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Show 16 Page MAH Independent May The The Paper That Dares To Take A Stand 3, 1973 Owner of seized truck fired shot, agents testify Reprinted Jrom the Seattle Times The agents had just seized Lowe's SI 8,000 logging truck December 26 for nonpayment of $380 in tax penalties which were assessed because Lowe was slow in April 24, 1973 A Monroe logging-truc- k driver, whose truck was being seized by agents of the Internal Revenue Service over a tax dispute, apologized before he fired a shotgun at their feet, the agents testified yesterday. Ronald K. Lowe is on trial before a jury in federal court here, charged with assault on a federal officer. Robert Davidson, the IRS agent from Everett, said Lowe told him and a fellow agent, Stephen Sallee, he was sorry to be rude to them, then went in to his house and got the shotgun which he fired at them. quarterly filing employer's withholding tax returns. Snohomish A tow-truc- k operator had just hitched on to Lowes truck and was moving it away when Lowe and his family returned to the home. After the shot was fired, the tow-truoperator unhitched the logging truck and he and the federal agents left. The case is being heard before U.S. District Court Judge Walter T.mcGovern and is expected to go to the jury tonight. ck according to 68 M VffEN Dont ask us. TELL US. Give us your deadline. Well meet it or we wont accept the job. We know that every type setting job is important to you. Bring us your type setting, then go see a movie. Well get your job out on time. TIi Salt Laka City. Utah B4115 Telephone 801 anti-g- day-nig- gun-contr- A gunman enterd Mrs. Sammie Biller's restaurant in Detroit, Mich., leaped over the counter and demanded money. Confronted by Mrs. Biller's .11 revolver, the startled bandit leaped back over the counter and dashed out the door. ( Detroit, Mich., News) Mrs. Merle Underwood, 64, a nurse in Cincinnati. Ohio, was on her way home from work one night when she was grabbed by one of two men who had been following her. She pulled a pistol out of her coat pocket and shot the man in the neck. Police later arrested the other suspect. (The Post A Times-StaCincinnati, Ohio.) Mrs. E. F. Saltsman of Little Rock, Ark., was working in her grocery store when a young man came in, drew a pistol, and demanded money. When she produced her own gun from under the cash register, the man fled. I Little Rock, Ark., The Little Rock Mrs. Lily Jee, 41, of San Francisco, Calif., was working alone one evening in the small grocery store her husband died defending in a holdup 10 years ago, when a man entered and pulled a gun. He took her money and was about to leave when Mrs. Jee picked up a pistol and shot him. The robber died later. (San Franciso, Calif., The San Francisco Examiner) Mrs. Edith M. Barry, 41, woke up one morning and discovered a burglar in her bedroom. Seizing a .22 revolver, she shot him. He staggered outside and later was arrested. (The Arizona Republic, Phoenix, Arix.) Hearing someone kicking at the front door of her Shelbyville, Ind. home, then enter, Mrs. Gertrude Miller, 74, grabbed her .22 revolver. When she found the intruder rummaging through bureau drawers in her bedroom, she fired. Police found a dazed man with 2 bullet wounds wandering in Mrs. Miller's yard and charged him with burglary. (The Shelbyville, Ind., News) Seven-me- n noisily invaded the yard of Mrs. Lorraine Rodriguez, San Pedro, Calif., one night while she was home alone. When she went outside, they threatened to bear ner. Mrs. Rodriguez fired one shot from her cal. .31 revolver. All seven men ran. (San Pedro, The courage of teenagers bent on robbing a Wilmington, Calif., gift store dissolved in a confrontation with a pistol wielded by the wife. One of them store owner's had a knife at the throat of Byron Gray. 71, proprietor of Gray's Gift and Pottery Shop when they heard Mrs. Gray call out, "Guess what?" At the sight of the pistol she held, they fled. Later, all of the 6 were arrested. (Redondo Beach, Calif., Daily Breexe) G COINS Mrs. Henrietta Dillon, 62, pulled a .22 pistol , after two youths, one armed, entered her Roanoke, Va., grocery store and demanded Roamoney. Both fled. (The World-Newnoke, Va.) r, Atlanta, Ga., police answering a call found F. Brown, wife of the night superintendent of police, calmly holding a burglary suspect at gunpoint. Seeing two men drive up to a neighboring house while the owners were away, she had grabbed a pistol and captured one. The second fled. (Atlanta, Ga., Constitution) S' ol ht Calif., News Pilot) Hold news media ht Mrs. James 1 un President Nixon described the shooting of Sen. John C . Stennis as a senseless act and said he bon the sinoll handguas known so 'Sotnr hoped that now Congress will "(it stmt action an lagiilation to specials. " (SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE. Feb.1, 1973). legislation He ordered Attorney Gen. Kleindiest to prepare "STRONG now proposals for which would pass Congress." (DAILY COURIER, Grants Pass. Ore, Feb.1, 1973). The POLITICIANS' "Saturday-nigspecial" legislation will either DISARM or make OUTLAWS of millions of good women like those mentioned below. In behalf of our mothers, wives, and sisters we cannot let it happen. With your help we will not let it happen! Two young gunmen pulled up to the Mission Hotel in Houston, Tex., and demanded that hotel employee Mrs. Genevieve Touchstone give them money. She snatched a pistol from the desk and warned them she would shoot if they didn't go away. The gunmen fled. (Houston, Tex., Chronicle) Rhadollff Company 2459 Major Stmt Senators and the HANDGUNS ARE A GIRLS BEST FRIEND Mrs. Rostand Albury of Key Largo. Fla., was awakened from a nap by a young intruder pulling at her kitchen screen. When he got inside he found himself staring into the barrel of her .32 pistol. She called police; then when the youth said he was hungry, she fixed him a peanut butter sandwich. (Jacksonville, Fla., Times-Unio- setting U. S. FELLOW AMERICAN. DO THESE HANDGUNS LOOK LIKE CHEAP, UNRELIABLE GUNS TO YOU? Arkansas Gaiette) ( NIGHT SPECIALS (t SATURDAY Only One Shot Fired Mrs. Leslie Lee Brown, 25, mother of 6, was awakened in her Houston, Ex., home at 4:50 a.m. when a man climbed onto her bed. Mrs. Brown screamed and fired several shots at the intruder with a small .22 caliber pistol she kept under her pillow for protection. The would-bassailant fled into the darkness. Later, at dawn, police found his body on the porch of a nearby house. (Houston Post) As Mrs. Sarah Edmondson, 55, was walking to work at a bakery in Baltimore, Md., at 5:30 a.m., a young thug punched her in the face and stomach and knocked her to the street. "You know what I want!" he said. What he got was a cal. .32 pistol bullet in the neck from a handgun that Mrs. Edmondson yanked oilt of her handbag. Police followed a trail of blood and arrested a suspect. ( Baltimore, Md., News-America- Mrs. Kay Keiser, of Bloomington, III., was alone one night when she became alarmed by the sound of breaking glass at her back porch door. She got out a .22 pistol and fired one shot through the door leading to her porch. A prowler fled immediately. ( Bloomington, III., The Daily Pantagraph) A burglary suspect who climbed through the bedroom window of Mary Gordon. 44, in Chicago wound up in a prison hospital with a .22 bullet wound in his back. Awakened as the intruder climbed in.' Miss Gordon pulled a pistol and felled the man with one shot. (Chicago Daily News) Mrs. Keith. Boyce and her baby were alone in their secluded home near Tulsa, Okla., one night when a stranger pulled his car into the back yard. Twice burglarized in the preceding 12 months, Mrs. Boyce didn't open the door at his knock. Instead, she waited quietly inside, holding her baby with one hand and a .22 pistol with the other. When the man kicked in another door and entered the home, the young mother fired several times wounding the intruder fatally. (The Tulsa Daily World, Tulsa. Okla.) d OUTCOME: Mrs. Boyce was cleared of manslaughter charges by District Court Judge Robert Simms, Tulsa, Okla. Judge Simms said, "If more people did this," he said, "we would have less of the problem we have in this country." The slain man had a 20 year record of major crime and was free on bond on a burglary charge when. shot. . The above incidents are excellent examples of being prepared and alert in the finest American tradition. Defense of seif, family, and property is as fundamental as all our other inherent and inalienable rights. To protect and preserve all our of rights is an absolute necessity. These rights must not be lost through apathy, complacency, or the subversive actions us. disarm our have like to than would in better land who our government nothing scheming traitors Is the American citizen going to sit idly by, saying, "It can't happen hera" and let the NIXONS, KENNEDYS, STEVENSONS, HARTS AND ALL THE OTHER HYPOCRITICAL, ANTI-GUPOLITICIANS SADDLE US WITH ANOTHER UNCONSTITUTIONAL, GUN LAW? WE DON'T KNOW ABOUT YOU, BUT WE ARE GOING TO FIGHT THE ABOVE PROPOSED LEGISLATION WITH ALL THE TIME, EFFORT, AND MONEY WE HAVE. WE HOPE YOU'LL JOIN AND FIGHT WITH US! The make, modal, and caliber of each gun are listed below by Any Quantity COIN CORPORATION Phone 211 East 3900 South 4 Salt Lake City, Utah iMONARCH N CRIME-INCREASIN- 262-587- G row: TOP ROW: Mu Mommy Soys... EAT YOUR VEGETABLES? But Sometimes lUtStnst Herb I Dont &!)QP FOR ALL YOUR NUTRITION AIDS Mail Orders k,160 South State, Orem Phone 225-41- Promptly 11 EVERYTHING FOR VITAMINS HEALTH FOODS HERBS Filled HOME Including Freeze Dried Foods Wheat Rice Hi Protein Granules Grinders SPECIAL Hand Operated STONE GRINDER Reg. $42.50 NOW ONLY $36.50 FOODS FOR STORAGE 4300 S. 4850 W., Granger, Utah 84120 Phone (801) 298-93- 05 or OPPOSITE RULER: Charter Arms Undercover Hih Standard Plinker -- 399-52- 14 .38 Spl. .22 lonf rifle I I 1 Silver Coins Greatest Investment Today Tv Gold & Silver Dollars Beat Inflation Have Security Confidential I Rust Coin 311 South Main & Gift 328-186- 2 yv. o Picture Reprinted o There Isn't a cheap or as Saturday-nlg- ht Printed lsreliabll specials at a public tervica T . ms ll "t Xgfi. 'I 111 ' - -- V vv-jfc- s from THE AMERICAN RIFLEMAN handgun pictured here, yet they have all been classified by the anti-gpoliticians and their cohorts. un by the National Association to Keep and Boar Arms, Inc. |