar
ytara of
rttaarch.Or Catty, on* ot tr&gt;*
leader* Vi hypnotn, ha* won
m* Evens Award lor hit
pravan technique* O fllct
downtown Santord I a m S
pm Call 111 1SOO lor ap
pointmant or Information

Masonry
Hay Kid*: Leaking tor an tatra
dollar? AM Mom A Dad to let
you Nava a cla m lie d ad
»*r*ga tala.

CiramicTlit

Phone Mali answering machme
MM Can Shinty
ni m *
Quality Western EooU l » t »
AEMV NAVY SURPLUS
IM Santord Ar*
m in i

Quality ttoctrkca! work n yrt
teptritnca Minor rtpa.ri lo
complete wiring I t ) Oft*

Somebody U Uoattig tor your
bargain Oner it today In Its*
Ciatsiliad Ad*

Alov mg la a newer hem*,
apanmwil? Salt "Pen t naqdt"
t*U with a want ad
MEN'S. LADIES’ AND CHILD E E N 't !• % *H all Etoa
Oerum Jtaaa. Llbartv Eibb
Overall* aad Aacts. Early Bird
pat* latocllm al Ml**.
WILCO SALES NWY 4* W 4 M l.
W OF M U N F O E D U U P I

E l e c t r i c i a n to yrt. t i p a h
type* ot afactrial work at lair
price* ID DM

Haulmg A Yard Work I* % *H
with A t m i n i M ana. m
un Larry, Joyce Bryarg^

Cir Rtpalr
«&gt;

Plumbing

Hypnosis

Chlla will u TvR f AC*, rtfrig,
frttiar*. walar caotort. ml»c.
Call M l *7)7

• «

. -

fj T Brd L0id?d&lt; N»w Tlrt*
Blue with nAMf lop No
money down. |3S mo 139 9100.
134 4103 Oeifer

) ‘ j ACRES, TA L L P IN E S .
GENEVA. 11).Jpg. LOW IN

IMS
Part

I!

LA K E MARY ) Id . ) | . F a n .
■ a .. Fireplace. Ceitteg Fan.
Fenced Lgt. Let ttl.aaa

321-1041

Alummum. can*, coeppr. toad
brau. tilyar. gold Werkdayi
14:10. Sal I I K o k o Mo Tool
ra li t W Ut SI H 1 11M

ONE PHONE CALL’ S TAR T* A
CLASSIFIED AD ON ITS
R ES U LTFU L e n d
th e
n u m b e r IS ))&gt; T»M

Outfit - woodffl, * »tr »ng.
like n*w, with €i«».|13S
*4111*9

r e a d t h is t w ic e

ASSOCIATES NEEOBOI New
tr aipartoncad Call Herb
Slant Iram ar Lea Aiknpkl
to*ay A ditcavtr tuccasii

CALL32V1Z74

M l -0041

AST

4 j—Mobile Homes

r ea l e s ta te
r ea lto r , m im

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE

■ UY OF THE WEEK - Al
tractive 1 bdrm Ctacrete Bib
» Drapes. E h . Eat. E Dish
washer an levity H s I M W I a
lap area Only Ml.tMII

*

SURPLUS JE E P Value U U *
sold tor 111 Call 1U 24) 1)43
E .t 70* tar into, an haw to
purchase pargatn* like this*

Far Estata. Commercial ar
|Residential Auction* A *p
praisait Call Dair* Auction
Ul.MM

Lowrfy

CallBart

r ea lto r m m i
E «*t )i« MM. S3) IHt. H I JM4

.

Laf a t i m i.rd Ad halp you lim
more room far storage
Classified Ad* find b u y m
fan

71-Antiques

OWNER f i l l f i n a n c e
Superior Maylalr Location
Highest quallly, roomy,
gratiovs living lor those who
appreciate Ih# hnesl This 1
BR. 1’ y B. eiecuhve home Is
priced righi al Ml MO Call
now lor appl

HANDYMAN SPECIAL — P ir
H i fly rtfu#b«iNd 3 bdrm, ) B
on H w f 44 'Witt Owner
flnonciM iviilAbii* ISI.fOO

i;i \ i

117* Caddy E icaliant condttioa
AT. FS PD AM FM radto.
grrm mull i n M ils 111
fan

59-Musical Instruments

s a n f o a o a e ia

SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR

Antrque* Diamond* Oil
Pemflngt Oriantal Rug*
Bridgas Anliquts
1)1 3B01

ter est
assum able
m o r tg a g e

S T E M P E R AGENCY

b a r g a in

LONGWOOOLK T IN T — J am.
fcidvSIOOdn, MQOmo U t )JO0

Gun Auction Shotguns, Rill** A
Mandguni Sunday August » 1
PM Santord Auction H I flag

41—Houses

OAV IN THE WANT AOS M l
M U or 111 tan

31A— Duplem

57A-Gum 4 Ammo

Don't pile no longer headed
items high as an elephant's
aye Ptaca a class -red ad. and
pile tha monay m your wailalt

N E E D A SERVICEMANF You'll
find him lilted in our Bvtinatt
Directory

duplex

Looking For a New — ....
Check tha Want Adi lor noutet
ot eyrry kite and prke

ISMS French B1011I
After Hours lea 1000. I l l WTf

321-075*
CASSELBERRY
) Wrm. «ir»
h*d%, ptf%, t)9S mo 339 7300
SAV ON RIN TALS RIALTO R

FE P E R A L

ao-Autoi

if l-W a n t e d to B u y

I S Sears Bast motor, good shape
— 1 100 16' Jon boat, aluminum
- 17$ I HP Wisconsin angina,
complete overhauled — *ISO
S'y HF Cohler engine, com
plate overhauled. tllS I S
Briggs E Slralton engine, A 1
shape - 1110 All horuonlal
engines. 11) tsu

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

A lfif aM Pond Wtilty Inc
IM W .L iM M iry blvd
Propifti
333 114)

) bedroom, 1Bath
JlOWoodmore
U/S month ♦ (Kutlty.

COUIV

WHEN HELP k p r im k t a l iy : b j t NEW V«,*PlP
JAW PHEWURE n a P l)C E $ A
W tfU LP
A3UIRT TtlNTf# ^APTufftp Bv ^ P E N UP
A T The
GRAVITY.' rr.
p u tb a p k
FC* P U T=3 A WLLPWEP PUT OF-WORK
IN
A.N0 u c w m c M .i c c '.

' *4ld1 gone. but ftv* Swing Iff IT
th« back yard t w i t Sail II mm
a want ad Can n j tan

55—Boats &amp; A c c e ss o rie s

THEy T

A VkHJlE

T u «t.,A u g . I I . t t t l - J B

Evening H e rild . Sanford. FI.

with Ma|0f Hoopio

OUR BOARDINGHOUSE

IA N D IL A IT IN O
DA VI t W IL D IN G
m a in , ia m p o r o

■tow# Feinlar -) » r Clan tbpr*-.
natonabi* pr.ta* II ytart
ato Kenneth Mon » ) $ » * ,
enyfi»e 6per $.

Tree Service

TERRY'S INTERIORS
Haitgapirlng. AginiiAg ta p
(vice* Guar stark, stl BBS*

H A IF E E 'S T I R E SERVICE
Trimming, removing A Land
Kapmg Free Etl. U ) l i t ]

«% T '* W H Ik w *%*•

e ■ % * ft Us NET

+ + * * • * ? * * 4 9 * »r

�« •

46—Evening Htrild, Sanford, FI.

TiNi.,Aug.1l,19B1

by Chic Young

43 G.t M
d*t«rv»d
1 Status
&lt;5 Spanish htfO
4 ld»n|d&lt;»t&gt;o«s 48 TiN *
(Si)
Supports
7 Tim* ion*
SO Cooling lit
(ibtM)
52 0*Ck Kind
10 fu*b*0 Indiin 54 P»p*r ol
11 Coulfferitt
Indibtidntii
Slit*! Armf SS Tifty
libbi |
58 Out el b*d
12 (nviro«m*nt 6 0 T iiig * n c y
•9*ncy(ibb&gt;| (ibbf)
1] Hymn ol )0y 6 1 Pic I bid
14 Footrest
82 Squeezes out
16 Tnot* m
63 Go»h
oflici
64 Curly i*n*r
17 Sunflow*'
85 Ski" turner
Hit* llbbr |
19 Onn* crtituri
DOW N
20 Citeh**
1 Advtntum
22 Mil* t.ti*
2 On* |Sp)
24 Ch*mnt t
3 Birnytrd
bum*r
tound
27 City in Rutin
4 Idol lik*
30 Om*
31 Kind ol cloth 5 Summtr tim*
llbbr)
34 Jim
8 Glut
ittiliti
7
Buntl pile*
36 Pictuiid
8 Ritort
31 kltdt
9 Bug*
39 300. Romin
10 Author Gr*y
40 M utcil
13 Bowling pi*c*
competition

Antnrir to Prmeut Pjnl#

ACROSS

•

Ml I

Reader Confused

*

«tv|d |n | It

About Exercise

r T r

DEAR DR. l-AMB - I'm
considering beginning a n
exercise program to get in
shape and to avoid having a
heart attack. But I rem em ber
that the doctors told m y
lather that he should not
1SB*b*hold«n 37 W h itt up.
to
--------- 7
e x erc ise because it w as
I I Blockhtid
41 Oiumtl tv*nt dangerous and he m ight have
As that issue points out, in
21 lo t Angiltt
(pi)
a heart attack from exercise.
one study of 1,108 cases ol
tp*ciitty
42 fuss
He did have heart trouble but
23 hontynt*
44 Smill bit
h e art a tta c k s, 52 p e rce n t
he died in his deep. This has
25 Cililormi city 47 Iron (G*r)
occurred during sleep You
26 Soiir due
48 D*ptrti
left me confused and I won­
could argue that you shouldn't
28 Smill bUli
49 Eiith • tin
dered if you could tell m e if
sleep a s it m ay cause a heart
29 Which thing 5 1 P in iilit
you really are apt to have a
31 Kindly
S3 Concoct
a tta c k . In an o th er study,
heart
attack
from
exercise
or
32 Chinubl* O' 55 Artilicnl hiir
though, ihe.-e were twice as
not.
gmuition
pi*c*
many heart attacks during
llbbr)
56 Putt
DEAR READER - There
33 Amtricm
57 M iydiy tignil is no rule that fits all ra se s 1 exertion than should have
Indnn gim* 59 form*' Pr*ti
would say that it is hard to been expected from tim e
dtnt t nick
35 futh h*il*r
involvement alone.
prove that anyone who is
nim*
Rob*rtt
com pletely tre e ol h e a r t
1 think the real answer is in
7
6
9
4
6
disease has ever had a h eart
1
5
2
3
attack from physical ex er­ how you exercise and how you
it
12
10
tion. The problem is that train. Develop your program
many people have silent h e art gradually and don't ever push
M
15
13
disease and do not know that yourself or overdo it. Don't
there is a buildup ol fatty- race against the clock.
19
IB
18
cholesterol In the arteries.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
Even marathon ruhners have
boyfriend and 1 have been
24
25 26
20
21
M
dropped dead while running,
going out for four months. He
but at autopsy It has been
told me that when he was
27 21
shown that they already had
younger he had encephalitis
*
m a jo r f a tt y - c h o l e s t e r o l
34
35
Because of this he is deal in
31 32 33
deposits blocking the arteries
one ear. Could you please tell
37
38
tn their heart
36
me exactly what encephalitis
Studies also show that even
is? We are thinking about
41 42
39
il you have a lot ol disease you m arriag e
and
having
may be able to do a lot ol children. Is en ce p h alitis
47 48 49
43
exercise, a s in tl* case ol catching? W hat a re the
*
marathon runners who were chances ol having a child born
50
51
later slwwn to have advanced with encephalitis?
”
heart disease and. in some
57
51 59
55 56
DEAR READER - You
cases, a previous h eart a t­
tack. in fact, exercise can be have nothing to worry about
62
60
(1
helpful in selected cases to "Encephalo" refers to the
Improve a person's health brain and ‘‘itls" m eans in­
65
64
63
so
your
alter a known heart attack. flam m ation,
This approach Is used all the boyfriend had Inflammation
lime today. But keep in mind of the brain. It must have left
this is planned or supervised permanent damage to the
exercise designed lor the a rea that re ce iv e s sound
signals.
individual case.
By BERNICE BEOEOSUL
Since many people spend a
The damage is permanent
lot ol time in physical activity
For Wednesday, August 19.
81
at this point but the Infectious
you can expect some people to
process that caused it is long
w a rra n t it. S triv e to be
YOUR BIRTHDAY
die during some form ol
since over. You can have
discerning.
exertion. This is discussed in
August II. 1181
brain inflammation from any
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
2
2
Ja
n
Give vent to ynur artistic,
The Health le tte r num ber 4-2,
number of infectious diseases,
19)
Normally
you're
prepared
musical or other creative
Jogging, E ie r tio n , Sudden
even though there are specific
tale n ts this com ing y e a r. to stand up for your rights, but
Death, which 1 am sending
germ s th a t cause special
They can afford you great today &gt;ou could yield to
you. Others who want this
types ol encephalitis. Your
stronger
personalities
and
act
issue can send 75 cents with s
pleasure and possibly open
boyfriend's condition is
the door to an exciting new against your own best in­ long, stamped, self-addressed
neither contagious
nor
terests
envelope for it to m e, tn care
way of tile.
inherited. He will have no
AQUARIUS
I
Jan.
-Feb.
19)
I.EO (July 23-Aug. 22)
of this newspaper, P.O. Bos
further changes from the
1551. Radio City Station. New
Unless you are careful today, You're not the type who tire*
encephalitis either.
(her* la a possibility that you to shift the blam* for your
Yotk. NY 1(019.
mistakes
onto
other*.
Yet,
will repeat a m istake you've
made in the past. T ry to u n c h a ra c te ris tic a lly , you
rem em ber your
e a r lie r may do so today.
PISCES (Keb. 20-March 20)
lesson. Kind out more o( what
be* ahead for you in the year Be extra-mindful ol your own ,
Dick almost didn I take
following your birthday by possessions today, a s well as
hu partner out of the dou­
sending lor your copy of those ol others, indifference
bled
spade contract Dick
c a re le ssn ess
m ay
AstroGraph. Mail t l for each or
was one expert who did not
n
ecessilate
a
costly
NORTH
I
I
I
41
(eel that be was divinely
to A stro-G raph, B os 489,
♦ WJIIIT4!
appointed to play all
R adio City S ta tio n , N.Y. replacement.
»
A
J
»
1
contracts
ARIES i March 21-April 19)
10019. Be sure to specify birth
9A 4
He ruffed the club lead in
Try not to be loo insistent
date.
dummy, ruffed a spade in
his own hand, ruffed a sec­
VIRG4) I Aug. EKS. pl, 22) upon having things done your
WEST
EAST
ond club and noted that West
4K 2
# A 11 ]
Do nothing today th at could way today, especially II you
followed with the deuce of
V I I 54
v Kys
make you look bke you are have to deal with one as
clubs Ruffed another spade
♦ T4 5
9 2
strong-willed
as
yourself.
A
and u w the ktnc fall from
taking advantage of a friend.
♦ I •4 S 2
4 A K J 10 •
the West hand Then he ran
By the u m e token, protect clash could result.
off all his trumps but one to
5474.111
your own interests.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
come down to a five card
*....
LIBRA (Sept. 2JO cL 23) In You are not Ukely to operate
tnding with dummy holding
9 7 41
queen jack of spade* and
partnership situations today too well under p re sss u re
» K q j l » ll l
are )ark nine of hearts East
♦ Q75
neither you nor your ally today, so schedule your tasks
had come down to a high
should
m ake
d e cisio n s property. If your workload
club, the ace of spades and
Vulnerable Both
the three hearts he he had
without consulting the other. soars, so will will your tem ­
Dealer North
been dealt
Acting alone, e a c h could per.
•Stria East
S w lt
Wsst
Now Dick simply led his
overlook alternatives.
14
24
14
queen of clubs East won and
GEMINI (May 21-June 20i
54
Put
44
Dbl
he
was dead He led hts
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
DM
Pm
I'm
Paw
queen of hearts tn a desper­
This is not a good day to
Coworkers or persons in your
ate effort to confuse flick
gamble with friends. If you
but Dick lust let II hold and
charge could be a trifle in­
are playing any gam es of
Opening lead ♦ !
made hts doubled contract
competent and difficult to
chance, don’t go above penny
Dirk pointed out later on
handle today. Be very careful
that West had really helped
ante stakes.
to whom you d e le g a te
him when he played hts
deuce of clubs II West had
assignments.
CANCER (June 2l-July 22)
By Oswald Jacob)
concealed that card Dick
■ad Alaa Son u g
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- C areful planning wilt be
might well have thought that
required
today
In
order
it
East's distribution had been
Dec. 211 You’re very trusting
Here ks • real gem played 4-2-1-4 and played ace and
today. Thu is adm irable, but achieve goals of importance,
Richard Frey back in another heart to pick up the
be wary of having too much Slipshod tactics could set you
40 when be was one of th* doubletoa king-queen
even
further
back.
•stw srirm tMtHisusr. assn i
faith in persons who don't
best players la the world

■”
■
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■

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■

H O RO SCO PE

19

by H ow ie S c h n e id e r

E E K &amp; M EEK
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ANNIE
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                    <text>73rd Year, No. 286—Wednesday, July 77,1981—Sanford, Florida 37771

Evening Herald-CUSPS 481 780)—Price 70 Cents

Winter Springs Eyes
20 Percent Tax Hike

Justice
It M ay Cost More In Seminole
Justice Is never cheap, but in
Seminole County it may soon get even
costlier.
Faced with a tight budget and a
public in no mood for higher property
taxes, county commissioners have for
weeks been looking for ways of raising
more money without having to dip into
the pockets of taxpayers.
They think they may have found
some relief in the courts.
Fees charged by the various offices
that make up the county’s Judicial
system — the clerk of the court.
Domestic Relations Commissioner,
and guardian ad litem (a program
providing Independent represen­
tatives for children suspected of being
abused or neglected) — "could be
going up,” according to commission
chairman Bob Sturm.
"The staff currently is reviewing
our present fee structure with an eye
toward bringing them in line with
those charged In surrounding coun­
ties," Sturm said. “Just how much
money we could raise by upping the
fees, I don't know. The study should be
finished by the time the new budget
goes into effect October 1."
Needing every penny they can get,
commissioners say they would also
like to see Judges start hitting
criminals with stlffer m onetary
penalties once the malefactors have
been brought before the bar of Justice.
"But we have no control over that,”
Sturm said. "That's the Judges' turf.
All we can do Is recommend.”
They can recommend from now
until Doom's Day as far as Chief
Seminole Circuit Jud g e Kenneth
Leffler Is concerned. "We're not going
to levy more fines Just because the
county needs money,” l-effler said.
"We use fines as punishment, not as a
revenue producer. Our Job is
dispensing Justice, not fund raising."
heftier added that many of the
people he and his colleagues deal with
“aren't in a position to shoulder
higher fees. How a r t they supposed to
pay It. go out and steal some more?
The criminal element Is not one of
thoee places the county can expect to
get more revenue."
Maybe not, but persons filing
lawsuits in the civil courts usually
have money and the county wanta
some of It. "Compared to surrounding
counties, our fee scale is very low,"
Sturm said. "We may be raising
those." Sturm added that filing a civil
action here costs 837 while in Volusia
County, the figure is 880, 847 in
Orange, 848 50 in Brevard, and 838 in
U ke County."
Had all of the 4,338 cases filed last
year in Seminole civil courts been
charged at the higher 880 rate, the
county's coffers would have been
878 .JS4 fatter. "When you're talking
about a proposed budget the slxe of
ours — 841 million — that's small

By BRITT SMITH
llersld Stiff Writrr
Following a 34-hour budget hearing.
Winter Springs city counnlmen reluc­
tantly agreed Tuesday to a tentative 2d
percent municipal property tax Increase
for fiscal year 1981-83 which begins Oct.
1.
However, rmphaslring that the budget
fight has Just begun, council members
promised to whittle the tax hike down,
possibly to nothing, before the final
budget is adopted.
The council found itself between a rock
and a hard place Tuesday night, needing
to set a tentative tax rate (or next year so
the county property appraiser ran begin
his work, but unable lo agree on exactly
where city revenues will be coming from
and how they will be spent.
"It's kind of lough," noted Mayor Troy
Ptland, to set a tax rate “when you're not
sure how much money you're going to
need to run the city."
For the proposed 81.9 million 1881-83
budget, he said, the tax rate was set at
$2.88 per 81,000 of assessed prooerty
value, 80 cents higher than the present
rate.
"After you've set a tentative rate, you
can't raise it, only lower it. So, until we
get the budget in final shape, we set it
higher than we'U probably really need,"
Ptland said
The current Winter Springs Ux rate is
82.08 per 11,000 of assessed value for the
city's 81.8 million budget.
The council will continue work on the
proposed budget Thursday tn a workshop
which is set to begin at 6 p m in city hall
on N. Edgemon Avenue.
During Tuesday night's session, the
major topics of discussion were salaries

This scene may soon become a common
at the Seminole
County Courthouse — lawsuit-filing attorneys forking over
increasing sums of money in order to get their clients a day in
court.
potatoes. But every little bit helps,”
Sturm said.
While Sturm may think the courts
could pull more of their fiscal weight,
the figures show that the legal system
Isn't doing all that badly In handling
its .finances. According to the
Saralnola
County
Oflica
of
Management and Budget, the
county's courts — both county and
circuit — are expected to produce a
total o&lt; 8440,000 in revenue next year,
primarily in traffic fines.
On the other hand, the 1881-87
pricetag for operating the court
system is anticipated to be 8491.392, a
difference ol 831.383 in red ink.
Slack that up against the largest
single county agency — the sheriff's
office — and the contrast is
remarkable. Sheriff John Polk has
requested roughly 88.3 million for next
year, but his department will raise
only about 8140.000 of that Itself,
mainly through the service of legal
summonses, the housing of stale and
federal prisoners and the return on an
interest-bearing bank account
OMB analyst Pam Hastings noted
that Polk "could lay claim to some of

that money which includes all the
traffic tickets his men write, but how
much of that you could reaUy consider
his I don't know.”
Sturm, who during the past several
weeks of budget hearings has ad­
mittedly "not been swayed very much
by the sh eriffs outcry for more
money," concedes that Polk has
"little opportunity” to produce more
revenue. "W e're not going back to the
old speed trap days when you fill your
money needs by writing traffic
tickets. That doesn't bring in that
much revenue anyway, plus you have
to pull men off patrol to do It," said
Sturm.
“Since he can't bring in more
money, I feel he should spend less,"
Sturm said. "What I've been saying Is
that the sheriff should manage his
budget a little more tightly. Maybe he
should bring in a management con­
sultant to show him how to do that
"All I know is that we have three
alternatives —cut coats, come up with
more money from somewhere, which
is what we're trying to do, or cut back
services,” Sturm said. "It's that
simple. '— By BRUT SMITH

for the city's 88 employees and funding
for the initial phase of a paramedic
program okayed by v o ters last
November.
The five council members started off
approving the 1*86,118 needed (o
maintain the status quo — hold the line on
pay and new personnel — but eventually
wound up where City Manager Richard
Rozansky wanted them: at 8884,332
which would include a 10 percent acrossthe-board cost of living increase plus a 2
percent raise for certain long-time
employees, and four new workers — two
in the police department and two for
public works.
As proposed, the extra 8108,237 would
come from the city's reserve fund and
would nol necessitate a tax hike.
Councilmen Hap Arnold and Jiin
Hartman derided the proposal as un­
necessary and inflationary.
‘ We're going to give a 10 percent raise
on top of (the 10 percent) we gave last
year?" Arnold asked. "That’s way loo
high. I propose we go no more than 3
percent."
Hartman said he couldn't go along with
the pay plan because "private industry
isn’t giving 10 percent raises. "I don't
think we can afford to either."
"We have to," retorted councilman
John Torcaso. "We have a good crew
here and I want to keep them. 1 can't see
somebody working for the city for 88.000
or 88.000 a year and trying to support a
family. I don't see anything at all wrong
with a 10 percent increase."
The four new employees will cost Die
city 828,161 next year. The two police
officers will be hired during the second
half of the fiscal year and will represent a
net increase of only a single patrolman

be-.-ause one officer is being pulled off the
ra id to work crime prevention and
community relations.
In Justifying his request for two new
men. Police Chief John Govoruhk said,
"The population is up. the number of
ca Us we receive is up, and the crime rate
is up."
"Well, if the department is short of
manpower, why can’t we call on the
sheriffs department to help us cover the
city?" Piland asked. "We’re paying
taxes to the county, which Includes the
sheriffs office. We should make use of
It."
Govoruhk had no answer to the
mayor's query, but said he would look
into the matter.
The council seemed tn agreement that
the first-year start-up cost for equipment
for (he proposed paramedic program and
four paramedics would run about 889.000
with 114,000 of that coming from federal
revenue sharing sources.
The only bone of contention was, as
councilman Martin Trencher put it,
"Just where are we going to come up
with our 878,000?”
The easiest way to do It would be
through property taxes, Piland said.
That's where that extra 80 cents tax
tentatively agreed on comes in, he added.
But councilmen seemed determined
not to raise taxes and instead engaged in
some rather desultory talk about
creating a special taxing district, raising
the sales tax, or dipping into the reserve
fund.
Ultimately, council members took no
action and agreed to try to come up with
a concrete proposal (or debate during
Thursday's budget hearing.

GNP Shifts Into Reverse
WASHINGTON (U P l)-T h e economy abruptly shifted Into
reverse from April through June and the gross national
product declined 1.8 percent on an annual basis — the first
drop since last year's recession, the government reported
.
..
..
. .
.
The surprising drop was matched by some good news, the
smallest inflation surge in three years, the Commerce
Department said.
As measured within the gross national product, prices
during the second quarter - April through June - rose at an
annual rate of only $ percent. In the second quarter of 1978,
prices went up 8.8 percent
The GNP. after seasonal adjustment, was 82881 billion 82.88 trillion — the first decline since last year's recessionstruck second quarter, when GNP plummeted 9.9 percent.
From January through March, the economy ami red
analysts by eipanding at s rate of 8.6 percent.
Auto sales that did not take place were the moat prominent
feature of the preliminary measure of GNP. The value of can
sold during the second quarter dropped by $10 8 billion.
But the drop was mostly wiped out in the final figure because
the government counted c a n held by dealers, an inventory
buildup of $11 billion over the tin t quarter.

The decline in GNP was widespread throughout the
economy, led by an $18.3 billion drop in final sales and a badly
slumping housing industry.
Fixed investment showed a $.7 percent plunge, computed on
an annual basis, and residential housing investment,
measured alone, accelerated downward by 20.8 percent.
Exports decreased by 8.3 percent on an annual basis and
government output was down by 4.7 percent.
In dollar (em u, personal consumption expenditures were
down $4.8 billion, residential housing investment was down 83
billion and net exports were down $8 billion.
The Commerce Department does not compute corporate
profits as part of this first preliminary reading of GNP. It will
be revised twice in (he next few weeks. Revisions of first
quarter figures sent GNP up an additional 3 percent.
After adjustment (or inflation as well as seasonal factors,
second quarter GNP decreased by only hall a percent
'
After tax corporate profits for the first quarter rose 2.3
percent, recovering to slightly above ihe level before the
recession.
Prices, measured within the GNP figure, were up 9 8 percent
at an annual rate tor that first three-month period.

House Committee Finishes Democratic Tax Plan

Reagan Wins One, Loses One On Social Security Minimum Benefits
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President
Reagan, pressing Congress to eliminate
the minimum Social Security benefit that
now goes to 3 million Americans, won the
vote that counted and lost the one that
didn't.
The Senate voted 81-48 Tuesday to back
the president and defeat s bid to save the
8122-s-month minimum payment.
Specifically, ths Senate voted to
reaffirm Its decision to eliminate benefits
for those who do not make enough payroll
Ux contributions to qualify (or minimum
payments. The House, which along with

the Senate approved ending the
minimum benefit i s pari of last month's
budget debate, reversed Itself, 408-13,
later Tuesday.
But House Republican leader Robert
Michel of Illinois, noting the resolution
was non-binding and therefore lacked
legal weight, told his troops not to oppose
U to avoid giving the Democrats political
fodder.
All this took place while 9,000 angry
senior ciUiens, carrying signs reading
"Fair play for the aged” and "Save our
security," demonstrated their opposition

Commissioners Vote To Help
Judges Keep Their Cool
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
; Seminole County Comm issioners
Tuesday voted unanimously to keep the
judges using new Courtroom E on the
first floor at the courthouse cool.
- County
A dm inistrator
Roger
Neiswendcr was instructed to settle as
quickly u possible differences between
u architect and a contractor over a
malfunctioning air-conditioner tn the
courtroom built and opened lor use 3 4
months ago.
: Neiswender said while the contractor
has said the sir-conditioning system for
(he courtroom was Improperly designed,
the architect has said It was Improperly
installed.
' “I would like the Judges lobe cool right
•way and settle the differences on who Is

to blame tor the problem afterwards,"
said County C om m issioner Sendra
Glenn, chairing-the meeting in the ab­
sence of Chairman Bob Sturm.
Neiswender said the situation would be
corrected as soon as passible, in s way to
make sure someone other than the
county foots the bill.
Mrs. Glenn said Judge Joseph Davis
Jr., administrative circuit Judge for
Seminole County, requested that the
system be put in operating order.
In other business, the county com­
missioners named throe county re s ta rts
to the board of directors of the new senior
dtiien complex in Casselberry. Named
were: Elisabeth Redmon of Casselberry;
Leo Warn of Altamonte Springs and
William Hamilton of Oviedo.

to any cuU In retirement benefits on the
Capitol steps.
House and Senate negotiators at­
tempting to Iron out differences in (he
chambers' separate budget bills could
rrtnsUte the 9123 minimum monthly
benefit — but the Senal* vote makes It
unlikely they will do so.
Nevertheless, the Senate Democratic
Conference Uler vowed to '‘continue lo
fight to defend Social Security benefits to
which the elderly of this country are
entitled."
House Democratic leader Jim Wright

was optimistic, saying he hoped con­
ferees would view the House vote as a
"powerful and moral instruction" to
retain the minimum benefit.
Many of the 3 million people who
receive the minimum benefit are socalled "doubledippers" — those who
worked In private Industry only a few
years before Joining the government and
becoming eligible (or governm ent
pensions.
The remainder are people who worked
for very low wages, women who worked
only a few years before or after raising a

family or people who earned most of
their money in areas not covered by
Social Security.
The administration says of those who
get the minimum benefit, only 300,000
would be hurt by the change because they
do not have another pension or would not
be eligible to Increased welfare.
Bui Hep. Mary Rose Dakar, DOhio,
disputed the administration figures,
saying 2 million would be hurt — most of
them are elderly women.
Meanwhile, the House Ways and
Means Committee early today put the

finishing touches on a massive tax cut
package Democrats hope to sell to
Congress in place of the tax initiatives of
the Reagan administration.
The proposal, which would reduce
t a r n by as much as a ha If-trillion dollars
over the next five years, needs only a
final, formal vote scheduled fee Thur­
sday afternoon.
The Senate, meantime, is continuing
debate on a tax package drafted by
Republicans and endorsed by Reagan,
which bogged down Tuesday over oilrelated Issues.

TODAY
Actiee Reports
Around The Clock
Classified A d s .........
Deaths......................
Dr. L am b .................
Editorial
Florida .
Horoscope .............
HoiptUl
Nation
Ourselves ...............
People ....... ...........
Sports
Television ............
W eather.................
World...................

18B-HB
...........IB

3A
JA

Traditional Salvation Army street com er music
m iniitry la revived in downtown Sanford by a
local Salvation Army Brass Band, which alto
playa for Indoor meetings. From left, Terry
larael. Let Ashby. Mrt. Captain Phillips, ilutli

Iteiman, Copt. Carl Phillips and Capt. John Jones.
Thr local Salvation Army is in (he m idst of a
lIM.ooo fund raising drive and a victory dinner is
set for Ju ly 28 at Ihe Sanford Civic Center. See
Editorial Page 4A.

�*r-gvenHg Berstd.Sanloiv.1. FI.

Wednesday, JutyM, m i

Paralyzed Ex-Policeman Sues County

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Summff Ends In Muled
Criticism Of 'Reaganomics'
OTTAWA (UP!) — The leaders of seven Industrial
democracies ended their annual economic summit
with a diplomatic document muting criticism over high
113. interest rates that a r t making the dollar strong
and driving up Europe's Import bill. President Reagan
lulled the session's results.
"1 am grateful for the understanding and support for
our policies. We leave with a tru e tense of common
purpose,’’ he said as he left for home with what ob­
servers described as a major victory in his debut In
international diplomacy.
In 16 hours of formal talks at the ttecluded hotel In the
Gatineau Hills 40 miles north of Ottawa, Reagan
defended high Interest rates to curb inflation and the
final communique acknowledged such rates, or
monetary policy, had a role to play In dampening price
rises.
But the document endorsed by West Germany,
France, Japan, Italy, Great Britain and Canada also
said monetary policy alone should riot be used to fight
Inflation and said such measures can disrupt other
economies by altering exchange rates.
Reagan doted off Tuesday when some other foreign
leaders were making their final remarks at the con­
clusion of the seven-nation summit.
Also observed nodding and fighting to stay awake
were West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, a
summit veteran, and Japanese Prime Minister Zenko
Suiuki. Secretary of Slate Alexander Haig, sat directly
behind the president, occasionally yawning.

Y/ng*Y/ng G ives Birth
MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Ytng Ying turned, stret­
ched, lay back against a wall and gave birth to the
second “giant” panda conceived naturally in captivity
—a snow-w hite t) ke 4 inches long and weighing all of 3
ounces.
Moments later, Ying Ying nunled her newest off­
spring and lovingly carried the wriggling, fluffy white
cub In her mouth, officials ut Mexico City’s
Chapullepec Zoo said. Describing the Tuesday birth,
which took about 30 minutes.
It was the second successful birth for the 6-year-old
Ying Ying and her lifelong mate Pe-Pe, who last Aug.
10 produced the first giant panda cub ever naturally
conceived and U rn in captivity.
The first cub, which weighed 3 5 ounces at birth and
also measured 4 inches long, accidentally w u
smothered to death by Ying Ying after a noisy visit to
her pen by high-ranking dignitaries.
Zoo officials have taken extra precautions to protect
the new 3.2 ounce baby panda. Two weeks ago they
banned public viewing of Ying Ying and have kept her
under 24-hour observation with closed-circuit TV.

Battle Rages In Lebanon

Nearly four years to the day (hat a bullet from a suspected
drug dealer’s gun turned him Into a paraplegic, former police
officer Terry Thuma la suing Seminole County, Sheriff John
Polk, the man he claims shot him, and the gunman's mother.
In a lawsuit filed In Seminole Circuit Court Monday, Thuma
and his wife Jayne are seeking an unspecified sum In excess of
$5,000 for damages suffered as a result of a July 23, 1977
shooting at an Altamonte Springs residence which left Thuma
paralysed from the waist down.
The case dates back nearly four years when Thuma, aa an
Orlando city policeman on loan to the U 3 . Drug Enforcement
Administration w u assisting In the arrest of suspected drug
dealer John A. Reese who at the Ume lived with his mother at
519 Oak St. In Altamonte Springs.
During a raid on the Reese home, Thuma was shot once In
the neck with a .22-caliber rifle. John Reese w u later tried for
attempted murder, but after a trial In which Thuma w u
brought Into the courtroom on a stretcher to testify, o sixmember jury Ml him free.
In the first of a two-count lawsuit, Thuma charges the county
and Polk with negligence for failure to: 1) “warn Thuma of the
dangerous propensities of the suspect," 2) "adopt and provide
a safe and secure method cr plan of effecting said arrest" and
3) "provide adequate protection for Thuma.”
In the second count of the suit, Thuma also accuses Reese of
the shooting and his mother with negligence In that "she knew
or should have known her son w u using the house u a place to
sell dangerous drugs. Including heroin and cocaine" and she
failed to provide reasonable protection for persons visiting her
property.
Mrs. Thuma Joined her husband In the suit, claiming she has
suffered a loss of his "services, companionship, and con­
sortium."
No hearing date h u been set for the case which has been
assigned to Judge Robert McGregor,
ALLEGED CON MAN ARRESTED
Following a two-month Investigation, the consumer fraud
division of the Seminole Slate Alton.ey'a office has arrated a
33-year-old Altamonte Springs man accused of operating a

ARF.A READINGS 11 a.m .|: temperature: 71; overnight
low: 75; Tuesday's high: 92; barometric pressure: 29.96;
relative humidity: 90 percent; winds: southwest at 7 mph
THURSDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 1:04
a m , 1:41 p.m.; lows, 7:06 a.m., 7:37 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 12:56 a m., 1:33 p.m.; lows, 6:56 a m.,
7:26p.m.; BAYPOHT: highs,6:34 a.m., 6:47 p in ; lows, 12:11
a.m ., 1:04 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augu.tlnr to Jupiter Inlet, Out
50 MUes — Winds southerly 10 to 15 knots through Thursday
with seas 2 to 4 feel Winds and s e u higher near scattered
thunderstorm! mostly during the afternoon and evening.
AREA FORECAST; Partly cloudy through Thursday with
thunders ton ns likely mostly during the afternoon and evening.
Ilighi In the low to mid 90s. I&gt;ows in the mid 70s. Winds
southerly around 10 in pit but strong and gusty near thun­
derstorms. Rain probability 60 percent today, 20 percent
tonight and 60 percent Thunday.

King Snubs Royal Wedding
MADRID, Spain (U PI) — In a royal anub, Spain told
Britain that King Juan Carlos will boycott the wedding
of Prince Charles and la d y Diana Spencer to protest
the couple's plans to begin their honeymoon si
Gibraltar, ■ British crown colony claimed by Spain.
The royal snub came amid a flurry of diplomatic
protest! Tuesday with Spain's Foreign Minister Jose
Pedro l’erei-Uorca calling the honeymoon plans
"uncalled-for and Inopportune,'' a government official
said.

iuim wiai)

Wednesday, July 22. I t t l - V o l . 73, No 2S4

evknttoe Dailf *»d tonSey. 4actft Sahtriay »» Tea Santera
Hat its. lac., &gt;MN Prince Alt.. SanttrS. Fla. VIII
tacaaS Clan Pallets PaM al tenlerd, PltriSa MW
Hama Otllvwvi Waal, n e t) Mania. UU&lt; 4 ManiM, M4Mt
Vtar. HI at Sy Mail: Wat* ll.lli Msatfc. II Hi t Meatat.
im ati vaar, ur aa
_________________________

MRS. EDNA SCHICK
Mrs. Edna P. Schick, 66, of
1412
W. Marvin St.,
Ixxigwood, died Monday at
h e r ' residence. Born In
A tlan ta, G a., moved to
l-ongwood In 1977 from
M iami.
She
was
a
homemaker.
Survivors Include her
husband, Charles E. Schick,
1/Migwood; ion, James T.
B yrd, W hitcsburg, Ga.,
daughter, Karen Nasworthy,
W alkln|vtlle, G a., sister,
Velma P. Woodward. North
P alm Beach; 7 grand­
children.
Baldwin Fairchild Funeral
Home Is In charge of
arrangement!.
MRS. MARGARET CANFIELD
Mrs. Margaret Canfield, 91,
of
969 Orlenla
Ave.,
A ltam onte Sprlngi, died
Friday at Florida Hospital
Altamonte. Burn In Sarvert,
Pa., ahe moved to Altamonte
Springs In 1951 from Jackson
Heights, N.Y.
She It survived by nieces
and nephews.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
Winter Park, la In charge of
arrangem ents...

Action Reports
★

HAROLD W. BILYDJE
Harold Wesley Bilyieu, 83,
of 113 Ichabid Trail,
Longwood, died Tuesday,
Bohn In Sllngerlands, N Y., he
moved to Ismgwood (ran
Scarsdale, N.Y., In 1971. He
waa a school teacher, a
M ethodiat and a retired
composing supervisor (or the
New York Dally News.
Survivors Include his wife,
Wanda; daughter, Mrs. Paula
C. Velho, E aston, Pa.;
b ro th er, Douglas Bllyleu,
Vero B each; sister, Mrs.
D o ro th y
S tc k ln g e r,
Sllngerlands;
and
two
grandchildren.
Semoran Funeral Home,
A ltam onte Springs, Is In
charge of arrangements.

Hunt Monument Co.
Display Yard
Mwy. 17-fl — Per* Park
Pti. 339-496#
Gene Hunt, Owner
B rente, Mark Is 4 Ore*tie.

• OAKIAWN
MONUMENT CO
Rt 4. Boa 744, Ssniord
Ph 11X11)
Mtvnumlfili
• An
• Cemetery letterin'
• BtORII Mltlrtk

fraudulent home Improvement scheme.
Arrested at his home about 5:35 p m. Monday on charges of
grand theft and contracting without a license was Lee Charles
Daniels of 132 Ronnie Drive. He w u being held in the Seminole
County Jail today under 65,000 band.
According to fraud investigator Doug Hnth, Daniels
"bilked" $3,700 from seven different people. "If there are
more, I wish they would get In touch with this office," said
Huth.
Hath said that Daniels, doing business as C. Lee First Inc.,
“would go around neighborhoods In the south end of the county
placing flyers on people's doors holding himself out as a
licensed building contractor spectalixlng In home repairs.”
The only problem with that la that Daniels was not certified by
the state Construction Industry licensing Board, an agency of
the Florida Department of Professional Regulation.
"His practice was to go out to the home of someone who had
responded to his flyer, give them an estimate and then demand
In advance a portion of the total price for m aterials," Huth
■aid. "He either didn't do the lob at ill or he did only part of IL
Basically, he'd Just lake the money and run."
Huth said Daniels operated from October until June. "He
recently started a new business under a new name — General
Maintenance Services,” he said.
VACATIONER S HOME HOBBED
Seminole County sheriff’s deputies were today searching for
clues to the burglary of a Maitland home In which more than
110,000 worth of household goods and gold were taken.

To Remain Suspended For Now
Although her b o a says she did a "very
good Job", science and soda! studies
teacher linda Coleman will not be
returning to her Jackson Heights Middle
School classroom this fall.
Orlando police are still Investigating
charges against her In connection with
the shooting death of a neighbor, and
school officials have suspended her until
the case Is either dropped or referred to
the stale attorney for prosecution.
Charged with aggravated battery and
possession of a concealed weapon, the
37-year-old Orlando woman was taken
Into custody July 4 after Doris Thomas of
4409 Colony Way was shot In the parking
lot of a local lounge shortly after mid­

f e

fg m

m

GARCIA 300 COMBO
R E O . $42.96

Features Stainless Slsel Bell Barings.
Six element multl-Dlse. Dreg, con­
verts lor left right hand retrieve.
Matched with a *'v ft. 2 piece Kwlk
Stlx Spinning Rod.

24n LANDING NET
REO. $4.77

SALE

A1“ Heavy Duty Embossed Aluminum
Handle with sturdy plastic end ceps.
v»" Heavy Duty Tear Drop Shaped
Aluminum Hoop.

rv*u* u n i

Sum ftotU 4M « 0 s Hwy 17 V
Iw 'j.oul IIuaU-112750
TrWphm. S.M LM)

WINTER PARK OfTICE

Ilk) I m Ko*i
W W Ctrl I’wU* U7tF&gt;

TWrphenr 62S22te

SOUTH* LAST ORLANDO

1S74 &amp; Sonutn BuubvwJ
OUndu. riundi ,UH&gt;7
latapftona 2H 7WQ
FOUST CITY OfDCC
1)01 Stnuwithw*
iComw oi Ham CX* BM h SR 4J6I
TtbpAww IMttUO

SALE

F*olyethytene Surf Riding one
design Bucket; keep belt Irtsh
lively. Sell closing door, alwsys
upright, Automatic water te.el
12 — No Ralnchecks.

piece
end
Hosts
Only

5' BAIT CAST NET

$2499
SALE
H ” Poly Moth — $' Radius. Catch your
own ball and save. Us* for Shrimp.
Finger Mullet. Chubs and more.

REO. $4.99

$ 3 9 9

Nash Woodtn Fillet Board. Spring
Loaded Clip.

COMBO CIEARANCEI
3 0 %

O FF

SELECTED COMBOS
lyoiM
Combos and Save 30 pet. Off the low
Zayre retell. Selections vary by tlore.

ZEBCO 20/20 COMBO FLOATING FISH BASKET
REO. $34.96

$499
SALE

$2999

Zabco JO 20 Reel. Wide Range
Straight-Line
Drag. Silent Automali
AutomeHc
•Line Drag,
AnD-Reverse. tilled with Berley
Trllarte Una. Matched with a 4 ft. • 3
piece Kwik Stlx Spin Cast Rod.

LU R E RIOTl
Y O U R C H O ICE

%

$199

O FF

Choose from the above selection and
save 20 pet. oft our every day low Zayro
Retail.
__

Talrphaw U2 1242 w Otbndu M l 5554

LONGWOOD Of MCI

SALE

Mann* Jelly Worm - 4 ,1 4 9"
Mr. Twister - 4" Phonom
Mr. Twistor - 4" Bloodline
Pee Wees * 4" In 4 Colors
Producto . i, | " Tournament
Product# • I" Rlpplers

SAM OHO - MAIN O triCt

FILLET B O A R D

SALE

$ 4 9 9

REO. $29.99

$ 3 9 9

2 0

P O ft). W » 112 W F.*» Si

Charles Ings, an Orlando police In­
vestigator who Is handling Coleman's
case, said the department la still waiting
lor lab results before further deter­
mination la made.
Although lngs declined to say what w u
being tested In the lab, besides articles of
clothing, he did say officials were using
eyewitness accounts as major sources of
evidence In the case.
Police said investigation of aU lab
evidence should be completed In August,
but they declined to say whether or not
charges would be altered. — SYBIL
MITCHELL GANDY

REO. $4.99

PLASTIC WORM RI0T1
Y O U R CH O ICE

Enjoy ihe peace of mind of complete
security. And. y o u d o n 't have to b e o
p re se n t c u s t o m e r t o r e n t . Come Into
our oilier nearest you toduy!

COSOM
FLOW-TROLL BUCKET

SALE * 3 4 "

201 Piece Assortment of Fishing Ac­
cessories Included with My Buddy
Tackle Box. Great lor the beginner — A
super value for the vacationer.

D E P O S IT
B
O
X
E
S
In all sizes

teacher without pay, pending an outcome
of the case.

SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY, JU L Y 22 AND ENOS SUNDAY, JU L Y 14

REO.
$6.99

a

night.
Coleman, who lives down the street
from the woman at 4424 Colony Way, h u
been with Seminole County Schools only
one year.
Before the Incident occurred, she was
employed for summer months by the
school system as an assistant coor­
dinator for Seminole County's summer
youth program.
When Coleman returned for work on
Monday, July 6, Schools Superintendent
Robert Hughes suspended her with pay
until the school board considered the
m atter.
At their meeting on July 14, board
members suspended the Jackson Heights

FISHING
FRACAS

201 PC. FISHING ASSORTMENT
M T BUDOT TACKLE BOX

N O W A V A IL A B L E
s

Firet
k Courts
k Police Beat

Cliiton Henry, a 47-year-old dental technician, told deputies
that someone broke into his heme on the Pearl Lake Causeway
in Maitland between June 24 and Sunday while he was away on
vacation.
Taken were five watches, a color television, s grandfather
clock, a typewriter, cam era, radio, two fans, assorted Jewelry
and 12 ounces of dental gold. Total value of the stolen m er­
chandise was estimated at $10,901
PLEA ENTERED OVER BEATING
A 34-year-old Altamonte Springs man has pleaded no contest
in Seminole Circuit Court to three separate criminal charges
stemming front an Oct. 14 beating of a local Insurance man.
Larry ft. Taylor, of 409 Barclay Ave., entered his pleas
Monday to charges of trespassing, improper exhibition of a
dangerous weapon, and battery. Sentencing w u deferred
pending completion of an Investigation Into Taylor’s back­
ground.
Taylor w u accused of entering Charles Williams' insurance
office, 701 E. Altamonte Ave., Altamonte Springs, after hours,
brandishing a billy stick, and beating Williams with IL
Taylor had accused Williams, 36, of stealing some compnry
commission statements.
In other court action, a former Altamonte Springs
businessman now living In Illinois pleaded no contest to 15
count! of state sales tax fraud and w u ordered to Immediately
pay 115,000 in back taxes and $3,100 during a 2H-year
;
probationary term.
Dwight R. MacPherson, former head of Security Systems
and Services Inc., w u accused of converting stale sales taxes
to his personal use from 15 sales i t the now-defunct Altamonte
Springs firm between December 1971 and May 1979.
The state Department of Revenue said the bill on the
unreported (our percent sales tax came to $9,612, plus an ad­
ditional $8,466 in fraud penalties and Interest.
In accepting the p lu s , Seminole Circuit Judge Volie
Williams ordered MacPherson, who now resides in Glen Ellyn,
111., to Immediately hand over $15,000 In government bonds to
the state and pay back the remaining $3,100 during his
probation.

Teacher Involved In Shooting Death

WEATHER

A R EA DEATHS

Hailed f*rr»» Utemattoas)

Ttie I’lJO charged an Israeli Lank column slashed 4
miles Into southern U banon today and seaborne
commandos attempted to land IT miles Inside Ubanon
at the port of Zahrani in the Jewish state's deepest
assault of the 13-day Palestlnian-lsraeli fighting.
However, In Tel Aviv in answer to a question about
an Incursion, a military spokesman denied any tank
assault at Palestinian positions In south lebanon took
place as reported by the Palestinian news agency
WAFA.
The PIX) and WAFA said the Israeli tank assault was
repulsed near an old Crusader castle of what 1’IjO chief
Yasser Araft called the first "Palestlnlsn-lsrsell
War.”

Etvntng IlcmkJ

For Negligence Leading To Injury

L 6. S Mirror Lures — Models TT .
52M, 7M A COM. Model A Bombers
— AH Bombers In-stock Includes:
1A, 2A, 3A, 4A, 5A, 4A L 7A In
assorted colon. Bill Lewis Rat ‘L‘
Traps — 14, W 1 4k 02.
Pick and choosa from assorted
colon and sava.
_______

REO. 14.99

SALE

$ 3 9 9

Durable Bltw Wire Floating Beg with 1
Trap Doors. Top door of Styrene, with
herd plastic tor a d d * strength.

T A C K L E R IO T l
Y O U R C H O IC E

9 9 *
Chooee from a Urge selection of
Fairfield end Breokslde Tackle.
Below is a representation of the
Dial Boxed - Swivels. Split Shot.
Aberdeen or Treble Hooks, Hoopers.
Flies.
Sneiled Hooks — Assorted Lures.

!««■ coasuo* suasmtii

1w
u,ew
45wK^*4fJ

17-92 *t

Z a y r e sa n fo rd

hwy.

OPEN DAILYt:JO».m.-9;ISo.m., SUN. 1(a.m.-ep.m,

AIRPORT BLVD*

&gt;

r

’**■**•+ - w " N * XaWwTS,

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

By Longwood Officials

NATION .
INBRIEF
Postal Workers Contract
May Lead To 20-Cent Stamp
WASHINGTON (U Pll — The tentative contract
between the Postal Service and two major unions
would give 500,000 workers an estimated 10,5 percent
pay hike but may expedite the arrival of the » &lt; e n t,
first-class stamp.
Uank-anil-file members of the American Postal
Workers Union and the National Association of Letter
Carders are being urged by their leaders to ratify the
three-year pact reached Tuesday after a marathon
negotiating session.
The proposed *4 8 billion accord averted a
threatened nationwide mall strike and had postal
workers predicting a jubilant celebration.
The contract calls for raises and bonuses totaling
B.100 over the three years plus cost-of-living in­
creases. Postal employees now average 119,915 an­
nually.

Design Blamed For Collapse
KANSAS CITY, Mo. tUPIl — A structural engineer
hired to investigate the Hyatt Regency Hotel disaster
in which ill people were killed said a design change in
the moorings of an elevated walkway doubled the
stress on six critical beam supports.
Wayne Uschka, hired by the Kansas City Star, said
he could not determine If the design alteration was a
primary cause of two 32-lon "sky bridges" plummeting
toa crowded dance floor Friday or just a minor part of
a chain reaction. But he said the change was
significant and demanded further investigation.

Total Bon Placed On 'Topless'
Nude and topless dancing has been
banned in both drinking and non-dr inking
establishments in Longwood.
The Longwood Commissioners adopted
an ordinance Monday night that prohibits
nude and topless dancing in all com­
mercial establishments.
The commission last week adopted sn
ordinance banning such activity where
alcoholic beverages are sold or con­
sumed.
They decided to take the matter one
step further to prevent establishments
from circumventing the intent of the law
by eliminating alcoholic beverages but
retaining nude or topless dancing.
longwood does not have any such
establishments. By approving the
stringent ordinances, the commission
hopes to discourage such businesses
from locating in the d ty .
Longwood ! ordinances are based upon
similar ordinances that have proved
successful in Orange County and other
areas of central Florida.
Both ordinances were considered
necessary by City Attorney Marvin
Rooks to prevent a problem that arose in
Orange Counly. T here, when nude
dancing was prohibited in places where
alcoholic beverages were sold, the

COLOR PRINT FILM
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110 or 11* Sill
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Medfly Case Goes To Court
I jOS OATOS, Calif. (UPI) - California went to the
nation's highest court to stop five Southern slates from
enforcing quarantines on its fit billion fruit and
vegetable crop because of the Mediterranean fruit fly
infestation.
Deputy California Attorney General G regory
Wilkinson asked the Supreme Court Tuesday for a
restraining order against Texas, Florida, Alabama,
Mississippi and South Carolina, which slapped
quarantines on all California produce this week.
Chief Justice Warren Burger and Justice lewis
Powell, in turn, asked the defendants and the U. S.
Agriculture Department for responses to the suit by
Friday.

'Dis-ldentificatiorT
Of Pets To Stop

establishm ents simply re-opened as on the east sole of Range Line Hoad, east
bottle clubs with nude entertainment, of Devonshire.
Action was delayed on the project to
accepted donations, or used other
allow the developer and the city staff to
evasive action.
The commissioners also adopted by a come to an agreement on changing
4-0 vote ordinances annexing two pieces Range Line Road in front of the property
ol property into the city. Commissioner to three lanes. To meet ihc city’s
Timothy C le a ry was away on vacation. engineer and the lan d Planning Agen­
Annexed Monday night were Lot 3, less cy’s request, Gatlimore had proposed
the west 190.4 feet, longwood Hills, adding turn lanes to Range line, but
owned by Ba&gt;mond J. Thibodeau and Monday night City Administrator David
Parcels 1,1 and 3 of Lot 14, Central Park Chacey recommended changing 650 feet
on Dog Track Road (next to Sambo's), in front of Meadow Ridge lo three lanes.
He said if Gallimorc would pay for the
the property ol Fred L Flanagan.
Zoned R-l AAA Residential in the Innerock and asphalt to extend the road
county, the Thibodeau property will be six feet on each side, the dty, which owns
designated R-l Residential in the city. the right-of-way on the other side, would
The Flanagan properly is toned C-I do Ihe preparation.
Commercial.
Philip Hollis of Boyle Engineering, who
A site plan for Tiberon Hills Sub­ represented Gallimore, balked al the
division being developed by Florida idea at first, saying, the project budget
Residential Communities east ami west could not withstand the expense.
of lak e Emma Hoad and north of
To avoid a delay in getting the project
Inngwood Hills Road was approved by underway, Gallimore offered to pay
Ihc commission. To be marketed as $6,000 toward the three-lanlng and later
•Tiberon Hills, the subdivision will laier upped the offer to $10,000 If the com­
be known as "The Hills" to distinguish It mission would approve the site plan
from Tiberon and Tiberon Cove.
Monday night.
Action was lablrd until next week on
However, the site plan request was
the Meadow Ridge site plan submitted by tabled until next week,
Galllmore Homes, Inc. It will be located
— JANE CASSELBERRY

Policy al the county's animal control shelter at Five
Polnis in south Sanford continues to be that attendants al
the facility will nol attempt lo identify by telephone fee
owners animals which are being held.
From today on, they will also not give the owners "disidentification” on animals either.
The new directive was handed down by county com­
missioners Tuesday after they received a complaint from a
pci owner whose dog was picked up by animal control of­
ficers a week ago. However the commissioners voted
unanimously not to charge Mrs. Emma Hall of Sanford a 3day board bill — $11.50 — for her dog.
Commissioner Barbara Christensen said the dog, usuallyconfined at its owner's Sanford home, got away last Wed­
nesday. When Mrs. Hall called the shelter inquiring about
her Scottish terrier Thursday, she was told they did not
have a Scottish terrier When Mrs. Hall went to the shelter
Saturday, she found her dog.
Mrs. Hull said today she picked up the pet from the
animal control shelter Tuesday.
The dog, she said, is a mixture ol Scottish ierrier an i
poodle, but looks more like a Scottish terrier. It Is named
"Scotty, naturally," Mrs, Hall said. The animal control
attendants had identified the pet as a poodle.
While County Conunissioner Bill Kirchhoff agreed with
the policy that animal control personnel will not attempt to
Identify animats by telephone, he added, "They shouldn't
dts-identify animals either." — DONNA ESTES

The

“W a fy x z e H A .

Wednesday, July II, 1*11— JA

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I AS VEGAS, Nev. I U PI» - The MGM Grand Hotel,
where M people died in a fire last November, has been
approved fur reopening and lire officials say It now Is
the safest hotel in the world.
Clark County Fire Department Assistant Chief John
Pappageorge praised the hotel, which installed a new
15 million fire safety system alter the devastating Nov.
II fire.
" I V MGM is now the world's safest hotel," Pappageorge said.

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Racial Slurs Found On Mural
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UPI &gt;- A ceramic tile mural at
Orange County'a John Wayne Airport contained visible
racial slurs that went unnoticed for more than a
decade.
County officials said Tuesday the words “spade" and
"darkle" were painted around the collar of a black
man's shirt, and according to an analysis of the 16-foot
mural, the words were part of the original a rt work.
The mural was created in 1970 by Martin Budnick as
a depiction of Orange County's history and cost the
county 126,000. Beached at his home in Ontario, Calif.,
Budnick said he does not recall painting the words Into
his design.

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Cuban Refugees To Move
LOS FKESNOS, Texas (UPI) - A U.S. Immigration
and Naturalization Service official says plans by the
Justice Department to move 900 Cuban refugees to a
south Texas detention center would be a "monumental
project" that "boggles the mind."
Plans to move the 900 refugees, currently detained at
Fort Chaffee, Ark., to the Los Fresnoa detention center
were outlined in a Justice Department memo obtained
by Tony Bonilla, president of the 100,000-member
league of United latin American Citizens.

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Why FREE? Thousands of area residents have spine
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
car*.
This Is our way of ancouraging you to find out If you ha vo a
problem that could be helpad by chiropractic care. II Is
also our way of acquainting you with our staff and
fedlltlas.
Examination incmoes a minimum of 10 standard lasts tor
evaluating the spine iy&lt;d a contour analysis photo as
Shown above
While we are accepting new patients, no on# need tael any
obligation.
Moat Insurances Accepted

REGULAR
110.99

IS); $ French A n (Acmi tram Pliu Hull Santord

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48” WOOD
C I 1L IN O F A N
Five tpaad Tropical
Bt m m . Available
in whlla or brawn
with bran trim.
REGULAR $99.99

S L A C K &amp; BECKER
N Y L O N L IN I T R IM M IR
Modal No n o t cult inch
twath with heavy duty nylon

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�E v e n i n g H e r a ld
IUSPS Ml &gt;M)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, F IA . 32771
Area Code305-322-261 lo r 83)-9993
W ednesday, July 21, 1981—4A
Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
ThomuGiordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertlilng and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, H .9 ; S Month*, $24.00;
Year, $45.00 By Mall: Week, $1.25; Month, $5.23; 8 Months.
$30.00; Year. $57.00.

It's Time To Give
Helpers Some Help
Tlicsc are certainly trying times. Inflation is
affecting us all. We're still hearing about the
m e" generation and its self-interest philosophy.
Hut coming through unselfishly for the past 50
years and still going strong is the Salvation Army
in Sanford-Seminole County. It’s been that long
the local office of that com m unity-centered
organization has devoted its time and manpower
to ease th e burdens of the less fortunate; cam e to
the rescue of those affected by disaster, natural or
otherwise; and it’s been that organization which
has acted as benefactor to our youth, guiding
them and building moral character.
Now the Sanford Salvation Army corps needs
help. It needs the help of everyone in the com­
munity who knows how valuable this organization
is to the young and old alike.
This is the 50th year in Sanford for the Seminole
County Corps of the Salvation Army and in the
past year alone it has served more than 26,000
persons of all ages through Its welfare and other
program s from its community center at 700 W.
24th St.
But inflation has caught up with our friends at
the Salvation Army here. As Capt. Carl E.
Phillips, corps commander, explains it, the
Salvation Army had to renegotiate the mortgage
on its building according to its original contract
The original mortgage was obtained at a 9perccnt interest rate, but In renegotiating it. the
best Copt. Phillifts and his people could do was
14.5 percent. That means every month the
Salvation Army pays $1,200 on its remaining
$75,000 m ortgage, and most of that amount is for
interest.
What the local Salvation Army wants to do is
raise $150,000. Half of that would go to pay off the
existing m ortgage so the $t,200 a month can go to
serve people, rather than interest and the other
half would go to capital improvements projects to
renovate and repair the Arm y’s Sanford
properties.
Most of us think about the Salvation Army
around Christmastime, but as Capt. Phillips
points out; ’’The Army is here 12 months a year,
It's not just a once-n-month thing."
Pledges arc coming in steadily, but the
Salvation Army is still far short of its goal.
There's a victory dinner planned for July 28 at the
Sanford Civic Center which will include a roast
beef dinner and entertainment by the Ballet Guild
of Sanford-Seminole.
Tickets arc $25 per and can be obtained through
the G reater Sanford Chamber of Commerce of­
fice, or by contacting Capt. Phillips at the
Salvation Army office.
If you've got a pledge or donation you want to
make in this fund-raising drive, you can contact
the sam e people to do that, too. It'd be nice.

Please Write
.lette rs to the editor are welcomed for
publication. AU letters muit 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 their names In print. The Evening
Herald also reserves the right to edit letters
to eliminate libel or to conform to space
requirements.

BERRYS WORLD

special name so send those suggestions In right
away.

The College of Engineering at University of
Central Florida (UCF) Is looking tor volunteers
to take part In a year-long study of various
energy-conservative water healing devices.
The program, funded through a grant from the
Florida Public Service Commission, features the
Installation of equipment In homes which then
will be monitored tor effect.
Homeowners selected to participate may elect
to keep the equipment for a fraction of the cost
once the UCF study 1* completed.
Persons Interested in participating in the
energy study are asked to call 275-2418 at UCF
(or details.

By JANE CASSF.I-BF.RRY

The Humane Society reminds us this hot
weather can be harmful to pets as weU as
humans. In the summer pel; are better left at
home and should never be left in dosed autos or
other unventilated enclosures In hot weather.
When outdoors, pets must have tome type of
shade.
Avoid excessive exercise and provide plenty of
fresh water at aU times.
In heatstroke cases, high fever must be
reduced rapidly to save (lie pet's life and prevent
train damage. Body temperatures of 106 F. and
above can be tolerated far only a few minutes
before Irreversible damage occurs. If heatstroke
does occur, gradually immerse your pet tn cool
water or spray with cod water from a
garden hose. Prompt action and Immediate
veterinarian care are necessary.

The "Name the Foal Contest" Is still underway
at the Seminole County Humane Society animal
Shelter In Sanford as the deadline has been
extended to August 1. The buckskin filly was
bom May 18 to "Brandy", an aged, abused and
neglected pony, which was In Humane Society
custody.
Any student tl years and under is eligible to
submit an entry to the shelter at 2001 E. 25th
Street, Sanford, along with their name, address,
phone number and age. Thla Utile critter needs a

DICK WEST

Choice
Of Some
Diet Plans

Pedestrians died at the rate of almost two
every day tn Florida in I960 according to the
Florida Highway Patrol.
Patrol records show that 7l» pedestrians died

In 1980 compared to 858 tn 1979. That equals an
increase of eight percent.
There were 8,478 pedestrians Injured tn 1980
compared to 6,545 Injured tn 1979. This points out
a slight reduction in Injuries in the overall count.
Of those pedestrians Wiled or Injured, ages 1-19
had a alight reduction while the 20-44 group In­
creased. The over 85 age group also had a
reduction.
Crossing the roadway where there was no
crosswalk caused the greatest number of
fatalities. In 1979, 168 persons were killed by
stepping In the path of a vehicle and In I960, 216
died In the same manner.
During the last 10years, there have been 5,423
pedestrians killed on Florida roadways in tragic
accidents. The only time the steady annual In­
crease In deaths has dropped was In 1974 and 1975
after the 55 miles per hour speed limit was
Inititited and gas was in short supply except for
a alight drop In 1977.
"One out of every four of the 2,879 persons
killed on Florida highways in 1980 was a
pedestrian,” said Colonel Eldrige Beach, Patrol
director, “and like most fatal accidents, could
have been prevented through a tittle common
sense and courtesy.**

IT Took NATURE 8 MlLUONlfGEE, A GOOpjbW
M IN IN G o p e r a t i o n
YEARS To SVILD TRE
wHv

*

^ .G R A N P

c a n y o n

,

ROBERT WAGMAN

G O U L P KNOCK T H IS

SECRETARY WATT

O F F IN 8

M O NTH S!

y y

WASHINGTON (U P I) Morning
television tans recently were witness to an
acrimonious wrangle between two rival diet
book authors appearing on the same talk
show.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The Carter ad­
ministration was often faulted for failing to
practice internally what It was preaching
publicly. Now the Reagan administration
seems to be following the same pattern.
Take, for example, two events that oc­
curred just before the Independence Day
weekend.

The exchange was not perhaps as dyspeptic
t s might hsve been heard had two talk show
hosts been pitted before the same camerss.
But It was nonetheless highly unseemly.

The Merit Systems Protection Board, which
was established during the Carter yean to
protect government whistle-blowers from
their superion' reprisals, announced a major
new Initiative to try to convince bureaucrats
to go public with Information on abuses. The
effort included a poster equating
whistleblowing with patriotism that was to be
placed tn government offices.

No other country on Earth has ever enjoyed
such a rich variety of diet plans as ts
available to the overweight of America. The
spectacle of two leading gurus bickering on
the public airwaves was Indecorous to say the
least.
Try visiting one of the so-called "Third
World” countries sometime. The relatively
meager choice of diet plans available to even
the wealthier Inhabitants of those benighted
lands wtU make your heart heavy with pity.
I havqhenrd stories of aborigines along the
AmaionRft cr who average less than two diet
plana per tribe. Contrast that with our own
abundance.
In this country, diet books are published in
such profusion that reviewers ure hard
pressed lu keep abreast of the tide. The
Sunday literary section of one newspaper 1
read not long ago lumped five new diet books
Into a tin g le re v ie w .

Imagine what talk show duets do to
America's Image In undeveloped parts of the
world where there aren't enough diet plans to
fight over.
1 remember when 1 was a child I used to
balk at rating hot tamales (or breakfast. My
mother would try to shame me Into downing
the portion on my plate.
"Many poor kids tn faraway places don't
have diet plans that include hot tamales for
breakfast,” she would admonish.
I would hang my head remoraefully and
gulp down a few biles. 1 never (lid learn to tike
tamalea (or breakfast but It was ■ lessen 1
never forgot.
Call me a do-gooder If you must, I believe
the United States would be wise to share its
diet plan plcntltude with less fortunate people
about the globe.
Just ask yourself this: Do you want your
children to Inherit a world In which half the
people have more diet plans than they can
poiaibly follow and the other half are barely
able to choose between calories and car­
bohydrates?
The conventional wisdom would be to
supply lower Bagatelle for eiam y ^, with
cookbooks showing different ways to prepare
colewort. That type of foreign aid obviously
generates resentment toward the benefac­
tors, activating the Ugly American syn­
drome.
But send them a new diet plan tn which
colewort Is the only authorised dish and we
will have won their eternal gratitude, phis a
loyal ally.

Preaching
And Not
Practicing?

During the same period. Attorney General
William French Smith presided over a Justice
Department ceremony a t which he presented
“ special meritorious service awards" to
some 280 employees.

JEFFREY HART

It s A Reagan Summer
In this Reagan summer of 1981, six months
into this president's tin t term, the auspices
■re all Rond.
There ts something about the atmosphere tn
Washington and in the country that goes
beyond the details of the budget, the tax cuts,
or any other measures.
Port of this has to do with the president
himself.
Reagan Is competent, relaxed and selfconfident, but he ts also lucky — and, looking
back on his career, the consistency of hts
political luck ts rather startling.
I worked fur Reagan In the sprtng of 1968,
when he w as going sll-oul to wrest the
Republican nomination from the front-runner
Richard Nixon.
One theory held that Nixon was a "loser,"
and would "stumble" somewhere in the
primaries. After all, Ntxon :iad lost to Jack
Kennedy and to Pst Brown and he had blown
his stock at his lamous "last press con­
ference.”
But Nixon did not stumble and all of the
efforts of Reagan, myself, and F. CUfton
While availed naught.
But suppose K eagsn had won the
nomination tn 1968 and gone on the brat
Humphrey. He would have inherited the •
Vietnam War and a bitterly divided country.
There would have been no chance to push
through the tax and spending cuts which are
at the core of hts philosophy.
Reagan was lucky to lose In 1988, and,
probably, lucky to lose again In 1978.
Instead, he arrived tn the presidency at Just
the point when the nation was ready to listen
to his tree market and federalist proposals.
Even the Democrats in Congress are talking
tax cuta and spending cuts. Reagan Is
working with the grain of history. And, in­
tellectually, hts approach now has behind tt a
new and tmpresalve theoretical literature.
Reagan ts also lucky in hts opponent.

Speaker Tip O'Neill Is now the senior
Democrat tn Congress and Reagan's prin­
cipal antagonist. Hut O'Netll ts a caricature of
the bloated and corrupt politician of
yesterday.
Even If O'Netll managed to aay something
fresh it would sound stale. After giving one of
hts routine blasts about the poor, the old, the
lame, the halt and the blind, O'Neill climbs
Into his long black limousine and lights up a
long black cigar.
A vintage product of the Massachusetts
grsftorracy, O'Netll is an opponent out of
Central Csisting.
Needless to say, Reagan was lucky in the
assassination attempt, and gallant in his
handling of It.
Particularly against the background of the
Carter administration, an easy act to follow,
Reagan's White House nudes competence.
The top troika of Ed Mtese, Jim Baker, and
Mike Deaver has been able to work quietly
and effectively. All adm inistrative ex­
perience suggests that such a troika would
usher In a power struggle, but that has not
occurred.
Reagan was lucky to come up with a young
man Uke David Stockman, an economic whti
kid who has done remarkably In his selling of
the president's program

But three department lawyers who were
slated to get the awards did not. Why?
Because they had recently critlctred the
conduct ot their superiors.
Two of the atttomeys, Michael Lubtn and
George Mendelson, were Involved In the
prosecution of officials of the St. touivbosed
McDonnell Douglas Carp, an charges of
making Illegal foreign p a y m e n ts to a ell th e ir
aircraft.
The lawyers ran Into trouble when they
wrote a memo protesting a meeting between
Associate Attorney General Rudolph Giuliani
and the general counsel of McDonnell
Douglas.
Giuliani, the department's No. 3 official,
admits that the overseas-bribery case was
discussed during the 90-minute meeting on
May 14. But he says that he had not known
before the meeting that the department had
any litigation — let alone a criminal
prosecution — pending against McDonnell
Douglas.
He says that be had no idea why the cor­
poration's lawyers asked for the meeting and
that he granted the request as a “courtesy"
that he would have estended to the counsel of
any major corporation.
The meeting took place in the contest of
recent administration and congressional
attempts to change radically the taws
prohibiting foreign payments and intensive
efforts by McDonnell Douglas to convince
government officials to abandon the
prosecution.

Where the UN Is concerned, even to men­
tion the words Andrew Young is enough to
make Reagan's ambassador, Jeane Kirk­
patrick, look Uke Joan of Arc.
Secretary of State Al Haig has a tendency to
"go public" when It Is not opportune, but he
appears to be disciplining himself In that
regard

So, laibin and Mendelson quite naturaDy
taw the meeting as undermining their
prosecutorial efforts. First they protested the
action Internally. When that got them
nowhere, they wrote ■ memo to Giuliani that
was made public.

Thoughtful Reaganltes worry today about
Judge Sandra O'Connor, not on the abortion
issue, but because they doubt that she Is a
boat-rocker. The administration was brought
in, they trgue, to really change things.

Giuliani’s reaction was Immediate. He
called the memo "a disrespect for the facts"
and "Immature petulance." He also began to
Insist that he had a right to meet with any
person with whom the government had
litigation pending.

JACK ANDERSON

Frugal' Gang Spent Freely After Defeat

"...And ‘Operation Doadwood,' out proofam to
wood-out thoso who arp not sponding monoy
fast oncjQ/y, Is going JUST GREAT."

J.

- * * * * • - *- * -

WASHINGTON—Throughout hts ill-starred
presidency, Jim m y C a rter assiduously
cultivated an Image of Puritanic parslm oaym frying hts own luggage, selling the
presidential yacht. Installing his cousin Hugh
Carter to nurse nickels and dimes on While
House expenses.
But once the Carter crowd was retired by
the voters last November, the t i K l a * U ; i
from Georgia began traveling first-doss si
the taxpayers, expense. The General
Accounting Office has totted up the postelection bill, and It turns out that the Carter
administration went out, not only with s
whimper but with a ro a r-th e roar of Jet
planes taking off on Junkets that served Utile
if any useful purpose to the pubUc that paid
(or them.
According to internal GAO files, more than
300 Carter appointees traveled about the
world between E lection Day and
Inauguration Day, (or a grand total of 798
trips. The total bill for these Junkets came to

,4

„

H it .000.

To be sure, many of these trip* were
Justifiable. But many were not The distur­
bing feature ot the tome-duck travel Itch that
afflicted C arter’s crew was the number of
outgoing offidals who apparently felt It
necessary to go In style before they were
snatched untimely from the public trough.
Here ore some ot the more glaring examples:
—Then-Energy Secretary Charles Dun­
can's trip to Paris for an International energy
ccnferet ce last December has already been
wett-pubtictied. He chose to take the
premium-priced supersonic Concord. Not
pubUcixed was the fa d that hts deputy, Lynn
Coleman, who also flew the luxurious Con­
corde to the conference, hod flown to Paris a
couple of weeks earlier and spent about 10
days there.
Leslie Goldman, then an official of DOE'i
international division, also made the Paris
jeene twice w ithin a month. He Insisted that

—*

*T V* ■

the preliminary trips he and Coleman made
were essential to lay the groundwork (or the
December meeting. Duncan’s retinue on the
December trip Included a secretary and a
public affairs adviser. They did not taka the
Concorde, however.
-Then-Labor Secretary Ray Marshall
betrayed s fmdnca; ! x Crii-d*aa U«rai wi
least during his peripatetic last three months
In office. The GAO (lies chow that he mode
f Irsl-closs official trips to New York, Chicago,
San Antonio, San Francisco and Atlanta, u
well as a tour to China and Japan by way of
Paris.
Aides who accompanied Marshall on the
Asian Junket also went first-class. They In­
cluded NUt Cdes, Ms deputy under secretary
for legislation, although the chances of the
Carter administration getting any legislation
through the new Congress in less than three
weeks before Inauguration Day were remote.
-D a le Hathaway, former under secretory

for International affairs and commodity.
programs at the Agriculture Department,
(lew first-class to Adelaide, Australia, (or a 3
meeting of groin*sporting countries. *‘l
didn’t want to go," Hathaway told my
associate Lucette Lagnado, "but the
Australian government wanted ■ senior
policy official"
In (act, first-class accommodations were
practically a condition (or H athaw ay’s ‘
making the trip. He said he had "on
agreement" with Agriculture Secretary Bob
Berg land: " I I 1 was going, 1 would go (trstclass." He pointed out that the 13*4-*-&gt;ialihour Right was “miserable'’ - though
presumably leas so In a (IrsVcIass seat.
-D r . J * » ' McCarty, an official of tbs
Health and Human Services Deportment,
spent four days in scenic Montnux, Swttterland, In December. The purpose of hi* visit
was to take pari in s conference on “use and
abuse ot social services and benefits."

�Evening Herild, Sanford. FI.

FLORIDA

Wadnstdsy, July*!. 1H1-5A

Security Tight A t U.S. Embassy In San Salvador

: IN BRIEF
Movie Set Theme Park
•To Be Built Near Orlando
ORLANDO, Fla. &lt;UPI) — The entertainment
company. MCA Inc., is planning lo build a COO million
movie set theme park in rentral Florida about 10 miles
north of Walt Disney World.
MCA, the producer of 16 to IS feature length films a
year, is slated to announce the project at a news
conference Friday,
The project is expected to propel Florida's fledgling
film industry into a more competitive position as a
motion picture production center wilh California and
New York.
MCA wilt build the complex on &lt;23 acres near the
Intersection of the Florida Turnpike and Interstate 4 —
a hub of theme park activity with Disney World, Sea
World, and Circus World aU nearby.

Shuttle Has Blast Problem
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI 1—Space engineers
say they will have (o find a way to protect the space
shuttle from blast damage from its own rockets If the
second launch ol Columbia is to occur on schedule Sept.
30.
Jim Greenwood, shuttle Integration manager at the
Kennedy Space Center, said the blast problem is "close
to No. I on the hit parade and lias to be resolved before
the next flight."
The space agency fears that even if the shuttle and
Die astronauts withstand the shock wave, the delicate
instruments used lor the seven scientific experiments
in Columbia's first payload might be damaged.

SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador (UPI) - When Salvadorans
talk about "El Bunker", they’re not referring to a heavily
fortified army command post or an underground guerrilla
hideout.
They’re talking about the U.S. Embassy.
American embassies have always been a favorite target of
protesters throughout t-atin America. In fact, the first UN.
ambassador ever assassinated by modern terrorists, Gordon
Mein, was killed In Guatemala In 1989.
Bui ever since Washington decided In give strong military
and economic support to the Salvadoran government, its
mission in San Salvador has come under repeated attacks by
both leftist and rightwing extremists
Squat and pillbox-like even when It was built in 1967, the
block-square building looks like a modernistic club sandwich
ol four alternating layers of windows and pebble-encrusted
concrete.
But when terrorists hit the mission seven times in 3i days In
March nnd April with rocket propelled grenades and subma­
chine gun [ire, embassy security officials breathed a sigh of
relief no one was injured — and battened down the hatches.
They also got about It million to beel up their defenses and

add a little offensive punch of their own, said one embassy
source with first-hand knowledge of the security program.
"U was a dream come true for our security chief because he
got almost 100 percent ol the budget he asked for in new
equipment nnd manpower," llie source said.
UN. Ambassador Deane Hinton now moves about the rapltal
In a caravan of bulletproofed vehicles protected by a phalanx
of Stale Department bodyguanls who carry lsraelimade Uii
submachine guns in stylish Gucci attache cases.
"I had to persuade those fellows that they had to let me out.
You have to have a little lun," said Hinton, a widower who like
all other embassy staffers had to leave his dependents nine
children — in the United Stales.
The most visible part of the embassy's new security Is the
6,500 olive green sandbags stacked along the lower half of all
windows to absorb machine gun fire and reduce the target sire
for more powerful weapons
Another 700 sandbags went up on the roof to build corner gun
turrets that give UN. Marine guards d e a r fields of fire over
the (our downtown San Salvador streets that converge on a
traffic circle in Irnit of the mission,
Then there LxDie wall —li feel high all around the building.

4

Commerce Center Plan Approved
After being assured a new project would not strain the area's
water drainage, Casselberry City Counctlmen approved a
Seminole Commerce Center construction proposal Monday
night
Officials ol their regular weekly meeting accepted the
planning department's recommendation lo approve the new
office complex on a Semlnola Drive lot between East lake
Drive and Sunset Drive.
Area residents who attended a public work session on July 11
questioned the project's effect on drainage.

made of steel rods and concrete sandwiched between two
layers of building blocks and humorously refened to as
“Reagan's Ramparts "
Not quite so visible is "Tiburon" iSpanlsh for shark), a
group of about 50 former Salvadoran soldiers and policemen
hired by the embassy to patrol everything within a halfmile
radius of the embassy during working hours.
"Tiburon" patrol members ride in unmarked, bulletproof
patrol cars, are armed with L’ris and U.S.-made M-18
automatic rifles, and are in constant radio contact with Iho
embassy.
The idea, mission sources said, is lo spot any suspicious car
in the neighborhood before it can whit by the mission and let
loose with rocket propelled grenades ol machine gun fire — or
lo seal off escape routes after such attacks.
Visitors entering the embassy are searched with metal
detectors nnd get a special lapel badge from a Marine wearing
battle fatigues and flak Jacket and standing inside a bullet*
proof reception mbicte.

But Utilities Director Ed Kculing assured officials that
Seminole Commerce Center would nol endanger drainage In
adjacent residential communities.
Hattaway Really ol Altamonte Springs, partly owned by
State Hep. Bob Hattaway, D-Altnmonte Springs, is building the
center. Space will be rented to professionals and other com­
mercial enterprises.
According lo contractors, Hun Galll nnd C. Phillip Thomp­
son, the one-story masonry structure will covrr an 18,000
square-foot plot.
Builders said work should be completed In four months

A? TK
*

CUITHC* TRff

t .

rion

_

•
|

71 I S Hwy.427
Longwood.FI
t Oik S 01434
339 3192

2nd ANNIVERSARY SALE
Savings I0%-40%
MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING CLASS
S tarts Week of July 17 &amp; Aug. 1

REDUCED SU M M ER RA TEI
HOURSM-T W F IM.THURS. 10 5:10, SAT. i n

Reagan Image Completed
l.AKF. BUENA VISTA, Fla, (UPI) - Blaine Gibson
says Ronald Reagan Isn’t an easy man to duplicate.
The rnolder of presidential figures (or Wall Disney
World’s Hall of Presidents, Gibson spent weeks
study ing Reagan's movements and mannerisms, nnd
six months putting them all together.
The result is a pretty-fair life-size model of the chief
executive sitting in a chair and hands folded The
model is between Presidents Elsenhower awl
Roosevelt In the Disney exhibit.
"President Reagan presented a special challenge,"
said Gibson who has produced more than half the
figures In Live hall. "There's a certain tendency for him
to erupt Into n smile spontaneously."

H

o

ld

d

o

w

n

Cloud Seeding To Begin Soon
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (U P !)- T h e stall of the
South Florida Water Management District will begin
studying bids from cloud seeders today (or next
month's effort to raise the level ol lake Okeechobee by
inducing more rainfall.
The deadline Inr sutxnllttng tikis ended at midnight
Tuesday. The Water Management District's stall is
scheduled to make a recommendation Friday favoring
one of it* bidders.
The Board of the Water Management District is
scheduled in meel Monday to award a raitra c l for the
project, which may cost up to 1450,000

Mickey Visits Governor
TAIJJkHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Mickey Mouse had
lunch at the Governor's Mansion Tuesday.
The heavy wool mouse costume that covers the
wearer from head to toe is so hot It ran tie worn for only
40 minutes at a time.
When it came off, Mickey turned out to be a girl — a
four-ftxtt-10-inch tail teenager whose mom works at
Walt Disney World.
Mickey came to Tallalwxxce to promote a fund­
raising event at Walt Disney World to raise money to
restore awl beautify the mansion.

..o f c O E L E C T R O ^ ,
RENTAL A SALES CO. , C -S
No. 7 Lskavtew P lata — ) l t CommtrclAl S t ru t
Sanford. Florid* 31771

(305)323-7885
SOWING
iWnwMir VdkfMI CuumlMfn

noting*
T H E

F U T U R E

IS

H E R E

T O D A Y !
ILIMITED INTRODUCTORY OFFERl
E n jo y G , P G , R a n d X r a te d
m o v ie s
y o u r

in

th e

h o m e.

V id e o

p riv a c y

R ent

C a s s e tte

a

of

$Q 65
A sk

with M V

a b o u t

TV.)

o u r

V id e o

M o v i e s E x c h a n g e C l u b . I t 's
th e

b ig g e s t

te le v is io n

in n o v a tio n

s in c e

'«•'

R e c o rd e r

a n d a m o v ie o f y o u r c h o ic e .

(*orIII

t

Z e n ith

te le v is io n !

in

Tills summer, electric bills will he bigger than ever
unless we all work harder than ever to hold them down.
Even with recent declines, the price o f fuel oil is much
higher than last year. Add our other increased costs and
that means higher hills. For FPL and you,
But there is something you can do this summer.
Air conditioning typically uses more than half youi
power. For central air, turn your thermostat to at least
78° instead o f 72° and you’ll save 40% or more on your
coiling costs. If you haw window units, use “low cixil”
and the lower numbered settings. C lean or change air
filters monthly. Turn off your air conditioning when

away tor several hours, or on days when not absolutely
necessary. And with ceiling fans the thermostat can
often be set higher or the air conditioner turned off
completely.
Water heating Is the next biggest user of electricity,
about 21% o f the typical home’s total. You can save money
e v c i y mouth by oi it simple change; with the circuit breaker
off, lower the thermostat tin your water heater to 140?7T~
you have a dishwasher, 120? if you don’t.
More energy-saving tips to hold down Big Bill
are available at your local
Florida IW cr &amp; Light office.
3 S /W E IT, FLORIDA.

FLORID* POWER t LIGHT COMPANY

&lt;■*

4V*

1

•&lt;
% .«,* «•*••*r&gt;*.

�P EN TA X
The Saving Place ~
Shop Sanford and Orlando daily 9 :3 0 * 9 :3 0 , Sun. 1 2 -6
Shop M t . D o ra, C lerm ont daily 9 * 9 , Sun. 12*6
Shop Leesburg, D e la n d , Kissimmee daily 9 - 9 , Sun. 11-6

■Cass For XO
C o m o ro ,18.47

249.88 209.88
• M l S u p e r SLR C a m e r a

• XO-1* 3 5 m m SLR C a m e ra

Automatic, electronic
35mm model (2 Olens

Point-focus-shoot cornera features 12 Olens

•W it h F M ie n s , 299.88

• With F 1.4 le n s .. 267.68

Focal M -SOOT
llsctronlc
Flash, 29.97

Jeans ’n Jerseys For Men And Boys
Score big savings on V-neck sport lerseys and
polyestor/cotton loans lor both big and little guys
Our &gt;og. 8.97, Jr. Boys' Acotato/Cotton Js rts y , 4 -7 ,.. . $4
Our Rog. 8.97, Soys' Polyostor/Cotton J s r t s y ............... $4
Our &gt;sg. 9.97, Msn's Nylon Mssh Football Jsrs s y..........$7
Our Rsg. 6.97, Jr. Bovs'‘‘Our B sst"Jsont, Sliss 4 To 7 . . $8
Our Rsg. 8.97, Soys' “ O ur Bsst" WosUrn-stvIo J s a n s .. . $7
Our Rsg. 17.00,Msn's Chsltsngsrr u Dsnim Jsans . . . . S10
Our Rsg. 10.97, Studsnts Corduroy Jsans (not shown) •• SS

Our Reg. 8.68

Back-to-school
Dresses For Girls

Fuzz
B u s te r

II

Latest outvmn styles, some In easycore polyester/cotton Choose sen­
sational one or two-piece dresses In
solid colors or pretty print! Save

167.88 54.88

Coupon good July 22 thru Arty 23.1941

F3.5 M a c ro Z o o m le n s

Not Alt Stytss In AH Itorss

35-l05m m variable fo­
cusing Minolta' mount
only

I

Bring in a n y competiiors ad
t*
£

and w e w ill m eet their ad price
on any similar o r identical item

IS

w e have in stock; today thru
Sat. J u ly 25th only at your

4.47

16.97

Safety Helmet

Adults' Ute Vest
U.S.C.G. approved vest

7.97 Root Cushion, 8.97

"KM7S" 4-ply Polesfer
Cord Whitewall Tires
Our Reg. 37.76 — A78x13

sim 110. SAll F.l.T.
■7lil3 19.76 31.97 1.71
crisis 42.76 33.97 1.17
ITIilS 44.76 33.97 2.04
871*14 44.76 36.97 2.14
07lil4 48.76 37757 2.21
V071.IS 49.76 38.97 2.26
N7lsl4 50.74 38.97 2.S2
N7li1S SI.76 40.97 2.S7
171x18 SS.76 42.97 2.14

Sanford K-mart.

Youths'.adults' helmets.
A A M V A approved

SdIVICtS INCLUOt
I rule* Sort a rc t»ok. pods and
beak. Srangt on iMTwnMU
2. Bsiurtoc. drvxn* and tn&gt;* rokxi
I N p K l Irani calp . 1

V.iotouadraar»n#otev«nd**k.»

point*. loptoc*. i rwcoMary at
adononal parti coil p#r wtwor
cysndw
S R.poci n w and outot

Many lortign c a n . ilgni tiucu

Nghsr

b o .o o ^

3 9 l 8 8 48^8

Your C h o ic e

2 9 .9 6 K

Dleo Drum Brake Speolal

Savel 36-mo. Battery

Equaliser Or Speakera

Portable Air Compressor

Services p e rfo rm e d on
m a n y A m e ric a n c a n

Fits many cars, light trucks
Top. side terminals.

60-W output equalizer or
amplified speaken

Plugs into c o r cigarette
lighter. Up to 150 p i l .

HI81S WHA! W6 DO

I

r

-

S

I

W

KM* Sport Radial Stool
Belted Whitewall Tires

•%. i v . &amp; l m

1. tnilal Now Motor
Brand Fluos
2. Sot bkrol and AcRutl

Computer Baianoe

Our Reg. 43.86 — 155R12

3. Timolnglno

1. Bopock front whool
boonrvgi
2. mspocftronl grooso
tools
3. Coer put.r balanco

£T u p

.(MR

4. A»gn front orvi

1

I L

m

1 9 .8 8

m

■ pr

| o L a rg e r

Sizes A v a ila b le
a n a C o m p a r a b l y P ric e d

Front Ind Speolal

KSH 1 9 .8 8 £
™

Many U.S ca n. Additional
parts, services at extra cost.

O

U

Ea.

4

/\

j|
Our Reg
B * W " W p r . 5.97-6.97

4 -c y l Engine Tune-up

Engine Or Tire Cleaner

Rubber Splash Guards

For any U.S. or foreign
cars electronic Ignition

Choose 16oz ‘ oerosol or
2 0 -o z " pum p spray.
•Not wt “ FI ot

Colors com plem ent car.
Resists fading or peeling.

�Evening Here Id, Stnlord, FI.

Wtdnetdey, July 11, i t l l — ?A

Shop Sanford and O rla n d o daily 9:30-9:30, Sun. 12-6

f;*****msfif *+••M»■

K m arl- ADVERTISED
MERCHANDISE POLICY
£X* lirm rtn n on it *o hjrv* *v*'y
VMd aam . ,iac. on our an* v . . . §n
K SvIiM d Mm 1 not *,*.!*&amp;* tor pur
t m . du* to ary u«to«na*n ’..i o n
* mart *"■ Uhl* . Ha-n 0 * c « r r rw,^*.)
lot Y* mvrthancYta [on* aam or raaiorv
ati&gt;. limit, gutfititf |to b* pufchaaad at the
Ml* one* *n*n*v*r araJabw of m &gt; **&lt;
|0u a comptiabl* q-i—*■f, *t#m at a comp*

C LIP ~
&amp; S A V E
D O U B LE

The Saving Places
S h o p M l . D o r a , C l e r m o n t d a ily 9 - 9 , S a n . 1 2 -6 .

fattotadudcnatpr&lt;*

Shop L e e tb u rg ,

DeLand,

K is s im m e e d a ily

9-9,

11-6

S u it.

COUPON

COUPON
\ c

(q t v
(n &gt; v

Ne
Fluarocubon

,*&gt;
W rnrnmriP*s 1

Nt

Gun

W

D ouble re d e m p tio n
applies only to those
Items In stock and
d o e s not In c lu d e
to b a c c o a n d tree
coupons.
Total
re d e m p llo n ca nn o t
e xceed cost ot the
I t em.
L i mi t o n e
manulacturer's
co up o n per Item.

Hi
Fluoracirban
Cms

r w

rJe n lW 1'

H ER E'S A N E X A M P L E :
s

,

% C ? &lt;fc 0,1

*

f
WITH
COUPON

W ITH

COUPON

Loving Care* Hair Color

WITH
C OUPO N

Washes a w a y only the gray
All shades. 3-oz* lotion

*not

WITH
COUPON

Pkg.
013
Plastic Drip-dry Hangers
Break-resistant and rust­
proof Cheerful colors Save

Arrid* E xtra -dry Deodorant
Regular or light powder 4oz-net-w t
aerosol spray

COUPON

From Kmart

Save! Tono* Skin-care Bar
With moisturizers and c o c o a
butter 4V*-oz •bath-size bar.
’Net wt
Coupon Good July 22 Irvu Jufy 25 1961

Coupon Good Jtfy 22 thru July JS 1961

Coupon Good July 22 thru July 25 198)

Manufacturer's
Coupon

|
■

\J

L'

|

total Savings
to You

Coupon Good jufyZZIrvuJutviSICJI

COUPON

COUPON

Protein
Regular
Oily Or
Extra-body

Sale Price

Salo Price
WITH
COUPON

WITH
COUPON

12-oz.Agreo* Crem e Rinse

I

Choice of 4 conditioning
formulas
12-fl -o z
size

|

WITH
COUPON

D elicious Sugar Wafers
Llghl and crispy sugar wafer |
cookies 18-oz * tray Save I

tO O Excedrln* Tablets
Extra-strength pain reliev­
er at a low. Kmart* price

*N#f w1
Coupon Good Mi 32 trvg jury 23 1961

COUPON

COUPON

WITH
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■

P K G S.

I

V

PKGS.

I

9-lnch While Paper Plates

SO Foam Drinking Cups

Grease-resistant, disposable
paper plates Pkg of 80.

6 4 oz plasllc-foarn cups for
hot or co ld liquids Save

Coupon Good July 2! ItvuJutyZS 1961

CO UPO N

COUPON

CO UPO N

LEMONADE MD[

Wstwbuasnd

“**■

Roach Trawl i

Sole Price

----------- V

M

| i

COU PON /

C h o ic e " |

2 R o a ch O r 3 A n t Tra p s

''

Black Flag* traps for elfeclive roach or ant control
Coupon Good JtAy 22 TrvuJuN2S. 1911

;;

| ■
■ •

—

— 1/

T

T

Pkg

•Eveready* Batteries

Household Aluminum Foil

Wyler’s* Lemonade Mix

2 0 -lb .' B a g C h a rc o a l

Choose "C " or "D *cell oatterles In packoges of 2

Foil for wrapping leftovers
and more 12 "x25' rolls Save

Has natural lemon flavor,
sugar added 24-oz net wt.

Charcoal briquets light
fast and oasy Save now.

Coupon Good July 12 Trvu July IS. I9SI

C o u p o n G o o d July 22 m -u July 25 1911

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

»Tjohnson uiex

L. L K I » l I

TOILET BOWL
F R E S H tH IR
D tO D O R lZ tf^

S a le P r ic e

Sale Price

S a le P ric e

jC

g arwpsgj

■
I

WITH
COUPON

WITH
COUPON

W ln d e x * W it h T r i g g e r S p r q y

B e fre s h l* B o w l F re s h e n e r

W ls k * l i q u i d D e t e r g e n t

P t n e - S o f L iq u id C l e a n e r

1

l-q u a r t C h a r c o a l li g h t e r

Contains "Ammonia D" glass
c le a n e r . 2 2 -o z.* b o ttle .

Choose spring, lemon or
rose scent 17-oz net wt.

Heavy-duty laundry deter
gent gets cloths clean 64 oz *

C le a n s , d is in fe c ts a n d
deodorizes 26-11-oz bottle

|
i

Flame-trap container Is
designed for safe use.

-Ha*
Coupon Good JuJy 22 trvuXXy 25.1991

m u u u ijy s .

Irvu July 25 I9SI

K IS S IM M E E
U i HWT in VINI
IT AT TKACKM

&gt;J

LEESBURG

f\

/r\

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W ednetday,inly 11. IHI

PEOPLE

China's 4-Million M an M ilitary

Sophia Loren Viewed

IN BRIEF
Maybe Sooner Or Later
They'll Get It Right
L'nltrd P r m International
Sooner or later, Evonne Goolsgong Cawley and Roger
Cawley will get II right. The tennis star and her husband
exchanged wedding vows—lor the third time—last weekend
at a private home in la s Vegas. The Cawleys were first
married in her native Australia in 1973 and again a few
months later In his native England. This time the best man
and maid of honor, Glen Campbell and Tanya Tucker, wore
bathing suits and sang. Mrs. Cawley, 30, wore a white
dress and her husband, 32, wore a black tuxedo. The
Cawleysare now U3. dtlsens and have a daughter, 4, and a
son, 6 weeks old.

Casfro Not Up To Par
lh e rc not being much new news about baseball, here's
some old news, courtesy of Atlantic Monthly: An article
about Minnesota Twins, owner Calvin Griffith in the
magarlne's August issue says left-handed pitcher Fidel
Castro was scouted by the old Washington Senators in the
1940s but tost out because his fastball wasn't up to major
league standards. Griffith, whose foster father and uncle,
Calvin Griffith, owned the Washington team, says he has n
baseball autogra[)hed by Castro, and that the FBI once
came to inspect the Cuban leader's signature.

Good Housekeeping magarine asked a roster of
Hollywood leading men how they liked working with Sophia
Loren. The responses from Robert Wagner, Paul Newman,
Omar Sharif and Tony Perkins was predictably flattering,
but Gregory Peck manages a twist. "She never gives an
Inch. The woman has no mercy,” says Miss I-oren's
"Arabesque" co-star, "And she is one of the two people I
remember who up-staged me. (Celeste Holm Is the other)."
Richard Burton—(they did the TV "Brief Encounter"
together) says Sophia "cheats at cards." Naturally,
President Reagan’s new ambassador to Mexico City, John
Gavin (her c o tta r in “A Breath of Scandal” ), is
diplomatic: "She has a great and delightful sense of
humor."

Being Eased Back Into Barracks
PEKING (UPII — China's 4-millionman military' ix being eased back into the
barracks.
The People’s liberation Army, a
bastion of loyality to Mao Tse-tung, has
lost several political fights in recent
months to the reform-minded Deng
Xiaoping and his pragmatist allies.
The army, which held China together
during the chaotic 1966-76 Cultural
Revolution and became the country’s
central institution, is being told more
forcefully than ever, "The Party com­
mands the gun.”
"Tile military is largely on the
defensive, having lost the big fights in
recent months," one Western diplomat
said.
Said another: "Anyway you look at it,
the military has been losing ouL"
Defense is the lowest of China’s
priorities in its modernization campaign.
The size of the army is being trimmed
and military leaders have had to swallow
two rounds of budget cuts.
Deng's decision to become chairman of
the military affairs commission, In effect
making him commander-ln-chief, also
leaves doubt who is in charge. The
Standing Committee of the National
People’s Congress lias enacted laws
governing soldiers’ conduct, the first

Won't Attend Royal Wedding
MADRID, Spain (UPI) — In a royal snub, Spain told
Britain that King Juan Carlos will boycott the wedding of
Prince Charles and lad y Diana Spencer to protest the
couple’s plans to begin their honeymoon at Gibraltar, a
British crown colony claimed by Spain.
The royal snub came amid a flurry of diplomatic protests
Tuesday with Spain's Foreign Minister Jose Pedro PerezIJorca calling the honeymoon plans "uncalled-for and
inopportune," a government official said.
In 1.ondon. Spanish Ambassador Frederlco Aria.vSalgedo
lodged a note with the British government protesting
Prince Charles and Lady Diana’s plans to board the Royal
Yacht Britannia at Gibraltar, on the southernmost tip of
Spain.

She Adorns A Peso Note
Never mind Use Susan B. Anthony dollar, let's hear It for
Gabriela,Mistral. The 1943 Nobel Literature Prize-winner
has become the first famous woman to adorn a peso note in
her native Chile. The South American country this week
introduced a new 3,000 peso note featuring a portrait of the
poet, wlio died in 1937 in Hempstead, N.Y. It's worth about
1123 and Is the highest denomination available in Chile.

Harley Movie Planned

Milestone For A Soprano

Bob Marley, who made Jamaica's reggae music known
around the world before he died recently of cancer, will be
the subject of a movie, according to producer Chris Blackwell of Island Bed orels Blackwell, who discovered Marley
when the singer-composer was a teenager, says the film
will use footage of Marley concerts and interviews along
with interviews with "the people of the ghettos and far­
mlands he grew up In and In the countries he Influenced."

She's come a long way since her girlhood In Spcarfiah.
S D„ but next Saturday marks a career milestone for the
American soprano Johanna Meier Miss Meier, who has
performed the role of Isolde in Wagner's "Tristan and
Isolde" In Mexico City, Toronto, Seattle and Venice, finally
gets to sing it at West Germany's Bayreuth Festival,
becoming the first native American to perform the
operatic role at (he temple of Wagnerian adulation.

firm Hu personally intervened to prevent
publication and halt the military carm
P*lgn.
1
Other military attempts to reverb
what It considers the country'g
ideological drift from Maoism also havd
flopped this year. The appeal to Chinesd
to emulate mode! soldier I,ei Feng's
patriotism and community spirit "fell
flat on its face," one foreign analyst satdf

time the army has accepted this degree
of civilian authority.
Deng and his allies overrode military
opposition to pass a historical document
at the recent Party Central Committee
meeting scrapping Mao's policies and
stature.
To assuage the military, Mao will
continue to receive lipservice as the
party's guiding light. But on a practical
level Deng, new Party Chairman Hu
Yaobang and Premier Zhao Zlyang are
eipected to move further away from
Mao's legacy.

Foreigners are unable to delect any
signs that China's military will vent it.4
dissatisfaction by taking armed action;
The country's size and the absence of J
charismatic military figure seem to
make a coup highly unlikely.

The military lacked the necessary
clout to prevent Hu’s appointment in
June despite misgivings that he will
move strongly against military interests.
"The army hates him,” one diplomat
said.

■China is not the kind of country wherif
you can stage a coup," the analyst said I
"You Just can’t march into the capital
and take over the radio station."
With the possible exception of a few;
die-hard Maoists, the army appears
willing to accept a downgrading of itsj
status.

One source of antagonism between the
military and Hu was the military cam­
paign earlier this year to criticize writer
Bai llua for his screenplay, "Bitter
lnve," which criticized Mao and cast
doubt on the future of Chinese socialism.
The campaign against Bai Hua was
picking up steam but the next logical step
—apoearance of a military article in the
Parly's People’s Daily — failed to
materialize. Chinese sources now con­

N O W O P EN
G&amp;B AUTOMOTIVE

Now that the Cultural Revolution is
over and the leadership question if
resolved for the moment, the need for the
army to remain at the heart of Chinese*
society as a stabilizing factor has,
lessened.

My office will be

CLOSED

2413 Hwy.W (O rlando D r.)

August 16 and will

Ph. 122 4417, Sanford

re-opon August 31
COMPLETE AUTO A N D -- ..
DIESEL TRUCK SERVICE
• RADIATOR R EPA IR S

DR. R.L. BASS
2541 PARK DR.

REALTY TRANSFERS
Donald f* FKity i mF Karyn J
Lewfltld Apu . lr»c to Edward
J DeCo'imo A wf Ann# M Un Of ro Ben* l. W111lam* A wf. Irmgard
&gt;441 Cedar wood VIII Condo.
L . Lot 33, Aldean Garden*,
uc.wo
14?. $00
Rutteil T Swain. Jr to King*
(QCDI Donn# J Trifltno to
Roger Irlulno, Lot 77. Lakewood Chalet*. Ltd . Lot* I A IA. bik B.
Sweetwater Oak*. Sweetwater
Sham, lit Addn I too
(QCDI Robert Add-ion to Derry SAore* I. 1535,000
Brian W Prenderga*) A wf
McGill Sr . Lot I. Blit 3, P.ne
Ltvtl, 1)00
ArdattiL toDS Proveniola Awf
Derry McGill Sr to Nadine Ruth j , Lot 13. Blk D. Sterling Pk
McGill. Lot I, Bltt 3. Pint Level Un Two *43 $00
Urban E ip Carp to Cor torp ,
1100
Pen nil M ktil e L Ml Pftytlit E Lot 45. ffekiva Cove, Ph One.
lOLentrd Hlechoel wf Elsie M E 131.900
ISO ol Lot 9, t»ib B, North Orlando
Gary L Ma**ey. Harvey M
Ranch#* S#c 1 tit,$00
Aiper A Terrence W Acker! to Von
Geoffrey C. Warner L *1 Nancy HornbwcA Partnership. Lott 11 It.
J, lo Robert A, D#lany Awf Nancy nikP'Tr.Ng i? iantando Sprtag*,
1 .Cot t«. blk t. Sterling Per* un •tltooo
1 hre«. tfo.ona
(QCDI Ronald R WWJener. %gl
Period Equity Grp Inc to to Jo Ann Andmar. tg l. WUS of N
Eiijibefh Gr urn ward, wid.„ Un M 34$' of Lot 40. Euraka Hammock.
3. Latie Kathryn Village, condo $100
UM00
(QCDI Anna K Whittles, tgl to
Cither in# V Duprt to Alben F
Dreve*. Trustee lor Norton B Frank McArdl# A wf Munel A .
Un
152, Sandy Cove. $100
Miller, Un 144 C. Springwood
H P L Inc .foLarklnl Wagner
Village,, condo $19,400
Mehta Meyer*, tgl to Mark V A wf Miriam L. Lot 131, Myrtle
Wh.ir Awl Patricia. Li l. B'k J. Lake Hill*. Ill *00
R(Chard E Torrontor A wf
Like Kathryn Park. Fifth Addn
Katherin# B to William T Dr*on
incl Mobile Home t)$.)00
George E, Green A wt Linda to Jr A wf Shall* A , LOl 344, Spring
Mehta Meyff*. tgl Lot ). Blk j, Oak*. Un 3, $45,000
Jama* AWadt. *gl to Stanley E
Lake Kathryn Park. Filth Addn.
label A wf Carol J . Lot* 94 A 91.
$10,400
William? Freeland A wf Lynn Santo Park $49,900
(QCDI Carl A AndertoniwfR
to Terry 1), Schlepp ig i, tot 4, The
Highland* Set Four. If. A A f), Dang to Agnat M Andmon, Lot 1.
Bik 34. North Chuluot* $100
Replat. $74,900
Anna Ruth Bowe to William E
Chmfiane n Field*. %gi to
Margaret Howard, ig t, lot 11$, Mar*h A wf Irene M Lot* 1A4. bik
Windward Sq Sac Two. I$$.000 15, A n Ruiteii * Addn to Fort
Samuel 2ell eft Tr to Equity Reed. $100
Frank Sitv«*trl A wf Lea to Halo
Realty Inc .. Un $4, Sandy Cove,
1100
Silve*fri In. Ltd. Inc. Lot 3.
Equity Realty Inc to Clifford R Howell E*l* , lit Addn. $100
U S Home torp to William J
JdffpMOn A wf Bleu D . Un |4t,
tfoirurr Jr,, tgl , Lot 31. 'Sutter*
'Sandy Cove 121,700
IQCO) Gerald D Brown *gl to Mill. Un One, 179,000
Michael j Paulucci Trustee
Croner G Ceudfil Jr, to HD
Duluth. N 3$' Of E 340‘ of S 1311 3 Venable Jr,. A wf Judy (no eddl
of NW* s of SEC * 30 30. Wot HR. Lit 19 A 30. Blk C, Menton* Acre*.
$11,000
let* W 3$ tt
Richard G Roger* A wf
Grove* Builder* Inc . to H D
Florence to F A T E . Inc Otteen Venable Jr A wf Judy. Lf It. Blk
Lot* *at A in town of C, Menton* Acre*. $4 000
Long wood. $41.$00
Linda C Clark to Carole M
Allan B Chaioupka Awf Phyllii Warming tonr tg l, lot 17 RamM to Gary W Coatoam A wt Wewood, 145 400
Sharon M . Lot I. Bik A, Sweet
(QCDI Colombo* LitNmore Jr .
water Oik* 1149.000
to Nathaniel C Lomai. Lot 4. Blk
Mery anna Sherry, repr. E*t, C. Merrill Park. $100
Minnie Oiler to Chant* M
The Spring* to lone rati Part
Cameron A wf Mar &gt;on D . Lot 11 A nerthip I. Lot 34. The Spring*
N S‘ of If. Blk «. Tier 1. E R Whitperlhg Pine*. Sac Two.
Tratford* Map of Sanford. 115.000 $11400
(QCDI Alfred Lapeter, J r. *gl
Tho Spring*to Suncraft Pr I, LI
to Sallee k Lapeter. *gl, Lot $, 37. The Spring* Whitpering Pine*.
Blk G . Winter Wood*. Un 4 1100 Sac Two. $14 400

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When Most States Are Scrimping

f^ C h eck

Wadnaiday. July tl. 19H— 9A

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w ith In terest

Florida Universities
G e t Extra $88 Million
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (U PI) — The Florida
Legislature pumped an extra |M million Into
state universities this year at a time when
most states are scrimping on higher education
money.
Some say the move has made Florida "the
talk of the country."
Still committed to the drive they launched
two years ago to improve the university
system, state lawmakers appropriated (839.3
million this year, Including $16 million for
•pedal enhancement of programs and pur­
chase of sophisticated equipment.
The nine universities now have gotten f t t
million for "quality improvement” since July
1979 In addition to money to cover Increases In
general operating expenses caused by in­
flation and a slight, but steady, Increase In
enrollments.
"This was a very Important year, not only
because of the significant level of funding (or
the universities, but because it was the third
year In a row there was a major emphasis on
higher education," says House Appropriations
chairman Herb Morgan of Tallahassee.
"Florida is (he talk of the country In higher
education circles right now," Morgan said.
"When our faculty and deans go to national
meetings, people are coming up to them and
saying, ’What's happening in Florida? Tell me
about all of the good things I hear are going on
In Florida.'"
California's unlversily system Is generally
considered the best In the country, developed
during the 1950s and 1900s as highly technical
industry moved Into the state.
Legislative leaders and Gov. Bob Graham
decided to match C alifornia's higher
education achievement as Florida tried to
broaden Ita economic base and attract big
business and industry.
"We have a real opportunity to gain in that
many other states are not increasing their
higher education funding or are cutting back,"

O u r I n itre it R im in g Checking A ccount really pula your money to w ork I
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says Duby Ausley of Tallahassee, chairman of
the Board of Regents.
"They're having a traumatic experience in
Michigan and in Ohio, Illinois and other states
It makes you feel real good about Florida,"
Ausley said. "You see them going through a
bloodbath, while we h are an opportunity to
expand and Improve our education system."
The basic university system appropriation
for 1961-83 is (U7.5 million, a 148 million In­
crease over 198M1. The Legislature also
appropriated more than $90 million for con­
struction, including money to establish a
higher education facility for Broward County
to be shared by two state universities and
several community colleges.
Legislators also expanded Florida Inter­
national University In Miami to Include fresh­
man and sophomore programs and expanded
the engineering curriculum across the state,
including establishing an engineering school to
be shared by Florida State and Florida AAM
universities In Tallahassee.
The legislature did order a reduction in
Chancellor Barbara Newell’s central office
staff, limit the number of university lobbyists
and prohibit universities and colleges from
assisting in any way groups promoting out-ofmarriage sex, a prohibition most university
officials see as an unconstitutional in­
fringement on free speech and a dangerous
precedent.
But university system officials believe they
made out like bandits overall.
"It was one of the most significant sessions
as it relates to higher education since I've been
following the legislature,” said Ausley.
Florida’s university system, considered
about average in term s of quality when the
drive for improvement began, already is
showing signs of significant achievement,
Morgan says, even though "this is not
something you can accomplish in just a year
or two."

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LAKE FRONT MARRED
S a n fo r d 's fr o n ta g e on l.uke M onroe r e c e n tly h a s
b een th e s c e n e of g a rb a g e d u m p in g , H e rm a n
K plln of HO O ak D riv e Is show n (m in tin g to a pile
of g a r b a g e le ft by fish e rm e n a lo n g Ih e ll.S . H ig h ­
w ay 17-9J rig h t-o f-w ay ju s t o u ts id e o f S a n fo rd . A
s p o k e s m a n fo r th e S em in o le C o u n ty S h e riff's
l) e ( ia r tm e n l re m in d s th a t litte rin g is » v io la tio n of
s ta le ta w . A p erso n found guilty of lU tr rln g of a
to ta l w eig h ! le ss th a t f i l e p o unds c a n b e fin ed U S.
U tte r in g of a to ta l w eight of five o r m o r e p ounds
is a s e c o n d d e g re e m isd e m e a n o r p u n is h a b le by
a fin e of SMHi o r i!U d a y s in ja il.

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI &gt; - Wildfires have burned a
hall-million acres of valuuble woodland this year, causing
extensive damage to the forest industry and sending animal
populations scurrying (or new habitat.
but in Ihe long run, biologists say the blackened landscape
will probably come back stronger Hum before and provide a
better source of food and cover for tire deer, turkey, fox and
birds that live in Florida's woods.
"Fire has a rejuvenlating effect," says Rob l* e, director of
the Merritt Island Wildlife Refuge. "The burned areas will go
through a series of changes, but over time lliey will come
back.”
So far this year, about 10,000 ucres In tire refuge abutting
Kennedy Space Center have burned. One blare touched off by
lightning last month turned tragic when two wildlife biologists
helping tight the (Ire got caught in a wtndshift and died In the
(lames.
Helped on by the nutrient-rich soil left in fire's wake, sume of
the burned ureas are already coloring. U-e says the grasses
and palmetto clumps will turn green first, followed by Ihe
underbrush. The pines and scrub oaks will come back last and
will take at least a decade to nature.
"Nothing in nature is static — It’s a very dynamic system.
It's always changing,” says lee.
Carlton Clutppell, a biologist with the Florida Fresh Water
Fish and Game Commission, says lire ran be beneficial for
such predatory birds as owls and hawks, but tough on the
smaller animals they hunt for food.
“What happens after a fire Is It does away with the cover,
The rats, mice, and snakes have no place to hide and become
easy prey," lie says.
Animals such as deer and turkey thrive alter fires because
they feast on the new growth that comes from changes in
plants and forest growth cycles.

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Doing Business In Sanford Area Since 1901

PH. 322-8321
tOO N. MAPLE AVE.
SANFORD

�SPORTS
1#A—Evtnlng Htrald, Sanford, FL

Wtdneuiiy, July 11- H*l

Juniors Play Holly Hill Tonight At 6

M iller's 13 Strike O uts Wasted, Sanford Falls

trf

Wednesday Night's
Games
Sanford vi.
Holly 11111.6 p.m.
Daytona Reach vs.
New Smyrna Hrach,
8p.ni.

Fittingly, for "Luckless Fred,’’ the
former Crooms standout w u at bat with
the game on the tine In the seventh in­
ning. First baseman William Carr had
just tingled home Donald Grayson to
pul) Sanlord within W. Carr then stole
second base.
Ormond'a crafty left-hander Scott
Penny, however, Jammed Miller with an
By SAM COOK
Inside pitch and the ball trickled to
Herald Sporti Editor
Sanford Junior aO-«Ur Fred Miller second bkaeman Hobble Dunlop, whose
throw to first base nipped Miller by an
probably figured It wAin't his night In the
sixth Inning Tuesday against Ormond eyelaih to end the Juniors' comeback
Beach when he atruck out Ken Connell hopes.
Larry Thomas started the seventh
and taro runs scored.
inning rally when he reached on an error
He would have been rig h t Despite
hurling a five-hitter and striking out 13 by the same Dunlop. Shortstop Bruce
batters, the Sanford Juniors dropped a 6- Franklin flew out to center field for out
number two.
4 decision to Ormond Beach when a
Alter a theft of second, center fielder
furious final-frame rally fell short In the
Glenn Landress smashed a one-hopper
District t Tournament at Chase Park.
The aelhack drops Manager Alvls off Dunlop's glove and Thomas scored
Whltted'a squad into the loser’s bracket when he kicked 11 out of the catcher's
tonight at 6 against Holly Hill, s 10-3 glove. Landress moved to second on the
Monday night loser to Port Orange. throw.
Grayson then followed with an Infield
Daytona Beach lakes on New Smyrna
Beach al &gt; p.m. The two losers are hit which moved landress to third. The
eliminated. In Tuesday’s other game, fleet-fooled Grayson then stole second
Port Orange dropped New Smyrna and scored momenta later behind Iandress when second lacker Kevin Smith
Beach 106.
slapped a dutch Iwo-run single to left
field.
Smith itole third base and Carr stroked
his hit to pull Sanford with two runs, but
Penny Induced Miller’s ground ball to
finish the locals.
Ormond, who won the tournament last
year to break a siring of Sanford
trophies, Jumped on top with two tainted
runs In the first inning. Mike Cawood
walked, but was thrown out by catcher
[&gt;ee Frederick at second base on a steal
attempt.
Penny started another rally with a
walk, though, and subsequently moved to
third base when Miller Issued another
paas to Charley Schultz after striking out
FIIKD !tt1L!,ER
Bay Irwin (or the second out.
. . . wasted effort
At this point, a Frederick passed ball

Her *id PhDio ky Tom Vlocmt

Sanford third baseman Donald Grayson eyes up a pitch in last
night's District 4 Tournament. Grayson singled in a run in Sanford's
furious last-inning ratty, but the effort fell short by two runs as San­
ford lost to defending champ Ormond Beach, 6-1. Tonight, they play
Holly Hill al 6 at Chase P ark on Celery Ave.
moved Penny to Uitrd base and when
Miller made a move toward first and
didn't Dirow, a balk was called to force tn
the game’s first run.
Ormond Beach quickly made It 34
when Franklin made a nice stop on Mike
Carr's ground ball, but his throw was bad
to first base which allowed Schultz to
cross Die plate.

MUIer had little trouble after the first.
The hard-Dirowlng right-hander blanked
Ormond on Just one hit Die next (our Inn­
ings. During that span he fanned eight
batters snd retired 11 of IS hitters at one
point.
The tilth Inning, however, proved to be
his and his battery mate Frederick's
downfall. After striking out Schultz,

Scan penny »
Rar Irwin.cl
Charity SctwitJ.le
MiMCarr.lo
jgMFMMAe
Kanny Conntll.fi
Mika Rintidi.u
Ronn-t Dunlop. Sb
'Total*
11 * *
I
IMWS
MOI 000 .4 .J .
Ormond Stock
JOO 004 « -!’!'
Gome Binnlno RSI—None
E-Frtdtflek J. Frankl.n I, Gftywn. W ""
Corr. Penny, Sckultl. Dunlop. LOB- Santonjijj
0. Ofmono Batch 0 1 8 - Dunlop SB—Tkomn...
GreySon. Smith, W C*fr S. MitWr, M Cr rV
Dunlop SAC - Smith MBP- By Ptnof ^
(Mtllff 1 B4 II1 — Miller * P - M.ller F*BT ..
Fiftdefkk i
ip H R CR BB io&gt;:i
SANFORO
ft S ft 1 ft 'jir.
Miitaai
ip H rer aa
ORMONOREACH
7 4 4 0 4
Ptrtnynft)
AR R H ,/i ll
FORI ORANGE
4 2 7 0
Todd LtrtQO.tl
7 7 1 \
Bobby WvKh.cf
Ktfk HAltn.ri
1 7 7 3
Robftfl Flmchum.lD p
J 1 0 1
4 1 7 3
Tern Abdo p lb
Randy Be&lt;l*ifh.»b
4 0 \ 0
J 0 0 0
Rfty Bydtf 1b
Donnie Kltm.lf
1 0 0 0
Ch-pThomfti c
4 1 1 1
KtitttCoufrmgtort.Jb 7t»
7 1 0 0
3* 11 f t
Tefftlt
NEW SMYRNA REACH
AR R H HI
Pat Mfff th tf
7 1 0 0 _
Sryftfl Spun.lb
7 1 1 V/
4 1 7 V
JortnMff rich.YY
johAMftggard c
7 0 0 t
Dortrty Moofft.lt
7 0 0 V
Tony Plummer.prt
0 1 0
AlftftHuYlfy.p
3 0 1
M b* Adfc-ftYrf Jb
2 1 0 0*
Jim Mftfrkk.1t)
4 0 2 bn
Doug Tcfltrmftin.Jb
7 0 0 SlH
Scott Mftrrkk.prt ft
7 0 0 J"*
Tfttftli
1* » 1
PoMGfftngf
00) 170 4--tails
New Smyrna Bftftcrt
00) 001 1 - K
Gftme M-nmrtg RBI—Trtpmftt
f-Abdo, Haggard, Jim Merrick DP-Pof|,t
Orange I LOB—Port Orange 4, Near Smyrna^”
BftftCh 10 JB- Mftlfrt. Span. Jim Merrkkl
MiJtfir John Merrick Hft—Tboma* SB
Urtgo, Witch, Ha ten j, FIinchurn. p. Merrick. .J
Plummer, HtAkey Sac — Witch IF ‘ ^
Flinchvm WP—Abdo Huikey
tW
PORT ORANGE
IP H R WE BB IOJ
AbdO(W)
SI J 4
4 ft V f
Fltnchgm
1* * *
* * *
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NEWSMYRNA BEACH IP H R WE BB SO ^
MutheyfLl
7 f 10 I 4 ft'™

Miller was reached for an infield hit by
Carr and walked John Fussell.
After a wild pitch moved up the ruonen. Miller whiffed Connell only to have
Frederick, Monday’s hero with three hits
drop the ball. His throw to first sailed
down the right-field line as Carr and
Fussell easily scampered home and
Connell ended up al third base.
M.Ve Rinaldi then dropped a perfect
bunt to rcore Connell. Dunlop walked and
eventually came around to give Ormond
Besrii a 64 bulge entering the seventh
frame on Irwin’s Infield h it Miller
allowed Jus! one hit out of the Infield —
Dunlop's harmless fifth-inning double —
but six passed balls by Frederick
hampered the effort.
Thomas, Franklin, Landless. Grayson,
Smith and Carr each stroked a hit for
Sanford. Smith had Iwo runs batted In.
Mike Can led llie Ormond attack wlUi
two infield slaps.
In the first game of the night, Port
Orange picked up three runs in the third,
one in the fourth, two in Die fifth and
finally pul the game on tee with four
tallies In Die sevenUi inning to pick up Its
second victory against New Smyrna
Beadi.
Kirk Halen and Tom Aldo chased home
three runs apiece for Port Orange. Both
had triples as Aldo hurled Die victory
wiDi relief help from Robert Finchum.
John Merrick's three-bagger brought
home two New Smyrna Beach runs in the
third inning. Merrick had two hits for
NSB Alan Husky was the losing pitcher.
SANFORD
Lftrry Thom**.rf
Bruce Franklin.ti
GtaU.ftrtdffti.cf
Doriftld Gfftytcrt.lb
Kfvifi Smith ,1b

WlUiftmCarr, 1b
FrtdMili«r,p
l«f Frfdff ick.c
Sieve DfrtniY.tf
Tftfftlt
ORMOND BEACH
Mike CftwOOdtf

AB
4
1
3
4
1
3
3
3
3
21
AB
3

Altam onte Split
Bolton's 3-Hitter Hoists Seniors; Oviedo Storms Triple A, 7-6
By BENTON WOOD
Herald Sport* Writer
A slight sprinkle was a fltUng end for
Altamonte's Triple A 13-year-old all­
stars Tuesday evening at Eustis, But
the rain wasn't about to fall on Buss
Whittington's senior league all-star
crew.
Southpaw Craig Bolton fired a three
hitter while Altamonte exploded (or a
six run fourth Inning ax the senior
league all-stars cruised past Eustts 6-1
to advance In District action.
In Dm early game, Die storm fell on
Altamonte's Triple A entry. Oviedo
rallied (or two runs In Die bottom of the
sevenDi off ace Ken Chapdelatne to sink
Altamonte 7-6.
The Senior league victory pits them
against Ocoee al Eustts on Thursday
evening at 7:30 . Ocoee, who dumped
Winter Garden 7-3 in their section, went
unbeaten through its tournam ent.
Therefore, Altamonte must win two In a
row to advance.
"Who said we couldn't beat Eustis
twice!" an elated Whittington asked
after his club battled back through the
loser's bracket to beat the hosts 11-7 on
Monday night before th eir rout
Tuesday.
Altamonte scored first wiDi a run In
the bottom of Dm third. With one out,
swift center fielder Scott Underwood
doubled to left and scared on the nest
pitch when right fielder ScoU Eusepi
looped a fastball off Dm handle Into
short right for a 14 lead.
All six of Altamonte's runs In the
fourDi scored with two out. First
baseman Marly Coffey took a Brian
Andrew's futball off Die ribs to open

Oviedo's David Wood ilreaki
home from third base after
team m ate Handy Ferguson
drops a perfect suicide squeeze
bunt. Altamonte Triple A cat­
cher John Ambrose moves out
to makr the play. Oviedo
stormed back to nip Altamonte
in the seventh inning on singles
by Terry Gammons and Craig
Duncan.
HaroM Shawl Or Icoll tun**

the inning and s pair of two out walks to
Dm eight and nine hitters in Dm
Altamonte order chased Andrews.
Underwood greeted reliever Todd
Auckland with a line single over third
base for Dm (Lrsl two runs of Die frame.
Eusepi and Bolton continued Dm on­
slaught wiDi two more singles and a
twivhasc error by Eustis left fielder
Leroy Webber had the hosts praying for
rain.
The 74 advantage was more than
enough lor Bolton to work wiDi as the
lefty mixed his fastball with a slow
curve to strike out the side In the fourth
and fifth Innings.
Eustts avoided a shutout with a pair
of runs In the sisDi without a hit. Shatto
answered for Altamonte tn Its half of
the sixth wiDi t two-run blast over the
343 sign In left center.
Bolton retired the tide In order In Die
seventh to nail down Dm victory. The 6foot-1 Junior-to-be fanned 11 on Dm
evening while sllowlng Just three hits.
"They were sitting back and walling
for Craig's fist ball," Whittington said,
"so he threw more breaking pitches."
Bolton helped his cause wiDi three
singles on Die evening in (our trips to
the piste. Underwood, Eusepi and
Shalto rounded out Altamonte's nine-hit
attack with two hits and a pair of runs
batted in apiece.
"That’s why they're hitting one, two,
three and four tn Die lineup," Whit­
tington reasoned. "The bottom of Dm
order did a good Job making contact
snd moving runners around.
"But we’ve got more Dian five or six
bats on Dili team. Hopefully some of Dm
other guys will get hot against Ocoee."

Oviedo’s bats got hot ot the right time
to drown Dm Altamonte 13-year-olds.
Cleanup hitter Terry Gammons laced
a single up Dm middle with two out tn
Dm bottom of the sevenDi to score
shortstop David Wood with Die tying
run. Gammons raced to second on Dm
Dirow to the piste and scored Dm
winning run on Dm nest pitch when
third baseman Craig Duncan slapped
another Chapdelatne fa itb a ll Into
center as Oviedo advances for a 7:30
p.m. game al Eustis on Thursday night
agatiul West Oak Ridge, who beat
Ocoee, 3-1 Tuesday.
Trailing 3-4, Altamonte rallied for
two runs In the lop of Dm sevenDi to take
a brief one-run lead.
Kyle Brubaker and Chapdelatne
opened Dm inning with consecutive
walks and moved lo second and third on
a wild pick-off attempt by Gammons.
Brubaker tagged up (or the tying run on
a fly ball hit to left by left fielder Dave
Martin. Center fielder Jeff Jackson laid
down a perfect suicide squeeze bunt
scoring Chapdelatne for the short tried
66 edge.

pair of fourth Inning runs. Martin
started the rally with a base on balls
and scored on consecutive singles to left
by Jackson and Dave Draten. Jackson
scooted home on a ground out by T J.
Scalctta.
The Altamonte lead didn’t last long,
Dtough, as Oviedo came up wiDi a trio of
runs In its hall of Die fourth. Two walks,
a Ellis Bell double, an Interference
ruling and ar error resulted in the 64
Oviedo bulge.
With Dm bases loaded and one run
across In Dm fifth, Oviedo called on
Gammons to relieve starter Doug
Powell with no one out. Altamonte
filled to score anymore runs as
Brubaker was picked off third snd
Gammons tanned Jackson and Drasen
to spoil a potentially big inning for
Altamonte.
A Mike Plnckes pinch hit double off
Gammons in the sixth was for naught
as he was stranded on third.
Gammons ind Duncan teamed for
four of Oviedo's six hits of Chapdela ine.

The lead see-sawed through Dm first
five Innngt. After Altamonte scored an
unearned run tn the first, Oviedo
stormed back (or a pair of runs tn Its
half of the (rune.

The Altamonte right hander terrorized
Dm Triple A circuit during the regular
wason with an unbeaten mound record.
But Duncan got Dm best of him with his
two runs batted In Including the game
winner.

Wood led off with a bloop single to
center, swiped second, moved to third
on a ground out and scored on ■ suicide
bunt by Randy Ferguson. Gammons
followed with a shot to left which ended
in a triple when Martin misjudged the
ball. He scored on a tingle by Dune am
Altamonte went back ahead 31 wiDi a

e u n it
Auckland, it
SSctrod.lt
Rum. ia
Monro,. 10
Mauir or. &lt;
Andrm, p
S M O tr. tl

ssotwr.it

s im
1 0
1 0
1 0
1 I
1 1
I 0
1 0
0 0

I
1
0
I
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0
0
0

Altamonte's Kenny
Gammons for a run.
Millar, pn
to board.rt
Thornton, c
Broom. 20
ALTAMONTI
Undr*wood, cl
EuMpr.H
Bolton, p
Shatto. lb
Cott„ . 10
Cochran.u
Mhnton. lo
Or mo, Har, IF
Mob.man. }o

under Oviedo's Terry
M*tl, C

(•tilt
4

ooo oc? 0-1 i i

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�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

N

Wednesday. Jufy 21.lH i—ItA

o t h i n g

Baseball Talks Fruitless, Resume Today
DOUBLE

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Despite the
presence of labor Secretary Raymond J.
Donovan in Bw baseball talks, negotia­
tions still have accomplished noBilng.
Donovan took part in Tuesday’s two
sessions, but negotiators went their
separate ways at 5:30 p.m. wiBi nothing
changed.
Another session is scheduled for 10
a.m. today, but observers see no signs

TROUBLE
Sanford's Mikr Rrnaud (left)
and S hea Whigham proudly
display (he honors they picked
up at the Tampa Junior Tennis
Invitational this past weekend at
Lake Front Park. The twosome
combined to win the 12 and under
doubles com petition, while
Whigham finished second to Jose
F antera in the 12 and under
singles competition, 6-2.6-0. The
im pressive pair will be seventh
grade students at Lakevlew
Middle School this fall. Whlgham
is the son of Mr. and Mrs Frank
W higham of Sanford, while
Kenaud is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Iwfly" Kenaud of
Sanford. Both are members of
the Bayhead Racquet Club.

J e n k in s

T a k e s

VILLANOVA, Pa. (UP!) —Charley Jenkins now must know
how Phil Bengtson and Gene Bartow felt.
All three men replaced coaching legends. Bengtson took
control of the Green Bay Packers from Vince Lombardi In 1968
after two straight Super Bowl titles. Bartow became head
basketball coach at UCLA in 1973 when John Wooden retired
after 27 distinguished yean.
Jenkins filled similarly big shoes Tuesday when he was
named the new head track and field coach at Villanova
University.
Jenkins, winner of two gold medals in the 1956 Olympics at
Melbourne, succeeds James “Jumbo" Elliott, who coached the
Wildcats for 47 y ean before he died of a heart attack last
March.
Elliott’s track and cross country teams won eight NCAA
championships and 29 1C4A titles and produced a total of 467
individual champions. Including Jenkins, a 1956 graduate of
the university.
And the new coach knows that’s a tough act to follow.
“ You’re right, It Is going to be very tough," Jenkins said at a
news conference. “I don’t think ID be compared with Jumbo,
but I’ll probably be compared with his successes.
’T ve had some fortunate experiences In life but this is by far
the most challenging,” said Jenkins.

&gt;

Asked if be thought Bw blackout was
appropriate, Milter answered, "F or Bw
lime being."
ile would not comment on whether any
progress was made in Tuesday's talks.
Asked if he would be staying in
Washington even if no session were
scheduled for today, Miller answered.
"Probably."

Beaver's Bomber Zeroes In On Greyhound Marks

Mtrakf Photo by Jant CJtirtborry

V i l l a n o v a 's

any meaningful progress might take
place.
The news blackout imposed Monday
evening by Donovan Is being observed by
both sides. Marvin Miller, executive
director of the Players Association,
would not talk about the meetings when
he lell the Federal Mediation and Con­
ciliation Sendee offices Tuesday af­
ternoon, but did air some thoughts.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

O n

'J u m b o ' T a s k

The appointment of Jenkins, 47, ended a four-month search
for Elliott's successor. Athletic Director Trd Aceto said Bw
hunt started with "about 30-35 names" before it w u cut down
to eight finalists.
Jenkins has no major college coaching experience but lias
been a very active recruiter for Bw Wildcats.
"When you have the mold of a Jumbo, you want someone
who can fit into Bw mold," said Aceto. "The (selection)
committee knew Bw things it wanted in a coach. We wanted to
make sure we came up wiBi Bw right man, and everyone is
real happy with this."
As (or hie coaching inexperience, Jenkins said he has kept up
wiBi Bw sport as an official, recruiter and fan, adding. " J Biink
I know an awful lot about the sport and an awful lot about
coaching Bw sport,"
For the past 18 years, Jenkins has worked for the federal
government His latest position was in Bw U5. Office of
Education.
Jenkins said he was first approached about Bw Job shortly
after Elliott's funeral but admitted, "I couldn’t picture myself
in Bw role." The more he thought about Biat role, however. Bw
more he liked It.
"Scxnetinws you find someBilng In life and say, This Is what
I really want to do,' ” he u id .

Lookouts, 7*3 Af Tinker

BLOOMINGTON, Minn (UPI) - Minnesota Twins’
Manager Billy Gardner may not have much to do now,
but team president Calvin Griffith said he will be busy
next lesson.
Griffith said Tuesday he will offer Gardner, who was
named Interim manager In May after John Gory I was
fired, a one-year contract extension
Gardner has not been officially offered the extension
but Twins' officials said it is only a formality after the
settlement of the major-league baseball playen strike.
"He's already shown me enough to be my manager
next year, even if we don’t play another game all
year,” Ggiffilh said.
Gardner, 54, who la living at his home in Waterford,
Conn., during the strike, said he w u "depressed"
about the lengBi or Bw strike.
"I finally get a major-league Job after 12 yean
managing In the minors and Bw players go on strike,”
Gardner said. "My first summer home us 37 yean of
baseball and I don’t like It. I want to get started again
to I can impress Bw boss and be Invited beck next

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - The Tampa Bay Buccaneers
have all 69 of their playen under contract, now But
nose guard David Logan has been signed to a aeries of
one-year contracts.
lo g in 1a signing w u announced Tuesday, but the
terms of the contracts were not revealed.
Six more veterans reported In for prw eason camp
Tuesday, bringing to tf the number of players In camp.
The rest of the veterans must report in by Friday.
Logan, a third-year player out of the University of
Pittsburgh, took over at now guard last year after
Randy Crowder went out wiBi a knee Injury early In the
seaaon.
Ha ta expected to ba Bte starting nose guard Uits year
because Crowder w u placed Saturday on the Ust of
players physically unable to perform.

College Jamboree At Howell
Tbs Lake Howell Boosters Chib will hold the Third
Annual Women's Colics* Basketball Jam boree
Saturday, Nor. 14 In Bw Silver Hawk gymnasium
beginning at I'M p m
The Lady G alon of the University of Florida will
headline ■ card But also features th t University of
Central Florida, Stetson University, where Sanford's
Cheryl Klein Is assistant coach, and Miami University.
Miami's Lady Hurricanes are Bte defending Division
I State Champions.

"Success In greyhound racing Is n
m atter of peaks,"explained Hope. "Now
I'd say The Beaver is on an extended
peak. I don't know how much longer he
can continue to do it, but for now he is
going strong. Earlier in Bw season It was
G E's El Greco, and Own Hession Sun had
his streak."

The boost by Beaver’s Bomber has
enabled Bie Scheele Kennel to hold onto
fourth place In the track standings.
British Sterling, riding a 337,500
paycheck for Bw Grand National win on
June 19 by HJP's Tony, Is on top for Bw
meet with 353,112. Kahn is next with
$42,518, followed by Carrier Enterprises
at $35,210 and Scheele with $33,963.
There were 11 winners in the first half
of Bie season In the Super 8, totalling
$66,000. There were six winners for
$10,000 each. In the second half of Bw
meet, the Super 8 Jackpot was upped to
$15,000 progressively and offered ex­
clusively on Monday nlghU. The July 20
Jackpot was $17,000. $1,000 is added each
week on one hits It,
Mutuel handle for the first 80 per­
formances at the midway In Bie season
was $14,940,394. Attendance was 149,499.

It was someBilng of a surprise to Hope
that The Beaver came around in
championship form. He had run well In
Grade A at Tampa Ust season, but Just
couldn't put things together at St.
Petersburg. The big wide turns gave
him trouble. But at Seminole, Bic banked
turns seem to be more to his liking.
Early in the Mason, Beaver's time had
been competitive enough foe a strong InIhe-money ratio, but he had only three
wtna In 12 starts. Then the streak started

S a v e O n N e w C a r P o ly s t e e l

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proper alignm ent • Inspect su sp en sio n and
ste e rin g sy stem s * U S cars and im ports
with adjustable suspensions * includes frontw h e e l d riv e C h e v e lle s. tru ck s, a n d c ars
requiring MacPherson Strut correction oslra

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*61 *62 *73 *76

Dave Smith and Paul Roach each hit home runs u
AmeriFirst b luted Mltches, 22-7 in Casselberry Men's
Softball League action Tuesday night.
Smith had a three-run shot, while Roach’i came wtBi
Bw h u e s loaded. In other games, Don Royal homered
as Bw Rebels whipped Power Drill, 144. Lee Rae
dumped Baird Ray, 156.

The combination of 144-11 w u the second highest
trtfecta payoff in Arlington Park history.

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tr#iJ«i ruMHJoif

Big Savings On Those Polysteel Whitewall Sizes Too!

AmerlFIrst Bombards Mltches

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS. Ill (UPI) - The 134-11
combination at Arlington Park Race Track paid
handsomely on a $3 ticket Tuesday - $34,(28.20, Bw
second highest trtfecta payoff in Bw history of Bw
track.
Track spokesman Philip Von Borries said horse No.
13, Willing Angel a 13-1 longshot, paid $39.30 to win,
$13.60 to place and $&gt;.00 to show. H orn No. 3. Valiant
Pattis, a 39-1 longshot, paid $25.40 to place and $2340 to
show. No. II, Jelly Face, a 10-1 longshot, paid $7.30 to

DRI t 11 o*
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{D*p*rvJtr»o on
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Custom Poiytteef - The Bidial That
Keeps Its Feet Even In The Bain!

The Twins posted ■ 5-14 rtro rd under Gardner, who
said It will be "Just like spring training” when Bw
strike ends.

Posey Sets Football Meeting
The Seminole vanity and Junior varsity football
teams will hold an important meeting Wednesday at I
p.m. In tht Seminole High School gymnasium.
“ It's very Important B ut everyone attend* because
we have to get some peper work out of Bu way and gat
ready for our start In Bvee weeks,n said Posey.

June 27, closing at Bie wire to nip WP
Cornwall In 30 87, Next sUrt, K's Car­
dinal nipped Beaver by half a length,
despite a 3068. His next four starts
featured wins by 8,7,5,and t lengths.

G O O D Y E A R

Registration for Bte Seminole Youth Sports
Association (SYSA) football season takes place at
lakevlew Middle School Saturday, July 25, from 9 a m.
until 12 noon.
Cheerleading registration will also lake place at this
time. The fee for football players lx $35.

Griffith Extends Gardner Pact

Buccaneers Contract Logan

and GE's El Greco plus le a n Strip (nun
Bw Wayne Strong Kennel and K's Car­
dinal from the Jack Kahn Kennel. GE's
i lesslon Sun also has eight wins while Bie
others have seven each.

SY5A Registration At Lakevlew

Gaettl, Green Tumble
Gary GaetU tripled and homered and Steve Green
hurled an eight-hitter as the Orlando Twins tumbled
Chattanooga, 7-3 Tuesday night before a "25 cents Beer
Night” crowd of 1323 at Tinker Field.
Tonight, Bob Mulligan tries to pull the Twins (15-16)
and himself (13) to the .500 mark when he faces for
Valencia Community College pitcher Robert Fuson (6: «&gt;GaetU crashed a three-run homer in the sixth inning
to hoist the O-Twini Into a 4-3 advantage. The three
RBI gave the slugging thtfd lacker 7) for the year.
Green, meanwhile, struck out four hitters, didn’t
walk a man and shut out the Lookouts the final four
Innings to record his seventh win in 10 outings. Randy
Bush slammed hit 14th round-tripper for one of two
Insurance tallies the Twins picked up In the eighth
Inning.

Beaver's Bomber, regaining a lost
touch, Is looking more and more like the
greyhound to beat this season at
Seminole Greyhound Park.
The Beaver, as Seminole railbirds call
him, Is simply burning up Bw 5-16Bu mite
course. Beaver runs for Bw Scheele
Kennel, and trainer Buddy Hope makes It
clear the Oct., 1978 red fawn dog Is
dearly "king of Bw pen."
"The Beaver is a perfect gentleman on
Bw track, but his disposition around Bw
kennel isn't really pleasant as far as Bw
other greyhounds are concerned," says
Hope. "He Just doesn't like to be messed
wiBv And Bwy leave him alone."
Beaver's Bomber became Bw first
eight-race winner Friday night (July 17)
by posting his fourth straight victory and
sixth consecutive subJl second clocking.
On July 4, Bw Beaver tied Bw track
record (30.57), set by Norton's Queen
hack on June 20.
Overall, Beaver's record is 86-1 In 19
starts. Beaver's primary challengers
include kennelmates GE's Hessian Sun

I

Addition*!
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£S£

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Install now tronl brake pads
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and u' c.imi seab • Hesurtacu
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SANFORD

l u w . First llre e t
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�U A — E vtflln g H ird d , Sanford, FI.

Francis Retires

W»dna«dty. July 21. W

SUPER, SUPER BEE
Sanford drag racer Terry Martin
has doubled his pleasure and his
fun by taking home the money
for two weeks in a row. Martin
wheeled hi* Pro E.T. Dodge
Super Hee through the traps as
winner, hitting a 12.50 clasped
time for the quarter mile at
Speed World, Orlando.
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end under contract. Second-stringer l)on
llasselbeck Is unsigned, along with
several other veterans. Only one rookie
in training camp at Smlthfield, R.I., is a
tight end.
Patriots' spokesman Tom Hoffman
said Francis and most other veterans are
not due to report until 5 p.m 1 riday. "A
lot of things can happen between now and
then," Hoffman said. "We're talking
more than 72 hours earlier than the guy
has to report."
But Head Coach Ron Erhardt, whq
talked with Francis at his Wrentharrj
home early Tuesday, apparently could
not talk him out of retiring.
"We are in complete shock of
something like this happening due to the
fact training camp has just opened,” said
Patriots' President William Sullivan.
• We find the timing of this to be very
Inconsistent with Russ Francis’,
character, since in the past he has shown
lo be very considerate of the Patriots'
management and his team m ates,"
Sullivan said.

FOXBORO, Mass. (UPI) - taut year
the New England Patriots had two ex­
perienced, talented tight ends U h»lp
Lake the pressure off their running game
Now, with summer training camp fust
beginning, they have none.
Russ Francis. 28. the three-time AllPro who developed a reputation as one of
the best all-around tight ends in the NF1.,
shocked the Patriots by announcing his
retirem ent Tuesday for personal
reasons.
"I've given this a lot of thought in the
last few months," Francis said in a radio
Interview. "A career change is not
something one does overnight. All I ran
say right now is that I am retiring
because of personal reasons. Beyond
that, I can't go into it at this point.”
Francis at times perturbed Patriots
officials with his penchant for dangerous
hobbies such as sky diving, motorcycling
and shooting rapids.
The reUrement leaves the Patriots,
considered a strong contender in the AFC
Eastern Division, without a veteran tight

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OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Wednesday- July 21.1911—IB

Cook Of The W eek: D essie King
Dear
Abby

She Clings To Old-Fashioned Ways

Keep Kids From
Telling All To
Phone Callers
DEAR ABBY: Now that summer vacation is here and
many children are left at home while their parents are
working, shopping or whatever, parents should instruct
their children on how to handle telephone calls from
Strangers when they are at home alone. You would be
a mated at some of the conversations I have had with
children when I have catted the homes of clients. For
example:
Q.: Is your mother home? A.: No.
Q.: Is your father home’ A.: No.
Q.:
Is your older brother, sister, grandmother,
babysitter there? A.: No.
Q.: Is anyone there with you? A.: No. (or) Yes, my little
sister.
Q.: When will someone (adult) be home? A.: I don't
know.
Q.: I want to verily your address. Is it ( )? A.: Yes.
Abby, do you understand what I am saying? These kids
are all alone, don't know whom they are talking to and are
willing to answer just about any question I ask. When I have
asked the children lor their parents' work numbers, they
don't know the numbers, they don't know where their
parents work and sometimes they don't even know t( their
parents work!
For the sak- and safety o! the children o! working
parents, please advise parents lo teach thetr children how
to handle telephone calls from strangers, because some day
the stranger may be really strange!
I.. IN OHIO
ItFlAH L t Thank you lor this opportunity to remind
parrots to Instruct tbrlr thildrrn to glvr no Information to
strangers on the telephone, and never to Indicate that they
are home atone.
Children thould be taught to always ask, "Who Is
ratting?'' and "May I hate your name and phone number?"
| Parents should always leave a phone number where they
ran be rrarbrd.)
A child who Is not old enough to answer the phone
properly, refer a rail or take a message Is not old enough to
be left alone.
DEAH ABBY: ASHAMED IN SAN ANTONIO wrote to
confess that she always sends herself flowers on Mother's
Day because her only child — a grown and married son —
usually forgeta, and she wants to have something to show
her neighbors. How sad!
I have an only child —a daughter, also married. I never
give her a chance to forget me on Mother's Day. The day
before, I send her flowers and encloae a note: 'Tomorrow Is
Mother’» Day, and 1 want you to know how proud I am to be
your mother!"
lt wnrka like a charm. She hasn't forgotten me yet!
CAGEY MAMMA
DEAR CAGEY: That same wily device ran be used lor
annlsrnaries. ( I'm proud to be your wtle."(
DEAR ABBY; I have this terrible complex about being
small-bosomed. Where did 1 get this complex In the first
place? From my husband, that's where.
He's always looking at pictures of those big, bosomy girls
in the magaiines. And whenever a stacked girl walks by, he
practically twists his neck oil linking
How tong would It take (or a Itat-chrsted woman to get her
breasts surgically enlarged? I'm considering surprising my
husband. What do you think?
FIAT IN FRONT
DEAR FIAT: I don't rreommend "surprising” your
husband. II you want to please your husband, discuss It with
him first. Some mru like to look, but they prefer Ibelr wlsra
as uaturr made 'em.
Do you hate lo write letters becaose you don't know what
lo say? Thauk-you notes, sym pathy letters,
congratulations, how to decline and accept tot Hattons and
how to write an Interesting letter are torluded to Abby's
booklet, "How to Write Letters lor AH Occasions." Send t l
and a long, stamped (IS rrnlsl, srll-addressed rnvrlope to:
Abby, Letter Booklet, 1!0*0 Hawthorne Blvd., Suite 1000.
Hawthorne. CallL 90258.

A u to m a tic ic e m a k e r i n
1 7 .2 cu. f t. n o -fro s t
r e f r ig e r a to r

By LOB SMITH
Herald Correspondent
In a quaint house on Elder Road lives 77year-old Dessie King who has been in
residence on that very spot since 1922.
A visit with her Is a pleasant trip back in
time, 30 years or so, to how life was then to
and around Sanford
Back then, says Dessie, "State road 46
was a single lane brick street. My family
had to make our own road back to the house.
We dug up palmettos and underbrush with
our hands. Nobody had tractors then.
Almost all the farming was done with hand
plows and mules. In downtown Sanford
there were about four buildings and a clock
and In the middle of town was a well for
watering the horses."
Dessie began cooking at the age of I. As
with most children of that era, Dessie had
chores to do. ‘I was to the stove cooking
and helping my mother In the kitchen," she

f *

; ____
* Two o4Ju«Ublo wtro
onotvon

R«g. &lt;699.95

$6 4 9 95

SANFORD

DtlAND

IfMWttt
III St.

HF S. IgrMf

3224113

HOME APPLIANCE

A rt.

7364423

DESSIE'S CORN BREAD
Sift together and put In jar and
refrigerate:
1 bag white water ground com meal
1 bag white cream com meal
To make:
24 heaping tablespoons com meal mix
1 heaping tablespoon flour
4 teaspoon baking powder
two-thirds cup milk
pinch salt
(use more or less milk depending on the
consistancy of mix you like)
Mix all tngredients together. Place In well
greased Iron skillet snd hake at ITS degrees,
10 to 40 minutes or until golden brown.
BEET PICKLES
Use small beets and cook until tender.
Cool, then peel, rinse, drain and pack in
jars.
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon celery seed
l &lt; teaspoon white mustard seed
Heat sugar and vinegar to boiling and
pour over beets. Seal.
SMALL AMOUNT:
4 cups vinegar
14 cups sugar
IARGER AMOUNT:
1 cup vrnegar
2 cups sugar
POTATO BREAD
4 fresh yams, boiled and mashed
1 teaspoon baking powder
4 stick melted butter
4 teaspoon allspice
4 cup brown sugar
1 small can pineapple, drained
1 cup crushed com flakes
1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring
pinch salt
Mix all ingredients together and bake at
330 degrees for about 4 hour or until done.
14-DAY PICKLES
Place 2 gallons of cut and cubed cukes In
stone jar. Pour over them 2 cups salt and 1
gallon boiling water. Let stand 1 week.
Weight down with plates or board. Skim
every day if needed.
1th day: Drain and pour over cukes t
gallon fresh boiling water. Let stand 24
hours.
9th day: Drain and pour over cukes 1
gallon fresh boiling water and 1 tablespoon
alum, le t stand 24 hours.
10th day: Drain and pour over cukes the
following hoi syrup.
5 pints strong vinegar
4 o*. celery seed
6 cups sugar
1 oi. stick cinnamon
11th, 12th and 13th day: Drain and repeat
(each day) syrup mix, adding 4 cup sugar
each day.
14th day: Put in glass jars.

'Free' M D A Clinic Opens
The Muscular Dystrophy
Association (MDA) recently
opened a new out-patient
clinic at the Mease Hospital
and Clinic to Dunnedto, which
provides — free of charge —
diagnostic services and
therapeutic and rehabilitative
follow-up care for patients
afflicted with any of the 40
neurom uscular disorders
covered by MDA's programs.
The new clinic replaces the
MDA facility at All Children's
Hospital toSI. Petersburg and
brings the total number of

fa d in g

. Cov«rftd m«ftl pan.
• Twin vftgftUhlo bin*
• Rolla out on whaula
• Energy aaver switch In
normal position helps cut
operating oast
• 30 sv wide. O f high

Her cake recipes date back to the late
1800s and the early 1900s. Her corn bread
and pickle recipes are her own.

Merer* PIMM br Lfttl Smith

Prescribed

LIMITED QUANTITY

"Ladies should dress like ladies," she
said. She dresses the way she was taught —
pretty print dresses and aprons, with her
hair pulled back in a bun — very proper.
Dcssie's home is a virtual museum of
family history and memorabilia. She has
some items dating back to her great
grandfather's time. Although she has a 1930s
era gas range In her home, she still likes to
cook and heat occasionally on her wood
stove.

Dessie King still cooks on a wood stove.

□ u rn rn

. Big 4 73 cu fl treater
« Factory taauilad
loemaker replant toe

said. Her mother, at that time, operated a
boarding house.
Dessie still lives and believes in, what we
might call.the old-fashioned ways. “I never
wore a bathing suit or men's clothes," states
Dessie The men's clothes she refers to are
pants.

MDA
clinics
located
throughout the country to 234.
"We are very pleased about
the establishment of the MDA
clinic at Dunnedto," com­
mented Thomas D. Berrell,
president of the Central
Florida Chapter of MDA.
"With the use of the hospital's
mull!-specialty facilities, the
Association wlU be able to
provide to patients the highest
quality of medical care," he
added.
The rltoic Is staffed by a
team of doctors and physical
and occupational therapists.
A social worker and or­
thopedic surgeon are on call if
needed. Patients attending
MDA clinic sessions at Mease
Hospital
can
recetv*
diagnostic and follow-up

treatm ent, physical and
occupational therapy, genetic
counseling, orthopedic aids
(such as wheelchairs, braces,
and hydraulic lifts,) and flu
shots. David A. Davis, M.D.
serves as dirre tor of the MDA
clinic.
"The Muscular Dystrophy
Association is unique to the
health agency field because it
offers a wide range of medical
servicei and support to
patients and their families
completely free of charge,"
noted Mr. BmtU.
MDA la the voluntary health
agency dedicated to the
conquest of neuromuscular
diseases through an un­
p a r a l le l e d
w o rld w id e
research effort, a nationwide
program of free m edical

t t i ' d like In p u l a b u t l&lt; &gt;uur
r»r concrming the tpiin| and
summer months Actually,
»c'd like lo irll you about
(m in t a buy "ul of someone's
car • lhi\ being the season for
errant little erratu m to find
their way Into such placet. The
neweci trick for debugging an
ear, as reported In Emergency
Medicine, it thit: Take the
tictim into a datk closet and
shine a flashlight into the ear.
With any luck, the bug, at*
Haded by the light, thould fly
out! Another home remedy
calls for the 'bugged* perton
to lay down with the pioblcm
ear up. Fill the ear canal with
tepid water using an eye
dropper. When the insect
surfaces for air. pick it out
with your fingers. Dead bugs,
of course, mutt be remoted

u h u u j

1m
1 cup mtlk
2 cups flour
4 teaspoon salt
3 teaspoons baking powder
Cream shortening, add sugar slowly, add
flavoring and beaten egg; add milk; nits
writ; then add flour, salt and baking powder
which have been sifted together. Bake in 3
greased layer cake tins in moderate oven
(330 to 373 degrees) 12 to 13 minutes.
COCONUT FILLING AND ICING
14 cups granulated sugar
4 cup water
2 rgg whites
4 teaspoon vanilla extract, few drops
lemon Juice
1 cup fresh grated coconut
Cook sugar and water slowly without
stirring until syrup spins a thread; pour
slowly over beaten egg whites; beat until
thick; add flavoring. Spread between layers
and on top of cake. While Icing is soft,
sprinkle thickly with coconut.
OATMEAL COOKIES
4 cup butter
6 tablespoons firmly packed brown sugar
6 tablespoons granulated sugar
At teaspoons vanilla

l eg*
4 cup sifted all purpose flour
4 teaspoon soda
4 teaspoon salt
1 cup Quaker oats, uncooked
Beat butter, sugars and vanilla together
until creamy. Beat In egg. Sift together
flour, soda and salt; add to creamed mix­
ture; mix welt. Stir in oats. Drop by rounded
teaspoons onto lightly greased cookie
sheets. Bake in preheated moderate oven
373 degrees 8-10 minutes. Yield: 3 doten.
EGOLESS, MILKLESS BUTTERLESS
CAKE
1 cup brown sugar
24 cup* water
1 cup seeded raisins
2 ox. citron, cut fine
one-third cup shortening
4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 Utapoon cinnamon
X cups (tour
3 tea^oona baking powder
Boil augar, water, fruit, shortening, salt,
and 4 &gt;ice* together In saucepan 3 minute*;
when cool add flour and baking powder
which have been sifted together; mix well.
Bake In greased loaf pan to moderate (330 to
373 degree) oven about 43 minutes

DENTAL INSURANCE

■

■

■

■

services, and far-reaching
professional and public
education services.
F o r information (bout
MDA’s services and the MDA
clinic at Mease Hospital, call
the Association's local office
at (303 ) 843-3333.

y

SV , 323-8174
1 323-8185

You can onloy watching tho birds ploy In your own
backyard, with ttl* 24" high octagonal Bird Bath irons

Contemporary Cardan*. Concrete construction for
iaittng beauty. Reg. Ill.t t. Aha ■ huge sslection of
House Ptonh end landscape plants for tho discriminating
Homeowner.

p ro f e s s io n a l
m e d ic a l
assistance. At with all foreign
objects in the car, if it can be
gotten out easily, fine, but if
extracting an object requires
sticking something else in the
car ■let your docior do it.

17-72 AT 27th ST.
SANFORD

COCONUT LAYER CAKE
4 cup shortening
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanitla extract

SAVE THE

e sy rin g e en

m iu w w

■

Cauliflower and sweet peppers may be
added If you wish.

Sanford's Newest And Mott Unique Boutique
LOIS DYCUSOW NER-LISA BARKER,MOR.

210 E. 1st ST.

PH. 222-4122
DOWNTOWN SANFORD

�tB —Evening Herald. Sintord, PI,
nr

Wednesday, July ;j, d h

Simple Surgery Available
|To Aid Myopia Patients
Special To tbe Herald
More than one-quarter n( the nation'* population sutlers
to m myopia — a dysfunction of the eye more commonly
jtnown as nearsightedness.
: Until recently nearsighted new could be remedied only with
ttorrectlve lenses: glasses or contact lenses.
C* Now, however, the condition can be corrected In many
people by a simple surgical procedure called radial
keralotumy (radial K|.
f Dr. Robert W. l&gt;ennon, founder of the Clayton Eye CUnic In
llverdale, Ca„ is one of three ophthalmologists in the
bulheast proficient In this relatively new procedure.
" "Radial K surgery is an Ideal solution for people who, in
rtaln Job situations, need improved vision but cannot, or
efer not to, wear corrective lenses," lennon said.

Radial K sratotom y
P ro ced u re

.

R E C IP E

/
Normal Focutinq

Anar Surgary

Contc in a

Myopic Eye

/ Q .C

f

He cited airline In-flight personnel, factory workers and
people who cannot tolerate contact lenses as groups who would
benefit from the surgery.
l-rnnon explained that In normal vision an Image ti focused
directly onto the eye's retins through two lenses, the ccmea
and the Internal lens.
In nearsighted people, either because of an excessive cor­
neal curvature or an elongated eye, the image focuses In front
of the retina, causing blurred vision of distant object*.
"The radial K procedure, which flattens the comeat cur­
vature, adjusts the focusing power of the (wo lenses by
changing the distance between them so that the image will
reach the retina," lrnnon explained.
The surgery consists of making eight equl-distant,
microscopic Incisions in the noneight area of the cornea.
l«nnon stressed the procedure’s safety. "Incisions never are
made within the eye's optical tone, nor do they fully penetrate
the cornea," he captained.
Not all myopic people are candidates for radial keratotomy.
Extensive preliminary examinations with a patient will
determine if he meets the criteria; the degree of myopia must
fall within a specified range, the patient's vision should have
remained tbe same for approximately three years, there must
be no eye disease, and the patient must be over 18 years old.
Care Is taken to be sure the patient understands the alter­
natives to surgery such as wearing glasses or contact lenses.
Approximately 70 percent of patients meeting the criteria
who undergo surgery can expect improvement to a visual
acuity of 20-40 or better without glioses. The other 10 percent
still will need glasses to achieve that degree of Improvement.
However, in most cates, a second surgery can compensate tor

Cwtteat

Surgery

under correction.
The surgery, which Lennon performs in his outpatient clinic
in the Atlanta suburb of Rtverdale, takes less than one hour for
each eye. Surgery ts done on one eye at a time. The second eye
can be operated on three months later.
After a two or three-day healing and adjustment period, the
patient will experience the results of the corrective surgery.
The total heating process may lake up to three months, during
which time the patient may experience some glare and
variable vision, but no pain or discomfort.
The radial keratotomy procedure was developed by Soviet
ophthalmologist Dr. Svyatoslav N. Fyodorov, director of the
Moscow Scientific Research laboratory of Experimental and
Clinical Problems of Eye Surgery, the largest eye Institute In
the world.
After eipertemcntlng with animats for several years,
Fyodorov first performed the surgery on humans in 1974. Since
then, he has done more than 2.500 radial K surgeries, all
successfully.
Radial keratotomy was introduced into the United States in
1971 by Dr. I*eo Bores of Detroit who had studied the procedure
under Fyodorov In Russia. Uimon studied under Bores and
other American ophthalmologists who practice the procedure.
To date, more than 3,000 radial K surgeries have been
performed In the Soviet Union and more than 2,000 in the
United States. No serious complications have resulted in any of
the caaes. In no case over the seven years the surgery has been
performed has the cornea reverted to its previous shape.

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

Heritage C O O K B O O K
* S E C O N D W E E K 'S C O N T E S T *

Recipes for...

B R EA D m. R O L L S

Jitterbug, 40's Attire
Spark 35th Class Reunion
Members of Seminole High School Class of 1940 met tor their
35lh class reunion at Quality Inn North Saturday. Everyone
agreed it was the beat reunion the class has ever had—even the
spouses of the classmates had a good Urne.
Olenn Ungle, class president, Betty (Sasser) Weber, Jean
(Williams) Hughes and Judge Ken Ixlfler deserve all the
credit for putUng together this highly successful two-day party
tn )ust two months time.
."There were only a (ew In the class that we were unable lo
track down," Betty laid, "and we feel grateful (hat over a
third of the d a is wrre able to come on such short notice, and so
many traveled such long distances—Washington, Arizona,
Texas, New York, Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia and ail
parts of Florida."
Ttie reunion started el 8:30 with a get acquainted social at
the Quality Inn North, followed by a buffet dinner. Dress for
the evening was lo be "the way we did in the 40s."
Herman Morris, high school principal at that time, and his
wtfeGladys, Satiuma.and Jessie (Durden) Perkins, the class
sponsor, with her husband Brack, wtre the honor guests. Jean
(Buyer) Wright, class of 1947, who is visiting from her home In
New York, also attended os a apedal guest of the class.
Bobby Jones, Greenville, S.C., the class secretary, gave the
invocation and Glenn Ungle served ax master of ceremonies.
The group observed a moment of silence In memory of their
deceased classmates: Mary Elizabeth Carver Thompson,
Vrrn Clark, Margaret Dtngfelder Corey, David Howard, Bobo
Mere, and Junior Vickery.
lYUes w tre awarded to two member* of the class coming
the greatest distance: Richard Singletary from Langley,
Washington, and Carl Moss from Scottsdale, Arts.
Malcolm and Joan MacNeill, Miami, wun the prize for
liavtng the youngest child (I years old).
Ulerni Llnglc, dressed In saddle oxfords, yellow pleated and
rutted pants with a key chain (pants bought at Yowcll'i In the
40s and atilt fit!), and Tol (Livingston ) Fitzparilck tn saddle
shoes, bobby sox, plaid skirt, sweater and pearls, won the prise
as the two most authentically dressed
The jitterbug contest proved a difficult one to Judgethey were all too good! Finally chosen were Wade and
Margaret Rucker, l*eeiburg, first place; Ben and Evelyn
(Matthews) Wilson, Waycrois □«., second; and Gerald and
Betty Jo (Brock) loaaing, Ocala, third.
The entertainment wai the highlight of the evening. Three
members of the original "Banana Boys" (music with a-peat),
who played (or the high school dances for several years In the
middle 40s. Dr. Wade Rucker, class of '46; Dr. Neil Powell, and
Pete Buker, class of '45, now play with a well-known group in
central Florida, "The Dixie Doctors". Dr. Chuck Graham and
Dr. D.O. Kline complete the group who played all the "oldies
and goodies" far the class members lo dance, listen, reminisce

C ALEN D AR
WEDNESDAY,JULYS
Insect Sling Seminar, 7-9 p.m,, Winter Park
Memorial Hospital Medical Ubrary Building. Free to
the public, call 646-7015 far reservations.
Affinity Singles»25 and over) house party at Sheila's,
• p.m. Guest speaker Attorney Russell Crawford on
divorce and marital problems. P a w and dancing. Call
327-2758
THURSDAY, JULY 15
AIts moo It- Maitland Christian Womta't d a b , lun­
cheon, 1 ':30 a.m. to 1 :» p .m ., Maitland Civic Center.
Feature- "Best of Backyard Barbecues" by Betty
Bow; music, Janet Rucker. Wlntfr Park and rpeaker
Dick Smith, DeLand.
Greater Seminole Chamber of Commerce new
member mixer, 5:3M p.m., Chamber office, 291
Maitland Ave., Altamonte Springs.
Deltona Public Ubrary Summer Program, 10 a.m.,
children 4-12, program on mans lees by Blue Spring*

rangers.

i . #- afrt «**W-wV44

and thoroughly enjoy until the wee hour* of the morning.
Pete Buker, band director at Sanford Middle School, was
gtven an honorary membership in the Dental Society so he
would be eligible to play with the "Dixie Doctors"—(all the
other memberi are practicing dentists In the Central Florida
Area).
The reunton reconvened at 10:10 Sunday morning at the
Irifter ramp. A tablous beet and pnrk tiarteque dinner, put cn
by the organizing committee lor their classmates, was served
at I p.m. The meat was prepared on on open grill by Ken’s
nephew, Vincent l*c((I&lt;r, and the side dishes were catered.
Reluctantly the group broke up late that afternoon. It was
decided that 10 years ts too tong to wait for another reunion.
They will meet again In 1886 with the goal of 100 percent at­
tendance and to top the good time that was had by all who
attended this reunlon-ll possible - TOI FITZPATRICK

Don't Delay*..One of YOUR Recipes Could

S U M M ER S IZZLER
PRICES GOOD THRU JULY It. IVIt

HAMBURGER
1 Lb*.
Or Mora

1st - 2nd • 3rd Prizes Each Week

ALL CHICKEN

GREAT DOGS

69’

, L , r&gt; ,

W e e k ly w in n e r s a r e e lig ib le f o r th e G R A N D P R IZ E
N O LIMIT TO NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED

Jiffy Com Muffin Mix
Chicken Backs C&lt;E S T
PORK &amp; BEANS HERITAOE
Upton TEA BAGS
Armtx SHORTENING
Polish Dill Pickles
T.O. LEE

m-

Milk

$|99

LAROE

Eggs

Y O U M A Y ENTER AS M A N Y W EEKS AS YOU LIKE
Food C ategories Coming Up In The Next 7 W eeks Of The Contest:

SALADS &amp; VEGETABLES - CASSEROLES - SEAFOOD
POULTRY-MEATS — DESSERTS — MICROWAVE
So send In that special recipe your family and friends like so well

Purex Washing Powder

t!
Ox.

White POTATOES
LEMONS
Green CABBAGE

Lb*.

SCHLITZ

BEER
EVBRCANE

Sugar

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RULES;
1*
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1101.

CANS

t**P!T I
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FOOOONOER

17'

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...It could be a winner!

99*

1100 West 13th St.. Sanford

TIP-TOP
SUPERM ARKET

No limit lo n u m b er of recipes subm itted but te c h
recipe m ust include your nam e, address an d
telephone.
TYPE or PR IN T your recipe giving full In­
structions fo r p re p aratio n , cooking tim e a n d
tem perature. (A pproxim ate number of servings
alio helpful.)
Anyone can e n ta r axcapt Evening Herald em ployees and th air Im m ediate family.

Mall Entrfas to: EVENINO HERALD
coCOOKBOOK
P.O. BOX 1657
SANFORD. FLA. 32771

DEADLINE FOR

First, Second and Third prizes w ill be aw arded In
each ol I he nine food categories. You m ay enter
as m any of th# weekly categories a s you Ilka.
A panel of three expert lodges will review ell
entries and winners will be notified at th e end of
the contest In September for a ta s te oft" to
xelect the Grand P rlre w inner D ecision of the
judges Is final.
All recip es received will be published In October
ror the Evening Herald s first annual cookbook
contest.

Or Drop OH At Our Office:
300 N. FRENCH AVE.
( By the lakefrent In downtown Sanford)
MON.-FRI. 1:36 5:30 - SAT. a;3»*NOON
Entries must be postmarked by midnight

Bread and Rolls...SUNDAY, JULY 26
THIRD W EEK’S CONTEST — SA LA D

l

VEGETABLES

�Evswim Hers Id. ItnTord. FI.

Wednesday, Juhrti. 1M I-1B

Capture The Flavor O f Spain
Wine Region Recognized As The 'Zone Of Sauces'
The renowned Riojs vineyards lie on either side of the Ebro
River in north central Spain, where the ancient kingdoms of
Aragon, Navarre and Old Castille meet the Basque Provinces.
Sheltered by the Pyrenees, the fertile Rioja valley has
produced wines since the 11th Century.
Roman settlers Introduced viticultural techniques to the
Riojs, along with their use of garlic and olives in cooking.
Then, Arab occupiers came with lemons, eggplants, pep­
percorns and almonds. Late In the 15th Century, Spanish explorers brought home tomatoes, potatoes, pimentos tnd
. chocolate from the New World.
The Rioja region is known as the "tone of sauces" and is
. famous for the simplest and finest cooking in Spain. Seafood
. from the Bay of Biscay is plentiful, and the surrounding
mountains abound with trout streams, game fowl, young
lambs, wild rosemary tnd thyme. RioJans rely oo natural
Juices and herbs to heighten and enhance the taste of basic
ingredients, rarely using spires to mask true flavor.
Here are some favorite regional recipes. Each is enjoyed to
its fullest when served with a distinctive Rioja wine. Rioja red
wmes can be light cr robust; Rioja whites go from clear and
crisp to warm and amber; while Rioja roses range from dry to
semi-dry.
CHICKEN IN WINE SAUCE
I Serves 4)
2 chicken breasts, boned and skinned (about 2 lbs.)
4 tsp. salt
4 tsp. pepper
14 tblsps. cornstarch
14 tbsps. vegetable oil
1 egg white, unbeaten
■ 2 packages (10 ozs. each) frozen spinach
6 tbsps. butter or margarine
2 cups sliced mushrooms
two-thirds cup white wine
1 cup heavy cream
1 tblsp. dried tarragon
Slice chicken Into 4-inch strips. Combine chicken with salt,
pepper, cornstarch, oil and egg white in medium bowl; let
stand 10 minutes. Meanwhile cook spinach according to
package directions; drain; keep covered. Melt butter in large
skillet over medium heat. Add chicken and cook until golden. 0
to 10 minutes. Remove chicken. Add mushrooms to pan and
cook until tender. Add wine, cream and tarragon to pan along
with chicken. Simmer over medium heat, stirring oc­
casionally, until sauce Is consistency of heavy cream. Arrange
cooked spinach on platter. Spoon chicken and sauce over
spinach.
TROUT A LA RIOJANA
4 medium trout with heads and tails left on, cleaned, washed

and dried
4 cup dry red wine
4 cup olive oil
4 cup water
4 cup finely chopped onions
4 tsp. each, dried mint, rosemarry and thyme
1 bay leaf, crumbled
15 whole black peppercorns
1 tsp. salt
3 egg yolks, lightly beaten
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place the fish In a heat-proof
dish. Just large enough to hold them in a single layer. Combine
all the remaining ingredients, except the egg yolks, and pour
over the fish. Martnataal room temperature (or about 30 mini,
turning once. Place pan on stove and bring marinade to a
simmer. Cover loosely with foil. Bake for about 20 mins or until
fish is firm. Transfer fish to a warm platter. Strain cooking
Juice* through sieve into saucepan, extracting as much liquid
as possible from herb* and onions. Slowly whisk a little liquid
into the beaten egg yolks, then whisk the mixture Into the
remaining liquid In the pan. Heat slowly, whisking constantly
until the sauce starts to thicken. Do not let it come near boiling
or it will curdle. Serve sauce separately.

BEEF CREPES RIOJA
3 lbs. boneless beef (top of rib, shoulder or chuck fillet)
I tblsp. olive oil
1 tblsp. olive oil
1 tblsp. butter
2 slices bacon, diced
3 tabsps. flour
2 tsps. salt
2 cloves garlic
4 tsp. thyme
1 bay leaf
2 tblsps. finely chopped parsley
4 tsp. black pepper
1 cup red wine
1 134 at. can beef broth
2 tblsps. butter
1 lb. mushrooms, trimmed
24 very small white onions, peeled
1 dz. crepes thawed
Pat meat dry with paper towels. In heavy skillet heat oil and

butter and saute bacon until light brown; remove to heavy,
lidded casserole with slotted spoon. Brown beef on all sides in
skillet, a few pieces at a lime. Remove and keep warm in
casserole over low heat. Sprinkle flour on meat, stir pieces
until flour Is absorbed. Mash salt nnd garlic with fork; add to
casserole; add thyme, bay leaf, parsley and pepper. Add Rioja
wine. Stir and bring to simmer, add beef broth to cover meat,
simmer again. Cover and rrmove to preheated 325 degrees F.
oven. Turn oven down to 300 degrees to maintain simmer, cook
one hour or until meat is barely tender.
In a heavy skillet, heat butter and saute mushrooms and
onions. (Make small cross in root end of onions to help keep
them from separating.) Sprinkle with sail and pepper. After
casserole has cooked one hour, add mushroom and onion
mixture. Cover and cook about 30-45 minutes longer or until
meat Is tender. Skim fat and discard.
To serve, place quantity of filling on each crepe, fold sides
over and turn crepe over. Put crepes In ovenproof dishes,
spoon additional filling over lop and keep warm In oven on low
heat until serving time.

YOU CAN TRUST
THESE TWO
SIGNS TO LOWER
YOUR TOTAL
FOOD BILL!

CHICKEN RIOJANA
(Serves!)
3 lb. chicken, cut into I serving pieces
4 cup (lour
14 cup olive oil
2 cloves oil
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 sprigs parsley, minced

4 sweet red or green peppers, seeded and cut Into strips
length wise
1 large onion, cut into half and sliced
5 oxs chorixo, cut into slices (If unavailable use any other
garlic — seasoned, smoked pork sausage)
S ozs dry white wine
, I small asparagus
salt and pepper to taste
Flour chicken pieces and set aside. Heat oil in a large heavy
skillet. Starting skin side down, brown chicken, a lew pieces at
a lime, removing them to warm plate as they brown. Brown
sausage slices and remove. Add garlic, parsley, onion and
peppers to skillet. Stirring frequently, cook over a moderate
heat for B-IO mins, or until vegetables a r t soft Add sausage
and wine. Cover lightly and simmer over low heat for another
30 nuns, or until chicken is tender. Correct seasoning with salt
and pepper, If necessary. Keep warm while you lightly steam
the asparagus. Transfer chicken to serving platter and garnish
' with asparagus.
SHRIMP IN GARUC SAl'CE
(Serves I)
1 lb. raw shrimp, shelled and deveined
4 onion, chopped
| * 4 cup olive oil
2 tbsps. finely chopped parsley
4 cut dry while wine
; salt and black pepper, freshly ground
3 cloves garlic, minced
. Saute anion in oil over low heat until soft and translucent
Stir in garlic and 4 the parsley, cooking another minute or to.
Turn up heat, add shrimp, and cook about 3 mins.,stirring
constantly, until pink. Add wine, seashn with salt and pepper,
and cook another 1-3 mins. Sprinkle with remaining parsley
and serve.
STRIPED BASS BISCAY
2 lb. striped bass, cleaned, washed and thoroughly dried
5 thin lemon slices, plus an extra lemon
a i tblsps. olive oil
1 tblsps. fresh breadcrumbs
1 tsp minced garlic
1 tblsp. mined paisley
4 tap. black pepper, freshly ground
salt to taste
watercress sprigs, for garnish
Cut I parallel sliU, down the bone, oo one tide of the fish, and
' insert the lemon slices. Combine next 3 ingredients. Spretd 4
i the m atu re on the bottom of a shallow baking dish. Put in the
fish, lemon side up and spread with remaining mixture.
! Sprinkle with salt, to tasU. Bake for approx. 4 hr., basting
every few mins, with pan Juices. Garnish with watercress and
sque « e fresh lemon over the cooked fish.

NORTHERN
BATHROOM

•

TISSUE

LOTS OF
CHICKEN
I.IINt AM I. I I GUI** Vk11MHAt RN

I NICKS I GIBII I VACRM.I A
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WHITE OR ASSORTED

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58

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�&lt;5— Evtning Htnkl, S/n)ord, FI.

W«dn»*diy. July j j , tm

O p t For Easy Elegance
Plan A Festive , Friendly Weekend Brunch
If you're searching lor a festive Idea for a friendly weekend
brunch, opt for easy elegance by mixing processed potatoes
with popular brunch Ingredients such as eggs and cheese.
Set your table with radiant bouquets of sun-kissed marigolds
and other summer blossoms; with this glowing ambiance,
bring out entrees that delight the eye and excite the appetlteIdaho Puff de Terre and Potato Brunch Pie.
Make these special spud dishes successfully by selecting
quality-processed potatoes.
The tasty Idaho Puff de Terre entree is a blend of instant
mashed potatoes, eggs, deviled ham, chives and shredded
Cheddar cheese. With a toasty golden crust studded with
chopped chives and a moist center of potatoes and bits of ham,
the puff has an Inviting light texture and subtle flavor,
reminiscent of the delicate souffle.
Another great culinary Idea for the weekend Is Potato
Brunch Pie. A simple combination of Hash Brown potatoes
with onions, dried beef and eggs makes for a quick, luscious
omelet.
IDAHO PU FF de TERRE

mashed potatoes. In small bowl ot electric mixer beat egg
whites until stiff; gently fold into potato mixture. Spool
mixture Into four buttered 10-ounce custard cups or individual
souffle dishes. Bake In a 371 degree F. oven 30 minutes or until
golden brown.Yield: 4 servings.
POTATO BRUNCH PIE
I package (5.1 ounces) dehydrated hash brown potatoes with
onions
1 Jar (2.1 ounces) sliced dried beef, chopped
* eggs
l i teaspoon pepper
Prepare potatoes In large skillet according to package
directions, eliminating salt and adding the chopped dried beef.
While potatoes are cooking, beat together eggs and pepper.
When potatoes are done, pour eggs over them. Cook over
medium heat S minutes, frequently running a spatula or knife
around the edge of pan to allow uncooked eggs to run un­
derneath. Cover. Cook 1 minutes longer or until top Is set.
Veild: 6 servings.

1 package (3li ounces) instant mashed potatoes (for 5 ser­
vings)
2 eggs, separated
2 cans (4H ounces each) deviled ham
1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
3 tablespoons chopped chivea

Idaho I'uff de Terre is a classy. Ughl-hearled brunch dish.

TOTAL
IT UP!

PT
cPtide

Prepare mashed potatoes according to package directions
omitting butter and reducing aalt to l*teaspoon. In small bowl
licat egg yolks; stir in ham, cheese, chives and prepared

W e’re fighting back with Penny Pincher Prices!
FRESH

PAPER
TOWELS
Aftsomo

FRESH FLORIDA

CALIFORNIA
NECTARINES

whiieob

158 r585

48c

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WHITE

Make The Most
From Summer's
Crisp Harvest

98

Summer is finally here, bringing a bounty of fami-lrcsh
vegetables and fruits. Green beans, firm and Juicy, overflow
bins with a crispness that means they’re straight (rum the
field.
Crimson tomatoes, Just off the vine, burst with Juice at the
touch of a knife. It's the season to feast on vegetables picked at
Hie peak of ripeness!
Fresh beans and tomatoes can easily stand alone at
m caltim e-but why not combine them in a testy cajsrrole?
This recipe adds sauteed onions and crunchy bits oi bacon for a
flavor accent. And to blend everything togethcr, there's a rich
sauce made from creamy Casino natural Monterey Jack
cheese.
With IU mild flavor and soft, smooth consistency, Monterey
Jack Is the perfect complement to the medley of fresh tastes
and Itxtures. The cheese was first made by 19th-century
monks in Monterey, California, and Is a distant cousin of
English Cheddar.
CREAMY BEAN AND TOMATO CASSEROLE

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. 76o/

ItATIONAL BRAND PRICE 2.39

S w eetC o rn _ 5 /7 8 c 0

N A H A !H A

RINSO
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

COUNT

i b r i

1602 PKG.

RONZONI

GENERIC
TEA BAGS

^

,

4801

DRINK

N A IIO N A I BRAND
PR»Cr • I 44

6 4 oi

Im

.

IBCSM

22 m

I I M WHI Rt ?a

OEHERIC

JUICE

^

HANAPDI P
CRANAPPLE
or CRANGRAPE

S ’! 1 9
JB,

29 LBS
23

lie* ant FlU* WHHH |»II FVFMCMI

,--------.

0

2 UNI? VtliOW OB GBKIN

PepsiCola___ 3/*l 0

78* H

Green Celery__ 4 8 c0

C a re ss

.

OCEANSPHAY

N41IONAI BRAND
rRIt I *1 40

LITTER

W H IU HOUSE

Apple Juice___ 6 9 c 0

Baby Shampoo 9 9 c 0

IT A IK

Dove Liquid__ 9 9 c

Team Flakes__ 9 9 c 0

r--------.

ea.

IlH IK A f M tS H tM III

14 m PANTBY PBIDK ALICEO. WHOLE OB

4m

Pancake Syrup 8 5 C 0

A P P L E

r i ■■

»— -i

o rn taic i4«« arouiABoani^M

22 m

Lux Liquid___ 9 9 c

0

I A B G f T fX A B

Mushrooms___ ! l 7a 0

Cut Beets__ 3 / 8 9 c

24##

orn raic 24m

,

Apple Juice__ !139 0

Trash Bags___ !169 0

10 COUNI LAWN L LCAr

Glad Bags____? 2 19

@
Peaches_____6 9 c llll

U u

4 bacon slices
li cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons margarine
3 lablcspuoiu flour
4 teaspoon salt
Dash of pepper
1 cup milk
m cups |S ou.) brand natural Monterey Jack cheese
I lb. fresh, cut green beans, cooked, drained
1 cup chopped tomato
Fry bacon until crisp; remove from skiUet. Drain fat
reserving I tablespoon. Saute onion In reserved fat. Add
margarine and melt In skillet over low heat. Blend In flour and
seasonings. Gradually add milk; cook, stirring constantly,
until thickened. Add cheese stir until melted. Crumble bacon
•dices. Add beans, tomato and bacon to cheese sauce. Pour Into
Pt-quart casserole. Tup with tomato slices. If desired, and
bake at 350 degrees, 23 to 30 minutes or until hot. S to S ser­
vings.
ba Kko h a r v e s t a p f i .e s
(Serves 4)
4 baking apples
4 tblsps. sugar
4 ota. white wine
2 ota. water
4 cinnamon sticks
1 m . blanched almond slivers, roasted
Preheat oven to $00 degrees F. Core appUe and cut a thin .
slice from the bottom of each, for balance. Place apples In a
■mall baking pan, Jusl big enough to hold them. FID centers
with sugar. Pour wine and w ater into pan and add cinnamon
■ticks. Bake (or » m int Transtcr apples to serving uisn and
decorate with routed almonds.
___________________

|--------1

M N C V A B fl B LICtD

10.!)•&lt; PANTBY PRitJt

Tomato S oup_4/sl

Marshmallows_39c 0

N apkins_____6 9 c 0
gzhiric

i

Kraft M ustard_69c 0

Facial Tissue_4 9 c 0
J

Potted Meat__4 /* l

ttMIRf

Cabbage___ lb,14'
*
Cantaloupes

t in

0
0

&gt;•« HOBMLL

[l
»

MILAM G B r i N

14*1 R IOCH N ANB % Q U l t i l B AB H M

Mustard______6 9 c

IM III

10m

Qlfttaic 140 COUNT

.

rtsat
*»rti*t
■*"«•

COM PARE

Potatoes____ 5/*l 0

,
0

1!•!

4401

MSI

WNtRt

)«| HUNGRYJACK NAftHCO

Grease Relief_9 9 c

Fruit Punch___ !109 0

ELSEWHERE 1.99

re
Pint **it

COMPARE

0

Kraft DRESSING.

O rn tN K l t d ROACH t

Ant Killer__

tLSf
wf»WI

$188

10

LB BAG

ELSEWHERE 4 * 1 0 0

9 c
11*1 in FIt«rf!HIH4U«l 10*0M
Ut ORCMtlifta
_ 9 |1 9

G C N IN IC - 4*i CAN

WHITE
POTATOES

oV

?.98

LB

I MHmai
n»tmi
mi

COMPARE |

U S. NO. I

GREEN
CUKES

r K«
fX«

ELSEWHERE S I.29 PER LB

COM PARE E3

ELSEWHERE T9' EACH

FRESH

SEEDLESS
GRAPES
Fresh tomatoes and brans unite in a delicate
cheese sauce.

FLORIDA
MANGOS

SEEDLESS
LIMES @
m a A
12
FOR
TTW
ELSEWHERE 69‘

■&gt;***."V*. ■

i

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.
lv cup soy sauce
'» cup dry white wine
l*3rd cup salad oil
1 tablespoon minced onion
1 clove garlic, crushed
2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon ground ginger
*« teaspoon salt
Combine ingredients; blend thoroughtly. Pour over
chicken, cover and refrigerate 1 hour. Grill as usual Makes
l ' i cups.

Summer naturally invites you outdoors to play, to relax, and
to eat. Whether you choose a trceshaded park, a spot by the
lake or the backyard (or your next outing, food plays a starring
role.
To simplify warm weather meal planning, home economists
have developed a summertime menu with an Oriental touch.
Crunchy chow mein noodles are a great beginning. Highlight ol
the meal is Hibs Royale and Sesame Chicken, delicious either
hot off the grill or cooked in advance.

Portable
Feast For
Outdoors

RIBS ROYALE
Spareribs: about 3 pounds lean, meaty ribs
l « cup soy sauce
3 tablespoons lemon Juice
teaspoon dry mustard
1 clove garlic, crushed
li teaspoon salt
*• cup catsup
2 tablespoons brown sugar
tablespoons brown sugar
l* teaspoon hot pepper sauce
1 teaspoon onion powder
Combine ingredients In a small saucepan. Cover and simmer
10 minutes. Brush spareribs often while grilling or broiling.
Serves 6.

CHECK g
IT OUT! cPilde
p

I

t r

« OQC
v
m
^ ^ L B

ass

ELSEWHERE &gt;1.28 PER LB

&gt;

TWIN
PACK*

7 0

LAND O' FROST UNLS SMOKED

ROUND
isjb ROAST

TURKEY
HAM

@ ^ $ &lt;1 8 8

^2 TO$ - ■ !6 8
3 L B S LB

a

lb M

ELSEWHERE

ELSEWHERE S2.VB PER LB

6 SLICE
PKG.

^ ^ L

tiring out your imagination when you bring out the grill. All
kinds of mrats, poultry and seafood are deliciously rntuimvd
when marinated or basted with flavorsome sauces.
To help make your next cook-out an affair lo remember,
home economists have developed a selection of sauces to
please everyone on your guest list.
SOY SAUCE SUPREME
cup soy sauce
*i cup water
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
1 tablespoon brown sugar
2 tablespoons salad oil
1, teaspoon hoi pepper sauce
1 clove garlic, crushed
1, teaspoon freshly ground pepper
Combine ingredients. Use to marinate beef, pick or chicken
before grilling. Makes l l » cups.
*y

88

ELSEWHERE 11.20 PER LB ’

ELSE WHERE’ S 1.20 PER LB

ELSEWHERE &gt;1.20 PER LB

BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

f e #

PANTRY PRIDE

FREEZER QUEEN

SWISS STYLE
YOGURT

^D IN N E R S
$ 1 5 8

2 LB
PKG.
|
FROZEN
ELSEWHERE SI.BO

a1.98 PER LB

Sauce Along
With Grill

BEEF
L IV E R

CORNISH
HENS
51 A A i

S L IC E D
BA C O N
5 Q Q

BEEF PATTtE MIX

OVER
3 LBS

U S D A GRADE A ROCK

MARKET STYLE

P a c k a lo n g r ib s , c h ic k e n and slaw .

Bring Out

We’re fighting back with Bonus Buys!

G REA T
GRO UN D

cv

CABBAGESUW
1 can (11 or.) chop suey vegetables, drained
2 cups shredded cabbage
li cup thinly sliced cucumber
‘t cup chopped green pepper
2 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons white wine vinegar
2 tablespoons salad oil
I teaspoon salt
Cover chop suey vegetables and cabbage with ice water,
le t stand for 30 minu'.S; drain well. Combine vegetables in
large bowl and chill. Just before serving blend together
remaining ingredients. Pour over vegetables; toss lightly.
Serve Immediately. Serves 6.

CHICKEN SESAME
1 plump chicken cut up

55V

Wednesday, July 11.1M1— SB

CUP
ELSEWHERE 41'

SWKKT AND SOl'H JIARBEQUE
1 Jar 110 oi.) sweet-sour sauce
2 tablespoons dry white wine
1 tablespoon white vinegar
2 tablespoons cooking oil
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
2 small onions, chopped line
l clove garlic, chopped tine

isiBiBSi
»•*•*

COMPARE|
r ia io e

Franks (

ELSEWHERE

COM PARE

n ttr

|—

UrMISHllulO*
(MMIHIIUAU

Fryer,

.—

.

|

ItMUMlHW

G r i l l F r a n k s ____ ? 2 2 8
u
« i p r o ertfif
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imjrkg
______ s p a

k

Bologna

0

IBsiPR Q CAROLINA M ID I

.-------.

Roll Sausage_9 8 c

0

saw

1

L lj
--------

Pork Hocks_m68* cS
* '

j

ISo* PRO

HM S

1

*

Pork Bones__lh6 8 c 1!5j

Beef Steakettes9l 98 d

1M i fKC

ISo* PKG SEA STAR ERIED

TYftOMi CHICKEN

.

Corn Dogs____ J l “ 0
2 LB ERG fVKONS

p -

Fried C h i c k e n ^ 48 E
COMPARE

BAKERY

S PACK PANTRY PRIDE SOURDOUGH

,

T m W ill lA N t

Cake (ANOEL FOOD)-- l 59

*2 ”

- 0

•HHM I

else

l)«

r to ic n

.--------.

2/88* 0
,—

0

T o p p in g

I-------1

HALE GAUOM PAMIRI PRIDE EROICH

7 9 c

*

0
.------- .

14 C l.- K E CREAM

Apple Pie_____ *129 E
PANTRY PRIDE

H0M E8TYLE
or SANDWICH

Cones item t &gt;_____ 69* In

(IS Y W H tN t &lt;1 J*

•

3

FOR

m $ J 1 9

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JOLLY
pops

list W H IR ! as
18/2o/

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(l!kt«Hiai •) *1

tlS E W H IR E « l I I

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SPRAY

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1 9

| NESCAFE
I
I COFFEE

10o&lt;JAM

^

$ * 5 5 9

3

_43c

1»

riM E 8 PRE 0

_____ _

Qtrs. Oleo___ 3 8 c 10
U o * PKG

-------- 1

R O R D E N M IC C D

Singles (A M E R IC A N )^ l5 8

0 J
----------

Cottage Cheese*!38 0
Ricotta C heese^l48 0
I So* PKG

MRS FILBERT t

|-------

Qtr's. Oleo___58* I68

HYGRADI

I■I••

1

■V*V,7’ EIRE
k h "i • WHERE

row* • ««**
1HSMIFIIIMSM IlbOllFMI ISIIII
■ .

COMPARE

Sure Solid____ !129 d

Kosher Spears 99*

0
--------- .

8*01

24o* JUNE BO I IR IS H

.--------.

l)o « NORMAL DRY 01 OILY

--------.

M * GRECH GIAM*I STEMS t PIECES

Pert SHAMPOO______ 9179

d

Mushrooms__ 59* 0

Tm aiBoooa Hta« lonotfi t u r n o* *•**

.,

S M * ARM L HAMMER LAUNDRY

ht ADA 1I0OWK Utltlillfi Ilk (IIUI1H

0
|------|

Detergent____l l 29

VO-5 HAIRSPRAV___ ?129

0

Roach Motel ____ 8 9 * k

VO-5 HAIRSPRAV___ ?129

I c e c r e a m _____!129 B

0

0

C O M PA R E |

m et

w h ip p e d

Mo* PKG

.

0 1

24 o* CUP P AM IR I PRIDE CRf A M tO

ijs a

Hot Dogs_____9 8 C

JUSSm «HEKE

J u i c e (ORANGE)

*------- *

Muffins____ 2 / 9 8 c

llo iP H G

pro

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•
0* n
r HoUrsm
ln rPAMIRI
f in in * PRIDE
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S o u r C r e a m ____ 8 8 c

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ia*oo*i out
(oawpif

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COMPARE

post*

huh r*i(i*11wlW
ClwhsIei'

Lunch Meat.

ELSE

JVZm WHERE

COMPARE

M U IR * M ID I MEAt

Fish Sticks____^l48 d
Whiting

rsMRt* I H tlt

i

i Mwioat

I M l CtJP
iww*
* u r PANIKY
r n n in i rn
PRIOf
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• here

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Qtr. Pork LoinLB* l M I d
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Chuck S t $ a k _ u $l “
valley

o v i n i la s

|

0

I 60

tiH m s i

COM PARE H S U

IR

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b a l l p a h k i^

o v te i i » » re ra n

final EI-tE
«"• *
WHERE
rra

mi

CREST

■ 2 . or
I
er+ nrx I
| T0?T “ ,PU* 8TE $ 3 0 0 I
T r v n r

_

U M » &gt; w * i» m

22oi
11 T E a I Z l i n
y
I 1 ss p
p r
r a
a y
$$ 11 44 99
I PC
^ J[”
V WASH

JUNE BOY FRESH

sSWEET
w t t l „^
CHIPS
PACKER LABEL

h

IL S I W H I RE •I IS

22oi

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8 9
IIIIW IIO K

u A D rD A i
1601CAN
| rCHARCOAL
I CHuSSrA
lighter J L£ c2 O
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FLUID ^ t j r i ff
OPEN PIT

B A R -B -Q U E
SA U C E

PA BST B LU E
R IB B O N B E E R

cm
T O 1 nH tat
I I LITER CHABIISWIME

Calif. Cellars
I . I U T I R *o*e

Calif. Cellars
I .* LITER- IH I 1 I WINE

Calif. Cellars

*nPW5»Ap«fCMf*pr?*s

Ifltw u ro * Wtaf Onl » tfMt

g^w.Ggjiaiitee^.!
paw fry

r » io e * i i i u v l

you

w o « on

y o u * i o y a l f o o d rill o

Real Sangria

■M M M

w ill

Double the Difference in Cash!
MSBB'SWOWf If f ( X | { 4 J I I M S ( O O l l O l t l t U N l { | | t N l t l I I I M M I O I M I W I 1 I
RtL«iiiAii.jiuiLLiii(WH,aiit nanttYfum biudoum*iri mmiukiia
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1 tablespoon brown sugar

It teaspoondry mustard
.5
Combine all ingredients in small saucepan; bring to boil, i
Deduce heal and simmer 15minutes. Use to brush steaks,
poultry, lamb, pork, ribs, or fish during grilling.

-,
1

TEHIYAKI MARINADE

l« cup teriyaki sauce
3 tablespoons lemon Juice
three-fourths teaspoon dry mustard
1 clove garlic, crushed
4 teaspoon sail
J, cup catsup
Combine ingredients in a small saucepan. Cover; simmer
for 10 minutes. Especially good with pork, or use to baste
chicken or beef. Makes 1 cup.

Zucchini Dish
Wins First In
Cooking Contest

.

1 PACK BLACK FLAG

I ^ I L I C R H E R I 2 11 IS

,
V

FLORIDA’S
LOW PRICE
LEADER!

Chicken Stuffed Zucchini took top honors In Die 1M1 Florida
Chicken Cooking Contest held June 4 and 5 at Tampa Bay
Center shopping mall.
The recipe, prepared by Mrs. Gertrude (Betty) Du priest of
Pembroke Park, won out over those prepared by nine other
finalists from across the state. Mrs. Dupriest will be
representing Florida in the National Chicken Cooking Contest
in Octan City, Maryland on July 29.
There, the best of 51 recipes prepared by contestants from
across the country will receive the lop p rtu of 110,000.

CHICKEN STUFFED ZUCCHINI
1 whole broiler-fryer chicken breast, halved, boned, skinned,
and cut in bite-tiie pieces
2 broiler-fryer chicken thighs, boned, skinned, cut In bileslie pieces
4 medium xucchinl, halved lengthwise, scooped out, pulp ,
reserved and chopped
4c cup chopped onion
3 tablespoons chopped parsley
2 cloves garlic, minced
4i teaspoon sail
l» teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 can (■ ox.) tomato sauce, divided
I ounces shredded m ouarella cheese
In large bowl, mix together chicken, reserved rucchini pulp,
onion, parsley, garlic, salt and pepper. In frypan, place oil and ,,
heat to medium temperature. Add chicken mixture and cook,
stirring, about 5 minutes or until chicken i« opaque and fork
can be Inserted in chicken with ease. Blend half of the tomato '
sauce with the chicken. Divide chicken mixture into I equal
portions; mound into rucchini Place stuffed zucchini in single
layer in large shallow baking pan. Spoon the remaining half of
tomato sauce over and around stuffed rucchini. Bake, un­
covered, In 350 degrees F. oven for 20 minutes. Remove from
oven; sprinkle with cheese. Bake about 15 minutes longer or
until cheese has melted and w)uash Is fork tender. Makes 4
large servings.
For a brochure of the 10 Florida finalists recipes in the
Florida Chicken Cooking Contest, send your request and a self
addressed envelope to; Florida Poultry Federation, MIS
Mariner Street, Suite 100 Tampa, 3360*.

�48 -tvanlng Herald, Unlard, FI.

W. dirndl y. July li, Itll

Florida Seedless Limes In
Tropical Fruit Best Supermarket Citrus Bargain This Summer
Summertime is lime time and right now Florida seedless
limes are becoming very plentiful In local markets.
This aeason Florida Ume growers, who produce 90 percent of
the limes grown In thl* country, are anticipating an excellent
crop of this tropical fruit.
Unleu Mother Nature play* tricks, Inflation weary con­
sumers can expect Florida seedless limes to be the best citrus
bargain In the supermarket this summer.
Both sweet and tart at the same lime, the versatile lime adds
cool, sprightly flavor not only to beverages, but also to ap­
petizers, main dishes and desserts.
Because limes bring out the natural flavor of foods they are
the perfect flavor enhancer. Try adding a Juicy wedge of lime
to iced tea, diet sodas o r sparkling mineral water for perky
flavor.
And remember, Florida limes have no seeds!
This time of year low-calorie fare Is always welcome. Crisp,
crunchy raw vegetables, with their array of rich color make
beautiful appetizers for the hors d'oeuvre hour.
Always serve Juicy lime wedges along with fresh vegetables
f
■
-

so guests can squeeze on extra flavor. For a perfect ac­
companiment try this lim ey Country Cottage Dip. Whirled in
the blender until creamy smooth this dip is a flavorful com­
panion for vegetables and crisp crackers. Or, try spooning a
dollop in baked potatoes for a delicious, low-calorie topping.
A juicy aqueeze of seedless lime brings out the delicate
flavor of fresh fruits, too. Summer melons, especially can­
taloupes, take on added distinction when served with a big
squeeze of lime.
Emerald Lime Fruit Sauce Is an easy, elegant way to dressup simple desserts. Serve u a dip or as a sauce for a medley of
fresh summer fruit.
LIMEY COUNTRY COTTAGE DIP
4 cup fresh Florida lime Juice (about 2 medium times)
4 teaspoon grated lime peel
1 tablespoon honey
1 cup cottage cheese
4 teaspoon dried dill weed
4 xup finely chopped cucumber, drained
Salt to taste

When ns iust too pretty to be msxle. itY natoim w mere 5
a PubiixDei) dose by its ready when you are. with sandwiches.
salads cod cuts, cheeses, even lull-course dinners and a variety
desserts So when
mealtime comes btil
/ V* —
your urge to coo*

L I

Turnovers Welcomed
By Beginning Cooks
Beginning rooks will want to add a basic recipe to their flies.
Savory beef turnovers, especially, will be welcomed by a new
bridegroom.

P u b lix

__
\

^ i n ( i i ii m n i ii[ R i ii tf iii m i 4 H |p

\

doesnt head lor

1 500 OFF

I?

-

26-oe. pfcg.

2

iio im w

,I I

G reat fo r S a n d w ic h e s!

Hoagie R o lls ......
Hot from th s Deli!

Stuffed Cabbage
Escalloped
A pples..................
F resh -B ak ed

Dutch Apple P ie.

McCalls

COOKBOOK C O LLE C TIO N

This week's feature
Caavl lo Coast C ^ ^ Q
looking
’ B A 7

ill ,.»M
I |li
14*v IOC

Patties............. V

READY-TO-TAKE-OUT
DELICIOUS SOUTHERN

»1 “

Fried

GREAT TASTING

B o lo g n a ........... *,* 6 9 *

C h ic k e n

Bar-B-Que
Chicken

*1 "

per lb.

NEXT WEEK S FEATURES
i «*. .i i ... i

C risp. W estern Ic e b e rg

Lettuce........£ £

FROM T H E D ELI

Switl Premium Sliced Olive Loaf
or Pickle A Pimento Loaf or

V a rie ty P a c k ..

looking

59*

Boll, Fry or M ath

White
Potatoes.. 10 £, •1e*
D elicious. G olden

B ananas..... »

25*

Publix B rand "F lo rid a "

Orange
Juice............. X

*1”

Swift Premium Boneless Canned
(MIX OR M A TC H )
DELICIOUS. JUICY
ASSORTED CALIFORNIA

Plums

Juicy, F u st of S e a s o n

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS BEEF

Chuck
Roast

H a m ........................

1

\

per pound

Bartlett
P e a rs.........10 ■„ »1

Bell
P e p p e rs..... 5 ■*, *1

Serve with Cheese Sauce,
Fresh A Tender

Broccoli.......9 9 c

SERVE CHILLED
RIPE. TASTY WESTERN

Jum bo
Cantaloupe

"C ou n try S ta n d " F re s h

Mushrooms.

Shoulder S te a k ....

THIS AO IF F IC T IV I: THURSDAY,
JULY 23 THRU WKDNKSOAV
JULY 29, 1981. CLOSCD SUNDAY.

Fresh. Green

Cauliflower. MU 99*

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef Boneless

Short R ibs.............

Cucumbers.. 5 ■„ *1

Serve Raw with Avocado Dtp,
Sno While

T H E P LA C E FOR
U.S.D.A. C H O IC E B E E F

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Fresh. Crisp

each

SAVE S i OO
A S S O R T E D FLAVORS

Breyers
Ice Cream
h a ll g a llo rr

• I 6*

"Full of Juice", Florida Fresh

Limes.......12

69*

Beautiful, Fresh Cut

R o ses.......... ....

tLim it 2 P le a s e P e r O rd e r)

*249
THE PLACE FOR
DAIRY FRESHNESS
Kraft ‘ S q u eeze" Parkay
(Plastic Bot ) or Miracle
Whipped (Bowl)

M VfOAUT

mao me moaswo

i tin s* 4 ii* .r* H v iei s
•CMSmnixRwitizciv'll II

M argarine... •oo 79*
SAVE 4 1 t
BREAKFAST CLUB
REGULAR QUARTERS

Margarine

Drain peach halve*, reserving 4 cup synip. Moisten chicken
pieces with measured syrup. Empty seasoned coating mix Into
shaker bag. Shake I or 3 chicken pieces i t i time In bag until
evenly coi led. Place in DxWnch baking pen. Bake at 400
degrees for 40 minutes. Place pesch halves In pan and bake i to
10 minutes longer or until chicken Is tender. Spoon pan drip­
pings over peaches. Makes 4 servings.

.

Armour Star B readed Beet
or Pork

O scar Mayer Sliced Beef
or Meal

To cook In electric skillet; Prepare egg mixture as above.
Place filled custard cups In skillet. Fill skillet with very hot
water to level of about 1 Inch, C om . Heal at 3M degrees F.
until water boils, a to u t 4 to 3 minutes. Reduce heat and sim­
mer until knife Inserted near center comes out dean, about 10
to li minutes. Remove immediately from hot water. Serve as
above.

1 can (H ot.) peach halves or 1 can (110l ) mandarin orange
lections.
14 pounds cut-up chicken
1 envelope seasoned coating for chlcke.t-ori*lnal flavor

Dutch L o a f..........

Gelatin Dessert..

n m il

To make filling, In bowl, combine '« cup gravy, beef, peas,
onion, mustard, salt and pepper.
To nuke turnovers, roll pastry into two 10-Inch squares. Cut
each Into 4 small squares. Place about 4 cup mixture on each
square. Fold dough over to form triangle. Seal edges by fluting
or pressing with fork. Arrange turnovers on lightly greased
cookie sheet. Bake at 45&amp;dcgreei for V minutes or until lightly
browned. Meanwhile, In saucepan, combine remaining gravy
and horseradish. Heat; stir occasionally. Serve with tur­
novers. This kitchen-tested recipe makes 4 servings.

BAKED CHICKEN AND PEACHES

D elicious P olish or

Z e sty -F lav o re d

S lIlllM IlllllllfllllllllH iilH IM IH I

SAVORY BEEFTURNOVERS
1 can (104 ounces) beef gravy
I cup finely chopped cooked beef
4 cup cooked peas
1 tablespoon finely chopped onion
I teaspoon prepared inustanl
Doth salt
Dash pepper
' Pastry fair Iw m tu * pie1
&lt;I teaspoons prepared horseradish

in large bowl, beat together remaining Ingredients except
witercress until well blended. Gradually stir In reserved
cucumber and milk mixture. Place six (S at. each) custard
cups in large baking pan. Pour egg mixture Into custard cups.
Place pan on rack In preheated 350 degrees F. oven. Pour very
hot water Into pan to within 4 Inch of top of custards. Bake
until knife Inserted near center cornea out clean, about 20 to 23
minutes. Remove Immediately from hot water. Serve warm or
chilled. Garnish with reserved cucumber slice* and waterc ro s leaves, If desired.

THE PLACE FOR
DELI DELIGHTS

Amish S w is s ......

fj On T h e P u rc h a s e o f
jj A ny L lo y d H a rris s P ie

Serve with oven-fried potatoes and cheese-filled baked
onions or baked tomatoes.

Cut 6 thin cucumber slices. Set aside. Pare, seed and shred
remaining cucumber. Stir In venegar and salt, le t stand li
minutes. Drain well, pressing out excess liquid. Set aside.
In small saucepan over medium heal, cook onion In butter
until tender but not brown, 3 to 4 minutes. Stir In milk. Heat
until very hot. Stir In cheese until melted Remove from heat.

Thoroughly mix all Ingredients in bowl. ChiU 2 to 4 hours to
blend flavors. Serve as a dip or sauce for fresh fruits. Makes
about 14 cups.

Flavorful C h o o se

Wtlh This Coupon ONLY

For those not into making pie mists yet, use frozen or
prepared biicull dough and roll out to make the two 10-Inch
squares needed.

CREAMY CUCUMBER CUTAHOS
( • s e n lags)
Cucumber In custards? Yes! Served warm or chilled, they
make ■ refreshing meal starter, side dish or snack. Though
light, they’re luscious with cream cheese and sour cream
adding richness.
1 medium cucumber ( 10 to 11 os.)
1 tablespoon vinegar
14 teaspoons salt
4 cup chopped onion
1 tablespoon butter
1 cup milk
1 package (J os.) cream cheese, cubed
4 eggs
4 cup dairy sour cream
2 tablespoons flour
1 lea spoon prepared mustard
4 leaspoon dried dill weed
4 teaspoon pepper
Watercress leaves, optional

EMERALD LIME FRUIT SAUCE
14 cups dairy sour cream
2 teaspoons grated lime peel
3 tablespoons fresh Florida lime Juice (about 2 medium
limes I
3 tablespoons maple or maple-flavored sjrup
4 teaspoon ginger

T H E P U B LIX DELI. WHEN IT’S T O O HOT
(OR TO O NICE) T O C O O K .

Florida seedless limes give this vegetable dip and
fruit sauce a sprightly, sweet tart tropical flavor.

Potpourri

Cayenne pepper to taste
Measure lime Juice and peel, honey and cottage cheese Into
container of electric blender. Blend until smooth. Turn Into
bowl. Mix In dill weed, cucumber, salt and pepper, 0x111 for
several hours to blend flavors. Serve as a dip foe fresh raw
vegetable pieces, chips and crackers, or spoon over split
baked potatoes. Makes about 14 cups.

Rn“9*d‘« Butterm*

M ozzarella......!.’•* *1”

Biscuits ........5 ctUL *

Wisconsin C h eese Bar Mild
Horn. Sharp C heddar, or

Scaliest Light n ’ Lively
Assorted

Yog urt.......3

M ozzarella......?»,’ *1ia
»1°

Pauly of Wisconsin Chunk
Style C heese

891

Sweet
Munchee..........M 19

Swiss Mtss A ssorted

Pudding.........£
Dam-Fresh

Light Cream f t

491

K raft's Light n' Lively
Individually-Wrapped Sliced

American .,.***; 89'

I

Cooked Ham
S tale Fair Regular or C h eese

Franks
lur print him from
Publix wiih ill
pruenwd tutor
printrniK

Dam Fresh Small Curd, L arge
Curd, Schm ierkase or Lowfat

Cottage
C h e e s e ............. ‘. S *179

Plumrose Sliced

AUFROUVOA

TH E PLACE

FOR SEAFOODS
S eatccd Treat

Kingfish
S te ak s.......
F ro ze n Fillet

Turbot.......

�Evening Herald, tantorrf, FI.

Leg Of Lamb:
Use Shopping
Savvy To Fit
Into Menu

Mediterranean
lam b Broil calls

for sirloin chops
served on an
intriguing

combination of
llngulnl, zucchini,

la m b merits a place in the shopping cart. Yet this favorite of
connoisseurs and creative cooks, is overlooked by some
shoppers I .a mb can be enjoyed within the confines of a
moderate food budget, especially wilh the application of a bit
of shopping savvy. You'll find that getting better acquainted
wilh this fine meat is extremely rewarding.
It is possible to have the economy of a whole leg of iamb and
at the same lime the convenience of cuts sized for one meal.
For a leg of lamb can be divided by the meat retailer to yield
cuts for three different and delicious meals — a roast, chops
and a stew or soup.
Sure to turn any meal Into a special occasion is a Lamb
Center le g Roast — a leg with sirloin chops and shank
removed. Preparation of this mealy, flavorful roast Is easy (or
It simply cooks unattended to the desired degree of done ness.
Traditionally, lamb has been roasted to well done, however,
more and more diners are discovering the culinary’ delights of
lamb cooked to rare or medium. You will note that the roasting
timetable includes these three stages ot doneness. To dress up
the Umb roast, serve it with a Spiced Peach Sauce, quickly
made with canned sliced peaches and peach preserves.
Sirloin chops, cut from Die top of the leg, ran provide another
delicious and economical meal. In the recipe (or
Mediterranean lam b Broil, the chops are served on an in­
triguing combination of lingulni, zucchini, onion and red or
green pepper. This recipe also can be prepared using
economical blade or arm chops cut from the shoulder.
For still another lamb meal from the leg, make a hearty
stew or soup. Use the shank Ur this and-or Umb trimmed from
the section removed containing the rump bone plus the first
sirloin chop which is irregular. Especially appealing U lam b
and Vegetable Soup that teams chunks of Umb with a medley
of vegetables.
While the family enjoys the mild, deticste flavor of Umb In a
variety of ways, they will be receiving the benefit of many
essential nutrienU. lam b is both high in quality and quantity
of protein, containing all the essential amino acida necessary
to build, maintain and repair body tissues and strengthen the
defense mechanism against infection and disease. Other
important nutrienU in lamb Include the B-vitamins niacin,
thiamin, nbofUvln, U-s and Ik-12 and the mlneraU Iron and
zinc,
ROAST IAMB LEG
7 to 9-pound lamb leg or Mo 7-pound Umb leg or center lamb
roast
Spiced Reach Sauce, if desired
FUce roast, (at side up, on rack in open roasting pan. Insert
meat thermometer so bulb is centered In thickest part of leg,
being careful not to let It rest In lat or on bone. Do not add
water. Do not cover. Roast In a slow oven (325 degrees F .) to
desired degree of doneness. Remove from oven when meat
thermometer registers US degrees F. for rare;
degrees F.
lor medium; I tt degrees F. lor well done. Allow roast to
"stand" In a warm place IS to 20 minutes alter removal (ran
oven. Since roasU continue to cook during this time, they
usually rise approximately 5 degrees F, in Internal tem­
perature, reaching HO degrees F. for rare; 160 degrees for
medium; 170 degree* for well done. For a 7 to 9-pound roast,
allow 13 to 20 minu es per pound for rare; 30 to 23 minute* per
pound for medium; 23 to 30 minutes per pound for well done.
For a 3 to 7-pound roast, allow 20 to 23 minutes per pound for
rare; 23 to 30 minutes per pound far medium; 30 to 33 minutes
per pound far well done. Serve warm Spiced Reach Sauce with
roast, if desired.
Note: Frozen lamb can be defrosted in the refrigerator or
cooked frozen. If leg is cooked frozen, allow l-3rd to ts more
time (at 300 degrees F. to 323 degrees F.) than for defrosted
leg-

onion and red or
green pepper.

ST4V1P
PRICE
SPECIALS
It's assy!
H*t#'l how It W O fkl:
1 Oetf wW •u6*i
Puce
I. &lt;IHCI 'Up Pub«B SI.ftmp P*«c«
tCMKiKBOQAl+l*■'(lu ll cHh#ch
l

BEG PKG , I
PHLSBURY PLUS

1-LB PKG.
OLOE SMITHFIELO

50-CT PKG.
MR COFFEE

2-LITER BOTTLE
DIET OR REGULAR

Cake
Mixes
wm CNNUi |i**t

Sliced
Bacon
V***

Coffee
Filters

Shasta
Cola

tm licit Poe* «rt* SAM

Slump* 1**1 tome «r*tfc p*#rf
PwWi
(UO«Nft&lt;* t«oi|

* A*d***» tot U r « g i pn m eek's

Publix Special Recipe 100°o
Slone Ground

tl e»
MS

tie*

99*

White Tu n a .

R a v io li.......... 'IT

99*
ROU
sja o

Dole

Pineapple
J u i c e ............."i*

W ine ........... *459

Frosting

99*

69*

i

rn n

PUSH ! R estRVIS TMt RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES SOLO

Alka
Seltzer

FAP Bartlett

1

79*

29

FAP

Green Giant 2 V o z . Jar
Whole or Sliced; or 4-oz.
Can of Stems A Pieces

K itty White .'W

(2 0 c O K Label), Laundry
Detergent

,

THE PLACE FOR
FROZEN FOODS

*2 99

(Be O K Label), Pink or White
4 V o z . Bar

D o ve S o a p ... Ur

*1ls
HALF GALLON. ASST.
0 AIRJ FRESH

Assorted

Viva

Ice

N a p k i n s .......79*
Bath Tissue

99*

C re a m

»■*» Ok* »«**• t«*B*

SAVE 20c
FLAVOR PERFECT

SAVE 1 3e
ASSORTED FLAVORS

Mayonnaise

Hawaiian
Punch

3 2 -o z. jar

89*

SPICED PEACH SAUCE

1 can (16 ounces) sliced peaches
lj cup peach preserves
2 teaspoons lemon Juice
l &lt; teaspoon cinnamon
&lt;« teaspoon mint flakes
Drain peach syrup into saucepan. Stir in peach preserves,
lemon Juice, cinnamon and mint flakes; cook alowly 12 to 13
minutes to reduce liquid (o I cup. Add reserved peaches and
continue cooking 2 to 3 minutes or until heated through,
stirTing gently to coat.

4 6 -o z. can

68*

(Limit 1 Piessv. With Other
Pu* ch iles of S3 ot Mo re,
Iid w d m f ell Tobecco Items)

Orange, Lake, Seminole,
A Ooooola Count!** Onlyl

Baked
P otatoes

Busch Beer

2

10-ei
P I*

$ ^ 99

V.V

*0*1
M l

10oi
M l

Sloutter's

99*
99*

&gt;0oi S 1 19

C hicken Pie

PM
SAVE 26c With Dressing
StouMer's .

89*

Turkey
C asserole

S 1 99

SAVE 34c. With Parsley
Noodles. Stoutler s

6-pk. ctn.

M anicotti

F ettucini
A lfredo

SAVE 50C. StouMer s

Lasagna

SAVE 20c. StouMer s

SAVE 30c. StouMer's

*119

SAVE 17c Wilh Cheese or With
Sour Cream A Chives
Penobscot" a

P R E M IU M

C hipped B e ef * 7 *1*9

SAVE 26c With Sauce.
Buitorns

Yams &amp;
Apples

SAVE 30C M'-ute Mam
Concentrate

Orange J u ic e .

'iV

Cheese
Ravioli

*1»

SAVE 20c. Birds Eyt-

Cool W hip

'Xi

Pasta Shells

Fish F ille ts

Treasure Isle Breaded

Chicken &amp;

Macaroni &amp;

lire* *119

B e e f...........

■ Ml

SAVE 18c. StouMer's

Corn Souffle

’i t

89*

1-* 41 iM Kt-fi ea

n -.«
.

H I

IDH

Fantail
*1 J9 Shrimp

.. mV

$2»

IDa*
...... Ml *24»
SAVE 3 6 e . R E G U L A R .
DRIP. E L E C - P E R K .
ADC M A X W E L L H O U S E

eeu*

'Cae-ee *•■•*•** I w i P-w as

Ml

*

119

SAVE 20C. StouMer's Green
Beans A Mushrooms

COME. SPRITE, SUGAR fR E t
IR n it i, TAB. f RESC A, M I l i O
v e u o , nr rise , sugar

Casserole

*AI 99*

_ *a w MR. eta* , vastest v— - —

SAVE 18C. Sto-Kor'S

iflAPE OR STRA W a tR R T. UPTON
U G U IA R OR SUGAR TREE TEA

Scalloped
Potatoes........ iV 89*

Soft Drinks
$ ^ 99

Macaroni A
C h e e se ...........

B pk ( I s .

mV

Coffee

SANFORD PLAZA,
SANFORD

1 - Its. b a g

89

LONGWOOD
VILLAGE CTR„
LONGWOOD

SAVE 20C. StouMer s

79*

1 0 -o z . jar

M&gt;s Paul s Light Balter

SAVE 26c. Stouftef s

Welsh
Rarebit.....

Coffee

tl o* 1 ^ 49
Ml

SAVE 2€c. StouMer's

Noodles

Instant

'l.V 89*

SAVE 24c. StouMer s

*119

SAVE 6 0 c , FO LG ER 'S

Booth Extra Crunchy Original
Fish Ftitels or

Fish S ticks

... mV

* 1 ’»

SAVE 20c, Winter Garden
CaUornta Mixed. Oriental Style
or Mahan Mined

V egetables

V.J* *1 89

&gt;119

SAVE 26c Dtnlom's

SAVE 26C. StouMer's StuMed
Beel. Cheese or Chicken
• m $1S9

Swedish
M eatballs

(Limit 1 P lfiie, Wlh Other
PwrtlMLit of 13 i« Mill,
I i OuRisr ill f ebicce Hems)

UiTil^ WGre'enS^tampsf? l [TilT]^ WGreenS^tampsf? l HiTi]^WGreVnStampsf5l [fijil^WGreVnStamps1^1

*-i™ ,
l*or. Can. RrotMMonal Fo«"tiU t |
Hot Shot Roach A .
it
I ,ix « .« w ,» M i r m u

t *t-r
koine

MEDITERRANEAN UMB BROIL

P eas............... 3 2S *1

Ant Killer

S 1 29

C o ld P o w e r . "V

P e p s o d e n t .....8 8 *

SAVE 40c. StouMer's Deamed

*1

wGre'enStamps

Tom ato
Juice

S h o u t............ * 1 «

59*

FAP Garden

13-01 cans

98*

(1 5 c O K Label), S o l d Pretty
Assorted

99

FAP Whole Kernel or Cream
Style Golden ( 1 6 4 to 17-oz.)

12 - 01 . ca n s

32-02 BOTTLE'
WELCH'S

( 10c O K Label), Liquid
Soil A Stain Remover

SAVE e t c . (30C CM Label).
T oolhpasie

24-oz. pkg

(Limit 1 with
Other Purchase*)

79*

C o r n ............... 3 C

w': 6 9 *

T H E PLACE FOR
H EA LTH A BEAUTY AIDS

Mennen
Stick
Deodorant

36-ct. pkg.

Mushrooms . *C”

11399

W

(Limit 24. P lease)

Fruit
C o c k ta il....... ’fw

Mi#

*»H

Cat Litter

W is k ......

SAVE 70c, HERBAL
REG . SPICE. LIME

SAVE 8 U

Pears............. ‘X

Purina

(35c O K Label), Liquid
Laundry Detergent

P epsodent^

P ick les........ "J* 98*

SCI FREE!

CLimrf | Pteiie e th Other Pure
|*3 ci M-r# E»ctu0*fH} AHTobtc &gt;tfemi)

Plastic

69*

Heinz Ju ice... 6 ‘.i.*.’ *1

$ &lt;

98*

THEPLACE FOR
HOU3EHOLO ITEMS
H a n g in g
P la n te rs

V lasic S w e e t B utter Chips

Food

m,

C ap N Crunch
C e r e a l .......... ’£V *1«9

Apple, Apple Cherry or
Mixed Fruit

Baby

■

mid*

29

(1 5 c OK Label)

89*

T a c o Kit

(Asi4ib&gt;ie ii these

Dog C h o w

*2
G old Medal Plain. Sell-Rising,
or Unbleached

Salad

Dressing

* 1 29

lie.

F lo u r ..............

-'» « U - , | M («

Counties O * Sunrte*
Lake Sem v&gt;*e O at*# Osctote

T e a M i x ........”

Wish-B one Italian, Creamy
Italian or Thousand Island

SAVE 2 6 c . ASSORTED
HEINZ STRAINED

SO
I S

With Lemon, Tetley

G reen Giant Golden Niblets
or Cream Style Corn, Sweet
Peas or Kitchen Sliced
G reen Beans (7 to 0 4 -o z .)

Buffet
Vegetables 3 'Z'

'**
(*»

Sour
Cream

D e rm a ssa g e

Regular Price S 1.49, Lawry's
Super (8.45-02.)

Pillsbury Assorted
Ready-to-Spread

C h e l Boy-ar-dee ABC s or
123's with Meal Balls, or
Sauce &amp; Beef

Seatlest Plain or Krispy

Klondike
B a rs ........

Chicken ot the Sea Water
Pak

Spaghetti
S a u c e ............»1 S9

Sunshine Delicious

Vanilla
W a f e r s ...

Paul Masson Chenin Blanc,
Burg undy, French
Colombard. Chablis or Rose

a o z cu p
BREAKSTONES

22-OZ BOTTLE
(20C OFF LABELI
DISH DETERGENT

•«*
M i l |i*-f
Mia In * 1aw**i

!*«» Im*«1

Ragu Regular or Extra Thick
Plain, Meal, or Mushroom

*119

Serve with Cheese, Sunshine

Hi-Ho
Crackers

O-* *«*•• l&gt;*w«

ente I#**

iff

till it'*4 (t*mi it M il

Whole Wheat
B r e a d ....... 2 £ £

Wednwday, July 11, IM I— &gt;1

-----------—-*•------ i s s s r ,
------------■*
Satlia,

Wood Plus Furnituro

Ij
2 iinMMtM,)) a w n m u

............................................................................—
lSO-el
Rkg .
--------1

. Otapcrsne Baby
* Wash Clothss
)

l « K . . . M , l l M i l l .M i l

IS o i. Jar,

............— •— &lt;— —
ir s
-* 9S 01 . Pkg., Aiaortae Scanti

Bright Day Dressing
4 1IHK..1 M )ri i* t n im it

Twlci is Fresh
Air Freshaner
1 l" K M M II

IHI,

|

4 to 6 lamb blade, arm or sirloin chops, cut to 1 inch thick
Salt and pepper
3 medium zucchini, cut into 4-Inch slices
1 onion, cut into 12 wedges
1 red or green pepper, cut Into strips
1 clove garlic, minced
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 teaspoon basil leaves
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon marjoram leaves
Cooked lingulni, If desired
Place chops on rack In broiler pan so surface of meat Is 3
inches from heat. Broil 3 minutes, season chops with salt and
pepper and turn; broil second sides 3 minutes and season with
salt and pepper. Meanwhile, prepare vegetables by slowly
cooking zucchini, onion, red or green pepper and garlic In
butter or margarine in large frying-pan 4 minutes. Sprinkle
basil, 4 teaspoon salt and marjoram over vegetables, cover
tightly, and continue cooking 4 minutes or until tender. Serve
broiled lamb chops with lingulni, If desired, and cooked
vegetables. 4 to 6 servings
Note: U m b chops may also be panbroiled.
U M B SCOTCH SOLT’EH STEW
1 pound (approximately) bonelesi lamb
1 tablespoon cooking 1st
4 cup water
1 can (II ounces) tomatoes
3 medium carrots, cut into A* to 1 inch slices
2 ribs celery, cut Into 4 Inch lUcts
I medium potato, pared and cut Into A* Inch pieces
1 onion, quartered
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon chill powder
Dash hot pepper sauce
Cut Umb Into 1-inch places and brown in cooking (at In Dutch
oven. Pour off drippings. Add witcr; cover tightly and cook
slotfly 1 hour. Remove fit from cooking liquid. Break up
tomatoes and add to meat. Add carrots, celery, potato, onion,
sail, chili powder and hot pepper sauce. Cover tightly and
continue cooking slowly 30 minutes. U a thicker soup Is
desired, combine 1 tablespoon flour with 3 tablespoons water.
Add to cooking liquid and cook, stirring constantly, until
thickened. 4 servings of 1-4 cups etch.
Note: Rump, shank and sirloin chop car. be browned and
cooked for first hour before removing meat, cutting It Into
pieces and returning meal to the cooking liquid. Two lamb
she inks can be used for this recipe.

�*

BLONDIE

IB-Evenlng Her aid. 4*nL&gt;rd. FI.

Wednesday, July 32. Itll

by Chic Young

9 9

0

Answer to Praviou* Purrta
46 Plant fluid
47 Found matt
I Duet
S I ThackarayI
4 Secretary's •'
Mitt Sharp
rot
SS Pottnual ttaal
6 PUyfut child S8 Poatic toot
12 Tike * meil S I Comput
1] Sutfu
point
14 Become
58 lata Yugostsv
sound
laadar
15 Tritan
80 Eiultation
18 lirgs fish 6 1 Rant out
17 High |La()
62 Actor Country
18 Ottoman
63 Clua
20 Coding
64 Hopa ol
vessel
flowers
35 Wordt of
10 Songstress
22 Food fith
danial
Smith
24 Air haro
DOWN
11 City in ltra*l 31 Indian maJ
25 Phratat
38 Jatt
18 Egg (Fr)
28 Engluh
1 flnrafia
41 0al&lt;ita
21 Applia*
county
England
43 Joint
(rotting
12 Social club
2 Float
45 Whmny
Jebbr)
23 laatat
47 Siama
3 Diractor
34 Wm* c u l t
25 Summon
Pramingar
48 Ptnniy1&gt;ania
38 Sailor
26 Malt cut
port
4 Namai
37 Food
27
Firttrata
48 Small amount
5 Sacond
contamar
(comp wd)
50
Modarn
pa
non
38 Ontnl
26 Court cata
pamtar
6 Carf a
38 Franth
52 Pnton room
IfadamIf k (pi | 30 Oita
mounllml
7 Japanata port 3 1 Mika monty 53 Part ol tha lag
40 Opponent
54 Abommibla
I Graak math* 32 Mad&lt;al
42 Dictatorship
pictura (comp
tnowman
matictin
44 Author
57 Guyt
tad)
8 Scrttm
Flaming

ACROSS

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3

8

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8

7

9

12

13

14

15

16

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25

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44
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by Bob Montana

ARCHIp

1

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57

56

55

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60

61

62

63

64

53

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it

By BERNICE BKDE OSOL

For Thursday, July 23, 19 8 )

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; M EEK

TUE M6APT- BVFASS
OPERATIC*/

TOtOlfcHT WE
OF THE LATEST
V
DEVELOPMENT
IN
LIFE1
ARE
GOING
TO
REJECTED
SAVING TECHNIQUES
1
DISCUSS THEPROS AND CONS... ^fORTUE REJECTED LOVER - j
&amp;C0UOD
SOCIETY
MCETIUG
^ u ia ir^

"J

H

J i

j

by Ed Sullivan

PRISCILLA'S POP

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CAPRICORN ( Dec. 2Wan.
19) Someone whose Ideals are
not on a par with yours may
try to influence you wrongly
today. Ignore his or her
suggestions. Maintain your
own high standards.

I eat meals with as much
high fiber as I can and my
bowels are OK. although I
take Metamucil once a week
since my diverticulitis attack.
I would tike to know what
foods to avoid as I certainly do
not want another attack if I
can help it.

DEAR DR. LAM B-M y
husband's doctor told him he
has marked obesity with
possible beginning Pick­
wickian syndrome. We have
looked and asked everyone
but we cannot find out what It
is. Could you please send us
something on that?
DEAR R E A D E R -T h e
term derives from Mr.
Samuel Pickwick, the fat
character in Charles Dickens’
novel, "Pickwick Paper*."
The character had frequent
episodes of dropping off to
sleep.
The extrem e
obesity
inhibits the normal movement
of the chest, interfering with
normal respiration. Since
breathing is inadequate, the
body doesn't get rid of enough
carbon dioxide. This affects
the body’s chemical balance
which in turn is responsible
for the tendency to have
frequent naps. I presume your
husband's doctor thinks your
husband's obesity is causing
him to have inadequate lung
function.

I am sending you The
Health U tte r number 5-6,
Divertlculosis, to give you
more details about diet and
management. O thers who
want this issue can send 75
cents with a long, stamped,
seif-addressed envelope for it

ARUARIL'S (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Associates will be willing
to be helpful today, provided
what you aik comes In the
form of • request rather than
a demand.

WIN AT BRIDGE

PISCES | Feb. 30-March 20)
Your financial prospects for
en terp rises
that
you
inaugurate look very en­
couraging today. Joint ven­
tures might prove to be
anything but profitable.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19)
In your negotiations with
another today, neither of you
may
achieve
optimum
resulU. If, however, each
ircaU the other fairly, both
will be satisfied.

gives a great mass of Infor­
mation and the part on play
is really worth having The
part on bidding la based too
much on British bidding
‘l, which are consplcuously unsucceasful against
Standard American in its
advanced forms.
Today’s hand shows an
avoidance play. South Is In a
normal three notrum p
contract. The five of spades
is led South takes East's
queen with his see and must
set up diamonds without let­
ting East gain the lead He
does so by leading a dia­
mond to dummy’s king and
returning to his own nine
■pot
There are possible compli­
cations here. Give East
West'a five of diamonds and
compensate by moving
Easts three of hearts over
lo West Now West shows
out on the second diamond
and declarer can only get
three diamond trickj with­
out letting East in
Now he must extend the
avoidance play to the club
suit. He cashes dummy’s ace
aad leads a second club.
East plays the lack, so South
must put up hit king and
hope that West bolds the last
club He does and South still
makes his contract

rmi

MIRTH

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♦ A 9 11
WEST
EAST
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0J 4
♦ Q 74
♦ qio4
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SOUTH
♦AJI
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♦ A ll

LIBRA (SepL ZFOcL 23)
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Should disagreements arise This is one of those days
today between you and your where doing for others may
mate, you're apt to feel he or have lo take precedence over
she la lo blame. This might your own needs. The tasks
not be entirely true. Be ob­ will be harder if your attitude
jective.
Is not cheerful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 14-Nov. 23)
Your chance* lor success are •
quite good today, but there ti
also a possibility you might
m ake things harder lor
yourself than necessary.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) There arc certain
people in whom you can put
your faith today. They won't
let you down. There art others
who you know from ex­
perience It would be unwise to
depend upon.

to me, in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019.
Even between attacks it Is
probably best to avoid foods
that contain seeds. The
concern is that one will lodge
in the pocket and cause
complications. Otherwise you
should eat a well-balanced
diet that does not disturb your
colon function. That means
avoiding foods that cause you
g al People with symptoms
often do well to avoid spices,
coffee (both decaffeinated
anl the regular kind), lea and
colas. Bran is a good source of
fiber but may form too much
gas for some people, In which
case a greater reliance is
placed on bulk formers.

At one time bland, low fiber
menus were recommended
for divertlculosis. Today most
doctors agree that If you do
not have one of the com­
plications, you should cal a
diet that includes bulk. The
Metamucil and other bulkforming agents are used to
help this.

HOROSCOPE
YOL’R BIRTHDAY
July 23, IM!
Gtve vent lo your artistic,
dramatic, creative or musical
talents this coming year. By
using your gifts properly, you
could open up sn entirely new
field for yourself.
LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22) If
you expect others to overlook
your shortcomings today, you
must be equally tolerant ol
theirs. lawk for their virtues
instead of their faults. Find
out more of what ties ahead
for you in the year following
your birthday by sending for
your copy of AstroTiraph.
Mail |1 for each to AstroGraph, Box 469, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10018. Be sure to
specify birth date.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
situation in which you feel you
are operating at ■ disad­
vantage can be readjusted
today by speaking to the
proper party.

DEAR DR. IuAMB—Three
months ago I experienced a
very sudden and unexpected
stuck of diverticulitis that
put me in the hospital for
eight days. The condition was
cleared through intravenous
liqukis and antibiotics. Then I
had a hernia operation but I
am back to golf and dally
walks.

When you have an acute
inflammation you have to be
treated differently than you
would between attacks or with
mild symptoms unrelated to
inflammation, bleeding or
perforation. Your letter in­
dicates that you were on in­
travenous fluids so your
condition would not be
aggravated by food during the
acute stage.

■
43

L

40

Solved By Diet

DEAR
READER-Divertirulosls of the colon refers to
small pockets that develop
along the colon. In some ways
they a r t like a small ap­
pendix. Indeed, when one gets
inflamed It can cause the
symptoms and findings of
appendicitis. Many people
with divertlculosis have no
symptoms.

21

19

18

10

Colon Problems

♦ K I 54

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: South
Wni

Nenk

Eail

Sh U

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Pm

Pm

I'm

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
E verything will be much
easier today if you try to go
along with the will o( the
majority rather than buck the
tide. Strive to be cooperative.

INT

Opening lead +5

CANCER (June 21-July22)
Your
possibilities
(or
achieving, especially in
material or carter areas, are
quite good today, but take
care you don't conduct
yourself unbecomingly.

By OtwaM Jacoby
sad Alan Sonlag
The Merrimack Book Ser­
vice of Salem. N.H, is dis­
tributing "T h e Bridge
P li y a r 'i
A lp h ab etical
Handbook" by T errtncs
Reese and Albert Dormer It

(a n t ru m cfTzxnusz uss »

ANNIE

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Leonard Starr

Bob Thavts
iT H6 NECESSARY,
THRCUai MN OESK M W TUG*

-PEOPLE IMCH WUCJCSO
TrtffT LW f
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*0WTOSWniEr fYFEfc/MMf w r

FAMILIES, AfiO-

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PAPERS, WGEtA? OeWALflrWTtttS

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TESSAN

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEDS

FLETCHER'S LANDING

by Douglas coffin

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�I I * *

Wednesday. July 21.1TI1— f 8

Evening Her*Id. Santord. FI.

Vigilantes Blamed For
Death O f County Bully
MARYVILLE, Mo. (U Pll
— Kenneth Re* McElroy was
the terror of Nodaway
County, a bully, or so hi*
detractors said. He had shot
at least two men and his fists
had hurt many others.
On a hot summer night
almost two weeks ago, about
GO of the 440 residents of
Skidmore, Mo., encircled his
pickup truck outside a corru­
gated tin bar called the D4G
Tavern and someone shot
McElroy, 47, once in the head
with a deer rifle.
A *l*-member coroner’s

Legal Notice
IN IN C CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE CO UN TY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Flit Number II 1)» CP
CNheltleil
IN R f : E S T A T E OF
G E R TR U D E B D IN G F E l O ER
OtCRMRd

NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
TO ALL PER S O N S H A V IN G
CLA IM S
OR
DEM AND S
AGAINST T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
AND ALL O T H E R
PERSONS
i n t e r e s t e d in t h e

VOU
ARE
N O TIFIE D
IN I

es ta te

HEREBY
the
«d

m lm ifritio n of th* M i n t of
G E R TR U D E B D IN G F E L O E R .
deemed. Fll* Number I t 1U CP.
it pending in the Circuit Court for
SenrunoleCounty, Florida, Probate
Division, IN* « J d r m of which i*
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford, Florida 577n
The per
tonal repretentatiyt of the estate
% SIMON L
D IN G F E L O E R
*now address it 4*o7 Wat rout.
Tampa, Florida 334(7* The name

and address of the personal
representatives attorney a rt set
forth below
All persons having claims or
demands against the estate are
required.
W IT H IN
TH R EE
MONTHS F R O M T H E D A T E OF
THE FIR ST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T IC E , to file with the
clerk of the above court a written
statement of any Claim or demand
they mar have Each claim must
be mwrillng and must indicate the
bass for the claim, the name and
address of the creditor or hit agent
of attorn*if. and the amount
claimed it the claim is not yet
due. the date when it will become
due shall be stated If the claim H
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature of the uncertainty shaft ibe
stated If the claim *t secured, the
security shall be described The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies of the ctaim to the clerk to
enable the clerk to m ail one copy
«o each personal representative.
All persons interested in the
estafk to whom a copy of this
Notice el Administration has been
mailed art required, W ITH IN
TH R EE M O N TH S F R O M TH E
D A TE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS

TONIGHT'S TV
,

EVEMHO

Jury Tuesday ruled McElroy
was killed by “person or
persons unknown."
The decision was reached
despile the testimony of his
wife Trina McElroy, 24, who
said she could identify the
man by name who stepped
from the ranks of the angry
vigilante mob and fired.
"Police Just never liked my
husband," Mrs, M cElroy
sobbed in a telephone inter­
view, explaining why her
eyewitness report had not led
to an arrest.
McElroy,
known
as
"Kenres" by both his friends

and enemies, had an ex­
tensive arrest record.
Police said he previously
had been charged with
chicken theft, attempted Jail
break, rape and attempted
murder. He was convicted of
a misdemeanor in an at­
tempted bribery case, then
was convicted of shooting a
Skidmore grocer.
That final case was on
appeal and he was out on bond
at the time of his death.
"We didn't want our lives
the way they were with
McElroy around, but I can't
believe anyone around here is
the kind to end the situation
with a bullet," Ken Hunter,
president of the American
National Bank of Skidmore,
IN THE c i r c u i t c o u r t f o r
said in a recent interview.
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
An autopsy has already
Flit Number I M f l CP
determined the cause of
Divl&amp;fan
McElroy's death to be a
IN RE ESTA TE OF
OEBORAM K A Y E s c h i s t l e
wound inflicted July 10 with a
D t eta tad
highpowered rifle. Missouri
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
law requires an inquest
TO ALL PERSONS H A V IN G
CLAIM S
OR
D EM ANDS
whenever a coroner finds a
AGAINST TH E ABOVE E S T A T E
death caused by violent
AND A LL O TH E R PERSONS
means, said prosecutor David
IN TE R E S TE D IN TH E E S T A T E
VOU
ARE
HEREBY
Baird.
N O T IF IE D
that
th t
ad
Six
witnesses
w ere
m iniitrafion of th« e tta tf of
questioned for about one hour
Deborah Kaye Schliflt, dtcfAtcd
Fll* Number II li t CP. it pending
at the Inquest hearing.
n the Circuit Court for Seminole
Evidence from more than ISO
County, Florida, Probate Division,
pages of reports and about 90
the ethjrett of which it P O
Drawer C, Santord. FI J W I
leads compiled by 23 law
The per tonal rrpreient alive of
enforcement officers was also
the fttete it Ethel L Coilint whote
introduced, Baird said.
addrett it JJ04 Savoy Drive.
Orlando, Florida ITtCH The name
In two hours It was over, the
and addrett of fhe personal
obligation of the sta tu te
rrpreientallve't Attorney are tel
having been satisfied —
forth below
All pertom having claims or
although, officially, the in­
demands against fhe estate are
vestigation is still continuing.
required,
W IT H IN
TH R EE
The
prosecutor
said
MONTHS FRO M TH E D A T E OF
THE FIRST P U B L IC A T IO N OF
coroner's Juries can make no
THIS N O TIC E, to file with the
definitive ruling, such as
clerk of the above court a written
naming a suspect, but they
statement of any claim or demand
they may have Each claim must
can suggest grounds on which
be in writing and must indicate the
to proceed.
basis for the claim, the name and

800
r
Io (D O N E W S
ISlANOY QAlFTtTH
(1 0 ) r o m a g n o l t s

address of the credit or or hit agent
or attorney, and the amount
claimed M the claim it not yet
due, the date when if will become
due shall be stated it the claim it
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature of the uncertainty shall be
stated if the claim it secured, the
security shall be described The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies of the claim to fhe clerk to
enable the c«*rk to mall one copy
to each personal representative
Ail persons interested In the
estate to whom a copy of this
Notice of Administration has been
mailed are required, W tTH tN
TH R EE M O N TH S F R O M TH E
O ATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
NOTICE, to tile any objections N O TIC E, to file any objection*
they may have thw cltatTe4UprThg't*thef may have that challenges the
validity . t the, decedent
_ ,s wits I
validity of the decedent's will, the
trto n
qualifications of the p
personal
qualifications of the personal
representative. or the venue or
representative, w the venue or
• Jurisdiction of the court,
Jurisdiction of the court
ALL CLA IM S, D EM A N D S . AN D
ALL CLAIM S, d e m a n d s , AN O
O BJECTIO N S NOT SO F IL E D
O BJECTIO NS NOT SO F IL E D
WILL BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
WILL BE F O R E V E R D A R N E D
Daft of the first publication of
Date of fhe first publication%of
this Notice of Administration duly
this Notice of Administration July
\S 1*11
77. 1*11
fJmon L Dingtelder
Ethel L Collins
As Personal Representative
as Personal Representative
of fhe Estate of
of the Estate or
G E R TR U D E B D IN G F E L O E R
Deborah Kaye Schistle
Deceased
Deceased
A TTO R N E Y FOR PER SO NAL
A TTO R N E Y FO R P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E
Susan A England
ROGER L B E R R Y .
LEG AL C L IN IC OF E N G L A N D
P O D RAW ER 0 .
l
C H EEK , P A
110
EAST
C O M M E R C IA L
W la st Highway 4M
S TR EET
Altamonte Springs, F L 17701
SANFORD. F L O R ID A Uf?|
Telephone DOS) M* 4400
Telephone JOS J2J 4121
Publish July 77. 77. IW l
Publish July IV n .
D E k *4
DEK t )

Legal Notice

ta b u

’ lasagne' (R)
£0$
3 J ( 17) FATHER KNOWS BEST

030
o 21 NBC NEWS
T i 0 CBS HEWS
&lt; 7 3 0 ABC NEWS
f t (35) CARTER COUNTRY
ID (10) JUUA Ch ild AND COM­
PANY “Br easiest Party” (R|

8:35
a (1 7 ) THATOIRl

700
o r hew s
T ) 0 P M UAOAXINE A &lt;*a&gt;gna&gt;
makes lug
a aaft-proctaOTiad chaw
gang* * put to IP* Ian. Cfel TNI
mates a Naan vegetable a,to. the
Sh*dfltonIh* 1111*INngt k i i n » .
nag* Cathie Maw goat behmd th.
K*naa at Th. FUntuonaa *studio
(7 0 JOKER 5 WHO
U , (35) BARNEY MILLER
0 (10) MACNEIL / IEHRER

Legal Notice

r epo r t

7:05

a (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

7:30

0

TO TIC TAC DOUGH

BARBS
Phil P a storet
Our neighbor says he's not
losing a daughter in mar­
riage — hex once more
gaining ihr use ol the (amily
Jalopy
1 verily every Ihing completely — )ou re joit a
nltpicker.

bJmTI

L iA

) 1
Ideal gill lor your favor­
ite long winded senator a
caucus clock.
People who lose their cool
should have had Ihetr air
conditioners ehecked belore
running lime.

•

NOTICE OF SHE RIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY g i v e n
tha* by virtue of fthif certain W rit
of EfttaitJon itiuwi out of And
under tht teal of Ih* C O U N T Y
Court of Semtnotf County, Florida,
upon « final judgement rendered
in the a torn* id court on the 4lh
day of M «y, A D It'll, in that
certain cate entitled, Richard G
Rfinhardi Plaintiff, v* Cathy
Hoffman, Defendant,
which
afo rru -d Write of Eaecuilon wat
delivered to me a* Sheriff of
Seminole County, Florida, and I
have levied upon the following
described property owned by
Cathy Mairman, said property
being' located in Seminole County,
Florida ,
more
p a rtic u la rly
deter‘bed a* fellow*
One tfTI Chevrolet Chevetfe, red
in color 10 No IBOlElYtAJJ/a
itored at Dave Jone* Wrecker
Service. Fern Perk, Florida
and the undersigned a* Sheriff of
Seminole County, Florida, witl at
It 00 A M o n t h t » r d day of July.
A D (l it , offer tor sal* and self to
the highest b*dder, for cash,
subject to any and atl eiittm g
Hen*, at the Front (West) Door of
the Seminole County Courthouse in
Santord. Florida, th t above
deter ibed personal property
That said sale *t being mad* to
satisfy the terms of said Writ of
E i ecu! ion
John E - Folk,

Sheriff Semlnofe
County, Florida
Publish July I, I. IS L 71 1*1!
DCK I

Nice

5:20

( T O 150,000 PVRAUIO
(7) O FAMILY FEUO
i f 135) RMOOA
0 ( 1 0 ) DICK CAVETT

WEDNESDAY

thing
the tale
ing shout
i

sho
can go lo bed earl) without
leellng that )ou'rr missing
something

K (17) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
(MONI

5:30

7:35
Q
(17) BASEBALL Richmond
Bu r n «t Sr*eu»e O w N
8:00
(1 ® REAL PEOPLE F«tw «1 •
cut floclor, sun isnrung compMillon. • •hrttimj conlMt an InOien
who u c c m i V i , lought th. gtnurnment ovw trtbN lenfl (R&gt;
(D O
th e w h ite shadow
IHm j*&lt;&gt; t chine* 10 cut • r*cfl,U
(H|

(D o

MOVIE
CyiAStY (tM 'l
John Forsyth*. Lire)* Ivsni Th*
patriarch of a ***lthy D*nv«r o*
tamify un*a»h*s strong fMLngs of
*ng*r tnd r*t*ntm*nl horn h* off
■prmg »h*n h« m*r,*s hn **cr*

i T f i s i MOVIE

ShoarJoan ' (C)

( t»73) 0**n Martin Rocs Mudion
A than ft i oM hwno turns out to b*
■ bank robbar

(0 (10) n a tio n a l q eo o r a p h ic
specia l Gorilla EG Mtnhtf
hosts * took tt m* short i of loo
Oracles d**t*t«4 mOihduM snfl
suaniisis aho ar* aorsmg to
ssrur, that th* isigast ot th* graat
apas float not tt* victim lo avtinclion (R|
900
Q QD DiFFBCNT STROKES WJ«f«
has prob**"'i i*concwog M o rfh l
at a poor black youth wtth hi* Cur­
rant Ida of k»*jry (RJQ

(D O THE OtRL. THE OOLO
WATCH ANO EVERYTHING A«4*t'ty youngi 'man diacovar* that »h«
gold watch ha hat inharitad from
his uncia has magteal quabttas

ffl (10) DIRECTED BY JOHN
FORD Ckp* from ovW two ddtan
clatKC Wm* .and Warviawt with
Jamas StiwarL Hanry Fonda and
John Wayna highaght th*s rafrot*
pactrva on tha mowamakinQ car
of daactor John Ford Nan atad”by
Orton Wartas

9:30
O (® THE FACTS OF LIFE Bias
bacomat imoNad m an mtanta
compafition with tnothar stuflan!
that laadt to larious contaguancat

(Rig
10:00
( 3 i|j OL*NCY a maflcal aiamav
ar utma* auutas on* of Ouincy I
most ratcmciad coMaguat of tor-

srtnguosmurflar (R|

le g o! Notice
N O TICE TO BIO
Nolle* Is h«rtby g»v*n that th*
City of Lafc* Mary. Florida, of
Stminol* County, Florida, will
r*c#ivt**al*dbtdl until 4 JO F M ,
July 17. tftl. at th* City Hall IIS
East Crystal La** Avenue, Lak*
Mary. Florida, for on* ( I ) 1*1
Modal Full 111*, or Immediate
Pursuit VahiCt*. with full polic*
packaga
Saaiad bids will b#
opened and raad at th* City
Council Meat mg, July 77. If 11. at
tOOPM
Specifications may b* bbtaintd
from th* City Clark. Lak* Mary
City Halt, IIS East Crystal Lake
Avcnu*. Lak* Mary, Florida
S Connia Major
City Clark
City Of L#k« Mary
Publish July 71 ,77 &amp; 1*1
D EK t*

5:45
a (17) WORLD AT LARGE (WED,

NEWS

a (17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON,
TUE.FR1)

Hanfly anchors cmarsgs of th*
flay s tclrvttm Pom Washrgton.

OC

555

11:35
a (17) MOVIE ' Croataaranr
not II Hobart Hooks. Oaram, sraia
12:00
(T&gt; a

BT ARSKY ANO HUTCH

®
O
LOVE BOAT Invtatbr*
Maniac Barnaflaiia Slant. Canon
Dana
Saptamhar Son Danfl
Haitaihofl. Bhailay Ftbsraa.
Paakaboo Gordon Jump, Paggr
Cast |R|
12:30
C l '3j TOMORROW Goans Th*
Knack MPAA prtslfltnt Jack
Valanla

(f O BLACKAWARENESS(WED)
(!) o THIRTYMINUTES(TMU)
(J o HEALTHFIELD(FHt)

I pwcM horny dipped fried thicken. mesh
Pflt.liwi.nd envy, cola lU* i« 4 1 hot bultor
tiltin' biocult* Honty won request.

Bail Brand

■

SMOKED
SAUSAGE

S I
1

Hormel Skinned * Devtlned

f h Wj

I5?

1

Valley DaM

*k m

VIRGINIA
SMOKED BACON

3 l
1

Georgia Grade 'A'

■■ J

WHOLE FRYING
\ \
CHICKENS Cut-up *tc Lb. fl#
Frttli Deity

GROUND
CHUCK

6:30
(]1 O E 0 ALLEN
6:45
O H IO ) AM WEATHER

OPEN HtM e.m. ■19 P-*- E.cogl Frt. A Sol. Ctolng &lt;•)*• A *.
IWt Frondi Avo.
tlN.Hwy.tr.fi
(Hwy. 11-12)
CotMborry
Son4ord

305
a (1 7 )F U N T )M E

3:30
fl.1i (35) THE FLINTSTONES
0 | tO) OVER EASY

3:35
a (1 7 )TM E FL IN TB TO N E S

(D (10) SOUTH BOUNO (TMU)

655

400

(D 110) SAILING. SAILING (TRI)

(D O QOOO MORNING FLORIDA

MOVIE
JOHN OAVIOSON
MERV GRIFFIN
5) SUPERMAN
3) SESAME STREET (R )g

S

12:05

7:00

a (17) FREEMAN REPORTS

0 ® TODAY

12:30

(7) O

MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
(T) O QOOO MORNING AMERICA
( 0 ( 3 5 ) FRANKENSTEIN JR ANO
THE IMPOSSIBLES (MONI
a
(3 5 ) BiRDUAN ANO THE
GALAXY TRIO (TUE)
m (35) SPACE GHOST I ONO
BOY (WED)
O i l 35) FANTASTIC FOUR (THU)
35) HERCULOnSlFRI)
10) V IL U ALEGRE

0 141 NEWS

(J

O

THE TOUNQ ANO THE

RESTLESS
(T Q RYAN S HOPE
© (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

405

a i 1 f ) T M E ADOAMS FAMILY

4:30
a (35) I DREAM O f JEANNIE

IX) ( 10) THIS OLD HOUSE (MONI
0 ( 1 0 ) SLIM CUISINE (TUE)

4:35

tD 110) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

a (1 7 1M AUL

500

s n , SPOLETO It (THU)
0 ( 1 0 ) FAST FORWARO (FRI)

7:05
a (17) FUNTIME
7:25

® n HOGANS HEROES
© (35) WONDER WOMAN
0 ( 1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS

1:00
0 ( ' OATS OF OUR LIVES
m 0 ALL MY CHILDREN
M (35) MOVIE
0 (10) HERE TO MAKE MUSIC
(MON)
0 ( 10) EVENING AT SYMPHONY
(R) (TUE)
0 (10) A DANCE OF TWO COUN­
TRIES CHINA ANO AMERICA

® TOOAY IN FLORIOA
f c) Q, QOOO MORNING FLORIOA

7:30

0 III TOOAY
O QOOO MORNINO AMERICA
I t (35) BANANA SPLITS
GO ( tO) SESAME STREET (R) g

g)

505
a ( 17) OZ21E ANO HARRIET

5:30
I ® GILLIGAN 3 ISLAND
) M - A ‘ B*H
, J new s
3 (TO ) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R)

5:35

(WE Ol

a (17) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

600
( i l Q CAPTAIN KANOAROO
© (35| FRED FlINTSTONE ANO
FRIENDS

94

8:05
U (17) LASSIE

8:25

C A

W EEKLY
FU R N ISH E D

C A V A L IE R
M O T O R IN N
3200 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford

H ® TODAY
(7l O GOOD MORNINO AMERICA
iJl (35) GREAT SPACE COASTER
( D l l O ) MISTER ROGERS(H|

(ON LAKE ADA)

8 35

bedroom

• 40 Fool Pool
• Mtid S r n ic i
• 24 Hour Phona S arvkt
• II Ch«nntl Cabl* TV
• My* Enlfftammant
f Night! In Loungo
• Ftm tly Rfilaurant
Eflicitncy Apts Availablt
At llifhfty Highar flat*
• SpfC'iaf Du taunt On
MeAlhly Halts

(305) 371-0410

a (1 7 ) MV THREE SONS

9:00
0 (f ) HOUR MAGAZINE
(!) 0 DONAHUE

if

MADAME KATHERINE

(to) SESAME STREET|R)g

I’A IM •I AH1&gt;

9:05

P r »I -

a (1 7 ) FAMILY AFFAIR

l H V M A L H AD R I A D I M .

P rte e n l

-

F u tu re

H I UN I I A D U f l O N A U A ) M IN S

9:30
a (35) ANDY GRIFFITH

• LITE 'LO VE • MAHRIAGE • 81 S4NISS

9:35
M (171I DREAM Of JEANNIE

CON a WOOD

1000
Q 4) BULLSEYE

BEEN IN BUMNEfifi EOH 5 0 VCAHS
IN PRIVACY OF MY HO ME

( 305)

iT&gt; O fnc m a ro Sim m o n s
© (3 5 ) (LOVE LUCY
0 ( i o ) m is t e r r o o e r s ir )

HOURS 8 A M
■ 9 P M Clnkt-tl S un day
X BLIK K U NOR1H Of U O G tK A L H K U
14111)

831-4405

*ra ilia im win wakMHM

11

AHSt.ee t Ce tottl I raw fhe CM I t«»e* M«hsv

Hl» 00

10:08

k. UOOWsfi. Urn l m i

a(17) MOVIE

A rth u flto ch e rs
L , P R IC E
'2 'S A L E ^

1:35
dX (17) MOVIE
Th* Batchcombat ( IB551 Hobart Nawion
GV»* Johns
0

2:00
( j DAXY DEVOTIONAL

3:15
U ( 17) MOVIE Costl Of SktNion (IMS) Richard Todd. Data
Robartton

The Meal You Can't Make at Home.

3:40

C U P COUPON

1 Lb*. Of Mcr.

BULK
SAUSAGE

MORMNO

&gt;1
I8?
&gt; 1 19

Price

8:15
0 ( 1 7 1 RATPATROL (THU)

when you buy ■

[TJFioyd Theatres |

Shrimp and Rah
Platter at regular price.
ia*vfF«ga and tia no! iiMBlgiwfl C * plfH ; 7 21II
Not laixf mth any oth*r ditcounl offai

MAT. "*Y '»• » ■ " « Q Q (
w is
A l l SEATS y y

llt t S

•im

Price

"

1

N E X T T O M R . C * F R I E D C H IC K E N

323-4528

W hen

(flee« 'aye and las not included) Eapifat t Jt It
Noi »a«*&lt;j with any otha* dhicowhl offer
■

HEYI KIDSI
Don't Forget To
Clip The Ad In Each
Mondayi' Herald For
The

you buy ■

Rah and Chicken
Pletler at raguiar pika.

U IU IS

LUNCH WAGON
FLESH GORDON

This coupon entitles bearer to:
1/2 off regular price of a

Fish &amp; Chicken
Platter

Bn.

&gt;:M ONLY
H A e e iiM Poeoia

RAIDERS of D m
LOST ARK

SEAFOOD

C U P COUPON

12 OFF r

i

■

This coupon entitles bearer to:
1/2 off regular price of a

Shrimp &amp; Fish
Platter
Arthur
Tftadia
lets.

H en-

6:00
® O
MARCUS WELBY. MO.
(TUt-fRO

K /d d fe S h o w s

PHONE ORDER AHEAD

12 OFF

fiiBHroaaaM

FRIED CHICKEN
••IT’S HONEY DIPPED"

1200
0 i i ) CARO SHARKS
ii)b ® O N E W S
© (35) THE WORLD OF PEOPLE
(D 110 COOK IN CAJUN (MON)
ffi ) 10) ROMAONOU S TABLE (R)
(TUE)
ID (10) MAGIC METHOO OF OIL
PAINTING (WED)

6:05
a (17) HOLLVWOOO REPORT

say, Ruth Gordon

■

Our Own

lam as %$c/pe

AFTERNOON

® Q SUNRISE
3 1 (3 5 ) JIM BARKER

1:10
0 ) o MOVIE Aba Uncoin In HR
not* IB Wi l tsroi Raymond Mss-

§*J

BABY STEER
LIVER

FAMOUS RECIPE'S REGULAR DINNER

300
B ® TEXAS
,Y 0 GU1WNG UO H T
-.7 O g e n e r a l h o s p i t a l
© (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
0 | l O ) POSTSCRIPTS

1:00

OLD FASHION BUTCHEB SHOP StBVICE 1 QUALITY

RECIPE

11:45
fD 110) COVER TO COVER

( D O NEWS

CD O MOVIE Yuma (Cl (1*70)
cam Wai.tr Barr, Sudwan

We Sell Only
U.l.D.A. Choice
Naturally Aged
b

230
, } n SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
0 (TO) DICK CAVETT

® O new s

IOWA
MEATS
W t it t r n

11:30

600
n 3 ) TOOAY IN FLORIDA
i ,1 0 THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
j O SPECTRUM (TUE)

3:10

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

0 1 ANOTHER w o r l o
* 0 ONE LIFE TO LIVE
0 (TO) FOOTSTEPS

) PASSWORD PLUS
J THREE 9 COMPANY (R)
j (10) COVER TO COVER

y MOVE
35)OOMERPYLE

11:30
O (1) TONIGHT Hoat Johnny
Carton Guattt Dark) Brtnnar
Brooka Sruakll
(J j O M 'A 'B 'H
IT) O ABC NEWS NtGHTUNL
(ft (35) TALES Of THE HAUNTED

200

1} (35) GLENN ARNETTE

8:30

11:00
g x iio t n o N c w a
(35) BENNY HILL
_ (10) THE URBAN LEAGUE 5
NATIONAL CONVENTION Datoras

1:30
® O AS THE VYORLD TURNS

ID ( 10) STUOfO SEE

1 d a il y o e v o t io h a l
) DAILY WORO

0 ( 1 7 ) news
1030
(Q) (35) NASHVILLE MUSIC

a (1 7 )M O V )E

0 ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(1 1o t h e p r ic e is r ig h t
m q THREES COM PANT (R)

5:50

i ) 1 TOOAY IN FLORIOA
® U 0 0 0 0 MORNINQ FLORIOA

10:05

1:05

11:00

THU)

(U) (35) INOCPENOENT NETWORK

11:05
U ( 17) NtOHT GALLERY

Som e men like to w ra r
turtleneck sweaters all year
long — others have learned
how to tie a tie.

( D O SUMMER SEMESTER

Coach Rm u p i » oitwed 1 1 000 to
to s m t m • comn*rciM tnfl hn

0 (10) EVENING AT POPS (R)
(TMU)
0
(10) JAMES MCHFNEFrS
WORLD (FRtl

10:30
0 ® BLOCKBUSTERS
( 1 ) 0 ALICE (R)
(351 DfCK VAN OYKE
ffl f 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (A)

■

■

e a to /w

■

■

■

■

Colonial Or

■

A rth u r

A ■c a Od i aS

,

SEAFOOD ■

C L IP C O U P O N
e z J M IS bam oun

e S40 N Orlando As*
Winlaf P it t

a F U S S O f in g # Blossom
Trail

a Farn Pa A Plata Rt 4M
Fam Paik

e 2700 Orlando D&gt;
Santoid

e 4007 E Cofonul Of

a 5503 W Colonial Or
Pm* Hill At**

• 400 W SM I* HI 4 3 0
A m m o n ia S p n n g i

ViXmtfr

At^LAZA TWIRl
EVERY TUESDAY

SEA FO O D

•&gt;

p

�* •

1 I S - g y w i l » f l H tn ld . 3Biftord.FI.

W id im 4 iy .jM t r n .lt H

W -A p E rtm e n t s
U n f u r n is h e d

legal Notice^
IN T M i C IR C U IT C O UR T.
■ lO H T R C N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT .
IN
ANO
TOR
s b m in o l b c o u n t y . F l o r id a .
CAIR NO II IIU-CAA4R
IN R l : T N Marriage of
O N E V
J O H N S O N ,
Hut tend
JO H N N IE
JOHNSON.

MAE

(R A O LC V I
WHt

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO JOHNNIE MAE (BAGLEVI
JOHNSON
(A d d rn t unknown)
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE O that « proceeding
concerning
dlltotvllon
of
merriege ond mart] of speclel
equity m Loft II ond it. Block c.
i A B STEVENS A00ITION TO
MIDWAY, Plot Book f. Page )|.
Public Rtcordt of Seminole
County. Floe Ido. not tetn lilod
OQomtl you ond you oro required
to torvo o copy of your written
deftntot. if ony, upon Petitioners
; eltornoY. Robtrl M Morrlt
Etqulre. P 0
Orowor IfM .
{ Sentord. Florldo JJffl. on or
betor* AuQutt )l, INI. end file Ifw
artgmol tntrtof witn the Clock of
; tnit Court outer tefort ter« ice on
Petitioner i oltornty Of Im
J medietetyttereefler. otherwise, e
' defoutt will M entered agonist you
for the relief demanded In the
petition
WITNESS my tend ondlte tee
' of ttut Court on tn* Iftn day of
- July. A 0 . IN I
• ISEALI
r
ARTHUR H BECKWITH. JR
‘
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By Suton E Tabor
Deputy Clerk
• Pubiltn July JJ. 7t B August S. II
. IN I
' D E K tt
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN
AND FOR lEMINOLR COUNTY.
• FLORIDA
' CASE NO. II HOT CA IIK
■[ JENNIFER KELLEY.
PlalntlH,
$v.
■ STATE BANK OF FOREST CITY.
' FLORIDA. CITIZENS FID E LITY
BANK AND TRUST COMPANY
I- OF LOUISVILLE. KENTUCKY
' ond B A R TLE S V ILLE PART
I* NERS.
Defondonft
NOTICE OF ACTION
V TO
v
CITI1ENS f i d e l i t y BANK
^ AND TR U S T COMPANY OF
i LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
£ Pool Office Boi MOOO
. Louitviile. Kentucky aOJ)}
BARTLESVILLE PARTNERS
te MR PHILLIP BECTON.
•t GENERAL PARTNER
■ MaO PeocMree Rood
Atlanta. Georgia MMO
.• YOU ARE NOTIFIED Met an
&gt; action for declaratory, M luncllre
: and other relief M v o I* wq properly

J Bdrm Mobil* Home Air, Near
PRiebrtet* U N

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sem inole

O flo n d o - Winter Park

I Bdrm Apt Downtown SMS.
Dap m S O JI

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Apt far rent, unfurn. J bdrm. I
B. A C. SJOO mo a- 1100 tec.
n illjf

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HO U RS
• 00 A M - S 10 P M
M O N D A Y thru F R ID A Y
S A T U R D A Y « Noon

RATES
1 time
SOc t line
J consecutive tlm et SOc 0 ling
Tcon tocutlyotlm oi
41c
to consecutive limes H e a lin g
SI.00 M inim um
) Lings M inim um

DEADLINES
Noon The Doy Before Publication
Sunday-Noon Friday

la ford adults, no pets. I bdrm,
ell electric eppliencet. Air.
WOO mo U l l O l t
I Bdrm Apts from I N I J L )
Bdrm also evell Pool, tennis
court JJlaaJO
LAKE JE N N IE APTS. I. |VyA »
Bdrm on Lake Jennie in
Sanferd Pool, rec roam,
outdoor t 1 0 . Iannis courts i
disposals walk lo shopping
Adults only Sorry ne pets
z n s ta l
PROM S IN
t Bedroom Apts Available
Shorn by Appf Only U ) 1140

4-Personals
tmarotffd in a rff-nad l#*y.
retired w*low or *p»n*ttf. *n
left *fr» or mid *0 \ A fun pel
for dinner». th ra ftn arf.
current event*, to forth I m s
retired CPA Write Si w. P 0
Bo* Wl, Long-pood, F l 127JO
•'lonaty? Write Compemomiwp
Deling Service. P 0 ???.
Auburndaia. f »or*de. 1)17) All
•ga».M
WHY BC LONCLVT Write *'Gef
A Metr* Detmg ftarvkd aii
ega* P O Boa 4071, Clear
wator. FI ))* il
lonely? Write “ Bringing Propie
Together Deling Servictt*' All
age* A Senior O fu rm PO
USI. Winter Hewn. Fie »M 0
COMPAT A DATE
Teke I minute to Htfen to
recorded mettege 1101 IM
H\1 USI or write Compel A
Dete P 0 Boa i l l ) Summer
vtllo. ft C 1941)
lonely Christian Single*
Meet Chrlttien Singlet in your
erte Writ# Southern Chrdiien
Single* Club. P O Boa 1111
Summerville. S C. )*♦•) or
cell 1 101 IM 915ft 11 hr*

S-LostA Found
Lost Cockepootypewh.tr
dog. entweet t* Ragt
Rewerd MJ4IJJ

♦■Child Car*
SPUR OF TH E MOMENT
b a b y s it t in g

m t iM
6 A -H e a lt h A B eauty

H— Htlp W»nfid
AVON R EP R ES E N T AT IVES
The Pert T im* Career
aaa JOJt - Collect 111 l?oa
GENERAL O FFIC E

taw Mo
up

Super Bmetitt
Accurate typ ng will lend you
Ihlt lebulovt position
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
LOW EST F E E -T E R M S
ISIJ French Ay*
J1J lilt
Full charge double m iry bkpr
Pleat* tm d complete return*.
Including oddreta and phone
no and referancet to Bos IM
C O Evening Herald. P O lo i
taw. Sanford. Fla
Staedr lob lor retired or term
retired person to help dean
store I IS mornings. ? days per
week See Mr
Powell al
Zeyre't mornings
CO NVENIENCE STORE CASH
i ERS Good to lory hotpnali
lotion. I week paid vacation
every a months Now looking
lor tiperlmced people ready
to work For Intafylaw phono
tte manager at
Airport Bled.
»1 * J !I
Catiafberry
IJ* IN I
Celery Avo
niaZJJ
Lake Mary
JNSJOS
Casa Mia Plneria of Sanford
Eiperlencad plflo maker
wanted Great opportunities
Apply in person IJ ) J007
DESK CLER K
UW Hr
Plush surroundings
Will train lor auditing, chenct
you can t past up
AAA EM P LO Y M EN T
LOW EST F E E - TERMS
INJ French Av*
» 1 SIJO
Wanted — Ambit lout people
wonting to make eatra money
Work your own hours, will
train JJT Ifao

&gt; In Seminole Caunly. Florida.
; * namely, letter of credit no 31
s h a k ie C h e r d ta b le ts
WE O C lIV E R
■: itiued by in* Slat* Bank of Foretl
Needlecreliert Earn
‘ •City. Florida for cuttomer, Jen
money with your hobby
tln lttr
Kelley.
I* pulallv*
Coll AnnUO ta il
S beneficiary, Clliient Fidelity
11— Instructions
.Bank and Trutt Company of
IS
Eatro
11 Demonstrate ley
•‘ Louisville. Kentucky "lor The
gill portlet No delivery or
t&lt; Account of Barttetvlll* Partner*." “Termit inttrucf ion - U S P T A
collecting
Carol
Zebel.
Ceftilled Group or Private
J . tea been filed ogomsl you and you
Sanford oreo, I J ) 4ML otlor )t
let ton* Children * tp*c&gt;*ity
.'.are required lo tarye a copy of
o
m
Barboro.
Altamonte
Dees Melictewttl III TSaT
't , your written orientev It any, 1* It
ere*. U 4 1II* St p m
•Jon T bcall Frailer, Ctquire.
■ptamiitt * attorney, whose ao
Riper lanced tele man* tanchor
11-Spectal Notices
1 dr ett I* MafuIf f. veorW» t Wellt
needed by tell paced teles
.; P A . Pott Office Poe U J Two
orgenlietion
Mutt have
\ South Orange Plata Orlando.
SOCIAL s e c u r i t y
initieliv* end be ebl* lo
•; Florida RIO). on or before Augutt
Bmefltt denied? I . pert heIp
assume responsibility Greet
IT. IN I. and III* the ongmol with
available on appeal* pas
growth potential for a leader
; the Clerk of Mill Court either
Auoclelrt. jot E lit j t ,
Evening hours Interested*
’ before terv.ee an Plainfift i *•
Sanford » l J l l )
Cell 1)011 JJJ J**J a V atk lor
; lorney of Immediately I hereafter.
Bobbl
• otherwise a default will be entered.
U — HilpWkntad
1 ega.ntl you for lha relief
R N t to ta w . LP N 't la taa«.
• demanded In the Compla.nl ar
pat'time or lull time Medical
’ petition
* W A N TED *
Concepts Bat Oajl
'• D A TE D on July IJ. Ittl
Retirod Senior cltilen to manage
•; (SEA L)
M.ddie
aged lemele with al least
Sanford gameroom Young At
ARTHUR H BECKWITH JR
I yr office eipenence wanted
Heart. Top Physical Condition
•; Clerk of the Circuit Court
far full lim a reception,n
Coll coiitct ( aosi tea ant
’ • By Sutan E Tabor
potilkm Must type 11 40 WPM
V At Deputy Clerk
A hey* viper fence In general
Oft Ice Clock— Mental health
I Publish July IS. n . It. A Augutt S.
otlk* Outlet A machine* Cell
egn-cy located in Ailemonf*
; in i
hem lor oppl Mon Frl • 1.
Ipr ingt needs retpontiblt end
•:d e k aa
&gt;114410
eager to learn per ion lor
general office limciien I year
FullHm pRN M t h ilt Apply
office work e telephone *•
Lake view Nursing Center,
NOTICB TO PUBLIC
per lance preferred Typing 41
♦I Notice it hereby glean that •
l i t E Jnd S I. ienlord
wpm. salary range SJJM l»JN
I; Public Hearing will be held be Ite
EOE employer Cell U l j f t l
J Planning and lining Commit!km
SERVICE
STATIO N I M me
e.l a .
.•In Ite City Committion Room.
1*11 Service
*•City Hall. Sanferd. Florida al MO
Pottibi* Management Position
P M an Thurtdav. Augutl a. IN I.
Hanoi* money
t* to cootKter Ite Nile*mg change
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
j! and amandmenl la Ite Zoning
LOWEST P E E - t e a m s
Skillvd m i.ntfnim * m*&lt;h#ni(
!;Ordm*nca of Ite City ef Sanlsrd.
; Seminole Caunly, Florida
CAp«bl« of wvid*n«. mAchtrt#
1*1/ French A vt
m ilta
■; Retorting from MR I. Multiple
wfup And rvpAir. AlAdrwAl i
N E E D A 1ECOND INCOME!
Air lino work AAu*t b« «bt* to
{•Fem.ly RaHdentlal Dwelling
No uiv.. no kilt, ne lee B g
mAtnfAM tool* And tiityrn for
To that af OC I. General
i !Ottlricl
money Rs sper* lime J ll J Jll
production llfti fqu&gt;pm»nf
•Commercial Dittrkt
*. That property deter .ted at the
Only thoiA looking tor a long
TWO MUSIC POSITION1
•‘ ■ait &lt;1 ol the SE'« af lac lien IL
f«rm opporfun-fy with od
Pert lime plpnitl. and pan line
J.Twp JOS. Rga JOE. ttti that
vAncemmt po**ibilit»A* n««d
children
t chblr director I I
•) portion lying SE af U S IJ FI
Apply Reply »o Boe No »0S. C
hrt per wh Call Sanlando
{* Being more generally datcrlbed
O EvAfung HerA&gt;d. P O Bo«
UMC. ))» llaa
•tea NW ol U S U N . rail af
US?. SAnford. F l XW\
Ijiamesott Community Caliaga
Eipar lencad lloor man Applym
;• Tte planned ute af Ih.t property
perten. mamlananca. Sanford
t*ta Caunly Oprrallant Center
Nursing and Convalescence
!&gt;IMunic&gt;pal bldgt I including af
Canter. *10 Mellonyill*
•ificat. lira tlallan. aleraga
ImmedtaH need lor eiper iencod
1‘ buiMing. public warkt operation*,
CASHIER
Sal. Neg
tecnlclen who hat orating
•‘ oelrniion canltrs. animal control
Posh Surrounding
routing and proem writing,
&gt;;op*f ationt and eihar tutting mat
Saal and Greet — In charge type
work tlalion layout and lime
Ite Plaiting A Zoning Cam
person
study Only thota toot mg tor a
t'm itlian will tubmit a teesm
long Item opportunity with
t-mandalwnlalte City Committion
AAA E M P LO YM EN T
advancement pottlbllltit*
C tn laeor af. bf aga.ntt. tte
LOWEST F E E - TEAMS
need apply Reply la P 0 Boa
Lrequatted change ar amandmenl
N il french Ay*
J llS Ilt
No IM . C 0 Evening Hrrald.
Tte CHy Committion will hold a
Sanford FL JZJJI
Public Hearing m lha City Cam
.•IniMion Room in Ite Ciiy Hall.
21— Situations Wanted
tTtaniord. Florida. Florida al J »
JjP M an Augutl 14. INI Igcgntldar
;.U &lt; 1 recommendation
Babysitting in my home Mon
Frl Fenced yard lac pity
&gt;;• All parliat in Inltratl and NOTICB OF P R O C IID IN O FOR
Near High School H I MM
^•Jilllent ttell hatt an opportunity VACATINO AND ABANDONINO
A P LAT.
•I*o be hoard at told hearing*
■A By truer ef Ite Nanning and TO WHOM I T M AT CONCIRNi
You willlakt notice that IN C'.Ty
■•Toning Commission ef Ite City af
J4 — f l w l r m *
rte n le rd . Florida Ihlt IRh day af Commission of the Ci*y gf Sahlerd.
Opportunifi**
Florida, al f 00 (elect PM on
s July. IN I
Augutl 10. IN I. Ri Ite City Cam
J O Oalleway. Chau man
mlttwn Room al Ite City Hall In
Be a Rawleigh Distributer and
N
City of Sanferd
Ite City of Sanlord. Florida, will
be your own Boss Make up to
‘ C; Planning and Zoning
consider and detarmma ‘matter
110.000 a year titra C e im j
Committion
or not ih*. City will vacate and
aan for appi
. Pubiltn July » . II. IN I
abandon
any
right
of
Ite
City
and
c lb E K M
tte public Ri and N P M l of
2t— Apts. A Houses
Hidden Lake Airport Bosdeeard
Access Road, lying South af AR
To Share
•;
FICTITIO US NAMI
l tatWMA U.S.
i
T»u 1k * »t lieteirr y m i lliel 1 • n pull S v v liim
Highway
I
J
N
.
and
Laka
Mary
, Vigaged In butmtttal I I U H.gn
Working GRIor College
Read, being mgr* particularly
(w a y
IJ N
longwood. Fla.
Student lo there house
VJ^eminolt County. Florida under datcrlbed at loiiowt
Eetpentet Cell 111 leal
Piet of Hidden LakeAirpert
Nt* iHl.liOul name or tOB DANCE
S PEU G EO T, end Ihal I Intend lo Boulevard Access Read. Plat Seek
t^iegitief taid name with Ite Clark 71. pa«a tf. Public Retards at
tte CifCMlI Court. Stmmew Seminole Caunly. Fiend*
County. FlerkM in accordance Person! unsettled may appear
Beaulilul dean all new sleeping
and be heard at me lime and peace
-W ith lha provNiant bf tte Fk
rooms Linen end me Id servlet
specified
Z-Vdou* Noma Sfaiufaa. To Wit:
provided Available now Call
City
Commits
on
el
Ite
&lt; faction IAS01 Florida S la M B
Z11IA4I ar mquR* al 411
City al Sanferd. F lor da
Palmetto Av*
Ry M N Tamm. Jy.
■’ Srg R M . Danca
SANFORD
— Rtaa. wkly A
City Clark
Pubiltn July H Zt. Augutl 1. 11
i.sordhly rales UIU RW Kll M i
Publish July V . INI
IN I
Oak Adults baI m i
d e k ii
OEKM

MAINTINANCE
MECHANIC

ENGINEERING
TECHNICIAN

Legal Notice

2* Rooms

%*

Mellonyill* * trace
Apt!
Specious, modern J Bdrm. I
Bain apt
Carpalad. kit
equipped.
C H IA
Near
tetpifal A lake Adults, ne
pets &lt;IJJ0 JJJ *713
E*l#y cevntry living? J Bdrm
Apis. Olympic SI. Potl.
Ikeaandeeh V,liege Ope* 11
m in i
rtrk u R Y
Family A
Poorsid* ]
Cove Apis
wteoenuv

;.
Adults section
Bdrms Metiers
)ZJ ?W0 Open on

a p a r tm en ts

32-Houm OnfunSfija
Wr Handle Reman
HartM Mall Reelty lac.
Rtalfar nSSTJC.
Hou*t lor rtnf — unfurn»*N«&lt;J
ll7Smo ♦ t ) » ( N
1771491
M
) Bdrm Good
Condition L«ro* Fmcfd
Y4fd *771 777 0714

SANFORD COZY CO TTAG E.
A**, pot*, ft17S mo H9 7)00
SAV ON RENTAl.ft REALTO R

Bj gwood indu*frul Pir* 4.000
*q ft f t erfbou*# with offkf
lor Mlg Di*tr 149 4470

Sanford Spacious I bdrm a den
A C. ceramic balh. furn avail,
adults i m i aai lea)

11-Aparfrmnts Furnished

If you or* hbving difficulty
finding • pUC9. to Hvf. CRr to
drtvt. • toO* or *om« *ervice
you hove need of, reed •!! our
••ni ed* every doy
7 Bdrm. Furni*Nedor
Unturm*hed. 1’ i both
with Air. 177 *4*9

37—Business Property
OARAOl for if•*# — pofentiel
for body *nop. uted c«r lot,
»•* of-g neiiy « get *t«tion
L«rgr corner lot
Good
locetion 177 07U
CommercUl Building lor rent.
1*00*0 II. *400 mo.
1*1 L )•*! 17) 1411
For R*nt - 7100 *Q ft *lore or
w4ffbou*e *p«(t 70S E 7Sfb
SI 77)0911 or )77 7770

Sonford. odulf*. no pot*. ttudU.
•il •locfrk •ppiioTKo*. ok,
*ltf mo )7) 101?

37-B— Rental Offices

I Bdrm Furnithod Apt with
P*t»d ond Scroonod Porcn
171017)

Business opportunity Smell
investor* (herb tn** Get info
your own butmetl for only
|4)00 Ceil for drteitt

38—Wanted to Rent
Went lo ffni 2 or ) bdrm unfurn
hou*e *h S«nfoaJ sets Not
over *100 mo After I (904) 719
4SI)

7 bdrm. 7 B. CHA. loedfd with
•menities, located 7 b«b* from
goif course 159 900
7*44S French 777 07)1
Alter Hour* 149 9000, 177 0779

OPEN HOUSE
th e ter r a c e

J l » Ridgewood Ay*
Model Open Tues
Thru Sun 10 JOto 4
J B&lt;Pm. J 'j bath. Central air A
neat, fully equipped kitchen
With microwey* FHA. VA 1
Cony Low down payment, low
monthly
payment
with
graduated mortgage Ml 144!
&lt;w TJJ 10*7. M JIIM _________
J bdrm hduse. Ailum# VA mlg*
of f S
CHA. fenced. In
Suniand Estates 10*00 JJJ
lift

S TEM PER AG EN C Y
JUST LISTED
J bdrm. I B.
good location, ailum a blt
mortgage Owner anileu*.
Ill »0

SANFORO CANAL FRONT — J
bdrm, •if. *77* mo 1)9 7)00
SAV ON RENTAL* R EALTOR

Nictfy Furnithod 7 bdrm Gorao*
•pi l i k i GoWrfl Rtfirtd
coupi* prrfrrrrd No ptt* 777
0774

I por*on or morrUd coupU SO
»c% or older No pot* *100 mo
f *S0 *o&lt; )71)«17

W ATER FR O N T For in*
esecullv*. 1 bdrm. ] full bath*,
fpi. teune wet her. intercom,
on KXT wide cenel ieed&gt;ng to
*f John* River Priced et only
*1)1 000

41—Mouses

SANFORO
7 bdrm. •tr. bid*,
ptt*. IDS dn. *700 mo 1)9 7700
*AV ON RENTALS REALTOR

ST JOHNS RIVER ICanall.b
Bdrm. J E*m. cw«ral heal alp
wall 10 won carper J car
carport Immaculate cod
d.t'On 140 JK Principals only
v?j m t or JJ1 U N

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

M— Mobile Homes

Mariner's v.llagc on Lake Ada t'
bdrm from *71*. 7 bdrm from
UM locofvd 17 f l |u*t South
of Airport 61vd m Unford All
Adult* 77)1470
Nico I bdrmopt
Coll for d««Ail*
June Pon.g Really JJJ M il

New ) Bdrm. 1 E. WWC. CHA.
rang*, refr q . lg wooded lot in
DeBery Johnny Walter Heel
Estate Inc Broker JJJ H V
After a - 441 4JI?

37D Industrial
to'Rent___

) Bdrm. |V| Both. w«iltd y«rd.
•&gt;r rond . n»&lt;# neighbortvjod
*U0 mo Rtf req )7)4S70

Home For Sal* fly Owners 1010
Willow Avanut. Georgetown
Section Price UI.»0S Down
tJ J00 Mlg SIS.400 Teems
1)47 47 moly JO yft a l i a 1. No
closing costs Call JJJOTJJ

Lease with
purchase option

SANFORD - ) bdrm. 7 story,
bid*, ptt*. 1)00 mo 1)9 7700
*AV ON R IN T A L R lA lT O R

SANFORO — AIRPORT BLVO
- 7 bdrm *700 mo I l f 7700 .
SAV ON RENTAL* REALTOR

41-H ouses

•Jl— Houses

37C-For Lease

m *47*

BUILDING LOT
City water,
sewer, lg frees, landscaped •
good locai«n I4J00

■ vf ) ) ) 1994

Spoctout ) bdrm oiderhom# the!
rwed* T lC Ownrr «*bng
*10 000 down

TOWNHOUSE CONDO - J
bdrm. I 'i B inesc (ond . close
lo shopp.ng Has CHA and
WWC. only val iot)
REALTOR 11)4*11
Evas: J4S 14*0. Ml IMf. M l IIJ?
MelhpN Lit ling leryict

Gidvr 7bdrm idf«l*t*rter home
Try VA or FHA *74.500
OWN^N SAYS SC L I
Met
*51.*00 now *44.500 41. bib.
CAH. Iem rm. nice neigh
bornood. Idyilwilde school
section, convenient to I 4

ASSOCIATtS. INC, Rt ALT0RS*!
UOHices Throughout
Cenlrel Florida
LAKE M ARY
J2 3 -IN 0
la* W LekaMery Blvd
IN DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE

Ar* you a full fim* driver w in *
part time car? Our class-fieds
are loaded w&gt;n&gt; good buy for

BATEAAAN R EALTY

Assume FHA Mortgage Cory J
Bdrm Home. Fireplace Huge
Living Rm Can' Air Asking
1)4 400 Call MS 34* TJf&gt;

L&gt;c realEtiofe Brokor
JiaOlonford Ay*

3Z1-07S9

—Geneva G ard ens-

Lovely Tree Shaded Hem* In
Quiet Area Lets Ol Cedar
Trim ♦ Cedar Deck. 1 Bdrm
J Beth Cenl H A Oereg* A
Werkstep *41*40
] Bdrm. J Balh All Appii
aners Cent H A Assumable
Ml* W No Qualifying Beau
litul Neighborhood l*t.*44

ADULT SECTION

Eiecefive Home In Beautiful
IdyHwild* J Bdrm. J Bath
W lent H A lerrmed talar
Healed Peel A Pefie Lovely
Tree Ihedvtf Let I74.M4
SALES
A S S O C IA TE S
NEEDED
9 openings left
Call Frank
J2JN 60

2 Bedroom, Washer/Dryor Hookup
Cable T.V.

Office Spec#
For i N t e
1)0 777)

6-12 Mo. Legse

Moving to • nuw «r home,
•perlmtnl? Sell "don l need*''
u*» with • went sa

1— 1505 West 25th Street
Sanford. Flonda 32771

*275 Mo.

-------Phone 322 2090-

CONSULT OUR

SANFORD - 1 bdrm. fir. Aid*.
Util inc. ft)* dn ) )f 7)00
tAV ON R EN TAL* REALTOR
F ur n«%h#d ip «rt mmt
*700 mo . HI L lotf
77)1411
F urrutAod •portmmt* tor sonior
Cmitn* ) U Rolmdfto A * t. j.
Cowan No pnono coll*

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

II A-Duplexes

To List Your Business-

Now Duplve.
•Qu»PP#d AlfcNon 1)7* mo

c o iim u s o

Dial 322-2611 or 831-99.93

IONGWOOD LKFftONY — |
rmi, *100 dn. *700 mo 1)17700
*AV ON R l N T A l l h BAITO R
1 BR. WWC. CHA. *fovf. rtfrifl ,
w w (Pytr hookup Scr««n«d
porch, off ttrt* p«rA»ng. Oo\*
lo downtown Sentord Import
122 S7S7
lot* M4ry - 741 Ru*fctn *1 New
7 Bdrm. CHA. WWC, *)10 Mo
1*1 k lotf. 7f) 17ff or TVlftfft)
Or Undo
Brand nc« unlurni*hrd 7 bdrm.
•II •ppli«rKV*. •ir. (•rpof. no
prt*. I M mo I H 777ft
Unlurn 7 bdrm. c im p i«t«iy
rrdnortlfd. now corp«f. A C.
Itnctd v«rd. no pfil. *71* 4
m 177 m i
SANFORD — ) bdrm. bid*, pool.
tlfS down. *7*0 mo 1)9 7700
ftAV ON R I N T A l ft R lA lT O R
12 H ouses U n fu rn is h e d
Brand Neve Wood and Stone
Eieculiv* Unlurrushed Home
J Bdrm. 1 Balh Lk Mary.
WuUer Iprgs Arta Sail Mo
» Sac All DM
Wonder what lo do with Two?
Sell On* — The quick, eat.
Want Ad way The magic
number is s j jet) or 111 *W1
Sentord- J Bdrm. CB homo Is)
month t tec Will accept I
small child SJalfla altar a
pm
Jbdrm. l'» B. SJflm a. Ill A last
e security Good references
rtqured J J in a j

■Ra T colbert realty
lac
3 2 1 -7 I3 I
Eves JU O eit
J5J C JSIh SI

Air Conditioning

Ta

•is will service AC'S, reeng.
freeiers. water coolers, mlsc
Cell JJJ ant

Beauty Care
TOWER'S B EA U TY SALON
Herrteft* Beeufy
Noob *19 E 1*9 ftt . 177 *747

fo rm erly

Boarding &amp; Grooming
An&lt;meI Heven Boerd&gt;ng end
Greemlnp Kennel* Shedy.
inbulettd. urecned. fly proof
fmide. oo»tide run* Fen*
a im AC cepe* We refer to
yeur pet* *terl«no %tud
re***fry Ph 177 17*7
W w Hill Kennel offer* Cel ft
Oof Fite Bath* ft* up 74
Hour, Full Service. US *717

Brush Cutting
c u sto m w o r k

Reaseneble
Rate*.
Free
(sllmete Call Early A. AA. or
Eye Ml (M l or (M U Jr I ) 7*4

Building Cbntractor
■ill Carin. S lalt Certlflad
B e tid in g C o n t r a c t o r
Residential or Commercial.
New ar Hemoduied MJ Oaea
When you place e Clai*.l.ed Ad
u&gt; the Evavung Herald, slay
closa fa your phone because
•omythihg wonderful Is about
la happen

LANDLORDS'
Qualified I ananD walling
Nolee D f Jjog
AV ON B ■ NTALS. R■ ALTOB
Jbdrm 1 • family ream.
fear garage, in
Deltona Call SJa I4JJ
Jbdrm. J R. CHA. fg yard.
1st. last « depot.I
• M ill]
one ph o ne c a l l ' star ts a

C LA S S IFIE D A O ON ITS
R IS U L T P U L E N D
TH E
NUMBER IS JlZ ia U .
Jbdrm. D yB SJJIma
♦ sec No pet*.
(U ll aaa JBMert t r i g m

Carpat Owning
July
bombshell
F re t
deodor lung w shampoo 1 deep
steam I bdrm traffic area trae
w Hu rm. dm rm. and hall t i l
Only |M tor each additional
room Ml 0444

CaramlcTIla
MElNTZER TILE
Newor repa.r. leaky showers our
jpeciaity. IS yes Esp laetSaz

Lawn &amp;Garden
Service

E Metrical
yr* t ip ah
type* of etettrlel work et fair
price* 17)47)4

e l e c t r i c i a n io

Handyman
Ptmting. carpentry, all typos of
horn* repairs Call tor tree
estimata Ml I4JI
n

Hauling &amp;
Yard Work
Heuimg ft Yard f t orb u Neff
with Ad 111 11)1 no sett 177
2497 Larry, Joyce Bryant.
Yard, censfructicn and mlsc
(teen up Also wrecker ser
alee. Call anytime JJJ IJ V0

Home Improvemen!
Rtmodtling. Add than*.
Carpentry
f t m i tt.f too ooeto right? Ceil
ChrU )7 )N I| Quality worb
menthtp at rta*onabt« ratat
CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
im p r o v e m e n t *
Painting. Roofing. Carpentry
Lk Bonded ft Guaranteed
Frae Estimates M l JM4

Mowing.
edging.
rubbi*h
removed Scheduled to tuil
your need* 4717*44

The Evening Htreld Classified
Ads offer no fency claim
s
Just Results!

Tomorrow meg be the day you
*eti that roll a way bed you've
nowhere to roil away
if you
Her# • Clentfwd Ad today

Plumbing

Mawtag

,v
j -.

O '

9 *

m7"LAC K■ Y
12)1941
MJ

U N C IU TTE R YOUR CLOSE?
Sell tho*a thing* that are |uti
tebmg uptpace w.tn a want ad
in the Herald 17* 2411 or 1)1

4U4 * f a r * A v «
172 4)09
n ---------- a - . . .

Lg I Bdrm. I ■ with A C on
shady corner tot m OtBary
WOO Available now
) Bdrm. I B CHA, convenient
Sanford UTS

CallBart
E B A L E S TA TE
E E A L TO E . JJJ ?af«
After hr* » &gt; (111

.

ujncreie vwrk
Concrete Work, footers, floors A
pools. Landiceplng A sod
• or) Froe esl. R J r m
i a l a n q u a l it y o p e r a t i o n
4 yrs esp P#l&lt;*. Driveways,
•ac Wayne teal jjf ly i
KMs gene, but ite swing set Ri
Ite bees yard un i? Soil It with
a want ad CaU R 1J4II

Loosing For t New Heme? Check ite warn Ads for houses
of every sue end price
FONSECA PLUMBING Con
structlon. Repairs. E met pen
cy L k . Bonded. Ins 17) 407)

MiniU-Lock
NEW Cancrele Buildings, all
silt* U « A up Al I 4 A SR 44
14 industrial Park, H I 0041

Pressure Gaining
Mobile Homes. Houses. Roofs.
Truck*. Treiter. Etc Porttblt
Uml Harold Rankin M l J i l l

Remodeling

R e m o d e lin g S p e c ia list
Masonry

Wa handle Ite
WTiole Ball of Wee

B. E. Link Const.
Brick, blocs, lirapiace. patios,
barbecue grills and repairs
Fret Estimate* JJ) IJS0

m in t
Financing Available

Horn* Repairs
I f ALL PHASE DOES IT ALL 4

Fon m*taifafign. eiferior
repair*. *tucco. r t beat.*
ra wreenmg
Ab l l PHASE CONTRACTOR*
CONTRACTOR!
4 f*) 9**1 or 1)1 71*5 ^
O UALITY AT A FAIR PRlCBl
Gen Repa-rs A improv IJ yrs
leciily. Senior One M l J JOS.

IronworksAl l Oinemenlai Wrevgni Iron
Wmdow Bars and lacurity
Doers a]J 1,44. Orlande
It you Iren I using your poof
labfe. tale a cue. end sell H
with a Herald classified ad
Call u n t i l

Nursing Center
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lea av lew Nursing Center
414 E Second S I. Sanford
Ml 4707

Odd Jobs
J A R Horn* Im p r o v e m e n t —
Carpentry wots or any type
■sol repairs sorter work,
painting (inferior er viler tor),
plumbing special!!. In mobilt
heme rvpa rt A roof coaling,
and wood patio decks Free
esi.m a le 1 )4 144)

Rooting
Writ# Way Roofing vxf Pan
ting Guarantied wort Froa
e*!imaftt Ph 17)491)
•OOF*, ket* rggairad. Reflect
ratto* tavo* an4 *h*ngi# wort.
M&lt;ao*ai. iMorod. boodad
Mab# 17)4)7)
Christian Roofing 17 yfi. a«p,
149 $7*0. free t*l. R»roof&gt;og. •
*poc*aiifa in rtpe r wort ft
now roofing
evert
day
is b a r g a i n
d a y in t h e w a n t a d s jj b

M il or 1)1 m t

Painting

Sandblasting
Landscaping

CJock Repair
g w a l tn Ev je w e l e r

Freddie Roklnson Plumbiilg
Repair*, faucets, w
c.*
Sprinkler* MJ 4110. JJ) 070*

Mailing Labels
Computer Printed Moii»ng
label* Call
ftuty Bee Label* 17) 10)I

INSTALLBR
Lanrtuap.ng OH Lawns Rt
fUZC* US SSI

HOUSE f a i n t i n o
lateriae A Er tartar
H .T. LACKEY JIJI44I

larob t r ie

J bedroom, J both, family room.
A - J t't B»r*8». I IT. .U .
Westsid* Oetary U K month
FRtl. security aaa 14)1

Pressure Cleaning

Fane*
SALE
Summer Wood Fence Sale 21000
ft ol wood lance and posts
must be soaat Can be seen al
Sentry Fences f)l Hey If 91
Long wood Wide selection.
Came early Sale continues nil
merchandise IS 411 sold
Murry I Hurry! 4J0 4M)

Heilman Famtmg A Repairs
uwaiuy wwh Free Ck*. 5*k%.
It Sen Kirs 114 4*40 Refer.
•souse Pentef -tsl Class WutV
rtetorsabie prices IS yeors
tap Kmnefh Hurt R ) SJS4
anyt.ma alter 1

SANOBLASTINO
DAVIS W ILOING
R l a m . SAN FOB 0

.
'

It you M T tell people, how aet
they going to know? Tell Item'
wifh a classified ed. by cellem
R ZJ4II ss 111 eve)

Tree Service
TERRY'S INTERIORS
Waltpapering, pa nimg Low
du e s Dual wars M IO A JA McKINNCY
Painting —
Wallpapering
— Commercial
Free Estimates Call Bus m
(440 For Brutes*oral iery.ee

HARPER ) TREE SERVICE
Trimming, removing A Lard
scapmg Fret Esi tjjojg]
Want Ads Get People
— Those Buying Ar
Selling JR )*|| „

m W &lt;

4*

�* \

41—Houses

41 — Houses
St owner, I M rm , ) bath. *cr
mtm. privity fcricv. *&lt;ii ho'd
Irud mCf A tfLmablf mfg f*i \
u i .pqo m in t

Alger &amp; Pom
R E A L T Y , INC.
RE3IOC NTIAL
LOW DOWN! 1 norm vpl.t plan
♦ attached workroom. utility
A fenced yard Owner will hold
mtg# &lt;t |J % tor 10 yr*
Payment only t i l l n p i
314.400
NO Q UALIFYING on inn 1
Mrm . 1 ft M ini w cortf id
poreft A lam rm Loytly neigh
00.'hood Low ca*h 10 mlgr
Wl.ttO
NEW EX EC U TIV E h o m e - 4
M rm . } B include* I tcreened
paint, book-aim 1 toiarlum
H uaitd on * * - atrat
t in .m

tort
WATERFRONT lot only Sf.400
E IT A B L IIH E D Subdlvttlon lot.
ttt.no
I ACNE on paved rd t* &gt;00
W ATERFRONT lot. tlO ®0
LOT ON CANAL, tit SW
COMMERCIAL
1 BEAUTIES ALL IN A ROW!
Live In ona. rani Ilia Ind. and
optftlt your buvneit In tin
3rd commercial building w
walk mcootar Prime location
taf.no
GREYHOUND BREEDING A
TRAINING kennel 14 runt,
main kannal. 1 lg whelping
kennalt 111 1 bdrm mobile
hornet l Beautifully laid out on
II ecrei Call tor detail*
tl 30.000
CALL

323-7843
R EA LTO R S

Kj.sir

l(iu K.ST\TT
MI-0041

MLS

tANORA I Bdrm, I Batti. Lge
Rmt. Eat in Kltch tawing
Rm, many eitrat. Ill.MB.
LARGE OLOER h o m e 4 Bdrm.
I Bata. Pina llaart. Iireglaca.
treat, need! work 114.tff
TH E FORE1T 1 Bdrm. 1 Batti.
wall landtcaped retirement
name Near Cluk hevie goal
and tauna tll.tft

By owner. 1 bdrm. 1 belli tef
Patio, privacy ttnee, will hold
Ind mtg Aktumablt mtg
y &gt; \ tat.eoo i n rial

R E A L T O R S , M LS
323-5774

D ay o r Night

ANXIOUS FHA ir VA I M rm .
Ream.! ceiling large yard
ui.faa.
PIN EC R ■ IT
Naal I
kitchen Eamowed FHA Va
Financed 141, too
COUNTRY HOME - Hwy 44
frontage, aver I i t acral. 1
Mrm . l&gt;iB. Birn w elec.
Paitgra. craik ItnceB tar
kertet. near Weklva River
&gt;44.100
ANIMAL L0VER1 — Weedty I
M r m like m homo In country
with lg bam A lent ad arta tnr
an,mall Amtniliat include
gaol. Iireglece. pintll.ng
Ownar malivalad 111.Ml
MODERN APARTM ENT carnal
with IM* lovely cedar Ircnf 1
M rm homo with lg gat In
kitchan. ttgeiale dining room
4- tpaciMi bdrm maht thii a
wptf reive at 141.MB
LO LO DOWN — Aitume
gaymtali an immacvlala I
M rm CE home with iplit glan
L i icreenea parch, leeiced
yard, tei.lfi
COMMERCIAL ZONED J
M rm . CHA. C&gt;. icreaned
patio. Ilka now. Hart your awn
hut Inal l 444,IM
LAKE MAEKHAM COUNTRY
HOME - t M rm . datachad
gar ago wgrkthop, lenced Igkg
view, low down, ivtl red vied
M L MB

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS
Santord's Sales Leader
W t LIST AND tELL
MORE H OM EtTHAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFORDAREA
JUST L U T E D 1 Bdrm, J&lt;, Bath
Custom Built homy on corner
lit E w ry feature »moft*ofc)ft
Estobhihcd neighbor hood!
IH IM

C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
BOAR O t A R t G R EA T
C LA S S IFIE D
AOS A R E
EVEN B ETTER

T7.7

100' FRONTAGE ZONEOCOM
MERCIAL, HIGHWAY 114!
NEAR LAKE MARY 6LVD
T E R R IF IC LOCATION IN
FRONT OF FORD DEALER
SHIP t i l t 000 TOTAL
I4S INTERCHANGE a t SAR
NO RD IN MELBOURNE
StS .000.
EXCELLENT
TERMS
WOOOED IS'ilSO COUNTRY
LO T IN CHULUOTA ONLY
SISCO W ITH GOOD TERMS
s e v e r a l a v a il a b l e

SEIOLER R EA LTY BROKER
&gt;11 4444

43B- Lots &amp; Acreage

Wanted
Need lot of land zoned
Cor moth It home

LOVELY S p acio us ) Bdrm. I
Bath homo wtih Fla rm.
equipped eat In kitchen,
screened parch. Cent Heat and
Air on a quiet col de sac
tIL N t
MAYFAIR VILLAS! I A S
Bdrm . 1 Bath Condi Villas,
wet to M iy tiir Country Clod
Soled fdnr la*. How plan A
interior decor! Quality con
ifrudfd By Shoemaker tor
M U N A upi
ASSOCIATES NEEDEOt New
or eipirltnctd Call Herd
Sttnitrom or Lao Albrifht

CASH FOR EQ UITY
We can c Kvie in a hri
CailBart Real Eitqft m MM
HAVft CASH
FOR YOUR FARM
OR BUILDING LO TI
UMCG Corporation Inc lit «U4
er 111 Mil ____________
Chin t mantert What h*v* roo?
Nred ) J Bdrm Home Price
and fermt negotiable

_ ______

We Buy equity In Hbuta*.
apartment*, vacant land and
Acreage
LUCKY
IN
VESTM ENTS. P O Bo* 1300,
Sanford, Fla. 1H11 H I 4141

today A discover success*

C A L L A N Y T IM E

322-2420

IMS
Park

R EA LTO R S
Multiple Listing Service

ROBBIE’S
REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
lift S French
Suila I
SanMed

24 HOUR f f l 322-9283
OWNER W ILL FINANCE
Large Country Home Fuse older
I BffY'fi &lt; BB. I lath Mom# in
ipsHSHi tori&lt;fiilOf&gt; Hal timer al
ciffu* f r t t l and garden, tpact
This l» your place Only
1*1.100

CailBart
h eal e sta te

47-A—Mortgages Bought
4 Sod
We pay ca»h lor 1*1 0 lies
mortgage! Ray Legs Lie
Mortgage Brptyr ljy n*e

50—Miscellaneous lor Sate
Grandmother dock, 19 iff of old
china, o«er cab camper top for
im truck. Zfncth color TV. A
much more Pit ait phone J3J
tm
ID' white baked enamel
aluminum awning ft ter ten

porch Like new f?M firm
cut m i n i
RaiJ buggy Beit offer over MOO
40 HP VW leigln*. Good cond,
After I &lt;{04) JH alt)
FooflOCker»»»» H up
AMMY NAVY SURPLUS
JIB Sanford Ave
227 SMI
I piece Corner Couch »ef
neautitui, bftge Very good

404 our baauMul new BROAD
MORE, from A roar BR'i
GREGORY MOBILE HOMES
M O Orlando Dr
H I 1100
VA A FHA Financing
Concord it a»4 } or ) oorm, lire
ratlklant wall*, wood tiding A
tiling la root Only Ill.ftS
II I S*‘,only t il,443
U 'kW . only 111.443
No money down VA 10/ down.
FHA Shop Uncla Roy I Mabila
Homo Sairt US 441 S
laetburg (404) 111014 Opan
Sunday* 114pm . weak mghtt
Irl 1 M
R C AO THIS TWIC®
14'iJ*' Concord or 14 iSl'
Hartford Both 1 bdrm. 1 B w
khtngla roof, wood tiding,
dalui* carpel, drape* A ap
plianct* Your citaica af
114,4*3 Only af Unclg Roy *
Mobil* Mom* Salt* m
LeeiDurg Ng down payment,
VA. ail othae financing 10S
down Shop Unclo Roy1*
Msfxit Homo tala*. US 441 S
reel burg rebel 111 OH*. Sun
day* 114 p m wenrgNt - 1 »

43— Lotv Acreage
Sammolt Wood* - Beautiful
wooded S S acre etale home
tilt Good teem* Call !7! 1410
altar 4 pm
Sanford Prima I* ft Acre* *
option* for lon.ng Ml.SO* •
Teem* W Malicigw**! m
letl. Eve* H I 1*1

isl1HC-t.tu r v iv a l

o f -T h e
f it t e s t

W—Garage Sales
Frl ft Sat 18 Mayfa&lt;r Circle
CB Rad'0% with Anfmnat
Almost new Lawn Mower w
Grass catcher, cement ml*ff,
cameras ft camera equip Pius
all kinds of mite

SS—Boats &amp; Accessories
1*77 Arrow glat* Bat* boat
Loaded with accattoriat 1)000
firm I 1404) 111 0141
141* Saabraaie IS’ * bowrider, 10
HP C h ryilar, magic III!
frailer 1130 1114)41________

y

★ B&amp;H Auto Sales *

lftf Electric Commuter e t n
Demo Never tilled Sticker
price 13400 Our price *4400
Drive Ihei* cul* litfi* electric
car* for about |10 month *11
BID*
______

1411 Lincoln Coni menial Coupe
Loaded 31*43

Y-L

77—Junk C ars Removed

1414 Impaia Wagon Lite new
*4tel
1*10 Pnoent, SJ Coup* Loaded
13443
Caikelbtrry

H O P DOLLARS
For your car or truck, regar
dirt* ol cond Prefer running
Free towing 131 MIS Agenl

1975 Dodge Wogon

« *1495

-11 Maverick 1dr. PS
A C. tedu. healer, runt good
3*43 &gt;11*011

1411 Toyota truck HtLUX Esc.
cond Must see Id appreciate
DeBary eve* U i 3*40

1975 Hornet

71 Grand Prit Full power, E*
reliant condition 11400 &gt;11
&gt;110 Or 371 &gt;4*4

Top Dollar Paid lor Junk A Used
calk, truck* A heavy equip
h liil &gt;11 3440

*2195
1974 Ply. V oice

FRONT DISC BRAKE JOB 1
* 4 1 95

Yamaha 1977 J*0
Call AM 1 p m m 1)94

GARAGE
SALE

* Bank imanciat availabl* a

IIN Hwy 1141

JA Willy Jeep Wagon 4i*. runt
good. S443 or trade for what
have you 111 SOU

Top Dollar Paid lor Junk L Used
ea-s. trucks 1 heavy equip
men UJS440

^M otorcycles

NO MONEY DOWN Payment*
t i l month Monie C»fkL PS
P B. Auto. AM F M tier rd. a ir A
many other r lira* &gt;14 4100 or
t)a 4401 Dealer

Nfw PfOt
MfChtnt Rotors
Nfw Grtfto M ill
rfihat ■
P«&lt;k Inrttf ft Ouftr Btifinfs

MOO
1700 ft fake over pay off ol

I I 794 m $494

*1495

=J

JIM LASH'S

SANFORD
MOTOR CO

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER

ON 400 Sul us i 1940, 7000 mites.

•M l Hwy, I I-t ) ittw ittn l*rilord ft Long wood.. Phonr 111 0741

1974 Swftkl G T SS0 M.000 ml
asking 14SO in good condition
Aft 4 p m 8 J4 4 )f

*3395
1964 Volks Bug

It•till Brakf Fluid
Chffk Col'pors ft
M fittr Cyftrtdtr

Now Optii M i • * m -1 p m.______
Hour* I M e m
/ O U p lW W *
fa 3 14p m
U U m

A M C JEEP

RenlalCart
AvailaWa

IM S . F r in c h A v t.

111-4)61

For Sal* Jotinkon boat, *!&gt; HP
Mercury motor A tilt trader
Sa* at 1410 S Orange Av*.
Sanford
IS’ Owens fishing boat 1 frailer
Hull m a.c cond *130 or basl
oflar 111 0011

47 — Lawn Garden
FILL DIR T A TOP SOIL
YELLOW SAND
CAM Clark I H r l MS IStO
Lanrn Mower Safes and Service
We Sefl the Best and Service
the Rest. Bob Balt Western
Auto Ml W 1st St

INVENTORY
REDUCTION
Discounts
Up To

4S—Pets Supplies
Part Dobrrman, pari German
Shaper d a mos old pup F ret to
good home 444 4S4S
F ree to good home —
7 Labrador pups iwksoid
377 4741

M-Horses
Gelding 1) yrs otd •■» thorough
bred 11 quarter horse English
and Western Experienced
rider 1700 44411*9
67— L iv e s to c k . Pou Itry
Llvairylngcbickans
lor salt IScaaci!
m an*

$2000

We Pay Down Payment!

68-W a n te d to Buy

BIRDS

condition t!JO IYI J J ti

REALTOR, i l l 1441

J7-Mobile Homes

10-Autos

TA St V

»«1 , “ . i v »

•0-Autos

HIP Trans Am. T top. loaded,
13.000 miles 34*41

DAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 41. 1 mil* nasi of Speed
way. Daytona Beach, will hole
a public AUTO AUCTlO h
every Wednesday al I p m Iff
■heonly ona In Florida You sal
the reserved price Call 4b4
M l 111 I tor further o*tiil*

S

80-Autos

*339-7909*

&amp;
■

jijo ju

47—Real Estate Wanted

Tht loonar you placa your
cl at ill lad ad. Iha sooner you
will gal rtiuttt

■ (

a c r e or m a k e o f f e r

Wgdnetday, July71, t ill- ’IB

T rla i la cqu&lt;pmant frailer for
tala Heavy duly Call H I 0114
day*, or 111 M il attar S X)

/ /

f\

Evening Herald. Sanlord, FI.
79—Trucks Trailers

UM.YAS.BUT
ARE YOU ON THE
W ITH HIS V
YOtfURT a &lt;:r e $
b u jl e he
Y E M J^ O F
TR A C K IN G IN
C GULP TRACK
5URVIYAL JU TlN '?
AN ANT
LAST YEAR'S WIMPS THE VELDT LED
ME T&lt;P SCENT
THROUH A
WERE SO SCM IV
THEY N EVER * THE PRESENCE flF R EN D E R IN G S
p la n t/
REALITEP W ERE c n i u t a t i o n ;
CMHPOKwrrr/
JU S T &lt;2YER THE

4 PLUS AC R E S . N IC E L Y
W OODEO NEAR O S TEEN
GOLF COURSE *3000 PER

JUST FOR YOU ) Bdrm. I Bath
Home with cent HA, t i l In
kitchen, playroom, wait wall
car p»ft it need! yard. Florida
rm and mart 114,104

with M ajor Hoople

O U R B O A R D IN G H O U S E

, ■,

BARGAIN BUY I Bdrm, 1 Bom.
1 fttBff Cfi homt in Drum
wold Spacious Great room
with fir«p(i€«. landscaping
purth, fenced yard and morof
MI,000

C A L L 333-5774
) bdrm. 1 I C t Woedmef*
Park tret, carpet.
1 lertanad porcnei. I l l 143*

S ACRES WOODED NEAR OS
TEEN
GO LF
course
i u . mo . TERMS a v a i l a b l e

r , a c r e WOODED TRACT IN
O S TE E N NEAR SCHOOL,
sii.soo a s s u m a b l e f i n
ANCING
100 elOO' ZONED FOURPLEX
ON AIRPORT BLVO IN SAN
FORD *11.300 SEVER AL
AVAILABLE

331-0041

Harold H alf Realty

IS ACRES HIGH GROUND
W ITH TALL PINES NEAR
LAKE HAR NEy
313,300
W IT H LOW IN T E R E S T .
ASSUMABLE MORTGAGE

4

l a r g e s e l e c t io n

New 1 oorm, 1 B home CHA.
•ppllancet. attume mtoe
johnny Walker Real Eilate
Inc. Broker 111 44tl Allart
tnl 4V1

Don't wait la BUY Real Ittate
BUY Real Ittala and waillll
LAW ANAKItH
REALTOR
Alter hrt 11)1134 and 111 t i l l

43—Lots-Acreage

» «

Frown River Reck, pit! Bov
Create Trepv Dry Wfltt,
Car Stop*. Cemanf. Sana
M ra&lt;le Concrete Co
» f Elm Ave
m I7S1

51-A—Furniture
WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
111 D I E FIRST ST

.1115411

S7— Appliances
Mag e Chat drop in range
Con*muou* &lt;laaning oven.
Cat cond H11I41
Kenmor* pari*, tarvica. uled
wathar* MOONEY APPLI
AMCEt 111 gait
6 I Y v E P 0 1*tu.H troll Ir**
Orlg isif. now SJOS or 114 mo
A gene u tlM a
Don ! P‘14 no longer maided
iltmk high at an elephant*
eye placa a claim lad ad. and
pug Iha mongy in your waiiait

S3—TV Radio Stereo
Good Ulad TV*. SIS tup
m il l e r s

1*14 Orlando Dr

Vntiqua*
Diamond*
Oil
Paintings Onantal Rugs
Bridgas Anf iquas
m 1101
Aluminum, cans, copper, lead,
brass, tilvar. gold Workdays
I 4 &gt;9. Sat 4 I KsKgMd Tool
Co 411 W III St m two

77—Auction
For Estate. Commercial or
Residential Awe:lions ft. Ap

praisals Call Deli'S Auction
83*429______________________
Don t pile no tonger needed
items high as an elephant s
rye Place a classified ad, and
P’le the money in your wallet I
AuctionTEvery Monday Night, 7
P M Sanford Auction. 121S S
French m t U O . Daily 10 S

75—Recreational Vehicles
1411 Dodo* TrivcoCampae
Sleeps 4. Loaded w tilr a i
1)1 O S llorlJ 1*4*4

77-Junk Can

Removed

----------------- --------------------------------- J--------

gone, but the «*&gt;ng set in
the beck yard *%•»*♦) Sell it *&gt;th
a want ad CaM m 1*11

We have a feat more Color I V b
tor SYS Herbs TV IM7 S
Sanford Ave 8)1 7)4

o c ia l

1980 Bronco
Ranger XIT
I N Loaded

tV&gt;,7995 /

141* 11' Mallard dual a ilt Sail
containad. new air. gas ar
electric Sleep* 1. U.309 H I
1134

Ph 1710131

kkh

ESCORTS
MUSTANGS
FAIRMONTS

BUY JU N K C A R S B TRUCKS
From *10 &gt;0 ISO or mor*
Call H I 1*14. i n *4*0
CASH FOR CARS
R unmng or not
) 8 4944

1979

1979

1910

L IN C O L N
ll.OO OM ILES

COUGAR XR7

T-BIRD

LO ADED

1 TO N E

•8995

•5695

1910
MUSTANG

1978
TRANS AMS
1TO CHOOSE

4 SP.
6 C Y l.

•6495

FROM

*5995

•6995
1977
FORD

4 W H E E L D R IV E

•2995

mm

JACK PROSSER
LAKE MARY BLVD. &amp; HWY. 17-92

ONLY

B H U

322-1481

L o n o w e b d L in c o ln - M e r c u r y
B B S S M t O H W A V 1 7 - 8 ! , L O N G W O O D • B J 1 -BQUO • 33 2 -4 8 8 4 • O P E N H I G H T L V T I L 9 OO S A T

SALE ENDS

7-2S81

1981 LYNX

IF YOU DON’T BUY YOUR CAR HERE B U S WEEKEND - YOU W ILL PROBABLY PAY TOO MUCHII
v i v&gt; u

kS

8 TK . #1241

*4843°°

■ OPEN SUN

12- 6

NEVER BEFORE NEVER AG AIN SALE

"W *Hd Cor”

PRICE
Compare price A quality
with any Import!

A S U N . T IL 6 P M

( ^0

LARGEST DISCOUNTS
IN HISTORY
O td e t

hanettmo troigtit. U » A l » o not In clud w d

SALE ENDS

7-28-SI

1981 CAPRI

STK. WC-1368

*599S°° C,TYHWY'

�H » — lY X ilm

Untorti. FI.

h um

s *t \mi

Pick up free Super Bonus Certificates
at our checkout counters
YtiugeM Super Bonus Stamp tor every
«1 you spend Paste 36 Super Bonus
Stam ps on each certificate
W hen you check out .present on e f*ed
Super Bonus Certificate tar each Super
Bonus Special you tetoct.

PORK CHOPS

PACK
I2 * «i.
CANS

7 '/ «-O Z

PKGS.

16-ox.

CANS

SAVt
A X IO M (A U

TOWHS

DETERGI
....

C i

SAVE 30

\

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                    <text>Evening H tra ld -(U S P S 4812S0)—Price 30 Cents

73rd Y M r, No. 208-M onday, A ugust 17,1911—Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

Would Serve Seminole's Elderly Shut-Ins

County May A sk For Funds To Provide Books-By-Mail
the U.S. Department of Education under
federal law.
County Librarian Jean Rhein said she
expects the books-by-mail program to
serve between 7,000 and 13,000 shut-ins
monthly, who cannot get to either of the
county's two libraries at Casselberry and
Sanford or to the bookmobile which
operates countywide.
Ms. Rhein said a “good many'* calls
are being received (ran shut-ins seeking
the service. “Most counties already
operate a similar service," she said.
If the funding spplicatlon is approved
by county commissioners and by the

H e Seminole County Commission at
its 9:30 a m. meeting Tuesday will
consider requesting 110,000 in state and
federal funds for a new program to
provide books-by-mall for senior citizens.
The books would be loaned from the
county's library system to senior citizens
who are permanently or temporarily
confined to their homes or institutions.
The application for funding is to be
directed to the Division of library
Services of the Florida Secretary of State
George Firestone’s office.
The state acquires the funding through

state, Ms. Rhein said the service will
begin in March. In the meantime,
catalogs are being prepared listing the
paperbacks to be available in the
program, if approved. The catalogs are
to be sent to shut-ins and to organizations
which serve the senior citizens.
Ms. Rehin said those who need the
service will be able to fill out a card
listing the books they would like to
borrow. They county library system will
mail the books in a special envelope and
the readers can return them to the
library in the same envelope when they

are finished.
The county has been involved in a
"There will not be a big drive to enlist library program for the past six years
users," she said, noting the service is a From 197J-IO-I971, library services were
special one and limited by funding to provided by the county under contract
serve a special element in the com­ with the Orlando Public Library. In
munity."
October, 1971, the county commission
The county library system will be decided lo initiate Ita own library system
purchasing the paperbooks and pxying with brandies in Sanford on First Street
for postage and other materials out of the in Casselberry at Seminole Plaza.
810.000 in state and federal funding, if
Current circulation at the Casselberry
approved, she said.
“ We will have to reapply for the fun­ library is about 10,000 volumes monthly
ding each year,” she said, adding the and about 13,000 monthly at the Sanford
chances of continuity in the program are library. An additional 1,000 volumes
monthly are circulated by the book­
good.

mobile.
C urrently 3i,000-to-40,000 Seminole
County residents have library cards. Ms.
Rhein said many others use the two
libraries without getting a library card to
check out booka. The two libraries are
open Monday through Saturday.
The library system In the 19*1-02 fiscal
year will operate on a budget c{ 1018,406,
1748,600 of that from local tax money and
the balance in state and federal funding.
The cost of library service to Seminole
taxpayers In 198MI was 13.71 per
resident. - DONNA ESTES

Cause Is Probed

Car Explodes
In Longwood
'nvestlgators were unsure this morning Just
what caused the Saturday night explosion and
fire in Longwood which demolished one car,
heavily damaged another, and caused minor
damage to at least six homes.
The automobile - a 1974 Pontiac belonging
to Clyde Turner of 711W. Court St.. Ixmgwood
— blew up and burned about 11 p.m. while it
was parked in front of the Turner home. No
injuries were reported.
Following the blast, witnesses said the car
burst into flames. The explosion sent small
pieces of debris flying 500 feet. A fender landed
on the roof of a house nearly 100 yards away.
Turner told Longwood fireman he and a
friend had been standing around the car Just
about five minutes before the explosion, but
had gone inside the house before it occurred,
according lo 1/ingwood Fire Dept. Capt. Alan
Brown.

M IL L E R

TIME

_______S e m in o le a t r i p
S e r ie s in L a fa y e tte ,
M ille r, a h a rd -th ro w in g
f i v e - h itte r a n d s tru c k
S to ry p a g e 6A

A J u b ila n t b u n c h of S e m in o le B ro n c o s hoist
S a n f o r d 's T e r r y M iller o n to t h e i r s h o u ld r r s a f­
t e r th e S e m in o le Pony B a s e b a ll A sso ciatio n
te a m w h ip p e d M iam i, M w ith a m ira c u lo u s
e ig h tr u n . last-in n in g c o m e -b a c k . T h e victo ry

H ifiu rw N a* t m Cart
to th e B ronco W orld
L a ., th is W ed n esd ay .
rig h t- h a n d e r , p itched a
o u t s e v e n M ia m ia n s.

Capt. Brown said his department was called
to the fire about II p.m, through (he county's
communications system and that the county
sent an engine on a mutual-aid pact, l/eigwood
Fire Department had an engine and a rescue
vehicle respond to the scene, C apt Brown
said.
Capt. Brown a id several witnesses also told
firefighters they thought they heard two ex­
plosions, but “a Inngwood policeman told my
men it probably wax the tire which blew after

the initial explosion."
The initial explosion blew out the windows of
another car parked nearby and caved In its
roof. It also blew out the windows or cracked
door frames on six nearby homes, C apt
Brown a id .
John Richardson, attached to the Longwood
Fire Department as a fire inspectorinvestigator, a i d at least five separate
agencies are involved in the investigation.
Richardson a id a member of the Turner
family a i d a bomb may have been placed in
the car causing the explosion, but he added
there has been no confirmation of that. He also
a id Turner, who is a plumber, may have had
some butane in the car which he uses with an
acetylene torch in his work.
But Richardson pointed out there is no
preliminary theory on what caused the ex­
ile a i d the debris from the car has been
recovered and the state fire marshal's office
is going to process the material In an effort to
determine the exact cause of the explosion.
Seminole County fire Investigator Ray
Pippin said some sort of explosive device may
have been used, "but we won't know
anything for sure until we finish processing the
car, or at least what's left of IL Aid we won't
even start that until later today," he a id .

S.R. 46 Railroad Overpass Project On Schedule, DOT Says
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
The pre-construction detail work on the
proposed railroad overpass on Slate
Road 48 Is right on schedule, according to
ilenry Fuller, project manager for the
State Department of Transportation
(DOT) fifth district offics in DeLand.
Fuller said the department is currently
in the final stages of relocating three
businesses in areas on the south side of
the roadway where the overpass is to be

built. Fuller said according to law the
business owners a rt entitled to payments
to help them relocate in other places.
They are to be paid moving expenses.
They have already received payments
for their property, he a id . A contract to
clear the right-of-way is scheduled to be
signed In September and demolition is to
be completed in November.
Fuller a id a contract will be let in
January, 19*2 for construction of the
overpass Construction is expected to

begin the following month. Construction
time Is 100 calendar days or about 18
months, said Sam Thurmond, DOT
district construction engineer.
During the construction period traffic
will be maintained on the existing
roadway, Fuller a id , but may be
reduced from (our lanes to two part of the
lime near the overpass area.
The federal Department of Tran­
sportation approved a grant of 13 8
million for the overpass construction

about 18 months ago. The federal
government is paying 90 percent of the
coats while the ststc pays 10 percent.
Fuller explained the project was ap­
proved for safety reasons and to stop the
blocking of vehicular traffic during times
trains are crossing the highway. The
state DOT counted 10,389 vehicles using
the stretch of SR 48 daily In I960.
The current curve in the highway by
the railroad tracks will be straightened
out when the overpass is built. The

westbound lanes will become an access
road when construction is completed.
The stale has spent a total of 1418,000
for additional right-of-way and will be
paying the three businesses which must
move about 168,000 In relocation ex­
penses, according to Harry Barnes, who
heads the acquisition and righCof-way
team for the DOT. The additional rightof-way is on the south side of SR 48.
During construction traffic will continue
to use the existing SR 48 as a detour.

Casselberry Council To Consider Land Use Plan Tonight
•

By KATHY GRANT
Herald SUII Writer
The Casselberry City Council will meet
at 7:30 tonight to tentatively approve the
city’s Comprehensive laud Use Plan.
The Comprehensive land Use Plan,

.

known as the City of Casselberry Plan,
complies with 1971 Florida statutes
which require all cities in the state to
adopt a projected 20-year plan by O ct 1,
1979, according to Dale MacMahan. city
planner.
The city planner said Casselberry

■

a

a

. A l

a

S

* .

received an Aug. 24 extension to approve
and adopt the plan.
MacMahan said he anticipates no
changes In the city's expansion. He
added that residential and commercially
zoned areas won't change under the plan.
According to MacMahan, the council

Don't Plant, Even Bother To Hoe
It's Dog Days, Nothing Will Grow
By MERLA MANOR
Herald Carrcspoadeat
Dog d ayi are dread days. During that hot, sultry period from
July 3 to August 11. when Sirius, the Dog Star, rises and lets
with the sun, according ti folklore, aril emanations are loosed
upon the earth Garden stuff doesn't grow, flah don't bits and
dogs, pigs and other warm-blooded animals go m ad
Mrs. Viola Clines of 1203 Pumegranite Ave , Sanford, has
lived her three score years and more close lo the tarth. She
gets this malignant period between July 21 and Sept. 1. She a id
she had seen U proved through the years that garden truck and
flowers planted between these dates soon lose their | reentry
and decline.
"You not only mustn't plant during this period, don't bother
to hoe your garden out, either," the a y s
Every year she makes a small garden. T hu year her corn
trej squash, planted before July 21 arc growing "beautifully."
The col lards and mustard greens, planted early this month,
to test it again," are drooping. “ Even the birds don’t
' she said. "Listen. Do you hear any birds singing’"
___e p l for an occasional dispirited chirp, an uneasy silence
eigned in the t i n e that sheltered her small house.
Mrs. Cline was bom in Florida but moved to Georgia at an
wrly age. She returned to the state in 1837 and has been here
linct then. Real dog-day tragedy struck her family cm hot
lugust day many years ago. A young cousin was bitten by a

mad dog and died the brutal death of hydrophobia. The painful
memory Uvea with her stif.
The ancient Greeks named the dog days When they occur
a n l how long they last varies from piece to place end year to
year. The hot, dry Greek summer began about the same time
that the Dog Star, Sirius, eternally following that ill-fated
klutz, Orion, rises and seta with the sun. In this country, the
hottest, moat sultry days of late July and August claim the
label.
This la the time when dogs are supposed to be especially
liable to spells of madness. The people of ancient Egypt and
Home, as well as Greece, blamed evil spirits for the disease
which reused ordinarily docile and friendly animals to become
suddenly vicious and aggressive without any evident reuse.
They became maniacal, developed paralysis and died.
That learned gentleman, Aristotle, first recognized the
relationship between hydrophobia in man to rabies In animals
and recommended cauterization of wounds produced by rabid
dogs.
The word rabid means to rave, rage, be m ad A good
working rule to observe during this unwholesome time of the
year is this: If a normally non-aggressive animal develops a
change of personality and becomes threatening, assume it is
h&gt; druphubu: and avoid ILK by some misfortune, you do moke
i on tact with it, wash the wound or contact area with strong
soap and water and see a doctor Immediately.

,11

S I1

_

_ —L.II _

ma n n f l j

ill hold a public hearing, second
reading, adoption and approval of the
plan, the evening of Aug 24
"We're coming down to the wire on this
one," he said

....

la i

t n l l i n ts la fl laK Ir

any opposition to the plan, which took siz
years to prepare. Florida law requires
cities to update their plans every five
years.

to day
Action
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4B
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2A

Bus Schedules,
Page 9A

MacMahan said

Watch Lifted

Dennis
Weakens
By Called P reu lalenutloaal
Tropical Storm Dennis, which brushed
the Florida Keys and tramped through
the Everglades National Park, weakened
today as It readied the mainland,
packing M mph winds.
Violent weather reked the eastern
seaboard, where a 21-year-old man wax
electrocuted when he touched a downed
power line.
Flooding wax reported in Tessa.
The National Hurricane Center in
Miami lifted its hurricane watch for
southern Florida. The storm eased the
drought that has been plaguing the area.
H urricane forecaster Gil Clark
reported In a I a.m. EOT advisory
Dennis’ center was at Everglades C.ty,
X miles southeast of Naples and 10 miles
weal of Miami.
"T h is movement over land baa
esM* Sr
Maser
eliminated the immediate threat of
Viola Clinrs of Sanford ways Dog Day* a rt here and (hat means some hurricane formation,’’ Clark said. “The
animals go mad. fish won’t bite and gardens won't grow. It happens hurricane watch across South Florida
has been discontinued."
every year, she la y *.

i

�I

lA -tv f» lw Q H tf ltl S iw tfd, FI.

Mandir.Auf.17. It* I

WORLD
IN BRIEF

•

Iranian Violence Deepens;
Government Minister Quits
United P r o i lnternalloul
Iranian Authorities marched 72 people before the
firing iquad during the weekend, the leftist opposition
replied with (even killings and Iran's Cabinet showed
signs of dissension even before gaining rubber stamp
parliament approval
The official Para new agency reported Sunday IT
opponents of the clergy-dominated regime were
executed by firing squad for "following the policy of
armed revolution against the Islamic Republic of
Iran.”
The announcement followed the report by Tehran
Radio Saturday that Si people had been executed — 27
for political charges and 28 for smuggling. In addition,
one adulterer and one homosexual were atoned to
death.
The opposition replied with seven killings on
Saturday, including the assassination of Saleh
Khosravl, a clergyman from Sananda]. and his 11
year-old son as they left a mosque. Tehran radio
blamed "Two armed American mercenaries" for the
third killing of a clergyman In a week.

Nuclear Warning
ER1CE, Sicily (UPI) — American nuclear scientist
Edward Teller wanted current Soviet superiority in
nuclear weapons and bomb shelters could tempt
Moscow to tell the West to surrender or face World War
III.
Teller, known as the father of the H-bomb, told an
atomic warfare symposium Sunday that "the Soviets
have 80 percent of aQ the atomic bombs in the world
and these are certainly offensive arms.
"Moreover, they possess a bomb shelter system that
guarantees the survival of 99 percent of their
population," the 72-year-old nuclear physicist said.
"With the possibility of saving the great majority of
Its population and destroying about Wpercent of that of
Its adversary, this could be a temptation to begin war,"
the Hungarian-born Teller said.
Teller called on US. allies In Europe to spend more
time, money and scientific effort on defense and
warned the United States and Its allies against
pacifism.
"Extreme, pacifism leads to either war or surren­
der," he said, adding, "If the democracies strengthen
themselves, they will win 10 years of peace, and then
another It and still again another 10 yean of peace."

Sfucfonfs Call O ff Protests
WARSAW, Poland (U PI)—Polish students suddenly
called off a series of protest marches scheduled (or
today in response to warnings from the government,
Solidarity and lha Catholic Church of tha danger of
The scheduled demonstrations, known aa “star
m strdirt" because they were to begin in five cities and
simultaneously converge on Warsaw throughout the
week, originally were called to protest the arrest of
five members of an outlawed political group.
The sudden cancellation of the protests came after a
weekend Black Sea wmmit between Soviet President
Leonid Brexhnev and Polish party leader Slanislaw
Kama that ended with a warning that recent strikes
and demonstrations "created a serious threat to tha
security of the state, Its Independence,” But that
warning was lets ominous than most analysts had
expected.

Soviets To Try Sex Education
MOSCOW (UPI) - I n e break with traditional Soviet
taboos, sex education will be taught to Russian
teenagers for the first time this fall
The youth newspaper Komsomotikaya Previa said
Sunday that ILy ear-old students will be taught the
basic biological principles of human relations, with
emphasis on tha risks of sexual contact at an early age,
the article said.
Students in the lop two grades of the Soviet school
system, usually II or 17 years old, will letro about
"ethics and the psychology of the marriage relation­
ship."

WEATHER

t,

ium»«»*•&gt;

August |7, m i - V o l . 72, No. 308

atcagd Saturday *r TUs laniard
, M e, M N. Presto 4 * a , t i o AordL PH. WTI.

&gt;

l e a n s .Class Pali*** P a d *1 laniard. Pkarts* WTI

.

'
Os u n n I

ll-Wj

V*a», M6J*. i f

A Fern Park convenience store was robbed of an un­
determined amount of cash Sunday afternoon by a lone gun­
man.

tgard, according to a police report, said the money was in his
truck, jumped in the vehicle and sped away, th e bandits fled
empty-handed.

The clerk, 12-year-old Teresa Diane Woods, told Seminole
County sheriffi deputies ■ man about 29 years old entered the
Shop b Go on Spartan Drive about f p.m., pulled a smallcaliber revolver and demanded money.

Action Reports

As the bandit (led with an unknown amount of cash from the
register, Woods said he told her to stay down behind the
counter or he would shoot her.

114*1

SIAM i Vaer, ISIJd

••• "
ia
ISJll i

★

City Administrator David Charry said the new well would
Increase the city's water caparity daily by 1 million gallons.
The city already has three wells located on Bay Avenue,
Church Street and at the Range Une Road-E.E. Williamson
Road site.

C o u rts

The capacity of those three wells combined is 1 million
gallons dially, he said.
In addition to sinking a new wet), Chacey said, two high
pressure pumps and an aerator would also be installed. He
estimated costa of the project at 170,000-10-190.000. He laid
another above-ground storage lank would be built at the site
in the second phase of the project.

* Police

CHILD MOLESTING PROBED
A 44-year-otd Altamonte Springs man was being sought for
questioning this morning In connection with the Saturday night
rape of his H-yeer-old daughter.

HOMES BURGLARIZED

According to a sheriff's report, the incident occurred between t and II p.m. when the man reportedly entered his
daughter's bedroom and offered her 1200 to have a n with him.
The report said the man told his daughter it waa okay that her
mother approved.

Three Longwood homes being constructed by Ar-De Homes
of Altamonte Springs were broken into over the weekend and
mors than 112,000 worth of property stolen.

Even to, the girl resisted and her father sexually assaulted
her, the report laid.

Taken were six ceiling fans, three stoves and microwave
ovens, two central heating and air conditioning units, a dish­
washer, garbage disposal, a lawn mower, and a stereo.

tn other business, the city commission will hold a public
hearing on an ordinance authorixing the collection of $1 with
each fine levied on traffic law violators in the city. The
additional tine would be collected by the Seminole County
Clerk of the Court's office and returned to logw ood,
Chacey said.

The houses were located at tot 31 and 310 Woodstead Court,
and 2227 Springs landing Blvd.

The resulting revenue would be used for police training
and education, the administrator said.

CLOSE CALL
It waa a clove call lor 23-year-old Gene Ward who was
assaulted by two motorcycle-riding bandits Saturday af­
ternoon, but escaped without giving up a cent.
Ward, of 2W Crystal View Drive, Sanford, told police that he
waa driving down 22nd Street near Chase Avenue when he waa
stopped by two men riding motorcycles who said they needed
assistance.
Ward said when he got out of hli truck, the men began
beating him with thetr helmets and demanded nancy.

OILY PROBLEM

A resolution will be considered to require developers to
post with the city a fee of 2200 per light pole In their
planned developments to pay the costa of providing lighting
in the subdivisions far the first two years after construction
is completed

It was a real slick crime — the theft of 124 gallons of
lubricant from an Altamonte Springs service station.
Sometime Sunday night, someone broke the lock off an
outside storage chest a t the Exxon station on State Road 136
and Howtll Branch Road and stole 40 quarts of n l and 10
quarts of transmission fluid. The missing goods were valued at
P4

The commission Is also to consider setting administrative
fees to cover costa in xoning and annexation requests.

DeLand M an Survives Fiery Accident

Airborne Birthday Party Balloon Tragedy
BARRINGTON HILLS, nL (UPI)
— The balloon pilot was one of the
moat experienced in the Midwest.
The weather conditions were good.
Two of the victim s owned
repo la Uoni for Jumping out of
airplanes.
II waa the perfect setting for an
airborne birthday party. It became
what may b t the worst balloon
tragedy tn UJL history.
The brightly colored hot a ir
balloon was thrown Into power lines
Saturday momenta alter pilot Jam es
Bicket, M, Bloomington, [11.,
realised an ipproachlng sto rm
would endanger the (light.
Five of the sis men aboard w tra
killed In the fiery crash in norUiwaal
suburban Barrington Hills.
The only survivor, Rocco Evans,

29, DeLand, Fla., Jumped out of the
gondola when Bicket tamed on the
crxll's propane burner to gain
altitude, pushing the balloon into
34,000 volt power lines.
"That's when I got the hell out of
there," Evans told the Chicago SunTime*.
Evans, who landed on a grassy
highway median, waa In serious
condition Sunday with bums over 29
percent of his body.
"They aQ should have jumped
when I did, u soon ax we hit the
wire* and I u w we were on fire," he
The National

iranspo
Transportation
e d e ra l/

A dm inistration w ar* Investigating

the cause ol the crash.
Bicket, who had leased the balloon

and Dew it professionally, had In­
vited tww friends, Evans and Ken­
neth Coleman, 39, Ktasimee, Fla.,
for a ride. The three other men
aboard — Brian Baker, 31,
McHenry, HI.; Terry Ritter, 31,
Cary, 111., and William Keating,
Forest, Park, DL — were paying
passengers.
For Keating, It was a belated
present to celebrate his 24th bir­
thday Last month.
Evans said he, Coleman and
Bicket had talked about a tine ol
dark clouds on the hortson before
they took off, but the weather ap­
peared good in the immediate area.
Witneaaaa Mid tha storm clouds
m oved quickly Into tha prevtauriy
clear sky.
Ten minates after the launch,

Bicket planned to end the ride,
trying to land away from the power
lines when (he craft was socked by a
gust of about 29 mph into the power
lines.
The cage then caught on fire,
sending the balloon suddenly
soaring.
Once the flames consumed the
balloon covering, allowing the hot
air to escape, the craft crashed
toward the ground.
After Evans Jumped, a second
passenger Jumped into a small
pasture and a third crashed through
the roof of an unoccupied home.
The balloon, then In flames and
with three men still aboard, ex­
ploded a* it phunnwled to the front
lawn of a home,
ho
There were no injuries on the

ground.
Evans and Coleman, parachutists;
who were members ol national and
world championship teams, were
not wearing parachutes on the flight.1
But Evans said parachutes would
not have saved them.
"It wouldn't have mattered. We,
were loo low."
Evans said he thought Bicket was'
wrong to try to land upwind of the
power lines. Investigators said
Sunday they were not sure If'
weather was a (actor tn the crash.!
Al Blount, president of the Balloon!
Federation of America, based In;
Iowa, said the accident was "the;
worst in recent history" and the first;
ballooning fatalities thts year.
.
n ic k tt waa co n sid ered one of Die1

most skilled balloon pilots in the!
Midwest,

Bigger Budget Deficits Foreseen Despite Reagan Cuts
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Several private economists doubt
President Reagan will be able to balance the federal budget by
1184, a chore even Reagan now concedes may be tougher than
be first anticipated.
Reagan last week, In signing Into law the biggest budget and
tax cut* in UJL history, raised the possibility of larger-ihant spec ted deficits in fiscal 1182 and 1M3.
Many economists ace hefty deficits the next two years, far
above Reagan's initial estimates, as m il as a deficit from 949
billion to |89 billion In 1984
This week, Reagan plana to m eet with budget director David
Stockman to map out further budget cutbacks for neat year —

reductions be says are needed, tn part, because hi* tax and
budget bills were amended tn Congress to wtn passage.
The administration's last public estimates, released In July
before final passage of the bills, projected deficits of 299 6
billion In fiscal 1981 (which ends Sept 30). 2419 billion in 1981
222.2 bUlkn tn 1283 and a surplus of 2900 million In 1184.
The New York Times reported Sunday that Reagan'i own
advisers are raising thetr estimates of next year's deficit by as
much as 220 billion.
Otto Eckstein, a member of Lyndon Johnson's Council of
Economic Advisers and now head of Data Resources Inc., a
Lexington, Maas., economic forecasting firm, says the deficit

Lake Mary's W afer System
To Be Shut All Day Thursday
installed where the system Joins the city of
Sanford’s system. Sanford provides w ater
(or the Lake Mary community. City of­
ficials do not know exarily when water
service will be resumed.

la k e Mary's water system will be shut
down all day Thursday beginning at I a.m.,
city officials announced today. Tbs water
service to the city’* 880 customers will be
shut off while ■ new m aster mater la being

s *m n. a p*m# a m . akmti o .
Chorlot O. Mwryht to Thomos *
lo wt*n o rayn* a » i a«M h . a.. Pwthirour 4 art Use. Lot if A W

Lot I. **pl Lot A. Highland P*rk. W a t w . S ik J l, to n ltn eo T h e W k

&gt;«*Inarm* VUI Apts la L.
AattwrHt Lyons 4 ho Donald M .
Un 11SA, Spr Inf wood Villtgo

tie*.

Soout. Palm torn** Sou SOX.000
Moron a. million's 4 wt Pi mots
VIII Apt Carp is
eimw a. a«tt&lt;a*r a * t i « u m AS to Jaanatta a CUary i BonaM P. Contlno, tgl. 4 Richard
Shannon
L. it. Tin, wv* at Let A All Cantina, sgi , Un. HI C
l , ctmmonct at &gt;8 cer. 0» Nil*
ol Nil* ol Sot WWW Me. Alecca Hammock, w
SpringwMd Village C en d a,
Icorrect Ivfl, IMS
MI.SM.
a*U» P. C**»or Jr. a wt Xoarmi
Constr By turn* Snort Homos
Iprlnpwosd VIII Apt* to Arthur
Inc. taJarry D. Smith 4 wf Amo. to Warn* P. Luke* a *u *irah
Lot a an D. NartS Orioneo Lot IT70. P. Srrooo Lonoc* Plat Unsworth 4 son, Arthur K., Un.
totC. tprlnpwood VIII., MO.SO*
lanchat Sot I A. SIMM
Sd SUch Mammock, 0 1*00.
Sprmgwood VIU Apt. to Howard
Oar id C. Paws* 4 wt AMne ta
WworS 8. Swan 4 art Wanda la
A
A Arndt 4 wt MIMrad A., Un.
SIcMrS B. Cootl* a wt Marie l„ Mark A. Shaw 4 wl Margaret L..
1110,
Springsued VII lag* Condo ,
Lot
a
HlfMand
Pin**,
Un.
I.
Lot V. itA a. Walkers AM) to AM.
Free* O. C*pai*nd 4 wt Mary to

Rtpi'gti S. Paella- to'

to

dafcotl P o flla, sel l Un.

It

Sartre*. Condo leg Ton Inc.

Tarn A, Arttord. lr. H
SMetoky 4 wt Marsha 4
Imperil*. Lata l | t I t l l 1
(Monro** Lot ASM LW. SWAM.
Indian Lakn Comir M Oawgus
L. Oendora 4 wl lotSSa I , Let AT
WIMweed. PUD. US.lt*.

Otm Amor. Hamas M James M.
M l Jr. 4 tod Oar N I. Lot ♦. eik a.
Starling Oaks MUM
BCA I* Aim* W Hltchcedk,
wtd. Un. 117, I Sandlea. Condo,
lot. VIIL MINI.
Alvard* P. Ottilit 4 wl

CVtotmo M M I t AAcCall 4 wt

Paine I*. Lai IL ■* C. Bn. PHI
at

Tha Sprue*, WUHta Sun.

sue* Inc. la Charts* B. Miltar 4
wt ear'll* J„ Lat «f. itspCat *l
wynwiem Wood*. 1%. i, i n . m
(OC(U Slip* on L. a aw N ear 4
AAare J. I* IN *4*0 L Bamlnpor,
s p l.L o tW .tlk p, Ponmaor m l L
sms .
Jama* 8 . I UN. to*, to J*e 8.
Cvm Ingham 4 ad Jayta A- La* I t
w*t wr m sa *', ■ m p ** n « r 4 1
» • a* McMtP* Or ana* Vina,
HUM.

***- *•# Ik: |h--

*«*«

An engineering report on the feasibility of the city sinking
a new well adjacent to the E.E. Williamson Road-Range
Line Road water facility will be given to the l/mgwood City
Commission a t Its 7:30 pjn. meeting today.

* Fires

REALTY TRANSFERS

AREA READINGS (I a.m .): temperature: 80; overnight
low: 79; Sunday'i high: I I ; barometric preeiure: 22.00;
relative humidity: 97 percent; winds: northeast it • mph.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: hlgt*. 9:46a.m.,
11:11 p.m. lows, 4:18 a m , 3:34 p m .; PORT CANAVERAL:
high*, 1:40 am ., 11:83 p.m.; lows, 4:68 a m , 1:29 p m ;
BAYPORT: highs,2:08a.m., 1:90 p.m.; low*, 16:61 a.m., 1:30
p.m.
BOATING FORECASTt S t Augustine te Japtler Islet, Out
M Miles: Small a aft should exercise caution. Wind cast to
aoulheait 19 to 20 knots through through Tuesday occasionally
to gale force In few squalls south pert today and tonight and
north pari Tuasday. Seal 4 to 8 feet but higher in iquaDs. Rain,
scattered thunderstorms and a lew squalls south today
spreading northward lon'ghl and Tuesday. Isolated thun­
derstorms north today.
AREA FORECAST; Variable cloudiness through Tuesday
with a chence of thunderstorms becoming more bitty tonight
and Tuesday. Highs around 68 today and mid to upper 60a
Tuesday. Winds east to southeast near 19 mph gusty near
thunderstorms. Rain probability 90 percent today and 60
percent tonight and Tuesday.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Florida except northwest —
Variable cloudiness with scattered shower* and thun­
derstorm* mainly during the afternoon and evening hour*.
N ear normal lemperaiurea with low* in the 76a o cep t near 88
along Uw southeast coast and In Uw key* High* (ran Uw mid
Me to lower 61a.

Evening IlnukJ

Longwood
To Consider
New Well

Store Robbed At Gunpoint;
Father Sought In Girl's Rape

VUI Apt. to A. Luotl*
Cagney. Un- W l

XprUawood VIM Apt*. Carp t*
A. Pailana Im arr.l,
iVlll. Apt. to Aram C.
Hamo Kan a wt I lac la I , Un.
ISIC. Spring wood VIII CeosPP,

HUM.
Iprtoewead Via. Apt- to AAenuP
I. BPeng*. Un 14C. Iptlnpw etd
VM , US40*
Spr logwood VW Apts, to OvorlN
Adkin* Jr A wt 0*061*. Un IS1A,
Iprlnewaoe VUI, 194*4
Spring wood VIU. Apt. I*
KNpkNy K. Oram a wf am ity «
4 Oerek A. Oranl, u n . It?A.
Spring woes vtiiepe C o n e s.
Ml. SO*
Spr logwood VIM. Apt*, to Cetvkl
Starling a wf MardoL Un. IASI.
Sprmpoood VIU, Condo. U I J K
IprWpwesd W l A*t*. Carp le
P aul K. Carrpii, Un. H ID
-------- ' ‘ Villope

1* Apt*. Carp te

W. Fwi** 4 wt Jetn.

U m ar* w . Fust* J r , 4 PeTrid*
J. P. Thom man, u n . I TWO.
tprlngvoo d Vllttg*

UMAX

MUM.
Vpr logwood vrn Apt. to Vlrek H.
Johnson 4 ad Francos L „ Un.
1J1A, Springwood Vlllepo C ento.
Mate*.
Sprlogwood VIMApts, te Edward
L. Lame oral 4 ad Boom* L . Un.
IMS. Sprmgwood vm. Condo,
m ad e.
tor Inga sod VUI Apt. le Segtile
Shir man. sp 4 Jack SMrm«'
Isanl M orr, Un. I tip . Iprtnpweed
Village Condo. 1 8 4 1 4
Spring wood vm Apt. te Pawl A.
Ckacey 4 wt Martlet AA., Un. IMS.
kpr logwood VUI.. IMAM
Sprtnpweod VIU Apt. to Burton
A Moti i,w l Sandra L . Un. HID.
tp rlnpwood vm Condo rw.to#
Sprlogwood VIII Agtl. to Arthur
P. Lehmann 4 wt Sydney, un.
IHA. tar mgwood VIII Condo.
VIU Apt*, c a rp le
Mary Aim Cltna. t e l . un. IMS.
1 VUI,
VIU Apt. to P*n*in
JL (manual. s*l. 4 AAatpellnda R.
Jana* tm *U *ft, Un. USA.
Iprtngwoto VIII.,
I VIM Apt. Ip MMa L.
UnceULto*.* ttw e i N. IteWNFl.
Un 1UD, torNpwdod VM. 1
SIMM

"will stay over 990 billion ( tn the next few years) and may go;
beyond 260 billion In 1284."
lawrence Chimertne of Chase Econometrics believes the!
1982 deficit will be between |70 billion and ITS billion, declining!
only to the 290 billion to 960 billion range in 1964.
Michael Evans, president of Evans Economics, a supporter
of many aspects of Reaganomics, sees ■ 299 billion deficit tn!
1982, declining only to (49 billion In 1984.
And Rudolph Penner of the moderately conservative!
American Enterprise Institute offered the highest ballpark;
estimates - a 260 button deficit In 1)62, rising to ISO billion in;
1964.

AREA DEATHS
HR&amp; YETA REISS
Mrs Yets Kris*, 71, of 1001
EppUnsd* Wsy, A pt 160,
Caisgtbeny, died Saturday at
Florida Hoepttsi-AlUroontc.
Mr*. R ein w u born Msy
19, 1210 it New York end
moved to CuMcIberry from
Brooklyn, N.Y. in 1276. Mj t
Reiss w u Jewish and s
bookkeeper.
Survivors: xlatori, Fay
, Zsmek end Ruth Slela, both of
Catari berry, Anns Cerim i of
AlUmont* Springs.
Bxkhrln-FstrchUd Funeral
Horn* of Aksmonto Spring* 1*
in charge of arrangement*.

1
Florida lhwplUl-Altanwnte. Georgina Robb at home; eon,
Mr. Robb w u born In David Robb, Longwood;
Glasgow, Scotland, April 7, daughter, Anne Robb of
1216, and moved to Longwood Longwood; a lister, Margaret
(ran Rochester, N.Y. In 1677, McWilton, Rochester, N.Y.
lie w u tn electrics! engineer
Baldwin Fairchild Funeral
with Stranberg-Carlion.
Home of Altamonte Springs Is
Survivor*:
hi*
wile, Jn charge of arrangements

working for
the family

MR. LLOYD « . HU«nT
Mr. Lloyd W.Huwttt, 91 of
P.O. Box 2007, DeBsry died
Friday.
Mr. Huwltt « u born In
Georgetown, 111., snd moved
to DeBsry from Danville, 111.,
In 1171 He w u a truck driver
and s Protoettnl
Surd t o o Include hi* srift,
Hairittt; eons, Ronald of
Houma, La., Paul, of Dan­
ville,
111.;
daughter!,
Christine Bonrell and Penny,
both of Houma, U .; etepsona,
Steven Bounds of Cayuga,
Ind., Mark Bounds, Danvilk,
111.; stepdaughter, Angela
Tarquiol, Covington, Ind.;
sister, Frieds Halle, Sidell,
DL; five grandchildren; (our
stcpgrendchtidren.
Pip* M emorial Home,
Danvtlk, HL, is in charge of
smngementa.

DAVIDTURNER ROBB
Mr. Devid Turner Robb, 61,

lt‘i undeotandAbly difficult for fattuIics to
do things during e time o fio is . . . snd yet to
mpny things have to be done. We’re here To
do everything for them that wt u n .

GRAMKOW
FUNERAL HOME

I U W I M A llir o H T M O U LtV A M U
S A N fU ltp . TLO H ID A 3 = ^ ' B ? '

iiLtpHorec m J3U I ; - ; , ’•£
W IU IA M t

Y -J.*

-ny*; ).

of MO Coventry Court,
Longwood. died Sunday at

S.

I.HAM KO W J L L '.

—

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&gt;-* l -u. *■ -VTf-

i :&gt; *
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-:

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�Evening Herald, Ssntord, FI.

Who Is Buried In The Grave Marked 'Oswald'?

NATION
IN BRIEF
Trans-Atlantic Flights
Continue Despite Boycott
United P m i International
U25. nights soared over the North Atlantic today,
generally unperturbed by a boycott by Portuguese air
traffic controllers that was avoided by rerouting flight
paths to the north.
Transportation Secretary Drew lew is said the
rerouted (lights may take a bit longer, but will avoid
any repeat of last week’s Trans-Atlantic logjam caused
by the two-day Job action by Canadian controllers.
About 300 Portuguese controllers, in sympathy of
12,000 fired American controllers, began a 48-hour
boycott at 8 p.tn. EDT Sunday, refusing to handle any
planes flying to or from the United States.
Affected planes Immediately began using any of
three alternate routes mapped out by U S. authorities
Saturday in preparation lor the Portuguese protest.

Library Action Delayed
DURHAM, N.C. IU PII — Duke University President
Terry Sanford has agreed to delay any official action
on establishing a library for former President Nixon's
papers until the school's faculty can discuss the issue.
Sanford had indicated he was‘ready to present the
idea to the Duke trustees this week, but he agreed to
wait after meeting with faculty members during the
weekend.
"We've got the process going of talking to available
faculty members," said Sanford.
"We’ll just take the time necessary to reach
everybody,"

Payments To The Dead
NEW YORK tUPI) - Federal, state and local
agencies in New York pay out about 111 million a year
to thousands of people who are dead, says a city of­
ficial.
City Comptroller Harrison Goldin Sunday said an
audit conducted by his office showed government
agencies maintain the names of dead people on their
active files (or long periods of lime.
He said one man who died on March 18,1979, was
paid lor five methadone clinic visits made from May 21
to May 23 of that year.
In another case, he said, a person who died on April
21, 1979, was paid lor a pair of eyeglasses picked up on
April 28 and two drug prescriptions dated April 23 and
May U, 1979.

Busing From City Begins
INDIANAPOLIS (U PII — Thirteen years of court
battles and protests over school desegregation will end
with the busing of nearly 3.300 black school children
from their dty homes to Frxnklin township schools.
The first group of children, 387 black pupils, today
were to begin their 40-nunulc dally bus rides to
Franklin township—the first suburban Marlon County
school district to help Integrate dty schools this fall.
In all, nearly 3,500 black children from Indianapolis
Public Schools will be distributed among tlx school
systems during the next (wo weeks.
Students riding buses lo the five Franklin township
schools wiU see an overwhelmingly white suburban
area.

Prisoner Commits Suicide
SALT LAKE CITY (U P II - Fanatical polygamy
patriarch Ervil LeBaron, serving a life term lor or­
dering the murders of rival religious leaders, com­
mitted suicide in h 'l prison cell pouibly by crushing
his own throat, investigators say.
LeBaron, 58, found dead In his cell Sunday, left a note
saying, "I've gone to meet my maker."
Detectives said they found three notes Indicating
LeBaron, who allegedly had 13 wives, may have made
a death p a d with a woman.
"There w u a gal that he was writing to ind he said
they would be together in a couple of days," Detective
Earl Julian said. "He said a lot of crazy religious
things and It wasn't too understandable."

HOSPITAL NOTES
W m ln o l. Mamar II I

Airftrif 14. Ifei
* OMISSIONS
U n lo rd
M inn.* Colton
E e w o rij j . Havptkam
A m , S Coin
• o u M or JoTinton
Ciutord M a n lty
Sou
f&gt; Smith
Dm C w illia m *

B ilt r l I WriBhi
None* C T r t lr r . DHtona
w Coloort. L o ll) M o r*
D ISC H A RG ES

lontord:
Jo Ann Jamrrt a ttafcr boy
Anthony A O w n
t i l l G OglotOy
Ervtgua S Seda
AAory A Novoh. Corn P o rt
Shnondro Cotton. L o u Monroe
Sondro Key Word. L W t AAanroo

F R E E S P IN A L
E X A M IN A T IO N
Danger Signals of
Pine hod Nervoa:
t. SuSrtiM . S u i t a i t a i 0 Slat

1 Soct NU Ti|M S w ill
l ru o Dow* S ra t WtoolOr Pda
8 Alio M ono M U u lfc fl

( ruahl M as Itnm iH U
l low* (oil PNC Sl| h h We Dno Ltft

Why FRIES Thousands of aro* residents hava spina
related probiamt which usually ratpond to chiropractic
cara.
This Is our way of ancouraglng yog to find out II you Nava a
problam that could ba halpad by chiropractic cara. II Is
also our way of acquainting you with our staff and
foctntlai.
Examination Indudas a minimum of 10 standard lasts for
aralgaing tha spina and a contour analysis photo as
shown above
White we a r t accepting new patients, no ana need (aal any
obligation.
Moat Insurant as Accepted

DAI-LAS (UPI I — Controversy
over a photograph purporting to
show accused presidential assassin
Lee H aney Oswald in a casket has
deepened the mystery over who, if
anyone, is buried in a grave marked
“Oswald."
Both Oswald's widow and Paul
Grudy, the mortician who prepared
the body (or b u rial said Sunday the
black-and-white snapshot is not of
Oswald and the grave should be
opened to learn the truth.
Marina Oswald Porter said she
plans this week to go to court to seek
permission to open Oswald's grave

at Rose Hill Cemetery In Fort
Worth. Texas.
Mrs. Porter has said the man
buried 18 years ago was her husband
but she fears government officials
have since removed the bedv
British author Michael Eddows,
who has attempted unsuccessfully to
have the Oswald grave opened,
contends the accused presidential
assassin actually was a Soviet secret
agent who assum ed Oswald's
identity after his defection to Russia
in 1939.
Mrs. Porter’s efforts so far to have
the grave opened have been opposed

ATI-ANTA (U P II - Wayne B. Williams,
flanked by his defense team and surrounded
by sheriff’s deputies in a packed courtroom,
pleaded innorent today to charges that he
killed two of 28 young blacks whose slayings
kept Atlanta on edge for almost two years.

«

It was the first public appearance for
Williams since July 14, when he testified in his
own behalf during an unsuccessful appeal (or
bond.

TUES.

Spag hetti
&amp; Sauce

Fried
Fish

*3 ’s

$395

Since his arrest June 21, Williams has been
kepi In a 6-by-12-fool isolated cell at the Fulton
County Jail under around-the-clock sur­
veillance,

8 pm Mon. thru Fri.
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W ITH P R I C E S S T A R T IN O AS LOW AS

Horn* Equity Loam Arranged

mt

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Lounge 11 am to

2“ MORTGAGES
BOUGHT SOLD

3 2 3 -5 7 6 3

$495

in the Buccaneer

Electric

Oil Industry experts believe
such radicals a s A lgeria,
Ubys, Iran and Iraq now
have Utile choice but to bend
lo Saudi pressure lo bring
down prices.

Barbecue
Ribs &amp; Chicken

Enjoy Happy Hour

Kllt

M c s c T A V IS H

The conservative Saudis
have been trying for three
years to stop OPEC radicals
Irom forcing the large and
e rra tic price Jum ps that
helped caused world-wide
economic recession.

W ED.

Soup &amp; Salad bar included.

I-M A U M U I

Meeting in top-floor suites
in a heavily guarded Intercontincntll
Hotel,
the
preliminary talks centered on
the OPEC long-term planning
committee chaired by Sheik
Ahmed Zaki Yamonl of Saudi
Arabia.
Humberto Caldcron-Bcrli of
Veneiuela told rep o rters
before the negotiating began
that an agreement "la very
likely."
He
said
OPEC
oil
production probably has
dropped to around 21 million
lo 21.5 million barrels per day
from 31 million b a n e ls dally
Just two years ago and that
"makes It vital to have a
unified policy."
OPEC sources said Yamani
has Indicated readiness to
accept an immediate agree­
ment on prices *t Wed­
nesday’s meeting only If there
is a firm commitment by
others on longterm policy.

1

M ON.

CALL UH Lr*EF.

GENEVA,
S w itterland
lU P Ii—OPEC oil ministers
began private talks In small
groups today in an effort to
work out a compromise on
prices before ihetr formal
emergency session Wed­
nesday.

I embalmed and that 1 used
cosmetic cover on to conceal a black
eye. I think the picture Is of someone
else, sold by someone looking for a
tittle glory."
The m ortician also denied
patrolman Rocky Stone's claims
that he helped embalm Oswald's
body and guarded it until burial.
During the weekend, Stone, who
lias been with the Fort Worth Police
Department for over 30 years, said
his eyes never left Oswald’s body
from the time it arrived at a Fort
Worth funeral home from Dallas
until it was lowered into the ground.

ALL YOU CAN EAT

The charges were read to Williams, who
replied "1 plead not guilty to both counts,"
Williams first came lo the attention ol police
Williams wore hundcuffs, but still managed
in tire case early on May 22, when he was
to wave to reporters and photographers when
stopped near a Chattahoochee River bridge
he was moved Irom the Fulton County Jail to
moments after a stakeout officer heard a loud
the downtown courthouse about an hour before
splash in the water. Two days later, Cater’s
the hearing began at 9 a.m. The handcuffs
body was found about a mile downstream and
were removed when he entered the courtroom.
within 300 yards of where Payne's body was
There were two deputies in each of the two found April 28.
cars that made up the motorcade with
Another stakeout officer testified during
Williams in the lead car.
Williams' preliminary hearing that he saw
Cooper tentatively scheduled the trial to Williams' car moving "really slow ... like it
begin Oct 3 and said a hearing would be held was coming from a parked position" moments
Scpl. 3 on a series of 29 motions filed by after the splash was heard.
Williams' lawyers. Among the motions is one
Mary Welcome, the law yer leading
asking that he bo tried separately on each Williams' defense team, said during the
murder coufit.
weekend she was not worried about security
Williams, 23, a freelance photographer and problems during today’s arraignment and
would-be talent scout, remains the only person indicated officials may have been overzealous
charged in any of the 28 slayings that in their precautions.

Price
Accord
Sought

picture looks between 35 and 40 —
just look at the forehead. le e was
balding and this man had a very
heavy thick head of dark hair," she
said.
Grudy, from his home in Fort
Worth, also said the picture was not
of the man he prepared for burial
after Oswald was shot in the
basement of the Dallas police station
two days after the assassination of
President John Kennedy.
"I cannot believe that's him,"
Grudy said of the picture. “ It doesn't
look like the body that I put In the
casket. It does not look like the man

M O N ., TUES., WED. SPECIA L

terrorized Atlanta for almost two years. A
grand Jury Indicted Williams in the deaths of
21-year-old Jtnuny Ray Payne, the 26lh vic­
tim, and 27-year-old Nathaniel Cater, Ihc 28th
and oldest to die.

Williams, wearing a dark blue suit and a
shirt open at the collar, appeared before
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Clarence
Cooper under extremely light security that
included a search of everyone entering the
second-floor courtroom.

F ra n th A»e (Acreaa tram P itta Hot) Lerrterd

a*

by Oswald's older brother, Robert,
of Wichita Falls, Texas
Mrs. Porter said the photograph
released publicly Saturday is not of
the man she buried Nov. 23, 1963.
The photograph showed a man
who appeared to be in his late 3Qs.
dressed In a dark suit and tie. The
m an's neck appeared puffy and his
hair dark and relatively thick.
" It's not Lee. I don’t know who it
is. It's a strange man in a casket,"
Mrs. Porter said from her home in
the Dallas suburb of Rockwall.
"1 saw le e buried in the casket.
He was Jujt 2f. The man in the

Williams Pleads Innocent
To Murder Charges

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC
&gt; lit l

Monday. Aug. 17, I t l l —M

:_____

YeeV4e^*

SANFORD
M l W . F I R S T ST.

3 2 2 -0 2 4 4

�Evening Herald

Wanted: a filth member of the Sanlord
Housing Authority Commission who thinks
positively and warts harmony. These are the

tu re j « i )« )

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, F U . 37771
Area Code 30WB-2811or 01-9993

qualifications current SHA commissioners
would like to see In a new member to be ap­
pointed by the Sanford City Commission on Aug.
24.

M onday, August 17, 1981—s A
Wayne D. Doyle. Publlthar
Thomai Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, A drtrllfIng and Circulation Director

SHA tenant, Hannah Plnckey sees the new
commissioner’s quitiflcaUons from a slightly
different perspective. She said the Job is not a
paying one, but someone is needed who un­

Home Delivery: Week, $1.00; Month, *1.25; 6 Month*, *74 00;
Year, *15 00 By Mall: Week. *1.25; Month. *5 25; S Months,
*30.00; Year. 157.00.

New Start With
The Third World
We applaud President Reagan's decision to Join
the North-South summit conference this fall, to
project America's New Beginning" of domestic
policy into the International arena.
The president's decision, announced by
Secretary of State Alexander Haig at the NorthSouth foreign minister's conference in Cancun,
Mexico, heralds a new, realistic U.S. par­
ticipation in the crucial dialogue between
developed nations and the Third World. Signally,
Soviet President Leonid Hreznev, despite claims
to be the true friend of the Third World, has
declined to attend.
Presidential Involvement in the issues between
North and South-lhe industrialized nations and
the underdeveloped countries—comes none too
soon. In Iran, America was held hostage to a
Third World revolution. In poverty-ridden Central
America we arc supporting precarious regimes.
Prom the Middle Past, Africa and Venezuela we
import billions of dollars of Third World oil.
Events in Afghanistan, Angola and Vietnam
demonstrate how American foreign policy has
been forged by conflicts in the Third World.
Underlying these incidents ore disturbing facts.
According to the 1980 Brandt Commission report,
sponsored by the World Bank, the industrialized
North accounts for one-fourth of the world's
population but produces four-fifths of the world's
income. Meanwhile, in a belt of poverty stretching
through most of Asia, Africa and Latin America,
800 million people are destitute, and each year
more than 30 million children under 5 die of
starvation.
The United States is not responsible for the
poverty, disease and conflict of the un­
derdeveloped world. The origins of human misery
reach beyond historical blame or economic cause
and effect. Pointing the finger only distracts
attention from the real Job of helping the Third
World feed and clothe itself. Name-calling only
delays the work of ensuring the smooth supply of
raw materials, in exchange for technology, upon
which the industrial world depends.
W o u n d th e T h ird W orld ;ire interdependent, but
N o rth -S o u th d la t y g u M h a v e put u s n l

Ids. Poorer nations have exploited meetings to
Remand a shopping list of aid. Even the highly
publicized Brandt report focused on the NorthSouth transfer of wealth, rather than the mutual
creation of plenty.
President Reagan got off to a shaky start with
the Third World with his policy on the sale of baby
formula to underdeveloped nations, where con­
taminated water contributes to bottle-fed infant
deaths.
Reagun has not yet presented a specific policy
for the North-South dilemma. But his domestic
policy, which favors the creation of plenty
through free enterprise, instead of socialistic
redistribution of wealth, provides a key to an
innovutivc international program.
Reagan's domestic program attacks poverty,
not by welfare, but by stimulating the economy to
produce new goods, services and Jobs. A bold
agenda that stresses the creation of wealth in
Third World countries through production, rather
than the transfer of wealth through foreign aid,
could be America's contribution to the NorthSouth dialogue.
Specific proposals could Include the exchange of
trade concessions in return for raw materials, the
negotiation of long-term contracts for
manufactured goods, and the signing of Joint
private-public agreements to prospect for oil and
other resources. Barter arrangements, trading
technology for resources, could avoid further
foreign lo a n s-a n d debts. Despite these
measures, America must recognize that there will
always be n need and a place for some foreign aid
and emergency relief.
Expectations for the summit conference should
not run too high. Reagan's participation will not
magically untie Lhe Gordian knot of relations
between lhe North and South.
But the conference will give the president a
chance to hear, first-hand, the problems, needs
and aspirations of the world’s developing nations.
We hope President Reagan will take the op­
portunity to present his vision of a New Begin­
ning" based on economic creation—not
redistribution—to a needy world.

BERRY'S WORLD

“Actually, I wasn't oooting-ott. ’ 11
dating why managamanl can’t

MaJapanasa firms."

'» *

'j’SfpJwS

derstands poor and uneducated people “who
can’t explain themselves so well.” And that
person should also be one who can remember
from where he came, she said.

\

c l O&lt;*
CL'
By DONNA ESTES

Mrs. Plnckey, a life-long resident of the area,
said she has seen housing authority com­
missioners come and go. Many of them, she said,
she has known since school days, but few, she
said, remembered the tough times of being poor.
Chairman Joseph Caldwell was eloquent In the
simple statement he made to conclude last
week’s SHA commission meeting.

•'ll we want to progress we cannot do so
lighting,’’ he said. “We all have to come to a
level of understanding. People can get along
together. I know this."
Commissioner Elisa Pringle, a school teacher
for many years, noted "we ail make mistakes.
None of us knows It all. We need someone who
can think poaitlvely. We need harmony.’’
Caldwell also called on housing authority
tenants to have pride in their homes, saying the
projects should not look any different than any
other area in the city. He pointed to the waste of
time by maintenance workers picking up papers
that should not be thrown on the lawns. That time
could better be spent, he said, providing actual
maintenance to the apartments.
Seminole County Commissioners have not
made a definite decision yet on whether they will
contract industrial promotion for the county
through the privately-operated Industrial
Development Commlutcn of Mid-Florida Inc.
Roy L Harris, executive vice president of the
organization, told the commissioners the group
receives 100-to-12D industrial queries monthly.
He said listing of property, industrially-zoned

land and buildings in Seminole County will be
integrated Into the files currently maintained to
form one single masterflle. The organization at
this point promotes Industrial development in
Orlando and Orange County.
He said last year was an unusually successful
one for the organization.
-New industry has made commitments to
IDCMF which will result In the ultimate in­
vestment of *700 million, *.000 manufacturing
Jobs, 4,000 new support Jobs and almost million
square feel of new industrial space." he said.
"Many of the people who relocate with these
companies will be buying homes and shopping in
Seminole County," Harris said.
Harris said if Seminole Joins the IDCMF, it will
cost the county about *85.000 annually. The city
of Orlando Is paying the development com­
mission *37,500 annually and Orange County is
paying *125,000.
Seminole County’s *85,000, according to the
contract proposal, will be used as follows: ad­
vertising and promotion *32,000; salary *33,100;
payroll taxes *2,285; administrative expenses
*1,5751; fringe benefits *8,510; auto *3,600 and
auto insurance and operation, *2,900.

WILLIAM STEIF

BOB WAGMAN

Tips
On Food
Safety

Politics
Of The
Tax Vote
WASHINGTON (NEA (-Administration
officials are saying that their stunning House
victory on the tax-cut bill marked the
beginning of the natlon'i economic recovery.
But most of thla town’a politicians and
political operatives—Republicans and
Democrats alike—are more concerned with
the political ramifications of the vote than
with the economic ones.
Said Rep. BID lawery, It-CaUf., following
the balloting."W hat the vote shows,
especially in the margin of victory, Is that we
(the Republicans) now have operative control
on the House floor,"
But a different view was expressed by a
fellow mem ber of the California
congressional delegation. He la Democrat
Mervyn Dymally, a form er lieutenant
governor of the state and a tong lime observer
of Ronald Reagan.
"Ronald Reagan hai long been one of the
most effective communicators in American
politics," said Dynally. "One-on-one he can
sell almost anything—especially when he Is
dealing with an Issue like tax reduction that is
obviously very popular with the voters back
home. "
"The result is a testimony to Reagan's
effectiveness as a lobbyist and does not mean
that the Democrats who voted with the
president on this one issue will necessarily do
m in lhe future on other I
A Influential Democrat on the stall of House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill agreed with
Dymafly but put the matter more crassly.
"The vote proves that nothing ts new In
politics." he said shortly after the Republican
triumph. "It only reaffirms that if he is
willing to give up enough, a president can buy
a victory on a particular Issue.
"Even gotng back to the days of
• President) Johnson, I have never seen a
White House promise the kinds of things that
were promised here in the last 11 hours to win
votes. Our nation's entire energy policy may
have to be rewritten to make good on the
promise* delivered to the en ergy-itate
delegations to win their votes.”
The key questions being asked by most
politicians in the aftermath of the House vote
are; Have Reagan and the Republicans taken
control of the House and will they have
smooth sailing on future Important votes? Or
was the White House simply able to promise
Its way to victory on this one popular Issue
and will It hove to start all over the next time
it faces a critical test on the House floor?
Most experts say that It ts still too early to
tell whether the administration has Indeed
forged a new coalition. An answer may cone
with the showdowns later this year over
Social Security and the Voting Rights Act
extension.
lh e tax and budget voles a rt likely to hive
political ramifications over an even longer
term. Many Democrats are no! all that upaet
with the president's victories because they
believe that the aucreae or failure of his
economic program will be the central issue ot
the 1962 congressional campsIgns and the
1W presidential race.

JEFFREY HART

Reagan Wins Again
The air controllers have behaved so
stupidly that you wonder whether they ought
to have held thoee demanding Jobs in the first

pilot.

All they have done is provide Donald
Reagan with a no-lose situation, a fat pitch
that he can poke Into the stands with no
trouble at all.
From the beginning of his political career,
in 1966, Reagan has been lucky !n his opparents — who have consistently un­
derestimated him.
Isn't someone, sometime, gotng to learn tlw
lesson ot the last 15 years?
(n 1966, Governor Pal Brown of California
thought Reagan, "Juat an actor," would be a
pushover. Brown lost by a million votes.
Jease Unruh, a tough political professional,
thought he could beat Reagan In 1970. Does
anyone know where Unruh ts today?
In I960, the Carter people — probably
reflecting Carter's own estimate - thought
Reagan would be the easiest Republican to
beat. People like Hamilton Jordan and Jody
Powell conaidercd themselves experienced
professionals. They went down the tubes.
Tip O'Neill genially condescended to
Reagan, telling him that he w u "in the big
leagues" now. O'Neill hai been made to look
foolish, and Democrats are talking about a
replacement for him.
In other words of the popular ballad, "When
wiU they ever learn?”
Now it’s the alr-contriJers' turn.
As Reagan looks over the state of play on
this one, he must be pleased with his assets
He has the law on his side. Each of these
strikers signed an oath as the condition of
employment not to strike against the
government.
The language la crystal dear. No ore forced
them to take these Jobs. They entered the
agreement voluntarily. This has been backed
up by the courts, which have slapped the
union with heavy fin e s and begun the process
of Jailing ita leaden.

Reegan has public opinion on his side. The
air traffic controllers average *34.000 w r
year. The demands which precipitated the
strike would have raised top pay tar sir
controllers to salaries little less than those
paid to any Cabinet member.
On top of that, they wanted their hours
reduced by 20 percent, to 32 hours per week.
These demands have zero public support.
Reagan hai economic reality on his tide.
Scheduled flights are operating, at a slightly
reduced frequency. Non-striking controllers
are on the Job, tnd military controllers are
moving tn. The lines are already forming of
candidates (or the positions vacated by the
strikers, whom Reagan considers to have
resigned.
This last point, Icing on the cake, means
that they are not eligible for unemployment
benefits.
From the union's standpoint, the assets In
this confrontation are virtually nil. They
have received verbal support from lane
Kirkland, president of the AFIXIO. Jimmy
Carter had Kirkland's support loo. They have
received support from Canadian and
European air-controllers' unions, which has
made no practical difference.
And that's about it. What a hand to play
against Reagan.
In imaihing this irresponsible strike,
Reagsn will be making some excellent points
— and he clearly intends to make them.
First of all, these federal Jobs exist because
they are considered vital. The n o t trike oath
reflects that.
It would be Intolerable, for example, U sQ
the second lieutenants in the U.S. Army went
on strike. Similarly, the mall must be
delivered, the bridges uid tunnels must
operate.
Reagan ts miking U clear that strikes tn
these sensitive areas cannot be tolerated.
He ts also making this strike an object
lesson on 'he necessity of livthg up to con­
tracts.

A few years ago the US. Department of
Agriculture potled 2.200 homemakers and was
stunned to find that 78 percent of them did not
know basic rules of food safety.
Sixty-three percent of them routinely stored
and prepared food In their kitchens tn ways
food specialists consider dangerous.
Conservative estimates say that 10 million
Americans get stek each year because of food
poisoning. These cases range from symptoms
resembling Influenza from spotted mayon­
naise at a summer picnic to life-threatening
botulism attacks from canned goods. Most of
this is attributed to food prepared at home.
For years, the government's major home
food safety crusade was tn home canning
Poorly prepared home-canned tomatoes,
green beans, com and peas, for example, are
a major source of botulism, an often fatal
toxin.
Now the USDA ts trying to do something
about routine food safety and has published a
number of free pamphlets for (he public. The
following advice comes from the government
and from other eiperil:
Wooden kitchen counters and chopping
blocks are superb breeding grounds for
germs.
With power outages common in summer
because of storms and overloads, freezers
and refrigerators may be shut off for hours or
sometimes days. A well-laden freezer will
keep food frozen for two days. Never refreete
Ice cream , says the USDA, because of
passible con ts mins lion.
The key to detecting spoiled food is, not
surprisingly, to smell it and look al It. Any
unusual odor or color means the food should
be thrown away.
But if the contents of a can or Jar spurt out
when it ts opened, do not even get near it. It
could contain botulism. For the same reason,
be wary of all dented cans and Jars with loose
Uds
The timetable for keeping food fresh is
depresstngiy short, given the high cost of food
and the lack of lime most people have to shop.
Eggs, for example, ran be kept only two
days in the refrigerator if they are hard
cooked — six weeks II they ire fresh, in a
carton and stored with the large tide up. But.
U frozen, fresh eggs may be kept three
months. Hard-cooked eggs should not be
frozen.
Cooked stews and caiaeroles will only last
two or three days and cold cuts will last about
a week. Milk should be thrown out a week
after the date stamped on the carton. For
every hour milk ts out of the refrigerator. It
will stay fresh one le u day,
Raw or cooked chicken should stay tn the
refrigerator two days at the meet but it can be
frown. If wrapped tightly for up to sis
months. No meat sandwich should be out of
the refrigerator more than two hours.
The USDA survey found many leftover
foods, especially those with gravy, are cooked
Improperly before preserving. Also, many
persona atari cooking meat such as turkey at
one lirm; and then give it a final cooking later.
That could mean the meat never gels hot
enough for a long enough period of time to kill
bacteria.

JA C K ANDERSON

Secret Taping Causes Senate-State Flap
WASHINGTON - If any government of­
ficial should recognize the danger of secretly
taping high-level conversations, It should be
Secretary of State Alexander Haig. He was
While House chief of staff in 1174 when the
Supreme Court ordered the release of oval
office tapes that forced Richard Nixon to
resign the presidency in disgrace.
Yet cue of Haig's aides recently made a
clandestine tape-recording of a secret irestnn
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
To the intense embarrassment of the State
Department, the improper taping w u quickly
ditcovertd — because one of the tapes was
Inadvertently left behind In the meeting
room.
Despite this Maxwell Smart touch, the
epiaodt w a. noi regrrded as laughable by the
senators. And Haig's staff toon realized the
enormity of the gaffe.
On July 10, two days after the secretly
recorded meeting, Richard Fairbanks, I trig 'i
a ssistan t secretary far congressional
relatio n s, w rots Committee Chairm an

M th ’

Charles Percy, R-Ill., a letter of apology that
ts unmatched tn its abject tom by any com­
munication to Capitol Hill from the Reagan
administration.
Fair banks positively groveled. He assured
Percy that “the individual made the recor­
ding without our knowledge or approval," and
acknowledged that the action was " a
violation of the rules of your Committee."
Fairbanks wrote that be w u “personally
most apologetic for this unintended breach"
of the committee's rules, promised that "It
will not happen again," stoutly maintained
that be had taken ptrsonal responsibility to
Insure against a repetition, and cloud with a
pathetic isckctoih-and-aihes protestation;
"Again, you h are my personal apology [or
this incident. Please convey my apology to
the other Members of the Committee and to
the staff."
This astonishing Uriah Heep routine by a
top ride to the haughty secretary of state may
not hare cunrlnnd the members of the
Senate committee, some of wham hive

reportedly had their notes put out of Joint by
Haig's overbearing behavior tn the p a st The
fact that the culprit who did the taping, Keith
Schuette, still has bla Job — Indeed, seems to
hare suffered little more than a "reprimand"
for his sneak attack on senatorial dignity may add to Senate suspicions that the in­
cident w u noi the accident It h u been
painted to be by Foggy Bottom artists.
Percy read the Fairbanks apology to
assembled committee members, and for
some, that ended the matter. O thcn were not
sure that It should be dismissed so lightly.
The doubters wonder why the secret taper
wasn't detected by one of his State Depart­
ment colleagues and warned that his clan­
destine taping w u a no-no.
There taeven the possibility th a t-h e a v e n
forbid — Haig may hare reverted to hia old
Nixoacra form tod author lied the secret
taping himself. Unworthy as this suggestion
may be, Senate sources reminded my
associate Lucatte Lagnada that Haig, in the
past, h u been burned by what he consider!

Partisan leaks from earlier cioeed sessions
with Congress.
In (act, Haig's minions had complained
iboul earlier leaks traceable to such "closed"
teutons on Capitol Hill and had asked permlaakm to have their own transcriber present
to record the July I briefing session. The
committee refused the request; if the Stale
Department wanted a transcript of the
proceedings, tt could look at a copy, with the
express stipulation that no copies be made.
Whether the taping w u a result of stupidity
or deliberate skulduggery, there ta do
question that tt w u artlessly carried o u t The
telltale tape w u found laying on a Xerox
machine after the briefing by Senate
Since the tape w u found on the aide of the
committee room occupied mostly by State
Department people, U took no Sherlock
Holmee to figure out who w u responsible. An
accusatory call to Foogy Bottom nailed down
the culprit - and brought the adject apology
from H aig'a em barrassed cong reu io n al
liaison ride.

**“ “■* "* f* «A«,’^

i sjp

�Evening H tn ld , Sanford, FI.

Monday. A u^ 17, l» ll—1A

Charlotte Said Major Crime Center^
Because Of Motorcycle Gangs
CHARLOTTE. N.C. (UPIi — Motor,
cycle gangs have made Charlotte a
major East Coast center (or an organized
crime network that includes drugs,
.comm ercial se a . and violence, a
Charlotte newspaper says.
In the first of a five-part aeries, the
Charlotte Observer said Sunday the
bikers have formed a nationwide network that some law enforcement officials
have compared to the Mafia in iU for­
mative years.
The newspaper said police suspect
members of two gangs, the Hell's Angels
and the Outlaws, in at least IS unsolved
slayings in North Carolina and South
Carolina since July 4, 1979, when three
Outlaws and two associates were shot
while they slept in a Charlotte house.
The Observer quoted a report by the
federal
Drug
Enforcement
Administration, that said motorcycle
gangs may control up to half the illegal
distribution of methamphetamines in the
United States.
It also said gang members in the two

Carohnas are 'nvolved in ownership,
operation rr, control of topless bars,
prostitution, dating services, head shops
and tatoo parlors.
Major gangs have also set up black
m arkets for movement of stolen goods,
the newspaper said.
The gangs protect themselves with
sophisticated security, intelligence and
communications systems, the Observer
said, and police are hampered by taws
limiting surveillance and bureaucracy.
The newspaper also published ac­
counts outlining the operations of gangs
In Charlotte, Durham, Winston-Salem,
Lexington and Charleston, S.C.
"Motorcycle gangs are the essence of
organized crime. There are some very
dangerous people roam ing North
Carolina — they’re a menace," Attorney
G en eral Hufus Edmlsten told the
Observer.
The newspaper said the Hell's Angels
domical* motorcycle gang activity, with
an estimated 50 members in Durham,
W inston-Salem,
Charlotte
and

Charleston. The Outlaws are believed to
have about 20 members in Lexington and
Charlotte, police told the newspaper.
The largest concentration of each gang
is in Charlotte, the newspaper said.
Police also said since June I, there
have been two bombings, two shootings
and one firebombing suspected to be
linked to a power struggle between the
Angels and Outlaws over control of the
west Charlotte sex trade.
Asource in the Hell's Angels told police
the gang has arsenal of weapons, in­
cluding mortars, machine guns and anti­
tank weapons, stockpiled in Mecklenburg
County, Cleveland and New York.
Police said the gang has a weapons
expert who travels between clubhouses
instructing members how to use certain
weapons.
The newspaper also said police in­
telligence indicates the Hells Angel's are
making a move to take over groups such
as the Sundowners of Columbia, S.C., the
Ghost Riders of Myrtle Beach, S.C., and
the Scalawags of Raleigh.

She Leads An Exciting Life
As A Marine Patrol Officer
TAMPA, Fla. ( UPI) — Jenna Sprecher
thlnK nothing of tangling wtth lobstermen or risking her neck inspecting
boats that could be laden wtth a cargo of
marijuana.
It's &gt;3 part of the Job as a Florida
Marine Patrol officer, and sometimes the
caD of duty can be a bit hazardous.
Ms. Sprecher, a t-foot-3 blonde, likes to
tell the story of the time she tried to
arrest a burly shrimp boat captain. It
seems the sea-worthy skipper wasn't too
happy about being arrested by a woman.
And it didn't help when the ship's crew
started laughing and making Jokes about
the woman who was going to arrest their
captain, all S-foot-ft and 300 pounds of
him.
"Skipper," 1 said, "we can either do
this the easy way or the hard way. The
odds are 99 to I that you'll whip me U we
hare to fight But, there's one chance in a
hundred that I'll beat your fanny. And
Just imagine what all the other fishermen
will be saying from here to Texas if you
loee."
The skipper thought twice, and went
peacefully.
"The word spread tike wildfire," she
said. "And after that every time I saw
him he was friendly and always Invited

me aboard."
Ms. Sprecher is the patrol's only
woman officer and wouldn't trade it for
anything.
"There are limes when its very scary,
particularly at night when you are
pulling up along side a boat," the 2ftyear-old said. "But you always try to
observe a boat at night before finally
going alongside."
Until recently officers patrolled by
themselves, but because of the drug
trafficking, they now are paired for the
more dangerous night duty.
Ms. Sprecher Joined the patrol in 1977
in the Florida Keys and is one of the
agency's divers for special missions.
She was brought to the Tampa Bay
area in late 1977 as diving safety officer
in the attempt In gather evidence from
the vessel Gunsmoke. The boat sank
eight miles west of Egmont Key at the
mouth of Tampa Bay.
It was connected with a marijuana
smuggling ring in which (our persons
were killed in the Florida Panhandle
when they a evidentially stumbled onto
the operation.
Although still subject to call in law
enforcement operations, she now is one
of four officers working to develop.

come from customers whose goods have been lost or
mlsrouted, losing up to 100 days
At the moment Vostochny handles 70,000 containers a year,
while Nakhodka can take between 4045,000. If Vostochny
finishes its second container terminal by 190, as planned,
volume could be stepped up rapidly.
About 4ft percent of the containers hold Import goods, while
5ft percent are for export, engineer Potapov said.
Moat of the complex's equipment is imported, Including the
American computer handling the container term inal
"We bought this a while ago, in a good period," said one of
the computer specialists, referring to 1974 when UJ.-Soviet
detente was flowering and trade flowing.
It must now be replaced within a year, probably with a
Soviet Edinaya Systems 1055.
Of course, it would be great Ueverything was simpler, as In
1974 when we simply bought what w* needed abroad,” the
computer specialist said.
The Japanese, however, supplied the bulk of the equipment
under the credit arrangement. Their chief concern was the
coal termlnaL In 1174 the Soviets agreed to ship the Japanese
H4 million of coking coal, or 5 million Ions a year for 29 years
from the south Yakutia coal fields.
The two loaders at each end of the coal terminal can move
3,000 tons each per hour, Potapov said, and the terminal has
been handling 6.34 million tons of coal a year.
But it was Idle when reporters visited recently because the
quality of the South Yakutia coal has proved to be so poor, or
soft, that much of it Is not worth shipping. The Japanese still
receive 3 million tons through Vostochny from the Kuznetsk
Basin under an agreement running through 190.
The disappointing coal yield could coat the Soviet. The
equipment at Vostochny is produced by such companies as
Hitachi, Mitsui Milk* - which held the contract for the coal
terminal — and Sumitomo. Loss of further Japanese
cooperation, which could be the case If the coal cannot be
delivered, would mean turning to SovieUnad* equipment,
generally acknowledged to be of poorer quality,
"We.don'* really need the Western countries for equipment,'*
said George Pincus, general manager of the port at Nakhodka.
"But If we need It badly, wall buy I t "

Blood Drawing Scheduled Tuesday
he Sem inole County Board of
ittors will sponsor a blood drawing
aday from 9 a m to 2 p m on the
tral Florida Blood Bank's mobile unit
chw illbe parked at the dsims oftee
Vinter Springs.
With the rapid growth of the Central
rlda area, the demand for blood bi­
ases," said Edward O. Carr, director
he blood bank. The Seminole County
ird of Realtors recognizes this ased
I is helping us meet the everresting demands."

Carr aaid blood donors must be in good
health and at least 17 years old. Thera la
no upper age restriction a s long a s lha
person fulfills the re g u la r donor
requirements. Each person Is given a
free, mini, fully-dotbed physical before
they are certified to donate. This Includes
tak in g their blood p rta a u ra , pulse,
tem perature and determining how much
Iron they have in their blood. Questions
concerning medical history and general
health are asked.
"Blood donors provide a unique form of
medical care because there la no sub­

Cmiml

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

Heritage COOKBOOK
★

SIXTH WEEK’S C O N T E S T *

coordinate, conduct and review law en­
forcement education and training
programs for the patrol.
She also is an liaison between tho
pstrol and other law enforcement
agencies, the public, and news media and
coordinates activities of the patrol's
boating safety, training and education
programs.
A diver since 12 and a photographer,
she became Involved in the recovery of
evidence while in the Keys.
"In the Keys a lot of lobatermen keep
their undersized lobsters In a separate
box and throw them overboard U a patrol
officer cornea up," she said. "They
thought once it sunk to the bottom they
had gotten rid of the evidence.
"But I started putting a drop buoy out
immediately and the Judge accepted the
recovered evidence in court,” she said.
"He ruled we had never lost control of the
evidence."
Ms. Sprecher encourages other women
to Join the patrol.
"I'd definitely encourage other
qualified women to explore the
possibility of becoming Marin* Patrol of­
ficers, but I don't care if they are women
or minorities, I'm looking for qualified
officers."

Soviet Union Behind Schedule
In Completion Of Pacific Port
VOSTOCHNY. U.S.S R. (UPI) - When the Pacific port of
Vostochny is finished, it will be one of the largest in the Soviet
Union.
But with only four of M planned berths finished after 10 years
of building, completion may be some time coming.
“1 don't know when the port will be finished," said loading
engineer Alexander Potapov, who showed foreigners around
the large complex on Wrangel Bay.
When operations began on Vostochny In 1971,1990 was given
as a probable completion date.
Vostochny was conceived to take the load off the port at
Nakhodka, 12 miles along the coast and a city only since 1950.
Nakhodka has been operating at about the same annual
capacity (or the last 15 years, however, and it was clear this
facilities could not handle the booming trade of Siberia's
natural resources, exchanged for goods from Japan among
other nalfbns.
A large part is available at Vladivostok, 12ft miles along the
coast, but the port is closed to foreigners because the Soviet
Patjffft Fleet is based in the area.
Sovostoduiy, an hour's boat ride from Nakhodka, was
begun.
The container terminal, coal-loading platform, wood-chip
and lumber berths already in operation arc working well so
far, operators and useri agree.
But much of the first stage of the port was funded by
Japanese credit loans, and stage two is under negotiation, with
Japanese cooperation far from assured.
"The coal companies a rt hesitant to cooperate in the second
stage,” said Japanese consul llidcki Asahi.
The container terminal, the first of five, U the moat
celebrated of the Vostochny complex. It Is one end of the
overland shipping route promoted by the Soviets as faster and
cheaper than the old ones linking the F a r East and West
Europe through the Tanama Canal or around Africa.
Using the Trans-Siberian railroad and an extension of It to
Vostochny and Nakhodka, containers need travel only M00
mil— from Yokahama, for example, to Rotterdam, compared
with 14,400 miles via Panama and 11,700 miles via Africa.
Japanese traders using the route say It works well, if the
good are not perishable or seasonal, but that complain!* have

RECIPE

stitute for human blood. Although moat
people have blood to share, leas than Ova
percent of tha eligible population
donates. Yet, the supply, demand, and
human lift, depends on blood supply,"
C*tt said.
Donating blood takes k a than 39
mimrtw, m l |f a itroplf. pilrikm
process. A one-pint donation comprian
leas than 19 percent of th* body’s total
apply, and following a donation, blood
volume is restored in several boors, Carr

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«A—tvenlne Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, Au*. 17, m i

Seminole Seizes Trip To World Series

Unbeatable Broncos Buck Miami
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Can anybody beat these kids?
First, Miami Avantl Manager Joe
Arriola asked himself that question in
Spanish Then he tried it in English. The
answer was still the same In the Southern
Zone Bronco Tournament hasted by the
Seminole Pony Baseball Association
Saturday at Five Points.
No. No matter what language, the
Seminole Broncos surged back from a 4-0
last inning deficit to upend slate
champion Miami, M and capture a trip
to the Bronco World Series In lafayette,
La. along with the Southern Zone CTOwn.

IU/
” ® &lt;

But fI
n(

—

Sem inole M an ager
Richard C offey

|1(|rU[

Seminole received a first-round bye in participant,
the six-team double-elimination tour­
nament which starts Thursday night. The
51,11 t0
Broncos will play Friday night. A pretournament parade takes place Wed­
nesday. Anyone wishing to contribute
The Broncos used a superlative, fivemoney to help offset tournament ex­
hit pitching performance from Terry
penses may
contact
Seminole
"The Cat" Miller. The Sanford fireballer
AaaodatJon President Bill Kiordan at
struck out seven of the hard-hitting
I3I-3J41.
Miamians and gave up only two earned
Some rones have yet to be decided, th e runs. Manager Richard Coffey also went
East representative will be Puerto Rico. to his bench during an eight-run, seventh­
Lafayette will be the host and St. Ber- inning splurge which stunned the Avantl

bunch.
"The Cat hasn't pitched two better
games than he has in this tournament,"
praised Coffey about his talented right­
hander. “Our bench did it though. They
came right off and started creaming the
balL"
Along with the cream, the Seminole
Crew mixed in a few walks for variety
during the Incredible two-out rally which
on two occasions came within one strike
of dying.
"Steady Eddie" Evans started the

fireworks with hU third hit of the day.
Third baseman Dale Stevens coaxed
Avsnti'i fine left-hander Klkl Antomnl
for the first of the Inning's four walks.
"We were a little down after the two
runs Miami scored," said Coffey about a
twoout dropped fly ball by Kelly Hysell
which gave Avantl Its 4-0 edge. "But we
never give up. I told them 'to lake the
first pitch and be patient at the plate.'n
After pinch hitter Jason Bray struck
out, shortstop Kirk Bosek reached on an
error by second baseman and pinch
hitter Tracy Turner lined out to center
field. It was patience personified.
Mark Coffey walked on a 3-3 pitch after
spoiling several strikes with foul balls.
That forced In Evans with the first run,
but Seminole's hopes still seemed bleak,
Catcher Eddie Taubenaee was next
Antonini quickly Jumped ahead of his
left-handed hitting opponent with two
curve balls. Taubenaee then fouled off a
pitch. Antonin! proceeded to throw four
wide ones with the 3-3 toss Just missing at
the knees.
"One pitch from Lafayette," said
Miami's Arriola, sounding a lot like
Altamonte Manager Gene Letterio a
couple weeks back. "But give them all
the credit. They took it to us."
Taubensee's walk forced in Stevens
with the second run and Arriola sum­
moned his ace reliever Raul Cendoya
from center field. Cendoya had struck
out seven of eight hitters in a similar
situation Friday against Newnan, Ga.
The all-around athlete smacked a RBI
single In the fifth Inning to increase
Avantl's lead to M after Antonini's
fourth inning blast over the renter field
fence broke up a scoreless game.
After taking a strike, however, right
fielder Sean Flaherty rammed a fastball
back up the middle to drive home Rosek
and only a strong throw by Antonlnl kept
a rounding Coffey perched on third base.
It was the Irishman’s third such rap of
the day.
Miller was up next and the tall righty
duplicated Flaherty's tingle back past
Cendoya a s Coffey tied the gam e at 44.

Antonlnl quickly fielded the grounder
and tried to force Miller at second bate,
but his throw was off the mark and,
ironically, pinned the Iota on the
Argentinian when Taubenaee alertly
scampered home with the eventual
winning run.

S a n f o r d 's T e r r y M iller (s e c o n d f r o m th e rig h t) g rts a c o n g r a tu la to r y h u g fro m
lo s in g m a n a g e r Jo e A rrio la a f t e r S e m in o le w hipped M ia m i. 8-1 to win th e
S o u th e r n Z o n e llro n c o T o u r n a m r n t a t F iv e P o in ts. C o a c h D ick W a rin g (rig h t) is
n r x t in lin e .

Even followed with his second tingle of
the inning to reload the bases. Stevens
drew a past to up the count to V4 and
Bray scorched a liner to left center to
score the final two runs of the frame for
an M advantage. On the pitch, Cendoya
apparently pulled a tendon In his arm
according to Arriola and was replaced by
Ricky who retired Roiek on a pop fly to

M tftM P la to ky T«m

v im m

first base.
In the inning, the Broncos sent 13
batters to the plate. Evans had two hits
and scored two runs. Coffey, Taubenaee,
Flaherty, Miller and Stevens had one run
batted in apiece, while Bray had two
"ribbies."
In the bottom of the inning. Miller
silenced the powerful Avantl bats In
order, lie fanned Fernandes. Induced
Bello to ground to Coffey unassisted and
struck out An ton ini to send the Seminole
enthusiasts into a wild frenzy.
“We ran train them," said an elated
Coffey about his comeback kids. "But the
kids had the guts to do IL” Our bench
(Bray, Turner, Mickey Helms, Greg
Ebbert and Scott Bowers) really did the
Job today." Coffey is assisted by Greg
Ebbert Sr. and Dick Waring.
Look out Ijdayette.
siMiNOki
■oi*».»»

a s a h at
t i e s

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t e e s

Helms, ct

s e e s

CMtov. I#

I I S I

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TOTALS
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E — Fwnenoel J. to rte . Antonlnl. H r le t I
Vuarei LOS — Seminole I . M ia m i S. IB —
B re r MB AntanMI SB — CenOo*e.
B o d nsu e i. Sesole. C otter, r ie f te r tr
IM
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Seminole-Altamonte: Match That's Gotta Be Made
As 1 sat waiting patiently for the
Seminole Broncos to rally and win the
|t j
Southern Zone Bronco Tournament, I
■y couldn't help wondering, how would
W these guys do ag ain st "G cne'a
r
Machine.'*
J*
"Gene's Machine" is the other out­
standing It and 11-year-old team in the
r
county. Better known as the Altamonte
■ Major league all-stars, Gene Letterio's
crew came within one pitch of going to
the Southeast Regional before losing to
perennial champion Belmont Heights.
■
The rules are a little different, but the
^
components are the same. Both teams
are great. There Is also a natural
rivalry. Altamonte's best player and
m
standout pitcher Mike Schmlt honed his
■
skills in the Seminole Pony Baseball
11 Association before moving to Letterio's
■
squad this year.
I
And since the Five Points entry is In
need of funds to finance its trip to the
I
World Series In Lafayette, La., what
"
better way to raise some cad i than a
benefit game between the two beat
teams this county has ever developed
m on a Little League leveL
Pony baseball la a carbon copy of
f ’ major league baseball that the big boys
k||
play. Altamonte's la governed by the
1
Williamsport hierachy. Five Points'
bases are 10 feel longer and they allow
'$
lead offs. I'm sure, however, that the
talented Altamonte crew will have no
trouble adapting to the Pony game.
Since it's the Seminole Broocoe that
f
are going to the World Series, It would
only be appropriate to play by their
rules. I'm aure Manager Richard
Coffey would do the sam e for
Mtamonte If the trip was on the other
foot.
So, let's play. 1 don't want to hear
M«SM Plato ky Tim v m m I
anything about charters or sanction* or
Joe Arriola (le ft), M iam i'* clauy manager, dbcune* strategy
insurance or any of the other
with Avantl butlne** manager Oscar Fem andei during a tense bureaucratic rad tape that people (all
moment In Seminole'* come-from-behlnd 8-4 victory over Miami. back upon when they don't want to play.

Sports Editor

We have a good cause here with
Seminole needing funds. We have a
natural rivalry and ww have two great
teams I would say Tuesday night
would U right Maybe about 7 pm I
n't care if )uu i lurge admission or
[o u the )u4t As IIley
m AIKSUr
wrestling, this is Die match Out has to

Points outfit and all that work paid off
Saturday when Seminole carted off its
championship trophies.
“ 1 don't think you could find two
better teams than we had here,"
Kiordan told the ovrrilow crowd during
post-game ceremonies. "The fans were
very well-behaved and behind the
players all the time.
Another constant spectator was Pony
M r a B w V w T v^'iS -T i?: 7
7f 1! :
1
■-

And ha&gt;* you ever seen Gene Letterio
back down from a challenge’
get

Joe Arriola may have left town by
now, but the class of the Miami Avantl
Manager will last forever. It's eaiy to
btagood winner, but lt'a tough to draw
that same dignity In defeat.
Arriola has that Innate quality. When
the championship was finally won, the
hugging starts. It'a easy to bug your
own players, but when the hanriihaki
were exchanged, (her* was Amota
with his arm s around Sanford's Terry
"The Cal" Millar after Miller had
thrown a masterful five-hitter to beat
Avantl
How can Arriola be such a good
loaor? Probably because the Cubanbon manager has been such a good
winner for so long. The Avantl Bronco
team was the only level from the Miami
area that didn’t reach the World Series.

I

S e m in o le c a tc h e r K ddie T a u b e n a e e ta k e s a cu t an d fo u ls o ff a p itc h
in t h e B ro n c o s ' 8-4 victory o v e r M ia m i S a tu rd a y a t F iv e P o in ts . T he
S e m in o le s q u a d e a rn e d a t r i p to th e llronco W o rld S e r i e s in
I j i f a y e t t e , l-a . w ith eight ru n s in th e la s t inning.

Right now the Seminole Bronco* a r t
Just glad they’re the one.

:fv

V
*

-*

1

Baseball veteran Wilbert Lindley, who
is the heed honcho for the Southern
Zone. "It was an excellently run
tournament," said Lindley. "The only
thing that hurts me la that 1 can't taka
both these fine teams with me to
lafayette."

t
, , fc

'

f c y g i j j g

1

¥

1

J

f

I

I

T I

L

A

■

t U

As Seminole Pony Baseball
W jp W
Association Preodent Bill Rionlan W P * h f l w S O l X
^
.M W Y w L
potniad out, aavorel things go Into
wKw
making a successful louruameoL He Is
Mw&gt;M
k * * *■!»
definitely one of them. Riordan has Gene U U e rlo with hb two ace pitcher* Anthony Laazaic (left)
vorksd Ureleualy all year for the Five and M ike Schmlt.

�Someday You Are Going ToBe In The RecordBook'

Monday, Aug. 17,1*11—XA

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Stephenson Carves W ay to 11 -Stroke Win
DAIJ.AS (U PI) — Jan Stephenson
had a continuous grin and let out an
occasional chuckle that was all very
acceptable since she had just carved
up par like no other woman In
history.

On a cloudy, muggy Sunday on a
golf course that Stephenson said
gave
her
nightm ares,
the
Australian-tumed-Tesan completed
the lowest three rounds ever in
women's golf.

But suddenly she turned sertous.
“This means more to me than you
might think," she said. “All those
y e a n 1 worked on my game with my
lather in Australia and I would say
to him, ’What are we doing this lor?’

She shot an 6under-par over the
Bent Tree Country Club course to
record a 54-hole total of 1H — la­
under par. No woman had ever shot
less than 200 over 54 holes and the
It was Stephenson's second vic­
lowest winning score for any tourna­ tory this year and her sixth In eight
ment — be it 54 or 72 holes — had years on the tour.
been 17-under.
Stephenson's am a iln g winning
Stephenson, who now lives in total was 11 shots better than that
nearby Fort Worth, was given a posted by veteran Sandra Itaynle,

i “ And he would say to me,
Someday you are going to be in the
iwcord book."’
Now she Is.

prolonged standing ovation as she
neared the 18th green. She
responded by rolling in her eighth
birdie putt ol the day.
“1 got goose bumps," she said. "1
honestly didn’t know 1 had shot as
low as 1 had until I totaled up my
score. 1 added It up to 64 and I didn't
think that was right. I knew 1 hadn't
shot 64 But I had."

who shot a £9 Sunday (or a 9-under thought I was on the verge," said
209 total. A five-way tie developed at Stephenson. “My goals this year
Funder 212 thaj included Sandra were to finish in the top 10 In money,
Spuxirh, Laura Baugh-Cole, rookie win a major tournament and earn
Kyle O'Brien, defending champ 1100,000. Now I've done all three."
Jerilyn Brtiz and U.S. Open champ
Before Stephenson's showing
Pat Bradley, who vaulted into the Sunday, the tour record for 54 holes
No. 1 spot in this year’s money had been 200—a score posted In I960
winning list.
by Carol Mann and In 1961 by Ruth
Jessen. The lowest under-par total
Stephenson won 123,250 which
ever recorded before Sunday was 17boosted her over the 1100,000 mark
widrr, which Hollis Stacy shot in
for the first time in her career and if
winning a 72-hole tournament In
her performance Sunday did not
Springfield, HI., four years ago.
boost her into superstar status, it
Stephenson's 64 followed rounds of
certainly put her close.
65 and 69 and the records she set
"I hurt mv back last year Just as I were not produced on an easy target.

by Alan Mover

PUTTING ON HEIRS

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F in e r m a jo r a
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C LA SSIC , B U T ir » * 5 ir r
A CASE OF "FATH ER
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Green Drinks A w ay Tourney Dry Spell
•WETHERSFIELD, Conn. (UPI)
* For Hubie Green ft was a
delicious drink after a long dry spell
Kit for runnerup Roger Maltbie It
^ps a hard loss to swallow.
JjThe two veterans, both without
M ir victories in some time, churned
the Wethersfield Country Club
tenday In the final round of the
p00,000 Greater Hartford Open.
£When It was over, Green had fired
*von birdies for a 64, his fourth subM r round and the lowest 72 holes In
oumamenl this year, to overtake
illbie by one stroke and earn the
A t.000 lop prize.
•Malthic, who started the day at 16-

g

under-par 197 and a threestroke lead,
had five birdies but also two bogeys
One of them was the result of a car
horn that caused Maltbie to blow an
easy 4-foot putt on the 15th hole, and
he missed agstn coming back the
same distance.

in that situation before."
Green, 34, had rounds of 6665-67-64
fer a 264 total to register his 17th
career victory on the tour. The
154.000 winner's check raised him lo
t3lh on the all-time money list at
$1,494,331.

His 20-under 264 total was one
stroke ahead of Maltbie, Fred
Couples and Bobby Clampett. who
each got 122,400 for second place.

"This win ended a very long dry
spell," said Green, whose last
victories were (he Hawaii and New
Orleans Opens in 1979

"I felt bad [or Roger," said Green,
who lied Maltbie at 17-under on the
ninth hole when Maltbie commuted
the first of two bogeys in his final
round 66. “I know it hurts. I've been

"It's a slow process of getting
back together,” said the 1977 U S
Open champion who started the final
round in third place a t 13-under, but
caught Maltbie.

Maitbie's bogey on the par-415th
turned out to be the deciding point.
Maltbie, looking for his first victory
since 1976, could do no better than
par after the 15th.
Maltbie said he was bothered on
the 15th by a car horn that went off
Just as he started his back swing.

Clampett, who started out the day
In fourth place at launder, got his
eighth and final birdie on the ltth for
19-undcr to share second place. All
alone was Tim Simpson, who shot a
65 for a 266 total
Jack Renner and Curtis Strange
had 67 and 66 respectively to tie at
"The car horn went off, and my 267 and fourth place.
A total of 91 golfers — the highest
hands just shook," Maltbie said. "It
in
the field after the cut In PGA play
was poor timing, I guess. My con­
centration wasn't what it's supposed this year — played the short 6,534to be. I haven't been in this situation yard course throughout the tour­
for a long time, and my con­ nament.
Every player came In under par
centration Just wasn't there. Once
that car horn went bingo, 1 went with except Don Bies, who canted an
even 264 (or 72 holes.
It,"

Astros All Right With Wright, Niekro Blanks Padres
i

By L'nitrd Press International
Mel Wright, pitching coach of the
Houston Astros, said during spring
training that the dub's staff was the
best he had seen In his 32 years of
professional baseball.
They are beginning to prove it.
.Over the last three games the
A stros' pitchers h sv t performed
superbly by giving up only one run
and 10 hits. Their latest triumph, 3-0
over the San Diego Padres, was a
combined two-hit performance by Joe
Niekro and Dave Smith Sunday.
"I thought our staff pitched well in
the first half," said Niekro, who
raised his record lo 76. " It's just that
we weren’t doing the things we hgve to
do to win. When we got the pitching,
the hitting wasn't there and when we

l

hit, the pitching didn't come through.
After those first IS games (5-12), we
played well. We may have the best
winning percentage in the league
after those flrzl 15."
Niekro has a point. After their
disastrous start, the Astros were 25-17
until the strike interrupted the season.
Niekro went eight innings and
allowed both hits to gain his first
victory since May 25. Smith got the
last three outs to notch h it fourth
save.
Padres' starter Steve Mura, 4-9,
took the loss as San Diego's scoreless
string was extended to 27 consecutive
innings.
Tony Scott singled In runs in the
eighth and ninth to trigger the Astros’
victory.

Dodgers I, liras rs 1
At Los Angeles, Steve Garvey
doubled in two runs and scored the tiebreaking run on Ron Cey's single in
the seventh inning to give the Dodgers
a comeback victory. Garvey's third
hit of the game came after pinch
hitter Rick Monday and Ken U n ­
dream drew walks oft rookie Steve
Bedrosian, 1-1, and tied the score 65.
Reds 2, Giants 1
At Cincinnati, Mario Soto and Tom
Hume combined on a seven-hitter and
George Foster went W ord, Including
an Rill single, in helping the Reds
defeat the Giants. Soto, 76, gave up
six hits, struck out six and walked one
in 8 1-3 Innings before giving way to
Hume, who posted his seventh save.
Hets S, Phillies 2
At New York, run-senring singles by
**

Dave Kingman and l,ec Mazxilll and a
two-run double by Ellis Valentine
highlighted a four-run third Inning
that carried the Meta to victory. Pat
Zachry, 6-7, went six innings to get the
triumph with Dan Boitano and Neil
Allen, who earned his ninth save,
pitching in relief. Mike Schmit
homertd for Philadelphia and Hubie
Brooks connected for New York.
Pittsburgh 4-4. Chicago 26
At Chicago, Tony Pena singled in
Mike Easier from third base with two
outs In the ltth inning to give the
Pirates a 4-3 triumph to the opener.
Bobby Bonds knocked in three runs
with a bases-loaded single in the tifth
Inning to help rookie Jay Howell win
his major league pitching as the Cubs
won the nightcap.

White Sox Comeback Catches Baltimore
By United Press Is Irma Ilona I
The Chicago White Sox created
quite a controversy by saying they
might need to lose games on purpose.
Don't worry - they may find winning
too much fun.
The gam e being on national
television showed people lhal our dub
wants to win," White Sox skipper
Tony U ltim a u id Sunday after his
club battled to a 10-inning, 6-7 triumph
over the Baltimore Orioles.
"I consider this game a roster win,"
continued U R usia, who made a stir
by admitting he would lose a game If
that meant a way to the playoffs.
••Everybody played a part and 1 think
(Jie country saw the real character of
qur team. Our team has enough
Character. Our club battles.”
; It sure does. With the Orioles
leading by two runs in the ninth. It
to u ld have been easy for the White
i»x lo told. Instead, they tied the
•core and then took a 76 lead. When
tied It 7-7 on Eddie
l|ve Orioles
O

Murray’s second homer of the day.
the Chisox could have folded again.
Again, they did not.
"We won't cave in,'* said U R ussa.
"Our guys really showed something
today.”
Harold Baines led off the 10th with a
double off loser Dave Ford, 1-2. After
Jeff Schneider relieved, Chet Union
sacrificed Baines to third and Tony
Bernazard singled through a drawn-in
infield to make a winner of Eld Far­
mer, 62. Kevin Hickey pitched the
10th and earned his second save.
Munay saw one of his finest dsys
wasted. His grand slam and two-run
homer gave him six RBI.
"I hit two fastballs," he said. "Both
were away. I was hot before the strike
and it was just a matter of getting
healthy. When that happened, I knew I
would hit."
T tgen $, Yankees 8
At Detroit, KlrkGihson, In the game
only because Ricky P tte r s was
ejected for arguing a strike call an
inning before, hit a three-run homer in

the ninth oft Ron Davie to cap a fourrun outburst. Aurelio toper, 4-1,
picked up the victory in relief. The
Yankees built an early lead on (he
hitting of Reggie Jackson, who had a
pair of RBI doubles.
Brewers 62, Blue Ja&gt;s 26
At Toronto, Jim Gantner and Roy
Howell knocked in two runs each to
key s six-run fifth that ltd the
Brewers in the opener. Ben Ogllvle
belled a two-run homer and reliever
Roilie Fingers picked up his second
save to help the Brewers complete
their sweep.
A'l 7, Angels 8
At Oakland. Tony Armas drew ■
bases-loaded walk oil Ken Forach, 96,
in the sixth to force in the winning run.
Forsch had an 0-2 count on Armas
before losing him to force in Hob
Picdolo. The A’s loaded the bases on
singles by Picciolo and Dwayne
Murphy and s walk to Greg Gross.
Rick Langford, 6 6 , earned the victory
with his league-leading 12th complete
game of the season.

Mariners 1, Twins 4
At Bloomington, Minn., Tom
Psciorck snd Richie Zisk each singled
in a run to ignite a three-run ninth.
Paciorek, who had four hits, knocked
in Julio Cruz with the decisive run off
loser Doug Corbett, 26, and made a
winner of Shane Rowley, 16. the third
Seattle pitcher,
Ro)aU 64, Indian* 26
At Cleveland, Frank White belted a
three-run homer in the second and the
Royals added three more runs in the
seventh to win the opener. Rookie Von
Hayes singled home Mike Hargrove
with the goahead run In the seventh
snd scored on Toby llarrah'i tingle in
the nightcap.
Hangers 3, Red Sox I
At Arlington, Texas, Rick
Honeycutt threw the tin t complete
game for the Rangers since the end of
the strike, lluncycult gave up six hits
snd did not walk a batter in boosting
his record to 61. Bob Ojeda, 1-1, took
the loss.

Major League Roundup
Standings
M e ie r League tia n d ie ti
Netienel L i e s *
ky U nited Prase interM ttew tt
I f K i n d Melt I

■•St
L Pci.
I
i
i
i

•OS

Low.*
r * Verb
lentreel
n-cego
trsburgn
hue

OB

714

too
43*
7SS
3SS
West

.714
714
IN
o* Ang
43*
Fren
ITS
met
113
en D&gt;ego
Sunday's Seetes
P ittsburgh A Chicago 1, I I
w ings. 1st game
Chicago e. Pittsburgh 4. Jnd
Jlonte

St
e.n

Louis e l

Montreal, p u d .

New Y o rk 1. Pnitedetphie 1
C in cinn a ti 3. Sen Francises I
L o t Angeles A Atlanta 3

Houston 3. Sen D.ego 0
Tedey's Prebeble Pilchers
(All Times I DTI
Lo* Angeles (Welch 4 II 4t
Chicago I Bird I S), I B p m
Sen FrertclKO (Blue SI) el
Pittsburgh (Solomon S4), 7 31

Seattle
Oakland
Chicago
Ken CMy
T rie s
Minn

sn

Sunday's R etelti
r a r s is C ity A Cleveling 3.
M l g im e
Cleveland
Kansas City A
Jnd gam e
D etroit 1 New York «
M ilw aukee A Toronto I, 1st
game
M ilw aukee I . Toronto A Jnd

Son Diego (Wise I SI at St
Louis (Sorensen SSI, I 33 pm
Montreal
( Burris 41)
it
Houston (Buhtg I I ) , I » pm
Tootday's O o m it

Loo Angeles el Chicago
Son Francisco el Pittsburgh
Mow vorb ot Atlonto
PMledetphio ot Cincinnati
Sen Otago i t St Loud
Montreal at Houston
Am erkaa Leepee
By United Press lateroetienel

M itw e u k t
Toronto
p it
Oetro’t
Boston
New Y ork

___H a lil
le s t
W L
I 1
4 I
4 I
4

1
I

I
West

jLaney, Ellinson
Sanford's Jay Laney did it the
u i y w ay, stablem ite " L a p "
Ellinson did the hard wsy and Jerry
Dickerson is just looking lor some
way to light.
The first two came away winners
Saturday night as Mike Fordham's
fearless fighting crew cleaned up at
the South Orlande Boys Club In
Pinecutle.

..I-oney, an 65-pounder, knocked

■ F T , '

Pet
«•
til III
I
VI t
IN
I

an
tn
m

1

i
a

I
I

MO 44) I
3 3M i t *
4 300 z
3 300
I 3)3

&gt; IIT

Calif

Chicago

A

Baltimore

I,

10

wrings
Seattle 7, Minnesota I
Oakland 7, C elltornie S
Tanas I , Ration 0
Today's Prebeble pitchers
( A ll Tim es B D T I
Chicago (Burns * 1 ) el New
York (R ru s th e l 001. • p m
Minnesota IKeotm en IS ) at
D etroit (P etry IS ) , I p m
Toronto
(Clancy
111
at
Kansas City IGato 4 1). I l l

pm.
M ilw aukee

(Haas

til

at

Teias (M e lla c k I I I . S 13 p m

Linescores
M ater Leegee R ew ltt
■ y United P raia lateroaliaaal
National League
( P in t O im tl
( I t lanm gsl
P ttbgn
IPO 100 PIS S 3 - 4 I0P
Chi
t i l OOP OOP0»-1 II P
Rhoden. Tekulye IN . Jackson
( I I I and Pena. Krorec. Caudill
(PI. Cap.ua I I I . 3m,in I I I and
Dev&gt;t
W -T e k u iv e (411. L —
Sm ith IS S3
I Second Cam el
Lisbon
000 103 00B— t I I
C hi
IO3S30 0 B 4-S I I
P e r t!. Jones I I ) . Jackson ( I I
and N icosia. Howell. M e rit I t l
and B lackw ell
W Howell I I
•&gt;
L -P e re i
41-43
HRChicago. Buckner (41
P h il#
000 IN 0 1 B -I « 0
NY.
OWOIOOOu-1 I t
Ruthven. Notes (31, Lyle ( I t
Zainry.
Bo &gt;lano

(71. A llan IT) and Si M in s W—
Zachry 14 71 L -R u llw y n ( I I I
HRs
Phlladyfdila, Schmidt
I I I ) . N rw Y ork, Brooks t l )
St
ram

Louis ol Muntrsel. a d d ,

San F ra n
000 000 100- 1 7 0
Clncl
tUtOOIOOk-Z S I
G eittln. Brrm ing (7IA TuttS
I I ) , Holland I I I and May. Soto.
H u m . 171 and Nolan w - ld l o
(741 L —G r i l l * (S4I
A iia
o n o io o o o - s n i
LOS Ang
000 I K M s - 4 I I I
P arry, BedrgsMn (71, C4rbar
(7) and B m rd -c t. valsniuata.
N ltdunfuar 14). t l i w w t I I I snd
S d o s c li
W - N .td tn h .tf (IS ).
L - B a d r o tls n
(It).
M B s-A I
lante. Chambliss (4). Murphy
(71, H orner I I I .

nous

aooooont-j so

San Dgo
000 0&lt;» OOP-0
Ntafcro, D
Smith I I I
A ih b y ; M ura Lvcds &lt;01
Kanrwdy w Niekro (741
Mura (4 f t

10
and
and
L—

Post Im pressive Boxing W ins

down Okechobce’s Jimmy Coldiron
with a slinging left hook in the first
round en route to pasting a thirdround technical knockout.
“Jay was about Id kill him ," said a
satisfied Fordhsm Monday mor­
ning. "The referee had lo stop IL He
said ‘Jay fought like a pro.’ "
EOinoon also won a third-round
TKO, but had to come off the canvas
to do it after being decked twice in

the (in! round. M crnlt Island's
Darrell Bennett put Ellinson down
twice, but it didn't deter the com­
petitive 147-pounder.
"Lap didn't know his name In the
first round he was so dazed,” said
Fordhsm. "But he cam e back and
smoked that guy's butt the rest of
(he fight,"
Dickerson, a MVpounder, was so
impressive tn his one fight that no

one wants any part ut mm now. "I
don’t know what we're going to do.
Everybody's scared to death of him.
I guess we'll have to go outside the
•rea."
Another r ordhsm fighter, Tony
Gaines, dropped his initial bout to
Bill Johnson of tha Southwest
Orlando Boy * Club In the third round
&lt;*i a technical knockout

AlUmlMU
T o n .fM 'i entries
1st— } l * . O I Counselor H rrb.
1 K's G ra m lin ; 3 W ist D ot. 4
Rust R obinj t D A ’S S t I t SHI. «
B o*y Horn*. I Q u trttr Dockj •
B ailing ab
Ind
3 IS O I SB Spider, 1
JO'S P r l n c m . 1 O I.n l, 4
Livingston L td ; S P m tr V .s Josh
0« Gosh. 3 Odd Mvggla. I L ittle
Astro
3rd - S I4 .
T rrra rlu m . 3
tin ts . S S u n i l
Greet Hope 1
i Spunsllk

4

C l F re t 11*. 3
Tlnstoo; 4 Moon
I H rlp rr I SB'S
FI re Engine Red.

i h - » * . D I Big Johnny B in .
s i* r Occasion
3 Underlul.
Dorm's l m e g * s Lucky Gotdyj
A tte g lrl G r t t t . 7 Little M ls lil:
Doctor Onie

L a rk ; 7 L a c y t Jeu. I S«cr«t
W ltn a tt. 4 Floyd i Fancy. S Bit

Wheels Aligned
ForA PriceThat’s
Not Out Of Line

3
4

Front-End
Alignment

*

t

Sth
1 14.C I. Sundown For
tu n e ;
I
M iss
C lto r t,
3
Spume scent Queen: 4 Sebena; S.
Sett M e gic. S GE s U rchin; I.
W h ittlin g D oll. I Meceroon

*19

4ih Jtt.A t Bell Dtnton, 1
Doll Vourseil, 3 Onlt Spumonl. 4
ttlmmy Beby, S Mede It Yours: *
K's Mote, 7 Jerwln jimmy, |
Double O Seven
Tlh— M .T :I. N orton s Diamond;
&gt;. Cowboy R td rn 1 Dr it's Edsel,

4 Cel Gune, 3 Pr# Shrunk, 4
K'sw Monaco, 7 Lacy'S Boil, •
T's Laura
•tn
3 I4.C .I Sk.til O ft ric k . !.
Wise M .lle l, 1 K ite Kachlne; 4
DM s June bug, 3 Trol Ih ro b o lly ;
k M idw ay Ash. 7. Glamour Bay.
I HC'S Golly P u tt
W b—H A S t Spectrum, 1 K t
Prom ise, 1. Abrupt E dgr. 4 G as
C u ts M odal. I Four On Red. 4
Anotonio's lim a ilj &gt; Bud B u tle r;
I Scou t M e i t I
lOtn
- 3 It ,A I.
O lym p ia d
World.' I B s Shaggy G irl. 1
Antonio'S I label 4 B. lu c t y
Larson; 3 F r o d t Folly. 4 In
ikcclon. 7. K 's C alvin; I Skihl
E lto
tills —7 1AC: I Dovon General,
1 P astdvna Jtena. 1 M .daiui. 4.
Shady Sami; S La M a rt Fancy; 4
Sundoll Kaa; 7 SH't Jan; I WP
Tin L lIIW

17th — S It.D I Doi Meadow

R utty, 4 DR t Thank Troy; 7 J B
M .tk le , i Atlanta Deb

Includes U S cars and imports with adjustable suspen­
sions Includes front wheel drive Extra for Chevettes.
trucks, cars requiring M acPherson Strut correction

J u it Say
'C hargo It’
Use 4m ul Beta I Met aril
Btuy 04 Oar. O/ikmn CmB

Hid • MijtriCaf • Visa
• AaencM I spret* Caid

•Cam Bund*-Own CM
•Cato

• Inspect all four tires
• C o rre ct air prossure
• Check steering and sus­
pension systems • Set
front wheel caster, cam­
ber and toe to proper
alignment.

G O O D YEA R
SERVICE ^S TO R E S

JIM HEMPHILL, Manoger
SANFORD

322-2821

�Fall Bus Schedules For Seminole Schools

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�OURSELVES
E tuning Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Monday, Aug. 17,1MI—IB

Donna White Bride IPN'GHrsjv
Of R.5. Tourangeau '

Bonnie
Olvera
l a k e Mary
C o rm p o o d e n l
3X3-73M

11:30
f j r TONIGHT Ouwat boat Dand
Siambar j Quasi I Cbanaa QrotVn
Bamadstta Patara

IVENMO

T a M*A*S'H

t r O A * c ncws w a n n a * *
® (35) WANTED DEAD OA A U V I

6:00

e ( |) ( D O ( D O * w s

In And Around Lake Mary

Dr. R.L. Bevier
Sets Open House
In New Office
An open house la being planned by U k e M a ry 's newest
professional office, Aug. II from M p.m . D r. R obert L Bevier
officially opened M onday, Aug. 3. ills new office Is located at
139 N. Country Club R oad, acro ss from the new city halL
We welcom e Dr. B evier b ack Into our a re a a fte r a 3-year
absence. O riginally in fam ily practice In Sanford, he m oved to
Altam onte Springs In 1971. He will be phasing out his
Altam onte office In the fall, he says.

A Sum m er Sunday Ice C ream Social w as held (or th e "Keena g e rs" Sun. a t 1:30 p.m . a t the F orrest.
Popular m usic w as played and sung by E dna A rm strong and
Joe Reich. Bob Johnson of the F o rrest w as also th ere with his
guitar.
The F o rrest w elcom es new residents, P aul an d B ernice
l e a p , Russell a.-'d H elen G riffith, John an d Adelvn W alder and
R obert an d G loria Jonnson.
Com m ittee m e m b e rs of the Ju ly 4th picnic sponsored by the
CIA, are proud to re p o rt a profit of $1300 for the day.
E n te rtain m en t, g a m e s, a pie throwing contest and the
l i n i n g an d feath erin g of M ayor W alter Sorenson highlighted
the day.
Mr. and M rs. S idney ( R lc k | RlCharde recently returned
from a 3-week lour of E urope. They visited th eir son. D r.
Stephen R lC harde, who leach es for the U niversity of Mary land
a t m ilitary b ases throughout Europe.
Some of the favorite sights they visited during their H ay
included N otre D am e, T othenburg, King laidw lg II C astle,
lo u v re M useum an d the l«atln Q uarter,
The U k e Mary a n d A ltam onte Springs extensions of the
H om em aker Club will be sponsoring an exercise p ro g ram
Sept. I t through D ec. 19. It will be held a t the A griculture
Center Auditorium on W ednesday of each w eek, from 1:30­
10:30 a m . N utrition Inform ation wlU also be provided with the
program . T he p ro g ra m la free to the public. F or additional
Inform ation call 3Z3-2300 ex t. I D or IB .
M em bers of the fire d e p a rtm e n t are In the process of visiting
the hom es of U k e M ary citizens. They a r e doing a survey,
determ ining things such a s the distance aw ay fro m a (Ire
hydrant, to tal n u m b er of people In the hom e and If there a r e
elderly or han d icapped occupying the home.
They a r e also o ffering a free (Ire safety Inspection. Anyone
Interested in the Inspection m ay contact Bob S toddard a t 323­
7029.
_____
T he U k e M ary G a rd e n Club will be doing the la n d s c V n g
(or the new city hall. H orticulturist M ark R oethct h a s offered
to a id them with th e 's k e tc h e s and layout.
The club ask s th a t If anyone has, an excess of Azalea,
U g u stru m , V artg ated P ittosporum , C rape M yrtle, M ores Iris,
Day lillle s or F o rm o sa tc please contact either M ary Ja n e
D urea, 322-3911 o r B a rb W o m a n , 323-3632.
Ronnie O lvera will be g atk eriag news from th e U k e M ary
are a as an E vening H erald rorrrvpoodrnt. Bonnie, her
husband. Vic, a U k e M ary city councilm an, and th ree
children m oved to U k e M ary three y e a n ago from D etroit.
Bonnie say s she likes people and is w ating for your call night or
day.

Lutherans Honor Miss Garrison
M arina G arriso n , d au g h ter of M r. and Mr*. R obert
G arrison of 719 O u trig g er D rive, D eltona, h a s been selected
to receive a L u th e ran Brotherhood IrvCollete M em ber
ip
it
I.-

Scholarship.
M arina Is one of 192 U lh e r a n Brotherhood contract
m em b ers nationw ide to receive such a n aw ard for th e 19*112 academ ic y ear. T hese students qualified on th e basis of
th eir acad em ic re c o rd , leadership skills an d e x tra ­

Mrs. Beth W hite, sister-in­
law of the bride, Longwood,
attended the b ride a s m atro n
of honor. She w ore a suede
rose gown with a chiffon
c a p e le t. S h e c a r r i e d a n
a r r a n g e m e n t of r o s e silk
flowers.
B rid e s m a id s w e re M rs.
Suom a Colem an of Apopka,
and M rs. Joyce Cooke of
F orsyth, Ga. T h eir d usty pink
gowns w ere Identical to the

cu rricu lar Involvem ent.

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12 (17) fath er

4touaM hm 'l.
212*4444
■ #!■ Mpawsraa
(#aela
I tM J U

le a s

a t jt

news

| ABC NEWS
I c ar ter c o u n t r y
( flo w er s h o w

6:39
7:00
a ip ncws
J o r u magazine a Sm i
former i evidence of vreftor* from
outer tpece a women wt&lt;o caret
tor injured end orphaned bade of
prey Chef Ted prepare# cofd
poeefced
Or Weeco on the
rroet common cauee of headachee.
Unde Marne matte Rabat end Mar­
rakech. Morocco

1
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( 35| SAANCY U l l l f A
(35)

(10)
REPORT

UACNCIL /

( I O STAASKV AMO HUTCH

(J O FANTASY tSLANO A pbotograpbor moats tna ghostly htrta gat
wno keeps showing up at har preturaa and a yomg man parteipataa
Vi a mWon-doaar poaar gama (A)
J [ ( 3 5 | JtMBAKKIA

0 ( 1 7 ) THAT OWL

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12^5
12 (17) MOVW Covad Tbrtd And
Pray " jtSSSI Van HaAm Joanna
Woodward
12:30
O OD TOMOAAOW Ouaats San­
tana. Mara Hama, tacord industry
aoetnaaywr Uantn Amman (A|

l/xigw ood, and Scott D ru ry of
Orlando.
The reception w as h eld a t
the A ltam onte Inn. In c h a rg e
of the b rid e's book w ere M iss
M arsha P a rk e r an d M rs.
T e n s P a r k e r . M rs . G a ll
Brown assisted In serv in g .
A fter a wedding trip to the
lo w er
east
c o a s t,
th e
newlyweds will m ak e th eir
hom e In A ltam onte S prings.

th ere Is a lot left In th is world
to sm ile a b o u t
POORER BUT W ISER IN
PHOENIX
DEAR PO O RER: My m all
(a running X to 1 In la v e r ol
giving p a tir a u w hat they
w ant to il ta d ol w hat the
d e a ttit thinks they need. One
g ta e re a s
d e n tis t
la
BeUflowrr, C alif., w rote to
u y th a t U the lady Irom
Maine w as willing to fly out U
California, he’d give h r r a
Hollywood unU e abooiotrly
fu r!
DEAR ABBY: In 1928 I
m ade a se t of teeth for an
elderly wom an. She Insisted I
use a shade Ihal w a s m u ch too
white (or a n a tu ra l look.
Against m y b e tte r Judgm ent I
gave h e r w hat sh e w anted. In
tw o w e e k s s h e r e t u r n e d ,
u y ln g th a t all her friends
th o u g h t h e r te e th w e re
terrib le. I m ade h e r a new se t
free. It w u m y m ista k e In th e
first place.
R E T IR E D D E N T IS T IN
CALIF.
D E A R R E T IR E D : N ew
tk a l'e w hat I c a ll p attin g the
bite oo the dentist w ith U s
own te tth .
DEAR ABBY: I think you
m issed the b o at w hen you
sided with the p a tie n t who
w anted snow-white te e th . T he
d e n t i a t ’a p r o v i s i o n a l
obligation w u to give h is
p atien t w hat sh e needed, not
w hat she w anted. He should
try to be receptive to h er
w ants, b ut she h a s no rig h t to
o rd er him to do ■ b a d Job.
L e t's lak e It one ste p fu rth er,
Abby. U you w ere the d en tist,
w hat would you h av e done If
she had Insisted on purple
te e th ’
DOGGY
D E N T IS T
IN
FLORIDA
U FJtR DOGGY: Aw, cam e

have given h e r w hite
teeth, end laid h er to eal
ml

fd

Jak e.

DEAR ABBY: I’m not a
dmUst, I'm a plaatic surgeon.

A m iddle-aged w om an ca m e
to m e for b reast-en larg em en t
surg ery . The size she w an ted
would have m ade her look tlka
a top-heavy freak a n d I told
her so, but she Insisted she
w anted a p a ir of 44s. I refu sed
to give them to her.
I later learned she w en t to
three other doctors befo re she
found one who ag reed to do
the Job. But he talk ed h e r
down to 42.
WITHHOLD MY NAM E IN
LA.
DEAR ABBY: I'm an o th er
dentist whose p atien t to ileted
on having m ow -w hite d e n ­
tu re s, so I m ade th em . 1
thought they looked te rrib le ,
but he loved them . I m ad e
them on the condition th a t
h e'd never tell anyone w ho his
den tist was.
PALM SPRINGS D E N TIST
DEAR ABBY: S om e old
lady up to M aine who needed
den tu res asked h er d e n tist to
m ake h er sp ark lin g w hita
teeth — “ like the m ovie
s ta rs " — and he refu sed ,
saying they wouldn’t look
" n a t u r a l . " Y ou u l d th e
den tist should give th e lady
w hal th e w anted — not w h at
he thinks th e should have.
Wrong! You are Ju st u
Ignorant a s the old tody.

4 :20

PRAi Ai * Laura K I M M

Atmaruo

As a den tal a s sista n t, I ca n
tell you ( h it the m a jo rity of
denture w earers don’t know
anything about selectin g th e
proper color teeth.

i n c u t n r is

1 2(1 7 )

; TUESCMY,

CAJUN (MON)
f f l l t o (COOKPf
a
tt) 110)I R
ROMAONOLTS
(
TABLE (R)
(TUI)
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PAINTING (WED)
CD ( 10) COVER STORY (THU)
4S(10)(raCA|FTV&gt;

12:05

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I tfW l Oregory Paca. Deborah Karr
Writer F Scan Fdrgeretd bee a lor.
rid affur w-tb corumruat Shsrteb
OraAam

m O MARCUS W tlS T . M O
(TUI-FAQ

5:15
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5:30

10:00
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drawn site a avanga quaat la And
out m e n about a pratty gM • b ag *
daain (A)

U (35)I
lO JO
a t (35) AMCMCAN UPISTYU
Paw Ao-ere
10:39

(R)(TUf)

8 ) (10) MUTER ROGERS TALKS
WITH PARENTS ABOUT SCHOOL
£ %

1:05
1:30

12 ( 17) RAT PATROL (MON)

( I) O AS THE WORLD TURNS

545
12 (17) WORLD AT CANOI (WIO.
FAR

550
12 (17) WORLD AT LA AO* (TUC
THU)

2:00
O ® ANOTHER WORLO
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2:3 0
(J O MARCH FOR TOMORROW

5:55

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6:05
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3 :3 8
12 (17) the FiBeriToaaes
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1 f i f i MERV ORIFFTN

830
(J O TO A U IN

6:46
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6:55

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w it h c h a a l is

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02 (35) SNIOUAN ANO TH*
QAiAJtV TWO(TUI)
n (35) space OHoar / omo
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35) FANTUDC FOUR (THU)

4 :3 5
12(17) HAZEL
5:0 0
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5) WONOCR WOMAN
10) MUTER ROGER* (R)

35 HERCUOC« (FRR
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110) VILLA AUQRS (TUS-FM)

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12(17)OZZW ANOHARRUT
5:30
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■ CrTOOAVMFlOMOA

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EVEMNQ AT POPS (A)

12 (17) MOVW

5:40

rriTooAT
l O M ontana

,

a f f l o i OREAT PERFORMANCE!
(FAR

( |) O SUMMER S fU fS T tA

fhOO

0 .3 0
(D O HOUaa CALL* A tom et
*01 acnoor leather o l Charley • a
admmed to Kanangton Oanaral.
wb«a no Anda ana can ate m *ianca M BN (K)

n r o a v s of o u r u v e a
(73 a ALL MY CHILDREN
H (35) MOVIE
a (10) A PLACI TO BE (MON)
ED (10) EVE UNO AT SYMPHONY

5:20
I l M T l M T PATAOMTUt)
12 ( 17) io v c . Am e r ic a n a m i
(THU)

8 :3 0
O T M T N CONWAY SNOW

O (D MOVW
Hanging By A
Thread • i Part JII t * r») Donna Mato.
Patty Duka Aatm Undanaortd
aaaaaamt ttaAmg on# ol tna Varn a
paaaangara. gating aanda and a
Vayad aura further compacata raacua attampta lA)
CD O M’ A’ S 'H Kangar racanraa
a "Oaar M ans' tattar from Na aaada and IMS ado a daap dapraauon |K)
( E O M O W ' Daaat Cowboyv
Oaartaadan a" | tMOl Jurat Oavrdton. lararna Stapnana Tha Oaaaa
Cowboy* cnaartaadart undargo
enormous praaaura during tna two
cm«al wwaa &gt; may ha-o to prapara
naw Supwr Bowl rouunaa |P)
8 ) (10) MOVW “ A Dancala Baransa 1C) 11ST)) Katharine Mapbum PaM BcoAatd Baaad on tna
play by Edwvd AJbaa Tna nail ol
two old Vanda disrupt! tna auarona
bar -t, notdng a tamdy logathar

O fiN C W S
1)1 o
the YOUNG ANO THE
elfsti ra s
T O Ry a n s h o p *
( ft (35) FAMAV AFFAIR
( 0 (10) THIS OLD HOUSE qxA)
(MON)
Q) I lb ) SUM CUISJNI (TUC)
ED (10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(WtO)
ED 110) FAST FORWARO (FAR

1:00

too

k in g

RIGHT Id e m P ellet p o rtre y f
George Bernerd Shew m • one-men
6lege ehoe drewn from the pUywrtgN i worki regerdsng women,
eea endmernege

mombho flomoa

5:35

7:30

0 ( 1 7 ) MVCRLV H K.LM LUU

a ® TODAY
T o OOOO MORNINa AMERICA
f t (35) SAMARA SPUTS
8 ) (10) M IA M I IT A t IT (A) g

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10 0 0 0 MORtPHO FLOMOA

■ « 0 )l

GET A PART-TIM E
jo b

AFTERNOON

12:30

Macheet Renree

young Wamut (V ow beauty |R )rj
CD o
WKRP M CINCINNATI
And*. M»b and u&lt; Carlson to w ­
n s / M Dayton m tba hopes at
—(WMOTg &gt; assignor and landmg
hoc p M i^ o u t i n n account |R|
( I) o BOAOCA PALS too euborO n m i o4 too m V posed c M i
•tia—oi to and tna* boaaaa taud
by swarding a lata about a mobster
commgtotnsarea
I T (15) UOVW
TSa la a l Snot
You Hear* 18W) I tS M l Hugn Mar­
tova Zana Waiter A woman and
har m
attempt la t a t o hus­
band - to n to raAraee to grant liar a
Wvercf

I

1 1 :4 5
( 0 110) STORY BOUND (TUC-FAR

3:05

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(J) O M O W Dengeeoue C/oe»mg (B/W) (1H3) Jeenne C/eih

on thc

my

1 Q T M R trS COMPANY (R)
( f t (3 5 1LOVE. AMERICAN i m l
40(10) SOOKSWaO (TU I-FAR

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TH* WORLD OF PIO PL*
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1 1 :3 0

1:10

O i OAJtv oevor ional

ol poymg too m ica atiantioa to s

h o n o r a t t e n d a n t 's . E a c h
c a rrie d an a rra n g e m e n t of
pink silk flowers.
Miss Jen n ifer D ills, the
flower girl, w as gowned in
d u sty p in k , o v e r la id w ith
w hite lace, an d c a rrie d a
white basket of silk flower
petals.
A lb e rt T o u ra n g e a u
of
Jacksonville B each, served
the bridegroom a s b e st m an.
U shers w ere D avid W hite of

S

12:00
oO 14 CA
ROSHARK*
CAP

(D O MOVW
Iba McConnaa
Story' |C| (1*55) Alan Ladd. Junw
Afyaion

8:00

M RS. RAY ST E W A R T TO U R A N G EA U

Q 4) WHEEL O f FORTUNE
J O THI PMCC IS RUNT
R ir l COMPANY (A)
i r o T THM---------J5)»UO
BREWER
I t (35)
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(D 110) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL (MON)
( 0 110) ITUCSO M I (TU«-FAR

12 (17) FREEMAN REPORTS

7 :3 5
3 2 ( i7 ) o r r s u A * T

a

I) t (35) DICK VAN DYKE
0 ) ( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (A)

HX3
( D O news

12 (17) MOVW
Tha Rearing
Twwntwa 11SJ*i Jamwa Cagnay.

7 :3 0
ITICTACDOUQM
I w u x jr t w c M s w
j FAMILY FTUO
35) AMOOA
(OCKCAVTTT

(1 Q AL)C*|R)

O l PASSWORD PLUS

2:10

7 :0 5
Q |1 7 )A U M T H C rA A M .V

Have*: M e n d n » h ! L - f ! i _ .

Where Weight Centre! Is More Then A DfeM

know s

6 .30

10:30

0 r atocKnusTiRe

11:00

12:00

605

Readers Sink Teeth
Into Dentures Deal
DEAR ABBY. T he letter
from the senior citizen In
Maine, whose d e n tist refused
to m ake h e r a set of sparkling
while dentures b ecau se they
w o u ld n 't
look
n a tu ra l,
prom pts this letter.
All my life (th a n k s to cap s
a t I I) I have enjoyed narrow ,
even white teeth. Y e a rs la te r,
when 1 needed a n upper
denture, four d en tists a b ­
solutely refused to give m e
beautiful white te e th Uke the
kind I had worn for over 40
years! They all Insisted th a t
big, horsey, yeUow teeth a r e
"n a tu ra l.”
The poor lit Is an o th er
story, but In m y bathroom
cabinet Is the proof th at
dentists a re "yellow h ap p y ."
(F our sets of d e n tu re s!)
Finally, how ever, I found a
young, sy m p a th e tic dentist
who u i d , " I ’ll g iv e you
w h a te v e r you w a n t ." So
to d a y , a n d Ih o u M n d s of
dollars la te r, I h av e d en tu res
w ith n a r ro w , e v e n w h ite
teeth.
TeU th a t unhappy senior
citizen to sim ply go from one
dentist to an o th er until she
finds one who wUl give h e r
w h a t sh e w a n ts , b e c a u s e

11:35
12 (17) WOMT O A U IA V

I t (55)ANOYOMFPTTH
f f l b o f ew es

Donna M arie W hite and
R ay S te w a r t T o u r a n g e a u
w ere united In m a rria g e Aug.
13, a t 7:30 p.m ., a t the F irs t
B a p tis t C h u rc h of S w e e t­
w ater, Ijongwood. D r. Jo e L.
Vernon p erform ed the c a n ­
d le lig h t a n d d o u b le rin g
cerem ony.
The bride Is the d a u g h te r of
M r. and M rs. H ouston B.
W hite of 103 P in e S t.,
longw ood. The b rid eg ro o m 's
p aren ts a re Mr. a n d M rs.
Albert W. T o u ran g eau Sr. of
Oklawaha.
Given In m a rria g e by h e r
father, the bride chose for her
vows a form al gown of white
organza featu rin g a fitted
bodice, full bishop sleev es an d
a m andarin neckline trim m ed
In Cluny lace a n d Scheffli
e m b ro id e ry . T h e b o u ffa n t
sk irt and chapel tra in w ere
accented by ban d s of Cluny
lace and an o verlay of cry stal
pleated chiffon. H er veil w as
of Im ported F re n ch illusion
and m atching Cluny lace. She
c arrie d a while Bible topped
with silk white c a rn a tio n s and
pink rose buds.

10:05
12(1?) MOVW

that ms

Army Reserve Jury t a i n
|UN i m w r e lrn j a m onth and
two w l i e a c h year, an you can
atari id tram a skill and cam
an meuanr during high school,
if you qualify During thc sum ­
mer. you train at an Army post
Earn m t i S1.100 your fu v
year Th* Army Reserve is gaud
preparation fee college or a
lull time &gt;ob Call your Army
Reserve representative, in the
Yellow ~

6:30
I ® TODAY
J 0 0 0 0 MOM*BSO AJJCMCA
15) OMAT BPAC* COASTER
110) MWTtA ROGERS (R)
H I
O l 17) Mt n tm a aosea

to o
I HOUR MAOAZSta

C b 'ft-Y

r r R ir r iR ig

goa
12 (17) FAASLV AFFAJN

fttt

0 ( 3 5 ) a jc v &lt;»rwftth

LlM O V ltiA N g iU

12 |17)IDRCAM0F JIANtaa
to s o e

I

V w itrai)

u n til

D e n tis ts a r c d o c to r s of
d en tistry , Just u p h y sic ia n s
i r e doctors of m edicine. T hey
a re p aid for th eir e x p e rtise
a n d sh o u ld u se I t u n ­
conditionally. You w ouldn’t
tell a physician w h at k in d of
m edicine to p rto c rlb e , would
you? So why should a p a tie n t
tell • d en tist w h at color 'a e th
to m ake?

I ^ U I f n D tT E B M jM A T O B

MADAMF. KATHERINE
P R IM - CAKO

CRYSTAL HALL READING

Past — Present - Future
H l l T f V l ADVICE ON A U AFFAIRS
• L i f t • LOVE • N A IW A Q Z • B U M N C M

BEEN Of BUSINESS FOR 50 YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF NY HOME
HOURS a AM. - 9 P.M. Closed Sunday

Thc den tist I w o rk fo r
doesn't give Ms p a tie n ts a
choice. He eelccts th e m*1* b e
thin k s they should have.

X M O C K * AOCTH Of OO*TRACK BO.
on amma-ia i t -to aa

•3 1 -4 4 0 5

uuN nw anM U U M

V i m b r «a»w Ft— IV* «Bt I y . a m

u t a t - H i- » a » w iM H

DENTAL ASSISTANT

a *rw

R

I n .ii THI NESTINO

« - • # « •

■ t • • •

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�I B-EvgnlnflHBrBld.SBnfard.FI.
- - -

■ ■—i .

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Monday, Aiif. IT, ltl)

-■ t ~~

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

K O T IC t OF PU BLIC h e a r in g
THE HOARD OF COUNTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY w ill hold *
Public hearing in Room 300 o l Ih t
S a m in g lf C ou n ty C ourthouse,
lenlord. F lorida, on Saps I. m i l l
T M P M . o f a t toon thee ta tte r i t
w tt.o id , lo c o n ttd w * tp d n llc
land use a m e n d m e n t lo Id *
Semmole County Comprehensive
P'an end REZONING o l the
deter bed p rop e rty

IN THE C IR C U IT COURT UP
THE E IG H TE E N TH JU DICIAL
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
C IV IL ACTION NO. (S U M CAlfL
W ILLIA M E NIC Aw H v and J
W INIFR ED N1CAHRY. h it w ilt,
P la tn lills .
vs
GEORGE W JONES, a h a GW
JONES, and IDA P E A R L JONES.
h it W ilt.
a n o r d i n a n c e a m e n d in g
Datandarat
o r d in a n c e
n is
w h ic h
NOTICE O F A C T IO N
a m e n d s t h e D E T A IL E D LAND
TO GEORGE W JONES, a k a
use
elem en t
of
the
G W JONES and IO A PEARL
S E M IN O LE
COUNTY
COM
JONES
p r E h E N S IV E
plan
from
A d d rrtt Unknown
general
rural
to lo w
you ARE N O T IF IE D that an
DENSITY R E S ID E N T IA L FOR action lo r o declaratory ludgm tnf
THE PURPOSE OF REZONING and a tem porary and permanent
FROM A I a g r i c u l t u r e t o r
miunction to e tla b itth an eate
IA s in g l e f a m i l y d w e l l i n g
merit on lh * follow ing o tte r .bed
d is t ,
the
f o l l o w in g
p ro p a rly in S tm ln o l* C aunly,
OESCRIBED PROPERTY
Florida, lo w it
T h e N W '.o lIh e NW'a ol Sod ion
Beg-nn.no 1)0 If o l the SW
7! I I I I . i n t in * Soutit I K II *nd
corner o l the NW ’ y ot th * S W 'i,
m i l m Norm I K n and alto, I t t*
Section K , Township 10 South.
in * » W to r SR 170 ( A im * ,*
Rsnga K E a t), ru n t w i n 10*0 It.,
Tr*ll» I* * ( r * t MOL IFurltvyr
East ITS t l . South MS ft . E a tl &lt;74
described n a p p r o ilm t lr ly I ]
It and South MS tl to th * pom! ot
m il* NW ol in * intersection ol
beginning, lass th * South IT) It of
Lak* Heya* and SR &gt;10 corridor ) th* N W ', of th * SW'y of taction f t .
f DIST No I I
Township 10 South. Rang* 70 E att,
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS BEEN
le tt lh * W att 1 chains that sol,
SUOMITTED BY BR IAN MANTIS
hat been Iliad a g a ln il you and you
PZ I I S i l l to
a rt required &lt;o verve a copy of
Further, in * PLANN IN G ANO
your w ritten defenses. If any, lo II
ZONING
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
on KEN NETH M BEA N E . ES
SEMINOLE COUNTY w ill hold «
Q U IR E . P l a l n li l l's a tto rn e y ,
public h rtr.n g in Room 700 o l lh*
w hot* a d d m t is P o ll Office
S rm m o i* C o u n ty C o u rln o u t*.
D ro w tr
O n *.
C a itttb tr r y ,
Son lord. F lo rid *, on A uoutl S.
Florid*, on or b tto r * September
1 or * t toon i n * r * * l l * r a t
10. I f l l , and HI* In * orig ina l with
p o tt'b l* . lo r« y lrw , h r t r com
lh* Clark o f Ih lt Court allhar bt
m * n it
and
m a tt
r« c*m
lo r* t t r y lc t an P la iM Itrs attorney
m tn d tlio m lo lh * Board ol County
or Immediately ih a ra a lfa r. ofhar
C o m m itt io n tr t on in * a b o rt
w it* a default w ill b * entered a
raphonrd ordinanc* and raaorung
gains! you for lh * r t l i t f demanded
m the com plaint o r petition
AddilNmal in lo rm atio n may be
obtained by c o n l*c lln o in * L*nd
DATED o r August tin , A D .
Managtmenf Manager at 171 alM.
Iff I
E i l leg
HEAD
P rrto n t u n a c ir lo a lltn d in*
ARTHUR H BECKW ITH. JR
hearing who w ith lo common! on
Clerk oT lh * C ircuit Court
in * propot*d o d io n t may tu b m il
B r Cynthia Proctor
w ritl*n t l* l* m * n t t lo in * Land
Deputy Clarh
Menagemenl D lv ltio n p rio r to lh *
Publish
A u g utt 10. I f , )4. ) | , I f f I
scheduled public hearing P rrto n t
DEL 40
eppeenng *1 In * n * * r in « i may
tu b m il w ritte n t l a lt m m lt or b*
N O T IC I OP S A L !
hoard orally
TO BNFORC8 L I I N
P rrto n t a r* advised Inal, II thry
Te
dacida to a p e ta l any decision
David Benton
mad* at I h r t r m r r l ingt, I hay will
4*01 W ither I
n rrd a rrco rd o l in * procrad.ngt.
Tampa. F lo rid * DSC]
and. lor tucn purpoa*. th ry may
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
naad lo m w r * that a verbatim
N OTIFIED lh a i lh * lienor btlow
recordol the proceedings i | mao*,
c la im ! a lien lor labor and ta r v ic tf
which r tc o r d
In d u d tt
in t
per Itemed, and applicable tfo ra g *
ta tllm o n y and t v l d t n c t upon
c h a rg a t,
on
lh *
fo llo w in g
which I h r «p ea rl i t to b r bated
described m otor vehicle
Board ol Couniy C o m m iu io n trt
Make and Modal:
Sammol* County. Florida
IS Mont# Carlo 1 door
Hr Robert Sturm, Chairman
I D No IH lfH S O 47)11)
A ltr tl A rth u r H Beckwith.Jr
th # |i*n claim ed hereby m ay be
Publ'th July )0. Aug I I , Sept I.
O iicha rg e d. a nd l h * ve hicle
__________________ OEK IQ)
redeemed from le.d llt n upon
payment lo lh * litn o r o t total
CITY OF lONGW OOO, FLORIDA
chargat due in the Amount of
N O IIC B OF PU BLIC HEAR ING
IHSIS7
TO CONSIDER ADOPTION OF
Th# Han claim ed hereby It
PROPOSBDORDINANCB
w blact te enforcement partuant to
TO WHOM IT M A Y CONCERN:
lh* provisions a f fa ctio n 71) SIS.
NOTICE IS H ER EBY GIVEN
Florida S latulaf
by lh * City ol Lcngwood, Florid*,
On August I I , I f f ! wf 10 00 A M
lhai lh * CHy C om m it!io n w ill hold
la id motor ve nu le w ill be offered
* pub lic h e a rin g lo c o n tld tr
lor public ta la al IN* following
enactment oi O rdinonct No STL
location
ant Iliad
N ic k 't P air* and Body
AN ORDINANCE OF TH B C ITV
a Q Brian Neea
•#
t u u n w o o if. r c o i n p r .
rrn Park. Florida 177)0
P R O V ID IN G
FOR
THE
vn le u p rio r Ip to ld data, lh *
OPERATION OF THE WATER
vehicle th a n have been redeemed
SYSTEM
OF
SAID
C ITY ,
by payment of lh * amount t t f forth
PROVIDING F EES FOR USE OF
above
SAID W ATER. REGULATIONS
The o w n tr of tl&gt;* vehicle or any
ANO P E N A L T IE S FOR THE
Person claim ing an I n t t r r t l In or
V IO LA T IO N
OF
SUCH
ban thereon h a t a rlg h l to a
REGULATIONS,
R EPEALING
near,ng al any lim a p rio r lo th t
ORDINANCE NO CM OF THE
Scheduled ta la by tilin g a demand
C ITY
OP
LONOWOOO.
for hearing w ith th# d a r k of lh#
FLORIDA. AND AMENDMENTS
Circull court In th * county m which
THERETO. PR OVID IN G FOR
lh * vehicle It held and mailing
CONFLICTS.
S E VER ABILITY
coplat of IN* demand lor hoofing
AND E FF E C T IV E DATE
lo alt other owners and I-anon a t
Said Ordinanc* w a t placed on
r a lltc ltd In this n olle *
llr t t nad&lt;ng on August 10. IN I.
Th* owner of lh a vehicle Nat a
and in * City C o m m iitip n w ill
rlgh l lo recover p o t it ttio n o l lh *
contidrr ta rn * tar lln a l passage
vehicle w ithout In tlilu tln g ludlcia1
and email ion a lta r lh * public
proceedings by p o llin g bond In
hearing, which w ill b * held in lh *
accordance w ith IN* provision* of
City Hall. ITS W ell w arren A r t .
Section IS* *IF. Florida Statutes
longwood. Flo rid a , on Monday,
Any Proceed* iro m lha h i * el
lh * lath day ol A u g utt, A D . IN I,
lha vehicle re m a in in g a lta r
*1 I K p m , or a t toon lh a ra a lltr
Payment o l lha amount c la lm td lo
at p a tt'b l* At lh * mealing In
b t due and owning la lh * Hence w ill
lr&lt; a tlid p art let may appear and
b t depot lied w ith lha clerk o l lh*
ba heard w ith re v e rd lo lh*
n r cull court for disposition upon
propoted Ordinance Thu hearing
court order pursuant la la c 'k m
may b* continued fro m tlm * la
T l) l t l I f ) Florida S lJfufts
tlm * until lln a l action i t taken by
Publish A uoutl IS. I f , If . IN I
in * City C o m m lttkm
DEL sa
A copy ol lh * propotad Or
CITY OF IPNGW OOO, F LOR IOA
dmanc* i t p o tltd al lh * City Hall,
N O TICI OF PUBLIC H IA R IN O
Longwood. Flo rid a , and coplat ar*
TO CONSIDER ADOPTION OF
on III* w ith th * Clarh ol Iho City
M O P O IID O R D IN A N C !
and tame may ba im pacted by lh*
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
public
NOTICE I I H E R E B Y GIVEN
A taped record M Ih lt mealing It
by
lha CHy of Longwood. Florid*,
mad* by th * CHy lo r Ht con
lhai
IN* City Co m m i l l km w ill held
v rn itn c*. T M t record may not
a pub lic h e a rin g to c o n tld tr
com m ute an adequate record lor
m adm en! ol Ordinance No 1)1.
p u rp o rt ol a peer i Irons a dacite n
wH mad
mad* by lh * C om m ittlo n with
AN ORDINANCE OF TH B C ITV
retpect lo lh * lor agoing m ailer
OF LONOWOOO.
F L O R ID A
Any parton w ith in g lo a n tu r* that
AMENDING ORDINANCE NO
an a d e q u a l* re c o rd * • lh *
*01
OF
TH
E
C
IT Y
OF
procaadmgt i t m aintained lor
LONGWOOO. F L O R ID A . BY
•PPallala p urp o ta t I t advised lo
INCREASING M O N TH LY FEES
m a t* lh * n a ca tta ry arrangements
FOR SEWAGE T R E A T M E N T
al h it or her ow n r r p a n t*
SERVICE, i n c r e a s in g f e e s
Daly Ih lt l) ih d ay ol Augutt.
FOR SEWER CONNECTIONS.
A O IN I
f
r o v io i n g f o r c o n f l i c t s .
CITY OF LONGWOOO
S E V E R A B IL IT Y
ANO
EF
Donald L. T e rri
FECTIVE DATE.
CHy Clerk
Said
Ordinanc*
w
i
t
p
la
c
id
on
Pub nth August If. 1*11
l in t ra id ing on August 10. IN I.
DEL n
and lha C ity Commission m il
N O T IC I
OP
A
P U B LIC contider tarns lo r lln a l passage
H IA R IN O TO CONSIDER T H I and adoption o ft ar lha public
ADOPTION OF AN O R D IN A N C ! hearing, which w ill M hold in IN*
BY T H I C ITY OF 1ANFOHO. City Hall, ITS West Warren A v e ,
FLORIDA.
Longwood, Florida, on Monday,
NoltC* i t hat to y given lh a i a lh * lath day of A u g u tl. A D , IN I.
Public H ta rin g w ill b * held a l INa at f . X p .m , or * s toon INtroaHar
Commission Room in lha CHy Hall at pots-bi* A l the meeting In
m IB* CHy of Sanfordl Florida, al t t r t t f t d p a riia t m ay appaar and
T 00 o'clock P M on AuguM TL M heard w ith r tt p a r t lo lha
t t t t . lo tontidaY IN* adoption of an propoted O rdinanc* This hearing
w d in t n e t by lha City o f Sanlgrd, may ba co nltn u M Irom tlm * la
Florida. 1HI* al which I t
tlm * until lln a l action It lik e n by
loHawt
lha City C om m o tio n
O R D IN A N C ! NO, ISA*
A copy of I M proposed Or
AN ORDINANCE OF T H I CITY dmanc* is posted *1 th * CHy Hall,
OF
SAN FO R O .
F L O R ID A . longwood. F lorida, and copies are
AM ENDING SECTION }&gt; IS I I I on H I* w ith lh * Clark ad lh * City
1171 ANO SECTION 77 17(h) OF and tam a may b t Nttpaef ad by th *
THE SANFORO C ITY CODE. AS pub lk.
A M E N D E D . SAl.-v SECTIONS
A taped record Of INI* m ealing is
P R O V ID IN G
FOR
A mad* by lh * C ity fo r Ita can
D E F IN IT IO N
OF
GROUND v tn ia iic * This record may not
SIGNS AN D M O B ILE TRAILER c o n tti'u tt an adequato record lor
purpotat al a Pda* I Irom a dec Ison
HONS.
P R O V ID IN G
FOR
S E V E R A B ILIT Y .
CONFLICTS mad* by lh * C o m m ittlo n w llh
rasped I* lh * loeegplrtg m a lle t
AND e f f e c t i v e d a t e .
A copy shall b * available a l th * Any parton w ishing lo ensure lha i
O flK * of in * C ty Clarh lo r all an adaquaio re c o rd a l IN*
persons desiring lg ta a m ln g lh * proceedings is irvamlamad tor
*Pt&gt;aii * 'a purposes n advised to
tam e
A il p a rtie s In in T a fa tl ang mas# lh * rveceutr y e rr ang* mem ■
s o n a n t ih s ii Nova an opportunity al his or har own eipansa
Daio H ilt ilf h day of Augutl.
lg b t heard al H id hearing
tty order ol IN * City C om m ltlK n A D IN I
CITY OF LONOWOOO
af in * CHy a t Saniord. Fkartda
Donald L. Tarry
K N Tamm. Jr.
City Clark
C-ty Clarh
Publish August I f , H Bl
PvblltN August U , l * * l
D fL U
DEL I )

1011

f

• * ♦ • •

property

From lh * NE Corner of Section
It. Township TO South. Rang* SO
East, Sem nore County Florida,
run S 00 degrees l l ‘ a l" E . along
in * East ime o f said Section 11. a
distance o l &lt;o lee! lo me South
R,ghl of Way lino of LA K E MARV
bo ulevar d

ano

the

p o in t

OF BEG IN N IN G tnencaconfirm*
S OOdagrte* M '4 I " E , along sa d
East Ime o l Sacllon II. a d istan t*
of 1900 00 l t d , I hence ru n S I f
degrees 41 i f ' w . para lle l with
the North line o l ia&gt;d Section II. a
d.slanca of SOO 00 1**4. thence run
S M d e g re e s ll *1 E . US 00 le d .
thence ru n S te degrees *1' TP' W
TS0 00 1**1, I hence run S 00
degrees M 41
E I K 00 feel,
thence ru n ) t l degrees St' SI" W
1007 01 le d . thence run N 00
Degrees 77 i l
W ItO 00 leel.
•hencer u n t H de g re es 41 I P ' w
10000 le d . thence run N 00
degrees 77 41 W ISO 00 leal,
usance ru n $ t l degrees IP IP* w
KOOO leal lo a point on lh * East
l,nt ol th * W ell SW i l l leel of lh *
N E 'io l sa.d Section I I . Ih e n ct run
N 00 degrees 77' 41" W along said
Easi tin * ol in * w ts i 9ie 4eg i * * i . a
drsianc* of 1900 00 leaf to tho South
Right o l Way Una of LAKE M ARY
BOULEVARD. Thence run N IS
degrees 41 IP ' E )1ef 47 le d to
in * p o in t OF B EG INN IN G Sa.d
parcel contains Tl l i t acres more
or Iasi
(Further described as *1 th * SW
quadrant o l Lake M ary B lvd and
R in th a rlR o a d, and iTOOit E n r o l
L ik a Em m a Road. ID IS T. No 1)
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B EEN
s u b m i t t e d BY j EN O S INC
Further, lh * P LANN IN G AND
ZONING
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY w.ll hold a
Public hearing In Room 700 of lh *
Sem lnol* C o u n ty C ourthouse.
Saniord. F lo rid *, on Augusl S,
IN I, or as soon thereafter as
p o tl-b l*. I* review , hear com
m enu
and
m *k*
rocom
m m dations lo lh * Board of County
C om m ission e r* on lh * above
captioned or dm tru e and reioning
Aod.lional in lo rm atio n may be
obtained by conlectlng lh * Land
Management Manager al 97) 41)0E ,l 140
Persons unable to attend lh *
hearing who wish lo tom m enf on
ihe proposed actions may submit
wr.llen statements lo lh * Land
Management D ivision prior to lh *
scheduled public hearing Persons
eoewe'inq at 'he heermgs me*
Submit wr lie n statement* or he
heard o rally
F r tu n s a r t advised that, it ih*y
deck)* to n o ir e i any decision
mad* at the** meetings, itv ty w ill
need a rtc o rd o l lh * proceedings,
and. lo r such purpose, they may
naad to tn s u r t that a verbatim
record o l lh * proceeding* is made,
whirls re c o rd
In clud e s
th *
testim o n y a nd e vidence upon
which lh * appeal Is lo be based
Board ol County
Commissioners
Sem.nol* County. F lo rid *
By. Robert Sturm .
Chair man
Alias! A rth u r M Beckwith Jr
Publish July X . B Augusl 17, IN I
OEk 10*
N O TIC I U N O IR FICTITIOUS •
NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCBRNi
Nolle* It heceby given I h l t th *
undersigned, p u rs u a n t la th *
■ F ic liiio u *
N am *
S U Iu tt"
Chapter MS DO. Florida Slatula,
w ill re g u la r w ith th# Clark of lha
Circuit Court, in and for O r a n g e
County, Floe Ida. upon receipt of
proof of lha publication of this
n o tk t, lh * IlctltlOus he m i to wit
TV NEWS under which I am m
gaged in buklnasi at I K S Park
Avenua in tha City of Apopka.
Florida 1770)
That lha party intarattad in said
bus mask enterprise i t as loliow t
Faiiaga Enterprises. Inc
Tha Apopka C h ill
By F a iric h J Me Guinn.
Pvkl.khar
Oalad a l A p o pka . O ranga
Caunly. Flo rid a . August 8 IN I
Publish August ig. I f , la, ] | , IN I
DEL SJ
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
p r o b a t e d iv is io n

F ill Nvm ker I I NS CP
IN BB t ESTATE OF
PAUL O BLACK.
Detested
NOTICE OF A D M IN ISTR ATIO N
Th* adm m islf alien o l lh * estata
ol PAUL G BLACK, dec. Ited .
File number I I 70* CP. Is pending
Hi th * C irc u ll Court for Seminol*
County. Flo rid a . Probata Division,
th* adcR a l t o l w hich t | North Park
Aveng*. Saniord FI. 77771
Tha n a m ik and add ra sta t ol lh#
personal ra p ra s a n U liv * and th*
personal te p re s a n la tlv e 't aHornay
a r* sal lo n n balms
A ll I n la r a t lt d parsons a r*
ra gu trid Id f i l l wins i m i court,
WITHIN TH R EE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST P U BLICA TIO N OF
THIS N O TIC E : I I I a ll Claim*
against lh * a s ta l* and I I I any
oblaction by an In la ra s itd parson
to ttham none* was m ailad that
Lhitlangas th * v a lid ity of Its* w ill,
lh * q u a llfk a lM n * of lh * parsonal
ra p ra ta n la l v l ,
vanua.
ar
lu riid k H q n d in * court
A LL
C L A IM S
ANO
OB­
JECTIONS NOT SO F ILE 'S W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
PubhcalKo a f Ih lt N olle* h at
begun on August W, IN I
Personal Represent at le t:
Barbara H ack
U K R a d c llll
Turlock. C *. W3*0
AHornay fo r Personal
Representative:
Franck E. F M rc *. J t
t j f H artford Blog .
70IC Robinson t l .
Or land*. P I. U M I
Telephone: JC14ISISS7
Publish August Its 17. IN I
CEL af

•

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

NOTICE OF P U B L IC H IA R IN G
THE B O A R D OF CO U NTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OP
SEMINOLE COUNTY w ill hold a
public hearing in Room IM of lh *
S tm ln o l* C ou n ty C ourthouse.
Saniord. F lo rid * , on AUGUST IS.
IN I ai I of P M
or as toon
iherealtar as p o s tib la , la cootKJar
a tpac.lic land us* amendment lo
the S em inole C ou n ty Com
prehantiv* P lan and REZONING
ol tha drsc&gt;&gt;bed property
AN ORDINANCE A M E N DING
O R D IN A N C E
FF IS
W H IC H
AMENDS t h e D E T A IL E D LAND
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
the
S E M IN O LE
co unty
COM
P R E H E N S IV E P L A N FR O M
LOW d e n s i t y r e s i d e n t i a l
TO
M E D IU M
D E N S IT Y

NOTICE OP PUBLIC
H E ARING
THE B O A R D OF COUNTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R )
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY w ill hold *
public hearing Hi Room 900 of Itw
Sem inole C o u n ty C oerthouse.
Saniord. Flo rid a , on SEPT I. IN I
*4 7 M P M . or as toon th a rta itrr
as possible. I* consider a specif.c
land us* a m e n d m e n t to the
Seminole County Comprehensive
Plan and REZONING of lh*
described prop e rty
AN OR D IN ANC E AMENDING
O R D IN A N C E
77 7S WHICH
AMENDS t h e d e t a i l e d l a n d
use
elem en t
or
the
S E M IN O L E
CO U NTY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E
P L A N FROM

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
H E ARING
THE BO AR D OF COUNTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R )
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY w tll hold a
public hearing in Room KO o f lha
la m in o lt C ou n ty C ourthouse,
Saniord. F lo rid *, on AUGUST )$
I f t f af 7 00 P M , o f as soon
Iherealtar as passible, to consider
a vpacHic land us* amendment lo
th * Sam m elP C ou n ty Com
prehens,v* P lan and REZONING
of lh * described property
AN ORDINANCE a m e n d i n g
O R D IN A N C E
TT ) )
W HICH
AMENDS THE D E T A IL E D LAND
USE
ELEM ENT
OF
THE
SEM IN O LE
C O U N TY
COM
P R E H E N S IV E P L A N FR O M
LOW OENSITV r e s i d e n t i a l
TO COMMERCIAL FOR THE
PURPOSE OF HEZONING FROM
A I A G R IC U L T U R E TO C I
R E T A IL C O M M E R C IA L . THE
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D

f

r e s id e n t ia l

for

the

PURPOSE OF REZONING FROM
A l AGRICULTURE TO f l ) A
M U LT I F A M IL Y
D W E L L IN G
DISTRICT ( I* S ACRES! AND CN
RESTRICTED NEIGHBORHOOD
COMMERCIAL 17 S acrasl. THE
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
PROPERTY
C N P ared
E 1sal Ina NW * , of lha NW’ , of
S II . T I I S . R 70 E . Its * lh *
property beginning 7*0' E a tl of
Doug le t A vanua on N orth Street,
than running 400 w est on North
S ired, than runn in g South 1170",
man running East 1*0' bach lo
Douglas A itn u e then North W
mcng Douglas Avenue, man East
7*0'. then N orth SW leaf lo tha
Poinl ot Beginning (Containing 1 s
aerts more ar le t t l
R SA P a red
E. 's o fth e NW 'y of tha N W ', ol
S II. T I I S . N 7kE , less In *
property beginning m IM ) w
turner ot North street and Douglas
Avenue, then running Wait 7*fF,
then running South SOD', then
running E a tl 7*0 . then running
North too- lo th * Point ol Begin
ning iCom a-ning is ) acres more
or less I
iFu rth er described a t being
situated on l h * SW corner of
Douglas A vm ue and North Sr )
• DISTRICT No 71
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
S U B M IT T E D
BY
CONDEv
PROPERTIES. INC
Further, m * PLANNING AND
ZONING
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY w ill hold a
Public haanng in Room X d o t lh *
Semmole C ounty Courthouse.
Sanford. Flo rid a , on AUGUST S.
IM I. or o t soon ina ra a tlar as
possible, to ra via w . near com
m e n ft
and
m ake
re tu rn
mevsdeiiom lo i n * Board af County
C om m ission e r* on lh * above
cep!&gt;oned ordinance and reioning
Additional inform a tio n may be
oblamod by c e n iic fm g lh * Land
Management M anager at 177 41)0.
E il 140
Persons unable to attend lh *
hearing who w ish to comment on
in * proposed actions may Submit
written tla ttm e n ts to the Land
Management D ivision p rio r to th *
scheduled public hearing Persons
appearing al lh * hearings may
submit w ritten statements to bo
heard orally
Persons ora advised that, it they
dacida t * appeal any decision
made al th a t* meetings they w ill
need a record o f lh * proceedings,
and. lor such purpose, they may
need lo vnsuf* lhai a verbatim
rtc o rd ol lhaprococd.ngs It mode,
w hich re c o rd
inclu d es the
te stim o n y e n * evidence upon
which tho acpaai i t to be based
Board o* County C om m istiorw rt
Seminole County. F lo rid *
By Robert Sturm . Chairman
AMetl A rth u r H Beckwith. Jr
Publish July 70 and August 17,

Iff)
in

DLk 10)
the

c ir c u it

court

for

SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
PRORATE DIVISION
Fil# Number 11-171 CP
D ivltiaa Probate
IN ME ESTATE OF
W ILL IA M M CARROLL
Oeceased
NOTICE OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C LAIM S
OR
DEMANDS
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
n o t if ie d
th a t
th *
ad
m in is tra tio n o f th e estate of
W IL L IA M
M
C A R R O LL,
deceased. F ile N um ber 11 V I CP.
•spending in lh * C ircuit Court for
S E M IN O LE C o u n ty. F lo r id * .
Probata D ivision, lh * address ot
which i t Seminole County C ow
Ih o u tt. N o rth P a rk A va n u*.
Sanford. FL
Th* personal representative ol
the v s ta le Ik
THOMAS C
CARROLL, whose address is P O
Boa 470. Saniord. FL 11771 Th*
name and address ot lha parsonal
re p re ta n lltiv e ’l attorney a r* set
forth below
A il persons haying claim s or
demands agam sl th * astal* are
re q u ire d .
W IT H IN
TH R E E
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PU BLIC A TIO N OF
THIS NOTICE, to II I* with the
clerk ol the above court a w rllta n
s'aiament o f any claim or demand
they may have Each claim must
be in w ritin g and must indicate ttw
basis ter the c la im , the name and
address o l the cre d.io r or h it agent
or attorney, and tha amount
((aimed I t th * ctelm Is not yet
due, the d a l* w hen it w ill become
dua shall be staled II the claim is
Contingent or unliquidated, the
nature ot in * unce rtain ty shall M
staled II Its* c la im is securvd. the
security shall be described Th*
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies ol the c la im lo the clerk to
tn a b i* th * c lr r k lo m a il on* copy
to each personal representative
A ll persons Interested In the
estate to whom a copy ot th is
Notice ol A dm in istra tio n hat been
mailed a r * re qu ire d. W ITH IN
THREE MONTHS FROM THE
DATE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
P U B LIC A T IO N
OF
THIS
NOTICE, lo I I I * any o M ettle nt
ihay may hav* th a t challenge the
valid.ly el in * decedent s w ill, lh *
q u a llllc a lio n t o l t h * parsonal
representative o r th# vanua or
lunsdKlHM si l h * court
ALL CLAIMS, DEM ANDS. ANO
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
WILL BE FOREVER BARREO.
Oat* *1 lh * lir s t publication »f
mis N olle* o l A dm in istra tio n!
August 18. IM I.
s Thomas c. C a rro ll
M Personal R epresent*live
of th * Estate q l
W ILL IA M M CARROLL
ATTORNEV FOR PERSONAL
R EPRESENTATIVE
OOUGLAS STENSTROM
STENSTROM .
M C IN T O S H .
JULIAN,
COLBERT 8 W H IG H A M . P A
P.D. Boa U K
Sante r*. F L D i l l
Tetephuh* X I I D 1171
Publish A ugutt It . IT. T N IO E l »

lo w

d e n s it y

CLASSIFIED ADS
Orlando - Winter Park

Seminole

831-9993

322-2611

180A M
MONDAY

—5 : » P M
th r u F R ID A Y

SATURDAY*

RATES
I S I m t ______
] c o n s a c u ttv a tI m a t
Z e o n g a c u tlv a tlm a *

H O URS

lO co n M C u tlv gtln sg s

Noon

S1.00 M in im u m
' J L i n t ) M in im u m

bv

w j l l ia m

. TRUSTEE
Further, the P LANN IN G AND
ZONING
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY w ill hold a
pubic hearing in Room IDOol th *
S rm .nol# C o u n ty Courtnousa,
Santoro Flo rid a , on A ugutt L
IM I. or a t loon Iherealtar as
postibla. to review , near com
m tn ts
and
m a ka
racom
mmdations to th * Board ot County
C om m ission a r t on th * above
captioned ordinance and raioning
Additional inform ation may be
obtained by contacting the Land
Management Manager at 777 4DO.
E h IM
Persons u n a b it to attend the
hearing who w ith to comment on
the proposed act ions may submit
w ritten statem ents lo lh * 1 wsd
Management O iv liio n p rio r 10 th*
scheduled public hearing Person*
appearing a l In# haaringt may
tubm .t w ritte n statements or be
hoard o rally
P rrs o n la ra a d v is e d th a t.it Ih ty
decide to appeal any decision
mad* at these meatings, they w ill
need a record of th * proceedings,
and. lor such pur post, they m *v
need to ensure th a t a verbatim
record of the proceedings is made,
w hich r e c o rd
inclu d es I n t
testim ony a nd e vid e n ce upon
which the appeal is to be based
Board o l County
Commissioners
Semmole County, Florida
By Robert Sturm.
Chairman
AHasI A rth u r M Beckwith Jr
Publish July K . August 17 1
September I. IM I

OE« tot
NOTICE OF P U B L IC H B A R IN O l
the

s e m in o l e

co untv

BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
w ill hold a public hearing in Room
100 o l l h * S tm ln e l* County
Ceurtneut*. Santee#, F ie r i* * on
AUOUST IS. IM t * • t eo P M „ or
as soon tharaarlae as post-Ota to
contldtr the following
P U BLIC
H E A R IN O
FOR
CHANGE
OF
ZONING
REGULATIONS
SIO V IH L E N . JR . - REZONE
FROM A I A G R IC 'H T U H E TO R
IAAA
S IN G L E
F A M IL Y
DW ELLING DISTRICT PZ (• S
I t ) sa Th# p rop e rty d e scrib e d*!
From t h t Southeast Comer ol
th# SW', ol Sacllon IS Township
te South. R ang* 7* E a tl. Sammoit
County, F lo rid a , ru n N W d t g r t t t
07' I t " W . along th a South lin t ot
u d SW i,. a d is ta n t v of IS f t * ! to a
to m t on lh * W ait Right of Way
Ime of M arkham Woods Road and
m * POINT OF BEGINNING:
Ihenct continue N tv degrees 87'
TV" W . along said South Im t of lh *
SW',. a d is ta n t* of 1171M ( ta li
thancarun N 00 degrees 07' S*" S..
Along th * c a n ttrtin * ol * 100 loot
Wid* F lo rid a Power Cor pur at - n
Easement, a d is ta n t* *1 7*0 88
leel. thence n*s S H degrees 07'
H E . 700 00 te*4, thence run N 71
degrees SI' S I" E . 1)7 71 lean
•hence fu n N IS degrees SO PS" E ,
70 00 le a lt Ih e n c t ru n S. X degrees
Ol'SS" t . 18 f7 ta a t to lha Poinl ol
Curvature o l a curve concave I*
the N o rth e a s t i
th a n e * run
Southeasterly along th * arc of s a i^
Curve having a radius of I7SM
•eel, a ce ntra l angle ol So Degrees
00". Io r an a rc distance of
l i t t l I vet i thane* ru n N at
Degrees M ’ 03" E . 171)7 leal I*
•ha Po.nt of C w v a tu rt o f * curve
esneave la th e Northwest, thence
run N ortheasterly along the arc at
said curve having a radius af 2100
leaf, a c e ntra l .s n g tta f gg degrees
00' 00", tor an arc distance af IV 77
test, thence run N . I t degrees IT
OS' E . IS 00 teef to a pern* on th *
w a tt
R ig h t of w a y
tin * af
Mar sham woods Rood, thanca
run S 00 degraas O f SS" I . along
sad Right o t Way Ime. a A tla n ta
of « r M tael to th * POINT OF
o e g in n in g .
Containing I t sa) aerts. more or
last
IF u r lh a r d escrib e d a t on
M a rkha m W oods R ead, three
miles north ol L a k t M a ry Btvd |
IOISTRICT No S)
F u rth e r, lh * P la n n in g and
Zoning Com m ission w ill held a
public hearing an AUOU1T $. ISI1
A t f 88 P M
ar as si
Iherealtar as postibla. in Room sot
of tha laeninal* County Ceuf
thouia, Sanford. F lo rid * . In order

00

make recommendation* Ip
Board ot County Commissionar* af
Sermnol* County an lh*
application.
Thena m afttisdanc* will
heard and wr iffan commtnrs may
b* m ad
with lh a Land
Management Manager Haarlrrft
may b t continued from tlm* N
lima a t found nacattary Furls
oet*.is available by c a lling tU
U K . E ile n tio n IM
Person* a t advises, that il they
decide la a p p ta l any decision
mao* at lh a i* meetings, th t y wtll
naad a re ta rd o l Tho (rocfadings,
and M r such purpose, Ih ty may
naad to a n tu r* th a t • verbatim
record af th * proceedings is n sM t.
w hich r e c o rd
includes Th*
last,m a n y and a v ld a n c t g u y ,
-TGiJ, lh * appeal &gt;. ia ba m *d *
B a n d Of County C om m lM lH i
Seminol# County. F lor me
By: R obert Sturm . Chairman
A ttest1 A rth u r H . Beckwith. Jr.
Publish J u ly H and Aug 17, TUI
DAK 188

•Hds gone, bur th * swing ter M
lh * b ack ya rd is n 't) Sail II airh
« w a n t ad Call 1711*11
P lum bing D IY . Hardware arv)
E le c tric a l re ta il am repair
Business w WO Real f u e l*
Besl Terms IU 9 0 M Wm
M a lin o w s k i REALTOR 111
7*81. Eves 1)91X7

29- Rooms

Noon The Day Before Publication

tle u itr tu l d ea n all new sleep ng
rooms Linen and maid shvic *
provided Available now C tll
17)1*41 o r inquire al i l l
P alm etto A v*

Sunday-Noon Friday

A I
A g r l M IA A A
SINGLE
FA M ILY DIST TO OC OFFICE
DISTRICT. THE FOLLOWING

s u b m it t e d
TRIC k E l . JR

S te a lin g
St&lt; a line
a le
ir c a h n t

DEADLINES

r e s id e n t ia l

Th* W e s t1v ot th e E a s t's of itw
N orthw est ' . o f Section la.
Township I t South. Range M East,
Irs t road r ig h t ol way lo r Red Bug
Lake Road and T u t caw, Ha Road
Itess the South SOO I n t of lha Well
IM tael th e re of), all lying an*
be,no ,n Sem.noI* County. Florida
IF urther described as DtMg
W r tlo f Tvtcaw .H a Road, abutting
Rtd Bug Road l a I acres MOL)
IDIST No I)
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS BEEN

Two q ueslion*
W ill you be
fin a n c ia lly mdepmdent in 1 to
S years? A re you p a d whal
you a re w o rth ! n not ca ll 77)

aaoa_____________________

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

to c o m m e r c i a l
for
the
p u r p o s e o f r e z o n in g f r o m

d e s c r ib e d p r o p e r t y

14—Business
Opportunities

I

Q i J

tT

18— H e lp W a n S e d

P unks

if

We w .th to thank our friends and
n e ig h b o rs fo r t h t many
w o n d e rfu l tu p r e ttle n s t l
sym pathy and deeds of kino
nets shown to us during our
recent bereavement Signed
the F a m ilv of M rs Susie fi
hoo* ey
* —

Personals

S acrnary i t
Local llr m p rtie rs insurance
knowledge, but lop Skill* w ill
tra m

Th* Bes&gt; Buy In Town
cos? d e ta in e d Ad

Needed - r ip e n cable TV .n
s te lla r* Besl pay m the ita ia
C all now X T 1*0) days, U t
a t a) Evas.

30-Apartments
____ Unfurnished

RN LPN ) I I p art tim e or PRN.
good s ta rlin g pay Call Shirley
SIS e)00. Longw ood Health
Care Center
___________

lo n e ly C hristian Singtas
Meet C hristian SMglts m your
area W r it* Southern Christian
Singles Club. P O Boa l t l ]
Sum m erville, 1. C. 7)18) or
call I 80) l i t M M I f h rt

E 1p e r.fn e ed fu ll line g rill cook

Unattached) Lonesome» start
Trial M em bership, lust i n
confidential
Dignified DIs
treat DrHerent Couniryw.de
L itera ture D ating ol Pretftge.
W illla m tlo w n . M a il 011*7
Th a t) *30 WI7

5-Lost &amp; Found
R tw a rd to a nyono fin d in g
sunglass** w ith Cold Initials
IMS) possibly Sanford Plata
777 * « i or H I IM *
Found — Silver Afghan hound
with gray coloring, itm a N .
call 8 7 * 8 * 8 * 'III 5 .M a r 979 4SJ1

— Apply Foetlre Restaurant,
m i O rlando Dr I I I T7I. Sant

SPUR OF TH E MOMENT
B A B Y S ITTIN G
_________ B S W M
W eakly,day B a b y iittin g ln
m y horn* H av*
R H er m e e t X I Q j)|

I

LPN i t 7 p a rt rim e. ) II pari
lim a A pply L *kaview Nursing
Center, T it E Tnd S t, Saniord
No Cash outlay Hom em ekwt
beat th# squeeia It you aren't
maamg 1400 p n mo and a r t
w orking m ore than 1) h r t p H
wk You cen t p a n this up Get
ln»» lh * ACT II. Call Peggy
)1 IO K I or Pal n &gt; 7 n ]
^ C u t l o m H Service i t
II you Ilk * last pace, goad with
ytson* get hired H i r e there It
lo ft of action
AAA E M P LO YM EN T
LOWEST F E E - T E R M S
ITI7 French A v t
179 Sirs

i t Dental Reception Ht i f
Part tim e lo s ta rt Could work
Ud* F u ll

Tennis In stru ct'o n — U S P T A
Cert Hied G roup o r P rivet*
lessor-) C hildren a specialty
Oev« M alM M W thl. 19199*7
Mutlc Lessons Plano. Guitar,
bats banio, drum s, brass.
woodwind n i i l l l ________

AAA R M P LO Y M 8N T
LOWEST FE E
TERMS
1*17 French A v *
97)917*
Housewives. Grandmothers tor
p a rt lim e and lu l l tlm *
telephone sales No experience
necessary Harbor Lighting.
•01 C ornw all Rd 111 44)7
Naad tom apn* w ith tip n . e n c i
In lig h t c la r lc a l s e c re ta ria l
work m 17*0 l a m noon

H-H»|pW teiHd
★ r H i l l C lerk ★
Dream Spot, fo r a m ature parson
with w om a n '* wear
AAA E M P LO YM EN T
LOWEST F E E - T E R M S
t t t t F ranch A y *
9)9 9171
S ain m anager — tiperlencaq
only, q u a lifie d residential 8
c o m m e r c ia l
ta p tr ltn c t
n a c a tta ry
F o r In ltr v ta w
W a s * c a ll Century 71, H ty ts
■ ta lly Inc . Saniord 7)9 90S*
W alder
Large Industry needs your a.
Partis*. M ust read blueprints
Good pay fo r good skills

TW OM USIC POSITIONS
Fart lim a pia n ikt, and part tim e
ch ild ren 's ch qit director a I
h r t per wk Call Sanlando
u m c . m i)a *
AVON R EPRESENTATIVES
t h t P a rt Tim a C eren
**c 907*- C o lle c t ISSITOi
Boat assemblers needed at one*
Ik* our crulSH department
Steady w o rk lo r real producw
Cobia Boat Co , 100 SHvw L a k t
Road. Saniord

★

cath lH k 'fc

Part and F u ll tim e, w ill tram
sm a rt person Nice b o u ts

A AA E M P LO YM EN T
LOWEST F E E - T E R M S
H 17Fr*nch A v e _______ I I ) )I7&gt;

AAA EM PLO YM EN T
LOWEST F E E -T E R M S
1017 French A v t.
77) S17*

PLANT O PERATO R. SEWER
City of C at salbeery, c iv il See
W e H I g rad or equivalent
Musi hold a M in im u m " C " P it
Cert if K a ta as sewer p lw it
Operator 111.7*4 y r Apply
Cass at b e rry CHy H all. *1 L a k t
Triplett O r., through l&lt;pt j.
J O E ________________ ___

Full tim e aide lor home health
agancy M ust have own car L
telephone EOE Call 7118180
or tx * )?87

FIRST COOK
E r OH lane ad only need apply.
Apply M person Halfday Inn on
lh* Ldka tron t
i c Parsonrwl Spaciallst ★
* V r Degree ♦ Personnel Eap
can w a lk you into this pot Ulan
A A A E M P LO Y M E N T
LOWEST F E B -T E R M S
ta il French A v t
779 317*

RN OR LPN
*17 and I I S Shift FvN llt n *
A pply In parso n Saniord
Nursing Convalescent Center.
*38 M tlR w tviila A y *
■N F u ll T im * M Shin Apply *1
L e k *v l*w N ursing C anlw. T it
E. In d S I. S *ntord
Cm *
Good h r t good pay im m aqiafs
opening. We nee* you nose.
A A A E M P LO Y M E N T
LOSWEfT F E E — TERMS
1*17 French A v t.
77)117*

Legal Notice
F IC T ITIO U S N A M I
Nolle# is hereby given that I ten
engaged m buslncs* *1 7H7 South
Orlando D r tea, Sanford. PI*. 7)711
Seminal* County. Florida under
the f ic titio u s nam e * f SUN
COUNTRY TOPS * TR IM , *n«
lhaf I inland tu re g u la r sad name
win* the C la rk *T m * c ir c v t Coski,
Sam m ot* County. Florida In *c
o rd a a c * w llh th * o rg y *la p * a t lha
FHliSibsP N a m * Slatgtas. T o w n ;
IdCfian MS 0* F lo rid * S U M rs
W37
Sig. Kenneth J. Hansen
PubfltR: Jut* n . August ). 10. IT,
IN I
OEK1TS

F u ll charge doubt* entry skpr
Ptaasa sand c e m p iu * • flu m e,
including address and phene
no and r fin a n c e s to Boe 18*
C O E vening H n a ld . P O Boa
MS7. Saniord. Fla

i f Spray Palmar
Local com pany needs stable
dependable person with good
tip H I tn c t
aaa em plo ym en t

LOWEST F E E -T E R M S
H17 French A v *.
D lS IT t
Right now wa need * taw good
salat people whs u n the
a m bition and dedication i t
succeed i l th a t's you, then
we re prepared lo o rtH rag
t o i l resward* 1 lh * methods lo
pH tham F H Ini H y lew p lu s *
c t l l C entury IS Hayes Realty
Service* In c . Santorg
17) M SP
ADORESSED
EN VELO PES
N E E O E D tl For inter m il ion
m a ll salt addressed, i lamped
e n v e lo p *
lo
BOX
III.
OURANO, M l. 48*10

■it M anager Trainees ^
Sesrnal N ational Co needs your
c a r tH d e s ire , » Y r. Csllege
degree super potential
a a a Em plo ym en t
LOWEST F E E - t e r m s
ITI7 French Avg
97)1171

J1—Situations \Abnted
C ie a n .rq — Days,
pretae Danone area
—
m m _____
Hay K id *. L M A in g lee an esira
dollar? A s k M om i Dad la Ml
you M e * B c la s s ifie d ad
garage i * M
Health C a r* M r inva lid a H rv a
d a y . M T a r a reas a v a lla b a
Im m ediately Reply M Baa KB
CO E vening H n a ld . P O Boa
S8S7, Saniord. Fla 9)771

■

,.4 5

\&gt;

■* ; ';V , i -

I l you a re n 't using your pool
labia, take a eg*, and sail il
w ith a Herald classified ad
Call 777 1*11

WHY SAVE IT
SELL IT
Q U IC K L Y w ith « Fast Acting
Low Cost C M iiih a d Ad

F ull or P e t T im * Tool *no Ol*
M aker
in q u ire at Kokomo
Tool *11 W t i l St., Saniord

M—Inatructiom

We nave apartments lorant
June P o rilg Really
Realtor 1711*71

l Bdrm A pis nom I71S 7 8 1
Bdrm also avail Pool, Iannis
court 97) a d *
__

8

B abysitting In m y hem*
ta p e r lanced mother.
17) 9471

A low

Cook — ev p n lanced in line
dining, breakfast A d-nner
F u ll lim e Apply in p n io n I a
p m D eltona Inn SI4 4*ei

Tnm*; w i n y _
lo n g haul
Salary p H d itm . new truck,
r t d t r e ip H ie n c e important
Contact J u n g lt l abo rt lor let
Corporation. SOI Sllvar L a k i
Or . Sanford, or ca ll IKS) 7)7
)1 ). o r t x s t a n 1077

6—Child C art

Room For R m i
P ris e i* Entrance
)17 TtSI

AAA EM PLOYM ENT
LOWEST F E E -T E R M S
HIT F r tn c h A v *
77)1171

WHY BE L O N E L Y ) Write "Gel
A M a te " Dating Servlet. All
ages P O Bos a gtl. Clear
w ater. FI 11111.

lo n e ly , w rit# "B rin g in g Pao pia
Together D ating S te v lc a l" All
ages L Sen.or c m ia n i PO
USt. W in te r Haven. Fla Tiaao

SANFORO
Reas w kiy 8
m onthly rales Util Inc Kit
ju s , Oak
Adults M l 7M9

'

T?

F ROM U N
B edroom A p is Available
'h e w n by Appt Only 1?) |Mg

M a llo n v llla
Trace
Apts
Spacious, modem 7 Bdrm. I
B a in a p l
Carpeted, k ll
equip pe d .
CHBA
Near
hospital 8 lak* Adults, no
pals ,S770 177 *73)
Saniord
I bdrm e den,
c e ra m ic
b a in ,
fu rn itu re
available, adults. 1771 mo 1
M l 74*1
E n |*y c a v a lry living? 7 Id rm
A p lt. O ly m p ic | | . p M i
Shenandoah Village ope* f j
a s m *.
M w in H 's V illa g e o n L a k # Ada I
bdrm fro m l)W . I e o ,m ,f(m
l l » Located I 7 « (m l South
ol A irp o rt Blvd In Saniord All
Adults 37) 8*70
1

B d rm . 1 Bath, Kitchen
equipped, washer dryw . air,
pool. S900 mo L ias* and
deposit. Orlando isa 1717.

LUXURY
F a m ily 8
Poolside 1
Cove Apts

wtthenue

APARTM ENT*
A d u lts ttc lM n .
Bdrms Vetter'S
) X 7*00 Open en

1811 W. R d 7 Bdrm, Cent H,
child ren welcome, no pets. 1*3
w k + 1300 sec dap inq u irt
*7) P alm etto A re or call M l

DELTONA VILLAS
111 Cerribeers S I. Deiien*. 1 m il*
H I I a 7 bdrm . I B, adults only,
appliances 8 laundry tK iin ia s
furnished. CH8A. WW Car
pel mg, m onthly rant Irom
11*7 F o r fu rth e r mlo call 1)03)
77) * l * f

H A p a rlm a n ti Fumithaci
Saniord — 7 bdrm. air, kids,
pert. )7ao m o ) x i;ao
SAV ON RENTALS R IA L T O !
Looking For a New Home? —
Check lh * Want Ads lor houses
ol every t i l t and p rlc t
Sanford, I bdrm . no children or
pert. a ir . carpal, all alaci
appliances. IX » up 771 801*
F u rm in e d Garage Apartmanl
Adults, no pets
977 S437
Fgwiiahad-apartm anti Mr senior
Cmtorsk. I l l Palmetto Av* . J
Cowan No phona cant.
Sanford 1 Bdrm . Kids, P H i 1100
Down lig g M o M f 7700
SAV ON RENTALS R IA L TO*
SANFORO
)rn s. a ir.u H lin c .
S IX d n. S3SO mo 77* 7300
SAV OH RENTALS REALTOR

H A —D u p le x e s
.N ew Dupiev.
•quipped k iichan M tlm o
Call 11) SiSC
every

day

d

b a r g a in

OAy IN THE WANT AOS 777
Tail o r t ) i fa t)

CONVENIENCE
STORE
CASHIERS
Goad s a la ry, naspilaiitation, I
week paid vacation w ir y t
m o nth s
E vp e yirn ca
not
necessary
Far interview
phono the manager al
A irp o rt Blvd

1311311

CastalbHry
CeMryAy*
tak a Mary

19*1713
i n Alt)
1131111

KEYES
DISTRIBUTORS
&amp; RETAILERS
LET KDR SPONSOR
YOU IN A NEW CAREER. START PART
TIME AND BE INDE­
PENDENT IN TWO
YEARS OR LESS. SUC­
CESS DETERMINED
■Y YOUR EFFORT,
EARNINO POTENTI­
AL IS UNLIMITED.
CALL m-71U TODAY
FOR AN APPOINT.
MENT.

•V i

* •

�I

31A—Ojplexes
LO N G w G O O lK FRNT — } rm .
k d l, 1100 Or 1300 n g l i t (TOO

•tl—Hooves

HAL COLBERT REALTY

» *V ON RENTALS R EALTOR
Lake V » f, near H tW fn l * h t
E tfife s I Bdr-n *&gt;f , l f » [ w
new pa-nt'and WAC 1771 with
Year L e a l* 771 7 H )
Don't p&lt;lt no long** r t t o m
■ttnu h.gn t t *n e le p h an ts
n t R lACAACIAtlilitdAO . a m
p i* tu t money In to u r •.a llo t i
Brand now never occup-ed,
Tbdrm . carport, CHA.
______ LIM m o laa t o )
SANFORD — 3 bdrm , ca rpo rt,
k.&lt;«. 141 » k m /TOO
U -V ON RENTALS REALTOR
B-g 1 Bdrm. I&lt;a Bam, carpal.
a*r Modern Nica A ra a »Tt»
mo lit la s t i n M i l 0 a ) 0 a U
lo r Carl
Tbdrm , I B. k-lch equipped, a ir
A heel Mohtwk O r , Sanford
U N m o , I t l la d . leas* 1 7»J
4404. atk for Ed
Spec-out nan I M r m duple*
lor rant Kitchen t u ilt
equipped J u n t o
JUST THINK, IF C LA S S IFIE D
ADS DIDN t WORK. THERE
w o rn o n t n r a n v h
N ra rTbdrm. I B * a ir. A ta .la b la
n o * H i. t o t • t t c u r l t r
Sno«n b t *ppt J4th p ia c t.
Sanford 111 )444 4 p m It
p m . n t 4141 10 a m ] p m ,
ask tor Da«.d

33-Houses Unfurnished
For rant - n ic t re tirem e n t noma
w ltn tn c lo t td g a ra g a In
d a llg n tfu l D tB a ry
A lio 1
Odrm. 1 B moblla home In
Maadonlaa By rha R ivar Four
Townai R rally Inc Broker
444 1710
I Bdrm. i&lt; i Ram
N.caYard. S1T0
17711)4
1 bdrm, 7 B. fa m ily room ,
u tility room, wooded lot
144 0O7T
WANT ADS ARE BLACK 1
W HITE AND R E A D A L L
OVER
H w t t for rant 1 bdrm .
I ’ l B. m M a yfa ir
n o n » / so u
Sanford - tO yilniida School —
Nawfy painltd in 4 out 1 BR. I
B, lam rm . C H4A. ig fancad
yd. no p a ll S)71 mo. t la c
m i n i or 13) 7444
CASSELBERRY
tb d r m , I B .
a ir, k'dv. U l) m o 114 7JOO
SAV O N RENTALSREALTO R
LAKE M AR Y
7 Bdrm Florida R m . Central
Meat and A ir. lanced back
yard SIM mo I t t and la it 1700
Sac Dap giadr Brown R eally
R t g t t t t r rd
R ea l
E tt a la
Broker 111 1717 07 H ) 1444
Clean 1 Bdrm. 1 B all. Cant HA
La'oa Vara Itl. t a il and dan
1110 mo tlO I IIJ

LANDLORDS
Qualified lenanlt w aiting
No lea 1)4 7700
IA V ON UCNC4LI. H k A k lO H
DELTONA
1 bdrm . Air k id v
p a ll, i m mo 114 7700
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR
1 bdrm 7B fa m ily room.
teargaraoe in
Dallona Call S74 U7T
WE MANAGE R ENTALS
HALL H A LL R E A L T V . INC.
REALTOR 1UI7T4
WhAtever I ha occ Atlon. thera i» a
i t a l l l e d ad 10 to t y f II Try
cm* toon
7 bedroom I Bath
710 Woodmoro
17f)monlh t security

33—Houses Furnished
House ter r m l in CHBary —
1st. la it 4 tlOO
WCualty 1)14744

41—Houses

323-7832
Eras 1110414
701E IS ihS i
Don -1 pile no longer needed
iie m i high a t an elephant's
eye Piece a it a ttilie d ad. and
pile the money in yo ur w a lle t &gt;

Country E llt t o In to w n — )'»
acres heavily wooded, loned
ao'le 1 * bedrms. ISy baths,
eat m kitchen, d in in g room .
Hying room. C entral Heat 4
Air icrtened porch, t wells,
beautiful landscaping, garage
♦ ) ip t c t c a rp o rt, l u tility
buildings, and 1 space Shed
ew ty from house By owner
lie * .000 111 1)74

REALTOR TIT 4441
E va t: 1** Sue. I l l la s t, m

im

Harold Halt Realty
INC. REALTORS, MLS

323-5774

Day or Night

HIOH RATE 1 QOT
YOU DOW N!
Call a s tir Owner
Financed H em et

NEW LISTING 1114 E lm Aye
Simply lovely Thia 1 Bdrm
homy hat C entral H 4A and
screened porch G reet neigh
berhood loo F a llib le owner
Itnonc-ng S41.W0_______ ___
Non luted * Acres 1 B drm . 1
Bath. Living Rm. D in ing Rm.
Florida Rm w ith Fireplace,
pool Appro* Im alefy 1W4 tq
•I ol living area F ru it trees,
oek and pine. Ira c to r Land
has S ta lt Gam a L icensed
permit Sell a ll o r d iv id e 111
1404 Alt I X p m

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader
WE LIST ANO S IL L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
SANFORO A R E A
COUNTRY ATM O SPHERE 1
bdrm. I B ith en la rg e shaded
loti Handy man S padal Just
lllv W .
JUST FOR YOU 4 B d rm . 1 Bam
Hama in inclu sive neighbor
heed!
N ice e n rn e r
let
Equ-pprd kitchen. Cent HA.
porch end te ll painted and
carpeted J u il ilk .lo o

C R E A T IV E
F IN A N C IN G
Available an Thu im m aculate 1
bdrm w huge eat in kitchen,
btg bdrm i. panelled Fam Rm
a I t r a i l w tre a t palarat
1)4. IN

CALL 321*5774

K js tr
111 M H S T V r i

BEAUTIPUL 1 B drm . ) path
home in Dream wold w ith aeol
and patio, CHA. eat in kiicnen.
Fla rm . fam ed le t. Bar B 0.
tre e n tia u te . w o rk s h o p and
moral l i t *0*
SUPER 1 Bdrm. 1 B a th home an
cotntr tat. w ith Cent HA. wall
to wall catpel. equipped k it
than with BBO b r a a k ijk l bar,
Fla. rm screened perch In a
nice n alphbotheod
M any
« « ir*i. P r u t H saa,to *
OUTSTANDING I B d rm . Iky
Bam custom b u ilt home en
lendtcaped c e rn e r le t in
e ila tliik e d areal C eery thing
yea could Ihma e t even yevr
own peal and p aliP I 1*4 M t

MLS

LAKE MARY 1 I d . ) B, Fam
R m , Fireplace. Canine Fan
Fenced Lge L it 17).MO
BRL AIR I Br. | a. remodeled
New Appr 4 carpets. FPL
Levety yard. III1 .4 N
STATELY 1 Br. 1 | . ) , „ r ,
Irama. paal. game rm . nica
a r il , t a tr t fat u t . t e i
realtor

ASSOCIATE! N E E D E D ! New
ec y ip tn tn c e d
C all HerB
Slm ttrem or Leo A lbright
today 4 discover success!
M A Y P A II V IL L A S ! T 4 I
bdrm . I b ath Condo Villas.
M i l le M ayfair Country Club
Select yavr lot I loor plan 4
-tu rn e r o rc o rt Q uality con
strveted by Shoemaker lev
S47.1N 4 apt

A tie r hrs 11) 11)4 and 111 441)

CALL A N Y T IM E

N EED A SERVICEMAN? You II
tin d h lm I,sled in our Business
D -rrclory
BEAT THE HEAT - Spacious 1
bdrm. 7 B, w Ig gam e room,
CHA. a ttra c tiv e fire p la c e ,
WWC. setrened p o lio v lovely
pool on 4 1041 4 /7.100

JMI
Park

C A lS E lR C U Rv
] bdrm , «&gt;r.
9*71. p ftL 1795 f*o 3J9 TJW
SAV ONRENIACS REALTOR

TONY COPPOLA A llO C .INC
REALTOR
*1*0111
OsHen Enloy c o un try living,
yet |vst m in u l** fro m Sanford
1 » IB on one acre Horse* and
other anim al* OK Priced to
te ll 1)7.NO

Cal IBart
estate

G *f M l v t p a M t — l * i * that
“ For Sal#" ikgn down &amp; ru n a
clatt&lt;fi#d a* Call 127 2411 or
t i l 999)

34-Resort Property
N C Mountain lake condo — 7
Or. 3 B.. Ii aw a tta a Oam.
marina, tennis, pool, hiking,
horse fra ils A va il Aug JO
Sept 4 373 4107

37—Business P ro p erty
SANFORD
7000 V) if. it in d u stria l or
C em m ercill fu n d in g on IT 41.
I M ) it In office tp a ce c e ll
H I SUO or 114 4U1
H a y t a loom lo rentT Let
c lA iid ie d ad i&lt;nd A tenant ft
O iticiS paca
ForLaata
114 7771
SANFORD
7.000 SR It II In d u stria l or
Commercial Building on 171)
1.000 tt in oftica i» * &lt; a Call
H M llO o r 114 4141

Wlt4*e Spring* - C u lt 1 B IB.
Kitchen renovated, complete
with range, re frig e ra to r and
compactor
C e n tra l H 4,
F b ir g l a i i c o a lin g o u l t i d t
U 4.400

Alger and Pond N eatly Inc.
1*4 w Lake M a ry Blvd
Property Management 727 7B4J
New ) bdrm. 3 B home In
CWBary CH4A. carpel eppl.
eitum e mlge Johnny W elker
Heel E ita tf Inc B roker 177
44)7. alter 4 U 4 AM /
Hey Kfdt loo kin g lo r en e itr e
dollar? Atk Mom 4 Dad to let
you have a c l a i t i t i e d ad
garage sale

Glenaa Tenner — JIT 1441
R ia ltp r Associate
M oving to a n e w e r hom e,
a pa rtm m lf Sell don 1 needs *
ta il w-m a want act

Paol*
7 bdrm. I 1. eat m
kitchen.living room 4 Florida
roam On ] treed Nits. SO* ISO*
ea . 177 7141
Sanford A rte Just re du ce d
110.000 tor gulck Sale Large
CKoniel on iu * acres J Bdrm.
I'k bam with a p p ro iim a te lv
14N N It o4 ttking area Isa 11
Living Room w ith f -replace.
H a l) M atter B d rm Form al
d in in g room
R ece n t Im
pravemehii coni n i t of neve
re e l, updated w ir in g and
plumbing rel-m m ed t o ld oak
noon 144.400 * n n UOJOO
Down and I t s M orlgaga to r
Balanct, no q u a lifyin g Call
M r butcher 171104S Owner
H ta ilo r.
Duple a —Lake M a ry . 1 0 .000.
111,000an C m r Neatly
771 J i ll ar aves 77) 4)11

BATEMAN R E A L T Y

8 3/ 4 % ASSUMABLE
MORTGAGE
/Super J BR Home ai
343V l a u r e l
Fam

Rm

U l ? T9 P I

CM C A
O n ly S-fJ S00
C a ll F o ,

A p p o in tm e n t

RABORN R E A L T Y
Realtor

Phone 132 400C

322-2420

REALTORS
Multiple Lilting Servlet

REALTOR. 172 7 4 fi

34-Motote Homes

G u ita r - w oo d e n .*strin g ,
like new . w ith c t s e . t ll)
441 1144__________

I K , Real E tt it e Broker
1440 la n tu rd Ay»

321 0758
8ft. hrs. 322-7843
Vacant
II
C o m p le te ly
re d tc o ra ie d
N ew c a rp a l
th ro u ^io vt Good I mane mg
114.WO.
Kam a w ild in co m a . O w ner
financing I BR W ••*** 1BR
Rental collage plus eatre M .
A ll P ill 1)4.000
Lake Mary — L a i M W a lW . 1
duple* Will trade U4.W0

A Large Home 111! M rg no iip
A vt. Open 4 } D a ily Cut to
U t MO lor quick sera S) 000
Down i n 1141
1)4.100
Spacious ) BR. |v&gt; Bath. FR.
New Root. N tw iy pamred.
near Pmocresl School, large
fenced back yard
A A M cC LAH AH AN
I K Real Estate B roker
m in i

42-Mobile Homes
R lA O T H IS T W IC I
Concord o r J l ' i t J '
Hartford Both ) b d rm . ) B w
Shm glt ro d l. w ood s id in g ,
d e lg it carpel, drapes 4 ap
p lip n e tt Y o u r c h o ic e i t
111.441 Only al U ncle Roy s
M o b il* H orn *
Seles
In
leespurg No down paym ent,
VJL Sll o th w f.nencm g I 0 \
down Shop U n c i* R p y 's
Mobil* Homo Sales. US *41 i.
Leesburg 140*1 717 0)74. Sun
S a il t ) 4 p m w knig rus - 7 k}

1* Ola

&gt; * our beautiful twvu- BHQAi,
MORE, Iron* 4 r o w B R 1 .
GREGORY M O B ILE HOMES
.JM I Orlando D r
H I ) TOO
JFA4 7 HA Financing
Coward 14 *44' 7 Or ) bdrm . tiro
rrsitta n t r-b llt. wood tid in g 4
anmgi* root only t l 7.4*1
IF * N . only 111.441
la it r . o m y ill. O O )
No money down VA , U \ down
FHA Shop U nci* R o y s MoOiK
H am * S a lts U S 441 S
LP/lburg 140al 717 E lla Open
Sundays II 4 p m , n r*** m g M i
III 7 M

thep out o f South Carehna* 9
regular lin t el vied Iwrmture.
antique reproduction!, A TV’t
t l CASH, V IS A .M C tl
t t A M fB lC A H E X P R E S S tt

IIIIS

11)1 M t

French 4 v t

When you place a C la ttih rd Ad
»n The Evnnii'ng Her aid, t l t y
O o it to your phone btceute
som ething wofiderful &gt;%about

75—Recreational Vehicles
45—Pets Supplies

43—Lots-Acreage

51-A—Furniture

Beautiful treed lot near New
Lake M ary School 11* 000
Call Lorm ann Inc Realtors
l i t 1707
1 ACRES TA LL P IN E S , SOME
PASTURE
ROAD FRCNT
a g e . r iv e r a c c e s s , g e n
E v a tiio o o

I ' i A C R E ), T A L L PIN E S .
GENEVA tll.SOO LOW IN
TEREST
ASSUM ABLE
MORTGAGE
1 ACRES C LE a r EO LA N D
PAOLA 1)1000

TVVIISOR M A tE R FU R NITU RE
illlilE

FIR S T ST.

m

I

ON 1147 NEAR n e w
WINN D IX IE CENTER COM
ING AT LA K E M A R Y BLVD
ZONED
C O M M E R C IA L ,
11)7.00
HOME SITES IN ORANGE
GROVE AT U M A T IL L A 17)00
EACH. CRAZY TERMS

1 * ACRES WOODED L IK E A
PARK.ON TOPOF A H IL L IN
GENEVA 1*0.000. TERMS
a v a il a b l e

71! ACRES WOODED ROAD
frontage
IN O S T E E n
S17.100
I ACRE) WOODED JACKSON
BAY
AREA
OSTEEN
IIA M O . s e l l e r
F IN A N
CING
lE lG i.c n R E A LT Y RROKER
I I I tta t

f 0 Iwppe-n
70 Camper Sleeps i, stove,
r e fr ig e r a to r , h itc h , lacks,
s p a re , s ig n a l hookup, car
m irro rs , gas lan k, clean S74S
H I 04*1

AKC Doberm an P u p t Black and
Tan I W k i # * o r m f d and la ilt
docked HOO
1 904 175 709*.
574 m j

1)1)411

C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS o* m v rc h a n d .il
every day
King a il* bed (No fra m e l M l
Good Condition

77—Ju n k C ars Removed

47—Livestock Poultry

CASH FOR CAR*
(tunning or not
1JM H I

Catty. A p p ro * I mat tty
US poundl
3711199

~ B liY JU N a C A R ) 4 T N l/C K r
From |10 to l m or mere
C all 377 1474.^72 4440

'•ood Used t v s , U l 4 u p
M IL L E R S
J tllO rla n d o D r
Ph 1310)17
Dwvt D ttp « ir O f P u ll Yowf M iff
U\e A W«nt Ad 37} 7*11 Of
• li m i

Antiques Diamonds Oil
Paintings O riental Rugs
Bridges A ntiques
17)7101

II?* Luc ra ff l i f t 40 H P motor
Motor w tra ile r 11700 177
1474
M o to r * f ra d a r 11700
377 1414

^•'D A T T Q N 'A AUTO AUCTION
*&lt;wy 11, 1 m ile was! of SpaerZ
way. Daytona Brack w ill hale
a public AUTO AUCTION
evpry W tqnatda* Al I p m 111
imp on) y o n * In Florida You **L
Hi* rotorveef price Call M l,
*44) 1)11 tor fu rth e r gel a its

78-Motor cycles

Alum inum , cans, copper, lead,
brass, s ilv e r, gold WceSdays
14 10. Sal * 1 KoKoMo Tool
Co H i W 1st SI 171 noo.

—

1*71 C h tv y »? Ton Long W h irl
base 1)1 V I Slra-gkt (tic k
LooAt good and ru m good
11795 *31 1774

For E tta fe * C o m m e rc ia l t r
ft e t t im f le l A uction* A Ap
p c a ita lt C ell Den t Auction
37) 5470

71 Plym outh Fury III 1 door
h a rd to p
PS 1 PB, good
running cond. tw o )1 )1 M )
y 74 H r W rocarr Srrvlco 9
M-gh*sl prices pa-d lor lunk ar
used co r* L trvckk
■V

79 Honda Twin Star
USCC Perfect 400ml
1995 1*9 0077

71-Antiques

It you ar« having d iffic u lt*
findmg a place, fa five, car I d
dr live, a iot»,. o r %omm tttw ic o
foil h«v« mead ol* read all our
*an! adt avery day

u n i
M a il
um
17**)

i la n k li* * M ln |l* tii4 R * R 4
DN H w y, f i l l
C a m lb e riy

fo p D ollar P a id fo f JunA A UteO
cary, tru c A ! A heavy equip
m * t 777 5990

48—W anted lo Buy

55—Boats &amp; Accessories

★ 339 7989*

.Art you a fu ll' tim e d f lu if with a
p art tim e car? 'Our c fa in fie d i
are tuadrd w ith good buy tor
rOu

Musi Sell Pony Great w ith Kins,
Saddle and B ridle 1100 17)
M U or 177 M l)

53—TV Radio Stereo

B &amp; H A u to S a le s *

rsA ud, e a r
•7)Cougar XR7
•7) Comet Soon
7? In te rn a l ID irs e ia W D

79 VW But 1 owner
New f i r t t . a ir, 71 OdOmt
U500 1*9 0077

88-Hones
K m m o r* parts, service, used
• • ‘ hers M OONEY APPLI
ARC. E S 47) 0*47

★

75A-Vans

F r t t to good h o m t — 2 yr old
f t m a l t E n g liih W h ip p tt
N r td t ttn e td in yard Good
'««riithi r h ild r t n 111 Otf 1,

I D TOM

t P in to i P int#! P la in t
77A utom afjc
|795
77 Auto m a tic, a ir
SllFS
A utom atic
1995
7* 4 Speed a&gt;r
H IM
79 Auto, a If
tl*9J
in - m «

ONE PH O N E C A LL 'S T A R T ! a
C L A S S IF IE D a d ON IT )
R ESULTFUL
END
THE
NUM BER I ) )77 1*11

AKC A la iA a n M a itm u T t pup
p tft E a c tlftn t Breeding 1750
th o tt A w orm ed ( M a lt tl 111
- i l l ! _______________________
G trm an S M a lt 3 Y r t Suptr
w ith c h ild re n r«c Walch dog
1700 377 S7S1________ ___

in

SCLEA RED O U PLEX L O T ] IN
SANFORD 117.100 EACH
TONE 0 FOR Q U A D * OR OF
FICE1

m

im jy

7) Veg*
A u la a ir, SifO llrm
31* IN I
1*75 Pontiac Sporf Coupe, rvn*
good 1)7) or boil oiler Call
a lta r I p m 77)1340
C ia tsifie d Ad* w ill always g-v*
you m ore
Much . Murh
More than you aspect

C O N S U LT OUR

47—Real Estate Wanted
W i buy e q u ity In tfe u t* * ,
apartment*, vacant land and
A c rta g t
LU C KY
IN
VESTMENTS. P O Boa 1100.
Sanford, Pla T177I 171 4741

A N D L E T AN E X P E R T DO T H E JO B

CASH FOR EQ U ITY
Wat an c lo t* m 40 hrs
C iilR art Real E i la i t H I 7441

To list Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

The weather t t perfect lo r a
backyard
s a le
sail
everything la s t w ith a want ad
Call l i t 7*11 or 1)1 4401

47-A—Mortgages Bought
A Sold

Air Conditioning

We pay ( a ih lo r I I I 4 Ind
mortgages R ay Lagg. Lie
Mortgage B roker 1)4 7744

Chris w ill seZvK * A C 't. re lrig ,
freezers, w a te r coalers, m ite
Can m a r j r

Concrete W ork, foolers. Itoon 4
pools L a n d s c a p in g A tod
work Frew e ll 77)711)

Deal with Dean Top S pa-d tor
1st or Ind m orlgaga you noid
Phone quotes given Ed Dean
SI) W colonial Or . Orlando
H I MM, ph answers 14 hrs

UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSET
Sail those Ih .n g t th a t are lutt
lakmg u p tp A c t w ith a want ad
m th * H erald J ll 7411 or 171

I MAN Q U A L I7 V LIBERATION
• m ra p PAt-ot, Driveways,
etc W aynv Beal 7)7 t ) ] |

M&gt;—Miscellaneous for Sale
King lir a bed (No I r a m t l MO
Good Condition
111 7014
II you non t t a ll people how a r r
they g o n g Ip k n o w ? T e ll them
With a c ta tk lfie d ad. b y c a llin g
m i l l l o r H I 444)

Brown River Rock. Window
Silts. Ready M i l Concrete,
Ratio Slones. Concrete Slaps.
Great* Traps M ira c le Con
crele Co 104 E lm A y e ,
Burroughs Adding machine. In
cate. ISO Honeyw ell elec
Ironic Air cleaner. SIM Sears
Cabinet sewing m achine. 171
P o r lp B i r d
b r e a th in g
machine. 11)0 Sm ith Corona
portaslf in case. U ) J l l 7HO
altar t
H u g a U p rio h tF ra a itr
I I 71 or Best O fla r
1714)44
M I N I , LA D IE S ' AN D CHILOR I N ' I I I * . a ll a ll 4lu»
Denim Joans. L ib e rty Bibb
Over all* and lo a n E a rly gird
gen setectlpa 1 slats.
WILCO SALE) HW Y 44 W 1 M l.
W OP 14 1ANFORD 1114*71

Concrete Work

TOWER IB H A U T Y S A L O N
H a rrie tt's Beaut)
N ot* SI* E 1st S I , H I S743

An-mAI H av en Board.ng and
G ro o m in g K e n ne ls Shady,
tm ula'ed. tcroenod. fly proof
m ad*. u u tiK f* runs Fens
Also AC cages W * cater i t
your p e ls . S ta rtin g Hud
regisif y Ph H I S7S1

Maddle fans -filia lle d ,
res-dm r-ai a la c trk a l work,
r a il JJ) a )*)

M t s o n ry

SALE

Snow H ill Kennel o l f t r t Cat 4
Dog F la * Baths S) up ) l
Hour. F u ll Sery-ce MS 171)

Building Contractor

P u n ting , ca rp e n try , a ll types at
home re p a irs. Call tor Ire*
( tu rn e r* . 173 1(7)

tom orrow m ay b t th e day you
ta ll that ro ll a way bad you've
nowhere to r o ll away
II you
ptaco a ClASSifiad Ad today.

Hauling 4
Yard Work
Haul-ng 4 Y a rd Work 10 f t (FI
with Aid m - I I l t no t o t H7
)F(3 L a r r y , Joyce B r y ir d .,

Somebody i t lop* mg foe revr
bargain Oftae It tPdAy in lha
ClASSditd Ads

King I I I * hand crocheted bed
cover
W h it*
w it h
blue
i over le t 1100 110 D M .

Ceramic T ilt

(41 lOOalO T ru c k Tires
17) lo r &lt;11
1314X01 A T l.tp m

C am p ltl* C rro m ic 111* tany.
walls. Hoars, cpunlerfept. f *
tl. fepA ir F r esl 17(0)11

E VER T D A V I ) BAR OAIN
DAY IN TH E WANT A D ), 123
M il o r | ) l ( t t )

NEW C p n c rtf* Build-ngl. t i l
tile s U O A u p A t I a 4 )R a* I
f in d u s tria l Park. )n g g a i

B

O

* *

P lum bing ftp a ir - all types
w at tv healers 4 pumps

J iliU L
Prtuura Cleaning
M cd lle Dome*. Moults. Roan.
T ru ck*. Trailer. Etc Portable
U nit M yroid

Homo Improvemart
C E N T R A L FLO R ID A HOME
IM P R O V E M E N T )
P ainting. RooFing, Carpentry
Lie Bonded A Guaranlead
F r a a B tllm a la m s iM F

Ail fh« H id d t iiw r t d fo y#u
Fop Counl r y RocX G o lp tf
Soul To o rd v r c o ll t t r r v 979
1451

Remodeling
Any k in d o l Masonry work —
lim e . b tK k . blocks 4 con
c r a ft 171 1SSI John M elon, y

Rtmodgllng Specialist
9»v lo n d it th#
Whqlo Mid Of W u

B. E. Link Const.
122-7029
F .n a m in g A r t llabl*

Nursing Center
OUR RATES ARE LOWER'
L a ke *le w N ursing Center
fIS C Sacend S t, Sanfard
H ) 4707

Odd Jobs
I S I H o m t Improvement —
C arpentry work at any ly p t
RooF repa irs, g ir t * / work,
pain tin g D ntarler or n l t r n r l ,
p lu m bing, ip a c la llia In mab-la
heme re p a irs 4 ro d catling,
and wood patio d te tt l i t *
e a tim v l* US &gt;44]
7V—Trucks-TraileiS

Painting

Roofing
W rite Way Roofing and Pam
lin g Guaranteed work Free
estim ate s Ph H l a i l )
ROOFS, leak 1 repaired. R eplica
r a lf t n ( t i n and tN a g l* w trk ,
llc a n ta d , iR ia ra d , * * * * * *
M ika m a m .

Christian Roping 17 yrt. »*p
1st 17)0. fra* *U atrading,
ip a c la lii* m r tp a v week A
new routing
SOUTHERN ROOFING I ) y rt
e tp . ra ro o fin g , laak special
isf
D ependable 4 honest
r r i c t Day *&lt; m gM n i l M l

Sandblasting
H allm an P a in in g 4 Repe-r*.
O u a iily work F ra * E u Disc.
Id Seniors S )i kasg Rt t t r .

Horn* Repairs

G W A LTN E Y JE W E LE R
30AS P a r* Ava
H7 4JCS

Mini-Li-Lock

II S t a t y la piaca a Classified Ad
Wa il even help ygu word
•I C all m M il

Handyman

• i l l C o rto , S la t* C e rtifie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r
R oskteniial or CommorciAI.
Now o r R om gdfted H 7 M F

M E IN T Z E R TILE
N ew er re p a ir, leaky i hewer your
&gt; specialty. 1) yes [ &gt; p l l t e a l

FONSECA PLUM BING
Con
tlru c fio n , Repairs. Emergen
cy. L ie . Bonded. Ins H J J N )

Latest Hits

B rick Block and &gt;tsn* All types
0* M asonry
Quality work
m a n th ip . F r a * E tlim a la *
A n ytim e ) ) ) 4)17 or M« DSI

Summer Wood F me « Solo 7) 000
II ol wood tone* and pern
must be soldi Can b * teen *1
Sentry Fences 711 Hwy 17 17
lo n g wood w id e selection
Com* e a rly Sal* continues lilt
m a rcha n d -so i t a ll said
H u rry i H u rry ! 0 0 4)77

I tw o B T U A Ir condil ioner.
l : » taxes old
n )*4 S 4

tuning Rm Set .V uttw ood C*n#
Back C ha in , lik e new. ] Living
Rm sets, com plete w r ie r bed
wifh Drawers, bras* floor
lamas, bras* and glass tables,
an much m ore 140 1114

L A R O E T R IR INSTALLER
landscaping. Old Lawns Re
placed MSSSOI

Ta nc T

•g o p l* who l ik t money us* low
cost classified M I to buy, sell,
or Irtd o

51—Household Goods

Landscaping

Quality a le c tric a l w ork 72 y r t
• a p a rlk n c a M inor repairs Ig
c o m p lrft w irin g 777 0)1*

F re d d ie R o b m io n P lum bing
H r p a i r i. Faucets, W
C.
Sprinklers )T) IS 10. H117M

R o c o rd t —

Rhone Male answer mg machine
lioo Call Shfrier

Outlay Western Bools S I* *S
ARMY N AVY SURPLUS
lltS an lO fd A r t
11)1741

E LE C TR IC IA N ig y r t eap All
types o* t f e ilr lA l w ork i t fa ir
prices ) ) ) « ) *

Boarding 4 Grooming

CarRapajr

m no*

M YPNOSISH
Slop Smoking, lo t a We-ghi,
B uild Conlidancts, Improve
R e la tlo n in ip a , and much
m o ra l I
A lte r
year* ol
rtto a r c h .O r Catey, anoaFtho
leaders in hypnosis, hat won
tho Evans Aw ard lor h it
p r o v tn loch n lqu o s O il Ice
downtown Sanlord l a m )
pm
C ell U llU C For op
pc ml men i or inlorm eiion

Beauty Can

fo r m er ly

Plumbing

Hypnosis

Electrical

S i r - a r hi show cps* Glass lop.
sides 4 shell Good condition
1)0 m 140)

'" " H

QUALITY AT A FAIR FRICET
Gan R epairs B Im prov. I ) y r t
.lo c a lly Senior DISC H U M
C LA S S IFIE D AOS ARE FUN
ADS R E A O 4 USB THEM
O F TE N Y O U 'L L L IK E THE
RESULTS

-FBUta Ramiae—1st Claw Wort,
ra e to n e tii* prices 1) years
tip
Kennefh Halt By lis t
- o n y f- p it a ga r L .
TE R R Y 'S IN TE R IO R )
W d llp a Q y rln g , M i n i n g Law
p r-c rv Guar w a rt. X7TMM

9 9 f

9 ♦

1 «

»

1
J--Cii.ee,
* -\-

!T O e O O lL A A t
For your car of true*, rtg a r
d ie ! ! of cond Prefer running
F r e t tow ing 1)1 U l* Ageoi.

SANFORD AUCTION

Lawn M o w tf S a lts and Servlet
f t t Sell t h t B t i t and S trv ic t
m t R t i f Bob B all W tU ttn
A u t o J o in I t t St

K -,;

q M y a e '.n r r &gt;-* m=

7J T B ird Loaded. New TJr#|
Blue wftb iA n-tt Top No
money clown, f t * m o 339 9100.
134 4405 Dealer

Salt m a in ly c t n i it f t et antique

•R IL L D IR T 4 TOP SOIL
Y E L L O W SANO
Call C la rk 4 H ir l 77)7)10

f r

SURPLUS JE E F V ltu t S3I9A
to ld fo r 144 Call JI2 747 1U)
F t t 304 fo r *n»o. on how 10
p u r c h a it b e rg a in i I At th lif

AUCTION
MON., AUG. I77P .M .

42—Lawn Garden

COURSE. *' ^
_ • A*NtA- 'gam, 1&gt;&gt; t R '*

M o v in g to a newer home,
apartm ent? Sell “ don 1 r^tiS\fa it w ith $ w in , ad ______ _

72—Auction

O lds Trombone and
case itOQ
___________ 171 0701___________

© F

197* Ceddy, Excellent condition,
AT PS. PB. AM f M radio,
or te n . mu%» yet 1)495 377
7*94

Let a T la iK fie d Ad htt p you I Ind
m o re f oo m (of i f or a t#
C t« iA it)fd Adi, fin d buyer!
t a il

Lowery M a gic G em * Organ
Rythm b utton* Like n e w l* M
1101044____________________

K

10-Autos

High back
antique b td 1500
37 1 0770

59-fA»ical Instruments

57-Appliances

POOL PARAOIIE — IS • 14
sp a rklin g p e ti v t - t lid * a
d tiin f beard came te a bdrm )
batki. Can H A &gt; larpe b d rm i
an IN i I I I lot overlookmp
h o rie ii O rta l te rm s! 111.400

real

U U IC Y
H 7LM BU R JEW !

Rtg Real E ita tp Breher (
Illllll
Eve 3)1 l l l l

grace s
1 bath
an a 144
Call tar
ST1.M4

PRICED BELOW M A R K E T —
Super I bdrm split plan w Can
H t A. w tv cpt. Mg bdrm s. scr
parch + fenced y n rd t Cead
Atuim ptient S44,70011

321 0041

B U N FO R

» ACRE) WOODEO R OLLING
HILLS IN g e n e v a a r e a
UMO PER a c r e , s e l l e r
f in a n c i n g , m a y d i v i d e .

CANOPY OF TREES tv rra u a d t
th ii ipaciout l b d rm I bath w
Pam Rm, eat In kitchen + Scr
perch Owner w ill ca n tid e r Ind
m tpl s44 toot

32 1 0041

|NCIPENTAUYl AS&gt;RiAN WAFFLE
MAKER INVENTEP Trie c e n t WHEN
AN ICtCREAMvENPrU RAN 0\)1 CP
Pl$HE5 AT "THE I8l?4 5T U?UI5 WflRlP&gt;
fair : CF ^CURSE ICE CREAM iT$ELF
FATES BA'K T0 ROMAN TIME*

NEEP5 Ai
L E A J i-P R .'C F

71 Antiques

Gun A uction S hofgunit R lftn &amp;
Handgun* Sunday A u g u il 30 1
PM Sanford Auction B W H fl

E D S lE C O N T A IN E R

( Z f ik ji

■ UV OF THE W EEK - Attractive 1 bdrm Concrete Elk
w Prepay Rge. P a l. A D u b
wether ealavely 7) ■ 1)4 lot In
top area Only SII.401H

M A Y F A IR ’S C H A R M
th ii betutitui 4 b d rm
horn* w tree 1400 tg tt
• 111 p ic lv m q u t lo t
yavf perianal tour .

F C R F E iT

24 HOUR IB 322-9283

DUPLEX
( l | ) b d rm units,
a i t location, good investm ent.
talSOO
HANDYMAN SPECIAL
Par
I 'Aliy refurbished 1 b d rm . I B
on H wy 44 West
O w ner
financing available. 1)0.400

PKres^TEi'!'

R E A LTO R . MLS
l l l l I French
Self* 4
la n ia rd

1144 S French J77 01JI
Attar Hours 144 4000, 111 0774

STEMPERAGENCY

U H -&gt; ^ 5 TnE
N X T liM

M o m t iy , A v g . 1 M D 1 - 1 8

E ro n ln e H e r a ld . S in lo rd . FI.

57A Guns A Ammo

KCP TtiK*CU76!STf H*J/E Li?Na
RMEP TrIE ice iCEA-M CCfil a* TkE

R O B B IE’S
REALTY

A LL FLORIDA R E A LT Y
OF SANFORD REALTO R

CAS SAVER
This T bdrm
lownhCkite conoo is Within
waia,ng distance to shopping,
has Ch a . WWC. 4 club pool
Only S41.M0

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

7 Pj ,
,* 1* „ AV ' f&gt;‘
’ ». **. *•
If **.**_. &gt;* k
y^.. w,.WJUg
r^Vl«W ‘ l j , J
-

1

1 ■&gt;}' r- a ‘ 1 - jj y i *.

r
' ’.-S
mt " T f * *v iv
* *, ;• - 4' ’LS-** ’ W U -a • / V, i -*
‘2 .

'■ • ■ , v - - —y j -

lA H O e iA S T lK O
DAVIS W ILD IN O
m a m , unfo b o

Tr#e Service
H A R F lI 'S TREE S IR V IC i
Tr.m m iog rHhOvifig 1 Land
UdpiAC f f H i d
33)079).

�% %* N%

BLONDIE

4ft—Evening HeraId. Sanford. FI.

0

Monday. A m . IT, 1991

by Chic Young

0

ACROSS
1 16 Aomin
4 N . « 0« il
progrlm
7 Study
tO V a r.ib l* star
m Cetut
12 Nautical cry
14 On* ISO I
tS S h i t n p i i ' M

b y M o rt W alker

K EEP YOUR SUNNY SIDE UP.'
LOOK 0 4 THE BRIGHT S ID E /
B E OP GOOD CHEER/

THAT WAG PO P Y O U ...
NlOWFCR M E . . .

THE BORN LOSER

42
45
47
$t

Otic balm
Boat
Roman leader
ItN it

Antwar to Pravoul Puifla

ChMiSMy
52 Smallatt part

54 Vi'di opera

Mineral Absorption
Affected By Bran

55 Egypt lib b r)
56 V ntd

DEAR DR. IAMB — You
and other doctors have advo­
M o c [ mjO
5IT .ni
[ u p f j l l n M cated bran and a high fiber
53 Gloomy
of* pvT'ii 0 diet. But I read that research
16 B u n
60 S"aky Itftar
T if t1 A
indicates that bran may cause
17 B’ f t d o&lt; dog
b i t vil la f
a line deficiency.
Alolv
f
I I Soundness ol
OOWN
L.
I wns constipated lor years
mind
2 1 Part ol com
41 In front
20 C o n fK r tt*
1 Ctinit'an
until I began using bran prod­
plant
43
Hadga
plant*
22 Seminole
M .d i*
ucts. I am afraid to cut back
chief
2 Snout ol good 23 Htratofora |2 44 Pavarbaratat
and become constipated, par­
w da|
24 Stiomry
•.it (Nall
45 M m d e n o t ­
ticularly since I am trying to
c o » tf« g
3 Potant ai ita tl 24 Show ol
ing | comp
nandl
26 K*nt
4 f'o**&lt; pan
gain weight and eat more. I'm
*d|
25 Fancmg
20 Tjk« (H I
(pl I
5 feet 3 and only weigh 95
46 Joumay
I word
}1 C o m p iti
5 Greek lartai
pounds. I eat no meat and dis­
41 Tarm ol royal
point
I Mut cal group 27 Opan
addiati
like margarine and greasy
7 Shelters with 26 Elactncal unit
32 Gift
29 Potato bud
33 Indian
49 Cooling d n nki foods.
Nidi
Does this have
34 C o m p m
30 Chop
I 8.'dan
50 Shabby
anything to do with why I
9 Egg dunk
35 Chargad
pomt
Clothing
need bran?
36 Porter
I I Nagatma &gt;on 36 Young aocial5 1 Cow i chawad
DEAR READER It's
ita.lor
thon
37 Set up god
13 Southern
lood
bail
40 Conladaiata
'you
true that bran may decrease
Statai Army S3 Ona o* tha
39 Primatmt
19Wto
your absorption of minerals
Garth » n t
tang
wagon
(abbr)
from your digeative tract. The
cereals as a group contain
4
1
7
2
3
6
S
9
1
substances known as phytates
that combine with minerals to
to
11
14
12
13
form insoluble compounds
15
It
17
that you cannot abaerb.
Incidentally, thit U true of
It
19
,0
21
several foods that are listed
as high In minerals ; the min­
22
23
erals are In a form that can­
not be digested and absorbed.
24
25
27 21 29
' ■ ;«
A good example is spinach. Its
calcium Is bound by its oxalic
30
31
32
acid to form insoluble calci­
um oxalate.
34
33
36
36
If you have a high Intake of
bran and whole-grain cereals
37
31
39
40 41
you might need to take m are
42 43 44
minerals or consume more
foods that are rich in minerals
46
45
49 49 SO
to be sure you are getting the
"
right amount. The roles of
54
51
52
63
line, calcium and trace met­
als are discussed In a new
55
59
57
Health Letter number 17-6,
Nutritional
Aspects of Miner­
59
59
60
als, which I am sending you.
ir
Others who want this Issue
can send 73 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed en­
velope for It to me. In care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
B y B E R N IC E BEDE' OSOL
1551, Radio City Sutton, New
York, NY INI). As it
explains, you can get more
For Tuesday, August 18, 1981
out of your minerals if you
your peers. You need not be a consume your mineral foods
Your Birthday
conformist, but don't be an on an empty itomach. The
August II, 1911
rest of your diet does affect
A dvancem ent In your antagonist
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. what you absorb.
choaen field is likely this
Bran does not provide calo­
coming year, provided you 19) Be satisfied with your own
ma k e the effort to keep lot In life today, rather than ries if you want to gain
abreast of all new knowledge comparing yourself to others weight. Not eating meat and
and techniques. Don't be left you feel are doing better. avoiding (aU eliminates a lot
behind because you failed to Appearances art deceptive. of fat calories which may be
AgL'ARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. part of the story In your case.
educate yourself.
LKO (July S3-Aug. S3) 19) You'd be wiae to lake To gat the needed minerals
From time to time we all tend notes today If someone Is
to exaggerate a bit, but if you giving you Important In­
do any boasting today the formation to relay to another.
tales you tell could later come Your memory might be a
back to haunt you. Find out trifle faulty.
PISCES l Feb. 33Mirch 20)
more of what lies ahead (or
you In the year following your Avoid persona today who have
birthday by tending for your taken advantage of your
NORTH
I-IT II
copy of Astro-Graph. Mail tl generous nature in the past.
♦ AQ3
VlK
far each to Astro-Graph, Bos Also, If shopping, dodge high♦ Al
489. Radio City Station. N.Y. pressure salespersons.
4 QII171
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19)
10019. Be sure to specify birth
EAST
Don't place yourself in awk­
date.
416
4714
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. S ) ward positions today where
4KJI
4 AT J
Double check all the (acts and the opposition is mort than
• JITS
♦ KQI 99J
figures if you are making an you can handle. Unrealistic
4 JISI
451
Important purchase today. self-confidence could cloud
SOUTH
4 K J 1011
Should
you
overlook your Judgment
4QI0I1
TAURUS (April 10-May
something, It could prove
♦ SI
20) Ev industrious today, but
very expensive.
4 All
also be sensible regarding the
I .IRKA (Sept. 230ct. 13)
Vulnerable North South
number of responsibilities
Try to avoid situations today (hat you can manage. Don't
Dealer Norik
which would cauae you to be
West
Sm Ik
Nsrtk East
overload the assembly line.
dependent
on
others.
14
l«
14
Associates wilt low respect
:♦
14
Paw
44
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Pass
Past
Paw
lor you unless they tee you Involvements with pals today
can fend for yourstlf.
could atart out on a light,
SCORPIO (O ct 14-Nov. » ) friendly basts, then suddenly
Opening lead 4J
You may have to take care of take a turn for the worse. Exit
If
you
see
storm
signals.
tom e difficult laiks Uxlay. If
57 Sediment

■

.IUSEDt?SUFFER FRQW Hl£U81000'

■

B ob M o n tan a

ARCHIE
G U .W i'V C B U M WAITING
( 0 9 ' , i FIVE MiNUTtSAND

■most ciouos i « GTia

TW6 IS

the pits

' WE ve

BEEN TRyiMG TO TAN

t o t TV- FIV6 VINUTSS NOW.
ANO THOSt STuPlD CIOUOS

HOROSCOPE

you should have you need a
varied balanced diet. Popping
mineral pills Is no! a good
idea either si the safe range
of many of the trace m inerals
Is rather limited. Too much
tine may decrease your "good
cholesterol" and In crease
your risk of fatty-cholesterol
deposiU.
DEAR DR. IAMB - I was
disappointed in your answ er
about a warm drink to substi­
tute of coffee, lea or cocoa.
Why didn't you suggest herbal
leas? I like them as they are
but some people like them
with milk. Mostly I use spear­
mint because 1 have a spear­
mint bed and dry my ow n Do
you have any objection to
this?
DEAR HEADER - Many
herbal teas are line. Some are
not Just because something
comes from a plant doesn't
mean it ti tale. Sassafras tea
contains a substance th at can
cauae cancer and has been
withdrawn from the m arket
for that reason.
Other teas have medicinal
value. The classic one is from
foxglove which provides digi­
talis. Digitalis was discovered
as a valuable medicine when
the effects of foxglove lea
were noted.
Another reader reminded
me of Postum, made from
bran, wheat and molasses as
a coffee substitute. It is fine. I
used it as a boy when "coffee
nerves" was a frequently
advertised problem. I prefer
It with about hall as much
Postum as recommended on
the label fir a better flavor,
more like the flavor of coffee.
▼awi a F i o a i o a

ORANGEJUICE
DREAM

WIN AT BRIDGE

by Stoffttl l

BUGS BUNNY

3 S\Y AI0MAJL F&amp;0CAG5 MEY
fog 3. Bu n n y p b o M, WHAT5

a Duck, s i g n

Heimdahl

X SOT TlGED OP FLYING SOUTH ,
SO X MA il E O M iSS-F m o n a e .

1 W i5 ?

^ 5

HS2E, 0 0 V

'

your attitude la negative, It
could make them (ar harder
than they really are.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21Dec. 11) Ib is Is not a good day
to cham pion causes un­
popular with the majority of

CANCER (June 21-July 23)
If you push hard enough you
can get what you want today,
but be careful you don't pay
too high a price where
rep u tatio n and friendships
are concerned.

A *°U T

6 im M 6

Y OU W ORKM AN*

c «m p in j A

Ti° n ,

Alan: "South had tried for
five club trick* when be only
needed four and lost game
and rubber"
iwcwsr a m g a m m a * s *n ,

by Leonard Starr
TffttOT FIX) hllOEM?
I BILL SBRf
the TQJN6 fool clearly tracingmis
THINKS Tie NORLPiSr- '' movements
bigger than it is / I immediately/

- MARK PEA5E HAS
ABDUCTED AN*.'.'

*£6

Oswald "to rubber bridge
or IMP matches declarer
should look (or safety and
only go alter overiricka

Oswald "South had o v e r ­
looked a simple p erc e n ta g e
play. A suit b r e a u 3 3 only
36 p ercen t of the time S outh
should play Just one tr u m p
b efo re cashing hla high
cluba. Then to dummy w ith
the tru m p ace to nil I a c lu b
Back with the queen of
trum p* to cask dum m y'* last
tw o club* and m a le his
co n tract."

b y Bob T l u v t s

FRANK AND ERNEST

X U

By Oswald Jacoby
aad AlaaSeaUg

when suck play does not
Jeopardiie his contract. Of
course, declarer doesn't
have to be like pessimistic
Pete and try to guard
against once in a blue moon
distributions *
Alan "Here is a rase in
point. South won Ike dia­
mond lead In dummy Led a
spade to his king and a sec­
ond &gt;P»de back to dummy's
ace then he played his ace
and king ol clubs and
entered dummy with the
queen of trumps Then he
played the queer, of clubs
The Jack didn t drop and
eventually South lost (our
tricks since be didn't have
time to set up one ol his four
hearts"

AT A SMALL AiRFIElD NEARBY
„ -TH* LITTLE GHU. IS MS

cou$rnm
, the pease guy

SAID-FUNNY l WON'T
NOTICE HER ttCNtkS
■ PLANE LAtiOCP HERE-

M E A N W H IL E S T A p r

'I b u g

V A C A T IO N .

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEWEEOS

0 0 S9/OUA IN D IA N STRINGERS
HERB WITH

NBWSJ

DENOUNCER

A THOUSAND WAR
PKUMS WILL BEAT
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FLETCHER'S LANDING

byDouglai Coffin

iH t HOP THfc WCL ROOM____„

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HER. MJOWb Of-

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t j r d Y ear, No. 289—Tuesday, July 21.1981—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening H e ra ld -fU S P S 481 280)—Price 20 C ents

Officials Say

Altamonte Mall
Disaster Unlikely
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Although the Altamonte Mall contains
walkways and balconies similar to those
in Kansas City's Hyatt Regency Hotel,
Seminole building officials think chances
are "practically nonexistent" thst a
collapse will ever occur a t the mall.
That opinion is shared by two former
Altamonte Springs city officials and a
spokesman for the Edward DeBartolo
Ccrp., developers, owners and operators
of the multi-million dollar mall.

HtnM PInHi by Tom VIkcmI

SAFE OR
UNSAFE?

M all a n d f o r m e r A lta m o n te S p rin g s o ffic ia ls sa y b a lc o n ie s a n d w a lk w a y s a t th e
A lta m o n te M all a r e s a f e , a lth o u g h in a p p e a r a n c e th e y a re s im ila r to th o s e a t th e
c o lla p se d H y a tt R e g e n c y in K a n sa s C ity .

$2 Tax Hike For Schools
Tentatively OK'd By Board
By SYBIL MITCHELL RANDY
Herald S u it Whirr
Despite threats, pleas, and a special
appeal by Seminole County Com­
missioner Robert "Bud" Feather, school
board members tentatively approved a
33 percent lax Increase Monday night.
School Superintendent Robert Hughes,
who proposed a 12 property lax increase
lor a 897 million school budget, gained
approval of his tentative lMI-'83
proposal But some Seminole County
residents in the audience were not happy
about it at all.
Seminole County residents presently
pay 16.11 per 81.000 ot assessed property
value. With the tax Increase, tf it is
granted final approval that amount will
be 88.11.
Although Hughes explained that the
extra tax money was needed for a new
school in Tuscawills and three "suites"
to accom m odste special education
students, he and board members still
were met with threats that they would be
"remembered at election time.”
A few advocates of the lax increase,
most of whom were parents and teachers
also were on hand for the public hearing.

Denouncing any need for a 82 tax itv
crease, Feather said his previous ex­
perience on the school board leads him to
believe Hughes has other motives. He did
not elaborate.
"In my eight years on the school board,
eight new schools were built without a
significant Ux Increase," he told board
m em bers William Kroll, Roland
Williams, and Pat Telson. Allan Keeth
and Nancy Warren were absent.
Feather, who asked the board not to
vote for the increase, reminded those
present that Hughes had promised to
"hold the line on taxes" during his
campaign bid for school superintendent.
Hughes told the crowd of about 30 that
he wax "obligated to look at the need (or
new school construction."
"Every growtng county In Ine state has
levied a 82 tax Increase but Seminole."
he said. "Orange County did It last year
and got over 8900.000 additional tax
dollars. This year they are only levying a
une-and-a-half dollar lax Increase."
The capital outlay committee, Hughes
said, started on the budget In early
March to establish priorities in the
Seminole County School System. Hughes

u ld the budget was the result of new
construction needs assessed by state
education officials.
Board Member Pat Telson voted
against the budget, stating that school
officials would have to start looking at
other alternatives in the future besides
taxes.
Hughes said Seminole County Schools
still owe the state 811 m illio n (or U k e
Mary High School. The loan is going to be
taken out of money raised In taxes, he
said.
Each year, he explained, the state
department of education will withhold 80
percent of |l million or 8800,000 from
county schools until that sum Is paid
bark.
Although Hughes' tentative budget was
given the go-ahead last night, some
corrections and amendments have to be
made, he u ld , since officials recently
learned of a 8473,000 "mistake" made In
aQotting state money to Seminole County
Schools for next year.
The revised budget will be presented to
the school board for final approval on
Sept 9.

Catholic Church Fears
Legal Death Definition
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
A Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral
presidential commission's recom ­ Research recommended Congress and
mendation for a uniform legal definition the states adopt uniform laws Including
of death could lead to more widespread "irreversible cessation of all functions of
acceptance of euthanasia, a top Roman the entire brain, including the brain
stem" as part of their legal definitions of
Catholic church official warns.
In addition, the Rev. Edward Bryce, death.
But Bryce u id Monday the proposed
executive director of the National
Conference of Catholic Bishops' Com­ definition "can become a stepping stone
mittee for Pro-life Activities, said there to laws which authortre euthanasia for
is "no demonstrated need" for the comatose patients who are dying but not
proposed definition of death and It would yet dead."
"The (proposed) statute ss presently
fall to achieve the uniformity sought by
worded is designed to ensure that dead
its proponents.
On July 9, the President's Commission patients are not treated as living, not to
(or the Study of Ethical Problems in ensure that living patients are not

Sanford Postmen M ay
Not Join In Strike
How much of an Impact a postal union strike would have
on Sanford and the rest of Seminole County is somewhat
difficult to determine.
In Sanford, the post office has 48 employees. 38 of whom
belong to the two larger unions involved in negotiations, the
letter carriers and the postal clerks, according to James
Covington, poatmaster. The 10 other employees are
management people or rural mail carriers, he said.
Iww many U fca 3 would Join a strike d n rid
he
called? "That's difficult to u y ," said Covington, adding:
"We can't tell how many would honor such a strike, since It
is illegal. The only talk I've heard so far is from several
employees who u id they wouldn't strike. As U r as we're
concerned, it would be business as usual."
Besides the Sanford post office there are about seven
more In Seminole County, but moat are small stations with
only a few employees, Covington said. He noted, however,
should a strike be called, there would be some Impact In the
larger cities, such u Orlando, and "that could create a
side-effect for us."
Should a strike occur, alternate means of sending
Sec SANFORD, Page 2A

treated as dead,” he u id .
•"nils represents a subtle shift in
society's attitude toward the dying
patient, and creates s precedent death u
a matter of legal definition rather than as
a matter of medical fact," he u id .
The comm luion, In m aking Its
recommendation, said it "concluded
that, tn the light of ever-increasing
powers of biomedical science and
practice, a statute is needed to provide a
clear and socially acceptable basis for
making determinations of death."
Traditionally, death has been defined
as the end of the “vital signs" of heart­
beat and breathing.

The mall, which Is the largest shopping
center of its kind in Central Florida, was
built seven years ago while Don Bundy,
who has since retired, was director of
public works (or Altamonte Springs.
Bundy u ld today the Altamonte Mall
was the "moat completely engineered
building 1 have ever seen in all my years
in construction activity. There were
engineers co-nlng out their ears during
every minute of the two-year period,"
Bundy uid.
"1 would u y It is impossible that that
building could be structurally deficient in
any way,” he u id .
The structure Is a bi-level building. The
second level includes a balcony which
runs throughout the mall and which is
used by patrons to get from store to store.
Former City Comm issioner Dan
Dorfman, who served when the mall was
constructed, u ld the city's consulting
engineer Bill Palm of Glace and Radcllffe, Winter P ark , reviewed the
building plans for the facility in detail.
Palm Is in Port St. I Aide on business
and could not be reached for comment
Meanwhile, Vic Hill, mall manager,
u ld the DeBartolo Corp. of Youngstown,
Ohio Is one of the biggest developers of
shopping centers in the country and one
of the major construction corporations in
the nation. HIU u ld the corporation
directly supervises a ll construction
phases of its shopping centers — to
provide quality control. Hill u id the mall
— since construction was completed, has
had a 26-member, full-time team con­
stantly Inspecting and providing
maintenance.
"It was an unfortunate tragedy that

occurred in Kansas City. But is that
cause for alarm about every' multi-level
building? How m any multi-level
structures are there in the world and how
many have collapsed?" Hill asked
Two skyvatks at the 860 million, 40story Hyatt Regency In Kansas Qty
collapsed into a dance floor Fnday night
killing scores of people and injuring
dawns of others.
Revelers standing on a second story
"sky bridge" heard two loud pops then
were crushed as an identical walkway
two stories above them folded at its
center, broke from its moorings and fell.
The two sky-walks plunged into the
bottom level dance-floor.
The death toll from the accident has
reached 113 and as many as 186 are
reported injured In the mishap.
investigators are considering whether
the jazz beat of the 1940s era band
coupied with the tapping feet of persons
on the walkways could have started in
motion a sympathetic rhythm that
splintered the tons of concrete and steel,
causing the crash.
Reportedly one engineer interviewed
since the disaster has noted that no
national building code In the nation takes
"harmonics" Into account in its con­
struction requirements.
Harmonics has been defined as the

result of a concentration of energy put
Into a structure by any means, tndudirg
a large number of persons tapping (ret in
unison.
Harmonics causes a structure to sway
or expand. The only structures designed
to withstand such "give" m the nation
currently, according to the engineer, are
bridges which may expand five feet
upward or 15 feet downward.
Harmonics is one reason why military
personnel when crossing a bridge are
instructed not to march in cadence but to
use alternating feet which would provide
only half as much pressure on the bridge.
Hill, a student of music, is familiar
with sympathetic vibrations. Although
the null provides various types of en­
tertainment, none is believed to cause a
dangerous concentration of vibrations,
according to the mall manager.
"We do not normally have loud music
going on in the mall," Hill said. "There
will be and has been musical presen­
tations in the center court, but I don’t
believe there has ever been a time
when music, meant to be danced to was
presented. And normally any musical
entertainment lasts for only 26-todO
minutes. "We don't compete with dance
floors."
He said, "We have soft background
See MALI, I’age 2A

S h o p p e rs s a y v ib ra tio n s a r r c o m m o n on b a lc o n y .

Lo n gw o o d O fficials O K

today

Tentative Tax R ate Hi
By JANE CASSELBERRY
Herald SUft Writer
Longwood Q ty Commissioners voted to
approve a tentative tax rate of 83. II per 11,000
assessed taxable property value to fund the
proposed 81,511,000 budget presented by City
Administrator David Chacey. This is a tax
rate increase of 99 cents per thousand.
The tentative figure has to be submitted to .
the county property appraiser by July 24 to
comply with the TRIM (Truth In MtUage) law.
The county will mail notices to taxpayers to
notify them of the proposed assessment and
the date of the public hearing on the budget to
be held Sept. 14. Final approval of the budget
will be on Sept 28.
Chacey u id the effective value of taxable
property In the dty for the current year Is
8141.999308 This would bring the dty 8448,717
at the lax rale of 83.16 per thousand assessed
value leu 822,435 to allow for the four percent
early payment discount and one percent for
error. This would produce a net yield of
8436,282 in anticipated properly taxes, Chacey
said.
The tax base has broadened In the dty, ta t

the taxes received are le u than they would
have been because of the Increase in the
number of persons eligible for the 815,000
Homestead Exemption instituted this fiscal
year. The taxable value of property In
longwood for the current 198681 year w u
reduced last tall by 814 million as the result of
the Homestead Exemption increase approved
by the state's voters.
The carryover expected from this year,
ending Sept. 30. is 8170,000, Chacey uld.
Expeded total income for the 1981-82 fiscal
year ending SepL 30,1982 is 81,411.000 plus the
1981 carryover.
The proposed 81,581,000 figure will Include
870,000 (or operating expenses, 830,000 for
contingency, cost of living and Incentive in­
creases totalling 8164,000 and 8115,000 for
capital im provem ent, minimum growth,
allowance, 894,000 and what Chacey calls the
"bare bones" budget of 81,155,000 A surplus ot
88,850 is anticipated for Sept. 30,1982
To achieve this 810,000 was lopped off
Chacey's original request for dty hall and
one firefighter and one policeman were cut
front additional personnnel requested by the
fire and police departments

!A
Artiou Report*
tA
Around The Clork
Bridge
IB
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(Tatslfled Ads
Comics
4B
Crossword
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Dear Abby
Deaths
IA
Dr. Iam b
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Editorial
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Horoscope ...........
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Ourselves
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Sports
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Weather
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World

3 L i/'
UKAIIKA, CHI. (UP!) It was a caper Miss Piggy
might have enjoyed.
Two suspicious police of­
ficers cautiously approached
the car, whose trunk was
shaking violently.
Inside, they found three
pigs — a 250-pound male and
two 206pound females.

Postal Contract Agreem ent Collapses
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A ten­ and postal workers not to walk out
tative agreement announced by until further word from policy­
postal union leaders collapsed in the making counsels.
"We are asking them to hang In ~
dawn hours today In a controversy
over ■ wage clause, but marathon until they hear the word from our
talks continued to avert a strike by policy committees," Biller told s
news conference early today.
500,000 workers nationwide.
"We a r t not going to stop
Union officials urged members to
stay on the Job until hearing further negotiations,” said Sambrotto.
Biller and Sombrotto said they
word from their leadership.
Four hours after a midnight strike based th e ir pre-dawn optimism
deadline, American Postal Workers about a tentative agreement on a
President Moe Biller and Letter verbal agreement at the bargaining
Carriers President Vincent Soro- table, but a typewritten version later
brotlo issued a telephone message - prepared for their signature by the
outlining to members the basic Postal Service differed from the
details of a three-year tentative earlier understanding.
The two union leaders said the
settlement. But, shortly after 7 a m.
EOT, the union officials — saying difference Involved a wage proposal
they had been "had" - repotted the (or postal workers, who now make
an average $18,800 a year, that
situation had changed.
The two laid they would continue Sombrotto u i d be offered In the
negotiations immediately, however, early hours today and was accepted
and instructed theu mail carriers by the Postal Service. Sombrotto

u id the union officials explained the
problem to Poatmaster General
William Bolger but quoted him u
uylng the typewritten agreement
w u correct
"We a re angry because we don't
Uke to be had," Biller added. He said
the typewritten wage proposal w u
“totaUy different" from the verbal
version the union negotiators felt
had been accepted.
There w u no Immediate comment
by the Postal Service on the wage
clause controversy, other than to
u y talks were continuing.
Sombrotto u ld both aides agreed
on the tentaUve pact at about 2 a m.
EOT, after which the union leaden
took It to their executive bodies lot
votes of approval and support
Ha sa id a taped telephone
message w u then made announcing
an agreement In order to assure no
" r e p u t of what happened In 1971,"

•a.

when there w u wildcat striking In
California and New Jersey.
Federal law forbids strikes by
postal workers and other federal
employees. Any differences that
exist a t the expiration of a contract
are supposed to go to binding ar­
bitration, but union leaden are
opposed to that and u id they would
strike instead.
The Iwu silica liad becA bargaining
continuously since 10 p m. EOT
Monday, and extended the postal
workers contract — which expired
at midnight — on an hour-by-hour
F e d e ra l m ediator Nicholas
Fidandis gave the fln t indication of
a problem at about 8:30 a.m. EOT,
when be told reporters that no
agreement had been reached despite
the earUer union reports.
"We have no agreem ent There's
no agreement here," he uld.

Meantime, the Postal Service
announced a tentative settlement
with another union, the 83,000 Na­
tional R ural L etter Carriers
Association, and u ld It w u near
agreement with the 39,006member
Mall H andlers Division of the
laborers International Union of
North America.
The two sm aller unions had
b argained separately with the
Postal Service and had ruled out
p articipation in the walkout
threatened by Biller and Sombrotto.
As midnight approached Monday,
the Postal Servlet readied con­
tingency plans to keep the mall
moving tn the event of a strike.
The plana Included using military
and national guard personnel to help
move priority mall, plus steps to
allow the use of private firms nor­
mally barred from mall delivery in
competition with the Postal Service.

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7* —Evening Hiruid, Sanford, FI.______ Tuesday, July 11, US I

W oman Killed In Motorcycle Accident

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Cease-Fire Frantically
Sought In Lebanon Fighting
United Press fnlrrnationnl
U.S. Middle Hast peace envoy Philip Habib worked
frantically today for a cease-fire In what PLO leader
Yasser Arafat called the area’s first "firaeliPalestlnlan war.”
But Palestinian and Israeli artillery gunners
hammered eacfi other's towns Into the morning, and
Arafat told reporters In Beirut "We have nothing to
lose."
In Ottawa, where he Is attending an economic
summit meeting of seven nations, 1‘resident Reagan
suspended Die shipment of all F-lts to Israel In a bid to
end the new Middle-East fighting.
At the United Nations in New York, the U.N. Security
Council scheduled a closed-door meeting on the crisis
at the request of lebanese Ambassador Gtuusan
Tueni, who requested sanctions against Israel if it does
not accept a cease fire.

Miss Universe Likes Reagan
NEW YORK (UPI&gt; Miss Venezuela, an
engineering student who likes Ronald Reagan and the
Cincinnati Beds, was named the “most beautiful girl in
the world" Monday night In the 1961 Miss Universe
pageant.
Irene Sari Cootie, 19, defeated 71 other contestants to
win the title at the Minskoff Theater in New York City.
The pageant was televised live to an estimated 600
million viewers around the world.
The 5-fooMO winner with reddish-brown hair was a
favorite of the 1,600 people attending the 30tii annual
pageant.

M a n Admits Shooting Pope
ROME lUPIl — With no trace of emotion, Mehmet
All Agca admitted to a Rome court lie shot pope John
Paul II but a Judge pressed witnesses about a possible
second gunman in the assassination attempt.
"The trial is over. Thank you very much," Agca said
Monday otter a 20-mlnute statement saying he Bred at
the pope bul did not accept Italian Justice right to try
him.
Judge Severino Santiaplch! directed his questioning
ol witnesses at reports o( a second-gunman in the
crowd of 10,000 that witnessed the assassination attempt May U.

Royal Couple Plan Honeymoon
LONDON (UP! I - Prince diaries and Lady Liana
Spencer will start Uwlr tvineyuwon In the same txnuw
In which his mother and lather began their marriage,
then (ly to tiibratler f&lt;r a two-week Mediterranean
cruise
Buckingham Palace announced Monday the royal
couple will spend the first two days after the July 29
wedding at Itniadlands, the home of the late I/m l
Mountbatten In southern England.
Before his death in 1779 at the hands of Irish
terrorists, Mountbatten, Queen Elizabeth's uncle, was
a mentor of Prince Charles

Cops Charged In Drug Plot
NASSAU,Ibthanias(UPI)-Six Bahamas policemen
have been charged with theft of marijuana Irom the
storage area wheie drugs confiscated Irom smugglers
are kept.
The six appeared Monday before a magistrate.
Three ol the olftcen were charged with breaking and
entering, and wills theft o( a bales of marijuana. Their
bonds were set at 110,000 rath.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT) Flash-flood watches were issued
today from Missouri lo Pennsylvania, where sudden cloud­
bursts, winds up to 77 mph and a hall dozen tornadoes
snapped pot* rr tines, flooded streets and injured more than 30
people. The storms first whipped through Missouri and Illinois,
leaving 23 people injured Monday in the St. I/nils area and
eight otiiers hurt in Illinois. A tornado plowed through a
mobile-home park in suburban Tulsa, Okla., later Monday,
overturning a doien trailers and injuring several people.
i*ower outages triggered by the storms left more than 107,300
people without electricity in Missouri and Maryland. The
storms reached Into Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Tennessee and
Maryland lale Monday and early today A flash-flood watch
was issued for western Pennsylvania.
AREA READINGS | | a.m.): temperature: TV; overnight
low: 74; Monday's high: VO; barometric pressure: 30.00;
relative humidity: 84 percent; winds: south southwest at 3
m .ph.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, JI:i5
a m ., 1:28 p.m.; lows, 6:11 a m ., 6:36 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 12:37 a m., 1:11 p.in.; lows 6:05 a m ,
6:17p.m.; BAYPORT: hlghs.3;33a.m..5;33p.m.; lows. 11:87
a m , 11:18 p m
AREA FORECAST: Variable cloudiness through Wed­
nesday. Thunderstorms likely today becoming less numerous
tonight and Wednesday. Highs in the low to mid BOs. lows
tonight tn the mid 70s. Winds southwesterly around 10 mph.
stronger and gusty near thunderstorms. Rain probability 60

percer.1.today, 20 percent icrJjh! and J! percea! Wrdacsiay.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Partly cloudv and continued hot
with scattered mainly afternoon and evening thunderstorms,
more numerous south. lows in the 70s except near 80 along the
beaches and In the keys. Highs tn the 90s.

I

By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
A 26-year-old Clermont woman was killed and another man
Injured Monday when their motorcycle rearmded a slowmoving car on Interstate f tn Altamonte Springs.
Sharon Ireland Giccamlse was pronounced dead at the
scene of the 11:25 a m accident about two-tenths of a mile east
of the State Road 436 exit. The driver of the motorcycle on
which Caccamise was riding - Edward H. Price, 34, of
Orlando—was treated for ruts and bruises at Florida
Hospital—Altamonte and released.
According to the Florida Highway Patrol (FHP), Caccamise
and Price were east bound on 1-4 when they approached a 1976
Chevrolet driven by Charlie Padgett, 41, of Kissimmee. Price
apparently misjudged the speed of the slow-moving vehicle
and slammed into the back of Padgett's car. Padgett was not
injured in the crash.
Price was subsequently charged with reckless driving, a
FHP spokesman said.
Monday's fatality brings to 16 the number of traffic-related
deaths recorded in Seminole County this year.
AUTO-TRAIN THEFTS
Two young Sanford men were in (he Seminole County Jail
today a ' used ol trying to sell aluminum window frames

Action Reports
* F ire s
★ C o u r ts
it Police Beat
stolen from two Auto-Train passenger cars.
Arrested were Arthur G. Tyson, 25, of II Seminole Gardens,
and Michael L Robinson. 21, of 70 Seminole Gardens. They
were being held under 65,000 bond each on two counts of
burglary and theft, and one count of possession of burglary
tools.
The pair w en charged Monday afternoon after being
a rm te d at Kokomo Tools, 918 W. 1st St., Sanford, where they
were trying to sell the window frames which had been reported
stolen Sunday.
The second burglary and theft counts stemmed from a July
15 bnak-in at Specialised leasing, 200 Persimmon Ave.,
Sanford, in which a tool set and cutting torch were stolen.
When apprehended Monday, Tyson and Robinson were tn
possession oi the stolen goods.

DRUNK BOTCHES ROBBERY
A knife-wielding man who may have been under the In-,
flueice of alcohol or drugs tried to hold up a Maitland service;
station early this morning, but was fwight off by the attendant. •
Ronald Celmer, the (1-yesr-old attendant at the Thornton Oil:
station, 1340 N. Orlando A re, laid Seminole County sheriff's
deputies that a man walked into the office about 1:15 a.m. and;
asked for change for a 120 bill.
When Celmer turned toward the cash register, the man
pulled a knife and demanded money, deputies said. Celmer
reportedly grabbed the assailant's hand and a fight ensued
During the scuffle, the would-be robber dropped his knife,
picked it up and ran away.
Celmer said that Judging from the m an's gait and the fart
that he stumbled several times as he ran, he suspected him to
be drunk or high on drugs.
ALOTOF BREAD
Thirty one trays of virious types of bread and roll* were,
stolen from the sidewalk in front of the Publix superm arket
State Road 434, Longwood, Monday morning.
Store manager Uoyd Norwood said the bread had been
dropped off sometime prior to 6 a.m. The empty trays were
discovered by store employees when they reported to work
Value of the stolen tread was set at 1111.86.

... Sanford
(Continued From Page I A)
“we've found it’s cheaper than using the
packages and other business-related material nulls. And, since it's more cost-elfectlve to do
would Include Greyhound Bus, United Parcel it that way in those cities, we're able lo save
Service and Federal Express, all Independent our customers some money. Our district here
in Sanford, however, is more sparsely
ol Ihe U.S. Postal Service.
Some major companies servicing Seminole populated and hand-delivering bills as a
Countians have already made contingency matter of courae wouldn't be cost-effective.”
Southern Bell Telephone's Sanford manager
plans to deal with a prolonged postal strike.
Bruce Berger, Sanford district manager lor lu rry Strickier said his company has a con­
Florida Power &amp; Ught Co., for example, said tingency plan In the event of a postal strike,
In the event of a strike his company la but he doesn't think it will be necessary to
implement.
prepared to deal with it.
"From all I’ve heard, there probably wtU be
"We're hopeful, of course, there will be no
strike. Bul if there is, we'll wait three days Into no strike. But II there Is, we can't do as the
it then If It isn't settled, or appears to be a power company can, since they have meter
prolonged thing, we'll hand-deliver our readers and other personnel out u a nutter of
customer's bills. And we'll ask them to make course, and we do nof. Bul we would contact
their payments in person at one of our local custom ers by telephone or through
newspaper, television and radio advertising to
offices nearest them."
Berger said FPfcL serves some 22,000 tell them what thetr bills are and where they
customers in the Sanford district which in­ can pay them,” said Slricklrr. He noted page
10 of the current Sanford telephone book also
cludes Geneva, parts of Deltona and Osteen
Of that number. 80 percent are residential tells customers where they can pay their
customers, the remainder commercial ac­ phone bills. "We have several locations other
than the telephone company for that purpose.”
counts, he said.
Berger said currently hla company has four Southern Beil serves some 30,000 customers In
meter readers who can handle the entire Seminole County, all bul 2,300 of them
diitrict in one month, "so we feel we could residential accounts, according lo Strickler.
Another reason Strickler and other major
hsnd-deliver customer bills with (ewer than
business managers are not too concerned is
that within a reasonable time.”
He explained h ti company already hand- that the federal government has said In the
delivers bills to customers in larger and event of a prolonged postal strike, the military
congealed cities such a s Miami because probably would be used to deliver the mails.

Public Records O p e n e d
D u e to Hotel D isa ste r
dressed Monday by the St. louts sub­
co n tracto r who designed Ihe steel-andconcrete skywatks. Jack D. Gillum, head of
Gilluni-Colaco
Consulting
S tructural
Engineers, said the type of skywatks his firm
designed at the Hyatt are not unusual.
"They have dme a preliminary in­
vestigation and have made sure of whal we
did," Gillum said "Hung structures have been
designed for years. We've done others and
never had a problem."
The Kansas City Chapter of the American
Institute of Architects, in s separate news
conference, reached a similar conclusion.
President E. Crichton Singleton also said any
speculation before the Inquiries — five si last
count — were completed would be “counter­
productive."
Throughout the city, church bells rang and
flags remained at half staff as the first ol Die
Bul in 13 deadly seconds Friday, Ihe up­ Hyatt Regency disaster victims were buried.
permost bridge folded and (ell from Its ceiling More than two dozen funerals were conducted
moorings, raining people and massive chunks Monday and another three dozen were
ol concrete onto a second-floor walkway. It too
scheduled (or today.
crumbled and craihed onto a dance floor
crowded with Jitlerbuggers dancing to the BigIn Topeka, 1,000 people turned out for the
Band sound.
funeral of four members of an ill-woman
Mayor Richard Berkley pledged to reporters maria chi band who died only minutes after
that night all city records pertaining to the arriving at the Hyatt Regency (or an evening
hotel's building and maintenance would be performance.
Immediately released to the public. However,
In Kansas City, next-door neighbors Jam es
It took the city attorney, who said they flrxt
Paolozzi and Dr. Jerold Rau lay side by side in
had to be catalogued, four days to comply.
ihelr caskets at S I Peter's Catholic Church.
" I’m not entirely sure whal you will find in
The viewing room at Amos Chapel over­
there of Interest," Berkley said of the records.
flowed with a silent and somber crowd who
"I'm nof a technical tspert."
had come lo pay tribute to Mr. and Mrs. Jam es
Kansas City's mayor has proposed for­ Daugherty, a Merriam, Kan., couple who
mation of a private citizen task force to would have celebrated their 31st wedding
"launch an impartial investigation" into the anniversary next month. Nearby stood thetr
six weeping children.
collapse of the two serial walkways.

KANSAS CITY. Mo, (UPI) - City offlcisli
said they would make public building records
ol the Ill-fated Hyatt Regency Hotel today,
where 1)1 party guests died beneath the steel
and concrete nibble of two sky bridges.
More than two doxen victims of the disaster
were buried Monday and three dozen more
were scheduled for burial today.
An architectural expert and the sub­
contractor who designed the skywalka denied
reports they were experimental structures,
saying such bridges had been features of other
buildings for years.
The 130-foot-long walkways — which Hyatt
Corp. officials have claimed were "designed to
Itold people shoulder-Usehoulder, as many as
you can Jam on there " — had been erne of the
most eye-catching features of the hotel's
futuristic, five-story atrium.

"W ere working on that. There will be a
cllUen's committee," he said.
The ques it on of what caused the worst
disaster In Ihe city's history was briefly ad­

"Death is not an end," Rev. Robert O’Dell
Jr. told the mourners, "It Is a beginning — the
beginning of eternal Ufe. They would want us
to remember them happy and together.”

G O N E FISHING

H e n ry G a in e s and friend', to o k a d v a n ta g e o f sunny w e a th e r a n d L u k e .Monroe
to go fish in g in Sanford r e c e n tly . G a in e s is shown p u llin g in a f r e s h -w a te r
m u lle t, w hich he c a u g h t u s in g re d w o rm s . The c a tc h w e ig h e d a b o u t Iwu
pound?.

Reagan Peeved At Democrats
Over Social Security Issue
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan
plans to make a nationally broadcast address
In an effort to snuif out s Democratic uprising
and caU (or a bipartisan remedy for the
financially troubled Social Security system.
In a letter to House and Senate leaders,
Reagan accused Democrats of "political
maneuvering" in opposing a move to ter­
minate the minimum Social Security benefit.
"These efforts appear designed to exploit an
issue rather than find a solution lo the urgent
Social Security problem," Reagan said in the
letter, which was released Monday and drew
immediate response from House Speaker
Thomas O'Nelli.
O'Neill said Reagan's statement "distorts
the issue" and Democrats ere "committed to
protecting the system and preserving the
security and dignity of those who depend on
It."
House Democratic lesders are promoting a
non-binding "sense of the House" resolution
they hope will reopen the issue of the
minimum monthly benefit.
DentocrtUc leader Jim Wright of Texas
planned to Introduce the resolution today,
urging members of t budget-cutting con­
ference to take steps to prevent current Social

...M a ll D isaster Chances
(CoatUmrd F ra n Page 1A)
music going all the time. We might

evenhave a bis band, someday, but
it won’t be loud music.”
To the com m ent that some
shoppers at the mall have felt
vibrations or a quivering in the floor
of the second level, Hill said the fact
there is some movement is not
necessarily bad. “ It would seem to
me that some flexibility is better
than complete rigidity.”
"The fact that the structure gives
is nof bad. In seven y e a n a heck of a
lot of people have guoe through the
mall," he said, noting that during
Christmas season as many as 60,000

*

percuis a day shop there.
Hill has no plans to "Interfere"
urith shopper.
wul* to stop on
the uecond floor walkway at the mall
to look over the railing to the shows
taking place In center court on the
lower level And he tecs no need to
take any such action In Ihe future,
unless corporate headquarters in­
structs him to do otherwise.
No one has ever fallen over Ihe
second level walkway railing during
those y e a n either, he said. "This
mall was built with safety in mind.”
Ruby Kelly, a spokesman for the
DeBartolo Corp., said today the mall
was built In compliance with uw

Htraltf Photo by Tom VMkkiI
;

Southern Standard Building Code. It
was designed by the ctrpvaUon.
The structure was designed erith a
flexibility factor, which allows (he
building to "give" with pressure,
according to Ms. Kelly.
Ms. Kelly said the second level
balcony is supported by columns.
The balconies tn the K ansu City
Hyatt Regency were suspended
rather than supported by columns.
T he entire Altamonte Mall
p. Is assessed at 6263 million
for —* purposes. It Is one of H
shopping centers built by the Ohio
corporation and one of the firm’s
nine which are multi-level across the
nation.

Security recipients from suffering ■ loss Ip
benefits.
In the Senate, Sen. Donald Rlegle, D-MIch;
planned to Introduce an amendment to ihe lax
bill under consideration that would restore the
minimum benefit of 6122 for current
recipients.
Both the House and Senate, in separate
versions of a huge budget-cutting bill, ap­
proved terminatlon of the minimum benefit,
which Is paid to about 3 million Americans
Proponents say most recipients would
become eligible for other Income assistance
programs after losing the benefit.
While the debate rages inside the Capitol
thousands of senior citizens plan to rally
outside to eipreas their concern about the
proposed cuts.
The administration has estimated tie
retirement system will go bankrupt next year
unless revisions a r t n ude.
Reagan said be will ask the television net­
works for time to address the nation to “call oa
the Congress lo lay aside partisan politics*
and find a way “to put Social Security on 6
permanently sound financial basis."
No dale has been set for the speech, White
House officials said.

Jail Guard Drops
Effort To Regain Job

I

The Seminole County Jail guar! who was fired June 29 (of
allMwd arxual h*rn—m»nf nf w « u prtscsi.1 has drupp«i mi
attempt to gel his Job back. .
Elisha Smith was scheduled to challenge hla
this
morning before Ihe sheriff department's civil service board,
but the hearing w u canceled late last week at Smith's
request
No reason for the cancellation w u given. Sheriff John Polk,
who terminated Smith for conduct unbecoming an officer
following an internal investigation into a female prisoner’s
complaint of sexual harassment, would u y only, "Talk t«
Smith or his attorney."
Harvey Alper, Ihe fired Jailer’s lawyer, said, "My client fell
he had resolved matters to his satisfaction and he instructed
me lo drop the case. Thai's *1L" Smith has been unavailable
[or comment
Polk said the probe which resulted m Smith's termination is
continuing, and other Jail employees are being "looked at." :

�ToMdxy, July 3!. 1**1 —4A

Evtnlna HtraM, San lord, FI.

D a ta Center
Construction
Is U n d e rw ay

NATION
IN BRIEF
Police O fficer Stabbed

A new data processing center lor the Seminole County School
system is eipectcd to be ready for occupancy by early
October.
Construction is underway on the building located adjacent to
the main office of the Seminole County School Board.
Data Processing Manager Randy Johns is optimistic that the
construction project can be completed by the first of October.
Johns Is anxious to abandon a pair of trailers, which the
processing department has occupied for seven years.
The new structure Is expected to cost $200,000. It will house
the school system's computers and offices lor tiie data
processing personnel.
Plans eall for increasing the size of the 13-member data
processing staff to mcel expanding needs, according to school
officials.
The departments request for more space resulted in ap­
proval for construction of ihe building during the June 22
meeting of the school board.
Six offices In the 4,i22-square-foot structure will comprise
the computer suite. Three other offices will be used for ad­
ministration.
The structure has been designed by Daimwood, Deny berry
and Pavelchak Architects. Beeline Construction Co began
work on June 29 — SYBIL MITCHELL GANDY

In N e w York Violence
NEW YORK I tIPI i — A protest by about 800 blacks
demanding Jobs at a Madison Avenue construction site
erupted into a melee with 200 construction workers, A
police officer was stabbed.
While pedestrians on lunch breaks ran for cover, 300
police in riot gear used their night sticks to separate
the demonstrators from the Black Economic Survival
group and 200 construction workers' most of whom
were white.
Mayor Edward Koch Monday warned, the city "will
not tolerate violence or threats of violence." He said he
had asked Robert Keating, the city's criminal justice
coordinator, to "make sure people do not engage in
extortion and get away wilh it," in their pursuit of Jobs.
The near-riot Monday afternoon injured seven police
officers and a dozen other people. One officer, Angelo
Bevilacque, was stabbed in the back and was listed in
fair condition at Roosevelt Hospital. The other injuries
were not serious, police said.
The violence broke out when workers clasfred with
unemployed blacks demanding Jobs at a construction
site on Madison Avenue, police said.

Shrimp Boat Crew A rrested
MONTAUK. N.Y. (UPI)-Thc Coast Guard has
arrested a 12-man shrimp-boal crew who tried lo bum
and scuttle the vessel to get rid of its cargo of up to $10
million worth of marijuana, authorities say.
The captain and It crew members of the "Lucky
Louise" were charged Monday wilh criminal
possession of the drug wilh intent to distribute it
Officials said the 600 bales of marijuana found tn die
70-foot ship's hold had a street value of f 10 million.
If convicted of the charges; the suspects, all from
Colombia, could each gel up to 13years' Imprisonment.

Winnings M ay Not Last Long
NEW YORK (CPI)—lottery winner Diijm F er­
nandez has won a court battle to get the first 1200,000
of her winnings-nr at least whatever is left after the
government, welfare department and lawyers claim
their shares.
A Supreme Court Justice Monday rejected a claim by
Mrs. Fernandez' 17-year-old neighbor that the in m-v
should be held tn escrow until he ran sue to get half die
$2.8 million prize.
Christopher Pando claims that Mrs Fernandez had
promised to split the winnings 50-50 if his voodoo saint
selected the winning numbers for her. A stale Supreme
Court Judge ruled Pando would not suffer financially if
Mrs. Fernandez was allowed to collect her first yearly
$200,000 payment.
Mrs. Fernandez' $200,000 however, may not last long
The federal government will take $40,000 before she
ever sees the money, and the city's Human Resources
Administration says It has the right to collect $32,000.

'Despondent' A irm an Missing
NORFOLK (UPI)—The Navy today tried to track
down a "deapondenl" airman who vanished from the
amphibious assault ship CSS Saipan, leaving behind a
blood-stained bunk and a trail of blood lo the vessel's
deck.
"We don't know what happened," said Cmdr. Mike
Cherry, a spokesman for the Atlantic Fleet.
Cherry said Airman Ward Brown, 20, of Douglas
County in Nebraska has been missing since Sunday
morning. He was last seen "despondent and nuntalkative" Saturday night, Cherry said
Brown is an orphan with no listed relatives, Cherry
said. "He was a ward of the state of Nebraska since
birth."
The only clues to Brown's disappearance was blood
splattered on his bunk and along passageways to die
port bow, Cherry said. The blood was the same type as
Brown's

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Sfafe Officials Predict
C alifornia Lawsuit
TAli-AHASSEE (UP!) - Florida agriculture of­
ficials say California will probably sue Florida for
placing a state quarantine on produce when a federal
embargo was already In effect for California's three
Mediterranean fruit fly-infested counties
California Attorney General George Deukmejian
said he would seek to overturn the quarantine before
the US. Supreme Court — possibly today.
"We have been anticipating a suit from California
ever since the quarantine was announced," Gov. Bob
Graham said Monday.
"They would probably sue all the southern stale*
involved tn the quarantine."
Texas, Alabama. Mississippi, South Carolina and
Florida Monday imposed quarantines on all Calif urala
produce. The quarantines require all California
produce be banned from the states unless they are
fumigated or come from areas where traps showed no
Medfly infestation.
The fruit fly infestation is confined to 150 square
miles In three counties south of San Francisco — Santa

Oar-, Alassd* ds San M«tw»

Sinkhole Opens In O cala
OCALA (UPI) — A sinkhole 20 feet wide and 30 feet
long opened Monday on the campus of Central Florida
Community College and menaced the school's new
vodUaruiI building.
The budding was only 20 feet from the edge of the 10feet-deep sinkhole College officials said there were
cracks tn the earth around the edge of the hole, in­
dicating it might widen. They planned test barings
today to attempt to assess the danger.
Opening of the sinkhole on the campus Just off of
Interstate 73 resulted in the temporary closing of a loop
road serving the school.
A combination of the current drought along with the
sudden weight of water from a recent heavy downpour
of rain was blamed for the sinkhole.

Foundation Is Being Laid On N e w Data Center

Refugee Employment Promises May Be Probed
DAUAS (UPI) - With 10 more
refugees set to a rriv e , a
congressional spokesm an said
Monday there may be an In­
vestigation into reported promises
made by the U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service that Jobs
would be waiting for the 90 Haitians
transferred from Florida lo West
Texas.
The INS reported Monday that 10
additional Haitian refugees would be
transferred lo the federal prison
facility In Big Spring, Texas, next
week.
"W e're definitely concerned,"
said Paul Hogcrs, a Washington
spokesman for Hep. Mickey Inland,
D-Texas. who has championed

HalUan right* tn Congress
"We're appalled If all the reports
we're getting out of Texas are true.
We plan to Investigate the mailer, he
said. “If ttiis is going on, we'll
definitely get into this thing," he
said Monday.
Mike Tromlnski, Cuban-Haltian
project coordinator for the INS, said
3) other Haitians originally slated to
be part of the weekend transfers
would be llown out "sometime next
week” — 10 to la k e Placid, N.Y.,
and 10 to Rig Spring.
He said no more mass transfers
were scheduled, but added. "I have
been advised that the INS is looking
into addilional space elsewhere."
The Rig Spring city council met In

special session Monday and went on
record In opposition to allowing the
Haitian refugees to remain at the
federal prison.
The motion pasted 3-2, with the
he-brraklng vole being cast by
Mayor Clyde Angel.
The 90 Haitians reportedly told
interpreters at the Big Spring
federal prison, where they were
transferred Saturday, that they
were told they were coming to Jobs
In Texas. They said they were
surprised to find themselves In
prison.
In a related development, the
former fiend of Ihe INS said in
Houston the government does not
have the authority to give out Jobs to

refugees.
"The Haitians were being
detained (or screening. Some may­
be deported. Nobody with INS would
have the authority to promise Jobs,"
said I cone I Castillo, former INS
commissioner. "Somebody Is con­
fused"
He said that the government
usually turns refugees over to a
sponsoring agency after approving
them for settlement.
"If you ask me," said Paul Doy le
of Catholic Charities, one of those
agencies in Texas, "IN'S in
Washington Just decided they were
going to do something and didn't tell
anybody.
"The government has never Just

sent people out to Jobs, it semis them
out In a sponsor. I'm amazed if the
Haitians were Just dumped on the
community," Etoyle said.
Even the governor's special
refugee resettlement task force was
not alerted to the transfer, said
spokeswoman I-re Russell.
"We're not Just partially in the
dark, we're totally in Die dark," she
said. "And, of all places, why would
the government send people looking
for Jobs to Big Spring?"
Big Spring — a city ol 25,000, some
100 miles south of faibbock — has
suffered economically since a Air
Force base, now the prison camp,
was abandoned a few years ago.

Titanic' Clues To Be Unveiled
A ltfl£N E,Texas t UPI) — Oilman Jack Grimm will not say
it he has located the Titanic nor will lie reveal until Thursday
underwater photographs lie says will eiplain why the luxury
liner sank.
Grimm said Monday it would lake two or three months to
examine all l)&gt;e data collected in his U-day search 230 miles off
the coast of Newfoundland. He said la- will show "the most
interesting things" at a press conference in Boston Thursday.
Expedition leader Mike lla m i said Monday from aboard lire
Research Vessel Gy re Use voyage had been successful and a
study of undersea photographs and videotape helped scientists
form an explanation of the Titanic'* linking.
Bui H am s and Grimm, an Abilene oil millioeialrr, said

Judge Lifts Texas'
Medfly Quarantine
LOB GATOS, Calif. (U PIl — A federal Judge Idled Texas’
short-lived quarantine against California fruit, but other states
inspected produce trucks al their borders today despite
agriculture officials' claims (a be winning the war against the
Mediterranean fruit fly In the Santa Clara Valley.
Texas, which In eight hours briefly stopped three California
trull trucks al roadblocks, was the must restrictive of 14 states
that imposed quarantines against cargos from a three-county
area south of San Francisco In fear the Medfly would Infest
their fruit crops,
U5. District Judge Patrick Higginbotham in Dallas late
Monday ordered Texas agricultural officials to lift thetr
blockade and set a hearing for Saturday on whether his tem­
porary restraining order should be made permanent.
The California Grape and Fruit league of Fresno had sought
the restraining order on grounds Texas' action, which required
that produce entering the state be certified os coming from
areas where traps showed there was no Medfly infestation,
violated the Constitution and federal regulations on interstate
commerce.
In Florida, meanwhile, nine trucks carrying California pro­
duce were turned back at the state line Monday because they
did not have proper certification. Others, officials said, were
allowed to enter the state.

FBI Agents Arrest
MIAMI (U PI) — An escaped murderer from Ohio who
dropped out of sight for 12 years and was thought dead until he
slipped through the hands of Canadian police last April is back
tn a Jail cell today.
William John llaslem. 41, was arrested by FBI agents in the
Miami suburb of Coral Gable* and taken to the Dade County
jail, returning him to UJ&gt;. custody tor the first time since his
Feb. 27, 1969, escape from the Ohio State Penitentiary.
The search for Haslem had been given up four years ago and
the federal fugitive warrant far his arreit cancel &lt;d because
information was recetved indicsting he was dea.', an FBI
spokesman said.
la s t April, provincial police at Sudbury, Out., an-ested a
nun using ih* name Inhn Phillips. Thev chanted him wtth
filing a false police report of a burglary at a TV repair shop,
allegedly Involving theft of 96 ounces of gold.

HOSPITAL NOTES
W ftliM k M tm a n jl Mov*,UI
A DM ISSIO N S
Ire loro
Marie T

Duaear

Kw* Hollaay
le llit M H u m a n rtf
Donald B Snlvert
Frank O. Tatum

Michael L Wetter
Bata M e rle Car. Cateeioerrr
Andrew J. Sfvpu'f
Maureen T Wharton. D r her r

C a d i* M Carter, longwood
Margaret L Smith. Osteen
Ranald E Devora, Titusville
D ISCH A RGES
Senior d:
Fred A Schmid!
Snaror.t M Shepherd
Eileen Turner
Brenda J jacket** and bed* *irl
Christina Y
Williamson and

Mtr twr
Robert h Frederick. O nion*
Frances B Sennit. Deltona

with your Insurancal
-C A L L -

questions about whether the ship luul been i«und would not be
answered until Thursday, when tlte Gyre steams Into Boston
liarbor.
"We searched the Titanic area and believe we know what did
happen. We leel we've solved the mystery," Harris said bytelephone. "We have black-and-white photos oi ocean, and the
first color video ever taken at 12,000 feel. We’re pretty excited."

|

T O N Y RUSS1
IN S U R A N C E
I
3 2 2 -0 2 8 3
B U S IN E S S IN S U R A N C E
ft

NOTICE OF REGULATION OF LAND USE
TH* B w id ef County CemnmHoner* of lent meJe County, Florid*,
p* tj(soles to r* «v(itf Ih* Ute of fond within If,# i n * nhown in The m rp
iit tht* advef fii#rn#nf A public hearing on the pr opetal will bo held on
July II. tilt. ef the Hour of t oo a m . a t toon thereafter, in Room ft#
of III* Seminole County Courthouse, Sin ford, Florida l no public
hearing it bomf htid in or dor to discus* and hoar comment* on ad*
O-lion* and revision* at comprrftafitivo amendment* fa Hit adopted
Sentinel* Courtly Comprehensive Plan
A* part of fh« continuing process of beeping fho Comprehensive
Flan riipentivt to changing circumstances and perception* of
community needs comprehensive omendments fo fho Plan h it* boon
prepared
Th* primary issue* associated with th* amendments or* prtionfod
below Th* Board of County Com mis Stoners will finf consider th*
comprehensive amendment* in fho public flooring on July ft. If If but
no action fo odopt or deny fho amendment* con occur until the second
public hearing on August M, 1*11
Th* porpoio ol th* public hearing* it f* provide Iht public an op
porfumty to present comment* to the Board of Counfy Commissioners
lor or againtl th# draft amendment* All interested individual* art
encouraged to malo thoir view* known
To help in the public route* a summary of the draff amendment*,
the drill amendment! and fho minute* of the Local Planning Agoncy
public hearing where fho amendment* wort dttevtiod have boon
comp.ltd into fho report “ Draft Compreheniiv* Amendment* —
I t l l “ The report It available tor review at the Planning Department
at th* Ccurrihome in Sanford A limited number of the report* are
available for iittnbulien to group* roprovontmg divert* bvim ett.
profettttnal. civic and community inferettt, and to member* of the
gone*al public All inlerottod group* end individual* or* encouraged
to critically review fho** draff amendment*, ask guoifioni and
provide react1#** Contact Woody Pnce. Planning Dtrtctae at ttl*
l l f t t i l III for Information Staff of th* Planning Department I*
available to d&lt;*cutt th* draft amendment* thould individual* or
group* ** doiire
ISSUES
The primary muo* and issue rrspomes associated with in* draff
comprehensive amendment* pro a* loiiow*
I How f&gt;e*» fo accommodate community need* tor lower intensity
nonrtiidentie! uto*. such at pfOlrs*»onet office* and small n*gh
hofftood m a il rvatii'ihm ent*, while protecting residential area*?
Are convenience tloret appropriately classified a* low Intensity or
full mienisty commercial? A related issue &lt;» whether the proposed C
S toning d-tfrict should be permitted or included from the Low In
tentity Commercial land uto category and permitted or *■ eluded
from residential lend ute category*
iHue response a new land uta category (Low intensity Com
mm,*H) end coning district |C S Convenience Commercial) ere
propot fd

THE

Escaped Murderer

D O N 'T G A M O L E

J To what extent can development design standards be flexible end
•flit protect neighboring residential and other utei? Mow best to
provide incentive* for development proposal* that protect sensitive
environmentally valued area* white protecting the character of the
area?
issue response Planned Unit Development coning district Is
proposed to bo allowed in Low, Medium end High D m u ty Residential
tow intensity Commercial. Commercial and industrial land use
categories without an amendment to the Plan for Planned Unit
Development land use Criteria tor allowing P U D toning are iden
t«lted to protect area character
J In wbaf manner can the community fulfill It* responsibility to
accept those citiien* of the community who require group home and
foe^er care facilities without isolating ihe resident* ol the facilities
from the community and without burdening the community?
issue response A proposed policy provides for group home and
loiter cart facilities in Medium and High Density Resident let end
PU D land usa categories. Revision* to the Land Development Code
will be required to implement this proposed policy
a In whet manner and by what procedures should the Official Land
Use Maps be physic ally revised when am ersded by action of the Board
ol County Commissioners?
issue response Procedures end forms ere proposed for inclusion In
lt&gt;* Plan as an Appendix lh§t provide for map revisions
AN O R D IN A N CE A M EN D IN G O R D IN A N C E NO- IM S . TH E
S EM IN O LE C O U N TY CO M PR EH ENSIVE PL AN &lt; PR O VID ES FOR
E X C E P TIO N S TO TABLE t# OF
TH E
SHORT RANGE
D E V E L O P M E N T P L A N ; PROVIDES D E F IN IT IO N S OF LAND
USC C A TE G O R IE S . FR O V ID E S FO R IN T E N T AND PURPOSE OF
T R A N S IT IO N A L A R EA S; FRO V ID ES FOR C H A N G E S IN TA B L E l|
OF TH E SHORT RANGE D E V E L O P M E N T P L A N ; AM ENDS
D E N S IT Y
RANGES IN D E V E L O P M E N T
P LA N N IN G AND
R E G U L A T I O N OF TH E D E V E L O P M E N T F R A M E W O R K ,
P R O VID ES FOR A O E Q U A TS SITES FO R O R O U P HOM E AND
F O S TE R CA R E F A C IL IT IE S ; PR O VIO BS FO R LOW IN T E N S IT Y
C O M M E R C IA L AS A LAND USE C A T E O O R Y ; PROVIDES
P O LIC IE S FOR TR A N S ITIO N A L A R E A S ; P R O V ID E S FOR
T H R E E F IF T H S (M f h i) M A JO R ITY V O T E O F O O VER N IN O
BO D Y TO ADO PT SPECIFIC A M E N D M E N T S ; P R O VID ES FOR
L A N D USC M AP, CHANGES TO TH E M A P A N D W O R K S H E E TS }
PR O VID ES FOR EXCLUSION FROM S E M IN O L E C O U N TY CODE,
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AN D AN E F F E C T IV E D A T E

U N IN CO R P O R A TED

Roktl 9- Stuun
Chairman
Board *9 County Commissioners
lemmele County

AREAS

OF 9 EM IN O LE CO U N TY
IN C O R P O R A T C O
U N IN C O R P O R A T E D [

�* T #

Evening Herald
lUSWS M l I N )

MON. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 309-322-2611 or 631-9991
Tuesday, Ju ly 21, 1961-4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomai Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury. Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, 84.29; I Monthi, 124.00;
Year, WOO. By Mail: Week, S1.2S; Month, 89.29; ( Months,
130,00; Year. 857.00.

Polish History
In The Making
H id e are not many historians or international
observers who would disagree with the London
Economist's view that Poland’s revolution from
below is the most important thing happening in
Europe
That being true, the long-awaited Polish
Communist Party Congress could write some of
the most important history of this troubled cen­
tury by institutionalizing the revolution into the
party itself. The Poles are challenging the very
soul of Marxism, which contends that history is
irreversible.
Those impressed by the significance of omens
are not unmindful that the start of the party
congress coincides with the anniversary of the
storming of (he Bastille. Also, it comes during the
week marking the first anniversary of the Polish
revolution's real beginning, when last summer's
wave of strikes closed the railway line into
Russia.
During the ensuing revolution against com­
munism's sterile economics of scarcity that
welled up from Poland's depths, a free trade
union movement, Solidarity, which was
desperately opposed by the Communist
authorities, came into being and enrolled nearly
all of the nation's industrial and service-sector
workers — 10 million strong. Farm workers
followed suit with a free farmers' union. In open
defiance of the state, nearly 200,000 Communists
have turned in their party membership cards
since last summer's strikes all but paralyzed the
economy.
Stanislaw Kama, who took over party leader­
ship in early September after the fall of Edward
Gierck, called for the special congress one month
later in a hid to reform the CommuniBt apparatus
and purge it of the corruption from years of
Gierek misrule. For the first time in the history of
the Communist world, delegates were freely
elected by secret ballot. As a result, four fifths of
the 1,964 delegates to the congress are attending
their first official Communist meeting.
Kanai's convening of the extraordinary session
is not unlike the reluctant summoning of the
Estates General in 1789 by King Louis XVI, a rare
convocation that abetted the ensuing French
Revolution. With as mnny as 20 percent of the
delegates tied to Solidarity, the Soviet-style party
leadership faces a real challenge because the
delegates elect the 146 members of the Central
Committee, which in turn chooses the party
secretary and the 11-man Politburo —the party’s
and the nation's chief ruling body. Kania, keeper
of the middle ground, is considered to have a good
chance to remain in power as a compromise
between reform ers and hardliners. In­
congruously, the Polish Communist Party
congress is shaping up as the nearest thing yet to
a European version of an American political
convention.
but this analogy is severely limited by the
threatening, relentless pressure of the Soviet
Union. In the latest of several recoiltngs from
armed intervention, the Soviets accepted the
holding of the party congress. And, while Moscow
seemingly tolerates a relaxation of Communist
discipline on Poland’s domestic front, few believe
this sufferance extends to military security In­
volving the Warsaw Pact or to any upheaval that
would threaten communication lines with East
Germany.
Hius, the challenge of the historic Party
Congress is to incorporate the quintessence of the
year long reform movement into Poland's
Communist Party without provoking the Soviet
Union to armed intervention. This appears to be
a likely outcome despite brief, jarring strikes by
transport workers that have closed down Baltic
ports, the Polish national airline and public
transportation.
Assuming the Poles can avoid the catastrophe
of a Soviet-Polish clash, their first order of
business after the Congress will be to roll up their
sleeves and restore their shattered economy. If
they can succeed at this, if they make com­
munism work, their revolution could be,
ironically, the salvation of Marxism instead of the
beginning of its demise.

BERRYS WORLD

By SAM COOK

While the Orlando Twin! have not found the
u m e success in the second half of the season
that they did In the tin t half, the home runs
continue to explode from their bats.
Catcher Tim Laudner betted hit 30th of the
year In Sunday's loss to Birmingham. Earlier in
the week, the Woot-J ilugger broke Jim
O’Bradovtch's club record of 28.
Third baaeman Gary Gaettl, the Southern
League’! Player of the Month for June, cranked
out hla H it Sunday and designated hitter Scott
UUger swatted number 17.
Tonight wtU be "29 cents Beer Night” at
Tinker Field as the O-Twlns attempt to climb
above the .900 mark with an eight-game
homestand. Tuesday’s opponent la the Chat­
tanooga lookouts. It is slso Orlando Employee

Night. Softball games will take place before the
7:30 p.m. start.
The rest of the homestand looks like
this; Wednesday; Chattanooga. Family Night, 83
covers the group; Thursday: Chattanooga;
Frit'
Charlotte, Days Inn Night, Uckets
available at most area Days Inns; Saturday:
C harlotte; Sunday: Charlotte; Monday:
Charlotte, All Faiths Night, family admitted for
83 with chu. J ) bulletin.

defeiAling champion Ormond Beach make up the
six-team, double-elimination field
City Champion Knights of Columbus Manager
Al vis Whi tied will pilot the Sanford entry with
assistance from Moose's Bill Dube and Ray
Bronson of Kiwanla.
William Carr, Fred Miller, Donald Grayson,
Kevin Smith, Bruce Franklin and Steve Dennis
are the players to watch for the Junior all-stars.
The tournament runs throughout the week.

A little closer to home this week, the Sanford
Youth Baseball Association Is hosting the
Florida Junior Ma)cr League District 4 Tour­
nament at Chase Park on Celery Avenue.
Along with host Sanford, Daytona Beach, Holly
llill. New Smyrna Beach, Port Orange and

Registration for the Seminole Youth Sports
Association football season takes place at
Ukeview Middle School Saturday, July 29, from
9 a.m. until 12 roan.
Cheerleading registration will also take place
at this time. The fee for football players is 839

DON GRAFF

BUSINESS WORLD

More
About A
Memorial

Innovators
Make
Money
By MARIANNA ORE
UPI Bus iness Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - As venture
capitalists and other businessmen step up
their search for new technology, firms with
innovative wayi to match money with Ideas
are flourishing.
One innovator Is Rain Hill Group, a Wall
Street firm which acts as a marketplace
where large corporate clients can shop for
technologies.
Unlike com pinies which develop
technologies on client request using ■ pool of
experts, Rain Hill simply serves as a
clearinghouse where Inflowing Ideas are
screened fer basic viability and passed on to
clients with matching interests.
- "I'm a trader by background,” said Rain
Hill President Richard A. Cawley, an officer
with First Boston Corp. before he formed his
current firm in 1178. ’’We believe the
technology already exists out there and often
companies don’t need to spend the time and
money to commission technology develop­
ment."
Cawley said Rein Hill has been doubling Its
business annually s i venture capital funds
outpace Investment opportunities and large
corporations under pressure to grow are
starting to shun costly acquisitions in
unrelated fields in favor of new technology in
their own product areas.

Don't believe everything you read — not
even what may on occasion appear in this
space.
The subject a few weeks back was the
memorial to be constructed honoring those
who served in Vietnam. Strikingly different
[or monumental Washington in a number of
respects, it will be black granite, not white
marble. And it will consist not of the usual
neo-classic pillars but of two low walls.
Intersecting in a shallow V, upon which will be
engraved the names of 97,692 war dead. But
not, It was noted, that of the war in which they
died.
Incorrectly noted.
The suggestion that there will be no direct
reference to Vietnam is an error (hat has
popped up here and. previously, elsewhere —
possibly resulting from a misinterpretation of
the project's staled purpose to create “a
memorial not to honor the war but rather to
honor the sacrifices of Vietnam veterans,"
Whatever the origin. It Is a misconception
that the memorial's sponsors are anxious to
dispel. The finished structure, they assure,
will make it perfectly clear that it Ls those
who fought and died in Vietnam who are being
honored.

ROBERT WALTERS

Venture capitalists poured 81 bUllon Into
smaller businesses in 1M0, up from 8290
million In 1979, according to the Venture
Capital Journal, a trade publication. Outside
Investors such as pension funds gave venture
capital firms 8900 million last year, up from
810 million in 1978.
“ American burinessmen should go back to
doing what they do best,” Cawley said.
"Worrying about Japanese management
techniques and trying to compete with
Japan's talent for incremental Innovation of
U3 . products like semiconductors In a bid to
boost productivity is silly. Our skill is figuring
out a new way to make semiconductors out of
peanut butter, and collapsing an entire In­
dustry.’’
The firm keeps an 600-Item "wish Ust" of
client requests in Reids ranging from energy
generation and control to organic chemical
products to electronic equipment.
Rain Hill also sometimes helps negotiate
co-venturing projects between venture capi­
talists and its clients.
Innotech Corp. of Trumbull, Conn., also has
benefited from the current demand (or tech­
nology.
"There seems to be an awful lot of money
around looking for things to do," said
Innotech senior vice president Richard
Corbin. "A lot more people are asking us to
come out end demonstrate how we can solve
their problems.”
Innotech, unlike Rein Hill, works on
assignments (rum companies to develop new
products and bustnesses using a "brain bank"
of 3,900 spedallsts In 2,000 disciplines
throughout the country. But the firm believes
in targeted technology development and first
helps the company eat concrete goals and
strategy.
Also flourishing is Cambridge Research
and Development Corp. of Westport, Conn.,
which collects inventions and finds en­
trepreneurs to bead new companies formed to
make and market the products. So far six
companies have been formed with 829 million
(ram outside Investors. Cambridge shares the
Investor's down payment for the invention 9090 with the inventor.

Dealing With The Dark Side
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The word la
“ laacUt."
Because it, more than almost any other
word In the American political lexicon, is
heavily fraught with emotional overtones. It
is rarely uttered in public by politicians.
But Sen. Berry M. Goldweter, R-Arli.,
deliberately chose to use that potentially
inflammatory word when recently asked
about the right-wing, quaxi-polltical organnUations that have become ao ahrtll in the
national debate over selected "social issues,”
notably the question of abortion
"They Ye really taking more of a fascist tine
than a conservative line,” said the man whose
credentials as an expert on the subject in­
clude his status si the patriarch of the
modem conservative movement in American
politics.
An Interviewer from ■ W ashington
television station asked Goldweter to be more
specific: "You mean the Moral Majority?"
Replied the senator: "Yes, the Moral
Majority, the Righl-to-Ufe.. . I don't Uka the
use of organized force In a political
movement. Let's not th reaten political
death."

made a truly momentous contribution to the
contemporary political dialogue — one that
he la uniquely qualified to olfer at a time when
voices of sanity are too seldom heard and acts
of courage are too infrequently performed.
Similar denunciations from liberals or even
moderates would have gone unheeded
because they are presumed to be motivated
principally by frustration, intolerance or
hostility. But the time is long overdue for
candid critiques of (anallrlwii and in­
tolerance masquerading as conservatism.
All across the political landscape, reslots
ire promoting their beliefs u the only
morally acceptable position on sensitive
issues ranging from abortion and the ERA to
school prayer and gun control.
Howard Phillips, national director of the
Conservative Caucus, talks candidly about
mobilising his constituency of true believers
by "pushing their ho4 buttons" — a barely
disguised euphemism for appealing to the
dark side of human nature where fear, anger
and Intolerance dominate.

At another point in the exchange, a
questioner asked if Goldwater believed a
person must be opposed to abortion or the
Equal Rights Amendment In order to be
considered a bona fide conservative.
“No," u ld the senator. “I don't think
they're related at all ”
Noting that Ideological purists have
demanded Senate votes on their abortion
cause more then 40 times In recent years
(often ai an amendment to a peripherally
related appropriation bill) Goldweter ad­
ded:
" I’m getting sick and tired ol all this hoo­
rah about abortion. I don’t care how many
laws we pass: ii a woman wants to get an
abortion, she's going to get an abortion."
Finally, the senatcr was sharply critical of
organisations “ getting rich raising money lor
conservative candidates" — and he included
In that category the Richard A. Vlguerie Co.,
the nation's premier right-wing fundraising
operation.
With those statements, Goldwater has

President Reagan, whose political career la
a product of the conservative revival Inspired
by Goldwater1! 1964 presidential campaign,
has — to his everlasting credit — defied the
radical right in nuking what probably are his
two most important personnel selections.
He picked George Bush to be his vice
presidential running mate in the I960 campatgn, then named Arizona Judge Sandra Day
O'Connor to till the first U. S. Supreme Court
vacancy during his tenure.
Neither could be accused of being a liberal
or a Democrat, but both are sensible
moderates whose politics makes them
"m ainstream
R epublicans"
— a
classification that Is anathema to the rightwing crusaders.
Indeed, it was the brutal verbal assault
against Judge O'Connor, a longtime personal
friend of Goldwater and a fellow Arizonan,
that angered the senator to the point where he
struck back.
“1 don't like being pushed around," says
Goldwater. "I'm getting tired of being
characterised as an immoral man, an un­
christian man." Hooray for him.

Those sponsors are another difference
about this memorial. Although some hold or
have Iwld public office — Gen, William C
W estmoreland, R et., form er President
Gerald R. Ford and (Miner Sen. George
McGovern, incumbent Sen. Barry Goldwater
— they are acting as private citizens. Ttie
Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund Is a
private, nonprofit organization established in
1919 to promote public Interest In the project
and to raise money (or construction.
It waa a alow atari. By July 4 ol tha Ural

year, a grand total of 8144.90 had come In. Rut
Interest has picked up since, Including in
Congress which has donated a site on national
park land, Washington's Mall.
A national competition for a design was won
earlier this year by a Yale University ar­
chitecture student, Maya Ying Iin, 21, who
defeated more than 1,400 other entrants,
including her professor.
In her own description, "the memorial
appears as a rift in the earth — a long,
polished black stone wall, emerging from and
receding into the earth." On it will be carved
In chronological order with dates of death the
names, "seemingly infinite in number," ol all
the service men and women known to have
died In Vietnam. The walls will point
respectively toward the Washington and
Uncoln memorials, unifying the nation's
recent experience with itx past
The two-acre, tree-bordered mall site is (he
government’s only direct contribution to the
memorial project Construction money - an
estimated 87 million — ig being raised
through donations from corporations,
foundations and individuals.
It Is being called “the people’s memorial,"
the one Ihe government did not build. Wisely,
It might be argued. The American govern­
ment's role In the development and conduct of
the Vietnam conflict Is still the stuff of
dispute. But there can be no argument about
the American people's responsibilities toward
those who served tn It.
"The memorial will make no political
statement about the war," the fund's founder,
veteran Jan Craig Scruggs, has explained
"Ax is proper, because In coming to grips with
Ihe history ol Vietnam, our nation must
separate the war Itself from the issue of how
Ihe veterans served their country."
To those people who want to be Included in,
contributions may be sent to the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial Fund, Washington, D.C.,
20096

JA C K ANDERSON

Clinch River Plant A Financial Fiasco

WASHINGTON — Government boon­
doggles are ahreys good (or evanescent
heed!!"** R«*»If th*y ere really to stick In the
public craw, two considerations a r t usually
necessary. The fiasco must occur under high
auspices, and the story must have a certain
oomph capable o( kindling public Interest
By aO the oomph Indicators, the Clinch
River breeder reactor at Oak Ridge, Term.,
may not register high. It Is an unheralded
project, with en awkward name, well off the
hasten path. But It la a multlmillion-dollar
fiasco born ol fraud and mismanagement.

•‘Sorry, ms'm, CtuuUas not two and naittm la
BanbSadr. Say — who a this?"

*

The plant, darting ef the nuclear power
industry, Is supposed to produce more
nuclear fuel than It usee, which sounds like a
bargain. But It has been no bargain for the
taxpayers who are mwtttlngly paying for I t
Originally, U was to be In operation by
December 1971, at a cost of f M million. But It
has already cost |1 billion, and the latest

■* * • »

esUmsts Is that It won't be operational unul
February 1990. By that time, the bill wtU be at
least 83.1 billion.
How could this happen? It’s easy, when tne
government officials who a n supposed to
keep track of the project's contractors shirk
their responsibilities.
According to a spokeswoman for ths Clinch
River project, about 10 percent of the cost
Increase was due to circunstances beyond
official control. In other w ords, the
bureaucrats wars responsible for “only" 8990
million of the estimated 82.) billion overrun.
Thai's bad enough.
But It’s actually worae than that.
Investigators (or Rep. John Dingell, D-Mkh.,
told my uw eiates Tony Capncdo and
Howard Rosenberg that a t least three-fourths
of Clinch River's prime contracts a r t open
ended, that Is with no (irmly net costa or
completion dates.
The Investigators warned that even the

9

staggering 83.2 billion estimate may be op­
timistic. It (ails to take Into account the
possibility that the entire Clinch River facility
might lu re to be relocated for safety reasons.

A 1971 Nudear Regulatory Commission
report listed w a rty 100 safety problems. A
Clinch Rivtr official said many of the
problems had been addressed even before the
NRC report, but the commissicn had not yet
checked to see If Ihe needed corrections were
actually made.
Fraud has also plagues the project. One
Internal Department of Energy memoran­
dum told how an employee of Atomics
International, a subcontractor, received a
81,000 Interest-free loan In return (or advanct
information on contracts, and another 89,000
In cold cash for bid price Information.
The FBI found that two purchasing officials
Invented bogus companies, from which they

claimed to have solicited bids for items
needed at Clinch River. This resulted in
overcharges running as high u 100 percent.
Typical of the cavalier way contractors
behave when Uncle Sugar is paying the bills ls
an Incident reported in another Internal DOE
document dated Feb. 13. It discloses that the
chief of W estlnghouse's dsta-processing
facility at Clinch River had been using a
8200,000 computer for his own personal
business. He not only stored leases and
business directories In the computer, but used
It for a football txnl.
The Congressional Budget Office has
estimated that terminating Clinch River
"could save Ihe government 81.4 billion over a
live-year period of 1962-1966.” But the Reagan
administration reportedly aver the objections
of Budget Director David Stockman, has
decided to go ahead.

�SPORTS
Face Defending Champion Ormond Beach Tonight

S an fo rd Juniors C rush D a y to n a B each. 15*5
By JOE DESANTIS
Herald Sporti Writer
Sanford's Major Junior league allstars jumped on Daytona Beach for 10
runs over the first two Innings at Chase
Park Monday night and then sat back
and rode the pitching arm of right­
hander William Carr for a 15-5 win in
nightcap of opening round action in the
Major Junior league District 4 Tour­
nament at Sanford.

bats going I — Sanford

Freeman.
Freeman faired little better than his
predecessor as the Sanford squad racked
up another five-run second inning.
le a d off hitter la rry Thomas opened
Sanford's second inning by drilling a
single to left center and advanced to
second on a balk. Shortstop Bruce

By virtue of a coin toss, host Sanford
played the role of visitors in its own ball
park and promptly proved to be rude
guests.
Daytona Beach's right-handed starter
Mike Lynch failed to find the plate in the
opening inning, walking Sanford's first
three batters.
Two balks, four stolen bases and a pair
of Daytona Beach errors later, hothitting Ixe Frederick's double to left
center rapped Sanford's five-run opening
stanza. It sent Lynch to second base in
favor of fellow right-hander Frank

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Bruce Benford. ct
Dave Herbert. cf
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Sieve Sweeney.2b
John Hood.)b
C hnsR ivrra ph )b i i
Ed Gantt II
Richard Pi* men, ph
Terry Johnson. If
Te tili

Lrft-ftcid Glenn landless followed
with an BBI sacrifice fly.

Port Orange wasn't the only squad
jumping in the double-elimination event
that sends the tournament winner on to
state competition.

Whitted has slated Fred Miller for the
starting assignment against Ormond
Beach. The double-elimination tour­
nament continues through Saturday at
Chase Park with two games tonight.
M OLLY H IL L

Franklin followed with an HB1 double
and then moved to third on an errant
pickoff attempt by Freeman.

The Port Orange Sports jumped on
Holly Hill in the second inning for four
runs and added plenty of insurance with
a six-run fifth-inning outburst to move
into tonight's 0 o'clock confrontation with
New Smyrna Beach.

S a n fo rd '* L ee F re d e r ic k c r u n c h e s o n e o f th r e e h its fo r th e n ig h t in
th e J u n io r all s ta r s 15-5 ro u t of D a y to n a Ite a c h . F r e d e r ic k d ro v e in
fo u r ru n s a n d co m b in ed vsitli h a tt e r s m a te W illiam C a r r to se n d S a n ­
fo rd in to to n ig h t's X o 'c lo c k g a m e a g a in s t th e d e fe n d in g d is tr ic t
c h a m p io n s — O rm o n d Ite a c h — a t S a n fo r d 's C hase P a r k on C e le ry
A ve.

Whitted figures Sanford will need those
bats when his squad meets defending
district champion Ormond Beach at I
tonight.

M anager Alvis W hitted

In the tournament's opening contest.
Port Orange capitalized on a pair of big
innings to coast to a 10-2 victory over
Holly Hill to likewise advance into
winner's bracket action.

Herald Phot* by Tern Vincent

distance.
"We still have to get the bats going,"
said Whitted of Sanford's 10-hit evening.

’W o still havo to got tho

Freeman then fanned third baseman
Donald Grayson, but Grayson alertly
took first on a passed ball and just as
quickly advanced to third base on a pair
of stolen bases.
Sanford added a trio of insurance runs
in the fourth and two more in the seventh
as Carr held Daytona at bay with a
combination of a smoking fastball and
breaking stuff to secure the 15-5 victory .
"They sure looked like Uiey're ready,"
said a pleased Sanford skippper Alvis
Whitted. "Tonight wus only the second
time Carr pitched and he had great
control."

PORT ORANOC
Todd lingo i i
bobby W.ech cf
Kirk Mifen.lf
Robert r linehun. 2b
T orr Abod to
Chip Thomei.c
hr.an Adda’f ph c
Donmt Klem, rf
Raymond Budd.rf
Tommy John von ph rf

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Molly Hill

Port Orenge

Sanford's stocky right-hander gave up
four earned runs, while spacing out seven
hits and striking out 10 in going the

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SANFORD

la rr y Thomat rf
Bryan Drbose.rf
BruceFrenkhatS
G tenlen drtii.cf
Donald Grayson.lb
Aundra W illiam iJb
Kevm Smith. 2b
Phil Harm ,2b
William Cerr.p
F red M.her.lb
M *r Carnet on 1b
Lee Fredericks
SleveOenms.lt
T her on logons. If
Tefels
DAY IO N A BEACH
Chris Wood If
Ionia Harvty.ct
Tim Smtfh.c.
Dw*yn« Hail.1b
M.ke lynch.p ss
Scoff F osier.ss 2b
V fcr Ranh rf
Rod Williams.2b
Frans Freeman.p
Richard John.lb
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SSO J00 2— IS
Daytona Beach
100 202 0 S
Gama nvnning RRI Nona
l Carr. Millar. A Williams. John 2. Smith,
Freeman. Foster LO B — Sanford » D.ylon*
B#*ch 2 IB - Franklm, F i M t f i a J i s Landrass S B -Th o m a s. Franklin, l»n d r»* ».
Grayson# 4. K Smith. IlirrtV M .ll.r 7.
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T Smlin 7
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SANFORD
Carr (W i

IF H E II
7 7 S S

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O A YTO N A BEACH
IP M R CR SB SO
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9 0 S
2 4 0
Freeman
I IB 10
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lynch faced S batten m the tin t inning

Altamonte Rides A ' Train
Laszoic To Division Title
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
None of the Altamonte Springs Major
league (9-12-yrars-oldi all-stars were
around when Duke Ellington was
strutting his stuff, but the fate, great
"Big Band" leader would have been
proud of Manager Gene Lctterio'a squad
Monday night tn Dr land.

ductor of Monday nighl'a symphony.
The stylish right-hander turned In a
virtuoso performance with It strikeouts.
Just two intentional walks, while limiting
Eustis to only three singles.
"He got stronger after the rain delay,"
pointed out l&gt;eUerio about a 65-minute
interm ission which cam e when
Altamonte was Just three outs away from
a completed game and holding a 44) lead.

Altamonte worked out one of
Ellington's favorite pieces — 'Take The
But the delay seemed to hamper Eustis
"A"Tram —enroule to a KWwhltcwash more than U tterio's crew as Eustis
of Eustis (or the District 4, Division 1 switched pitchers Just prior to the
championship at Bill Page Field.
showers, although the home team was a
Altamonte will play the winner of victim of a shower of hits after the field
tonight’s Winter Garden-Apopka winner was repaired.
of Division I tn Ocoee. Last night, Winter
Altamonte squeezed two runs out of
Garden turned back Apopka. 6-1 to force
starting pitcher Jay Wataon tn the second
tonight's rubber match.
Inning. Center-fielder Steve Shaker
Thursday, Lriterio’s crew will need
See ALTAMONTE, Page (A
just one victory over the eventual winner
AB R M Bl
since Altamonte S ' undefeated. The a l t a m o n t s m a j o r s
12 1 0
. l.t l.r K L 7b
Division 11 survivor will have to beat VB r»n
r,t M .rtn .ll It
Altamonte twice. The victor advances to Jim m y Foe. 1b
1 1
the Sectional Tournament which begins Milt Schmit. 2b si
S endyHovif.il
0 0
in Ocoee Tuesday, July 3 .
Anthony "A" laszaic was the con­

's

Ryan lie It, If

Todd D ttry.M

Neel Harris. 1b In
;«tf M&lt; Gf«ln. rt
Bruce Car Non. ph
Gary Nuts, rf
Anfhonr k i u i n . p
Onn llr .t , t
Sieve Snasar, cf
TO TALS

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Mark Hill. 7b ss
R «»» Ettrng.r, lb 7b
Dave Wesfgate. ss p
J*r
'von. p ID
O a rrfllD .v lt. rl
Brron Longford, t
Aaron Rebel, ph
HobbrSlrong.il
John Michael, ph
Jimmy Curry. lb
R.cnordCurry, if
TO TALS
Alt.m oot. M ,| ,r ,
Ewifis Meiers

Gemt winning R B I - nont
E
Marshall. F o i. Westgate OP
nont
LOB
Alfemonft S. E u ifii 1 2B - le tter*.
S&lt;hm.| MR
Betty. H a rm SB - letter.©.
Hill. R Curry 2 SF
Harrtt WP
W iHon 2
LP
Westgate J P B - Langford 2
A LTA M O N TE

named in honor of the long-time publisher of the
Sporting News
"In all my years ot covering sports, the one
Assignment that gave me the most pleasure was
being on hand (or induction of those players going
into the Hall of Fam e," said Richman. "I'd sit out
there tn the audience listening to the players speak
and my eyes would start tearing while I was taking
notes. That was because 1 had seen most of these
fellows play, most of them were personal friends
and I knew how much this meant to them.
"My selection means the same thing to me. My
first reaction is that I can think of many other

mm

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A happy Altamonte Major League all-star team lei* everybody in Del.and know
who is nuin her one after grabbing the Division II title Monday night.

Sanford

323-3811

D O N ’T BECOME
SHIFTLESS

writers who deserve II far more than I do, and my
second reaction ts that no one will ever cherish this
award more than l will."
Bom in New York on Jan. 29,1922, lUrhman was a
minorleague ballplayer before joining then-United
Press fresh from the Army In 1944 He developed a
reputation as a meticulous and articulate reporter
and toon began writing a series of esdusives that
made him nationally famous.
Richman won the National Headliner's Award for
consistently outstanding sporti writing In 1957 and
was nominated for Pulitzer ITtzes tn 1957 and 1961.

Transmission Service

Altamonte Seniors
Batter Eustis, 12-7

L IF E T IM E G U A R A N TE E

choici

IB SO

0 2 II

IP H R ER BB SO
)2 1 4 2 A 4
21 A A A 1 4

EUSTIS
Wat ion
Westgate

&gt;r DRUM BRAKE SPECIAL
•«

IF

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l *war

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M

002 21S-I0 a 2
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Richman N am ed To Hall O f Fame

NEW YORK lUPI) - Milton Hichman, sports
editor and columnist for United Press International,
has been elected to the writers' wing of the Baseball
Hall of Fame at Cooperstowm. N.Y.
Richman, 59, will be honored at Hall of Fame
induction ceremonies Aug. 2 along with former
Associated Press sports writer Joe Reichler
Other sports writer* already enshrined include
Ring U rdner, Grantland Rice, Damon Runyon,
Heywood Broun, Dan Daniel, Bed Smith, John
Carmichael, John Kleman. Warren Brown, Frank
Graham and Dick Young. Richman will receive the
J.G. Taylor Spink Award, initiated in 1962 and

m

4
0
0
0
0
2
0
2

^
O
2
|

Scott Underwood rapped out four hits and Greg Shatto added
three mare as the Altamonte Senior iQ-ftars battered Eustis,
11-7 to force a one-game showdown tn the District It, Division
II Senior league Tournament at Eustis Monday night.
husus and Aiunmulc mjuaJc off tonight at 3 trtih Manager
Russ Whittington going with ace left-hander Craig Bolton.
Eustis will probably counter with Its best, Todd Auckland.
Eustis seized a 2-0, (lrst-lnning lead Monday, but Altamonte
pushed Across three tn the bottom of the Inning to take the
edge. Another Eustis tally Ued matters in the second, before
Altamonte went ahead for good with Its second three-spot tn
the second.
Two of Underwood's strokes went for doubles as the former
Punt, Pass and Kick champ scored two runs. Shatto added two
doubles and a single to the attack as the Seniors used a fourrun fifth inning to pul the game out of reach.
Mark Cochran scattered five hits to pick up the victory. The
hard-throwing right-hander whiffed nine Eustis Niters and
walked seven. Cochran also added two stifles.
"Mark kind or ran out of gas tn the seventh," said assistant
coach Rodney Metz Sr. about a Eustis four-run splurge. “ But
he coasted in from there." - SAM COOK

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SANFORD

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322-2821

�* ft
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lA-Evening Herald, Sanlord. FI

* * ►

Tuesday. J uly 11, leu f “ '

C

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Posey Sets Seminole Football
Gym M ee tin g For W ednesday

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SANFORD
PHONE

321-0120

Continued from 5A
opened the frame with a walk and moved to second when
shortstop Dave Wcslgute kicked Sliane te tte r i-l ground ' ill
Shaker had moved to third on a wild pitch prior to I citerio
grounder and Sfuine easily stole second base in tfw first pitch
to Bret Marshall Moments later Marshall was called on
strikes as was third baseman Mike Schmit, but not before I- -ih
Shaker and la-ttcrto scored with head-first dives on uiM pitches.

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Despite being held hitless by Kustls, Altamonte cuimr amled
a 30 edge going into tfvetopof the fourth Inning. After two were
oul, l-axraic helped his own rsuse by working Watson for he
fifth walk.

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illainontr'K Dan Beats has a "uml reason to
mile. The miliil catcher belted a iwo-ruu huine
un Monday night at Del.ami to help Altamonte
rop Fusil* DM) fur the Division II title.

THISW
EEK
Uceatad A Insured

CARPETDOCTORS339-4564

l'Jfi5 by his father,
Wallace I). McCatlcy
and has been n family
operation ever since.
Hilly gained his ex­
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A lifelong resident of
Sanford,
Billy
graduated from the
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College.
Ace Auto Hadiator
has Inland equipment,
including the Flo-test
machine, m aking it

passible to service
large and
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The shop is open
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Friday and from 8
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Westgsle bore down, however, to itrlkr
Weslgsle
strike out
oul Jeff Merit Hi
and Lasralc to retire the side.
In the sixth inning though, Altamonte gave Wrstgste another
belting around the field. Again, alter two outs were sccurn III pesky lelteriu ripped a double down the right-field lint- i \
lined a shot to left with lettcrio stopping at third base
Schmit, hitting tike his namesake, crashed an opponto-field
double to left which scored Fox. After a walk lo lisle landed
the bases, te tlrrlo slipped home on a passed ball.
Ilsrris then chased everybody home with a three-run blast
over Uie ccntcr-Iicld barrier. Fur the tall Inileldor, It «a-. nn
batted In number two, three and (uur tor the cvrntnr
"A” Train l-asratc, meanwhile, was getting strw v T ,
something la-tlerio credits to a rigid pitching program which
calls lor his pitchers to throw a set ol SO pitches a day
"it's something I picked up si Hollins College where we work
out," said l-elterlu about his Boyd Collie, Tars' baseball torn h,
Influence.
Not to mention Duke Ellington and Altamonte'-- "A" Train,
right Gene?

Call 322-2611 U m l

E v en in g Herald
H erald A dvertiser

Dinger Sigm li it Pinchtf Nirvts
i HlMMJws
t tWtiCuOSinning
' Oeti Pi n
i lone Baca P»«
I SwjijlJt'f PjrHi
Hip Pun,
Pam Do*n Ltgi

Valone’s ripped the Carpetbaggers, 11-3 Monday
night In Women's softball action at Summerset P irk in
Casselberry.
In other games, the Misfits dropped Foley’s Follle ,
IM and Power Drill crushed Area 1 ,15-1
Men's action will be on tap Wednesday and T? raday.

letterio's words proved true is detenstvc replacement
Jlituny Fox dropped an expert bunt that rolled dead dow n tli
third-bast
third-base line to open the (UUi inning.
Schmit walked and Hyan title beat out a roller to the Hurd
tmxmnii when Km distracted turn by darting down the Uiltd
bate line With the bases tilled, Neal Harris mmrtied a liner to
right field which scored Fox (or a 5-0 advantage.

Prepared by Advertising Dept, ol

FREE S P IN A L E X A M IN A T I O N

Valone's Rips Carpetbaggers

That brought a sprinkling of rain and a pitching change Icom
Kustls. Westgate moved in from shortstop with the downt*)u
and Altamonte waited — Just three outs from the title
"I wouldn't have done that," mused letterio a l-u t lluKustls change. "We krvjcked lhat kid (Westgatri all o\,-r n &lt;
field last time and the other guy (Watson) was giving us s- nw
trouble with his sldeann delivery.''

Business
Review
A D V E R T IS IN G

The Seminole varsity and Junior varsity football
teams will hold an Important meeting Wednesday ut fl
p.m. In Uie Seminole High School gymnasium.
"It’s very Important that everyone attends be- auz&lt;
we hate to get same paper work out ol the way and got
ready lor our start In three weeks," said Posey.
The Seminole athletic director also announced dial
assistant track coach Nate Perkins will handle the
girls’ cross country team and Ted Trombus* will
handle the boys. Trombose will also assist in track

Catclier Dan Beaty then ripped Altamonte's first hit ,i Li,
one—on the line over the right-field fence fur a lao-run hot 1i r
and a 1-0 advantage.

's

Don't 0tl*v. ilari yeur id

in tht M il illlN....

John's Sew 'N '-V oc
Clea-i^ Oil, Adjust Your Sowing
Machine Or Vacuum Geuner
FRECM PAIR OF SCISSORS SHARPENED FREEI
A *21.50
Sewing Machine
Valuo
IM

A M 9J0
Vacuum Geaner
Value

(Tift ft

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M**#r WtfUft

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Coll; 322-2611

ACCIDENT or INJURY
Da you Hove A CCium?
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• N O RECOVERY, N O FEE

Oftftft Heel »M F h 4

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111 S, MAGNOLIA A V E N U E -SANFORD-111 U n

n a w . NEW YORK AVENUE - DtLand — IJA0900

GUARANTEED ON SALES, SERVICE i SUPPLIES!
TRADES ACCEPTED-FINANCING AVAILABLE
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tw w x s u m w u o J

WALLACE W. HARDY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Designated Pergonal Injury And
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I l l N. Eola Dr.
Orlando, FI. » M !

PHONE

42S6134

�Business
Review

Evening Hertild

OWN FOR LESS
THAN RENT

• PUT YOU#

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MON F R I.t4 4 .S A T. IAS, SUN t l

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25% to 50% off

O viedo Edges
Altam onte
Mark Hofmann’* squeeze bunt brought home Craig Duncan
with the winning run Monday night as Oviedo upended
Altamonte AAA in deadlock ihe District 4, Division 111 J-yearold series at one game apiece at Eustis.
Altamonte Manager Vance Ambrose will sent! a te righthander Kenny UuipdeUlne after the Diviaion 11 Ttlle tonlghl at
Eustis at 6. Oviedo will probably counter with Duncan.
Chapdolotnc shut out Oviedo on four hi Li, 7-0. He struck out
eight. Duncan was the loser, but some shaky fielding, (our
walks and three wild pitches led to lm demise.
Monday, however, Oviedo’s Terry Gammons was the
b.ggest pain in Altamonte’s attempt to wrap up the division. In
the fifth inning, with Altamonte holding a 1-0 edge, Gammons
singled and stole second base.
The swift Jamestown resident moved to third on a passed
ball and then cruised home on a bunt by Handy Ferguson.
“He’S (Gammons) really going to be a good one," said
Ambrose.
Altamonte had seired a 1-0 lead In the top half of the inning.
Kyle Brew bilker walked and stole second. P.J. Scaletta then
natled a pitch to rtght field, chasing home Brewhaker.
Dave Wood picked up the victor for Oviedo He allowed just
two hits (Chapdelatne got the other one in the first Inning |,
walked ihree and struck out three,
David Drazen suifered l)ie loss, despite allowing Gammons'
two safeties. Drazen walked three and struck out five.
Altamonte went down tn order in the seventh Inning.
'T here was absolutely no hitting," said Ambrose about Un­
ban game which was delayed 30 minutes after three innings by
rain. '‘H ie toys looked a little flat, but I guess you could say
that for them too."

OPEN TUES. THRU SAT. 10-4

Altamonte 000 010 0—1 2 2
Oviedo
OOOOUx-1 2 2
WP - Wood, I.P - Drazen

s m s s v w m v re m n ttv a s s ro w tm A W w

&amp; PAINT
SUPPLIES

PAINT
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Ill MAGNOLIA

For this low price they will adjust tension (top
and bottom&gt;, adjust motor belt, inspect motor
wiring, oil the machine completely, clean hook
and feed assembly, check wiring to controls and
machine liming on your sewing machine On the
vacuum cleaner they will clean, oil and adjust the
agitator, wheels and height control, and check the
belt, bag housing, motor and brushes
John’s Sew N’ Vac, located at 111 S. Magnolia
Ave., Sanford and 148 W. New York Ave. DeLand.
will observe the first anniversary rl its Sanford
store in August.
A family business, it is owned and operated byJohn A. McCartney, who has more than 20 years
experience in sewing machine and vacuum
cleaner sales, service and repairs, and his soas,
John A. Ill and Mark A., who have grown up
learning the trade from their father.
Repairs are (nine right in the store and in most
cases one day service is provider!. They will be
glad to give you a free estimate on your sewing
-machine or vacuum cleaner repairs.
; They have original Singer parts right in the
klore and have access to all parts for sewing
machines and vacuum cleaners.
They repair all makes of vacuum cleaners and
sewing machines and repairs are guaranteed.
John's Sew- N’ Vac sells new and used vacuum
cleaners with well known and respected brand
•names such as Royal, Hoover, and Kureka and
sewing machines such as Necchi, Viking, Dial
%And Sew. and Rlccar.
Trades are accepted and financing is available.
Trade-ins are fixed up and sold as used machines.
Sewing machines are available for as low us $29.

^

Twite 9» Rite

l T ^ C O H L .O H M .H T * H O F t) |t
' . . . gii UT 14 4 . _
p u ll
oreHMO*r7««u
* « F.-«*&lt; '" • l*

wi4 o««n* »•

----

~

MADAME KATHERINE
I-A1M CAfin •CHYSIAZ IIA1I RFADING
P « » l - P r e e e n l — f u tu i*
m u m Am t o ns m i m i m h n

Preventive
m aintenance on vacuum
cleaners and sewing machines should be done at
least once a year to assure that the machines run
pfoperly and last longer," he said. Especially
in Florida where so much fine dust and sand can
be damaging Keeping them properly cleaned and
oiled can prevent costly repairs."

• HIE -LOVI • MAMHIK.I • I I V*IV&gt;
BfXN IN BUSINESS FOR 50 YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF MV HOME
HOURS SAM - 9 P.M, CIr»»el Sunday
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• Cototiomy Supplier

WASHINGTON lU Pt) —Changing the scene of the baselaill
talks from New York to Washington did not produce a set­
tlement Mnnday, but the two sides agreed to a news blackout of
further negotiations.
After meeting for more than four hours Monday, the 39(h day
of the strlkr, the players ami owners agreed to meet again at
9:30 n.m. today. Federal mediator Kenneth Moffett made Ihe
announcement with neither side speaking publicly.
Izibor Secretary Raymond J, Donovan asked the talks be
moved from New York to Washington to avoid the "goldfish
bowl atmosphere" of inedta attention. The plan (ailed when
several newspapers and radio and television stations sent
reporters and camera crews to Ihe talks, held at the Kedcrnl
Mediation and Conciliation Service, not only from New York,
but from across the country,
Donovan met for 45 minutes with Marvin Miller, executive
director of the Players Association, and player represen­
tatives, and for 35 minutes with Bay (ircbey, Uu* owners’ chief
counsel, and the American and National league presidents.
He also met with the two sides together (or about an hour.
Moffett then announced Uie news blackout at 6:10 p.m. and
said talks had recessed for the day.
"Tlw reason fur Uie blackout is the same as the reason for to
coining to Washington," Mid Moffett.

Greyhounds
Super WmtiMlf
Monday Wahl result!
lit r set - I II. D II .M

FISpumeecenl

SOS 4 40 J 40

I Cheerful C ro ro r
11 40 3 40
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4 00
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RENTALS &amp; SALES
• Whee'cheiti

Change Of Scenery
No Help To Strike

I Queen

John’s Sew N' Vac also sharpens scissors and
pinking shears
They are ope.) Monday through Friday, 9 a.in.
to 5:30p.m. and S atu rd ay s a.in. to 3 p m.

Equ pment

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41 114 44.
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74 40 14 40 5 40
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Phone (JOS) 333 IMS
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Sanford. Fla, 33771

0(141 14 44* P|! 41 34 44) &gt;114

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T

Announcing
Diane Burton Is the
new manoger of the
Lake Mary Hair Care Junction
Stop in soon and meet her

CLIP A N D CALL ■ ■ ■ * &gt;

GET YOUR
CARPET
PROFESSIONALLY
CLEANED.

By O A YN ELLE

HOSPITAL ARRANGEMENTS *4»p
WlODINOS - FUNERALS

McR@BERTS t ir e s
SINCE 1958

COMPLETE MUFFLER A N D
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MEN&amp;

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8 STYLING

i G a y n o llo 's A N T IQ U E S
HUNDREDS op item s
I T n N t iir

t il 11)1

50% O H -SKSK y

We service what we sell, and everything is
guaranteed," said John McCartney If anything
goes wrong with a machine purchased from most
discount stores it is necessary to pack it up and
semi it back to die factory. Should anything go
wrong with merchandise we sell the customer can
just bring it in with the warranty card and we will
repair it here free of charge. *

PHONE Ml SOA*
r\

SANFORD

A u sasv sn m w w sw ssM ssw sw

Johns Sew N' Vac Will
Service Machine For $5
absolutely free of ch a rg e .

A COMPLETE LINE

B onjom in M o o ro Paints
' Pon Points
C1ASS &amp; PAINT
Semiilt c o m p a n y , in c .

Mark McCartney, in the sewing niachine-vnruum c le a n e r business with Isis
father and brother, stands in front of Johns Sew \ V V ac sto re in S a n fo rd

For only $5 the trained professionals at John's
Sew N’ Vac will clean, oil. and adjust your sewing
machine (a $21.50 value) or vacuum cleaner (a
$19.50 value) plus sharpen one pair of scissors

Tueidey. July 31. 1111—&gt;A

M OBILE H O M E M O D E L S O N D ISPLAY

BUSINESS ON THE MOVE '

A D V E R T IS IN G

Evening Herald. Senlord, FI.

CO M PAR E THESE F E A TU R E S

Caff 322-2611 [low!

Herald A d vertiser

i72» p t ^ m l

LOTS

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Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

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■ STANLEY STEEMER ■
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The carpet cleaning company
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400 S. Volusia
Orange City

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* 4f 0

+

Tuesday. July 11. Itll

L a k e M a r y O fficia ls P o n d e r
26 Percent T a x In cre ase
As expected, lak e Mary residents road was dedicated to the maintained by
probably will see their property tax bills the county several years prior to Lake
rise slightly next year.
Mary's incorporation as a city in 1973.
The lak e Mary City Council ten­
City M anager Phil Kulbes said
tatively approved a I t percent tax in­ documents he has uncovered indicate the
crease Thursday night
county took over Evansdale Road on
A fto-rmll tax rate, tentatively was March 30, 1971. "Then, when the d ty
approved (or a $756 *93 budget (or the Incorporated, we assumed responsibility
1981-82 (iscal year, which begins on Oct. (or the street," he said.
The council gave Massey until Aug. t to
1. That is a one mill increase over the
current rale o( 3.8$. A mill is tl per 11,000 sort out the ownership question.
Under a proposed formula for paving
of assessed taxable property value
The council also scheduled a final and drainage along 3,000 feet of Evan­
hearing on the city's millage rate and sdale Road, the city would pay IS percent
proposed budget (or Sept. 24 The current of the 1105.000 cost of the project
Property owners along the road would
city budget is $645,337
The tax increase may be necessitated pay about 7S percent. Owners of property
by Inllation and a loss o( more than not along the road, but who would benefit
$30,000 due to Increased homestead from the work, would pay 10 percent of
exemptions, according to Mayor Walt the cost.
— Tabled a motion which would pave
Sorenson.
In other action Thursday, the council: the way for takeover of The Forest's
— Postponed a decision on the long- utility system. The matter will be con­
awaited Evansdale Road paving and sidered again at the council's Aug. 6
draining project because no one is sure meeting.
The delay will allow residents of the
just who owns the road.
City Attorney Gary Massey said that mobile home community to review the
he could (ind no record of Seminole takeover plan and make recom ­
County or the city building the clay road, mendations.
The city and the utility's owner, First
likewise, Massey said the road was
never dedicated to the city by the original Federal Savings and loan Association of
Orlando, have been discussing transfer
land owner.
Several citizens who live along ol the utility system — including the
Evansdale Road, however, claimed the BO.OOO-gallan-prr-day sewage treatment

plant — since 1979.
Under the proposed plan, First Federal
will guarantee the plant for one year
after all lots In phase two of The Forest
are sold and occupied. Eighty lots
remain in phase two.
The $28,389 annual cost of running the
utility Is o p t t ’ed to be offset by fees
collected from Forest residents.
The reasoning behind m unicipal
takeover of the facility Is lower costs to
Forest residents, according to Kulbes.
"If First Federal sells the utility to a
private operator, he’ll charge those
people a lot more than the d ty would,” he
said. "A private company will be in there
for a profit We (the d ty ) just want to
break even, keep the facility up to
standard, and provide our dtlzens with a
good service."
—Was Informed by Dty Manager Phil
Kulbes that he has agreed to purchase a
new turbine water meter from the
Neptune Meter Co. of Georgia for $3,11$.
The meter should be installed by Aug. 20,
according to Kulbes.
The d ty ’s existing meter is inaccurate,
resulting in the d ty receiving more
water than is recorded on the meter. The
d ty of Sanford, which supplies Lake
Mary's water, has been pressuring the
d ty to have the meter repaired or
replaced - BRITT SMITH

New Medical Aid Plan Offered
The Florida Health Care Plan, Inc. has
been certified by the Sodal Security
Administration as a Health Maintenance
Organisation (HMO) to serve Medicare
recipients in Seminole, Volusia and
Flagler counties.
With centers in Daytona Beach and
DeLand, Florida Health Care Plan is
exploring the possibility of opening a
similar health care center in Seminole
County to make care more accessible.
"It's certainly in our plans," said Gene
Bryant, executive director.
T here a re approximately 1S,1$0
Medicare recipients in Seminole County,
according to the local Social Security
office. Most of those recipients recently
have been mailed notification about the
program offered by Florida Health Care

Plan.
The Medicare law allows certain
qualified HMO's to enter into contracts
with Medicare to provide optional health
care services to Medicare beneficiaries.
FIICP has approximately 11,300
persons enrolled, a few of whom are
residents of Seminole County, who
receive care at the Deland center.
Beneficiaries may continue to receive
the services covered by Medicare from
th ier present physician and other
providers of service as they have in the
past or they may choose to enroll In the
Florida Health Care Plan. If they enroll
In Florida Health Care Plan, they will
have a physician provided by the health
maintenance organisation and receive
other M edicare services, such a s

prescription drugs, hospital care, and
nursing home care through Florida
Health Care Plan.
If they opt to join FHCP, Medicare
recipients will pay the organisation a
monthly fixed amount to cover the costs
of the deductible, and coinsurance under
Medicare and Medicare pays directly to
the FHCP the balance for covered
Medicare services.
In the high option plan the patient is
provided with an annual physical,
routine eye and hearing checks and
preventive dental care. They can receive
up to a 30-diy supply cf prescription
drugs for $3 and up to 36$ days
hospitalisation.
Those wishing to enroll in FHCP must
have their applications approved on an
individual basis by Medicare.

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

Heritage COOKBOOK
* SECOND WEEK’S CONTEST *
Recipes for...

BREAD»» ROLLS

Government Red Tape Snarls Family
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) - The Rcmao
family found out early about government
red tape.
It snarled them before they left the
chapel at the Orlando Naval Training
Center on a warm day In May where they
went to take the oath as new American
cilixens.
Somehow their 9-year-old son lads
wasn't on the list of those being
naturalised. One of the most memorable

ntght- came to the United Stales In 1973.
days in their lives turned into
A fourth-grader at the S t Ovaries
mare.
tdatla Hotnao recalls what happened Catholic School In Orlando, he does know
as the judge read the names of the 300 about his new country. And he wants,
very badly to be part of It. He's upset
people on hand to take the oath.
“ lie called my name and my husband's about being in limbo — a boy without a
name and we stood up, but he never country,
"1 want to be an American," he says.
called Iaila' name," she said.
lads doesn't even remember his native 'T h is is my country now. I feel very bad
Portugual. He was only a year old when that I can't get my papers. It just isn't
Ids p aren ts scraped together th eir fair because a cjilid should be what he
savings, borrowed from relatives and wants to be.”

AREA DEATHS

Don't Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

Dr. Herberta Ann Leonardy Dies
Word has been received
here of the death of Dr.
Herberta Ann leonardy, cf
M iami, on June 4 while
visiting her son in Atlanta. A
former attorney, she was the
first woman from Florida
admitted to practice before
the UJ1. Supreme Court. She
practiced law in Sanford Irum
1924 to 1939. A recognised
authority on partlamentary
law, she had recently
returned from Japan, where
she had been teaching the
subject A former teacher,
she served as president of the
N ational Association of
Parliamentarians and of the
Dade County Classroom
REICHERT W.
BRUCXMANN
Reichert W. Bruckmann.
81, of 123 Hickory Tree Road,
Longwood, died Sunday. Bom
in North Bergen, N J., he
moved to Longwood from
Freehold, N.J. in 1979. He w u
an engineer, a Presbyterian
and member of Tau Beta Phi.
Survivors Include his wife,
C harlotte; son, Peter R.
Boston Lake, N.Y.: daughter,
Mrs. Charlene E. Hird,
Rumson, N .J.: brothers
Ludwig E., Tuscon. Arts.;
G ustav T., Long Branch,
N J .; five grandchildren.
Woodlawn Funeral Home,
O rlando is in charge of
arrangements.
WILLIAM M. CARROLl.
William McKinley Carroll,
83, of 322 &amp; Maple Ave..
Sanford, died Tuesday at
Seminole Memorial Hospital
Bom in UnadiUa, N.Y., he had
lived in Sanford for the past 24
y ears, moving here from
Binghamton, N.Y. He w u
re tire d from electric line
construction and was a
member of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical

•

• r to- •••

I)ll. LEONARDY
Teachers Association.
Workers.
Survivors include his son,
William C. Carroll, Sanford;
two stepdaughters, Mrs.
George
Manning,
Binghampbxi, N.Y. and Mrs.
Raymond Burchell, Triangle,
N.Y.; one sister, Mrs. Bert
Woodruff. Balnbridge, N.Y.;
10 grandchildren; 23 great­
grandchildren and five greatgreat-grandchildren.
Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanford, is in charge of
arrangements.
JOSEPH W. DOWNEY
Joseph William Downey, 74,
of 10304 Acapulca Way,
Orlando, died Sunday at
Florida Hospital. Bom in
Graham. Ky., he mmred !«
veminole County 1$ years ago
from Chicago. A pipefitter, he
w u a member of Union Local
$97 Pipefitters Plumbing and
a member of the Grapevine
Christian
Church,
Madisonville, Ky.
He is survived by his wife,
Exie C. Downey, Orlando;
son, Joel E., Winter Haven:
brother. Clyde, Madisonville,
Ky.. and three grandchildren.
Senior an Funeral Home,

She was a graduate of
Stetson U niversity Law
School and did six years
graduate study in Colombia.
She moved to Miami In 1939 to
become lib ra ria n of the
University of Miami Law
School. She taught at Ponce
de Leon and Coral Gables
high schools until the 1950a.
Dr. Leonardy, who was
president of the Woman's
d u b ol Sanford U) 1921-22, also
taught adult classes In
psychology and parliamen­
tary law a t UM and founded
the
first
all-m ale
parliamentary law group in
the nation. She was a member
of many organisations in­

cluding the Daughters of the
American Revolution, the
National Society of Huguenots
and the Florida
Bar
Association.
She authored several books
on parliamentary law and
was associate editor of the
National Association of
Parliamentarians magaxlne.
She was a member of the
Coral
Gables
United
Methodist Church.
She is survived by her son.
Dr. John G* Atlanta; two
grandchildren and three
brothers. Dr. W.C. Halhcock,
Atlanta, M.C. Halhcock, Lake
Worth, and Ted Halhcock,
Fort Myers.

Altamonte Springs, js in
charge of arrangements.

N.Y.; three grandchildren,
one great-grandchild.
Baldwin-Fair child Funeral
Home la In ch a rg a of
arrangements.

MRS. CHARLOTTE LE1INE
Mrs. Charlotte F. Lehne, 81,
of Shcoah Boulevard, Winter
Springs, died Sunday. Bom in
Massachusetts, she moved to
Central Florida from South
Yarmouth, Mass., in 1972. She
w u a housewife and an
Episcopalian.
She is survived by two sons,
C. R ichard, P lscataw ay,
N .J.; H. Theodore, F a irbanka, Alaaka; sister, Mrs.
Mary F. Parker, Jackaoovllle; brother. E rneat T.
Hiehle, Greenfield, Calif.
Cox-Parker Funeral Home,
Winter Park, la in charge of
errengements.
FLOR1AN PUSKAS
Florian Puskas, 91, of I74E.
Pine Ave., Longwood, died
Monday.
Born
in
Cxechoelaeakia, he moved to
Longwood from New York In
1982. He was a retire d
shoemaker and a Catholic.
Survivors indude his wife,
Ro m ; d au g h ters, Mra.
Frances Ligac, Longwood,
Mrs. Helen M ityas, Armcnk,

v z 7t r a
1st - 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
Weekly winners are eligible for the GRAND PRIZE
N O LIMIT TO NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED
Y O U M A Y ENTER AS M A N Y WEEKS AS YOU LIKE
Food Catagorlas Coming Up In T h a N a x t 7 Weeks O f The Contest:
S A L A D S * V E G E T A B L E S — C A S S E R O LE S — SE A FO O D
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 th a t special recipe yo u r fam ily and friends lik e so w e ll
.J t could be a w ln n erl

Funeral N o lle**

RULES:

C A R R O L L . M R . W IL L IA M
M c K lN L lV - Funeral MevIces
«tr M r. W illiam M c K in le y
Carrofl. U ol SIS S Mapla Ave*
u n io n , who di«4 Tuesday. will
h ( SI . IS a m. Thursday al
OrsmSow Funorol Homo Chop*
m m iho arv. Jonn Hinton M
I k tat mo Crtnvatton to to) few In
lit* or Honors those •(shin*
may moao com rttvlkmt to lha
* m «r Icon
Hoart
Fung
Geemksw
F u n rra t
Hom o,
Vanlore, is In disrwo
DOW NS V ,
MR.
iO S R R M
W ILLIAM — Funorol aorvKM
Mr Mr Joseph William Oarm or.
7L it tCXr A u rrn r w ar.
Orlando, oho d-od Sunday In
Orlando, will to M I p m
TN rador si Samoron Funorol
Homo chapol Buriat will to In
HifM ond M om orv O ordons.
Stmaron
Funorol
Homo.
Adamanto Sprawl. M In chorea.

No limit to number of recipes submitted but each
recipe must Include your name, address and

O A K IA W N

M ONUM ENT CO
R! 4 Bob 244 Sjnlofd

Ph 122 4212
if,

Itfleiinf
kdt \

TYPE or PR IN T your recipe giving full In­
structions for preparation, cooking time and
temperature. (Approximate number of servings
also helpful.)
Anyone can enter except Evening Herald am
ployaes and ♦heir immadlatt family.
Mall Entries fat EVENING HERALD
c-e COOKBOOK
P.O. BOX I4S7
SANFORD, FLA. 227ft

DEADLINE FOR

i*- r a ^ i S ^ k ’S ''.
• • , iA V .l a ' » " - ,r -

A panel of thrae expert |udges will review all
entries and winners will be notified at tha end of
the contest In September for a taste off" to
select the Grand Prlra winner Decision of the
judges Is final.
All rtcipes received will be published In October
(or the Evening Herald's first annual cookbook
contest.
Or Drop OH At Our Office:
200 N. FRENCH AVE.
(By the lakefront In downtown Sanford)
MON.-FRI. 9:30 5:30 - SAT. 1:30-NOON
Entries must be postmarked by midnight

Bread and Rolls...SUNDAY, JULY 26
THIRD WEEK'S CONTEST — SALAD i VEGETABLES

r y ,« « -,•

’
* ----

First, Second and Third prises will be awarded In
each of lha nine food categories. You may enter
as many of tha weekly categories as you likw.

fc fv

• -

�»

OURSELVES
Evening Mereld, Sanlenl. FI.

Belly-Button Buff Blessed
W ith Navel Intelligence
DEAR ABBY: FUNNY NAVEL wrote to say that she was
embarrassed to wear her bikini to the beach because she had a
funny-looking naveL She said, "It’s not round like a normal
belly button; If* square, and I keep a dime stuck in It to keep it
from popping out."
You told her to take the dime out of her navel and call a
plastic surgeon. Shame on you, Abby, for suggesting that she
change its natural shape!
1 hope I'm not too late because I'd like to get in touch with
this lady. I'm a singer-composer and writer with a special
interest in navels, which 1consider the most erotic part of the
human anatomy.
Unique navels have always fascinated me. In (act I am
writing a book on the subject, and have a collection of
photographs of unusual navels from all over the world. 1 would
like to photograph your correspondent's navel for my book.
Will you please send me her name -.id address1
BELLY-BUTTON BUFF
DEAR BUFF: Alas, FUNNY NAVEL requested anoojmlty.
However, you possess a rare kind ol navel Intelligence. Good
lurk with your book. 1 hope you get the oo-belly prise.
DEAR ABBY: IN THE MIDDLE asked if she should decline
invitations from her ei-husband's family to sttend their family
galheriiigs. It seems that her "ex" has rem arried and his new
wife is uncomfortable at family gatherings with Wife No. I
present, so consequently Wife No. 2 sUys away — and so does
her husband.
Abby, you told the "ex" wife that if she was Invited, It meant
she was wanted, and she should go if she wtshed. If Wife No. 2
was "uncomfortable" and stayed away, that was her problem.
While your answer sounds reasonable, let's face it, Abby,
that's not being fair to the new wife. I know.
My husband was married before, and l know how difficult it
is to become accepted by John's family. They loved John's
first wife. Marge was part of their family for 10 years, and the
fact that John and Marge have children makes it even harder
for me to compete.
The ex-wife should let go of those old family ties and give the
new wife a chance to become part of her husband's family. If
there is real affection between Wife No. 1 and her ex-husband's
family, they can invite her on occasions other than family
gatherings. Her "ex" and his new wife belong there — she
doesn't. And if Wife No. 1 is invited, knowing if she accepts
Wife No. 2 will stay away, she should have the good sense to
decline.
IN THE MIDDLE TOO
DEAR IN: You make a good point. But thla sticky situation
could be avoided If the family would refrain from Inviting
former members, unless they know for sure everyone will be
comfortable.
DEAR ABBY: Please referee:
Situation: Man makes luncheon date with woman — a new
g m rra T n

rm

n r r m i » » i r a n t » i r sT m

Tuesday, July 11, m i —IB

t o n i g h t 's t v
TUESDAY,
EVENING

BOO
•T 1 0 7 ) 0

new s

(35) anoy omcnTM

(10) SOUTHBOUNO Chula*
ntar**' Th# mueie known a*
norlano. or "Tai-M ai.' M taaturad

BOB
6:30

(T)NacHrws

acquaintance. Half an hour before meeting time, Iranian

!

telephones man and cancels lunch date in haste, offering no
explanation. She says she will call him later in the afternoon.
Man goes to lunch. As man is walking toward cashier, in walks
broken lunch date with man No. 1 Man No. 1 does not know
man No. 2. Man No. 1 greets woman with, "Why, hello there"
or something. Woman smiles and says, "Hello" or something.
Man No. 1 pays cashier and leaves.
l^ater that afternoon woman calls man No. 1 and accuses
him of being rude and Inconsiderate for not stopping to chat a
moment, a t least long enough to be introduced to man No. 2.
Man No. 1 says "N uts!" Who's right?
DEAR CURIOUS: Man No. 1. The woman is clever. She
knows that the best defense Is a good offense.

Committee Formed
To Aid Foreigners
With Increased numbers of international guests selecting
Florida as their destination, Bonnie D. Manjura. director of
Tourism Development for the Orlando Are* Chamber of
Commerce, has formed an International Hospitality Com­
mittee to meet the needs of the foreign visitor.
"L an g u ag e and signage, currency difference and
emergency medical needs are Just several areas being con­
sidered as problems the International traveler faces during
visits in the Central Florida community." comments Dick
Weaver of Sea World, chairman of the committee.
Already five subcommittees dealing with currency,
language, health and medical needs, signage and tran­
sportation as well as public awareness have been esUbliahed
to work with various sectors of the community to advance
international assistance.
Some 30-plus active member* from such companies as
banks, attractions, hotels, restaurants, shopping and en­
tertainment facilities, are donating their time to plan a special
welcome for the visitors from such areas as the United
Kingdom, Germany, la tln America, Franc* and Scandinavia
who visit the Orlando area in large numbers.
T r r r T T T r r r r iT T trir» « i r r r m

ei r r m

new s

Q ABC NEWS
(35) c a r t e r c o u n t r y
(1(1) SPOLETO I I On Tour
Tea*T A tampang ol Soomo » »arlad dance oRarmga mcMda* th# lar
Lubomcn Dane* Company th*
North Caroana Dane* Thaatr* and
th* Nathan apaciacuiar Dane*
CaNOranon

J U S T C U R IO U S

r i ir r r r r \

IT'S BACK

6:3 5
Q ( IT ) THAT GIRL
7:00
■ (IINCWS
X o p m m a q a a n c pouc* «no
Yob' Sanaa to prapar* amptor***
tor raal rotaarw*. laa* a too* at th*
Shrtnar a CRPpM Chad, an i Moaprtat. Slav* Canay m*»a* toy boat*,
trw Snaddt on putting Am bae* M e
a mamag*. Und* Ham* mart* th*
anoant gardana ol Manco City
® Q JOKER S WHO
f t (35) b a r n e y m il l e r
tD (10) a i a c n o i / l e h r e r
report

6:30
O FLO
®
O
LAVERNE 4 SHIRLEY
lann, and Sgiaggy lamaau#
about *hat Ha *oMd b* ka* il may
aar* lAant mon* liar* |R|q

5:45
0 ( 1 7 ) WORLD AT U R G E (WED
THU)

900
O
3 ) Min s t r e e t b l u e s
Captain FunUo praata* hr* cam­
paign lo aronarala LaRu* and H*
and Banar go wdarcoyar a* aoman lo nab I rapial |R)
X O MY OLD MAN Anal, McN.
end and Warran Oala* liar m th*
ttory d a taan agar and har Doan
and-eut hdi* tramar talhar aho
art rournad ahar • K y a t , aaparatwn (R1
®
O
THREE S COMPANY A
aaahhy man baccmaa obaatiad
arth maang lh* raiuclant Cindy la*
bnd* tRig
Q ) (10) NOVA Th* Aaiarcad And
Th* Dmoaad ' A radical naa thaory
*a to ah, th* dmoaaor* d«ad out
ahar ISO miWon j i m ol tuccaaaAil
donknanc* it aiammad |R)Q

555
O ' T d a il y d e v o t io n a l
(71 O DAILY WORD

930
® a r r s A UViNQ Jan And* a
dirty magt/nt n har S y*a. d d
daugniar i book bag

1000
O

(D NERO WOLFE N#ro t+% •
iwca M And ITVM I— mtngFy unre­
lated n v d ir i m mrth • rruaemg
m onutoil and t l atusiv* •uthor

I")

7:05

CD Q KART TO HART WhrW on
vac at on At thaw cattle ranch. !*•
Marta become the target ol a ruthIm i land baron who m erit thee
prooert* lor Btrip mauna (R)

O (17) ALL W THE FAMILY
7:30
r r n c ta c d o u g h
! (3 S50.000 PYRAMID

0

t o

5:15
0 ( 1 7 ) RAT PATROL (THU)

X)

O (17) FA1MR KNOWS BEST

dess

Aral black haavyweight charr&lt;Non
S&gt; (10) OWCT COUNT TM I CANDOTS A H H k M avia, on aging
producad by lord Snoadon lor
CBS r&gt; IMS porVa^ng th* a,Kar­
an! *s,v paopr* daal m il growing
old n labroadcaai and updatad

(U &lt;35) INOCPtHOCNT NETWORK

fam ily f e u o

irp p s ih H o o A
CD (10) tSCIt CAVTTT

ID (10) BIU MOYERS JOURNAL
*IN NcttON On Iran ' M Moyere
n1»r«iAAS L Bruca le.ngen
tserherdt l '»ion Barry Roeen and
othert n a rrwr* of the tecent asin m Iran

7:35
a
(17) BASEBALL Richmond
Brnaart Syracua* Craal*
800
0 (3) 1060 lobo and hr* dapu
nat go undarcovar lo crach a car
than ring uamg pratty gal* *»
® 2?

w a it e r c r o n k t t f s

10:05
1030

0 (35) BACKSTAGE AT THE
GUANOOLEOPPY

H

11:00

d ) o HAPPY DATS Jenny and
m* Font art accidentally married

jig io x o N E w s
35) BENNY MILL
_ (10) THE UNBAN LEAGUES
NATIONAL CONVENTION D*Ur**
Handy anchor, covarag* d tha
day * actwtia* kom Waahaigton.

I I (35) UOVtC Th* Great Whn*
Hop*'(CM It TO) Jama* Carl J
Jan* Aiarandar Jaca

B e sse re r O n

TV Tonight

PC
0 (1 7 )

11 36
0 (17) M O W
N u w g Man
( IMS) la* Namca. Alan Bala*
12.60
a t P ITAftSXY ANO HUTCH
(T&gt; O M O W
Pans AI laa*
Wood Mano, |t*rr) Suiann*
Soma,*. Hobart Foiaortfl

BARBS

And it gets better every year!

Phil Pastoret

12:30
0 ® TOMOKAOW Ouaalt Th*
Poanfa, Smart

Nothing takes longer to
accomplish than the quick,
easy way to do something

THE SEVENTH ANNUAL
SANFORD-SEMINOLE JAYCEES

160
1:45
0 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "Tha Bualar K*alon Sto», ( ISST) DonaM O Connor.
RnondA Fleming

200
O C 9 D A A .V DEVOTIONAL

RESTAURANT SAMPLER
Containing coupons WORTH MORE THAN 1140.00
in FREE MEALS, at 20 Sanford Area Restaurants
supporting the Jaycees, and, if you ACT NOW on

Burger Chef
Gulls Galley
Famous Recipe
Courtyard R estaurant
Poppa Jays
Western Sizzlin
Cook's Corner

Colonial Room
Ye Ole Hom estead
Cafe Sorrento
M r. C's Chicken
Sobiks
Woogies Pub
Burger King

one; get one free meals at the above restaurants and ore good
until March 1, 1982. W hen sales begin this w eek, the Jaycees will
be offering this *140.00 value for only *15.95, but if you ORDER N O W
BY MAIL ONLY, you pay just ‘ 12.00. W hy not dine out for less and
support the Jaycees at the same time. Send your check a money
order for *12.00, postmarked NO LATER THAN July 27th, 1981 for
Jaycee Restouront Sampler P.O. Box, 1232, Sanford, Fla. 32771. You
may also charge your Sampler on your M C /VISA account by submitting
the following information.

WEDNESDAY

The person with a strtag
tf degrees te lark after kls
same Is bound te be an Inltal

UQftfjihQ
560
® o MARCUS WELSY. M O
(TUE-FN)

MAT

630

0

(9

ID

a l ie n

6:45
Q ) ( 1 0 l A M WEATHER
6 55
GOOO MOP NINO FLORIDA

O

®

7:00
0 ® TOOAY
X a MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
(Y o DOOO MORNING AMERICA
£[{ (351 FRANKENSTEIN JR ANO
THE IMPOSSIBLES (MON)
(I t (35) BIROMAN ANO THE
GALAXY TRIO (TUE)
U&gt; (35) SPACE GHOST / DiNO
BOV (WEOI
I t (351FANTA S IC FfKIR (THU)
I t (3 5 )HERCULO iOS|FRI)
® 110) VILLA ALEORE
705
0 ( 1 7 ) FUNTIME

&gt;

7:25
( T TOOAY IN FLORIDA
GOOO MORNING FLORIOA

p a in t in o iw e d i

ED (1 0) SOUTMBOONO (THU)
ID J 10) SAILING SAILING (FRI)
12:05
0 ( 1 7 ) FREEMAN REPORTS
12:30

YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
r r n r y a n s hope
l i t (35) FAMILY AFFAIR
(Z ) (10) THIS 010 HOUSE (MON)
EC (10) SLIM CUISINE (TUE)
t C (10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(WEOI
CD ( 101SPOLET 0 I UTHU)
ED (10) FAST FORWARD (FRQ

1:00

O 14 OATS OF OUR LIVES
m O a l l m v c h il d r e n
I p (35) m o v ie
( D (10) HERE TO m a k e m u s ic
(MON|
m (10) EVENINO AT SYMPHONY
(R irruE)
® «110)
u a d a n c e o f tw o c o u n ­
t r ie s
CHINA ANO AMERICA
(WEOI
ED (10) EVENINO AT POPS |R)
(THU)
ED (101 JAMES UCHENCRS
WORLD (FRI)
105
0 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE

730

(D

1200
0 I I CARO SHARKS
J O ’ ONEW S
ifV (35) THE WORLD OF PEOPLE
QD (10) COOK IN' CAJUN (MON)
® (10) ROMAONOLTS TABLE |R)
(TU E)
ED (10) MAGIC METHOO OF OIL

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j 5 ) BANANA SPLITS
10) SESAME STREET |R)Q

600
®
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(ft) (351 FRED FUNTSTONE ANO
FWENOS
6 05
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825

6:30
TOOAY
0 0 0 0 MORNING AMERICA
GREAT SPACE COASTER
MISTER R0QER3 (R)
8 35
0 ( 1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

( J I O AS

th e

130
WORLD TURNS

200
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1 I

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ONE LIFE TO LIVE
ED | TO) FOOTSTEPS
2:30
(J O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
EZ) (10) D « K CAVETT
300
0 ® TEXAS
i j o o u io in o l ig h t
171 O GENERAL HOSPITAL
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3 05
( 0 (1 ?) FUNTIME
3:30
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ED110) OVER EASY
3 35
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9:00
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(10) SESAME STREET |R)g

965
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930
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4.00
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( 7 ) 0 MIRV ORIFFIN
35) SUPERMAN
10) SESAME STREET (R)C?

81
0

4 05
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4:30
( U (3 5 ) I DREAM OF JEANNIE
435
0 (1 7 )H A 2 E L

1 0 00
BULLSEYI
RICHARD SIMMONS
5)1 LOVE LUCY
101 MISTER ROOER3 |R)

5:00
( 9 Q HOGAN'S HEROES
35) WONOER WOMAN
(10) MISTER ROGERS
565
0 ( 1 7 ) (U ZIE ANO HARRIET

1030
Q ® BLOCKBUSTERS
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(ft (35) WCK VAN DYKE
CD ( 10) ELECTRC COMPANY (R)

530
O 14 &lt;GILUGAN S ISLAND
X O M 'A 'S 'H
&lt;T) Q NEWS
ED (10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
535
0 ( 1 7 ) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

1100
O ( 9 WHEEL OF FORTUNE

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

QQC
33

R A ID E R S o f th s
LOST ARK

2 On July 10. t i l l . It was
very hot in California How
hot t u it (In degrees
Farenhetl)? (a) 121 (b) 129
(0124
2 Mammoth Cave. Mesa
Verde. Redwood. Capital
Reef and Arches are all (a)
located la New Mexico (b)
national parks (c) Civil War
battle site*

&gt;

^M O V iE lA N PjV aay 11*11 U1 &lt;Jl*

*

TUESDAY CARLOAD
N ITE
Per car

1.75

C E N T I R F O L O O IR L S

LUNCH WAGON

ANSWERS

lt:tt

9 T 3 gq |

PUSH GORDON

W EEKLY
FURNISHED BEDROOM

MOTOR INN
(ON UK E ADA)

• M Faal Paal
I M a d Sarmc*
• M Haar Pbaa* taryiaa
• II CBaaaal CaBM T V
• Lira laiarlaiamant
I N ifM , la L*«*e*
•Fam ily Railaaraal
■HKHRcy A*ii A.aiiaai*
AI ll^ h ity Mi*h*r Rale
• Seaaial Oocaaal Oa

m* m i ,

a im

Imousfycfoe
FRIED CHICKEN

"IT'S HONEY DIPPED"
O P E N l l : M a m . . I I ».m . f leapt F rt. A Sal. C b » i » f M : * F-l
IM t French A »e .

(Hwy. 17-41)

41N . H w y. 17-tl

Ca tie berry

Seaierd
j | f ............... .......

I S i l l 1 S S S S 1 S S S I I S S S H S H I I S SS &gt; I R A * A A R A l A A j !

’^ '• • • • - • 0 1 0 0 0 0 fSA-l

*

NABBItON F0*0 M

3200 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hvy. 17- 92) Sanford

rn o n t no.-------------- ---------------------------------------7ln
zip_^----------------------------■

Ms, 11II t i l 1MJ
A U (H O W S

9CAVALIER
4s
|

AFTERNOON

Th# World Almanac

Q

No

3:45
0 (17) M O W ' Fkght To Tangwr ' (tM )| Joan Fontam*. Jack

1. Name the 11 th -cen tu ry
British poet who com posed
"Elegy W ritten In a C o u n try
C h u rch ya rd '
(a ) W illia m
W ordsw orth (b ) T h o m a s
G ra y (c ) C h risto p he r M a r ­
low*

Altogether, our Sampler contans 40 coupons of which 38 ore buy

AAe (v V IS A A ccf

2:40
® O MOW
Anchor* Aaa^h
|C1 (i*ail Gan* Ka*,. Fiana Saia-

tra

this ONE TIME OFFER, you'll SAVE *3.95 on the
regular price and still enjoy these area restaurants:
The Golden Lam b
W affle House
Cavalier Motor Inn
John's Deli
Hachem's Inn
Church's Chicken

® O NEWS

11 45
f f i ( 10) COVER TO COVER

ft* -n N£yyg
X
O THE

1 0 05
0 (1 7 ) MOW

2:10

Up to you esrs In red
tape? You're fortunate
Mott of us arc over our
heads In the stuff

605
0 ( 1 7 ) MOLLYWOOO REPORT

9.35
0 (17) I DREAM OF JEANN E

( 9 0 news

Ne, (iwrndol)n. It's sol
•elite te refer te the Senate
Sehwiy si a roegreatlonal
ndergroesd mevtmeat.

600
(T l TOOAY IN FLORIOA
( ) O THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
O SPECTRUM (TUE)
O b l a c k a w a r e n e s s (w e o i
o THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
O HEALTH FIELD (FRI)
6 SUNRISE
I L (35) JIM BAKKIR

n ig h t g a l l e r y

11:30
O
( 9 TONlQMT Mott Johnny
Caraon Ouaali Suiam* Ptaihatt*
Dr Robart Altman and Nmo tha
wngmgparrd
g i O M‘ A*a*H
(7) Q ABC: NEWS
Nrws NIQMTIINE
TA IIS OOF
F THE HAUNTED
(ft (35)) TALES

11:30
O ® P A S S W O «O P IU S
i j ) O THREE'S COMPANY (R)
® ( 10) COVER TO COVER

550
0 ( 1 7 ) WORLD AT LARGE (MON.
TUE. FRQ

a (C TO O A V IN FLORIOA
® o GOOO MORNING FLORIOA

11:05

Rob Besserer, formerly of
Sanford, and the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Besserer,
will appear on Channel 24
television tonight at 8:30 p.m.
Besserer, a dancer with the
Lar Lubovtlch Company, will
be featured in StUleto ’l l .
taken from a performance of
a ballet In Charleston, S.C.

5:30
( 9 0 SUMMER SEMESTER

i

Q(17) NEWS

uw-

520
O (17) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
(MON)

X O THE PRICE IS RlQHT
17 ) 0 THREE S COUPANY|R)
(f t (35) O lEN N ARNCTTE
® (10|STUOK)SE£

u u u u M n n n n n n n n n n n

't**

0e

00*• %1

i

�* •

l f t — E v t n &gt; n o H t r i ld , U n f o r d , F t,

T u t i d i y , J u ly 11 . I t l l

A M A H E R O F RECORD
Robrrl l Mttnmilltr. Ind A T r
Jamas R Hail.gan A rrl
Margaret V . S'i of Lol IT,
Souihtrn FI Citrus Ca Plat ol
G tn tva T r , 11b 000
Sprmgwood V-ilaga Apts Corp
10 Janal M Shifts, s g l. Un ID A
Sprm gwood Village
Condo,

MARRIAGES

J.egal Notice
F L O R ID A S TA TU T E S ITf Its
N O T IC E OF APPLICATIO N FOR
TA X D EED

•0

.
that Paul N Somer rill# or Shell*
R Somerville Hi* holder of the
follow .no ceeliHcatts host lied said
certificates for a
dead to b*
issued thereon Th* carfilical#
numbers and years of issuance,
the description of th* property,
and th* names m which if was
assessed ar* as follows
Certificate No 1441
Year ot Istuanc* ITfS
Description ol Proparly Lof 71.
Blk A. North Or land* Ranches Sk
7 PB 17. PG I)
Name m which assessed Serge
Robert F A Shlrlay Seege Wright
All ol said prep#»1y bemg ,n the
County ot Samlnol*. State of
Florida
Unless such certificate or cer
tilicaies shall b* i adeemrd *c
cording lo lew th* properly
described m such ceflilicei* or
certificales will be told lo th*
highest bidder at '»* court house
door on Ih* Irdday of August. TPBI
at il 00 A M
Dated this IRh day of Jun*. 1401
S.gnature
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr
By Theresa Macek,
Deputy Clerk
Clerk of Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
Publish Jun* N A July f, 14. 71,
let i
DE J 114
n o t ic e

is h e r e b y

g iv e n

Legal Notice

I t %

le g a l Notice

published once* week lev * period
R E S O L U T IO N NO. 441
oi Iwo 111 weeks in Ih* Evening
A R E S O L U T IO N OF TH E C ITY
O F A L T A M O N T E SPR IN GS. ' M erild. # newspaper of geeverel
circulation ,n Seminole County.
F L O R I O A . P R O V ID IN G FOR
Florida
TH E
C O N S T R U C T IO N
OF
That this resolution Shan be and
S A N IT A R Y SEW ER ON C E N TE R
become effective immediately
S T R E E T A P P R O X IM A TE L Y 701
•tom and f t iR its passage and
FEET
S O U TH
OF
MON
adoption
T G O M E R Y R O A D TO V O N
PASSED A N D A D O P TE D IMS
T O O M E R Y R O A D A NO ON
fin day of July. A O I N I
M O N T G O M E R Y ROAD FROM
A TTES T
C E N T E R S T R E E T WEST AP
Hugh W Marling Jr
P R O K IM A T E L Y S00 F E E T ANO
Mayor of th# City ol
P R O V ID IN G
FOR
TH E
Aitam onit Springs. Florida
A S S E S S M E N T OF S E V E N T Y
Phyllis Jordan!
□ N E A N D O N E H / L F OF TH E
C&lt;ly Clerk
CO ST T H E R E O F ON A FRONT
Publish July W, 71, I N I
FOOT
ANO
AREA
BASIS
D E k Sf
A G A IN S T T H E A O J O IN IN G .
C O N TIG U O U S . BOUNOING ANO
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
A B U T T IN G
P R O P E R T IE S
Notice it hereby given dial I am
b e n e f it in g
th er efr o m ,
m
gtged
in business al ISa) 4
and
th e
r e m a in in g
F ranch A v e , Santord Semmof*
t w e n t y E ig h t
and
one
County. Florida under the he
h a l f p e r c e n t to b e p a id
h tiou ln am t of T O M 'ip A IS Y . and
for
by
th e
c it y
of
that I tnfmd to register said name
A LTAM O N TE
S P R IN G S .
with the Clerk of Circuit Court.
F L O R ID A
Semmoi* County. Florida in *c
W H E R E A S , the City Cam
cord*nee with the provisions of If*
mission ot Ih* City ol Altamonte
Fictitious Nam* Statu et. TeWit
Springs, Florida, deems ,1 ad
Section 441 04 Flonc i Statutes
v iia b l* lo construct sanitary
14S7
sewer on Center Street from
SIG Thomas fl Nutty
M ontgom ery Roed South ap
Publish July &gt;1. I L August a. IS,
p rp aim a te iy so) leal end an
IN I
Montgomery Road from Center
D E k 40
Street west epproaimelety 100 feet

28— Apts. A Houses

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o le

O rlo n d o - W in te r P a rk

322-2611_____________ 631-9993

C L A S S IF IE D D E P T .
HOURS

RATES

._ _ _ I a 5tw!r»_ _ _
Wor k ing G ir I or Co Ileg*
Vudynf io m ar* house
ie.penses Call 177 4*41

29-Rooms

flu nk A Aulorino- I If. 411 4
Alderwood S I. WS A Dor* A
I lim e
Stc a lint
Aulorino. 4 14, u r n addresi
j . v u ’ ituf dean all new iTeep ng
1 consecutive ! i m « i SOc • lint
James I Rousseau. II 95. 770
rooms. Linen and maid Serve*
7 consecutive tim es
ale
I M A M
— J 70 P M
Ail* Villa D r , Denary. A Roi.snn#
provided Avoilobi* new Call
17) 1*41 or inquu* ot 477
C w « l l n , 14 ) tarn* add
M O N D A Y thru F R I D A Y 10 consecutive tim es 77c t ling
117.700
m u E l* t. I I I , S 47, M in lm o
Palmetto Av*
S A T U R D A Y 4 Noon
47.00 M in im u m
H
Millar
A
Sons
FI
lo
Jtck
E
* I Or I A OuD, E D lell. I IS. Boa
* ) L ln *4 M in im u m
A ild tr A trl Mary A . Lol IS.
7)11 Stnl
-Apart merits
Tuskaarilia Pomi, tia.too
James Potior. 7 47 , 413 W lllh
Robrrl E Nett* X wf Barbara to
UfCumistwd
SI . S*n« . A hr ujgrt D Ellis. * 4 ).
Mark S Grych A rrl Vvonnt F ,
7411 Church I I , Sint
Lot I I , Blk 0 . Sam.no It Silts.
* loytl 0 landers. f 74, IIS Hays
1 Bdrm M » u e Home A ir, Near
11X400
Dr . S in t , A Ann* A Sm&lt;or&gt;. * If.
Pin*br**t* 414)
ViCO Inc Joseph F Bad to
i l l Belh Dr Stnl
E
d
w
.n
G
Brown,ng
X
wf
Alii*
W
.
I Bdrm Ap! Downtown 4115,
Anihonr J Robmoon, 1 Wl 1104
Lol 4 . Blk 6 F i . r . a , C o n .
W lllh S I. Stnl . A JQ*n M
Dap 111 S97I
1104.500
Hoimtt, 1 Si. stm t tad
Api for rent, unlurn 1 bdrm. I
IO C D I Aquarius land C o . Inc
itc k E H in t. S it . B«&gt; 7704. L »
lo Anthony Julano A rrl Janet,
B. A C. 4)00 mo « 4100 s k .
V tr y A Oonni A Lawrence. I 41,
_ l % ^ l p V t o n t e d _ ____
4- Persona h
lots I I A II. Blk 77. Sanlando T n t
m i i 74
stm t tad
Suburb
Baairlilul,
Alt
Sac,
1100
D tn itl J Magee. 1 44 . 441
Santord. adults, no p«it. I bdrm.
G M Eubanks, tiai trust*#* to
Morses R d . Mild , A J t n r l J
interested m a refined lady,
Full and p«rt Um* Aid* for
*11 tlK triC appliances, air,
Santord Ot God. Inc . Lol SI. FI
Wilson. 7 If. stm t odd
retired, widow or spinster. «
Mom*
Health
Agency
Must
S700 mo ))&gt; 4014
Land A Coloniittton Co Addn,
In n e r * 0 Polek. 111 . 407 Stn
lal* 50'S or mid ad’s A fun pal
havt own car and fflepMone
1100
M tr it A r t .AS. A M ary J D o tr. I
lo r d in ne rs, theaters, art,
Sfm lnol*
and
Southwest
I Bdrm Apis Irom S77S 7 X )
11. stm t tad
current events, so forth i m *
Wrencs Horn* Inc to Phillip M
Votvtui Counties Fo* appoint
Bdrm * to avail Pool, tennis
George 0 Roitnd. 17 74. M l
retired CRA Writ* 4 LW, P O
Tail, Lot r ) 4. Wrmwood Un S. itn
tourf 17) 4*70
mffil Call m 0«OO Equal Op
t i k i Merkhem Rd . S tn l . A
ftok N l , Long wood, F L 1)710
Addn. 14) 100
port unit ir Employer
LA K E J E N N IE A P IS . I. I T A 7
Lindt H Smith. 1144 , 1)17 Park
Samuel ItH t it
10 Equity
Bdrm on Lake Jenm* in
A r t . Stnl
Realty me . Un 14 Sandy Cove,
"lon ely' W rite Companiontkp
Santord Pool. f K
room,
Handyman, general main
M ichtrl J 0 *l*ti&lt;*. 4 44. 4111 S
1100
D ating S ervice, P O 777.
outdoor B B Q. lennit courts A
tenanee. carpenter, alio part
Ofltndo O r , Stnl A S tn d rt L
Aubuendal*. Florid*. 7)417 All
Equity Reilly Inc &gt;o Hamid*
disposals
Walk
la
shopping
time plum ber, electrician,
Paulson. 141 . 141 , s tm t td d
Ptrblanl A *1 Shaukal All. Un )4
R E S O L U T IO N NO tti
Adults only Sorry no pert
W H E R E A S , all imprgvtmants
carpet man 1 auto mechanic
Crug It Thurston. 4 17. 114
Sandy Coyt. &gt;74100
A R E S O L U T IO N OF T H E CITY
______ _
11)0747
shall be don* in compliance with
Top pay m san
LongwoodMiHsRo . LW . A Laura
W H Y BE L O N E L V T writ* "Get
Evelyn G Kurban, sgl lo John
OF
A
L
T
A
M
O
N
T
E
SPRINGS.
th* plans, spaclllcaliens and
0 llotllt. I 17. S tm t tdd
A M a t r ’ Dating Service All
FRO M SIfO
D eluca A *t Muriel, Lot I. En
F
L
O
R
IO
A
.
F
IX
IN
G
A
TIM
E
ANO
estimates on 111# with Hit City
ASSEM BLY M E C H S4 SO Hr Up
cntrlts D Olstn. 111 . f i l l
ages p O Boi 4071. Clear
I Bedroom A p is A vailable.
chanted Manor. 177.SCO
P L A C E IN W H IC H TH E O W NER !
Clerk of the City ot Altamonte
Will Tra-n
Snown by Appl Only ) ) ) I M Branch Mood IN . i Orl A Amts
water, fi usii
Samuel fell etc to Equity
OF
P R O P ER TY
TO
BE
Springs. Florida, which sad plans,
Super
opportunity
May*
own
M D unittry, 141 . t i l l Alveron
Realty Inc . Un IN . Sandy Co**.
N O T IC E OF SH E R IFF'S SALE
ASSESSED FOR SPECIAL IN
specifications and asllmalas
M dion vill* • T r » c » ■ Aprs
hand
toots
Lonely?
W
ril*
"Bringing
People
A r t . Orl
&gt;100
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
S T A L L A T I O N O F S A N IT A R Y
Spacious, modern 1 Bdrm. I
(onslitufe Ih* plans, specifications
Together Oeling Service!" All
Arthur 0 Bollock. 11 St. I l l I
aaa em plo ym en t
Ihal by virtu* ot that certain Writ
1 E W E R S E R V IN G C E R T A IN
and estimates lor til said un
Bain apt C e rp tle d , k il
ages 4 Senior Citijent P O
Equity Rea iy Inc lo Joseph a
O rltn d o O r. A hr m a t S Schmtnl.
ot Eaeculion issued out ot and
P R O P E R T I E S ON C E N T E R
L
O
W
E
S
T
F
E
E
TE
R
M
S
equipped.
CM 1 A
Near
provemems
1411. Winter Haven. Fla » M 9
F irmanl. sgi A Linda M Viltar.
7 Sf. stm t tdd
under Ih* seal al ih* Circuit Court
S T R E E T A N O M O NTGO M ER Y
HIT F rA u h Aye
133 1174
hotpHal A lake Adults, no
NOW. TH E R E F O R E . BE IT
s g l. Un DO. Sandy Covt, Sat,000
Cntrlts D Cook. II 11. 1404
ol Sem inert* County. Florid*, upon
r
o
a
d
i
n
t
h
e
c
i
t
y
o
f
R E S O L V E D DV T H E C I I V
pels *1370 i n 4151
CO M PA T A D A TE
Sue S Parker (m arr I A Be term
Dtrollts A r t . Stnl . A Wendy M
a hnal lodgement rendered m th*
A LTA M O N TE
S P R IN G S .
COM M ISSION OF TH E C ITY
Take I minute lo listen lo
MAINTENANCE
L Parker (marr I to Peninsular
♦lift. 14 40. 411 C t t tim t D r . Stnl
* " ie » Country living? 3 Bdrm
aforesaid court on the 3rd day ol
O F A L T A M O N T E s p r i n g s , F L O R ID A . OR A N Y O TH E R
recorded
message
1
TO)
f&gt;&gt;
FI Oislr Council Assemblies ol F e b ru a ry. A 0
A .Hit J Fishrr, 441 , 7104 W
Aplr
O lym p ic I I
Peal.
t i l l , in that
PERSONS
IN T E R E S T E D
F L O R IO A . AS FOLLOWS
49 S1 WTT or write Compel A
God, Inc., commencing al N E cor
lllh S I , S im . A Em m a L
Witnandeak Villa** Open I L
T H E R E IN M AY A PPEAR ANO
certain cast entitled William C.
Thai ih* Cily Commission of Ih*
Dal# P O Bov i l l ) Summer
ol
It
c
)
7
)
l
13
ate
.
S
1
S.OOO
Moptmi, 14 ), u rn * tdd
S*iHed ma»niefv*nce mechanic
77)3414.
Spivay pi*,ntitl, n
jamas C
BE
HEARD
AS
TO
TH E
C ily ol A lttm onl* Springs.
villa. S. C 7144)
Raymond P C M ilitld A w! Graveley, etc , at al. Defendant,
Leopold Small. II 17. 171 P ilm
capable ot welding, machine
P R O P R IE T Y
ANO
AD
Florida, deems il tdrisablt »s e
c ttx u r y
a p a r tm e n t^
M yra lo Jarama F DedencA A wl which atortsaid Writ ol E iK td io n
Springs D r . AS. A S h irlrr A
setup
and
repair,
electrical
A
v is a b il it y o f m a k in g such
Lonely Christian Singles
necessary public improvement to
F am ily A Adults section
Dons L . lo l IM. Mowed Eslalts, was delivered to me as Sheriff ot
Morrison. 7 IS 171 Palm Strings
airline worA M ult be able to
im p r o v e m e n t s , as to th e
construct sanitary sewers in
Meet Chfltilen Singles m your
Pools
id*
7
Sdrms Master's
47
X
400
Or . AS
maintain tools and tivtures for
cost t h e r e o f , th e m anner
Saminola County, Florida, and I
Center Street from Montgomery
ore* W rit# Southern Christian
Chvt Apis 17) 7400 Open on
U 4 Home Corp lo Robrrl A
Brian r E m n rrt, It 14. I l l
production line equipment
have levied upon the totlowing
of
p a ym en t
ANO
th e
Road South approalmalely ) 0) feet
Singles Club. P O Boi I I ) )
.eekanav
Ditch A wl Ton,I* L . Lot IT,
Only those looking tor a long
Jupitrr Wy , CD A Trrrs * L R
A M O U N T ASSESSED AGAINST
describee, property owned by
and on Montgomery Road from
Summerville, S C 1444) or
Foiwood Phas* III. First Addn ,
M jrm e r's V illa g to n la k * Ada l
term opportunity with ad
Gtsptr. 111. 141 N Pori Dr . i r r
EACH P R O P ER TY
AS IM
Estate of Nora Bessia Gravely,
Center Street west apprarimalely
coll I 90 ) 471 WS0 14 hrt
470.000
bdrm Irom I 71X 7 bdrm Irom
vancement possibilities need
Richard W Klmbro. 7 47. HI 7.
said property being located in
proved
W0 feel
G
ilb
trl
4
Blake.
Ind
A
T
r
to
Bor 141 A. Mild , A O* Dor an S
17ka located 17 41 lu ll South
apply Reply to Boi No IQS, C
W H E R E A S Ih * City Commitsdn
Thai all said improvements
Samlnol* County. Florid*, more
Mika Boll! A *1 Virgit, Loft IS. 14
Roman. 7*7 1744 Mar It A r t .
ol Airport Blvd in Santord All
O
Evening
Herald.
P
O
Boa
of Ih* city et Attamonia Springs
particularly described as lollowe.
snail be done in strict compliance
S-Lost &amp; Found
A If 4 ot f w lor SR 44 Vanke*
Atop**
Adul's 1714*70
I4 SJ. Santord. F L J i m
Florid*, did by Resolution Number
On* Mobile Home, located at 41
with th* plans and spKifKallons
Lake
t
d.
1)0
000
Namon L S'Plm, 4 71. IB Lk
US deem ,| advisable lo install
Hacienda Village. ID NO HF SIS0 .
and estimates of th* cost of said
R
ich
a
rd
L
Johnson
A
wl
Loti
Cockapoo lyp* while
Monrot Ttrr . Stnl A Brenda K
Nice I b d rm tpt
sanitary svwev m Center Street
Till* No taeai)
Improvements now on til* In (he
Danielle M lo Esther M Greene and Hi* undersigned as Sheri It ol
dog. answers lo Rags
Cantor details
Rolirrlt, 110 . 1177 S B ty A r t .
South ot Montgomery Road tp
nil ife ot Ih* Cily Clerk ol Ih* Cily
im arr ). beg S U A E i l l ' ot NW Saminola County. Florida, will al
Reward
771
41))
Stnl
Jun*
Pgrtig
Really t i l 44)9
cronm
elely
)d
)
reel
lo
Mon
of Altamonte Springs, Florida,
cor ot SW '. ot H W 't Sec 7 71 10. II 00 A M on Ih* Itfh day of
Sonntt II Singitltry, 141 , 1714
Igomery Roadand on Montgomery
which sa d Mam, sptciliaitieni
run
S
100
'
i
140
'
etc
.
14
000
Santord Spoc ioul I bdrm ♦ den
Rost St, Stnl A trd irn n* L
Road Irom Center Street West
Immediate need for experienced
Auputt. A D IN I. otler lor sal*
and eslimaias ar# hereby ap
i-OrTldCar*
Jtan N Siorty, sgl to A James and Sail lo ih* highest bidder, tor
A C. cfram lc both, turn Avail,
Mr Or III 14 ). HI 7, Bo* 1 M Sam
epprov.merely MR Ittt pursuant to
proved by ih* City Commission
ffCIliC:l4ffl who has drifting
D t Hayes A » t Carolyn A , Lot IS. Cash. s u b lK l lo any and all
adults S1SS 1 441 7941
Mrrbtft L Booty. 4 44 . I l l
the
author
,
1
y
of
Chaprar
170
.
routing
and
process
writing,
and
c o n ilit u lt
Ih t
plant,
Blk C. Hirer Run, Sac One. ranting Hens, at ih* From IW ts 'l
SPUR o f t m E m o m E n t
Dr WHO A rt . AS A Vanessa V
work station layout and time
F lor id* Slatuf *». in Ih# manner as
specifications and estlmalat ot
140.000
b
a
b
y
s
i
t
t
i
n
g
Crittenden. I I 14 I If Ford S I . AS
sat forth in Resolution No 441, and
study Only those looking tor a
c o il for said proposed im
Door of Ih* Samlnol* County
Raymond N lum m y Jr A wf
j jj r ja a
Hand C Hancock. 1714 , 1911
] t Apartments Furnished
W H E R E A S , by said Resolution
tong term opportunity with
provemems. and Ih* Cily Com
Courthouse In Sanford. Florida,
M a ry L lo Vernon R Boyd A a k a tha abov# described personal
Snoshontt T r l , CB A Cynthia A
No 44X th* City Clark was in
advancement
possibilities
mission of Ih* Cily ol Altamonte
Vrrn Boyd. Lol 1) 1. W’ l ot 17). A properly
R iddlC 7 40, ft Lk Trip lfll D r .
tlructtd lo prepare an Atttstm tni
need apply Repiy to P O Boi
AA-Health* Beauty
Springs. Florid*, does hereby
Nicrfy FurNth*d 1 bdrm Garage
W 1&gt; ot 134 O P Swop* Land Co
CB
Roll in accordance with the
declare in* necessity lor con
NO IQS. C O Evening Herald.
Thai said sal# is being mad* to
apt Lakt Goldm
Retired
Plat ot Black Hammock. Sla.PoO satiety Ih* (arms ot sad Writ of
Ctrl L G.ll J r . 4 4f, 111 D S
method of assessment provided in
ttructfon of Ih* ternary sewers
Santord.FL
J
lf
f
l
coupl* preferred No p*It 171
SH AK Lk'E h e r b t a b l e t s
Laurel Builders Inc lo Charles E iK u tlo n
ConnarOrl A Tracy Wallace, 10
said Rrsoiulion No 441. and
and ih* work Inc Identel (hereto at
0774
w
e
d
e
l
i
v
e
r
CO N vTElilENCE S TO R E CASH
R r awrtrti A wf Patricia C • Lot
14 ST4 0 Georgetown Dr . CB
W M i R EAS . Ih# Cily Clerk 04 Ih*
described aforesaid at a necessary
John E Polk. ShtrHI
___________ I I ) 7*4)___________
10. Shed Grore Homes Un I,
i ERS Good salary hospital*
flobtfl A triplet!. I l l , 7104 S
C ily ol A ltam onio Springs,
public Improvement
Samlnol* County. Florida
Santord, adults, no p*(t, studio.
414.100
ration, t week pa d vacation
Pits A r t , Stnl .A N t t H Lucts.
Florid*, pursuant lo Ih* dirKdon
Thai in* total cost of said Im
Publish July II. 71 A August a. IT.
Ml electric appliances, air.
every
4
months
Now
looking
IQ C D I M A W Enterprises Inc
II—
Instructions
I I I . 140 krldtr Rd . Sam
provtmantt, including ih* cost of
ol I h t C ity Commission hat
1*41
1144 mo 77)4014
lo A lltn B Wallett A wl Ann* A , O f K 47
for eiperienced people ready
JamtS h Arthur. I 14. P 0
prepared and completed in
all labor and mettfieit. financing
to work For interview1phone
W NO- ol E US' of S 140- of M 774
Dtarrrr 0 . Osirm A M tlb t G
Assessment Roll which was
I
person or married coupl* SO
charges, cost ol plans and
lennit instruction
(M P T *
the manager at
etc . I t c 4 70 » . SUB
Rt&gt;d. f 41. stm t add
presented lo th * City Committicn
yrs or older No pets 11 SO mo
specifications, cost ol tnginatrlng
Car lified Group or Prlvolo
Airport
Blvd
i
m
i
S
I
Ih o rdort A Bbtau A wl Helen
N O T IC E OF S H E R IF F 'S tA L C
Randall tV R ic k a rd , f 40.
ot
Hi*
Cily
of
AHamont*
Springs.
v tta s« m i n i
and legal ter rices and *11 ether
lessons Children a specially
Casselberry
J lf t T lS
N O TIC E IS H ER EBY G IV E N
lo Baity F Hammtrs A wt Ban
Miami A lor A Webb. 4 At, l i f l
Florida.on July 7. i t l l, and which
(■perries tier estate or Incident lo
Doug Maiiciawski
111 n i l
Catery Ave
333 4113
dr a, lo t 7. Bik F, Lk Kathryn (hat by virtue ol Ihal certain W r.i
I Bdrm Furnished Api wllh
said Assessment Roll was ac
Function A n , Stnl
dolor mining Ih* Itetbillly
Las* More
t t i t i* i
Patio an. Srvawve* •*,**,n
o* Eaeculion tltuid out at and
Woods 1st Addn. t to.too
cvplvd and or dared Iliad with Hw
L uihrrs Ltm s. a 10, tta O llvf
pe oat wool lily *• such isntiruition
111 0171
William e raids A wt Oorothy t* under the seal at Hi* Circuit Caurt
records of Ih* City and
m reconttfucfien. oamuuslroilon
SI , 1 ilusrilla. A C m * B i i a m r ,
12-Special Notices
Case Mia p iiie n a of Santord
at
Sammol#
County,
riorld*.
upon
Mount
Carmel
Church
ot
Christ.
W H E R E A S . Under Chapter 170.
erpemes and such other repemet
I f ) . IN I Paimtlto SI . Til US*
E ip e rie n ce d p u t s maaer
SANFORD
I bdrm. air. k'dl.
a Imal Judgement rendtied *n I ha
Lot 744 Booatrlown. 1100
Florida
Statutes,
public
hewing
is
Frederick M iacobsim. I al, ft/
as may be necessary or me Want to
wanted Great epporfunities
idilinc. US on &gt;74 7700
SO CIAL S E C U R IT Y
Mount Caemaf Church of Christ alortsauf covet on Ih* IRh day ol
mandatory whareby th# owners of
the financing herein aulhomed, is
Ionian r a r h tt r . S tn l A Ruih A
Apply In person J 3J 3003SAV ON R E N TA L S R E A L TO R
fkwfitt fftnifg? r.p tft http
to Hanry Grooms ate f lustres tor March. A D IN I. mi ihal cKtain
th* proparty to be attested or any
rttim alad lo be Twelve Thousand
A ,MrS. 4 SI. Stmt td d
•vAilpbi# on cppoili PIS
Proeldenl Missionary Baptist cat* entitled. Auetlllo Arreata.
offier persons interested therein
Dollars 1117.000 001. and Iht sum
♦*-im r v 1♦ 1* 7 *.
DESK C L E R K
iJ iO M r
F u rn llM d rfllclenc v
A
u o c u IM . &gt;04 E
til
Sf
.
Plaintiff,
vs
Chaml#
Haul.
Inc.,
Church. Lot 744 BooStrtown.
may appaar before in* CHy
of money n K e n t r y lo pay for Ih*
M d . A M iry A E * tn t. I 41. 407
p lush surroundings
in Lake Mary
SftMord. M l IS 11
etc , et al. Oelendant, which
11.000
total cost of said Improvemtnl Is Commission and be heard as lo Ih*
Rosalia Or . Stnl
Will train lor auditing, chance
M l 0*SI
John Guletian Jr A wf Alica 10 atortsaid Writ ot EiKutlon was
prop rie ty and advisability ol
harrby author Iltd
Ltrrrm c t L L tv m t, 7 11, 1)10
you
can't
pass
up
18He
Ip
Wanted
delivered to m# as Sharllt ot
Robert
M
Rosamond
A
wl
Sally
making
such
improvements
and
*1
That
seventy
on*
and
on*
hall
G u ln t « tr t Or . C B
A Sally
t urn,shad apartments tor San toe
AAA EM P L O YM E N T
Saminola County. Florida, and I
H . commence *1 pt 441 17 Irom
pet cent (7! SO pattern I of the coil
lo In# coal ther eel and at lo th*
Robbins. 7 IS, s tm t add
CitHeni 111 Palmetto Av* , J.
AVON REPRESENTATI VES
h a rt levied upon the tallowing
L O W E S T F E E — TE R M S
NW cor ot 4 IM S'ol E lias ol Sec
of s t'd Improvements shell be
amount thereof to be assessed
Gary Coolty. 4 41. 1101 B'Scaynt
Cowan No phone coil*.
T M Part Tim *Carter
described
properly
owned
by
I
9
U
French
Ave
M
J
S
U
l
7i 14 )1 etc t l .700
against each properly to Im
assessed on a front loot and ere#
A n . WP A V trn tllt K Sltum
*44 S974 - C 0 HK1 ISIIrot
Cherniy Haul. Inc , s*&gt;d proparty
Aaron
O
Compton
X
wf
Carolyn
{roved
bans
agamsl
ail
loll
and
lands
pirr, 4 it, 1I 0J Kttolm * A *t . A P
Mfdicel office receptionist, tap.
10 James J Null A wt Loralla A being located In Seminole County,
NOW . T H E R E F O R E , b e I?
31A-Duplexes
adloinlng and contiguous or
Carpet M echanic ar Halpar
John M Romano. II 47. 70
F lo rid a ,
more
particularly
[preferred. Reply to Be* No
Natnan l Van Mettr. Lots B. C A
bounding and abutting upon such
R E S O L V E D B Y T H E C IT Y
wanted Na phone calls Apply
M ortt Loop. AS A M try H Lang
described as lol lows
101
c
•
Evening
Herald
P
O
D. M M lo rd s Adda Ctirut
COM M ISSION OF TH E C IT Y OF
im provem ents
or
specially
in per tan S enter d Carpal H IS .
1114. stmt add
Inventory and (auipmeot
Boi 14S3. Sanford. F L J i m
Heights 431,100
A LTA M O N TE
S P R IN G S .
benefited thereby and further
Nrw Dupiev.
Park Av*
Bral A S tg rtss. I 14 . I l l
I I R I I Double Beam infrared
Edw inG Browning A wt Allc* lo
F L O R IO A AS FOLLOW S.
itttigneled
by
in*
esttumenl
pie
I
equipped*,1chen 1)11 mo
Monigomtry Rd . A S A D oreen
Needier ratters Earn
Qua! Control Inst
William J torray A wt Kaihiaan,
I Thai a public hearing will t*
now on 111* in Ih* oltict ol list City
Call &gt;7 ) 14SO
N lundquilt. SS4 . s tm t
♦ W A N TED *
7 St a nie u Steal Vacuum Tank
money with your hobPy
Lot 74. Hik O. CamaSot Un 7.
held on July 74. It ll. *1 7 JO P M
Clerk ot th* City et AHamonie
Ton S Otr'S. 10 17. 41) Htnson
with motor - 410 gal
Call Ann 130 443S
IONGWOOD
LKfRONT
)
Retired
Senior
clliian
lo
manage
444.000
or
as
soon
inereauer
as
possibi*.
S
prings,
F
lo
rida
,
which
said
P k rn r, Stnl A Shtrl A A b ility .
1 GC O a t Chromalogracn
laniard gameroom Young Al
rm t. llOOdn. 4300 m e )34 7X70
Richard A Frank Jr A wt Viola
atsessmem plet It hereby ap
*i which lima Ih* owners ol Ih*
141. H I E Itrn S I . Stnl
I Olympus Microscopy 7 » mm
Need
E
rtra
Income
white
you
Heart. Top Physical Condition
lo Christophar V Frank A wt 14
proved by the Cily Commission ol
ixoperly lo b* assessed lor Ih*
Krlly L RIHrtlT. IS *. 7M I
SAV ON R E N TA L S R E A L TO R
cameras and II All Opnctl— T E
are at home? FS may be the
Con collect DOSi 444*154
Oonna M . W Sll 44' of N IIS ’ ol 4
nslallaiion of sanitary sawer or
Hi* City of Altamonte Springe
Chipptrrt T r l , MHd A A n t I
electronic control
answer Free details Enclose
*
10
ol
NW'a
ol
Sac
14
70
II.
4
S
.N
0
Canter
Street
south
ol
Man
Florida
I
BR. WWC, C H A . tlov*. retrig .
Iha'ti.tr. 1 ST. 1411 L tu d tr Dr .
I Microtome Thermo* Elec
stamped envelop# French
OMR* C l e r k - Mental Mann
W illiam E
Parkin* A w l
Thai twenty eight and on*hall
Igomery Road apprenmately 100
w w dryer hookup Screened
Mild
Freeimg Unit Vamalo koki Sheer
Style. Bos d ia l. Niles. Illinois
agency
local**
In
Anamonl*
M arga ra l k la W illiam C
I vet lo Montgomery Road and en
per tent I I I SO per cent I of I he cost
porch, oft street perking, dot*
Malbournt Charles, T It , 170
and Olympus Modal MA Ml
Springs
needs
responsible
and
Perkms
Irom
Sw
car
ot
4
'
y
of
Montgomery Road Irom Tamer
of said improvements Shell be paid
D fnr A rt . Stnl , A O pht L tt
10 downtown Santord Seniors
I Auto T echo,con
eager
10
Itorn
person
tot
N
W
'.
ol
4
*c
It
11
M
a
le
.
4100
Street
west
approelmalefy
400
In
i
by
in*
C
ily
of
Altemont*
Springs.
17) S7S)
Punlory. 1 14 u m t tdd
I Spec H opnotmrtar Spactronic
E.perlenced telephone solicitor
ganerol office lunci ion 1 yaar
,n accordance with Resolution
Th* Springs lo Suncrali Part
Florida
70
needed
by
loti
paced
sales
oltict work * telephone e«
narship I, Lol IX Th* 4pringt
No 44X and any other parsons
Thai it is ih* dtterminelion ol
) Stainless Steal Vacuum Tank
lose Mary )* l Rutkln SI New
orge nlia tlon
M u tt have
par lane* preferred Typing 41
Whispering Pints. 4 ec
Tw o.
Interested 1her am may appear
the City Commission Ihal all lots
ITS gal wlin motor
7 Bdrm. CHA, WWC. 4)10 Mo
im lia liv# and be able to
wpm. salary rang* I'M * 4*7?)
411400
before
Ih*
Cily
Commission
end
bo
and
lands
adislning
and
con
Lount M Monro* 4 M ich ttl
1 Stainless Sleei Vacuum Tank
assume responsibility Great
1st X lost 74) 7)44 or 74) 4M 1
Robert M Urgent A wl Diana
E
O
E
employer
Call
1
)
11411
heard
as
10
ih*
propriety
l.guous.
or
bounding
and
abulling
Dmnis Monrot. A l Mauler* name
TOO gal
Orlondo
growth potential toe a leader
e it al
n to Jamas D H edge's A wt V#ra
advisability ol making such
upon Hi* la d improve marls will
Mails
I IB M Typtw rlltr
Evening hours
Interested?
M . Lot II. Blk A. North Orl
provemenls and at lo Iht cotl
be especially benefited b« Ih* sad
I O r m Precision
Ann.t Brtdlty A i airy D
Brand new unfurnished ) bdrm,
Call 0 0 4 ) 111 M 4) I S. ask for
liter ret and at lo The manner of
Ranches. 4k 4. 1*4.000
improvements provided lor in Hitt
Samson kmg A Pacoia A
I B ad erlal Incubator Larg*
ell appliances, n r , carpet, no
Bobbi
pay men I therefor, and as la Ih*
A rt* On*. Inc to Bruca 4
t r solution: and (hat Ih* ipacial
Robrrl Pal Nickie A Mary EH m
l Autoclave S te rllliir steam
pelt. t )M mo IM 71)0
Margoi s A wf Andrt* 4 . Lot 41
amount Ihertol lo be accessed
assassmanlt la b# mad* and en
press , ss
IFurnail
Full lime HN 7 ) shift Apply
Rapiatof Windham woods. Phas*
fared agamsl all lots and lands
agoinsl each proparty so improved
Unlurn ) b d rm . com pletely
I Copy Machine w.lh paper
Paula K Btunothltr A John J
Lakevew Nuts.ng Center.
accord,ng lo Hco Aisasamem Rail
On*. 413.100
located on Center Street and
dispenser
redKoreied, new carpet. A C,
Jantl C Goldtn A J tro m t —
*1* E Ind 41 . Sanford
C IR C U IT CO UR T,
Mont gomery Road adtoining and
prepared by lit* City Clark *1 Ih* IN T H l
Robert D Rayae A wt Sutanna la
fenced yard, no pots. 4)11 e
I Stainless V *H Vacuum lank
AJBmAli
JU D IC IA L
Raymond T. Konko A wl Halers R
City of Aiiam anla Springs, ■ l O H T I I N T H
contiguous ar bounding and
SK 17) 7M )
100 gal
Shtila Mari* Gft*ton A John A
S
E
C
R
E
TA
R
Y
4175
Up
C
I
R
C
U
I
T
.
IN
A
N
D
FOR
Lot IS. Blk F. North Orl Ranches.
Florida
abutting upon such contemplated
I Cham K tl Pumps ( I St* mit i t
Nancy L tt Huggins A William
4
IM
IN
O
L
R
C
O
U
N
TY
.
FLO
R
IO
A.
T
o
p
7
«olchCo
Sac
|A.
411
NO
improvements
shall
be
made
on
a
7
Thai
Iha
CHy
Clark
ot
the
Cily
SANFORD - I bdrm. kids. pool.
sita ll
Ltfay
F R O B A T I C A 4I NO I I IM C F
Creme dele Creme ol lobs A cd
,Th* Huskey Co 10 OKCaleilna
I Larg* Automatic Sitriiuar
of Altomonto Springs. Florid*,
Irani tool and arte basts, that it lo
| I 7S down. 4710 mo 1)4 7)00
Onnlt S.ngitlon A Hugh O
1*0*. 4h or Speed writing
Conktr C rp . Lol 74. Blk C,
say. ihal in Its* preparation of Ih*
shall give ten HOI days nolle* M IN R l : I 4 T A T I OF
I Centrifuge Eairador E i k
IA V O N R E N T A L S R E A L TO R
Torty l trrollord A A illla m A
Good
with
figures
S
T
A
N
L
E
Y
W
A
Y
N
E
S
W
EEN
EY
special assmrnenf roll covering
Sweetwater Oaks Sec II. 17* 000
writing lo Ih* properly owners at
Muter
tat forth In Ih* M secernent Ron *t I* k a S T A N L E Y W S W E E N E V I
FI Rtsidtntial Com m . Inc lo
l pH Malar Electronic
Its* contemplated improvements,
AAA E M P LO YM EN T
Brenda K Roberts. Un. C. B l II.
lucts special benefits shall b*
lo Ih* lim a and plact of mo public I* k a S T A N L E Y 1W E E N E Y I
I Scale. Toledo
LO W EST F E E
TE R M S
I Par aim Matter Bath alec . t t
Wekiv* Fairw ay Tsw n h om ts,
hoaring designated harem said ( a k a S TA N S W E E N E Y )
determ ined and prorated ac
1417 French Av*
7711) 7*
Speingwood Vilt Acts to Bylly
Dereatad
I pH Meier Battery
cording td the toot Ircnltgt and
noticethoil be served by mailing o
444.700
M Scoll. Un D S C . Sprmgrrood
N O T IC E OF A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
1 Schiotj Tonometer
Treater Smith Carp to Michaal
are* basis ot Ih* retpacllv*
copy ot tom e la oocti of Iho said
village. 117, roo
n e e d a s e c o it d in c o m e ?
T M Admimtirailow of IM atitl*
I C e n trifu g e In lt r n a lie n a l
properties adloinlng and can
7 Sheehan, trustee, U n ) t
property owners ol hit or her
No le v . no k ill, m lee B,g
STA N LEY
W AYN E
Cl Meal
known oockeu OS obla ned Irom Of
tiguous or bounding and abulling
Baylree. Sat Four In c , l i t .
Sprlngweod V III
A p is
Id
movwy m spar* Mm* 77) 714*
dacoasad.
F lit
l Misc Glassware
upon
such
tm pravam tnit
Iho records of mo City Clotk et Iht S W E E N E Y ,
IQ CDI Patricia W M atwali lo
Eugtn* A Byrn*. Un
114 E.
I
F
iiher
Colony
Counter
Number
II
))4
CP.
is
pending
especially benefited by said Im
CH y ol AHamont# Springs
Elbarl O Mai well Jr . Par ol land
Sprmgwood Vllltg* 111.*00
) Drum Closers tor SS gal eng s provemenls
TW O M U S IC PO SITIO N S
F lo rid * , or Iro m such other IM Circuit Court lor Sammol*
In Sk 10 70 7) el a l . H 00
Sprmgwood VIII Apis 10 Gate*
gal
p«rt time planikt. «n d part lime
sources os Iha City Clark dtamt Count*. Florida. Probata Oivitxin
That th* City Clevk of th# CHy of
Mildred S Dickerson lo Talley
H
Champagne.
Sprm grrood
I pH Meter Metrion IV t lK in c
children's c M tr director 4 •
rrl,k bit and Ih* said CHy Clark lb* address of vRUCh it Sem,note
AttamoM* Springs, Florida, m
L Hall away A Robert T Hal
V'llagt Unit 17) A. 1)7 700
I Culture Refrigerator
hrt per **k Call Sanlando
m a ll establish proof of sold Count* CourtM ul*. Pott Otllc*
accordance with Ih* pravisw* al
lawya, Ely of SE&lt;a of N W . of
Springrrood VIII Apis Corp lo
I
Tort
Ion
Balance
Dial
0
Grams
Or
twee
C.
Sanford.
Florida
77771
UM C. » * IM*
mailing
by
altUMsit
which
shall
bt
law.
snail
proceed
I*
mat*
and
N E ' a of Sk f 31 N less 4 117 4- at
Ctlharint V Duprt. Un 144 C,
4 FlausCondtnter
T M names and address ol IM
KNIGHTS OF
lilad with the CHy Clark.
prepare a tP K ia l autstmanl roll,
*1 . 4141400
Spring*Odd VIM. I J 4.400
I Vacuum Preitur* Pump
EipK iencedlloor man Apply in
assailing ih* special benefits lo be
X Thai nohe a at me lime and P*rson*l R ap rtw ntellvt end IM
Alary H Morrison A Margaret
COLUMBUS
I
Chemical
Grind
ar
Sprmgrrood VIII Apis 10 D trth
person, mamienanc t. Sanford
received as in* result *1 said
place ol mo public hearing at Personal R tp ra ta n la liv a 't *1
W Pitman lo Thomas B Pitman A
350400k Ave.
I
Condenser
A Grant A kingsl*r. Un 171 C.
lorn*,
a
rt
set
forth
below
Nursing
and
Convaiotcenc*
authorised
harem
shall
b*
given
by
improvements age mot Hit lets and
rtf Cynim* B , L*f 1 A 4 » ' of a. 61
Sonfprd
SprrnRtood V ill 141.100
I
inhalation
Unit
tor
Animals
A
ll
in
lo
re
s
ifd
persons
a
rt
410
MtfTonvill*
CentK,
Iwo
1)1
publication*
*
week
apart
landi,
adioining
and
conliguout
or
E. West Altamonte H i t , Sec Two.
I Ophthalmoscope
required to IH* with this Court,
Thursday
7:30
in
th*
Even
in
g
Herald,
bounding
and
abulling
said
Im
4100
IQ CDI Michael D Quatlry A *t
I Water Bath Electric
newspaper of genet#I circulation, W IT H IN T H R E E M ONTHS OF
provements. bating said tpKial
They on B Smith A wf Judy K lo
Sunday 7:30
Hollis I t Epil S V ir g i n . »■* m
M A IN T E N A N C E
44 hr l u g
l Egg incubator
TH
E
F
IR
S
T
P
U
B
L
IC
A
TIO
N
O
F
published in Seminole County
assessment agamsl th* respect ire
Rowland H Pundit J r , sgl . Lol
E tO l NW‘ , o t t W i . o f loc 1170
I Smell Lilt
( t l *11 claims
Florida, provided Ihal Ih* lost TH IS N O T IC E
p ro p trfie s lo be especially
Jock of All trades
M l Wekiv a Hunl Club. Foa Muni.
Win $23-1] 00
77. tlOd
7 basts Carton Slides MO
assessed
upon
a
front
loot
end
ate*
puOlicalion shall beat laasl on* III tgom tl I M ettti* on* m an*
AC Pibmg Elec background
Sec . 411,000
M oili Qualify to S ttvtn L.
I H am ate Grmder Eledrlc
o ciK lio n by an .nfer tile d person
basts
of
savant
y
en*
and
on*
halt
wee*
prior
to
IM
d
o
ll
of
ih*
Michael
B
Lent
1
wf
Victoria
C
Quality A *1 Molly M , 11 ml A
1 Star luer C 41)
AAA EM P LO YM EN T
per cant 171 U p a rc a n ll at Ih* coal
hearing Said not Ho shall dew r « o lo whom node* was mailed Ihal
M .lhaalO Qualify A *1 HOlllS H . lo Edward E O* Rauus A
I Condenser Mill lies luing
challangas I M validil* of IM Will,
Old you know mot your
of suets improvements as delee
IM sireeis or other areas lo
LO W EST F E E -T E R M S
karmeen A , Lol 1. Blk A . Glen
'» m l . Lol M Blk II. Weothor
I Animat Balance m kilo and mined by this resolution, and th*
dub or orgonitatioet tan
Improved and advis* all persons IM qutlilica'uxtt af IM Personal
1117 French Ave
D ) 1174
Arden Heigils, 17X 400
Sirtld 1*1 Adda 1100
rem
•swear i t this listing each
EiBCiiTTf s ;,trm l',ed ey this i n i s r i s f r i th trs ia That iha t t ? r r u n ? 4 U t 4. •*•■**.
Jtsajt L Steers to
I Magnetic Slltrtf a Hat Plat*
resolution (0 be assessed again*!
wee* toe only 1) SO per
descriptions of etch property Ig be luntditlion of IM Court
Avoiding Corp . N ISO' ol E ‘ y o l Lot
Pairici* l Gretwr, Lot 4 4 Btl
and tha undersigned et liter ill of Ih* said property, and tha method
week? This is an ld**l way
24—Business
assessed and IM amawsl lo bt
ALL
C L A IM S
AND
OB
I. Bik K W Bruit s Addn. LW .
A irt Hills. Un On*. 1190
Seminole County. Floridr. will el Of payment of ih* atsessmersl
lo
inform iha public of yaur
assessed
la
each
piece
or
parcel
aI
JE C T IO N S N O T SO F IL E D W ILL
4114.000
Char in R Young A *t Susan D
&lt;fcpor1uniti*s
II Ot A. M on the Mnddey ol July,
dub
activities
Thai
ih#
special
asusvnenls
properly
may
b*
ascertained
al
BE F O R E V E R 6 A R R C O
W e n d t I McKinney (fo rm
*0 VHlor P rlR ittl. U n A 101 Bl 1
A D I N I . oiler lor sale end sell lo provided toe by Ihis resolution
IM ollicf of tho CHy Clark of th*
Publication of t M NotK t MS
Johnson I A hb Clay T I* Nancy C.
Fairway Villax SS4.000
I he highest bidder, for cash,
Plumbing
D
IY
,
Hardware
and
snail be payable al tti* option of
C ity of Alternant* Springs. begun on Julv 14. T i l l
Harris, wid A Dolly V erguti. s g l,
Joann Edwards no rm V an P rill
vubiect to any and all M illin g
E ltd ric a l retail and repair
Ihe properly owners at totlews
Florida
SA N D R A R U S S ELL
Lol 4, Blk 3A Weather si laid Ind
AhB toN tnCyA Ford, Lot 4 4 E ly
liens, al T H l D E F E N D A N T'S
Butinas* W WO Real Esiai*.
(n cash, within Ih.rly IMS days
H your dub ur organ.laiiots
4 Thai mis rttofuiion shall
Person*! Rtpresenltliv*
Addn. US 000
ot S. B ik O .lak tW A ym e n tttigMs.
P L A C E OF BUSIN ESS, 1*0
Best Term s, Sfd.OOO Wtn
aould lit* f* M included in ihis
of in* confirmalon al Iha said
become ttt tc t lv e immediately
701 H *rk p fW f
L.nda N Sh*tt tld. Rtpr Est
SCO 000
Cgncerd O rly* . Cassalharry,
Mahctowski
R E A L T O R 771
li t mg call
special
assessment
roll
or
in
on*
upon
ill
passage
and
adoption
Santord.
Florid*
1)771
Joseph L. Mills Jr IP Feuslin* C
The Spcmgs lo Sunctali P*ri
F lo rid a . Ih# obey* O tte r'b ra
744)
Evas
77)
)M
&gt;.
annual Installment, ta d deferred
PASSED ANO ADOPTED this R O B E R T M M ORRIS. Etqu.r*
M ii &gt;. » pci: mt that pari of N 70S'
rarshp I, L N 14. Th* Springs
personal prop'fty
payment i f bear .Meres! at thet
Tin day ol July. A a m i .
700 W ell l l l h Slr**t
of N E ' c ot Sk II N 74. W Pi Canal
Whispering P in a l Sic
Two.
Thai said talc is being mad*
tale gl tight percent II perttnf)
A TTE S T
P O Drawer 1419
28— Apts. &amp; Houses
E of Rd f w etc , StdO
sal Illy Hi* terms ol said Writ of
SI 1.400
per
annum,
me
drier
red
payment,
Hugh
W
Marling
Jr.
Sanford. Florid* 11771
Winter Spgs Dev la Nader
C iK v ta n
Suncitit Plr I ra In* Springs
pairs
interesl
lo
be
duv
and
payable
MAYOR
Triephon#
DOS)
71171)0
C o . Inc.. Lot
13.
John E Pols. Sheriff
Lot 74. Iht Springs Whispering Conslr
C L A S S IFIE D
one H I year Horn Ih* date of
Phyllis J orda hi
Attorney for Personal
Tuscewill*. Un. I, 417.100
Saminola County. Florid*
Pints. See 7. U 747
D EP A R TM EN T
confirmation of sad astaasmanl
TANFffRD Rest wkly t
R*grtt*nt*liv*
CHy Clark
M
arm
onD
Record
to
Tanya
M
Publish Jun* 70 4 July 7. IE I I
Dat'd C Hill A wt Patricia lo
m m ii
roll.
mordhry rates Utl) In:, Kit sob
Publish July If. IT. IM )
Publish July ia. i t . m i
Pi*ut. Lol 14. Ilk i . Rcpial or Blk
wills t*&gt;* on July IX IN I
E lr m L Spirty A w l M arilyn. Lot
Thai inis r espied ion. mail be D E k 44
Ook Adults 441 7141
D
E
K
A
I
C
South
r*rn
Park
s
d.
110.000
O
E
J
Wl
M
ir
E
s
tt.
4101090
71 JtwTiltf

DEADLINES
N o o n T h e D a y B efo re P u b lic a tio n
S u n d a y - N o on F rid a y

30

MECHANIC

ENGINEERING
TECHNICIAN

DISSOLUTIONS

leg al Notice

REAL ESTATE

NOTICE
B IN O O

toes: .’Jim M- Crstcr fs

E v e n in g lle r a ld

ToSher# _ _ _ _ _

____

M

V * *

vNv * a

■•

; .. iTj
i

* ;/:• . .
,,i - .
iy S » ■ V j a y

. ' A T O K fS S ir !-14CJ u

'
»

, i» f. ■ ■Si

” -

P * » f '- * ’ f J«/ h * -

�33-Houses Unfurnished
Brand New Wood and stone*
Eaecutive Unturn,ih«3 Homo
] Bdrm, &gt; Both l k Mary.
» « « t Scnji Area 141] Wo
• Sec *m m i
Wondre •.tilt to do With Two?
Soil One - Th* quick, cot*
Wont Ad wo*
The magic
nuthOcr it T i l lo t) of (11 M il

ST JOHNS R IV E R IC i n i ll, 1
Bdrm, J B u n . cenirel heel e.r.
w»it lo well carpet, 1 ter
(• 'p o rt Im m e tu ie lt ton
d.i.on 1*0,150 Print Ice I* only
i n m m or m no*

E I ^ A

Alger &amp; Pont

M d o O f ] B o m Good
Condition Large Fenced
Yard 111S M l Oil*

r e s id c n t ia l

iontofd 1 Bdrm . CB home tit
month ♦ tec Will occept I
tmotl child 514 111* otter «
pm
Moot* tor rent - unturnithed
H IS mo • SllStec
171 M il
lOdrm, t ' l B. H IS mo. t i l l loti
* tocurit* Good reference*
reqg.red H ) I I 4 I _____________

HAL COLBERT REALTY

LOW D O W N • 1 bdrm split pitn
* AtftrbAd worArooni, utility
A trrK td v trd Owner will hold
mlQf At 1} % tor JO yrs
P tym ent only SUE TO PI
1)8.900

323-7833
E v e t 3110 1 1 1
701 E U th SI

LANDLORDS
Qualified I enontt well ng
Note* 111 1 X 0
SAV ON r e n t a l s , r e a l t o r
lOdrm I B lomil*room.
I toe garage. m
Deltona Coll S10 M il
1 bedroom. 1 both, lomlly room,
double oorog*. 1 *r old.
Wetltld* DeOer* 1410 month
First, tecum * too Soil

371-0041

G R EY H O U N D b r e e d i n g a
TR A IN IN G Sennet 2i runt,
main kennel, 1 Ig whelping
kenntti ( 2 ) ) odrm mobile
homesl, BeAutitully laid out on
12 acres Call tor dtttils
1230.000
CALL

323-7843

Cal I Bart

24SO Ridgewood Aye

th e te r r a c e

R EAL ESTA TE
R E A L T O R , i l l te n
Aiteehrt m i n i
SANFORD
1 bdrm. 1 tlory.
k.dt, pelt. S100 mo 11*1100
SAV ON R E N T A L R E A L TO R
SANFQRD C0 1V C O T TA G E ,
kids. pett. SIM mo 11*1100
SAV ON R E N T A L S R EA LTO R
SANFORD
A IR P O R T BLVO
1 bdrm SMC mo l i t 1100
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L TO R

Model Open Tuts.
Thru Sun IQ 30 fa •
3 Bdrm* J 'i bath, C m lra l air A
heat, fully equipped kitchen
with mlcrcwvAvt, F HA, VA A
Conv Low down payment, low
monthly
paym ent
with
graduated mortgage 122 ) 99J
123 R&gt;47. 321 1140
OW NER iA V S S E L L - Was
S41.400. now 144.400 4 1. blk.
CAN,. Ilm irifli, nice neigh
b or hood. Idyttw ilde school
section, convenient to I 4

B ATEM AN R E A L TY

VAN? OH D C A N A L F R O N T
J
tHftm Air, W l mo 339 7100
SAV ON R C N TA L S RE ALTON
SANE ORO
7 bdrm, Air, hint,
(&gt;rtt lUSdn.SJOOm o 129 TWO
SAV ON R E N T A L S R EA LTO R

M LS

JU S T
L IS T E D
E very
woman i dream
Deli«tit1ul
home in Lake Mary.. 3 bdrm, 1
bath, double tided fireplace,
fam ily
rm ,
in
planked
panelling Large fenced yard
far children' and pets. Many
i it r a s if 1,008
IM M A C U L A TE | Bdrm. 2 bath,
large family rm, with wet bar
and fireplace., privacy lance

you * r » Having tffUCwNf
firsd-ng * pl4C 9, to live, C4f to
driv*. a job. or torn* ttrv ic t
yoo M v t n#rd of, f « d all our
w#nt ods ev*rr d4y

37-B— Rental Offices

uorm
Moving to A newer hom t,
ApArtmont? S#M "don't n w J t"
tist w in a w jnt td

37CFor Lease

ro r t r i t e G lflo e w ilh
L ilt R la rg e O rlic*
Good Hit et .on m o m

370-Industrial

By owner, J bdrm. 2 bath 4&lt;r
patio, privacy fence, will hold
2nd mtg
Assumable mfg
r i\
441 900 221 92*2

STEM P ER A G EN C Y

38-Wanted to Rent
Wwil I ) rent 1 of 1 bdrm 4mlurn
brute at Sanford area Nol
over HOOmo Attyr S 1*0.1 II*

kUl

JUST L IS T E O
1 bdrm. t S.
good Ibcklion, * ttu m * b lt
m o rtg ig * Owner .n iio u t .
M l MO
BU ILD IN G L O T
City w*t*r.
tewer. Ig Ireet. I*ndtt*ped *
good Intel,on 1*100
TO W N H O U S E C O N D O
1
bdrm, J1&gt; B m . K . cond . (lot*
to tnopg.ng Hot CHA end
WWC. only 111.MO
R E A L TO R 111 4WI
e . t t i«* m m . m - m * . m n i t
Mvltigle L.ll.n * S .rv .c .

keg R . t i E t u t e m k . f 1
U lltll
B e , 117-1*1*
SpMiout 1 bdrm oWernom* Ih il
need! TL C
Owner asking
SI0.0QP down
Older 1 bdrm .dell tterfer home
T r , V A or F H A H* » 0
G ire g f to lull t h e m no room
toe in e c ir T Clean 1. pul w.lh &gt;

‘A’i.-.: JL3 Ln :r.t McrstJ PH,

A rt you * lull time driver m th *
pert time cor? Our dett.t.eot
or* looded *&lt;ik good buy lor

Attum* F H A Mortgog* Coxy 1
Bdrm Home. F.reploco Hugo
Livmg Rm C*nl Air Atkmg
MAtOO Coll US M* H IT
) bdrm Novto. Attum o VA mtgo
ol *S
C H A . lonced. in
lunloidl E tlo lt t 10,(00 H I

111 M U or *11 ***1

mi

—G eneva ^ a rd e q s-----ADULT SECTION
2 B ed o o m , W asher/D ryer Hookup
6-12 M o. Legse

Harold Hall Realty
REALTORS, MLS

i-1505 West 25th Slreel*
Stnlord, Florida 32771

C O U N TR Y HOM E — Hwy 44
frontage, over I IS acres* 2
bdrm. V jB* Barn w eiec.f
Pasture, cress fenced for
hones, near Wthiva River
444 TOO
ANIM AL L O V E R ! - Woodsy 2
bdr m lik e new hem e in country
with Ig barn A fenced area for
animals. Amenities include
peel, fireplace* panelling
Owner motivated t ! 1,448.
M OOERN A P A R T M E N T comes
with this lovely cedar front )
bdrm horn* with ig eat in
kitchen, separate dining room
spacious bdrm make this a
super value at 147,444

Ib dim , 1 BCB Woodmer*
Pork oreo. corpel.
1 Mrfened porthot. I l l 1.5*
C O M M U N I1 V
B U L L E T IN
BO ARD S A R E
GREAT
C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
ARE
EVEN B E TTE R

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford’s Sales Leader
WE L IS T ANO SE LL
M O R I HOM ES TH AN
A N T O N I IN TH E
SANFORD A R I A
U O LL HOUSE I Bdrm l&gt;, ■
home on tried, l.n d td F * * 1*11
Cm I H A . W*il I* w ill c*f
p*l Ul.l.ty Rm . psrtk lmc*d
y*rd, *itd m*r*l 111 M l
E r T R A I G A LO R E 1 Bdrm, I
( i t * Hem* wittl Penrltd FI
R m . C* «l H A . W ill *r*ll
C*rR*t. 1 UM ily tk*dt. I*rg*
I n n * y*rd at,Ik Idtt *1 Crirut
Tr* «t end m dtti Mi.***,JU S T FOR V O U I1 Bdrm. 1 Bern
H*m i in M * ,l* ,r— i Blk iro n
L*k* M * n rt* . dtukl* If*,
im it d ytrd. Bteui.fui D k h
lkr**gh*ull All lb* .it r d t t
M LM t

1| ! * * «

«
M
fw
-K
f
c*

T2—Auction

H Cot) 1.1 boat SIMP Evinrude. 4
HP trolling mot or. Trandran
trailer w alt aetts E »c cond1,
41400 27)0914

T o r E state. Lom m erciai or
Reiidenfial AuCtiom A Ap
pra uaii Call Deil t Auction
0 2 SATO

Westwmd 14 2" Triadyne Gator
tilt trailer,. Mercury 400 re
mote controlled Motor needs
repair Reasonable 8210053

11 «70

white based enamel
aluminum, awning, A screen,
porch Like new I7S0 firm
Call 322 2732

ate our heeuf.rui n*«i aR uAG
M O R E, front A rear BR s
G R E G O R Y M O BILE HOMES
3BC2 Orlando Of
223 ) 200
VA A F HA F inane img

■WILSON M AIER F U R N IT U R E
111 U S E F IR S TS ?

I l l sen

Concord 14 t*4 lo r )b drm , liir
resistant walls, wood siding A
shingle roof only 412.994
t4'« 4* . only 111.994
14170 . only 411.99)
No money down VA 10/ down.
F H A. Shop Unci# Roy s Mobile
Home Sales US 441 S
Leesburg (904) 717 0)24 Open
Sundays 12 I p m . week rnghts
til 7 30
R E A D THIS TW ICE
24" a Si' Concord or I a *S3
Hartford Both 3 bdrm. 7 B w
thm gle root* wood Sidmg.
deluae carpet, drapes L ap
pliancei Your choice at
419,99) Only at Uncle Roy I
Mobile
Home
Sales
m
Leesburg No down payment,
VA. all other financing !Q%
dawn
Shop Uncle R o ys
Mobile Home Sate*. US u l 4
Leesburg 1904 ) 787 0)74. Sun
days 12 i P m wkmghfi ~ f JO

42— Lawn Garden
F IL L D IR T A TOP soil
Y E L L O W SAND
C*ll Clerk A H , r i l l ) 15*0
la w n Mower Sale* and Service
We Sell the Best and Service
the R fit Bob Ball Written
Auto 201 W 1%t St

B5— Pets Supplies

52—Appliances
Mag e Chef drop &gt;n range
Conifnubuf cleaning oven,
E «c cond 172 2147

Part Doberman, part German
Shtpeed 4 mo* old pup f ret to
good home 44A 4SA)

Kenmore parfk, tervlce. utvd
waiheri M O O NEY A P P U
A N CES 271 0if7
H t e K E P O li e u ft frottfret
Or*g 4429. now 420) or 119 mo
Agent 1)9 8)84

IM M A C U L A T E I Bdrm. 1 B*tb
bom* on * Idvily Lmdtcfpod
i*l in L* (b Arbor I Screened
porcb. •** io kitchen. FI Rm ,
Liubdry. W ill lo w »n corpot
L e tt* x o m i l L o ll M oei.
IS*. Id*
M AV PA IR V IL L A S ) 1 A 1
Bdrm . 1 I t l * Cond* V«ll*l.
M i l lo Meylerr Country Club
Select your lol. Hour pion *
miff .of deem D utl.ly con
tNuctid ky Shoemektr lor
141.11* A u#l
ASSO CIATES N E E O E O I N . »
or tepefitnced
C.M Mert
Srtnilram tr L f* Aikrigkl
toddy I *itc*vtr tuccettl

322-2420

R E A LTO R S
Multiple Listing Service

★ B&amp;H A u to S a le s *
★ 339-7989W
1990 Trane Am T top. loaded.
1) 000 m&lt;tee 49*48
1978 Lincoln Continental Coupe
Loaded 44A94
1979 Impale Aragon
14894
1940 Phoen45994

The looner you place your
cla i i if ltd ad the voontr you
will get reirU'H

64- Morses
Gelding 12 y ri old Vy thorough
tired ty Quarter horee Engliih
and W eltern. E«pefienced
rider 4700 A il 11*9

SJ Coupe Loaded

NO M O N L Y D O W N IK* intilt l
US month Mont* CdclO. PS,
PB Auto AM F M tteffo. Air A
men, other *«1r*t I K *100 or
( ) . **05 Detier
____ __ _

If f l Dodge Travco Camper
Sleep* 4. loaded w evtrat
2)1 0A7J or )72 A4*9
1971 23 Mallard dual aaie Sett
contained, new air, gat or
electric Sleepy 7 43 500 377
1744

-

77—Junk C ars Removed
Top Dollar Paid for Junk &amp; Uied
cart* truck) k heavy equip
me* t 322 4990

D A Y TO N A A U T O A U C TIO N
Hwy 92, 1 m ilt wekt of 5p*ed
way. Daytona Beach, will hole
a public A U T O AU CTIO N
every Wedneulay at 8 p m li t
the only one in Florida You vei
Ihe reterued price Call 904
2448211 Icy further uefaift

B U Y JU N K CARS A TRUCKS
From HO fo 150 or more
Call 321 U24. 333 44*0

Top Dollar Paid for Junk *0 Utrd
carl, trucM K heavy equip
men! 222 4990

CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
33* 8941

STOP D O L L A R !
For your car or truck, regar
d le « of cond Prefer running
Fret lowing i l l 1411 Aqenl

78-M otorcycles

1972 toyota truck H IL U X E tc
cond Muct tee to appreciate
Denary eve! iA 8 4i*0

Hitt Monde KXJ CM ? Adutl
&gt;ddm
E •cetlinl condition
T i l 115*

77 Grand P rii t ull power, £•
ceiient condition 17900 227
2170 or 272 )98a

ON 400 Su.uk i lt*0. 1000 m il«t.
1100 A tekr ovtr p*y on ol

ttiss in sax
Don ! pile no longer needed
•terns high i t an elephant %
eye Piece e ciM idied ad* end
pile the money In youf wafllttl

Like new

* Bank financing available *
ItN Hwy 17 9}
Cattelberry

75—R ecreational Vehicles

74 Cabin crolier, t ic cond . a
C. A Cyt l O. trailer w power
winch 4)994 Phone after )
pm
222 4117

Rad buggy Best otter over |i00
H'P1VW engine Good' cond
After S &lt;9041 749 *51)

1911 Electric Commuter cart
Demo Never titled SHcker
price 44a00 O ur price 44*00
Drive fhete cute little electric
cart tor atout 410 month 131
1104

Don't pile no longer needed
dem i h^gh m an •l«pf»Bn|"4
eye Place a clai'iltied ad, and
pile the money m your wallet t
Auction Every Monday N-ghf. 7
P M Sanford Auction 1211 S
French 122 72*0. Daily 10 4

SURPLUS J E E P Value 4J I 9 A
void for 444 Call 212 747 1)4)
Eyf 701 for infoc on how fo
purchatt bargam ! like thut

T*7*"sulukl G T 550 10 000 mi
etk.ng 1*50 in good condition
AH * p m 111 *11*

41—Lots-Acreage

I S ACRES H IG H GROUND
W ITH TA L L HIN ES NEAR
LAKE
HARNEY
S IM M
W IT H
LO W
IN T E R E S T .
A SSUM ABLE M O R TG A G E
S A CR ES W O O DED NEAR OS
TE E N
G O IP
CO U R S E
It* SOD. TE R M S a v a i l a b l e
large

ChrN will terv.ee ACN. reNig,
treeieri. »*tee cooleft. m i»(
Coll 111*111

s e l e c t io n

Beauty Care
*

P L U S A C R E S . N IC E L Y
W OODED n e a r O S TEEN
GO LF COURSE 1J0M PER
a c r e OR M ARE O F F E R

io , n * .p a ii
lyp** o. electrltl work kt le-r
p ru t* 111 « M

e l e c t r ic ia n

TOW ER 5 B E A U TY SALON
rO R M E N L Y H trrieTft Bokut*
NocA SI* E Itl ST . H I 51.1

iPamllfigie carpentry. all typai §f
home rypauri Call tor frtt
rkfimate 122 197)

I k a c r e w o o d e d t r a c t in
O S T E E N N E A R SCHOOL
111.500 ASSUM ABLE f i n
AHCING

Boarding A Grooming

Hauling A
Yard Work

loonocr TO N E D f o u r p l e x
ON A IR P O R T BLVO . IN SAN
F O R D t i l . 500 S E V E R A L

Animal H * « n Board ng tnd
Groom ing Kenneit Sned*.
intuleled- tcreened, t l, prool
inside, ovtt.de run* Fan*
Alto AC c*get We c«ler To
•our pelt
Starling Hud
rrq.trr* Ph H I 5111
____

Heul.ng A Yard Work 1* *»ofl
with Ad 111 U l l no On* m
?*»! Larry, J i m B rt «nt

Snow Hill kennel offer* Col A
Dug Fie* Bath* 15 up 1.
Hour, Full S ttv K t M i 5111

Htmodeling. Add,liens.
Car pent, r
Went th# too don* rii^itT Call
Chris H I F i l l Quol.t, wort
month.p at leetonofale rote*

a v a il a b l e

ICO- F R O N TA G E TO N E D COM
M E R CIAL H IG H W A Y 11*1
NEAR LA K E M AR Y *LVD
T E R R IF I C L O C A T IO N IN
FR O N T O ' FO RD D EA LER
SHIP 11KOOO TOTA_L
1*5 IN TE R C H A N G E A T SAR
NO NO IN M ELB O U R N E
1*1.000.
EXCELLEN T
TER M S
W OODED 15.150 CO U N TR Y
LO T IN C H U L U O TA O NLY
11500 W ITH GOOD TERM S
SE V E R A L A V A IL A B l *
S C lO L E l

r ea lty
h i *m «

BROKER

41B-Lots &amp; Acreage
Wanted
N**d l«) or lend toned
t o t motxt* bom*
n io it *

Brush Cutting

Home Improvement

H A V B C A IH
FOB YOUR FARM
OR B U IL D IN O L O T I
Mir* Cer**nl.*n Inc 11IIM*

m in am._____________
Don't *enlr&gt;t Wt.et net* rou?
Need ) ] Bdrm Horn* P r x t
ond ter m i n*qo..*bl* 111 .** I

C E N TR A L FLO R ID A H O M I
im f r o v e m e m t i

Po.nling. Roofing. Carpentry
L k Bonded A Guaranteed
Fry* E tlim e ie tH S IM v

Building Contractor
Bill Carlo. Slat* Ceri.lied
B u ild in g
C o n tro d g r
Retideniiol or Comma, dal.
New or Remodeled H !0** .
When rou piece * Cteit.lied Ad
,n The Evening Herald, ttl*
clot* la your phono because
tomrlh.ng nondortul it obout
lo happen

July
bom blk l II
F re t
dooderiimg • shampoo A derp
tie .m I bdrm lran.c area Ire*
w l.v rm, d.n rm , end h*ll 111
O nly’ HO lor t*ch add,I,octal
room H I 0*1*

Ceramic Tile
M E IN T/ E R TILE
New ex rrpair. leaky shower* our
Specially. IS yrs Fep l* * B * l

Home Repairs
4 - a l l p h a s e o o e s it a l l A
Fan
.n ila llitlp n ,
yelyrior
repairs,
tlucce.
re &gt;e*l.
re tcreen.no
A L L PH ASE CO N TRACTORS
18 r i m i o r 111 115) y ___
Q U A L IT Y A T A F A IR F R I C I I
Gen Repair* A improv I I yrt
locally. Senior p .u ,
CarponTTY a Remodeftrw
No Iob footmen
111 l*S(
A H e r. M

47-A — Mortgages Bought
A Sold
W* per c*tb lor lit A Ind
mortg«q** Her L * t«. L it.
Morlgtg* Broker i w n t *

50-MscelUncous lor Sale
Btocn i loaf t ta le 111 ** **
Army Navy Surplus
110 Sanford Ave
M l SKI

m B
p
s-* -v
sm F
k
5 ‘L

!«% • %

\

% 97 N
| ^

Ir o n w o r k s
Al l Ornamenfal Wrought iron
Window Bars and Security
Doers *111*4*. Orlando
II rou aren't using your poo.
lame, lake a cue. and tefl if
with a Herald clast,Led ad
Coll M l 1*11

The Evening Herald Classified
Adt offer no fancy claim
t
Jutl R etulfll

Plumbing
T l
FftQ tH t Roblrtkon
Plumbing
R tp ilr i* l«uc«1»* W
C«
Six.nklrf» 222 1410. J32 0704

U N C L U T T E R Y O U R CLOSET
V II those things 1h*1 ere |utT
Taking uptpkck with a w»nt kd
n th* Nereid 111 1*11 or ( I I
w ei

Mailing Labels

FO NSECA P L U M B IN G
Con
itrucHon. Rtp4 fl* Em irgah
cy L it . Bond'd, in! 221 *07)

Pressure C tuning
Mobil* Homes. House*. Roofv
Truest. Tra iler. Elc Portable
Uml Harold Rankin 111 1155

Computer Prinfed Melllr*)
Label* Cell
Busy Bee Label* H I *011

CaXiiRipSir
G W A L TN E Y JE W E LE R
Mas ParkAv*
M l *50*

LARGE T R IIIN IT A L L B R
landscaping Old la w fti Re
placed H S S M I

Pence

LOncrcrt W o r k
Concrete Work, fooler * Ik o n A
pool* Landscaping A tod
work Free etl 17? 1M l
I M AN . Q U A L ITY O P E R A TIO N
* yrs t ip Pitied. Or.yyoays.
Hr Wayne Beal M l I V
Kid* pan*, buf the t*WB *•* ■*
the back y»rE fwvtT Se» E
a wtm ad C M 1 7 1 U W

* v

q f t *&gt; '*■

M iniU-Lock
Remodeling Specialist
N E W Concrete BuilOngt. *11
m e t 110 A up A I I 4 A SR .«
I* Industrial Perk, m o o t l
Looking For . New Home?
Check th* Went Adt tor house*
ol every tlx* and price

W* handle me
Whole Ballot Wa«

B. E . Lin k Const.

322-703*
Fkrone,ng Available

Rooting

Nursing Center

Write Way Rooting and Pam
ting Guaranteed wort Free
E t l,male* p n n i * * l )

O U R M A T E S A H E L O W IR
Lateview Hurting Center
* I » E Second SI . Sanford
H I *101

ROOFS, laakt repaired. H eyiict
tailed ***** and shlngl* w*rk,
llcedted. insured, bedded
Mike 111*111.

Odd jobs
J A B Home improvem ml —
CarperUry work at any lyp*
Root repa.rt guile, work,
po.nling m ir r .o r tr e ite rn rl.
plumbing, tpocfelHi in mob,I*
Iwm* repa rt A root footing,
and wood pal so deck*. Free
etl.m al* U * l* * l

Cnotlian Roofing II yr* tap
la* 5150. Ire* asl Retooling,
tpocialiio in ropoir work A
now rooting
e y R A Y D A Y IS BARGAIN
OAV IN T H E W A N T AOS M l
M il or 111 ***1

Painting
Sandblasting

Landscaping

.Ah. i___ __________
W* Rur *qul&lt;F in H o u tti,
eperlmantt. &gt;*c«nl land end
A cr«* g*
LUCKY
IN ­
V E S TM E N TS . P O Bot 15Bfc
Sen lord FI* H T1I. 1 U * U »

Tomorrow mejr be th* day you
tell lh «l roll * wo* bed you've
nowherelorollnway
II you
place * Cldltitied Ad todey

No tob loo large or tmeli
Quality * m utt Cell H I (411
References F r E tl

Remodeling
CUSTOM WORK
Reatonakl*
Balt*
F ro t
Estimate Coll Eort* A M or
Evo H I 111*or ID S ) 1*111**

Carpet Cleaning

CASH FOR E Q U IT Y
W t c*n clot* &gt;n M brt
C*HBert Rfdl Ettkt* H I !&lt;**

M owing
edging,
rubbish
t t moved Scheduled to suit
your needs 111 IS**

Handyman

47-Real Estate Wanted
A T T R A C T IV E ) Bdrm . I I ■ Bdtb
h#mt in Wmdm*r* P u l l
Cm* h a . w*ll *• tydil cerpel
1.1(1 utility, p*rch. die*
u n d ic ip yd Ldll ()*.5M

P*rk

•Phone 322 2090—

1974 Seabree/e 14’ 1 bownder, 70
H P C h rysle r, m agic 11it
trailer 47M 222 8191

D ay o r N ight

ANXIOUS F H A t r VA ] Bdrm.
Beamed ceiling, large yard
li t , toe

mi

*27 5 M o .

Alumifkum. ion*, copper. l**d.
W o t! tllyer. gold Weikddyt
1 . JO. S«! * 1 KdKoMo Tool
Co *1* W Ttl SI 111 1100

51-A— furniture

C A L L A N Y T IM E

Cable T.V.

Classified Ads will always give
you more
Much . Much
More than you eipeci

J2—Mobile Homes

I bdrm, 2 B, CHA. loaded with
amenities, located 2 bike from
go if course ISt.tOO

New 2 bdrm. 2 6 home CHA*
appliances, assume mtge
Johnny Walker Real Estate
Inc . Broker 222 4447 After *
*04 4)17

Antique*
OlemotTdt
Oil
Paintings O r ,* «!»! Ruft
Br^hl** Antiques
111 1101

•1 1 2

r ea lto r

321-0041

Business opportunity Smalt
investors check this. Get info
your own business tor omy
S4J00 Call tor details

2544S French 322 0221
After HOUfS; 341' l©00.* 221 f f I f

1971 Arrow glass Bais boat
Loaded with accessories 13000
t.rm 1 |f04) 481 02f7

II Owens Deep V Runabout k
trailer Hull &gt;n t ic cond 1750
or belt of lev )71 0077

1977 Ford Grenada Ghia AT,
AC. PS PB, A M FM . delude
vetour interlor, I owner', E.«c
cond 43000 323 1)77 or 322
24*9
____

68— Wanted to Buy

S5-B oa1s &amp; Accessories

Grandmother clock. 19 set of old
china.over cab camper top for
sm truck, lenilh color TV , A
much more. Please phone 12J

. Ill KM

L A K E M AR K H AM C O U N TR Y
HOMfi — ) bdrm, detached
garage workshop* fenced, lake
«*•», low down fust reduced
442*944

W A TE R FR O N T
For the
executive 4 bdrm, ] full baths,
tp». sauna, wet bar, intercom,
on log wide canal lead ng to
Si Johns River Priced at only

1

Live try »ng ch-ckem
to n a le 7)c each
222 4879

Kids gone* but the iw*ng *«* in
the back yard iin 'tf StII if with
a want ad Call 122 2*11

real e s ta te
r ea lto r

Home For Tele By Owner! 1010
W.llow Avenue. Georgetown
ieci.on P rK a 111,*00 Down
tl.SOO Mtg tie. .00 Te rm ,
t i n *i mol* io y rt el I . *. No
elot.ng (o tlt Cell 111 0*11

ALL FLORIDA R EA LTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

7

Pn 322 01*

14' Owens fishing boat A trailer,
Hull in e*c cond 42)0 ee best
otter 321 0077

BUY Real Estate and wait If l

323-5774

^ *a

80-Autos

m il l e r s

2411 Orlando Dr

SO—Miscellaneous lo r Sale

CallBart

S Acres Oil
Morknom Lorvgwood Rd
AH t Anytime n i « l t *

for Rant
h i r wood Industrial P irk &lt; 000
to tl Warenout* w.lh other
toe Wig O n tr let *416

in
your
OWN 4
ACR ES, nicely wooded and rot
fee far tr©m town OK for
home or mobile, priced IU.400
with terms to fit your budgtt

in v e s t

Dun l waif to BUY Rtat Cstate
l a w a n a k is h

b

v w in iv e

C O M M ER CIAL 1 0 N E D — 2
bdrm. CH A , €B . screened
paite, tike new, start your own
business- 444,180

Lease with
purchase option
New 1 Bdrm. 1 B. WWC. CHA.
tinge, tele ig ,lg wooded W in
OcB*r* Johnny Walker He*
E t l l l t Inc Broker H I 4411
Aner F - W O P .____________

r w i*

il-H o u v c s

471.400

tm.ooo

Oft let SpACt
For L t t s t

8 «

Bi owner, 1 bdrm. 1 both, n r
iwtio. priyecy leru* will hold
Ind mig A ttum ib l# mtg P i * ,

vit *oa in *l«i

m

HAVE T vJE: R ld H T T&lt;3 REi'WN ^L E N T •

Seminoi* Woodt
Oteulllul
•moded S S ecr* tlet* bam*
til* Good terms Coll I I I w t
elt«* * p m

321-0759

i -

1V'

C A LL 321-5774
It

V f

LO LO D OW N — Assy me
payments on immaculate I
bdrm CB home with split plan
Lg screened porch, fenced
yard. 444.704

Lie real E t u i* Broker
1M0 Seniord Ay*

1 Bdrm, t' j Bain. * « llr d »*nL
*.r cood , m et ntigh&amp;omood
4340 mo Ret rtq 1?) 8)70

M— Mobile Homos

A :
'4 tU

PIN E C R E S T
Neat ) Bdrm.
Kitchen Equipped, FH A V i
Financed 141.TOO

R E A LTO R S

Lg 2 Oclrm. 7 B *.th A C on
ihJBy corner lot .n Ot'Dorf
v m AvA'lA&amp;lf now

O PEN HOUSE

■jiv)

i:

CO M M ER C IA L
3 B E A U TIE S A LL IN A ROW*
L*vt in ont# rent ih t 2nd. end
opernl* your business In the
)rd commerclAl budding w
wAis ri cooler Prime location
449,900

J BQrm. 2 B CH A , convcnlmt
S^ntord 4274.

RlfSKTE1

l\EAL BST.VTF

LO TS
W A TE R F R O N T lof only 47.900
E S TA B LIS H E D Subdivision lot,
t i l 500
I ACRE on p tv rd rd 49.200
W A TE R TR O N T lot. 110.000
LOT ON CA N A L. SU-S00

O N E P H O N E C A L L ’ S TA R TS A
C L A S S IF IE D A D ON ITS
r Esu ltfu l
end
th e
NU M BER IS H I T i l l

K E E P .'

BUT 1
PE M A N P.
MY

KJStf

Inc
T R U C K E R S SPECIAL
1 bdrm. J B home CMA, M en
equipped loro* fenced *ord,
onVihlonR d No pen no k.dt
WOO mo . lit. loti, - I I SO sec

Y^U CAN

REALTY

67— Livestock Poultry

Good Died T V 'l.t lS Bup

A iA 1U 5T A LAJLSE fCCK.'

24 HOUR [ Q 322-9283

NO Q U A L IF Y IN G on this 4
bdrm, } B homt w covered
porch 1 Itm rm Lovely n#igh
borhood Lo* ctsh to mtge
442,490
N t A E X E C U T IV E H O M E
4
bdrm, 1 B includes 7 screened
paI iOS. boottcASes A soltrium
VtuAted on A • - teres
4129,900

AtS A

K E E P WTH YCUR BACK

ROBBIE’S

S3— TV Radio Stereo

AvPr-5PUTT-TT
RENJVk'HEP
HUNTER, Tr1l$
l&amp; .MERE
CHILD'5 FTAY/

T ire td e y , J u ly I t , 1 M I - 1 B

E v e n in g H t r e ld , S tn lo rd . FI.

wilh M ajor Hoopla

tW P L t, 111 4ET VU TdMdRIWW-lF
Y0U make it .' WW REMEMBER WAT
KE TAUuHT 1WU' MAE WVNUINP
1 3 HUNT YruR PREY. THEN BUHP A,
fire t &lt;
j cco* i t :

R E A L TO R . M LS
n i l $ F ro K h
Sell* t
t.nlerd

R E A L T Y , INC*

we Hondie Rentott
Hicotd Holt R tjit* Inc
Blotter HS-IM *

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41— Houses

41— Houses

SALE
Summer wood Fane* Sal* M OM
it ol wood fence ond posit
must bo soldi Can be icon at
Sentry Fences 111 Hwy 11*1
Longwood Wide selection
Com* ea rl, laleccni.nuetl.il
m erchandise I* *11 sold
H u rry! Murry I H urry! 1 )0

an

t

H O U t l PAIM TINO
Interior A E ilertor
H. 7. L A C K S Y JM H U .
Heilman Pamling A Repairs
Quality work Free E t l D iK .
to Sauer* IS . A .N Reier.
tout* Painter It l Cits* Work,
reasonable price* IS year*
tap Kenneth Holl M l US*
anytime alter S

1 A N O B L A 1 1 IN O
G A V I* W R LD IN Q
111 41**. S A N FO R D
II you CKm l loll people, now ere
they going In knowT Tell them
with o d o tiiiie d ad. by cklling
M l 1411 or E ll m i

Tre «S * Evict

TERRY S IN TE R IO R S
w a llp a p e rin g , s tin tin g Low
price* Goer work. M lO u q
" m c k in n E v
P d Id ling
Wallpapering
RttK Jenl.il — Commercial
Free Ettim ale* Call Au* M l
taaO For Protvuwnal Service

■ 1

HARPER'S TREE SERVICE

Trim m ing, removing A Larva
u * p m g Free E tl H16M1
Warn Adt Gel People Together
— That* Buying And Ttwt*
Selling in I t l l or u i m i

B*

t &lt;* -

0

�B L O N D IE

« Br E » « n ln q H e ra ld . S a n fo rd , F I,

T u e sd a y, J u ly H , m i

by Chic Young

Ma au^bTEAD .) ( soae.
CAN 1 KAYE A ' ( ELMOrjAN^NC-tl

X

Uf
9 G n d d tf

^ £ 7 /~ '

Answ er to P revious P u n t*

Pumping Iron May
Not Aid Heart

SO T in tb m onth
(Ib b r)
5 2 Vary i m i l l
SS Pul a n d to a n d
5 8 H o r n food
5 9 S uccata

t E |*c i
5 B elonging to

PEA n J T B U T T E S ) \ , A N Y T IM E
A N 3 J E U .Y

4 7 fin ish e d

across

J im m y

Raw m aterials 60 Wit irdtbtid
E ip « n i
to
Struggle
61 Show i
A uttior G ray
de clin e
It CoilUl iffi 6 2 B u llfig h t
ch»«r
I I B ib « * l
c h lts c ta r
63 Put of to b«
19 S c o rin g o r
6 4 R a lu t*
g a m u t,on
| ib b r |
DOW N
2 0 la rg e de ar
1 Sticky H uff
( p i)
2 1 Soamsh g o ld
2 R i* ir in
23 Insinuate
R u t in
26 P in of spaacti 3 le n g th of
29 P tctn td
•innci ttltut
33 N o n # d u ty
4 Mio
tung
34 lu b ric a te *
38 E m t
5 ChO O M I
37 Insect
6 M r Heap
31 M argarine
7 R eals
c o m p im o n
39 J a p m a s *
m h ( p i)
8 C o m p it t
po in t
40 M ock up
42 l o t i
9 E llip tic il
44 E t t t f it n l p m 10 S k itin g t r i m
11 C o m m u n n u
46 Pr,c*
12
13
U
IS

B E E T L E B A IL E Y

bv Mort Walker

WE RE GOING
SHOPPING FOR
A NEW ONE

OTTO'S
3EP 3&lt;?OKE
last
N IG H T

SEE ANYTHING
YOU LIKE?

/

1

T H E BORN LO SER

by Art Sansom

H « fell a Gutter Tippling
thrush hs body How well he
Vncw the jow and sublime
sensaticns that awaited him
cn the ether side ot that door

He g ripped the Vncb
with h is dam p and
quivering band and
began to turn it., he
tingled unth anticiprt ion

^

2

4

3

5

12

13

15

16

■

18

17 l i t w i n

39 V ary*

19
22
24
25

41 F u r y M l*
cre a tu re
4 3 F r tq u tn tly

Good |Er)
Hurry
Aleuts hom*
Numbers
( itb r )

26 Ob/«ctiY«
27 Authoress
fe tb a r
28 Idiots

DEAR DR. IAMR - 1 have
been working out with weights
to improve my health but one
of my buddies told me that
weight lifting won’t help your
heart. He said you have to run
or Jog to do anything to
strengthen your heart Is that
true? If so, why won’t weight
training work your heart? It
certainly Is a lot of work.

(poetl
4 5 H * u l* r
4 7 E ig h t (S p |

DEAR READER - It all
depends on how you do weight
training and also on how you
E l ting
jog or walk. There is some
utensils
51 G r* n t
G r tlt I l k *
in your frie n d ’s
53 T yp* o f |*c k * l truth
lo ch in
statement If you take the
54 E y*
Scotlind
extremes of the two different
7 h lt i t (ib b r ) 5 6 T h * p r * t * n t
6 7 G r« *t r * ip * c l
forms of exercise. If you lift a
G i lk
5 6 C u rio u *
Iffirm itiv *
heavy weight, rest, then lift
again you wtU work your
7
9
It
8
10
lifting muscles but you will
not work your heart very
14
much.

30
31
32
35
38

6

48 l» t lin k
49 F*m in tn *
(tu ffti)

17

”

■
”■

24

25

”

J6

27
i

33
_

34

44
47

A R C H IE

41

35

■"

41

40

31

32

”

■
■

36

j

■ 11

37

T

■

30

“
so

49

"
..

■

55

56

57

59

60

61

«2

63

64

52

S3

54

5J

by Bob Montana

1*

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For W ednesday, July 22, 1981

E E K &amp; M EEK

by Howie Schneider

MOW'S THAT
CUTE LITTLE
FOR&amp;60

CAR OF

P R IS C IL L A 'S POP

by Ed Sullivan
H E S S T A R T IN G
TO G E T A N T S V '

&amp;

BUGS BUNNY

by Stoflel &amp; Heimdahl

PROFESSOR, J

POUND A S P E C IM E N O F TU E'
m is s n s link between mam a n d aph in

THIS CAVE.

1 RXSOT X&gt;MENTION,
HE5 GPUVtPy WHEN HE
P i e s r WAKES UR

T -, r -

N ---------------.----------

V

-

_

________ ✓

YOL’H BIRTHDAY
JolyC , 1911
Take advantage ol any
opportunities th is coming
year to add to your storehouse
of career knowledge. Finding
time to study may be difficult,
but your effo rts will be
rewarded.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Don’t count too heavily today
on lady I - u c k to help you
lullill your ambitions or goats
Instead of pulling for you, she
might be working against you.
Romance, trav el, luck,
resources, possible pitfalls
and career for the coming
months are all discussed in
your Astro-Graph that begins
with your birthday. Mall tl
fore ach to Astro-Graph, Bos
4B9, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Subdue any inclinations today
to boast or exaggerate.
Instead of making you look
good. It might do Just the
opposite,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22l
Be extra-careful in your
business and
financial
dealings today. Impulsive
actions could cause mistakes
that might prove to be very
expensive.
LIBRA (Sept. 2W )cl 23)
Normally you are one wrho
understands the value ol
making com prom ises or
concessions, but today you
may be unyielding on
positions about which you (eel
strongly.
SCORPIO (OcL 24-Nov. 22)
Be helpful today, but don’t let
others dump so many of their
responsibilities on you that

FRANK AND ERN EST

by Bob T h avei

l-A$T N lfiH r I
PRAYED TO &gt;t&gt;u FOR
PATIENCE--------W H A T ^ THE HOLOUP?

,

DEAR DR. IAMB - 1 am a
46-year-old female. The last
two years I have been
breathing through my mouth
and have started to snore.
During the day or night when
I breathe through my nose it
feels stuffy. I have always
been a nose brealher. This is
very annoying to me. What
causes this and what can be
done about It?

you don’t have time to lake
care of your own interests.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Enjoy yourself today,
but don’t give fun pursuits top
priority. Dulles you fail to
take care of now could cause
serious problems Later.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
19) You may not work too wrell
under pressure today. II
important projects are left to
the last minute, you might not
complete them as com ­
petently as you should.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Avoid Individuals today
who, experience tells you,
always try to Impose their
ideas on others. You won’t
want to be tolc hat to think.
I’lSCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Don’t lend anything of value
today to people who don’t take
care of things as well as you
do. Something you prUe could
be returned In a sorry state.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be doubly diplom atic In
Im p o rta n t
o n e -to -o n e
relationships today.
If
something is u id that arouses
opposition. It could be difficult
to repair.
TAURUS ( April 20-May 20)
Use good Judgment at this
time or you might assume
new responsibilities or duties
(hat could severely cramp
your style. Know your
limiu-tlona.

There Is a unique feature to
your circulation. The venous
blood In your arm returning
from your muscles still
contains a lot of oxygen. Foe
short durations of exertion,
your body simply becomes
more efficient in taking out
the oxygen that Is sUU in your
venous (blue) blood. Thai
means under ideal c ir ­
cumstances that you can do
two to lliree times as much
work without Increasing the
amount of blood your heart
must pump. E ndurance

See an ear, nose and throat
specialist. If you have an
allergy with swollen mem­
branes, he may wish to treat
II. But if you have a basic
anatom ical narrowing, he
may suggest surgery’- This Is
a submucous resection. The
tissue under the lining is
removed to open up the
passageways.

WIN A T BRIDGE
NORTH
i ii ii
♦ k q to
▼A5
♦ QJ4
♦ a q 4 11
WEST
EAST
♦74
OJi ]
*qj9«j
sr k io7 a
♦941
♦ A9 7 5 3
♦ 109)
♦J
SOtrTH
♦ A99 4 )
♦ 94
♦ K 19
♦ K 97 5
Vulnerable Both
Dealer North
19ral Narth East
Swll
IO
Pass
!♦
Paaa i NT P iu
i*
Pan )♦
Pan
4*
Pan *♦
Pan
Pan
Pan
Opening lead VQ

By OtwaM Jacoby
lad AUa SoaUg

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Try to avoid today groups or
cliques with which you don't
feel comfortable or those that
have caused you problems.
Forewarned la forearmed.

DEAR READER - You
probably do have narrowed
nasal passages. That can be
from swollen nasal mem­
branes from an allergy or a
chronic Infection. Or you
could have a gradual growth
of tissues such as cartillage
that has narrowed your
passages. Or your nasal
septum may be deviated
enough to be causing an ob­
struction.

The bidding w a s n 't
perfect but a good small
slam In spades was reached
Sli clubs la a superior
contract, but this was match
points and North-South bid
to tha higher scoring slam.
West hit upon the best

lead of the heart queen and
South won the a re In
dummy Barring a bad
break In either o f the black
sulta, slam is there as long
as South Isn’t careless
Declarer played the king.
ueen and ace of spades
rawing all the opponents’
oppon
ending trumps No'
outstanding
Now, as
long as dubs wrre not divid­
ed 4 0 (only a 10 percent
chance) declarer could
dispose of his heart loser on
dummy's fifth club and lose
only one trick to the dia­
mond ace But South has to
be careful
South needs to collect all
five club tricks. We have
already mentioned that he
won t get them If the suit
breaks 4-0 If they break 2-2
they come In automatically,
but 50 percent of the time
the suit will divide 3-1.
It la rather normal play
for South to lead a low dub
mmy to istart the suit.
to dummy
Then back to hit king
M and
over to dummy’s other honor
for the third lead
All well and good and an
expert makes what la hit
perfect normal play on the
first lead. He leads either
the seven or the eight Then
after the third dub dummy
holds the six-four and
declarer the five Re can
overtake the five to get that
heart discard
ix tw srm a errtanusa i w i

S

ANNIE

by Leonard Starr

«J ~Fl?aT Tr«E |l
My Au. TfWT J

I HAtS IT

MS PROOF TWT*i
rESE «
iNDbTnIES MS KEN
*7 PJtJECWV&amp;NG THE
iTCJNCfS-S AT

SCJFFLh’ GDV
o tu m / o e -

ENVSDfHEHT?

ii* r a * a F
TCIR if O t f R lB .
1

ThEK/KSWTSJF
conF ioem reports;
I nAlEH’TREADTrEM
WSELF YET. nHHE
HP MJUE£T THEN,

K S K lV H
IW T 0 SRiWEP

PhaELA Tjlf

lxN(J &gt; i |

L J &lt;s

TU M BLEW E ED S

For general health I favor
exercises that provide for
strength, endurance and
flexibility. All three a re
Important aspects ol your
being fit and healthy.

Exercise works your heart
because exercise requires
your body to use m ore
oxygen. One way more
oxygen ran be delivered to
your working muscles Is by
increasing the am ount of
blood your heart pumps a
minute. The more blood your
heart pumps, the more it
works. As It works It opens Us
own arteries to the heart
muscle.

"

51

A more complete e x ­
planation of how your heart
responds to work Is Included
in The Health U tter number
14-10, Exercising Your Heart,
which I am sending you.

But 11 you lilt weights for
one group of muscles and
immediately go to another
group of muscles so that you
are working steadily over a
period of time, It will affect
the heart. The sustained
duration of exercise Is the
point

20

22

exercises sustained for longer
periods ol time use up the
extra oxygen and the heart
work increases.

__________

by

M g S E *!

~
A H B S O CRUEL.. [ CF'U

r

V. K. Ryan
S° ^SCHUP
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F L E T C H E R 'S L A N D IN G

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