Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 10

Location:
Butte, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I I Fischer loses 1st match draw Bobby Fischer lost the draw Thursday night, giving Boris Spassky the first move, and the world championship chess match start next Tuesday. Unless the American chal-. lenger or the Soviet champion pleads illness and gets another postponement. The confusion of the past week was summarized by the old woman selling cigarettes who asked in the beginning: "Fischer come?" Near the end it was: "Spassky go?" "I'm very pessimistic," Dr. Max Euwe said at 10 a.m.

At noon: "It's a very delicate situation." At 7 p.m., the president of the International Chess Federation sighed: "There's hope." That was Tuesday. It could have been any day i in the garbled prelude to what chess lovers say is the match of the century Spassky the U.S.S.R. vs. Fischer of the U.S.A. Spassky arrived early to wait for Bobby.

Saying "I came to play," he philosophically accepted the first postponement when Fischer didn't show. REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Demos (Continued from Page 1) away from a majority. But a key ingredient of his convention backing was the California delegation, and at least 151 of his votes there were at issue in a challenge now before the Supreme Court. Eight of the court's nine justices, all save William E. Brennan, were in Washington, and the expectation was that the court would issue word soon about the California case.

McGovern won all 271 delegates in the June 6 primary, lost 151 of them when the Democratic Credentials Committee decided to apportion the votes among all the election candidates, then got them back by verdict of the U.S. Court of Appeals. The delegate count stood this way: McGovern 1,458.15. Humphrey, 401.55. Muskie 231.05.

Uncommitted 402.65. McGovern was due in sweltering Miami Beach Saturday to assume command of his own campaign. His chief rivals arrived in succession Friday, as did Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas and Sen.

Henry M. Jackson of Washington. Mills described himself as a long candidate- and said still thinks Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts might accept a convention draft.

The arrival of Wallace was the day's most dramatic, for it signaled his return to political campaigning after 54 days in a Silver Spring, hospital. The Alabama governor was partially paralyzed in an assassination attempt on May 15 as he campaigned in Laurel, Md. "We're back in the fight and I'm still an active, viable candidate even though I've been sidelined for a few days," lace said after aides and Secret Service agents carried his wheelchair down the ramp of an Air Force hospital plane. He had stopped on the way Montgomery, to resume charge of state government, and told about people there he is "going to insist" on a Democratic platform responsive to the needs of the average man. He thanked God for sparing his life, his doctors for saving it.

"As it stands now, I have no plans to go on the convention floor," Wallace told newsmen. "I'll have to play it by ear and do whatever is the proper thing to do." He avoided any advance commitment to the ticket Democrats choose in Miami Beach. "I'll do like the others and say it depends on what happens at the convention," said Wallace, a third-party presidential candidate in 1968. Hijacker (Continued from Page 1) two days from Ft. Riley, would be arraigned on air piracy charges.

Un Wednesday FBI agents rushed a jet at San Francisco International Airport, killing two hijackers who demanded passage to Siberia and $800,000 ransom. One passenger was killed and two were wounded in gunfire by the hijackers, the FBI said. The PSA plane hijacked the next day was on a short flight from Oakland to Sacramento when the hijacker pressed a gun into the stomach of a stewardess on the approach to the state capital. Goodell, bespectacled and calm, then ordered Capt. Jerry Blakely to fly 500 miles to San Diego, and demanded that a parachute and the ransom be waiting.

linaconda, STANDARD 563-6951 Phone 312 East Park Later he demanded an apology or he wouldn't play. At one news conference, one of Fischer's lawyers said he'd come to say he had nothing to say. Yefim Geller, Spassky's second, fielded questions with: "Kak Gavarit po Angliski," or as you say in English, "No comment." Then there's the "Eavesdropper," a man approaching middle age with a shock of graying hair combed in careful disarray onto his forehead. He takes voluminous notes, for a magazine piece, he says. On scraps of paper he records conversations he's overheard.

He carries the scraps in a red plastic shopping bag as he moves soundlessly about the hotel lobbies. Strikers approve pension MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) Federal mediator Harry Bickford announced Friday evening that Northwest Airlines and its 1,600 striking pilots have come to terms on a pension plan. The airline's offers on hospitalization and group life insurance, the however, were rejected by pilots, Bickford A source close to negotiators indicated that a fourth stumbling block in the talks, flight passes, had been resolved. But pilots spokesman Rob Rezanka said that was not the case.

Those four fringe issues had been seen as the major barriers to settlement of th dispute that has kept Northwest planes grounded for nine days. Bickford made his announcement following a nine-hour session with the two sides. He said Northwest and the pilots were meeting separately Friday night and said he would get the sides together for continued negotiations Saturday and Sunday. The bargaining talks Friday were the fifth straight day of intensive negotiating. Meanwhile, a general meeting of the pilots was called for Monday to discuss the status of the contract negotiations.

In an internal communication, the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) said negotiators have "reached agreement on a substantial number of points" with Northwest. The communication added it now appears that "the negotiating situation is shaping up to a showdown on each and every. point that remains open." Representatives of the pilots and airline were meeting with federal mediator Harry Bickford Friday in the fifth straight day of negotiations. Cold (Continued from Page 1) effective as fixed combinations, five effective with reservations, 15 possibly effective and 13 probably efinfective. Rated effective without reservation were Isophrin nose drops for nasal congestion; Fedrazil for hay fever; and Chlorephrine Nyscaps for hayfever nasal congestion and as a time-release capsule.

At the request of the Food and Drug Administration, NAS studied 420 OTC drugs as part of an effectiveness review of about 3,000 prescription drugs. "The 27 products are broadly representative of cold preparations on the market since most are similar composition to the drugs studied," the FDA said in releasing the data. About 25 per cent of the OTCdrug claims were judged effective, compared with about 60 per cent of the prescriptiondrug claims rated effective or probably effective. One passenger, Franz Lingnau, became a hostage for the second time in two days. "I don't believe it's possible it could have happened on both of them," Lingnau said.

"I'd like to know the odds on this. When I realized it was happening again, I was angry. The odds are so far out, it shouldn't have happened for another 20 years." Lingnau, 44, of El Dorado Hills, is an estimator for a construction company. He was en route to Burbank from Sacramento Wednesday when his PSA jet was commandeered near San Francisco. When that ordeal was over, Lingnau completed his flight to Burbank routinely, took care of the work he had traveled south to handle and was nearly back in Sacramento when it happened again.

Anaconda weather Anaconda Area Variable cloudiness with scattered showers and little temperature change. High today, 75 to 85; low, 45 1 to 55. Temperatures yesterday: Maximum 77 at 3 p.m. Minimum 50 at 6 a.m. Year ago 66 and 36.

Two years ago 86 and 54. Softball games end with 7-0 All three Anaconda Recreation Women's Softball League games this week ended in 7-0 decisions. The winners were Chrysler Center over Haufbrau, Office Supply over Anaconda Merchants and Paradise Bar over First National Bank. In girls softball, the winners were Peppermint Patties over Rover 7-0, Hitless Wonders over Road Runners 18-0, Unknowns over Losers 7-0, Super Smileys over Super Snoopers 15-6, Wonderful Wackers over Goosetown Gang 8-5, Hitless Wonders over Groovy Goolies 11-4, We Don't Knows over Losers 7-0, Super Smileys over Groovy Goolies 7- 0, Peppermint Patties over Maroons 8-6, and Frosh over Unknowns 9-6. Hitting home runs were Theresa Caulfield, Super Smileys, and Brenda and Kim Hurley, Wonderful Wackers.

Women golfers have dinner The monthly dinner meeting of the Anaconda Ladies' Golf Association at the Country Club, Wednesday evening followed a day of golfing. Reports were presented by Mrs. L. E. Painter and Mrs.

E. E. Groff. Mrs. D.

W. Mitchell presided. Winners of the "one club, one putter" event were Mrs. L. K.

Bossle, Mrs. M. D. Ivankovich, Marilyn Anderson, Mrs. Paul Everett, Mrs.

Richard Walker, Mrs. F. A. Dorlarque, Mrs. William Lankeit, Mrs.

Sanford Jacobson, Mrs. W. J. Yeoman, Mrs. H.

F. Morris, Mrs. William Strelnik, Mrs. Edgar Schwartz, Mrs. John Stephens, Mrs.

Leonard Dee and Mrs. M. C. Messner. Art classes scheduled Arts and crafts classes for boys and girls in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades will be offered at the Copper Village Arts Center, 110 E.

Eighth. The classes will be conducted from 1 until 2:30 each Tuesday and Thursday afternoon. The classes will be conducted over period of four weeks with a nominal charge. Those participating are to bring pencils and typing paper. Pre-registration may be completed by phoning 563-3604.

Officials lose Officials lose AIUABA, Brazil (AP) The City Council has voted to remove two of its members who were jailed on charges of assassination of Armando Feitosa, the former mayor of this northeastern Brazilian town. RUSTIC DRIVE-IN THEATRE 3 Miles South of Deer Lodge On U.S. 10 Adm. $1.00 Children Free FRI. SAT.

JULY 7-8 RIDER SPECTACULAR "HARD RIDE" "HELL'S ANGELS 69" "THE LOSSES" SUNDAY, JULY 9 "THE BABY MAKER" Barbara Hershey Scott Glenn "SUDDEN TERROR" Mark Lester-Lional Jeffries (R) Car burns on highway An automobile, apparently stolen after midnight from Anaconda's West Valley, was destroyed by fire on Interstate 90 near Sunset Memorial Gardens nine miles east of Anaconda at 4 Friday morning, sheriff's officers reported. A passing tourist reported the fire and no one around the vehicle. When officers arrived, they were unable to the car. James Kelly, 229 Powell, West Valley, owner of the Pontiac, reported the vehicle was in the yard at his home at midnight. Both sets of keys to the vehicle were in the home.

Bruce Thompson of 101 Howe, West Valley, reported to officers an apparently abandoned vehicle near his home was stripped Thursday night. The car is registered to Walter D. Busby, according to records. Anacondan dies at 70 Ralph W. Price, 70, of 802 Mount Haggin Homes, a Anaconda resident 20 years, died Friday in Community Hospital of Anaconda.

Born in Bracket, N.D., Nov. 21, 1901, Price made his home in Indiana and Massachusetts before coming to Montana. He lived at Conrad entered the Army at Butte Oct. 7, 1942. He was discharged in Michigan, March 17, 1943.

He was employed as a bricklayer helper at the Anaconda Reduction Works from November 1952, until May 1961. He was a member of the United Methodist Church, American Legion and Smeltermen's Union. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mary Christians Price, Anaconda; a brother, Ray Price, West Glacier; three sisters, Mrs. Hazel Kilmer, Ronan; Mrs.

Ruth Tiemann, Gary, Mrs. Doris E. Smith, Kalispell, and a number of newphews and nieces. The body is at the Finnegan Co. Funeral Home.

Burial with military honors will be in the Veterans' Plot in hill Cemetery. Mrs. Arlene Ryan Funeral services for Mrs. Arlene Pickett Ryan 23, wife of John Ryan of Oregon City, will be 2 Monday afternoon in Our Saviour's Lutheran Church by Pastor Ole Larsen. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Gardens.

Friends may call at the Parson Funeral Chapel beginning Sunday. Mrs. Rayan was fatally injured when struck by an automobile Wednesday night near Oregon City. Corpsmen will get awards Anaconda Civilian Conservation Center will have its monthly dinner and patching. ceremony Monday at the Job Corps Center on Foster Creek west of Anaconda.

Don L. Temple, director, said dinner will be served at 5:30 to a delegation of guests. Awards will be presented corpsmen who have achieved distinction in areas of vocational training, athletics, education and leadership. ATTENTION All tavern owners operators and all Fraternal organizations in Deer Lodge County: United Steelworkers of America No. 6002 is letting out on bid the beer concession at Washoe Park.

for Smeltermen's Day, August 8, 1972. If you wish to bid on the concession, submit with a certified check, your nome or firm's to our office, at 421 East Park Ave. All bids are due July 22, 1972. Dr. W.

J. Jurcich Announces the opening of his Office at 402 E. Park, July 10, 1972 For the Practice of General Medicine Initially Office Hours 1 to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday Friday Ph. 563-8232 (No Surgery or Obstetrics) Anaconda statistics APPLY TO WED Samuel George Richter, Missoula, and Michelle Antionette Navarro, Anaconda.

DIVORCE GRANTED Thelma from Gene Tuman. Grand slammer EASY. RIDER Mike Jeidy didn't ride long, but it was exciting. He was a contestant in the bareback competition at Butte's big rodeo which wraps up tonight. Mike took his dive from Hell Fly, a fiesty mount that proved to be tough.

(Staff Photo) CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. said, she has never had an ac- Humanities Lady cyclist of 68 committee meets here loves open highway The Montana Committee for Humanities met Friday at the Finlen Hotel with about 80 persons from Montana Tech, Carroll College, and other state universities and agencies attended. The committee is a fledgling, Missoula organization which seeks to bring academic world and the regular community closer together, Bruce Sievers, acting director of the committee, said. Lectures and group discussions will be organized featuring persons in humanities from around the state. The committee was funded in March by the National Endowment for Humanities.

Butte was one of the five stops the committee has made. Others were Great Falls, Sidney, Billings and Kalispell. The committee expects to receive a larger grant in October to fund its activities. Sievers said persons in the towns the committee visited showed a great deal of support for the project. Committee chairman is Robert Pantzer, University of Montana president.

(AP) Mrs. Gay Raymond of Fruitport, is no ordinary motorcyclist. She's a woman. She zipped her big HarleyDavidson 752 miles from Fruitport to Chattanooga for the annual convention of Motor Maids a nationwide organization of women motorcyclists. And she's 68 years old.

"Everywhere I go, crowds gather around to look at the old woman on the motorcycle," she said. "I really get a kick out of surprising everybody." The white-haired fireball says she wouldn't give up riding for anything. Not even for her doctor. She's been bothered lately by back trouble and was advised by her doctor to give up riding. "I just laughed when told me that," she said.

"If I give up motorcycle riding, might as well give up everything." She estimates she travels 000 miles yearly on her motorcycle "the biggest one you can buy." "I ride big one because it has the steam to get you where you are going." In 42 years of riding, she Scientists fly high to study eclipse FORT CHURCHILL, Man. (AP) An international team of scientists faced the sun for almost two hours Friday as they flew eight miles above Canada's barren Northwest Territory preparing for a solar eclipse Monday. The group's leader, Dr. Arthur the Los Alamos, N.M., Scientific Laboratory, pronounced the dress rehearsal a success after the giant Air Force jet filled with scientific instruments landed here for refueling. The airplane left Fairchild Air Force base at Spokane, early Friday a and was to return there from Churchill.

"Everything went quite well today except for a few minorproblems, but we're pleased," Cox said. The aircraft flew a race track pattern over and over along a northwesterly line west of Hudson's Bay only 160 miles fron the Arctic Circle. Crowded into' aisles filled with cameras, telescopes and other instruments mounted in special windows, the scientists trained their sophisticated sensors on the sun. Monday the moon will slide across the face of the sun, blotting out the firey orb body and leaving visible only the corona, tons of hot gases that leap out millions of miles into space. the corona is the target of the scientists' interests.

One of the minor problems Cox referred to was the airplane's inability to reach 40,000 feet because it was so heavy. Instead the maximum altitude was 39,100 feet during the flight which swept over the ground at 570 miles an hour. Rodeo results (Continued from Page 1) around cowboy, stayed over in Calgary Friday night and forfeited his entry fees in two Butte events. He's tied for fourth in bareback after riding Thursday. Some Brahma riders rode after the Friday show since the largest number of contestants entered that event.

One of them tied the current leader with a 75 score. Others took rerides after the Friday show, including Marvin Shoulders of Oklahoma, son of the legendary cowboy Jim Shoulders. The last of more than 200 cowboys will show their stuff at the final Vigilante show beginning Saturday at 8 p.m. Their performance will decide who will split an estimated $11,000 in prize money. The main contest in saddle bronc riding will shape.

up Saturday night when Jock McDowell of Wisdom, a national college champ, takes a crack at five times the bucking horse of the year. A tie developed Friday night in the professional bareback riding, when J. C. Prujillo of Prescott, earned a 75- A first inning grand slam home run by Tom Fleming sent the Rams to a 9-4, victory over Pirates in Anaconda Recreation Boys Baseball Friday. In other games Rockets tallied in each inning in going to a 11-3 win over Colts.

Anodes broke a tie game in the bottom of the final inning for a 5-4 decision over Giants. Pat Hess was a home run hitter Thursday for the Jokers. ANACONDA Notes NE Knights of Columbus will have a picnic in Washoe Park Sunday. cident. And when she is not using her cycle, husband Dan, 81, often takes it for a spin.

He spent 43 years as a motorcycle dealer and was five times the winner of the Jackpine Endurance Run at Lansing, Mich. Their first date came when he invited her on a motorcycle ride in the country. They were married in a ceremony in which all the participants were astride cycles. And dressed in riding clothes, of course. Plumbers to meet with employers Representatives of 150 shops will meet in Butte at 3 plumbers, and 18 plumbing p.m.

Monday in an effort to settle a week-long plumbers strike. Plumbers in Butte, Anaconda, Helena and Bozeman have not worked since their contract expired last Friday. Money matters are reported settled and the remaining issues are said to deal with work rules. Details of the money settlement have not been made public pending action by the wage stabilization board in Washington, D.C. Dog case before police court Jess Underwood, 1328 Kaw, pleaded innocent in Butte police court Friday to charges of allowing a dog to run loose and keeping a vicious dog.

After hearing testimony from the defense and the prosecution, Judge John Selon continued the case until Tuesday, when another witness will be heard. Principal complaining witness was Eva Balbi, 1022 Maryland. Several other persons also testified. John J. Wilheim pleaded guilty to a charge of disturbing the peace.

Complaining witness was Marilyn Lanfear. Judge Selon sentenced Wilheim to $30 or 3 days in jail. Fire basis of lawsuit Alleged negligence with a fire on private land which caused a forest fire is the basis of a $68,000 suit in federal court in Butte. The government contends that' William Gwynn, Jack Hingle and Wilfred Gilmond, all of Eureka, were doing business as loggers in August of 1970. The complaint stated the fire began on the loggers' land and spread to national forest land causing the Butcher Creek Fire near Eureka.

The government asks a $68,371 judgment for costs it incurred in stopping the fire. WEST DRIVE-IN THEATRE "THE WILD ROVERS" with William Holden Ryan Last Run" with George C. Scott Anaconda deaths. RYAN Funeral services for Mrs. Arlene Pickett Rayan, 23, former Anaconda resident, will be held from Our Saviour's Lutheran Church Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock.

Pastor Ole Larsen will officiate with interment in Sunset Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the Parson Funeral Chapel beginning Sunday morning. PARSON Funeral Chapel Anacondo 209 Cherry 563-3421 Attention Anaconda Post No. 21, American Legion. PRICE The body of the late Ralph W.

Price of 802 Mount Haggin Homes, husband of Mary Christians Price, is at the Finnegan Co. Funeral Home at which place funeral services will be conducted at a time to be announced. Interment will be in the Veterans' Plot in Hill Cemetery with military honors at the graveside by officers and members of Anaconda Post 21, American Legion. Finnegan Co. Morticians "The Home of Friendly Personal Service' A Longfellow D.

Savage 107 Oak Ph 563 3371 Anaconda, Montana IN LOVING MEMORY of CHARLES H. EDMONDSON Joyce Washde MONTANA'S FINEST THEATRE ANACONDA Ends Tonight Shows at 7:00 9:10 point marking on a horse called Prettysocks. Jay Himes of Colorado got the same score Thursday night. Five other bareback riders stayed aboard, but could not pull into the lead. In amateur bareback riding Thursday's no score trend was broken when three riders went all the way to the whistle.

Joe Phillips of Dillon was highest with 58, Jerry Christman of Great Falls got 56 and Jim Harrison of Wise River, 51. The greenhorn calf-tying drew lots of laughter from the crowd and a new team took over the Big Brothers of Butte accomplished their chore in 43.2 seconds well ahead of the Silver Bow Kiwanis and the Rod and Gun Club. The Petticoat Patrol and clowns Jerry Olsen and Wiley McGary livened up moments between rodeo events. Nice haul TORONTO (AP) Safecrackers escaped with $400 to $800 from the strongbox of a theatre a few days after the theatre began showing a film named "Catch the An Incredible that journeys beyond imagination! 'Silent running' UNIVERSAL RELEASE 0 4 BRUCE DERN CLIFF POTTS Children's Matinee Today at 2:00 P.M. Matinee Admission Sun.

Mon. 8 P.M. CLASS of '74 GENERAL FILM RE presentation: CORPORATION COLOR Tuesday Wednesday ON A STUD COLOR ADULTS (X) Rated.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Montana Standard
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Montana Standard Archive

Pages Available:
1,049,147
Years Available:
1882-2024