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Tyrone Daily Herald from Tyrone, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Location:
Tyrone, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Four Tyrone Dally Herald A wi.h...a.rr.« Established August 15, 1867 An evening newspaper published at Herald Building, Tyrone, Pennsylvania, 16686, by Tyrone Herald Company. Entered as Second Class Matter at Post Office at Tyrone, 16686, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Mailed daily, except Sunday. Published by Tyrone Herald Co. Telephone 684-4000 Single copy, 10 cents; by carrier per week, 50 cents; Motor Route, $2.00 per month; by mail, per month, $2.00 in advance.

Bottinelli-Gallagher, sole foreign representative, 12 East 41st Street, New York, N.Y. 10017; 360 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111. 60606; Liberty Trust Philadelphia, Pa. 19197; Park Avenue Building, Detroit, Michigan 48226; Fourth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222.

Member of Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers' Association. WORD OF GOD The Lord risen Indeed, and hath appeared unto Lute 24:34. Our risen Lord still conies and goes strangely. Sometimes He visits with us. Patented Dog Silencer A patent granted the other day brings to mind the story of the persistent trombonist.

He was a fellow whose playing made up in To District Court decibels what tt lacked in finesse and dulcet purity of tone. He uARonmiiRr statP Insisted on practicing early in the morning when his neighbor liked fn to sleep. So the neighbor recorded the practice play orne ys were to me sun it back to the toinbonist at full volume in the middle of the night. th federal govern- Thenceforth, no early morning concerts. ITf rOI TJ John F.

McClellan Sr. of Monkton, uses a variant of this varUa Program of meat in- Offices To Aid Victims Tyrone Daily Herald, Thursday, July 13, 1972 Fischer Loses Initial Match at their present loca. damaged track and stock was pending and said he would pro. (UPI) Sen- flooding spawned by Tropical ate Minority Leader Hugh Storm Apnes. Scott, said Wednesday This would bring to 14 the President Nixon has promised number of federal agencies in- tlons fccott saw.

"the fullest resources of the volved In cleanup and recovery We must maintainJ 1 operations ployment level we had before The EDA was set up by con- the floods. We must help our gress to combat unemployment industries and keep our labor and provide new employment force healthy." opportunities through public Congress approved an addi- works, grant and loan programs tional $200 million in flood re- for commercial and Industrial He' tor Pennsylvania Just be- development. fore li adjourned for the EDA field offices I have ocratic National Convention, recommended should be of con- He said an additional $60 mil- siderable help to businesses in lion to help railroads repair or ts," he said. By IAN WESTERGREN REYKJAVIK, Iceland I (UPI) wenl the federal government" would be granted to flood victims in Pennsylvania. Scott said the Economic Development Admlnist ration (EDA) would open offices this week in Harrlsburg and Wllkes- Barre to aid businesses damaged by last month's heavy day.

The Republican leader said John Whltaker, deputy assistant to the president, would coordinate all federal assistance in the flood area from ton, working directly with closed'meeting Scott's office. wlth representatives of the "This will give us a straight Int rnat ional Chess Federation line to the White House in ac. (FIDE he Icelandic organic compllshlng the rebuilding ef. erjj and representatives of U.S. appeared to error an i to'defeat at the hands of the Mky Fischer's demands were pre- mer, a vice of the U.S.

Chess painful. Fischer rose from the massive mahogany chess table, made a helpless gesture and 56th move, it of the hall, he reached over to shake Spassky's hand. Fischer obviously was upset Meof Inspection Controversy Goes Peace Talks Are Resumed it. i nn but Cramer, who is a member companies owning the elevision American's camp, said rights to the match, internation- al chess sources said. The "he is a pro and this is part of the game.

I believe he has got X- approach in his newly patented dog silencer, but his device is ctIon nf Atrrl much more subtle. It operates on the principle "that dogs are sub- Department of Agr Ject to Silencing by mimicry in much the same way that humans Itu are." Ergo, McClellan fashioned a gadget that plays back a dog's bartai. but at a frequency inaudible to the human ear. The dog falls By GEORGE SD3ERA PARIS (UPI)- The Vletna. mose Communists today resumed peace negotiations with the United States but said President Nixon must stop the his master is not disturbed.

Dandyl But what if burglars litil war against them if he get hold of the Idea? gatlon sald ne would wants to get a peace settle- ask U.S. District Court to stop ent. Entering the conference hall The state's meat inspection or the first session in 10 weeks program has been In turmoil for the past year. The state was certified late in 1970 to make inspections which normally would be handled by USDA It Fischer locked himself into his hotel suite with his second, Father William Lombardy, a the for prepare After 51 Years: Washington Afewpaper Publishes Final Issue it. Fischer will game turn up for the scheduled 5 p.m.

(1 p.m. EDT) start today. Schmid also said organizers Wearing a traditional ao dal on the basis of proposals we will not keep spectators from long-sklrted dress, the stern, have put forward in our seven- the first two rows of seats in looking Viet Cong woman point plan." the hall as they did during the diplomat said, "All this does William J. Porter, the chief ft game on Cher's Tne challenger lost the first not show the United States u.S. negotiator, told newsmen The wew game 2gth moye when ln desires to engage in serious the sidewalk before the walked out for js rriinuies ta Qf pawns negotiations." heavily guarded hall that the Wednesday to protest two The Viet Cong Foreign Americans and South Vletna.

television cameras hidden Minister said, "We are mese were ready to show a ready to conclude a settlement themselves flexible. players sit at for their championship match trappe(l bishop to doing this he in which SAM FOGG since President Nixon broke off the conference May 4, the Communist negotiators e- manded a peace treaty based on their year-old seven-point rett Waters, a newsman of 40 they were attending the wake years experience, was antici- of a friend in a neighborhood pating retirement at age 65 in funeral parlor. October. Lorenzo Middleton, 25 "This is the third newspaper and black, was promoted from had shot out from under copy boy to reporter last week. i.

waters recalled. "One Both were out of Jobs today was st Patrick's Day in 1954 following the end of publication wnen the Times-Herald folded. wwei thin wron wlth of the 51.year.old Washington Th ls is the worst of course that time Daily News, an evening tabloid because of my age. I put in for that employed 600 persons and retirement in October but I had an average daily circula- on what the mechanics tion of 217,073. of it is now." The News announced in a Middleton sat on a table with front page story headlined a former copy boy colleague.

"Farewell" Wednesday it was "They hired me in January selling its and certain and I was promoted to reporter assets" to the rival Washington Evening Star. It cited financial problems and commented it was "now impossible" for three Nixon and South Vietnam months later, USDA tantamount to surrender, announced that the "equal to" as Hanoi chief negotiator Xuan status was in jeopardy because the inspections were Inadequate. "We have to admit that there at a state agriculture department spokesman said. "There is no question about that, but we have consistently improved." The whole situation was In limbo until the recent budget fight. Gov.

Milton J. Shapp, ways to economize, Thuy told newsmen, "If the United States shows a desire to negotiate, it is necessary to stop these acts of war," He issued the warning after a blunt attack on the U.S. air raids, which, he said, included a heavy raid Wednesday on a populous district of Haiphong and neighboring hydraulic works. Viet Cong negotiator Madame Nguyen Thi Blnh charged the Air Force was now using The LI 9 hter Side Showers Fall Foreign Insight Across east IntoConvention WASHINGTON (UPI) in a around when someone press release this week, Rep. addressing them." Otis G.

Pike, D.N.Y., wrote The Australian said, that Americans would have a understand. We have a two an action favored the champion. Although Fischer made a desperate attempt to turn the game into a draw, It became obvious that Spassky could not be kept from promoting a pawn By United Press International to a queen, thus making an A warm, humid air mass eventual checkmate a certainty. caused rain showers in the East today while scattered showers is and thunderstorms also fell in the South. "I Thunderstorms were common few near a cold front stretching hard time explaining our orators like that in my country from Lake Huron to Kansas.

political conventions to foreign, too." Later on, the visitor exit isn't all that pressed puzzlement as to why to raus about six stories since tnen, 1M oHo al lncno nrB on South Vietnam, he observed. By now, the News editorial ers. Actually, difficult. I happened to have watched portions of the Democratic National Convention with a group that included an Australian who had only been in this country a few days. use federal Inspectors.

When objections arose, $1.4 the Democrats went to so much trouble to televise the proceedings and then delayed Important business until most viewers were asleep. Matter of Moral Rectitude "It's a matter i I One storm dropped hail up to an inch in diameter on Jamestown and Concordia, Kan. Virginia was under the threat of heavy rains today and flash flood warnings were in effect for small streams in the Shenandoah Valley. Flash flood of moral watches were in effect through explained, portions of western Maryland independent newspapers to people were talking to reporters mllllon was ut bac into he He frequently turned to me "Thanks to rule changes, many and northeastern West Virginia Cln Saigon, military sources for guidance and it only took a of the de i gates attending this and much of the Appalachian said Wednesday U.S. planes ew words of clarification for convention are young people, region of irginia budget to retain state Inspectors were dropping chemical bombs him t.o understand what was And Mlaml Beacn ls a i ked Fair, dry weather prevailed anu me Quarter Trl rmlnrr Wad tuWh tho OYrontinn in Communist.held Quang Tri operate profitably in the rom ot her papers Washington, D.C., area.

The television crews who flocked in Province. But they denied the when the demise became desplte requests were either toxic or P.m., a few began rom the to hold the Washington Post has morning field to itself. The death knell of the News was sounded at 12:15 p.m., a quarter of an hour before a tiome edition deadline when the newspaper's vice president and editor, Richard Hollander, entered the editorial room and beckoned his staff to the main jfcsk. Hollander broke the news of toe closing quickly and softly. was no angry response or cursing from the 75-member jnews staff.

STRUCTURAL STEEL ANGLES, CHANNELS, PIPE REINFORCING RODS MODES BROS. 684-0870 bombs were poisonous. emptying out their desks. A few and then more began drifting across the street to Matt Gy pSyMOthS Found Kane's Irish shop hangout. It was a true wake.

Hiding In Rain To Taper Off Tonight HARKiSBURG (UPI) An Agriculture Department inspector who found hundreds of gypsy moths hiding In the wheels A tropical depression has Qf a camper nas prevented what spread a thick layer of clouds CQuld haye led to an out break across Pennsylvania, bringing Qf tne ravenous i nsec ts on the rain to the eastern sections of wes Coast, the state. Occasional rain is expected In The inspector, JackMcVicker, most sections of the Common- stopped the camper near the I wealth toaay as the low tracks Somerset exit of the Pennsylva. north. The rain is expected to nla Turnpike and found it In- taper off tonight. fested with gypsy moth pupae.

Partly cloudy skies and The camper belonged to Mr. warmer temperatures are ex- and Mrs. W. B. Smith of Yu- pected Friday as the low moves caipa, who were return- on into New England.

ing home after visiting their The highs today will be in the son in Lakehurst, N.J. to mid 80's. The lows to- Nixon said a special disinfec- I night will be In the 60's and tant material to treat the camp- low 70's, with the highs Friday er was flown in on the gover- in the 80's. nor's private plane. Meat Prices Should Level Says Shultz city where sinful night life and in the West with the exception turpitude abound.

of some showers in the "By keeping the convention in Northern Rockies, session all night, the program Temperatures early today chairman keeps these callow ranged from 51 at Grand Fords, on. Or at least he said he understood what was going on. During tiie credentials debate, for example, the Australian asked me why the youths'" away the flesh to 104 at Needles, Calif, delegates were milling around pots and otner temptations too on the floor rather than listening to the arguments. WASHINGTON (UPI) Treasury Secretary George P. lurid to mention." The Australian said, "I understand.

We have a few to realize that Program chairmen like that in Australia too." Perhaps the toughest Job was explaining why some of the Democrats were actively cam- More than 45 per cent of Kentucky is forested. ELKS FRIDAY NIGHT DINNERS STEAKS HAM-CHICKEN Moderate Prices Ace omoda tion For CLASS REUNIONS RECEPTIONS PARTIES Oratory lUghly Persuasive "You've got convention oratory is highly persuasive," I replied. "If the Shultz says increased imports delegates paid attention to the of beef and veal should bring speeches, they would find both nresiden. about a leveling of meat prices sides equally convincing and Pining for the vice presides in August. would be unable to decide how Shultz "said it was "very to vote.

That would bring the heartening" that foreign produ- convention to a cers which supply about 75 per standstill. cent of American meat imports "The only way the delegates "Politicians who have fled to estimated they could increase can make up their minds on the Canada to avoid being drafted tial nomination. "There's a move under way complete to malte the vice presidency an all-volunteer Job," I said. over the next 5V 2 various issues, and thus avoid a for vice president would then deadlock, is to get up and walk be granted amnesty." STtlM STUDIO'S HIOH SCHOOL PACKAOI PRICIS RBGULAR I 8itO Colored lo Gold 6 la GlawlM Bwll tOO Walltta 1 $23-50 supn 8x10 Colored ia Gold 12 IB 100 Walku I Ytar Book Picture $28-50 Dl LUXl 2 txlO Colored ia Gold ia tOO Year Book Picture $34 00 SUPBUOft 2 ixlO Colored la Gold 12 GlMJiae tOOWeJIttt 1 Yew Book Picwre $39-00 STREM 1511 TWRFTH AVINUI AITOONA, PftettA. shipments months.

Representatives of 12 meat exporting nations met Wednes. day with Shultz, Acting Secretary of State John N. Irwin II and other administration officials. In return for increasing exports to the United States, the nations would get preferential treatment when quotas are set for 1973, "This government when it considers 1973 quotas will loosen the quotas for those who help us in 1972," State Department spokesman Charles W. Bay HI said.

Shultz said that Australia, for instance, agreed to increase its shipments from 5,200 tons of meat a week to 8,000 or 10,000 tons. Besides Australia, other nations represented were New Zealand, Mexico, Ireland, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nlcaraerua, Costa Rica, Panama, Dominican Republic and Haiti. The prices most likely to be affected directly, Shultz said, are for hamburger, hot dogs and processed meats. But he said reduced prices on these products may ease consumer demand for better cuts and bring those prices down too. NEW KICK GENOA, Italy mountain guides from San Martino di Agtrozza know their native Dolomites so well that climbing them is no longer any fun.

So Renzo de Bartolis, 35, and I his comrades came to Genoa Wednesday, roped themselves together and climbed down the facade of a 393-foot skyscraper. A crowd of 5,000 cheered their exhibition. FUND DRIVE CITIZEN'S FIRE CO. House To House Canvass this evening 6:30 P.M. Until Dark BANKAMERICARD Discount FREE PARKING BELL WOOD NEXT TO IGA OPEN DAILY 10 AM.

9 P.M. IT'S JUST LIKE BUYING WHOLESALE! SALE ENTIRE STOCK SUMMER WEAR MENS BOYS GIRLS OUR USUAL LOW-LOW DISCOUNT PRICES.

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About Tyrone Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
180,699
Years Available:
1885-2007