Newspaper Page Text
Page 16
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, November 16,1972
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DEMONS Easy Bake Oven Toy land Parade Pushbutton Farm Coffee Maker Automatic Iron Baker-Broiler 30/30 RIFLE
wv..tr3” s 10” 3” ” f “ 10 ' 6” 13” 24 88 s&> 29 88 »"“« $69
Each Scream’n Demon Bakes cookies, pizza, & Three 8' . inch soldiers The activity and sounds Will perk your coffee & Self-cleaning push but- Pushbutton control and 22’ Barrel walnut fin-
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and recbarger Forward U" TRIKE .10 88 ’* Con.ro. .... 16.88 —
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Amish odyssey
They may get wagon across bridge
By JOHN M. WILLIAMS
PEEKSKILL, N.Y. (UPI) — The Amish
religion allows its members no “modem”
conveniences—and that includes auto
mobiles. So when Eli Garber, an Amish
farmer, set out from Maine to visit his
native Pennsylvania he used his normal
means of transportation, a wagon pulled
by two horses.
His trip, an 800-mile jaunt, stalled
Wednesday night because of a New York
state law forbidding livestock from the
Bear Mountain Bridge that crosses the
Hudson River just west of here. That law
includes horses, even if they are pulling a
wagon carrying an Amish farmer, his wife
and four children.
The 39-year-old farmer parked his
wooden-spoked wagon in a rest area on
Man in wheelchair charged
with killing in courtroom
HOUSTON (UPI) —William
Johnson Jr., bitter because he
Today, Fri., Sat.
Double Feature
(R)
"BLEEP”
"GIRL ON A
CHAIN GANG”
N.Y. 202 across from the local hamburger
drive-in restaurant. His two horses were
tethered in a nearby field.
But it looks like the modem technology
he abhors has come to his aid. Efforts by a
local radio station brought the promise
from bridge authorities they might allow
the tiny wagon carrying Garber and his
family to cross “by special escort” today.
Garber’s journey was special in itself.
Speaking through plastic sheeting that
guarded his wooden wagon from the
below-freezing cold, he said he had spent
the last year homesteading in Maine in an
attempt to escape the industrialized
society that was creeping up on his
community near Harrisburg. He said he
traveled through the Catskill Mountains on
his way to Maine but decided to follow a
must spend the rest of his life
in a wheelchair, was charged
Wednesday with killing the
woman who crippled him as she
waited for a courthouse eleva
tor during a recess in her trial.
“I have a nervous condition
where she shot me five times,”
said Johnson, 24, as he was
wheeled to police headquarters.
“I’ll be paralyzed for the rest
of my life. She didn’t have to
do that. That’s why I shot her.
I wanted to kill her.”
Carol Venters, 28, the mother
of four children and Johnson’s
common law wife, was shot
once in the left shoulder and
once in the lower back with a
snub-nosed, .22 caliber pistol.
She died about two hours later.
Mrs. Venters was standing
trial for shooting Johnson, a
former service station employe,
when he threatened her with a
tire tool during an argument
last year.
Witnesses said Johnson first
pointed what appeared to be a
toy gun at Mrs. Venters as they
waited for the elevator on the
third floor of the courthouse.
He pulled the trigger several
times and said, “Bang, bang,
bang! You’re dead!”
Mrs. Venters laughed and
coastal route on the way back. He said he
was returning to try to convince other
Amish families that New England offered
a more simple and less congested life.
Garber said things had changed in the
old Pennsylvania-Dutch country. He said
his year in Maine was an attempt to “get
away from the influence The People (the
modem Amish) seemed to be getting
into.”
“We’re more old order minded,” he
said. “There are a lot of us who are not
satisfied.” He said he would “talk it over”
with the others in Pennsylvania about
moving to New England and “try to get
organized together.”
Life in Maine, he said, “was very
satisfying.” Though it was cold in the
winter (he said the temperature once
, • *wJfll AliilliUVfc I ■///sSrX 7?
MIAMI, Fla.—Michael Nozza (1) accused of the malnutrition death of his 3-year-old son leaves a
custody hearing in Miami where his five remaining children were placed in protective custody for
30 days. Mrs. Lois Jean Nozza (r) accused her husband of beating her and the kids and would not
buy food for them. (UPI)
started to walk away, but
police said Johnson then pulled
out a real pistol and fired it
twice. He was immediately
wrestled to the floor by a
deputy sheriff and one of Mrs.
Venters’ attorneys.
Several dozen persons, includ
ing four jurors in the trial,
witnessed the shooting.
K. D. Sims, a court employe,
said he searched Johnson for a
weapon Tuesday after over
hearing a witness say Johnson
was “going to get her.” Sims
did not find a weapon and said
he was too busy with other
courtroom duties to search
Johnson Wednesday.
Sheriff’s Sgt. John Logan,
who helped subdue Johnson,
said Johnson was still trying to
fire the pistol as he was
knocked to the floor.
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dipped to 40 below zero), the bearded
Garber said the life was good and his
family did not want for much.
His family farmed and lived off what
they could grow. He said they ate in the
wagon during their trip. “Simple things,
he said, “Simple food.”
The Garbers’ presence in the rest area
aroused the interest of the townspeople
and cars continually drove into the rest
area to take a glimpse of the wagon and its
inhabitants. Over at the drive in
restaurant, children pressed close to the
glass and queried one another about the
people across the way. “Do you think
they’re from the Stone Age?” said one as
he chomped on a double cheeseburger.
BIRD LOVER JAILED
BANGKOK (UPI) —For sev
eral days, traffic policeman
Suthep Srisakdi noticed a man
who walked by his duty post
carrying a live pigeon under his
arm.
Suthep grew more and more
curious.
Then Monday, he stopped and
asked the man if he could look
CONVENIENT
REAR DOOR
PARKING
At
PURSER
Furniture Co.
124 N. HUI St.
at the bird.
When the pigeon spread its
wings, Suthep saw a little red
plastic bag tied to one wing.
LOAN
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BY PHONE
227-7213
Personal
FINANCE CO.
118 North HUI St.
Griffin, Georgia
Mrs. Norma Lenhart, Mgr.