Article clipped from Centralia Daily Chronicle

ursaayee of iid the ressed iiment; awayFrench idor in its,e ern-Wetl-r and ed andife said, m and “Hut I else.” s learn t-band. irough slative ;mor’st they e real saidit tfjeday—lothes,ortant*s were sred,” rience and am any year, mds it ment, moresd the m the liatelyAlthough Abu Daoud is a leader of Ai Fatah, the largest p! the Palestinian guerrilla organizations, Al Fatah chief Yasir Arafat and the leaders of all other major guerrilla groups repudiated the terrorists and said they had no con-neetion with their organizations. But President Hafez Assad of Syria personally ordered a Caravelle jei of the Syrian Airline to take them and their hostages to the Middle East,Gas price to declineWASHINGTON (AP) - Supreme Court Justice William II, Rehnquist today denied a request that he change a lower court order upholding Phase 4 price ceilings on gasoline,The ceilings are to go into effect at midnight tonight, requiring many gasoline retailers around the country to lower their prices.New government price ceilings on retail sales of gasoline will force many stations to shave, from one to three cents per gallon off their prices to tnotorlsts, officials of the Cost Of Living Council said.Every gasoline pump in the country ■ is supposed to have a red, white and blue sticker listing the ceiling price and octane rating of the gasoline in the pump.Gasoline retailers, who claim the government has singled them out for special price punishment, held to a slim hope that the Supreme Court might suspend the ceilings at the last minute.Chief Justice Warren Burger rejected Thursday an application from the. National Congress of Petroleum Retailers that would have blocked the new controls, but an' attorney for the group framed a new appeal to Justice Thurgood Marshall.The attorney, Jerry S. Cohen, dismissed speculation about a possible boycott by the 185,000 members of the group if the ceilings go into effect at midnight.A boycott had been threatened by some retailers last weekend — when11 *»• lt;.• n j. . iper cent of the work force,At the same time, total employment in the country held to a seasonally adjusted level of 84.4 million. It was theinree years, ine June unemployment Eigure was 4.8 per cent and was followed by another slight drop in July to 4.7 per cent.Drunken driving vigilAppearing below is the ninth of a series of weekly compilations of drunken driving arrests and dispositions of drunken driving eases through courts in Lewis County. It is designed to provide an indication of whether the incidence of drunken driving is increasing or decreasing in the county.Total drunken driving arrests thus far in 1973 - 415,Total drunken driving arrests within the past week (Aug. 28 through Sept. 3) — 12.Total drunken driving arrests during the previous week (Aug. 21-27) — 12.Total traffic fatalities in the county thus far in 1973 — 13.Disposition of drunken driving cases within the period Aug. 28 through Sept. 3 in the county;Lewis County District Court:Jesse L. Giilaspie, 40, Vader, forfeited $250.Gary D, Wichert, 28, Winioek, pied guilty and was sentenced to one year in jail with six months suspended and fined $500, also suspended. He was also placed on probation for one year and ordered to attend the alcohol offender’s program. The sentence followed Wickert’s third offense.James I. Pratt, 26, Chehalis, pled guilty to his first offense and was sentenced to five days in jail,suspended, and fined $250 with $100suspended. His driver’s license was also suspended for 30 days.Gerald D. Baine, 19, Centra Ha, pled guilty on his first offense and was sentenced to five days in jail,suspended, and fined $250, also suspended, with his driver’s license suspended for 30 days.Kathie S. Walker, 22, Chehalis, pled guilty on her first offense and wassentenced to five days in jail,suspended, and fined $250 with $100The remaining fine and jail sentence were also suspended on the following conditions: that he incur no alcohol related violations for one year and that he contact the Lewis County Mental Health Clinic for treatment., Claude H. York, 49, Rochester, pled guilty on his first offense and was sentenced to 35 days in jail with 30 days suspended and fined $250 with $246 suspended, His driver’s license was also suspended for 30 days.Larry W. Spiering, 52, Paekwood, pied guilty on his first offense and was sentenced to five days in jail,suspended, and fined $250 with $300suspended. His driver’s license was suspended For 30 days. A charge of negligent driving was dismissed.Anthony Rhodes, 55, Mossyrock, pled guilty on his first offense and was sentenced to five days in jail,suspended, and fined $250 with $100suspended. His driver’s license was also suspended for 30 days.Irene C. Baker, 57, Glenoma, pled guilty on her first offense and was sentenced to five days in jail,suspended, and fined $250 with $150suspended. Her driver’s license was also suspended for 30 days. She was also charged with driving to the left of centerline on a highway to which she pled guilty.We're OpenMonday - Friday 8 to 5:30six months suspended and fined $200 with $100 suspended. His driver’s license was also suspended for 60 days/’
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Centralia Daily Chronicle

Centralia, Washington, US

Fri, Sep 07, 1973

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Timberland R.

WA, USA 23 Nov 2019

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