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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 56

Location:
St. Louis, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
56
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

14D TW, Sept. ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH GREECE, TURKEY over the bland republic of Cyprus. Announcements i Istanbul and Athens said that Turkish Premier Suleyman Demirel and Greek Premier Constantine Kol-lias would meet Saturday in Turkish town, and Sunday in a Greek town near their common border. Tha announcements said the meetings would serva to "examine Greek-Turkish relations in general in light of discussions which have taken place between the two governments, including the Cyprus question, and to exchange views on international developments of interest to both countries." 5 PLEAD NOT GUILTY IN PURPLE MARTIN CASE Bjwclal lo th Pout-Dispatch JEFFERSON CITY, Sept.

7r-Two state employes and three sheriff's deputies charged with killing federally-protected birds last Aug. 21, entered pleas of Magistrate 0. Lee Munger. They were charged with killing more than 1800 purple martins near the Governor's mansion. The defendants, Earl Campbell, Stanley Duemler, Roy Renn, Larry Jarrett end Edward Plogstead, asked for a trial by a 12-man jury.

Magistrate Munger set the case for Oct. 19. The defendants allegedly weir assigned by a state supervisor to get rid of the birds aTOurid the Governor's mansion. They fired at them with shotguns, thinking they were starlings, they said. They are charged under a state law.

The mum penalty is a $500 fine and 90 days in jail. TO DISCUSS CYpRUS PR0BLEM ATHENS, Sept. 7 (UPI) -Greece and Turkey announced yesterday that their premiers and foreign ministers would meet this for talks aimed at resolving differences not guilty yesterday before a nrvirmn- nnnnffiir iinnrran: RifmnpiffBrc nnnni IPSP BEIGE JUKE RAM JUICE ORAHQE JWIi 0m BHGE JUKE OIBEM JUKI UHHBEJIK fM RE JUKE MIKE JUKE TOEKJH VxV jL2 nMiiR nnnnimc nmaniiE iiiihpk nranMCK annni Victim of Change An automobile resting against a tree alongside a highway near Goteborg, Sweden, yesterday after the driver, Charles Andersson, 79 years old, was Icillsd. This was the first traffic fatality since Sweden switched Sunday to driving on the right hand side of the road. Police said Andersson was attempting to avoid an approaching automobile.

Heavy Rain Brings Relief To Water-Short Hong Kong You don'f have to 'FS IEWIE3V jw-w fjijl jf Asia is not a surplus-producing area. Two victims of the terrorism that local Communists have launched in an attempt to unseat the i i were buried yesterday in a Roman Catholic cemetery. Anti-Communist radio personality Lam Bun and his cousin, Lam -h died after a Communist "traitor liquidation squad" doused them with kerosene and set them afire. Despite tight security measures and the heavy downpour, more than 1000 persons attended the funeral. Numbered slabs identified the graves.

Government officials were considering naming a street after Lam Bun. STUDENT BEATS GIVEAWAY; GAME IS CANCELED Replace one old flavor with two new ones. Make Mondays and Fridays Del Monte Pineapple-Grapefruit Drink-for-Breakfast Days. We'll be pleased. But you'll be tickled.

100 WHOLE WHEAT BREAD ArJedl HONG KONG, Sept. 7 (UPI) Heavy rain in Hong Kong yesterday brought relief to this colony of 4,000,000 persons dependent on Communist China for much of its water. China should begin pumping 15 billion gallons of water for the six months starting Oct. 1, but there was no assurance Peking would abide by a contract signed three years ago. The Chinese ignored Hong Kong requests for emergency supplies to help the colony through a dry summer.

As a result, water was rationed to four hours every four days. Yesterday's rainfall filled reservoirs. The government announced that it was calling off rationing so long as the reservoirs remained at peak capacity. Even so, the government was preparing for a dry winter. There is official uncertainty whether there is anyone left in neighboring Chincese province of Kwangtung to turn on the contracted supplies next month The province is torn by Civil itrife centering in Canton.

Dwindling food supplies are also a problem for British colonial authorities. China normally ships 70 per cent of Hong Kong's food, most of it by sea, some by rail. Fewer boats and hardly any rail traffic has been coming to the colony, and food prices have soared. Now the government is seeking other sources of food, hampered by the fact that Southeast Cap Sheaf is prepared from the healthy heart of the grain and ONLY45 CALORIES PER SLICE ONE OF THE TRULY DIFFERENT BREADS FROM FreundL PITTSBURGH, Sept. 7 AP) A law student who cracked a service station giveaway game is going to collect, if he does not tell how he did it, his law yer said yesterday.

Although nobody would say how much the student, Barry Tumpson, is getting, the lawyer remarked: "I think it will very handily help him get through1 law school. Tumpson figured out how to beat a game called "Heads or Tails," sponsored by Esso sta tions. He collected enough win ning cards to be worth $20,000 The game was canceled. Spotted Leopard with luihmon tracker an ihi right, on of the leott acceiiible and molt remote of oil African tribeimen. Itopard ihot by Da no Brown, Country of Angola, South- wt Africa.

at. 1 s- ysv ftp Presents COFFEE 100 COLOMBIAN AND OTHER RARE, MILD COFFEES 2 jw a no Mi mm At BETTENDORF-RAPP At FOOD TOWN At IGA FOOD LINERS At SCHNUCK'S Markets At TOM-BOY Stores At Independent Supers Or Ask Your Grocer BOTTLED BY PEPSI-COLA METROPOUTAN BOTTLING COMPANY, INC. OF ST. LOUIS, MO. UNDER AUTHORITY OP PEPSICO, NEW YORK, NEW YORK.

"Pepl and "Ptpsl-Colt" an ftgfsttred tradtmarta of Inc N.Y N.Y..

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About St. Louis Post-Dispatch Archive

Pages Available:
4,206,408
Years Available:
1869-2024