trial of century' starred patty (march 21, 1976)
TRANSCRIPT
8/4/2019 'Trial of Century' Starred Patty (March 21, 1976)
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/trial-of-century-starred-patty-march-21-1976 1/1
Hearst Case
"Trial ofCentury'Starred PattyCA M E*DA iVTr^fo/™ "/^ . A. r - k . ••«aMMa^i*^k*w«M^,,.,....,. „ "SA N FRANCISCO (AP)
The federal bank robberytrial of newspaper heiress Pa-tricia Hearst was one of themost widely publicized courtproceedings in recent his-tory.
Ke y figures in the trialwere U.S District CourtJudge Oliver J Carter de-fense lawyer F Lee Baileyand U.S Atty James L.
Browning, the governmentprosecutor
Th e verdict climaxed acourtroom drama describedby one defense attorney as"the trial of the ce ntury."The unquestioned star of thedrama was Miss Hearst her-self, telling at last her ownterrifying tale of nearly twoyears in the underground.
Frequently t e a r f u l an dgasping for breath, she re-called in vivid detail he rnightmare months of captiv-ity locked in a hot stuffy clos-et where she said she wasraped tortured and threaten-ed with execution.
"I was really scared," shetold her jurors, insisting thatthese threats of death moti-
vated her avowals of con-version to the terrorist Sym- .bionese Liberation Army .
Sh e called her own tapere-corded words of revolutionlies anddisavowed her secretlife as Tania' of the under-ground The tapes wereforced 6y her captors, shesaid, and h er gun-totin g rolein the bank robbery was apose to please them.
It was a unique defense.She never denied that she hadwalked into th e Hiberniabank one spring morning andhelped rob it N or did shedeny it was her voice whichbragged of the robbery on ataped "communique."
What she did deny wa s thatshe did any of it willingly.He r defense was coercion,and she insisted that she be-lieved even as she cradledher gun in the bank that shemight be executed at any mo-ment
But the government, in itseffort to convict Miss Hearstof armed bank robbery, told adifferent story. All but ignor-ing her kidnaping, Browningused the heiress' ow n wordsas the most damaging evi-dence against her.
JURY SAYS GUILTY - Patricia Hearst
wa s found guilty Saturday of the Hibernia,Calif., bank robbery by a jury that deliber-ated only 12 hours. Miss Hearst, Who hadentered the courtroom smiling minutes be-
fore, showed no immediate emotion whenthe verdict wa s announced. In this photo.Miss Hearst is shown holding a weapon dur -ing the April 15.1974. holdup. (UPI Photo)
lieve their own eyes and ears-that the films could be in-terpreted in Miss Hearst's fa-vor and the tapes were care-f u l l y coerced lies.
The trial wa s rocked sever-al times by outside occur-rences — most notably theterrorist bombing of the fa-bled Hearst Castle. San Sim-eon Although her jury was se-questered Miss Hearst tookadvantage of a Browning er-ror and managed to tell themfrom the witness stand of thebombing and other threats onher life by the New World Lib-eration Front.
Otticiais have said theyknow little about the N W L Fincluding its size The grouphas claimed responsibilityfor several bombings in theSa n Francisco area
Even now, Miss Hearsts a i d t e a r f u l l y . 'I t h i n kthere's a good chance I couldbe killed "
On the tape recording sheinsisted was forced, MissHearst's jurors heard her de-clare. "On April 15. my com-rades and I expropriated?10,660.02 from the SunsetBranch of the Hibernia Bank
. . My gun was loaded and atno time did any of my com-rades in tentional ly pointtheir guns at me."
The prosecution had otherheavy weapons in its arsenalof evidence There were banksurveillance f i lms whichclearly showed Miss Hearstin the guise of the bewigged"Tania," training her sub-machine gun on bank custom-ers.
An d there were the wordsof a youth who quoted thefugitive Miss Hearst as con-fessing the bank robbery tohim. "She said she was a will-ig participant," testifiedTom Matthews.
Bu t Bailey set out to con-vince jurors they could not be-
Her testimony, designed toprove her innocence, leftsome unanswered questions,including her activities fornearly a year after she re-turned to California fromflight to the East Coast. Butit wrote a partial ending tothe bizarre story of politicalkidnaping and conversionwhich ha d captivated theworld during the young heir-ess' mysterious months onthe run.
Many eyewitness accountswere offered after the abduc-tion bu t none as dramatic asthe victim's ow n recollec-tions from the witness stand.
Miss Hearst weepingly re-membered the knock at herdoor and a dark form askingto use the phone, then the 'three abductors rushing in.
"Bitch, you'd better be qui-et." she said her chief tor-mentor shouted as she wasgagged and blindfolded, herhands tied behind her back
Sh e remembered hearingthe screams of her lover, gun-shots and more screams as
she was stuffed in the t runkof a car and taken away
"I was struck in the faceand I lost consciousness,"she recalled t ear fu l ly "Icame to and I was being drag-ged down thestairs . . Some-body grabbed me and then Iwa s in the trunk of a car "
In her excruciating three-day narrative. Miss Hearst,almost constantly in tears, re-called the nightmare scenesof her captivity - beginningwith her imprisonment in twosmall closets which becameher torture chambers.
In those closets, she said,
she was raped by two SLAsoldiers. William Wolfe
and Donald Cinque' DeFreeze. and was constantly tormented with threats of in-stant death
'I figured they'd have tokill me." sh e said at onepoint. "I had been there toolong and'. . I knew too muchanyway ."
wa y inside the bank, and 1just wanted to get out ofthere." she said
On Feb. 19. with the juryabsent, Miss Hearst invokedthe 5th Amendment 19 timesas Bailey tried to bar ques-tioning about her travels inthe 12 months before she wasarrested Carter later toldher she had to answer thequestions because she waivedher 5th Amendment rights bytaking the stand in her owndefense
After about a month in thecloset at a Daly City hideout,she said the S LA brigademoved to San Francisco, tak-ing their hostage along in agarbage can.
"I was just kind of hunchedup in the garbage can," MissHe a r s t r e c a l le d . " Th e ydropped it a couple of timeswhen they took it out ot the
car."
The second closet, she saidwa s even smaller than thefirst - one-foot-seven-incheswide by five-feet long. Again,she was kept blindfolded, al-lowed out only to use the bath-room and for once-a-weekbaths with a ski-masked SL A"soldier" standing guard.
In case Miss Hearst's de-scr ip t ion w as n o t v i v i denough Bailey decided jurors should see the closets forthemselves With court in recess for Washington's Birth-d a y , th e jurors, judge, attor-n e y s an d t h e d e f e n d a n therse l f were taken on astrange safari through therainy streets of San Fran-cisco to the scenes of her cap-tivity
Distraught and stunned bythe crush of cameramen andc u r i o s i t y seekers MissHearst was rilshed in and outo f the two buildings. Jurorsshowed no reaction to the ad-venture, but Miss Hears tnearly fainted
• On Feb 23. she defied Car-ter and with th e ju ry present
invoked the 5th Amendment42 times when asked aboutthe missing year
A s she sat on the witnessstand, fashionably attired ina new navy pants suit, a de-mure white bow at her neck.she projected an image ofgenteel breeding alien to thelikes o f ' Tania '
Th e fashionable ne w ward-robe and solemn appearancewere part of a concerted de-fense effort to erase from ju-rors' memories th e laughingPatty who had waved aclenched fist of defiance atthe world when she was cap-tured Sept. 18. 1975.
Her arrest at a San Fran-cisco apa rtment began a newand more bizarre chapter 01heg saga — life as a defend-ant and jai l inmate.
Upon her arrival at SanMateo County j a i l . Pa ttyHearst was asked her occupa-tion. 'Urban guerrilla." theheiress replied.
A t he r tr ial , th e prose-cution seized on this declara-tion as proof of her true alle-g i a n c e to v i o l e n c e . T hedefense explained it away asa last show of compliance bya terrified victim
IK'S SMILING — U.S. Prosecutor James L. Browningiisplays a broad smile during a meeting w i t h th e pressSaturday al te r a ju ry found • Patricia Hearst guilty ol thei ibe rma Bank robbery Defense Atty F Lee' Bailey,lowever. said We are not too thrilled about it, and said he
would appeal the conviction (UPI Photo)
Back in court, the pale slen-der defendant told of her re-lease from the closet abouttwo months after her kidnap-ing She was christened 'Tan-la" then, she said, and wastold she would help rob abank.
S he said DeFreeze , theblack ex-convict chosen tohead the ragtag S LA, gaveher an ul t imatum " H esaid, fight or die, that I wouldeither have to stay with them
and join up with them, or I'dbe killed an d that I betterstart thinking about it '
So she went to the bank, shesaid, to save her life, bu t still1 cared she might bo killed byIho dreaded Cinque
I t h o u g h t even t h o u g h 1w o u l d g o in a n d d o t h i s , t h a th e was going to k i l l me a n y
The clenched-fist picturewa s admitted "in evidence,and jurors were told to drawtheir ow n conclusions. Bu tthey were reminded by the de-fense. verbally and visually.that this defendant was "aHearst," heiress to a legendand to vast wealth.
Each day of her trial, jurors could glance at the frontrow of the court and spot thefamily — parents, sisters andoccasionally cousins — sup-porting the woman who hadonce denounced them as "pigHearsts"
During her daughter 's mostsordid recollections, Cath-erine Hearst would wipeaway a tear and RandolphHearst his face a portrait inpain would shield his eyeswith one hand
The anguish of Patty s par-ents was a key element mBailey 's defense plans. Hesought jurors with children.hoping they would identi tyand t h i n k , "But ior the graceof God, that might be mydaughter "
Before theywere empa-neled the jurors ha d followed
news coverage avidly andknew not only ot the bank rob-bo ry b ut a l s o o f M i s sHearst ' s part icipation in an-other (Time H shootoul a t ,1
Las Angoloa sport ing goods
ev s t r u c tu r e d a d e f e n s ewhich would, in effect give ananswer to both cases Hehoped that the Los Angelescharges would be eradicatedby an acquittal in San Fran-cisco.
Browning, in hi s prose-cution case used the Los An-geles escapades as evidenceof the defendant 's lawless in-
clinations He showed thatshe waited in a van while f e l -
low fugitives William andEmily Harr i s went shop-lifting, fired a submachinegun to provide hem with c o v -er and made a getaway withthem, hijacking a car in theprocess
Ironically Miss Hearst ad-mitted all of it Her defense,again, was simple but un-precedented she was a vic-t i m . b r a i n w a s h e d a n dcoerced, so terrorized by theHarrises that she acted as arobot manipulated by fear
S he portrayed th e Harrisesas guardians ot the SLAcredo who abused her and in -
sisted she continue allegianceeven after six ol their com-rades died in a f iery Los An-geles Shootout.
The survivors wh o sharedM i s s H e a r s t ' s f u g i t i v emonths did not testify Mostsaid they feared self-in-crimmation
But the ghostly images otMiss Hearst s dead captorspervaded th e t r i a l . Theirfaces were seen in the eeriebank films: their voices wereheard on the SLA tapes, andtheir violent deaths were re-enacted in videotape footageof the flaming S hootout
He r relationship with oneot them became a crucial is-s u e . Miss hearst swore thatWil l iam Wolfe, known as"Cujo." raped her while shewas captive in the closet. Sh edenied her own taped eulogvwhich declared W ol fe "thegentlest, most beautiful ma n
I ve ever known 'Coaxed by Browning to ad-
mit she had affection forWolfe she displayed her tal-ent for using the prosecutor 'squestions to her own advantage
Q. Did you in fact have astrong feel ing lor Cujo
A I n a w ay. yes
Q ^s a m a t te r oi fact, didyou love him
A N o
Q. But didn' t you say youdeveloped a high regard forhim''
A No 1 said 1 had astrong feeling about him
Q. W h a t type oi strong f e e l -in g
A . 1 couldn' t stand hi m
\j?&'vf*.
Classified
W i t h M i s s llearsi s t i l l l a c -in g t r u i l m t h a t i n c i d e n t B a i l
But the key issue was MissHearst's mental atti tude to-ward the S L A . and in thet r ial ' s waning days both sidesparaded in experts to tell ju-rors their discoveries aboutt h e w o r k i n g s o t M i s sHearst's mind.
Three psychiatrists hiredby the defense corroboratedMiss Hearst s witness standaccount of suffering Theyportrayed her as a prisoneroi war ' who was now suffering from 'survivors' syndrome "
The government, in an ex-tensive rebutta l case, calledit s own experts. One of them.Dr. Joel Fort, portrayed MissHearst as a "true believer"
in the SLA and a queen ofthe terrorist tr ibe
T he d o c to r w h o i n t e rviewed the heiress for some15 hours, said he believed shew as converted to the SLAless than on e month after he rk i d n a p i n g a n d w i l l i n g l yjoined other terrorist "sol-diers" in the bank robberyand in sexual encounters.
He said she spoke t avora b l . v of Wolfe and two otherSL A members and Fort f e l t
she had formed affectionatebonds" with them
Thus, ju ror* were present-ed w i t h t w o confl icting por-t r a i t s ol i l i o heiress who hadbeen an enigma lor so longTh e judge warned them thatps.vchiatnc testimony neednot bo accepted as an abso-lute guide •
Wa s Patty Hearst a victimor volunteer when she joinedthe brazen daylight bank rob-bery '' G m l t y or innocent" i
Y o u and you alone have to (m. ik e t i n ? , u l t i m a t e d o n - \
M O I I , Car ter t o l d the juror*,and no psychiatr is t , no a \ \ -
u > i no judge oi anybody olso• m o u l d mvado tha i province
N E W S J O U R N A L
C l a s s i f i e dI n f o r m a t i o nNE W OFFICEHOURS
Monday throughThursday . g t<
Friday 8I<Closed Sa tu rd a y
C L A S S I F I C A T I O N SA N N O U N C E M E N T S
10 1 Death Notices10 2 Card of Thanks10 3 In Memonam04 Funeral Directors10 5 Florist — Funeral Design106 Cemetery Lots - Monuments10 8 Lost. Found
• 1 0 9 Tra ve l -—Tra n sp o r ta t io n• 1 1 0 Personal Announcements
A UC TION S11 1 Auctions
MERCHANDI SE11 2 Wa n ted to Buy — Swa p11 3 A nt iq ues— Stamps — C o i n s
• 1 1 4 Garage Sales• 115 Most Anything• 1 1 6 Lawn and Garden
11 7 Musical Instruments11 8 Camera Supplies
R E C R E A T I O N A L!19 Camping — Travel Tra ilers120 Boats - Motors12 1 Sports Equipment
AGRI CUL TURAL12 3 Livestock —Poultrv12 4 Fart-i, Food Products12 5 Farn Construction
EDUCATI ON12 6 Trade — Teen Schools
EMPLOYMENT13 0 Employment Agencies13 1 Administrative13 2 P ro fess iona l13 3 Clerical — O f f i c e13 4 Technical & Trades135 Genera
1Help
136 Sales Opportuni'es13 7 Telephone Sales138 Clubs Restaurants'39 Domestic Services
iOBS W A N T E D1 40 Wo rk Wa n ted Serv ices
F I N A N C I A L14 5 Business Opportunities146 Investment — Stocks — Bo n d s
14 7 Money to Loan — Wa n tedC E N T A L S150 Apartments Furnished'5! Ap a r tmen ts Unfurnished152 Houses Furnished153 Houses Unfurnished54 Light Housekeeping Rooms
155 Room and Board156 SL EEPI NG Ro o ms157 Mobile Homes Rent158 Garages
Darkmg
15° Farms ana -and — Ren t140 Business Property Rent or i_ease16 1 Lake and Resort Property16 2 Wa n ted o Rent
M OBILE HOMES16 5 Mobile Homes16o Modular Homes
E A L E S T A T E W A N T E D16 7 Real Estate Wanted
EAL ESTATE FOR SAL E170 NW Mansfield171 NE Mansfield172 SW Mansfield173 SE Mansfield174 Ontario:75 Lexington76 Bellville Butler77 Shelby78 Geographically Unclassed79 Business — Industrial80 Invest m ent81 Lots and Acrea ge82 Farms and Land83 Ou t o T o w n34 Lake and Reso r t
RUC KS AN D T R A I L E R S189 Heavy Duty
90 Light Dutv
R A N S P O R T A T I O N91 Bicycles92 Motorcvctes93 mport Sports94 Msc Autos95 American Motors Products
Gremlin96 Chrysler Products
Chrys lerDodgePlymo u th
97 Ford ProductsFordLmro nMercu ry
vS General Motors Products'BuickChevroletOldsmobilePontiac
•1»9 Au to Pa r t s Accessories
•person to Person Family Want Ad RateApplicable To These Classifications{No n -Co mmerc ia l
Announcements
101-Death Notices
H E T L E R JR .Stephen Hetler Jr 80, o f 2100 Cn-der Rd father of Robert, William,Eugen e, Mrs Leona Huffman,passed eway Saturday morning at
the Crestwood Care Center Friendsmay call at the Geiger-Herlihy Fu-neral Home Sunday 2 to 4 and 7 o 9Funeral services will beheld at thetuneral home Monday morning at10 00 wth Rev Sylvan Obergefello f f i ca t ing Burial will be in Mans-field Catholic Cemetery
Geiger-Herlihy
M U L L E TC > f fo rd W Mullet, 67 , o f 24 4 Green-lawn Ave , died Thursday in Mans-f i e ld General Hospital Born March2 I°Q9 in Coshocton, Ohio Surv iv -ing are his wfe, Grace Russell Mul-l e t . 3 sons, Clifford C, Lloyd E,and Ronald E. Mutlet; 9 grand-children, 1brother, Carl E Mulletand 2sisters Mss Nellie Mullet andMrs Charles Wise Funeral ser-vices wll be held Monday at 2 30p m at the First Church of TheNazarene, Straub Rd., conductedby Rev Ronald Emptage Burialwill be n Mansfield MemorialPark Friends may call at the Dia-mond St Home of Wappner FuneralDirectors
Wappner Funeral Directors
P E R R YJennifer Rebecca Perry, infantdaughter of Phyl iss Perry 56 4 Wa r-ren Rd grand-Daughter of Mr andMrs Ed Perry pa-sed away in Ak -ron Children's Hospital ThursdayGra ves id e serv ices will be conducted Monday at three oclock atRicn land Cemetery Arrangementsm charge ot Finefrock's
Fmefrock's Services
102-Card of Thanks
A sincere thanks to all relatives, neighbors, pallbearers and friends for theircards concern words ot sympathy andmany acts of kindness shown to us dur-ing the illness and death of our husbandand father A special thank you to DrSemur p Ralan, Dr Robert E Barkett,and'he nurses at General Hospital Alsoto Rev Alfred Schroeder, Rev Allen Reiter and the Aappner Funeral -lame
Mrs carl Daughertyand Family
T h e wi f e , son, brothers and sisters ofFrederic Noble Davis extend sinceret h a nk s and gratitude to the numerousf r iends and relatives who sent flowers,cards, food, and other expressions ofs y m p a t h y during our recent bereavemeni We are sincerely appreelat-> v e of the dignified services conductedby Rev Archie Johnson, the participa-tion and sympathy of th e numerous em-ployees and officials of WestinghouseCorp and Mansfield Tire & Rubber Co.,and to the friends wh o provided cars forthe funeral procession
Mrs. Frederic Nobe (Nettie) Davis
104—Funeral Directors
F I N E F R O C K ' S
1-DNews Journal, Mansfield, O .Sunday. M a r c h 21UjtTjt ^
Ill-Auctions
2 9 ,
S E R V I C E
G E I G E R H E R L I H YF u n e r a l H o m e
524-5532
T h e J o n e s M e m o r i a lF u n e r a l H o m e
T E R E S A PEIFFER, director681 Park Ave W -572-8111
W A P P N E RF U N E R A L D I R E C T O R S
TW O LOCATIONS
98 S Diamond St.100 Lex.-Springmill Rd
522-5211529-2323
108—Lost, Found
FOUND Large, mole cat, white wt h or-ange stripe bfotches. Vicinity of MowryRd. and 603 . 892-2452.
FOUND. Ig red female hound, very
friendly, Garver Rd south of Bellville.883-3302
FOUND Male Tiger cat, gray/brownstriped, Hit by car in front of Smucker's3 ' 1 2 / 7 6 Please call 522-7915.
FOUND small tan dog, if opear malea Straub Rd area 756-4114
LOST Large male rish Setter, Fourthand Rowland area Phone 525-2660
LOST Male black and white tiger cat,brown patch next to nose Ans 'Fluffy"Vic of W 6 th St. Cali 524-5526.
LOST pair of mens eyeglasses at theOsbun sale Reward. 522-9910 or Ashland289-0798.
L OST, small black and brown dog, ansto Jasper Dresden Dr area. 589-5636
LOST Yellow and black German SabeShepherd Ans. to "Neechee. Nocollar.Vi c o 2nd and Main. 526-4032
LOST 3 month o d male Irish SetterRowland Ave area Answers to 'Red'R E W A R D ' 524-2070
L OST 4 mo old ma le Irish Set-ter Vicini ty of 4th and Bowman74 7- 1994
LOST — male cat. grey/silver Beengone 5 days. Wearing studded red collar.Please call 526-1338 Diamond Hill areaCHILD'S PET
A U C T I O NURBAN renewal will re-move our building and sowe will sell listedItems bypublic auction -ORE-
m. M A R C H1 9 7 62 P . M .
2 0 1 N . S e l t z e r S t.
Crestline, O h i oRESTAURANT ITEMS
Square tables 26 side chairs, 2 Hotpoimelectric deep fryers, one Is'new, Ken-more oven, Thurmaduke 6' stainlesssteel steam table; 4' stainless stoeltable. Puffer Hubbard refrigerator with
compressor 2' long 2 shelf pie case; 4'long self-contained Pepsi-Cola beveragecooler 4- long self-contained Kelvlnatorfreezer United 3 keg draft beer dis-penser 4 3" long with 3 heads, air com-pressor and cooling compressor. Nation-a l 4 c a ta g c a s h register, kitchenprocess items as Hart griddle; Hart 4burner h ot plate; Hart 2 burner hot platew i t h griddle, Flannery dishwasher,Servel refrigerator, Osborne meat sllcerwith stand, work counter with stainlesssteel top, 4 and 5' storage cabinets, an-tique mod card table; Campbell soupmaker Toastmaster 2 slice toaster,Cory 2 element hot plate, 2 electric wallclocks menu signs and board, shelvingand storage racks; cigarette rack, V x f
x 3' high safe, adding machine; papercutter glass display case 5 long; dis-play case 4' long; odd work tables an dstools, utility truck, spare good electricmotors (2), all the glassware, silver-ware, cooking utensils, paper supplies,merchandise inventory and all other in-cidentals, 1 9 0 4 and up liquor license per-mits, large leaded glass window withwor d BANK in center Th is has been abar and lunch known to everyone.
G R E T E R ' SC R E S T L I N E , OHI O
Sale By:J I M G E B H A R D TRealty and Auction
Bucyrus284-3351Sycamore 927-4959
P U B L I C A U C T I O NOFFAR M EQUIPMENT
We will sell the following lilted farmequipment by auction at the farm lo-cated 15 m east of Mt Vernon, 9 m.south of Danville, Ohio, 2 m north ofMartinsburg on St Rt 62 to (Cnox Coroad 73turn east 2 m or 1V 4 m. north-west of Bladensburg on Co road 73 on:
T h u r s d a y , M a r c h 25, 1 9 7 612:30 P.M. Sharp
FARM EQUIPMENT1 9 6 8 Oliver 1850 dlesel tractor with widefront cab. 18-4x34 tires, over-under shift,heater, power steering, fully equipped(good cqnd.), Oliver 546 - 5x16 trip backplows with spring coulters (nice cond.),JD 1967 55EB combine with air cond.cab, 234 corn head and 12 ft floatinggram head hyd. hums reel (good cond. ),JD 494A corn planter with dry boxes andinsecticide boxes and rubber packingwheels, JD 34 PTO manurespreader, JO10 ft KBA transport disc 1969 New Hol-land 352 grinder mixer (very nice
/ JD 31 hay conditioner, 1975 JD 8ond /
Person that picked up red lacket on Rt.13 Mon please return to Clear ForkHigh, beongngs needed
HO — P ersona lAnnouncements
W A R N I N Gto the writers of ictltious advertising, itis a criminal act jnder Section 2739-17 ofthe Ohio Revised Code to publish fic-titious advertisements for purposes ofharassment or practical lokes Personsdoing sowll be prosecuted by this news-paper to the full extent of the law Youare sub jec t to penalties of fine and/orimprisonment
M R Berryman has contacted me.F. E. Morns
884-3356
Nurse needs female roommate to hepshare expenses wth same
522-1495
Auctions
111-Auctions
,
tonwagon wth flotation tires (like new),McCurdy 22Sbu.gravitybed(new), Dun-ham front end manure loader, JM8 tonwagon wt h Klllbros bed, JD 24 T balerwth 2 bale thrower, Farmham rake, JD32 B 8 row field sprayer wth fiber gasstank, JD 4 row rotary hoe, 3 pth, JD-FBB 13x7 graindrill on ubber hyd. lift andgrass seed attachment (nice cond.), JD42 ft. P T.O. hay andBrain elevator, JD 3section harrow. Pax 300 waterers, 24ft 4
in. grain auger. 1967 Chev C-50 heavyduty truck wth 4 speed and 2 speedtrans wt h 13 ft. Knephlde bed, nydhost new *res, folding stock racks andauger fert attachment (complete).
FEED25 large round bales of mixedhaytapprox 1200 b. A 100 bales first cut-ting alfalfa and timothy (thrower bales)'50 bales 2nd cutting alfalfa ha y 30 tonsof corn silage.NOTE The above equipment has hadgood care, some of which is nearly newand ready for the fieldNo small items, be on time.
Lunch ongrounds.TERMS CASH DAY OF SALESALE TO START AT 12:30 P.MPositive ID
M R . & M R S . J A M E S B U R C HOwners
L . H o w a r d J e w e l lAuctioneer
Phone Mt. V ernon 614-392-3211Mt. Gilead 419-946-1826
The Hilliers, Clerk andCashier "
S S C H I L L I N G E RFrank M Schillmger 56 , o f 813 Burton Av e died Thursday n the OhioState University Hospital in Coumbus Born April 24 , 1919 m Mans-f ie ld Su rv iv in g are his wfe, MaryL Sc hillmger one son Jeff Schil—l inger two daughters, Mrs MerleMorrow and Mrs Jerry Mabee.four g-andchildren, and two sis-ters Mrs Tho ma s Ka u fma n a n dMrs Sa m Z ivkov Funeral servicesw i l l be held Monday at 1 0 3 0 a m a tthe Diamonds! Home of the Wapp-ner Funeral Directors conducted byRev David Sipes Bunai wll be inMansfield Cemetery
Wappne r Funeral Directors
P U B L I C S A L EO F
F A R M E Q U I P M E N TDue to changng our farming operationwe will sel the followng listed farm
equipment by auction at the farm lo-cated 5 mles south of Mt Vernon, Ohioon State Rt 661 o the Village of Bran-don, turn left (east on Knox Co Rd no27 (Sycamore Rd then 1 mile to the'armon
S A T U R D A YM A R C H 27 , 1 9 7 61 2 : 3 0 P . M . S h a r p
6 TRACTORS 61 9 6 8 Allis Chalmers D-21 dlese tractorfully equipped wt h cab, (new cond.),1 9 7 4 1855 Oliver diese tractor wth wdefront roll bar. etc only 200 hr (|ustbroke in) 2-JD no 730 diese tractorswth electric starter JDno 630 gastrac-tor Massey Ferguson no 65 diesel trac-tor wth multi power set of JD5x16 semmounted plows JD 4x16 3 pt mountedplows, JD 4 x 1 6 pow set of Oliver rearmounted 6 row cultivators JD6rowcu1tivator JD 4 row cultivator set of 18-4 x38 dual wheels 2 sets of duals fits 730 a n d63 0 JD'ractors
EQUIPMENTMeyer 250 bu circulating grain dryerwth controls complete (3 yr old; JD 6row (30 n ) platelets corn planter JD 18tt foldup transport disc 1975 Dunham-Lehr cultigator 1975 speedy sprayer(like new) Nino 19 PTO ractor spread-er JD 13x7 gram drill on rubber JD 10ft K-B-A disc, JD 10 f t smoothing har-row JD 12 t springtooth harrow JDfront end loader JD hay conditioner JD4 bar rake on rubber JD lime spreader,jD (arm wagon on rubber wth bed,farm wagon wt h flat bed 25 ft. 6 in
( S C H L E G E LMrs. Florence R. Sleeker Schlegeifo rmer ly o f 6 41 Manchester Road,widow of Harry C Schlegei, motherot Charles H Schlegei, sister ofMrs Howard Miller Mrs Gordoniowash, and Mrs. Charles Arnett,passed away in Win ches ter N u rs ingHome Friday Friends may call inr mofrock s where servic es wll bet o r d u c t e d Monday afternoon at oneth i r ty o clock by the Rev Jer ry Lbcnmalenbcrger pastor of the F irs tEng l ish Lutheran Church, Inter-ment in Ma n s f ie ld Cemetery
Fmet ro ck ' s Serv ice
S C H N I T Z E RV io le t Schmtser 77 o f 274 RedmondRd Columbus widow ot Fredricki.SchmUer died t-nday in DoctorsHospital Coumbus Born No v 241 8 9 8 in Portsmouth Ohio Surviving•ire one son Fredrick J SchnM:ertwo daughters Mrs Roy Manecsea n d Mrs Russe l l Niebel eightor.indtlnldron 10 great g ra n dtMdren two brothers Loren andI.ul Cu t nmjhatn and one s is ter' X V s Hild.i Brandel Funeral serV / I I L S w i l l bt* held Monday af I 3 0P M <i l the Ontario Homo ot Wappin funcr.il Directors, conduc t edin the Re« Harold McNeil Burialw i l l bo ID Mansfield Memo r ia l\\\-k
Wiippnct Pjneral Directo rs I
grain auger with motor auger feed cart
4 <n portable gram auger nog sortingcrate Graham chisel plow W7 4 Chev 2ton truck wth 14 t grain bea foldupstock racks dual hyd host (nice cond )'970 Chev Vi ton pickup 'ruck heavyduty other TIISC terns not isted
CONSI GNED ITEMSi-ora sem mounted 4x14 plow JMgravity bed, 1 row Nl super picker n o 323good, 1 85 bu McCurdy gravity bed andrunning gears Ne w idea 35 f t grain andhay elevator wth hopper Ne w Idea no 7single row corn picker set of IHCw rowcultiva tors for H or M tractor Miller 10ft off set disc, 1949 Ford 8 N tractor wthloader and blade, 6 ft doube disc. 1cylWise engne. 32 t alum, ladder McCul-loch chain saw platform scales, 8 Itstock tank (new) fence stretchers,screw tack 7 rolls of new barbed wre,3-'8 .n eleclrn. drill and press frame, 3PTH tractor platform LI NCOLN ELEC-TRIC WELDER nev.) quantity of pres-sure treated .umber andblacksmith anvil, other mtsc articles not listed
SHEEP50 head yearling Iambi, cross bred Suffo lk-Dorset still in the wool, ready tobreed Possibly more available day ofsaleNOTE The above equipment is m goodconditi on and ready to go to the field. Nosmall art icle s so be on lime
TERM S Cash day ol salebale to start at 12 30 P.M
Posit ive IDLunch on grounds
M r & M r s . D a l e MillerOwners
L . H o w a r d J e w e l l
A u c t i o n e e rPhono Mt Vernon 614-393-3281
Mt Gilead 419-946-1826The Hilliers
Clerk and Cashier
N e w s J o u r n a l
W a n t A d s
G e t R e s u l t s
PUBLIC S ALE8 miles west ofMansfield, 1mte south ofRoute 30-S on Route 31 4
Sunday, March 28Time: 1 :30 P.M.
TR A C TO R S . 830 Case diesel, MD dlesel,
C Farmall 901 Forddlesel,
85Massey
Ferguson. 1000 Case SP, 2010 JD dlesel/VC Allis Chalmers combine
Farm Machinery J-14 Ford 3 pt plow,5-14 Case plow; (2; f 3-pt disc; (510JD disc 13-7-Ford drill, 13-7 IHCdrill;JD hay crusher; IHC NO 27 hay baler;JD 7 side mounted flower IHC No 7*pull-type combine, New Idea manurespreader I HC4-row corn planter, lawntractors 11' IHC transport disc; T JDpull type disc, IHC manure spreader;Cockshutt plows> Z-14' 3 pt. hitchi Fer-guson cultivator, 3 pt. hitch-, 9' cultlpack-er new rotor mowers 5' pull type and 3-pt hitch, wagon and hayrack, 5hp. rototiller forward and reverse, uted veryhttle, feed box; straw> bicycles, AC au-ger No 90 combine V good; 3 sec rotaryhoe 3sec spring tooth harrow, 2 sectionrotary hoe No.8JD7 mowar, MFhayTike, 4 row, 3-pt. cultivator New Idea•>ay rake, JD 2.14 pull type plows HC3-14 pull type plows, manure loader for HInternational Dunham Industrialmanure loader 1 9 6 9 350 Yamaha, excel-lent condition, 1971 Ford heavy duty%ton 4-speed pickup (if not sold beforesale date) andbuzzsaw.
Lunch partial list —consignments wel-come not responsible for accidents
K R U P P a n d S E I T ZMansfield, 529-5384 or Gallon 4*8-4992
AuctioneerBo b Calhoon
Butler Ohio
A V O N
A U C T I O N
First of 2 sales with one ofOhio's best collections. Oldand ne w with many hard-to-f ind items. Dealers andcollectors all welcome.
S U N D A Y M A R C H 2 1
1 P M a t
A l g e ' s A u c t io n H o u s e
2823 N avar r e Rd .
Canton, Ohio