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Show Page HERALD, Provo, Utah, Wednesday, August 7, 30-T- HE 1974 Guerrillas 2 Killed, Wenatchee, Wash. Rail Yard Blast Kills Two, Hurts Seventy-On- e Quirks In The News LEICESTER, England (UPI) Stephanie Cox, 20, pleaded guilty Tuesday to scratching 299 music records belonging to her Hit By By United holes. none of the Miraculously, homes' occupants was seriously injured, even though ceilings collapsed and pieces of shattered box cars whistled through their homes. Window glass was blown out of homes area. over a fi Unofficial estimates of the damage, which included about 40 boxcars, ranged upward to $1 million. the dismissed Magistrates OCEAN GATE, N.J. (UPI) -Rcase when she said she and Paul obert Berger hoped to be the Cook had patched up their lover's to cross the Atlantic tiff and were now engaged to be first man balloon. Tuesday he in Ocean a married. rose 6,000 feet in a homemade craft but fell to his death when BRIGHTON, England (UPI ) -Pthe balloon burst. Sole John olice inspector Witnesses said the ordered Constable Philip Herhelium-fille- d balloon broke ring to investigate a theft fell into it as Barnegat Bay apart Tuesday. near, the New Jersey shore. The missing, property was a body was found Berger's box of haddock. in the gondola. He trapped apparently did not have time to use his parachute, which was also found in the craft. Berger, 47, a Philadelphia electrician who was married and the father of four children, had never flown in a homemade balloon before. He spent two years and $25,000 building the craft. Berger intended to float across the ocean and land in Paris in 36 to 48 hours. . . The LOS ANGELES (UPI) Los Angeles International Airport was blasted Tuesday by the most destructive bomb ever to hit a U.S. air terminal hurling bodies, baggage, spears of glass and chunks of concrete through a passenger waiting area. It was still a mystery today who planted the bomb, and why. Two skycaps died, blown apart with such force that the first investigators on the scene thought there were four or five dead, and 36 others were injured, mostly passengers waiting to board flights for Hawaii and the Orient. Seventeen were hospitalized, one in critical condition and two in serious condition. Michael Strong of the police airport detail said he was about 100 yards away when "a tremendous blast shook the area and it was a scene of utter devastation. People were down on the floor crying for help. Bodies were blown all. over the lobby." "All I could see was blood. There was blood everywhere," Press International Israeli warplanes struck into southern Lebanon twice in 13 hours today, hitting Arab guerrilla bases in the region known as "Fatahland" just north of the Israeli frontier, the military command in Tel Aviv announced. The planes first struck southern Lebanon shortly after 1 am, the Israeli command said, in the general area where three guerrillas kidnaped four Israeli Druse villagers Tuesday night. The Druse were working on Israel's security fence along the northern frontier which is designed to prevent such attacks. The command said the second raids began at 2:10 p.m. and lasted for several minutes. The command said in a communique that one of the kidnaped villagers managed to escape from the guerrillas during the night. He stayed in hiding until daybreak and then slipped back into Israel. two-stor- Balloonist Killed When Homemade Craft Bursts boyfriend. - Israelis y brick including a roundhouse, were riddled with foreman for the Burlington Northern, David M. Jones, 28, of Wenatchee, and an unidentified transient riding on the train. The blast, which occurred shortly after noon, occurred in a fertilizer tanker. It ripped apart boxcars and sent tons of shrapnel over an area as far as a mile and a half away, where a three-foo- t section of track was found in the yard of a startled South Wenatchee resident. Half a dozen buildings in the Burlington Northern yards, WENATCHEE, Wash. (UPI) An explosion on a freight train Tuesday destroyed scores of boxcars and damaged at least four buildings and half a dozen homes. Two persons were killed and 71 others were injured. The two men killed were a yard 36 Hurt by Mystery Bomb in Los Angeles Airport Bowie and Davey Crockett died in the Battle of the Alamo in the Texas struggle for independence from Mexico. Neither was a native of the Lone Star State. n OPEN DAILY SALE ENDS SATURDAY 9-1- SUNDAY 0; 10--7 it? AUG 10 P floor. TARGET PROPANE lis LANTERN 30" Indian straw target with replaceable face. Fire Department paramedic said. The Rev. Patrick Shaughnes-sy- ; pastor of the Evangelical Northwest Missionary Church in Phoenix, on his way to a month-lonpreaching tour in Korea, was critically injured. Both his legs were badly mangled. William Sullivan, head of the Los Angeles FBI office, said whoever left the bomb there "may have wanted to take it on a plane. At this point in the terminal, you are not required to go through security yet, and he probably placed it here because he couldn't go out to the airplane with it." (In Washington, Rep. John noted that "the Murphy, perpetrators of this heinous act will be subject to the death penalty" under the terms of a federal law signed only eight hours earlier by President DINING CANOPY g Our Reg. 24.88 DELUXE Single-mantl- TARGET ARR0WS...66' BEAR 76ER center height. Jointed corner poles, telescoping center pole. Coleman e lantern comes with 1 6.4 oz. fuel in disposable bottle. Nixon. uu BOW (Murphy authored the law, providing a mandatory, death sentence for those found guilty of murder during commission of a M ' airpline hijacking.) Leather arrow rest and plate. Molded decorative reinforcing overlays on tips. I j f I I I : (91 (I iO idr I Vj r V' I Vy f-- f m y ATf ( I if i, air travelers at the Los Angeles Airport watch while aid is administered to the victim of a blast which Tuesday killed two and injured 36. UPI Telephoto. Building Collapse Toll Reaches Total of Seven - Firemen survivors and Atlanta sent a team rescued who MIAMI (UPI) 15 recovered seven bodies from the collapsed offices of the Federal Enforcement Drug Administration say they found notes from employes complaining of roof leaks before the disaster. The parking deck atop the building collapsed Monday morning, when 57 cars were parked there. Fire chief Don Hickman, who directed the rescue effort, said roof leaks could have caused the concrete to absorb water, increasing the weight of three-story-hi- the roof and possibly contributing to the disaster. Hickman said his firemen found inter-offic- memoranda e telling superiors of the roof leaks while the rescuers searched for bodies in the rubble. The General Services Ad EES! regional office in of to Miami Tuesday investigators to determine the cause of the former collapse of the auto agency, remodeled six years ago into a federal building. The city of Miami and Dade County also began investigations of the disaster. FDEA administrator John R. Bartels Jr., who arrived Tues- ministration two-stor- y day night, said the cars parked on top of the building were "within (safety) limitations." However, Hickman said the building did not have any steel beams supporting the thick concrete parking deck installed for the auto agency long ago, when cars were much lighter than today's models. Eleven cars and a van tumbled through the roof, crushing drug agency office workers below. iiiiiiiiiiii I I I I II six-inc- h LI, check it out GEM CONSUMER SPECIAUST KERRY PHILLIPS SP Tf i AiP''' iS f 'jj M0SSBERG mart Firearms and Ammunition Policy 12- - 1 :L';J4 Firearms a"il ammunition are H,S '.v. llH 500 SHOTGUN ' Reg. 2.97 I (LJiJI ji Iff jr 1 1 ffpk ' k l 4 Days V Box of 25 and oior cooed Dy gauge for safety. Charge 6- - 12-gau- 12-G- a. CONCERNING CANNING CONFLICTS :: 22 Reg. 2.64-2.9- 2 4 Days Only ot. 20-gau- only ot it V V : fc: mi f. : LIGHTWEIGHT BACK PACK Our Reg. 19.88 4 Days Only I i 97 MB Camper's great companion! Nylon pack with aluminum frame. 6 compartments. ictwoiwct" iv za&iau i. 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"and bjawrtapart," a 12X12' 0 ? coin-operat- The blast tore out sections of the concrete wall behind the lockers, hurled some of the said skycap Gary Cartwright. lockers through the lobby, ripped Police and federal agents tried into the ceiling, shredded to determine the origin of the blew out the glass blast. Investigators said the baggage and front of the terminal. force indicated an explosive "Right afterward, the whole charge equal to about eight terminal was silent. Then a few minutes later, people started screaming and looking for their friends," said passenger Barbara McLock. The dead were identified as Harper Glass, 64, of Inglewood, Calif., and Leonard Hsu, 46, of Lomita, Calif. Glass, who was carrying luggage for a small traveling circus on its way to Honolulu, and Hsu were right in front of frontiersmen Jim Legendary pounds of dynamite. Airport General Manager Clifton Moore said it was the most destructive bomb ever detonated at an American air terminal. About 300 persons were in the area when the bomb went off in a section of the overseas terminal about 20 feet from the Pan American World Airways check-i- n counter. Investigators believed the bomb was left in one of the public lockers there by someone who perhaps intended eventually to carry it aboard a plane but a witness said he saw the explosion come from a cardboard box on the floor next to the gift shop. John Van Den Heever, 26. told reporters he was standing 25 feet from the box and saw it erupt. His girlfriend, Ruth Converse. 17, was among the injured. She was holding a friend, Angela Thompson, 11, on her lap and the younger girl was blown to the Canning oonflicts com In assorted sizes, shapes and colors, are caused by a number of different reasons and can happen to anyone. Some can be prevented by careful following of canning procedure instructions. Others, which merely make the food less attractive, are related to the ripeness of fruit and vegetables, the physkangeinthefood Airing processing, or the chemical reaction between the food and canning iquid. The following guide was desigr.ed to help you discover the cause behind the conflict. 'Jars do not seal because: The jar rim was chipped or the rim was not adequately wiped off after filing. Particles of food came between the sealing compound and the rim of the Jar. The jar was filled too full; consequently, the Hd did not close property. In not Jar lids were used accordance with the manufacturer's directions. The lids were either too hot or too cold for a good seal. A scratch across the sealing compound left an air space that prevented a complete seal. The screw band was rusty or bent and dW not hold the Hd firmly against the rim of the jar. The screw band was tightened after the jar was removed from the canner. The lids were detective. This does not happen often with new Ids, but it is possfele. 'Foods spoil because: Pressure In canner was not maintained at 10 pounds during processing. This happened because the pressure gauge was not accurate, the heat under the canner was loo low and alowed the pressure to drop below the necessary 1 0 pounds pressure, or no altitude correction was made at elevations above 2,000 feet. in the water-bat- h canner was not kept at a ful boll throughout the entire . Water processing time, or the water level m the canner dropped below the tops of the jars. Air was not sufficiently exhausted from pressure canner before regulator was placed over the vent to build up necessary pressure. Note. Low acid foods (such as most vegetables, meats and fish) must be processed in pressure canner to prevent the development of the microorganisms responsible for food and poisoning spoilage. 'Foods change color because: Preparation of foods was too timely. Food was not processed long enough to destroy the enzymes that effect color. Foods were overprocessed. Liquid in the jars did not completely cover the food. Exposed portions became discolored. Air bubbles were not removed. Fruits such as apples and pears were not specially treated with ascorbic acid color High color in foods such as beets and cherries dissolved in the liquid or syrup. Chemical changes took place in the coloring matter of the fruit or vegetable. Food was stored in exceptionally strong light or In too warm a place. 'Foods Host because: Food was packed too loosely In the jar. Syrup was too heavy for the fruit. Raw-pac- k products tend to float more than those that have some precookjng. More air remains in the tissues of uncooked food at the time it goes Into the far. Food was processed too long. Fruit was overripe. 'Sediment coHecta In the botom oilers because: Minerals present in the water used for precooiong foods or for filling the jar settled out. Table salt with an ingredient was used In place of picking salt. Starch in com and beans settled out. Fruits were too ripe. 'Liquid Is low or tost because: Food was packed too tightly or jars were filed too ful. The product boiled over and started a siphoning action. Water was less than one-inc-h over the tops of the ars In water-bat- h canner. Pressure in pressure canner did not remain constant during the processing time foods the absorbed Starchy liquid. Air bubbles were not removed. I hope this guide win help you avoid or correct the problems you encounter during this If vou have other woblems noi covered in tti trtk-i- n and future cannino seasons nfiuuu J.Jcalme E J w |