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Show a Page 22-T- Friday. October HERALD, Provo, Utah, HE 4 t Offspring 42 Money in ACROSS 13 12 I 14 Bit M 8 S E 9.1. 1 D n E u A T. 5.A fiflT Ail OR o Tr o t r L -- Tw I w p!tj a dlIoJT Nls JLmw ZlU 1 T T E A M M2, WOO I E O 19 Automotive so-3- 8 ciety (abbr.) 21 Attitude 23 Shade tree 24 Christian Hope 41 Seedsman 42 Invitation re- holiday sponse (abbr 25 Gather 43 Information 26 Skeleton part bureau (abbr 27 Succulent ) 44 Penned up plant Safety agency 45 Body (abbr ) 45 Beverage ruts io worn 47 Court cry Let it stand Forfeit 48 First-rat- e 51 Weeding (comp. wd.) implement Humility 52 Day (Heb.) Half a score 28 M 30 32 35 36 17 10 9 8 11 Leap Off Bridge Foiled by Police n "" 2- 021 24 23 TT 126 LOGANSPORT. Ind. Police say a (UPI) despondent young man who survived a leap into a knee-deecreek was about to make a second jump, but they stopped him. 32 """IT-- " " 35 34 p 33 39 40 charge of disorderly 41 46 45 " il 49 50 53 54 55 56 57 58 I I I I I 47 1 J 48 C2 PARIS (UPI) - el I I charged this month Giscard received the baubles from Bokassa during four trip to the Central African ii i Republic between 1970 and 1975. The periodical also said Giscard's brother and two cousins received gems from Bokassa and charged Giscard violated standing customs rules by not declaring the value of gems when he returned to France. The president's cousins, Jacques and Francois Giscard d'Esta ft I Willovvbrook Hill Of CONDOMINIUMS PROVO Coin k Company r "HOTEL FRANKENSTEIN" AVAILABLE TICKETS OFFICE AT MON.-FR- I. OREM HIGH MAIN p.m. ONIYI (Starling Oct. 22, 1979) 12-- 4 NO PHONE RESERVATIONS. 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TOOT. ?09 60 N 300 W MOVOl'3 SH0W8P.NL presents 177-X- IHM) Fri. & Nov. q TOMORROW 10:00 P.M. Sold exclusively I'hont' Or .m - Twin tennis courts a lUcqurttMll courts a Swimming pool D Whirlpool o Sp o ftirtwquc Picnic irus a Tot lots logging ntr path o ClubhousCsociil Public Stuna o Came room Homes priced transportation from U4.WU RETURNS TO UTAH COUNTY i i it! i Community Amenities: The moil acclaimed IMS Muiical of All Time Seen by Over 2 Million People! con- the French president would issue his statement. But there was speculation in Parliament that Giscard would rebut the charges on nationwide television. The satirical weekly. Le Canard Enchaine. innn- OFEKS ing, d'Estaing may go on on national television to answer charges that he received diamonds as gifts from from deposed Central African Emperor Jean-BedBokassa I. Giscard's spokesman confirmed the president will respond to the allegations that he received diamonds from Bokassa but did not say when or how u A MICHAEL denied the allega- Central African capital, tions and said they will to seize all archives from sue the publication. The Bokassa's office to prepresident's brother vent a scandal. Bokassa, who reportedOlivier also denied the ly took part in massacres charge. of schoolchildren in The Foreign Ministry Bangui, was overthrown also denied a claim by Le in a coup in September. Canard Enchaine that it His alleged involvement transmitted coded in- in the killings provoked structions to the French widespread protest in Embassy in Bangui, the France and abroad. Presi- nr ROERT Planning to Answer Charges dent Valery Giscard past decade." "A reduction in the use of harmful pesticides was the greatest aid. We can still attribute some infant mortality among eagles to the residues of DDT found in the woodlands,'' he said. This year, for example Gramlich said, more than 42 eaglets were born compared with 35 in 1978. duct. The young man had told his former girlfriend that if she wouldn't take him back, he would jump off a " 42 143 144 the birds' ability to reproduce. "At one point in the 1950s we had a repoductivity level of essentially nothing We reached a low of about seven baby eaglets in one year." said Wildlife Service spokesman Frank Gramlich. But he said the use of less harmful chemicals in Maine's woodlands, greater protection of eagle nests, and a major effort to educate hunters and woodsmen have achieved "some success over the ja The who was not identified, was arrested on a preliminary ' 38 37 .TaU. li.t a bridge police said. When his threat failed to win the compassion he sought, the man leaped from the Sixth Street bridge into knee-dee- p water, but was - 2T"2930" ' 51 ar class funeral" Charlie wanted. Smith, who usually dressed in a string tie and a cowboy hat. was buried in a new suit after a service attended by a diplomat and hundreds of mourners. :: A fund to help defray expenses for the old Smith's fancy funeral last Saturday was set up : at the Citrus and Chemical bank but Margaret Boren. assistant cashier, said donations have not v materilized. She said Wednesdav the fund was over $1 500 g short of the $2,600 needed to pay for the funeral. x. Except for Smith's small bank account, a $100 g donation from the bank and Social Security 'j: money, no funds have been forthcoming, she said' It was announced in all the papers and it was announced around the community about the fund and how contributions could be Smade." said Mrs. Boren. "But so far nobody's income forward." Margaret Ghent, Smith's close friend and confidant, is believed responsible for the bills since she vsigned for all the expenses. :j Small deer 39 Comedian - - BARTOW. Fla ( UPI A fund set up to pav for :: the funeral of Charlie Smith, who was the nation's oldest resident at the reputed age of 137. is more than $1,500 short of the $2,600 it cost for the ' first SIT ElEiD 0 A Years of painstaking efforts to save the bald eagle and whooping crane two of America's most majestic birds appear to be paving off. federal wildlife officials say. A spokesman for the U.S. Wildlife Service has reported that a program in northeast Maine to protect one of the nation's few remaining populations of bald eagles from extinction has met "with some, success." But he warned that plans for an oil refinery and other pressures by industry to build in the area could jeopardize the birds. In the West officials said an attempt to create a new flock of the vanishing whooping cranes also seems to be taking hold. A whooper from the experimental flock arrived for the winter this week at New Mexico's Bosque Del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in the Rio Grande Valley after flying 800 miles from its summer home in Grays Lake. Idaho, a spokeswoman said. She said scientists are hoping as many as 17 other cranes will make the trip before winter sets in. The flock was created three years ago by taking eggs from the nests of the nation's only other known flock of whooping cranes, which migrates between Canada and Texas. The effort to save the bald eagle in Maine was prompted by widespread use of pesticides, including DDT. in the 1950s that eventually began threatening - 0 u p eiapseg"ewder S T 19"" 22 e tM PfjO DIE ST W t Ti Ti S.5 I Sill Ti IN AM U Efforts to Save Bald Eagle, Whooping Crane Paying Off Charlie Smith's Funeral Fund Short by $1,500 lftCADjS g u j m e n E L J. A Z 6 5 Ti 25 ftjO iiiii India Groan 45 Sign of 5 Old time sorrow 9 Compass 46 The sun (Lai.) point 12 Earthy deposit 49 Compass 13 Flower point 50 Display 14 Mime 52 Child's toy 15 Bin 53 Wine (Fr.) 16 Nile queen, 54 Big book for short 17 Gentleman 55 Poems 56 Time zone 18 Donkey 19 Demure (abbr.) 57 Time division 20 Paiate 58 Labyrinth 22 Nipple 24 12, Roman DOWN 25 Russian monetary unit 1 Charitable or27 Loving 31 Biblical land ganization 32 Comedian (abbr.) 2 Rowing tools King 3 Arm strap (2 33 Fast aircraft wds.) (abbr.) 4 Law degree 34 Actress Southern (abbr) 5 Pleasure ship 35 Makes cow 6 Paris airport sounds 7 Feel regret 36 You (archaic) 8 Feeling 37 Italian 9 Impudence innkeeper 10 Point of land 39 Wild animal 40 Type of poem 1 1 Existed 1 19, 1979 Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 n 0 ar. ati |