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St. Joseph Gazette from St. Joseph, Missouri • 2

Location:
St. Joseph, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
2
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People, Episodes in Today's News St. Joseph, Gazette, Friday, July 7, 1972 Boris Officially Accepts REYKJAViE, Iceland (AP) Bobby Fischer has apologized to Boris Spassky in writing for "disrespectful behavior" that threatened their world champion chess championship, and the Soviet News agency Tass announced Thursday night that "all demands of the Soviet delegation have been satisfied." The American challenger's apology was delivered to the Russian chess champion during the morning, opening the way for the start Tuesday of the 24-game series, plagued by delay, confusion and bad feeling. The Tass. dispatch said that in view of Fischer's written apology for delaying the start of the match, the Soviet delegation no longer had any objections to the contest getting under way. Not Exactly "Star" Pay NEW YORK (UPI) The world's richest man will make his debut Saturday as a television actor in a commercial.

Jean Paul Getty will deliver a one-sentence line for E. F. Hutton a Wall Street brokerage, which he says he has been a customer of for 40 years. He will be acting only in the technical sense that everybody who' appears in a TV commercial is considered "talent" by agencies and unions. His fee for the job $1.

Postpone HST's X-rays KANSAS CITY (AP) Lower back X-rays were postponed until at least today for former President Harry S. Truman, a hospital spokesman said Thursday. He said they will be done when Truman has a series of gastrointestinal X-rays taken. The back X-rays were ordered after Truman reported a pain in his lower back earlier this week. There has been no significant development in the condition of the former president during the past 24 hours, he said.

The hospital says Truman remains in satisfactory condition. Henry, How Do You Do it? BALTIMORE (UPH) -Forty eight- Playboy buanies have chosen Presidential adviser Heary A. Kissinger as "the man I'd most like to go out on a date with." Kissiager, whose White House assignments have led at least one belly dancer to flop into his lap, will not be on hand Friday for the formal award. A 15-foot-high poster will be his stand in. "His eyes are so penetrating they make him look like he knows what's on your mind before you even say it," said bunny Lynn Cole about her vote for Kissiager.

"He looks so masculine and mature," added bunny Celine Foutz. "You can look at his picture and you just know he's a genius," commented bunny Dana Lasecki. "No Political Significance" SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP) Senator George S. "McGovern, the front-running candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, visited Alabama Gov.

George C. Wallace Thursday but aides to both candidates said "nothing of political significance was discussed." The half-hour visit to Holy Cross Hospital was described by an aide to the South Dakota Democrat as a "courtesy call" which the senator felt he should make. McGovern "felt the governor was strong and vigorous and he wished him well over the next few weeks," a McGovern aide said afterwards. Wallace, plans to leave the hospital Friday. An Air Force hospital plane will take him briefly to Montgomery, before flying on to Miami Beach where the governor will continue to seek the party's presidential nomination at the Democratic National Convention.

Air Pollution Charge Filed Against Ford in Detroit, DETROIT (UPI) Ford Motor Co. has been charged with "obnoxious, offensive, damaging and harmful" air pollution of heavily populated metropolitan Detroit in the most far-reaching environmental protection suit ever filed in Michigan, it was an-. nounced Thursday. The suit, disclosed by the Wayne County Air Pollution Control Division, changed Ford's giant River Rouge complex with "at least 143" violations of the county's pollution control regulations. The River Rouge plantof the largest in the -sprawls over 1,200 acres and is the heart of heavily populated, heavily in- Mich.

dustrialized downriver Detroit. The suit, filed in Wayne County Circuit Court under Protection Act of 1970, is an Michigan's Environmental unprecedented action by local officials against Ford, the founder of the Motor City's homegrown industry. Herbert L. Misch, Ford vice president for environmental and safety matters, said the company was "surprised and shocked" by the suit. He accused Wayne County of disregarding Ford's efforts to lick pollution.

Misch said Ford has spent $25 million on pollution controls at Rouge since 1963 and built a new foundry, Area Weather Forecast Friday, July 7, 1972 U.S. weather observations for a 24- MISSOURI hour period ending at 6:30 p.m. Chance of sevAssociated Press eral periods of showers and Albuquerque, cloudy 91 56 .01 STATIONS- High Low Pr. thunderstorms through Satur- Amarillo, cloudy 79 57 with a warming trend. Asheville, Anchorage, clear 56 80 day High Friday in the 80s.

Low Atlanta, Birmingham, cloudy clear Friday night in the mid 60s. Bismarck, clear Boise, clear High Saturday in the 80s. Boston, cloudy KANSAS Partly cloudy Buffalo, cloudy Charleston, cloudy' with chance of thundershowers Charlotte, Chicago, cloudy Friday and Friday night. Highs Cincinnati, cloudy Friday in 80s. Lows Friday Denver, Cleveland, cloudy clear night in 60s.

Mostly sunny Sat- Des Moines, cloudy Detroit, clear Duluth, cloudy NEBRASKA Partly cloudy Fort Fairbanks, Worth, clear clear and warmer Friday with Green Bay, cloudy Helena, cloudy chance of shoaers or thunder- Houston, clear storms east portion. Highs Fri- Indianapolis, rain cloudy Jacksonville, day 80s. Partly cloudy Friday Juneau, clear Kansas City, clear night and Saturday. Lows Fri- Little Rock, clear day night upper 50s northwest Los Louisville, Angeles, cloudy to 60s southeast. Highs Memphis, clear Miami, cloudy Saturday middle 80s.

Milwaukee, cloudy Minnaepolis, rain TEMPERATURES SINCE New Orleans, cloudy YESTERDAY New York, clear (Reading at The Gazette Building) Oklahoma City, clear a.m. 5 p.m. 80 Omaha, rain 8 a.m. 6 p.m. Philadelphia, clear 9 a.m.

7 p.m. Phoenix, cloudy 107 10 a.m. 8 p.m. Pittsburgh, clear 11 a.m. 9 p.m.

Portland, cloudy 12 Noon 10 p.m. Portland, clear 1 p.m. 11 p.m. Rapid City, rain 3 p.m. 1 a.m.

A St. Joseph. (Airport) 2 p.m. 12 Midnight Richmond, clear 4p.m. 2 a.m.

St. Louis, cloudy Salt Lake, cloudy ST. JOSEPH TEMPERATURES San Diego, cloudy THIS DATE SINCE 1910 San Francisco, clear Highest 99 in 1909, Lowest 50 in 1967. Seattle, cloudy Spokane, cloudy" THE SUN Tampa, cloudy Sunrise 5:58 a.m. Sunset 8:50 p.m.

Washington, rain Would (Continued from Page 1A) that additional studies must be made before alternate proposals can be properly evaluated. "The chamber will continue to cooperate with the city council and the city government in these efforts," Mr. Gray said. He said factual information obtained in the task force report would be made available to city officials. "I see no reason that factual information we have been able to uncover in our studies should not be available to the city administration and the council.

They were gleaned; from public records, all we did was compile and collate it into one report so that the people can review the information without going to a multiple of sources. We also digested it somewhat so that they would not have so much bulk," he said. Task force members have been invited to attend the meeting with government representatives today, Mr. Gray said. Suspend Chilean Minister confrontation in the nation's Congress.

Del Canto, a Socialist and second in line to succession to the presidency, was suspended by, the Chamber of Deputies late Wednesday night in a vote for impeachment. Deputies of Allende's Popular-Unity coalition boycotted the session. The suspension is effective immediately. The Senate, also controlled by the opposition, bas 30 days in which to act on the lower chamber's proposal. If it also approves impeachment, Del Canto would be automatically forced to resign.

The opposition has accused the interior minister, who is also national police chief, of inaction in the prosecution of ultraleftists who have been seizing private farms and factories to force Allende to accelerate the pace of his program to transform Chile into a Socialist state. He also was suspected of involvement in the mysterious arrival of a score of packages and crates from Cuba two months ago aboard a Cubana airliner which were not inspected by customs. Instead, Chilean plain-clothes police took them off the plane to an undisclosed destination. The opposition has charged that the shipment might have contained illegal arms. SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) Hernan del Canto, Chile's interior minister, faced possible impeachment Thursday as President Salvador Allende's leftist government and the antiMarxist opposition headed for a Hughes Target of $51 Million Slander Suit LOS ANGELES (AP) A $51-million dollar slander suit was filed against billionaire industrialist Howard Hughes Thursday by Noah Dietrich, his former business associate.

The Superior Court complaint alleged that Hughes slandered the 83-year-old Dietrich in a telephone news conference held last January in which Hughes denied the authenticity of a purported autobiography written by Clifford Irving. During the conference, Hughes referred to another associate as a "no-good dishonest son-of-a-, and he stole me blind," according to the complaint. The suit said that later in the conference Hughes likened Dietrich to that individual. OPEN for BUSINESS EARL'S SHOES 511 So. 6th St.

Local Deaths Miss Mary Waters Miss Mary May Waters, 83, died Thursday at Laverna Heights, Savannah, Mo. Miss Waters was a native of Exeter, Neb. She had been employed in sales at the Curtis Publishing Co. Waters was a member of St. Joseph's Co-Cathedral.

Survivors include several nieces and nephews. Services for Miss Waters will be Monday morning at 9 in the Horigan chapel. Monsignor Charles S. Nowland will officiate. Burial wil be in Mount Olivet Cemetery.

prayer service wil be 1 recited at the Sidenfaden chapel at 8 p.m. Sunday. Olmsted Rites Services for former judge A. M. (Pat) Olmsted, 81, Harrison, will be at 2 p.m.

Saturday at the Holt Chapel in Harrison. Burial will be in the Cemetery in Harrison. Mr. Olmsted was elected to the county court in 1936. In 1939 he went to Washington D.C., as a policeman.

He was a veteran of World War I and a native of Chicago. He died Wednesday at a veterans hospital in Little Rock, Ark. Survivors include one brother, Milton Olmsted, Pacioma, three sisters, Mrs. Marguritte Kibbon, Grass Valley, Mrs. Melissa Kelly, Manhattan, and Miss Ann Olmsted, Port Custa, and several nieces and nephews.

Palmer Services Services for Harry 0. Palmer, 65, 2507 South 10th street, will be Saturday at 9 a.m. at St. Patrick's Catholic Church. The Rev.

John Hix will officiate. Burial will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery. Mr. Palmer, a lifelong resi? dent of St. Joseph, was a retired press operator for the Walker Manufacturing Co.

He died Thursday morning at a local hospital. A rosary will be recited at the Heaton-Bowman chapel, 319 South 10th street, at 7:30 tonight. Crowley Rites Services for John M. Crowley, 75, 2702 Pear street, will be at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Rupp chapel.

The Rev. W. R. Tucker will officiate. Burial wil be in the Stoney Point Cemetery, southeast of Gower, Mo.

Mr. Crowley was a native of Great Bend, and was a veteran of World War I. He came to St. Joseph, from Brookfield, in 1941. He died Wednesday night at the veterans hospital in Wadsworth, Kan.

Reed T. Miller Reed T. Miller, 64, 2906 Hampton Road, was pronounced dead on arrival at a local hospital today. A native of Bolckow, Mr. Miller came to St.

Joseph eight years ago. A retired farmer, he became a self employed bookkeeper when he moved here. He was a member of the Bolckow Baptist Church. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Esther E.

Miller of the home; two daughters, Miss Lois Miller of the home and Mrs. Wilbur Sunde, Quincy, his mother, Mrs. Purdie Miller, Maryville, one brother, Stanley Miller, Los Angeles, two sisters, Mrs. Marjorie Cowen, Maryville, and Mrs. Gerald Fuller, San Diego, and four grandchildren.

The body is at MeierhofferFleeman mortuary. Delbert Copeland The body of Delbert Monroe Copeland, 44, who was killed Wednesday night in a train mishap here, will be taken to a Salem, mortuary from the Meierhoffer-Fleeman mortuary. Mr. Copeland is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Copeland, Salem, Mo. He was one of 14 children. Mr. Copeland was struck and killed by a railroad switch engine at about 7 p.m. Wednesday in.

an alley between 2d and 3d streets near Jule street. Mrs. Mae Clark Mrs. Mae (Aunt Mae) Clark, 96, 1823 Messanie street, died Thursday night at a local hospital. She had entered the hospital on Wednesday.

Mrs. Clark, a native of Plattsburg, had lived in St. Joseph for over 80 years. She was a charter member of Heaton Bowman Funeral Home Mr. Harry 0.

Palmer 2507 South 10th St. Husband of Mrs. Goldie Palmer. Father of Mrs. Bettie Powers.

Brother of Mr. Arthur -Palmer, Mr. Michael Palmer: Mrs. Pauline Nold. Mrs.

Mary Hart. Mrs. Edith Hahn and Mrs. Margaret Beniamin. Mass celebrated Saturday at 9 A.m.

at St. Patrick Church. Rev. John Hix celebrant. Interment Mt.

Olivet Cemetery. Rosary will recited tonight at 7:30 o'Clock at our 319 South Tenth Street Chapel. 319 SOUTH TENTH STREET CHAPEL HEATON-BOWMAN 319 10th. EAST CHAPEL 3609 Frederick I Blvd. 232-3355 It's Easier to Shop at LEE'S for Stereo-8 and Cassettes in our organized catalogued bins POPULAR CLASSICAL COUNTRY SHOWS SWING POP-ROCK SOUL JAZZ ALL TYPES MUSIC Choose Your Favorite -All Labels RECORD JOSEPH RADIO SHOP 516 Francis (Next Door to Light Co.) 232-4563 MAY WE HELP YOU THE NEXT TIME You Are Thinking of DECORATING YOUR HOME? Try us--you'll like us! SCHALLER'S 'S LARGE THE PAINT AND WALLPAPER FREE FREE SUPERMARKET PARKING LOT N.

W. CORNER, 8TH AND MESSANIE DELIVERY OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAYI the New Hope Baptist Church, and the oldest living member of that church. She was also a member of the Jolly Agers, senior citizens club. Survivors include two nieces, Mrs. Ethel Lamaster and Mrs.

Margaret Mathews, both of St. Joseph. The body is at Alexander's mortuary. Moore Services Services for Mrs. Mary Moore, 80, 1011 Corby street, will be Saturday at 1 11 a.m.

at the Horigan chapel. Monsignor Charles S. Nowland will officiate. Burial will be in Mount Olivet Cemtery. Mrs.

Moore, a native of Andrew County, was the widow of Roy Moore. She died Thursday morning at a local hospital. A rosary will be recited a at Sidenfaden chapel at 8 tonight. For Your Lunch Come to Les' Large Luncheon Awaits You at Les' If you are short of time for lunch, then we have a large luncheon buffet, it's ready for you when you come in. Try Our Sandwich Bar Soup du Jour- and Sandwich Hamburger, charbeiled All served with cole slaw, cotBaked Ham- tage cheese, baked beans, hot Corned Beef- German potato salad your Roast Beef- of two! choice BrisketRESTAURANT LES' COCKTAIL LOUNGE Belt Highway and Pickett Road Phone 233-3555 SIDING Aluminum Vinyl, Steel or Asbestos Estimate Call: TRI COUNTY HOME IMPROVEMENT CO.

211 Urban Renewal Warehouse CABINET WALL BASE CABINET 42" SINK. KITCHEN $54900 HOT WATER HEATER WOOD CABINETS 66" SINK Formica Top Double Sink and Fixtures $159 18" WALL $21 '30" WALL CABINETS ALL SIZES IN STOCK Open Till 7 P.M. Except Friday and Monday 8:30 BLOCK'S SUPER DISCOUNT STORE 408 EDMOND OPEN NIGHTLY TILL 8 30 Open Every Friday and Monday Night Until 8:30 The Phone 232-7755 DOWNTOWN SALE Men's Suits SUMMER and YEAR 'ROUND SAVE NOW! Selection Is Large Our Famous Name Suits Including KUPPENHEIMER EAGLE, MICHAELS-STERN, DONCASTER, YORKTOWN $79.95 SUITS, Now. $64 $89.95 SUITS, Now $74 $100 SUITS, Now $125 SUITS, Now $165 SUITS, Now Men's Clothing Second Sizes for All Men -Regulars, -Floor Shorts, Longs, Extra Longs, Portlys, Portly Shorts Summer Sportcoats and Slacks REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE MEN'S FURNISHINGS Floor MEN'S STRAW HATS Reg. $4 10 1.

on MEN'S SWIMWEAR and BERMUDA SHORTS Leg. $5 to $20 OFF SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S SLACKS Perma Iron, Mostly Flairs. Reg. $6.50 to $13. DRESS SHIRTS Short Sleeve Perma Iron.

White and Colored. Reg. to $7.50 $485 DRESS SHIRTS Short Sleeve Regular $8.00 to $14.00 SALE PRICE $585 $985 MENS HOSE One size All Anklets and Over the Calf. Reg. to $1.75 3 for $2.85.

Perma PAJAMAS Iron, Plain and Coot Fancy. and Reg. Middy to Style $9.00. $639 "CHARGE IT" SPECIAL GROUP- on Your Knit PLYMOUTH ACCOUNT Sport Shirts Cru Neck Fashion Collars Plain and Fancies to me NOW $385. TO $98s CHARGE Service, SPECIAL SALE PRICES IN EVERY DEPT..

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About St. Joseph Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
509,610
Years Available:
1845-1988