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Show A r p : ' -- - If i - . f " WW, - - ' - . i.5v,t "?" v . Jwiai 1 .r f. t l f ... u t t.rv-i-"-. wai i , Si-.-- ' rf .,y , ,ie Sn - wiw!, I -- o - John (UPI) once No. 2 man on Richard Nixon's presidential slaff, has been ordered to surrender to federal officials Friday of next week to start serving up to five years in orison. r '" The Senate voted Tuesday to deny members of Congress the cost of living salary increase due Oct 1, expected to be near 5 per cent. The House took similiar action last week. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Geseli revoked Ehrlichman's bond Tuesday and directed him to serve his sentence of 20 months to five years for a 1971 break-iat the office of Daniel The Senate vote was marked by more unusually high absenteeism than a fourth of the members were gone although the legislation was scheduled for action before the Labor Day break. Of the 28 senators seeking reelection, only Sen. Henry Jackson voted to provide members of Congress with a pay increase. Fourteen voted against a salary increase and the remainder were absent. a Democrat and a Two senators Republican charged their colleagues w;th lacking the political "guts" to vote for a pay increase eight weeks before the election. 46-2- Since being convicted July 12, 1974, the former Seattle lawyer has been living in New Mexico, writing novels and providing legal advice to Indians. - Ehrlichmen, head of the "Plumbers Unit" in the White House, f was convicted of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Dr. Lewis Fielding "j V';. Ellsberg's psychiatrist. - 1- - ; 4 1 if 4 ' P4 4 y fS- A p Jtw"H issing Girl Freed From Dungeon; Alleged Abductor Accused of Kidnaping, Rape PORT MOODY, Canada (UPI) -181 days, Abby Drover was entombed, chained and sexually assaulted in an underground dungeon, neighbor allegedly by a middle-agewho had helped lead the search for the missing schoolgirl. Through it all, Abby said, she kept her faith in God. At one point, she told her kidnaper in a note penciled on pink paper: "I just wish you would be my It was Abby. The two officers lifted out the girl -and so weak she could hardly walk took her to a hospital. She later was released and was reported at an undisclosed locatiun with her family in the Port Moody area. The entrance to the dungeon was concealed by a trapdoor behind two doors of an emptv workbench cupboard. The chamber was slimy, foul smelling, and soundlittered with garbage friend." Tall, balding Donald Alexander Hay, 43, was charged Tuesday with kidnap- ing and raping the slim, Abby, who was found by chance Monday night when two police officers answered a routine call at his home. Abby's mother. Mrs. Ruth Drover, who held a bedside reunion with her emaciated daughter at a hospital, said, "She's got spunk, she'll come back. "It was pretty terrible ... she will never forget it but I am sure she can overcome it and push it to the back of her mind " Abby disappeared March 10 while on her way to school. Reward leaflets flooded the area around Port Moody, a prosperous oil and lumber center about 15 miles north of Vancouver, but a search failed to turn up any trace of her. Police sources said Hay - who lived only a few doors from the missing girl MpH in h Mrrh Hp was known to the Drover family and had three stepchildren who often played with Abby and her two older sisters. Police were call ?d to Hay's shabby, fiamc heme Monday following a complaint of a domestic disturbance. The officers interviewed Hay's inwife and checked the premises above the cluding a dark-haire- d Sen. Ted Stevens, billion legislative appropriations bill expected to receive final approval i c-- H -- if fi ft-'- . assaulted and sources saiJ. ,1 J j ill i u Expect a lot. His record says you'll get You've probably heard of David Monson s l!'e w,$n tih,r. I I i11 :; $ s f.!,rc '0!i' )! j .1',! !, A '".- i (!'.. e i ' iiJijiiClii exactly after Nixon resigned the presidency in the face of impending that President Ford impeachment granted him a "full, free and absolute pardon " for any crimes committed as president. Ford s action averted the probability that Nixon would stand tnal for a multitude of actions known under the col lective title of "Watergate." Ford said at the time the Nixons had lived "an American tragedy in which we all have played a part. It could go on and on and on and someone must write the end to it. "I have concluded that only I can do that, and if I can, I must." Except for his formal statement at in which he said he made tho time "mistakes and misjudgments" but Nixon has admitted no wrongdoing never mentioned the pardon. There seemed little likelihood he would say anything today, about the pardon or anything else. Since resigning, Nixon never com- - as a politician has lived an intensely private iife. Reporters who telephone, or waii by the gates of the estate, are told nothing. Nixon's only publ'c outings have been his nine-datrip to China and his appearances on two occasions at Long Beach Memorial Hospital his brush with death from phlebitis shortly after he left office, and the stroke suffered by his wife. Pat, this summer. foi Uuie in "ulilic even -- y His David Eisenhower and Edward Cox, described Nixon at the time as so depressed by his ouster and his rapidly worsening illness that he showed no visible elation or relief when he learned of the pardon. Both Nixon and his wife appear to be in better health, Nixon looking when he came energetic and chtv-rfu- l to the hospital to take her home. Nixon's finances, once worry, shaped up with a substantial advance a on the memoirs he is writing reported $600,000 agreement for a. series of television interviews with David Frost and the sale of two Florida homes for $710,000. He also gets $60,000 a year as his presidential pension, $45,000 for expenses and Secret Service protection for life. sor.s-in-la- Hays Hurt in Crash BARNESVILLE, Ohio (UPI) -Former Rep. Wayne Hays, who resigned from Congress in disgrace, is back in Barnesville Hospilal for the second time in three months this time the result of a traffic accident. Police said a pickup Hays was drivstruck another truck Tuesday near ing Wheeling, W.Va. A deputy sheriff said the congressman told him he was trying to keep an antique lamp from crashing in the truck when he let the vehicle slip into the wrong lane. His personal physician said Hays will remain hospitalized two to thiee days for observation His condition at Barnesville Hospital was listed as satisfactory. t, J.-'-- i v 1 fcTsV; J ill t i4 1 - f i t S (ttkl rmm . . it. . I .t-- i 35 SrotsmanWASHEBSN SAVS W Permanent Press temp settings tUb' i j fj Sj .: I Don't Miss Out terrorized, police SEC.OFSTATELT. GOVERNOR sCvri h Page 1 7-- garage-worksho- y -- 1 - two-stor- .8 AVI! proof. It measured 6 feet by 6 feet by 'i feet high The walls were lined witi concrete. The single door was padded with thick insulating material. Inside the dungeon police found a rusty iron bed. a dirty mattress, a single light, a portable toilet and a sink wiih running water. The only food was a half empty box of cookies. Police also found a pair of handcuffs and severs! lengths of light rham. "I know a lot of people are going to be glad to see me," she told the officers who found her. Police Chief Len McCabe said the girl was forced to live on snaefcs such as milk, cookies and chocolate bars -"s he never had a hot mp.il " Sometimes she was lift alone for up to two wevks without a visit from her abductor: On other wcasmns she was THE HERALD, Provo, Utah mmm : I , a. It was two years ago today B t f , a month to the day said, "The only reason the issue is raised now is because we don't have the guts to vote ourselves a pay raise." But Sen. James Allen, said, "Congress has enough problems maintaining a good image before the public. Now is not the time for Congress to step in, demanding an annual increase for its members." The pay ban was attached to the $1 :rQ"Vy a V ' 1976 SAN CLivvlENiE, Calif. (UH -Today marked an anniversary for Richard Nixon, but .c was doubtful there would be any celebration behind the walls of his oceanside estate. r dungeon where Abby was imprisoned but found nothing suspicious. They were driving away when another radio call sent them back. They spotted a man climbing out of a shaft leading from the underground cell and heard a "whining" coming from the bottom of the shaft. For "Why make an exception for members of Congiess." asked Sen. John Past ore, DR. I., who is retiring. "Why are you so afraid? Why are you so lacking in courage?" Pastore said. "It's because we haven't got the guts to say what's in our hearts." House-sanctione- n under a neighbor's garage in Port Moody, Canada. A neighbor faces charges of kidnaping and rape. (I'PI Tclephoto) THIS IS THE ROOM in which Abby Drover was found alter she had been held prisoner for six months. Police said Abby was starved and weak when discovered by two police officers E'.lsberg had been standing tnal for violating the tcp secret embargo on the Pentagon Papers and releasing them to news media. When word of the White breakin came to light, the case against Ellsberg was dismissed. Ehrlichman, forced to resign as Nixon's counselor for domestic affairs, also was convicted Jan. 1, 1975, of one count of conspiracy, one count of obstruction of justice and two counts of making false declarations to a grand jury. He had denied being able to remember various facts in the and coverup. Watergate break-iIn the Watergate cover-uconviction, Ehrlichman was sentenced to 2't to eight years by Judge John Sirica. He could have received up to 20 years and a $35,000 fine. That case also is being appealed. Iliewiaie uJPii one-shot- psychiatrist. fV ..5 Deal hot WASHING TOW WASHINGTON , and llcuse have agreed to impose a election-yea- r freeze on pay raises for members of Congress. Their salaries will remained fixed at $14,625. Ehrlichman, '. - .,.1'"' t , 5 . -- fI iva n J ii ti iv nr&o rv Salary Freeze For Congress Ordered i o rnson J i 'sfv..iiJJvwVJ Wednesday, September 8, r I. L rnrifwfifiiui u - 'i-- m A t y ':i,v V lib t JkW 1 If L-T"U '' 'I- C)id '" ' S'l'I ' f1 ,1 i V ( ?" "''' '' ' ! t "(! , t- . 1 - Smith Monson i -l. p'says you i;c! Veto for Duvid Smith Monson Sec. o! Slate It. Go vei nor t vpprt a ioi. His locotd II " p. i .r.2?!2sj t5!f tt"2 nlmHpm" APfLIAriCE & FUOel. GO. Li 255 iv, h crjgepeae r |