tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/times-news_tf...vol. 66. nfo.,290 ii^ 0 c v d lle y...

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VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^0cV dlley'siiQ i^ - ■pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON (UPI) —De- PEM<H<CTRAT08S-OUTSn>E i»ie Boulder^ Colo., Day Nfamn'a visit-tiiere. One demonstrator, was arrested by Bou>- Nursery clIiKhed fists at a BPli<»niaii (iett) daring Pat der poUcfc (UPI t«lepiioto). Pat Nixon’s Toiu’ Beiiig Made Under Tight SeQurity;^Report Life Was Threatened ^ ------- . DEMVF.R (UPI):^To. many^Qt -the children she visited, .Pat Nixnn. was Just ''A. nice, lady in rejd coat. But to othei~3. Including soinF adults, she was truly tlje First Tjriy nf the land—CarmaitlSazoi wSwse almost- Indlan-fike' fea- turos wrinlclad at tirari rolled down her cheeks, described her by saying; so sweet.'’ There%^nly"^ne^ilight Way To See The Eclipse ____ ______________ teer projects she visited in the noveTie^T5E:;Slre*5 ©enver ---- and---- ^Bouldet_:uarcaIhi Wednesday. She was on the third-day^-ft-five-state~tour to projects at campuses across the country.- -................... ' ~ Tf you can’t resist the temp- tation to stare at the partial eclipse that is due 6ver Twin - Falls -Saturday, - you may for It with some ."solar Dam- age” . eclipse but It Is by Indirect means. The only recommended way P®y;to view the phenomenon, say the experts, is by using two pieces of white ciirdboard. In one a pmhole should be made Tills is'tffa waiiilnK fi'Ojii~Pir John McNEESTTrfnrertiritre'Wa^'I'aHa with the sun to the viewer’s back so the rays and image of the eclipse will focus through the pinhole onto the second piece of while cardboard, the imago is visible without dam- age. Even looking at the ecll^e through a cahiara viewer will result In damage, the ex- perts say..JOidy; advl9»-watch. hf> Association of Optomeirists, In view of the approaching ec- lipse. Many still believe viewing the eclipse .cpn-he done comfortab- ly. he .<:atd, by using dark glass- es. a smoked glass or old photo negatives among other methods. "Thl.'i 1$, not true.” says the local optometrist and his col- Jegues. •'There are many per- 800^ today who suffer eye dam- age from such processes in years past.” The retina has no sensitivity to pain and thus the individual does not xcalize the sipal! area "burned bj« the, Invisibl? Infra-red rays of the partially hidden sun. ______ Retina burns, however, a r e . . ____ Incurable and produce a CTind About W fee mtmnesr soot in-the victim’^ vit.|-Wilh thn iinnef-jtrort.«f-«l)out Ion which effects the eyesight of the individual throughout the remainder of his life. Local eye experts say there the television reproductions and lot the television camera take the brunt of the damaging rays. Scheduled to appear Saturday, the eclipse will bg ’total on~the eastern coast lint by the^lme ^ it .reachesJdaho, spteialist3.saja. it will be only about 35 to M per cent, or a partial eclipse. .The length of the eclipse will seven minutes conditions. under optimum i i i the adult* at4he-l-afay6tfei Colo., “Follow Through^^chool jUQject, dna^of several volun She’ traveled under ' security tighter than that for most presidential visits In recent years. Denver police checked'oufTi report two men in a red foreign car threatened to kill Mrs. Nixon. The Secret Service in -Wa.sh- ington would say only: "Wc are jnvrttifla^inR infon iiatluii ' I0l;n~ Rupert Sets Hearing On QtyBud^it RUPERT-City budget public fense Secrelary Melvin R. Laird has announced cutbacks tolalini; 93,900 military and civilian jobs at 371 military base!^ in a move to iiave $915 .million. Details of the reduction order —which does away with 35,300, military and 58,600 civilian jobs —will be released Friday at 4 p.m. EST, Laird said. Oversea? reductions will, be. annoupc^d. after "consultations with most coiintrles Hiive bec’n completed,". he said.--------^ ------—Y : ---- ---------- But congressional sources have already dlsplosod some of the targets of the economy measure. Among the hardest areas hit will be the Northeast and West Coast naval installations, with lO.BOO . civilian jobs nationally slated for extinction. These Included naval yard' reductions of 1,400 worker.'i at Boston, 1,500 at Portsmouth, N.H. and 1,800 at Philadelphia. More than 4,000 civilian jobs icnt be eliminated at three West Coast shipyards by mid-1971 including 1,230 layoffs at Mare Island, Calif, with {in additional I 05 S of 500 through attrition; 400 layoffs at Long Beach, Calif- with additional loSs through attrition and 338 at Breinerton, Wash." Major Army base reductions Included more than 2,000 military and civilian jobs at Ft. Polk. La.; 1,117 civilian and 16 military jobs at the Army command project offices at Huntsville; Ala.; 1,06-1 military personnel at Ft. Benning, Ga., at a saving of J7.4 million and 689 at Ft. Crordon, G<^ to save J4.8 million; 11823 military and 117"civillah"iol)s~at F.T. Bragg. N.C. at an estimated savings of $13.4 million; and 1,123 milita Jobe at Ft. SUL Okla. The regional hea<}quaB$rs of ing Installation agency at We.-;tnvRr__ Air ___ Force Base Mass., will be merged with the Griffiss Air Force Base. N.Y. Air Forcc' comnfunications ser- vices, resulting in transfer of 333 military ahd 81 civilian personnel from Westover to The transfer is part of an effort to save $17 million and eliminate 2,000 jobs in the ineFger by mi<J-1971. cohgre.s- Oiest Paini Give Formei* is .schedul^_ fot; 8^-p.m. March 17 at the city office; The 1970 budgefhas been set for $841.000. During a meeting Tuesday nl^ht, councilmen decided to purchase a pump for thp 9th Street sewer line lift station co.sting $2,433.50 and contrtds and piping f6r $1,230. Hamilton and 'Voeller, consulting engi- neers, will order this material. CoonT?ttrrien adopted two resol- utions , concerning I IP' 13 and ig. ____ i.iu.i'i, which will authorize the threat on Mrs. Nixon's city kb issue interim warrants Tonwy constmntiDn-coStrrof ir - rigation, sewer and water until the bonds can be sold for these areas. Spud Holding Plans AtNFOMeet IDAHO FALLS (UPI) — The NatTOhal Pa rmers' Organization and elsewhere lias beep successful, national NPO dent Oren Lee Staley of Cron- ,ing, Iowa, told' an estimated 1.000 persons heria Wednesday night. What the NFO Is really battl ing for. said .Staley, is pre.ser- vation of the family type farm structure and "we have to do it together.” Staley salit slonal sources said. In another major air forcc con.silidation, the Air ForCe communications service head- quarters will be moved from Schott Air" Force Ba.se near Belleville. 111., t6 Richards- Gebaur • Air Force Base at Kansas City, Mo., involving the transfer of 1,100 military and 400 civilian jobs. • : PreSideiit- “A Bad Night” .30 Mgmbers Of While Mob jailea LAMAR, S.C. (UPI)—Stata and local authorities, under tha prodding of Gov. Robert E. McNair and White ‘ >louso ^ rouridtd SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)— Pains near the heart of Lyndon B. Johnson gave the former President a "bad night,” his doctor said today. Lt. Col. Robert L. ' North, chief cardiologist at Brooke General Hospital, said Johnson was awakened several times by pains in the chest and left arm. ‘The pain is not associated with any change with the President's heart sounds, vital signs or electrocardiogram,” Tom Johnson, executive assi- stant to the former President, tOia" a medic,0,1 briefing. , "It is nevertheless an unplea- sant factor because this pain interferes’ with the President’s rest.” Bake HEYBURN —'•NFO mem- bers from throughout Magic Valley, .iplu,s Power county, plan a "haked potato” rally Friday afterntxm at the lis - ter Dozier fUrm, 370 north ond 400 west pf Paul. The "baku'; is expected- to start about 1 p.m. George Brandon, NFO'of- ficial, said farmers today are loading potatoes out of their storage cellars a^id will form a caruv^ to tli6 Dozier place. •‘We are doing this be- Tcanse the processors tell us there is too much .surplus.” he .said. NPO members will c a r^ signs on their trucks : ______ rsJCDnBU Jaa.^. to H ^dle TTieir Surplus.” ing to a llfe."- Mrs. Nixon was .scheduled to meet with .student leaders and hold a news conference today before departing for the College of the Ozark,s in Point Lookout, Mo., the first place during the tour Where she will actually tour the college campus. Part of the concern for Mrs, Nixoivs safely wedffesafiy'TtfHy have been generated by a series of firebombings ' and explosion.<i irr the Boulder area. heavHy damag^ the Air ROTQ office on the University of Colorado campus. Wedne.sday night, after Mrs. Nixon concluded her tour of a nursing home, a day care center and art 'nstltution foi mentally retarded adults, an For areas where a. total ec- explosion occurred ^ lipse can be seen, it is the first .Boulder. But police said they Stateil'since 1963,*knew of no damage. It was decided that the .spray program will operate under the street department. Richard Bohle and Ed" Hart- man, representing the civic re- lations committee of the Cham- beir Trf- €omeree- -request-the city make a complete Study of parking and traffic proble;ns withm the city. publicity. •susiwcteil today -of- Tipr -whitO' Most Rail Worker s^ii'e On The" Job .“WASHINGTON (UPI) —Most railroad workers obeyed'- a congressional order todajt not to strike the nation’s rail .system, but wildcat walkouts tjireatened disruption of freight service in parts of the Midwest, the Far West and th^ South. A Spokesman for the National Railway Labor Conference, representing management, said affected lines would go to cOCirt seeking legal action against strikers if picket lines were not ^thdra^n. _____ Congress pas.sed and Pres- ident Nbcon signed stop-gap legislation Wednesday declaring a 37-day moratorium on any strike by four shopcraft unions ^tJekotrt— by— th«— 128 ___, ______ TOCTnbe rs mob that attacked school buses' carrying Negro students. Warrents were issued for 30 men bn riot charges In Tuesday’s violence and by early today 15 have been booked In the .Darlington County Jail. Ona was hauled M still wearing pajamas. Arraignment was scheduled later tc5ay. The riot charges grew out of m ob- action—Tuesday irtOTrtHg when sorne '2lJ0 wnites near Lamar High School attacked three school buses with ax handles, clubs and chains. Windows wore broken and two buses- were overturned befora police with tear gas and nightsticks beat . back tha crowd. The 39 Negro students on tha buses were rescued. orIt railroads. Nbton’s 3JA hours'" union members -were set to on strike. However, _ a i m idiflglit strike deadline number of key rafT ^minaM^ Some stayed only briefly, tly as a token display of defiance. But pickets were still signature came Just s'" before -the 48,000 ’t§2 State Sends Investigator To Shoshoiie . SHOSHONE — School offloW * here 'received word froin~~tl<a" Stata Departthent of Education \ that their request for asslstanca in solving the Uncoln school admliUsfraUotReacher problem w ll bp BcknowIedgM. Mth someone—from-the-<lepartment here next week. 'TTle School Boai d ailtej ' " State Department to make an . ovaliiatlon- and recommenda*' tlons in solving the problem* least nine lines by mid. mom- ing. Vau can’t "Stop- the potatoes after they leave the -farm.. -SQ_ibi^Jtey.-to tion is keep Uie farm and the processor have to pay your pfice.” Noting alleged threats and re- port.<i of near violence In Eas- tern Idaho as a result of the NFO holding action, Staley ad- monished the members always to abide by the law. He said NFO members are businessmen man died at and should conduct themselves in a busiiiesslikS manner. Hop^a, Abandoned J’or French Sub TOULON, France (UPI)—The French navy today confirmed reports of an explosion aboard the lost submarine Eurydice- ending any hope still held by relatives wjlting lir’Toulon fur J. W- NEWMAK prominent Idaho Afiep- lied at Magic Vall^ Memorial Hospital wedneaday its return from a test dive in tha Mediterranean Wedne^ay. Among Siose 'waiting', ^n Toulon was Sabine Sala, 19, fiancee' of Jean-Pierre Gode- froy, one'of the Eurydice crew of 57 that died in the disaster; •’He was going to Introduce m e ' to his parents- In a few shis siaid. "We were to be married in October. 'fi'd iust bought the ring before ne left on this voyage,” HBr‘Bpeech~dls5otvaMn-Testrsriba3e. a ' feeling . that* the" outside help^ would provide a .more objectlva .. view of the matter., The evaluation cannot t>a done, however, in time for the Schbol Board to consider tha recommendwkrn9\ at their reg- . ular Marcji'School-Board meet- ing whicb^lll be Monday nl^t, MardrTB, before the Stalie Da* partment officials .u n ba Ittrp.. A t the School Board'^ii^ting, however, bids will be ' opened for tran«portatloni-«p»ratlon-<if- school buses,, and a day set for the budget hearing. Tha- spring trusteir^alecttoO- wlU also be set. MISSIILES'!SENT ALOFT VANDENBERG AFB, Calif.' (H Pl)—A secret satellite a Minuteman I. intercontinental ballistic missile were sent aloft Wednesday iti separata ". launches 'Jit this) aerospaca^' . BOISE (UPI) — Gov. Don Samuelson signed Ini6 isw ing two new agencies, estab- lishing a water pollution control fund and seven pub- lic health districts in Idaho. S a e ^ Majux Uj' I« Vefy MucJI ^a--«ileht'~m ajrpity—lsr-rio_tpw>ina'Tiot, have feeen on a TOO laRire f » date:” — He-said a count of the telerfdit grams was niit-made, but "re-l.st " the si dead. In fact it is* very much - alive and simmering somewhere out- there. ^ It -I'eacied sQ-violently and -----quickly Wednesday^to-a' iMece -:_^of-4ogislation-introduced-into-the :—-Idaho-Hoiise-of^cpresentativcs - that the bill won’t even come ■niis in effect means the’ bill Is dead.^ The bill,-lntroduc«d, by. Rep. Bill Onweiler of Ada County; askdarY two and'.a half- per cenr~exc&e tax « r ‘>Tr motbr -jtehicles in ftia stata'" iiiwfer 16.> -raised fram ,thls ,Iegi»- Mon<!y- ation. It 'lation, Ir apptovedr-woald hava FaUs-aootacted the ‘nme^fews been sent ta tha state trea.*- ,t pBOffion^ back to thi» ritiol «nrt.>niintigc Jar-.ttra -and-£Ounty-r •Hia apportionment,. per cent b ^ s . About 90 per cent of the TO-Onoy .collectea in a county would have been retunF= ed-to 4hat county.': passed, additionaHcoat-to-iiiotor-viehicle ■T|5finse from ~ :{wBs overwhflmingJ Ha said fie was assured by to be done about road .con- ms and I also agree 'the . ■_______. .to In' Twin Falls are-riot Went majorrt5t4)^i['5cst, but i Kel a better ^«an be fotmd to mofce these' repftlri. chairman Af . Committee,-. the House Printing that th» bill VwMild- quired to'register. therF'vehiye and pay the required registrl- tkin fee. Then o^eis-.would have been reqtflrtd to pay two tod a hair per cent tnore-lor tfae-eatfafiated worth o<_tha v . hide. ' V Hep. Jack -'Claibom of twin The bill, it was learned, was introduced in tlie first place to 'draw attention -to the road re- in - John .Christoffersen, a'IVTin Falls City Councilman and a tttimbcr of the city's rlUgkway and .Wcty_.0>mra!ssteB.. said. ’*As far.'M.iJ''to>(nK\respo^ ' or $75 for. their vehicles, when 4hi»ir pn to-lh.. office to register a vehicle. ; " I think this mfght indicate p^ple in Idaho ai fed UP with taicesr~taxes mofe taxes," Mr. Chrlstoffersta said.- ___ ',Tha'reJv:tion. from tha stent majority itr Twin Falls was in the about. two,^=j]ays, ■ ristoffefi^llTatgr ------- on-this—issua ’ (Jian'-oi^t iuowever,' any otfae^ issua l a q ^ tM LeglM •*7 ----- :— uic wen. staterhcSsg-in-Bobe Wi morning. ■1t

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Page 1: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

VOL. 66. NfO.,290i i^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ -■pVIN FA LL^ , JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS

WASHINGTON (U P I) —De-

PEM<H<CTRAT08S-OUTSn>E i»ie Boulder^ Colo., Day Nfamn'a visit-tiiere. One demonstrator, was arrested by Bou>- Nursery c lIiKhed fists a t a BPli<»niaii (ie t t ) daring Pat d er poUcfc (U P I t«lepiioto).

Pat Nixon’s Toiu’ Beiiig Made Under Tight SeQurity;^Report Life Was Threatened

------- . DEMVF.R (U P I):^ T o . many^Qt-the children she visited, .Pa t Nixnn. was Just ''A. nice, lady in

rejd coat.But to othei~3. Including soinF

adults, she was truly tlje First

T jr iy nf the land—CarmaitlSazoiwSwse almost- Indlan-fike' fea- turos wrinlclad at tirari rolleddown her cheeks, described her by saying;so sweet.'’

Ther e%^nly"^ne^ilight Way To See The Eclipse

____ ______________ teer projects she visited in thenoveTie^T5E:;Slre*5 ©enver---- and---- ^Bouldet_:uarcaIhi

Wednesday. She was on the th ird-day^-ft-five-state~tour to projects at campuses across the country.- -................... ' ~

Tf you can’t resist the temp­tation to stare at the partial eclipse that is due 6ver Twin

- Falls -Saturday, - you may for It with some ."solar Dam­age” .

eclipse but It Is by Indirect means.

The only recommended way P®y;to view the phenomenon, say

the experts, is by using two pieces of white ciirdboard. In one a pmhole should be madeT ills is 'tffa w a iiilnK fi'Ojii~P ir

John McNEESTTrfnrertiritre'Wa^'I'aHa with the sun to the viewer’sback so the rays and image of the eclipse will focus through the pinhole onto the second piece of while cardboard, the imago is visible without dam- age.

Even looking at the e c ll^ e through a cahiara viewer will result In damage, the ex­perts say..JOidy; advl9»-watch.

hf> Association o f Optomeirists, In view of the approaching ec­lipse.

Many still believe viewing the eclipse .cpn-he done comfortab­ly. he .<:atd, by using dark glass­es. a smoked glass or old photo negatives among other methods.

"Thl.'i 1$, not true.” says the local optometrist and his col- Jegues. •'There are many per- 800^ today who suffer eye dam­age from such processes in years past.”

The retina has no sensitivity to pain and thus the individual does not xcalize the sipal! area

"burned bj« the, Invisibl? Infra-red rays of the partially hidden sun.

______ Retina burns, however, a r e . .____Incurable and produce a CTind About W fee mtmnesrsoot in-the victim ’ vit.|-Wilh thn iinnef-jtrort.« f- « l )o u tIon which effects the eyesight o f the individual throughout the remainder of his life.

Local eye experts say there

the television reproductions and lot the television camera take the brunt of the damaging rays.

Scheduled to appear Saturday, the eclipse will bg ’total on~the eastern coast lint b y the^ lm e i t .reachesJdaho, spteialist3.saja. it w ill be only about 35 to M per cent, or a partial eclipse.

.The length of the eclipse will

seven minutes conditions.

under optimum

i i i the adult* at4he-l-afay6tfei Colo., “ Follow Through^^chool jUQject, dna^of several volun

She’ traveled under ' security tighter than that fo r most presidential visits In recent years.

Denver police checked 'ou fT i report two men in a red foreign car threatened to kill Mrs. Nixon.

The Secret Service in -Wa.sh- ington would say only: "W c are jn vrttifla^inR infon iiatluii ' I0l;n~

Rupert Sets Hearing On Q ty B u d ^ it

R U P E R T -C ity budget public

fense Secrelary Melvin R. Laird has announced cutbacks tolalini; 93,900 military and civilian jobs at 371 military base!^ in a move to iiave $915 .million.

Details of the reduction order —which does away with 35,300, military and 58,600 civilian jobs —will be released Friday at 4 p.m. EST, Laird said. Oversea? reductions will, be. annoupc^d. after "consultations with most coiintrles Hiive bec’n completed,". he said.-------- ------—Y :--------------

But congressional sources have already dlsplosod some of the targets of the economy measure.

Among the hardest areas hit w ill be the Northeast and West Coast naval installations, with lO.BOO . civilian jobs nationally slated for extinction. These Included naval yard' reductions o f 1,400 worker.'i at Boston, 1,500 at Portsmouth, N.H. and 1,800 at Philadelphia.

More than 4,000 civilian jobs icnt be eliminated at three West Coast shipyards by mid-1971 including 1,230 layoffs at Mare Island, Calif, with {in additional I 0 5 S of 500 through attrition; 400 layoffs at Long Beach, Calif- with additional loSs through attrition and 338 at Breinerton, Wash."

Major Arm y base reductions Included more than 2,000 military and civilian jobs at Ft. Polk. La.; 1,117 civilian and 16 m ilitary jobs at the Army command project offices at Huntsville; Ala.; 1,06-1 military personnel at Ft. Benning, Ga., at a saving of J7.4 million and 689 at Ft. Crordon, G <^ to save J4.8 million; 11823 military and 117"civillah"iol)s~at F.T. Bragg. N.C. at an estimated savings of $13.4 million; and 1,123 milita Jobe at Ft. SUL Okla.

The regional hea<}quaB$rs of

ing Installation agency at

We.-;tnvRr__ A ir___Force BaseMass., will be merged with the Griffiss Air Force Base. N.Y. Air Forcc' comnfunications ser­vices, resulting in transfer of 333 military ahd 81 civilian personnel from Westover to The transfer is part o f an effort to save $17 million and eliminate 2,000 jobs in the ineFger by mi<J-1971. cohgre.s-

Oiest Paini Give Formei*

is .schedul^_ fot; 8 -p.m. March 17 at the city office; The 1970 budgefhas been set for $841.000.

During a meeting Tuesday nl^ht, councilmen decided to purchase a pump for thp 9th Street sewer line lift station co.sting $2,433.50 and contrtds and piping f6r $1,230. Hamilton and 'Voeller, consulting engi­neers, will order this material.

CoonT?ttrrien a d op ted tw o re s o l­utions , c o n c e rn in g I IP ' 13 andig. ____i.iu .i'i, which will authorize the

threat on Mrs. Nixon's city kb issue interim warrants Ton w y constmntiDn-coStrrof ir ­rigation, sewer and water until the bonds can be sold for these areas.

Spud HoldingP lan s

AtNFOMeetIDAHO FALLS (U P I) — The

NatTOhal P a rmers' Organization

and elsewhere lias beep successful, national NPO dent Oren Lee Staley o f Cron- ,ing, Iowa, told' an estimated 1.000 persons heria Wednesday night.

What the NFO Is really battl ing for. said .Staley, is pre.ser- vation of the fam ily type farm structure and "w e have to do it together.”

Staley salit

slonal sources said.In another major air forcc

con.silidation, the A ir ForCe communications service head­quarters will be moved from Schott A ir" Force Ba.se near Belleville. 111., t6 Richards- Gebaur • A ir Force Base at Kansas City, Mo., involving the transfer of 1,100 military and 400 civilian jobs. • :

PreSideiit- “A Bad Night”

.30 Mgmbers Of WhileMob jailea

LAM AR , S.C. (U P I )— Stata and local authorities, under tha prodding o f Gov. Robert E . M cNair and White ‘ >louso

^ rouridtd

SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (U P I)— Pains near the heart of Lyndon B. Johnson gave the former President a "bad night,” his doctor said today.

Lt. Col. Robert L. ' North, chief cardiologist at Brooke General Hospital, said Johnson was awakened several times by pains in the chest and left arm.

‘The pain is not associated with any change with the President's heart sounds, vital signs or electrocardiogram,” Tom Johnson, executive assi­stant to the former President, tOia" a medic,0,1 briefing. ,

" I t is nevertheless an unplea­sant factor because this pain interferes’ with the President’s rest.”

BakeHEYBURN —'•NFO mem­

bers from throughout Magic Valley, .iplu,s Power county, plan a "haked potato” rally Friday afterntxm at the l i s ­ter Dozier fUrm, 370 north ond 400 west p f Paul. The "baku'; is expected- to start about 1 p.m.

George Brandon, N F O 'o f­ficial, said farmers today are loading potatoes out of their storage cellars a^id w ill form a c a ru v ^ to tli6 Dozier place.

•‘We are doing this be- Tcanse the processors tell us there is too much .surplus.” he .said. NPO members w ill c a r ^ signs on their trucks

:______ rsJCDnBU Jaa.^.to H ^ d le TTieir Surplus.”

ing to a llfe ."-

Mrs. Nixon was .scheduled to meet with .student leaders and hold a news conference today before departing for the College of the Ozark,s in Point Lookout, Mo., the first place during the tour Where she w ill actually tour the college campus.

Part o f the concern for Mrs,Nixoivs safely wedffesafiy'TtfHy have been generated by a series o f firebombings ' and explosion.<i irr the Boulder area.

heavHy d am a g^ the A ir ROTQ office on the University o f Colorado campus.

Wedne.sday night, after Mrs.Nixon concluded her tour of anursing home, a day care center and art 'nstltution foi mentally retarded adults, an

For areas where a. total ec- explosion occurred ^lipse can be seen, it is the first .Boulder. But police sa id they

Stateil'since 1963,*knew of no damage.

It was decided that the .spray program will operate under the street department.

Richard Bohle and Ed" Hart­man, representing the civic re­lations committee of the Cham- beir Trf- €om eree- - r e q u e s t- th e city make a complete Study of parking and traffic proble;ns withm the city.

publicity.•susiwcteil

today-o f-

T ip r-whitO'

Most Rail Worker s^ii'e On The" Job.“WASHINGTON (U P I) —Most railroad workers obeyed'- a congressional order todajt not to strike the nation’s rail .system, but wildcat walkouts tjireatened disruption of freight service in parts o f the Midwest, the Far West and th^ South.

A Spokesman for the National Railway Labor Conference, representing management, said affected lines would go to cOCirt seeking legal action against strikers if picket lines were not ^ th d ra^ n . _____

Congress pas.sed and Pres­ident Nbcon signed stop-gap legislation Wednesday declaring a 37-day moratorium on any strike by four shopcraft unions

tJekotrt— by— th«— 128

___,______ TOCTnbersmob that attacked school buses' carrying Negro students.

Warrents were issued for 30 men bn riot charges In Tuesday’s violence and by early today 15 have been booked In the . Darlington County Jail. Ona was hauled M still wearing pajamas. —

Arraignment was scheduled later tc5ay.

The riot charges g rew out o f m ob- action—Tuesday irtOTrtHg when sorne '2lJ0 wnites near Lamar High School attacked three school buses with ax handles, clubs and chains. Windows w ore broken and two buses- were overturned befora police with tear gas and nightsticks beat . back tha crowd.

The 39 Negro students on tha buses were rescued.

or— Itrailroads.

Nbton’ s 3JA hours'"union members -were set to on strike. However, _ a i m i d i f l g l i t strike deadline

number o f key ra fT ^minaM^ Some stayed only briefly,

tly as a token display o f defiance. But pickets were still

signature came Just s'" before -the 48,000

’t§2

State Sends Investigator To Shoshoiie. SHOSHONE — School o ffloW * here 'received word froin~~tl<a" Stata Departthent o f Education \ that their request fo r asslstanca in solving the Uncoln school admliUsfraUotReacher problem w l l bp BcknowIedgM. M th someone—from-the-<lepartment here next week.'T T le School Boai d a ilte j ' "

State Department to make an . ovaliiatlon- and recommenda*' tlons in solving the problem*

least nine lines by mid. mom- ing.

Vau can’ t "Stop- the potatoes after they leave the -farm.. - SQ_ibi^Jtey.-to tion is keepUie farm and the processor have to pay your pfice.”

Noting alleged threats and re- port.<i of near violence In Eas­tern Idaho as a result of the NFO holding action, Staley ad­monished the members always to abide by the law. He said NFO members are businessmen man died at and should conduct themselves in a busiiiesslikS manner.

Hop a, Abandoned J’or French Sub

TOULON, France (U P I)—The French n avy today confirmed reports o f an explosion aboard the lost submarine Eurydice- ending any hope still held by relatives w jlting lir ’ Toulon fur

J. W- NEW M AK

prominent Idaho Afiep- lied at M agic V a l l^

Memorial Hospital wedneaday

its return from a test dive in tha Mediterranean Wedne^ay.

Among Siose 'waiting', ^n Toulon was Sabine Sala, 19, fiancee' o f Jean-Pierre Gode- froy, on e 'o f the Eurydice crew of 57 that died in the disaster;

•’He was going to Introduce m e ' to his parents- In a few

’ shis siaid. "W e were to be married in October.

'fi'd iust bought the ring before ne le ft on this voyage,” HBr‘Bpeech~dls5otvaMn-Testrsriba3e.

a '

feeling . that* th e " outside help^ would provide a . more objectlva ..v iew o f the matter.,

The evaluation cannot t>a done, however, in time for the Schbol Board to consider tha recommendwkrn9\ at their reg- . ular Marcji'School-Board meet­ing w h icb^ lll be Monday n l^ t , M ardrTB, before the Stalie Da* partment officials .u n ba Ittrp..

A t the School Board'^ii^ting, however, bids w ill be ' opened for tran«portatlon i-«p » r atlon -<if- school buses,, and a day set for the budget hearing.

T h a - spring trusteir^alecttoO- wlU also be set.

M ISSIILES'!SENT ALO FT

VANDENBERG AFB, Calif.' (H P l)—A secret satellite a Minuteman I. intercontinental ballistic missile were sent aloft W e d n e s d a y iti separata ". launches 'Jit th is ) aerospaca^'

. BOISE (U P I) — Gov. Don Samuelson signed Ini6 isw

ing two new agencies, estab­lishing a water pollution control fund and seven pub­lic health districts in Idaho.

S a e ^ Majux Uj' I« Vefy MucJI^ a -- « ileh t '~ m a jrp ity—lsr-rio_tpw>ina'Tiot, have feeen on a TOO laRire f » date:”

— He-said a count o f the telerfdit grams w as niit-made, but "re-l.st

" the si

dead. In fact it is* very much - a live and simmering somewhere

out- there.^ I t -I'eacied sQ-violently and

-----qu ick ly W ednesday^to-a ' iMece-:_^of-4ogislation-introduced-into-the :— - I daho -Hoiise -o f^cpresen tativcs - that the bill won’t even come

■niis in effect means the’ bill Is dead.^

— The bill,-lntroduc«d, by. Rep. B ill Onweiler o f Ada County; askdarY two an d '.a half- per cenr~exc&e tax « r ‘> T r motbr

-jtehicles in ftia stata'" iiiwfer 16.>

-raised fram ,thls ,Iegi»-Mon<!y- ation. It'la tion , I r apptovedr-woald hava F aUs-aootacted the ‘nm e^fews

been sent ta tha state trea.*-, t pBOffion^ back to

thi» r it io l «nrt.>niintigc Jar-.ttra-and-£Ounty-r •Hia apportionment,.

per cent b ^ s . About 90 per cent o f the TO-Onoy .collectea in a county would have been retunF= ed -to 4hat county.':

passed,additionaHcoat-to-iiiotor-viehicle

■T|5finse from ~ :{wBs overwhflmingJ

Ha said fie was assured by

to be done about road .con- ms and I also agree 'the

■ . ■_______. . t o In' Twin Falls are-riotW ent majorrt5t4)^i['5cst, but i Kel a better

«an be fotmd to mofce these' repftlri.

chairman Af . Committee,-.

the House Printing that th» bill VwMild-

quired to 'reg ister. therF'vehiye and pay the required registrl- tkin fee. Then o^ e is -.w ou ld have been reqtflrtd to pay twotod a hair per cent tnore-lo r tfae-eatfafiated worth o<_tha v . h ide. ' V

Hep. Jack -'Claibom o f tw in

The bill, it was learned, was introduced in tlie first place to 'draw attention -to the road re-

in- John .Christoffersen, a 'IV T in Falls City Councilman and a tttimbcr o f the city's rlUgkway and .Wcty_.0>mra!ssteB.. said. ’ *As fa r.'M .iJ ''to> (n K \respo^

' or $75 for. their vehicles, when4h i»ir p n to - lh . .office to register a vehicle. ;

" I think this mfght indicate p ^ p le in Idaho ai fed UP with taicesr~taxes mofe taxes," Mr. Chrlstofferstasaid.- ___',Tha'reJv:tion. from tha stent majority itr Twin Falls was in the about. two,^=j]ays,

■ ristoffe fi^ llTa tgr

------- on-this—issua ’ (Jian'-oi^tiuowever,' any otfae issua l a q ^ tM LeglM

•*7----- :— uic wen.staterhcSsg-in-Bobe Wimorning.

■1t

Page 2: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

xa- J . ; ,

/ - V

V. A

.■..., . v , . «

-;C -

n u il iu wither jll^ort. F ro m T lm e s^ e W s 24-H our VVeather B u raau W Ir«

TemjperaturesNa onal

Atlanta Bi!imarck Chicago Cleveland ■Dcnvo f —— - ■;Dcs Moines Detroit

- Fort Wjprth "■JndianajSSIis

Jacksonville Kansas City J B Vega s ■

Max.67225455

-55-

Mia. ]Pcp. 52 7

3334 . .52

Xns Angeles Memphis . MiamiMpls.-St. Paul New O rleam New York Omaha Philadetphlik

~ Hortland, Orc^ St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego

' San Francisco 'bu ttle_________ _

-Spokane— Wasliington

’ 46 ■ 50

• 60 35 73

■isS l -

6065733160404839585452

•61.52_51

-27324030.6034M -

.36

.55T

-H i

5!;.Today’s 8 ajn. Magic VaUgy

33-43

48 1.31 4470 18 5935 3036 32 27 3550 .69 47 1.15

J £ .

.38

.41

-13- 40-----S5ii

Fmieral-Sem<

ForecastF a liT ^ ro u gh Friday. Highs

today 45-52, lows tonight 18-25. Probability o f preclpltatkin Inear zero. Outlook Saturday partly cloudy. On Camas Prairie and In the Wood R iver' VaHey, highs in 40s both, days; lows tonight zero to 10 above. Temperature ranges; Gooding 48-24. Jerome

temperaturesi^^JT.w In F a*I I s Weather Burca6V'27, with 84 per cent humidity; T .F . Entoinology Laboratory 30, with 86 per cent humidity; Jerome 25, Buhl 29, Rupert 21, Castleford 27, Fair­field 5,'and Hailey 16. Soil tem­peratures: T . K Weather Bu­reau, four-inch 45-35, clE^t-inch ^ 0-38, 20-inCh 4(M9, 3g:iHch~ T 2~ 42; Rupert, four - Indi, 43-.i7, BuhL.4SrS5, and Castleford 42-33, both three-inch. -------------------

* ----

JrWi Newman Dies AtA^e87

James William Newman, ST; promhient sheepman for many years, died Wednesdaji evening at Magic Valley Memorial Hos­pital, o f a long illness.

Bom June 23. 1882. a t Bell County, Tex., he ..^oVed wFth' his family to Prineville, Ore.,

Klj-s.'iMary Anil. Huber Jolley. 1 iJ.m.-SaturdayrBurley-Second Ward LDS Chapel. ' .

Mrs. M yrtle E. Smith, 2- p',m. F r i d a j i Thompson Chapel, Gooding. . ....

Mrs. Ptillen .Mrs. Beatrice ■ Ethel Pullen,

54, died ' Wednesday at Ma^ic Valley Memorial Hospital o f a; long illness.,^S h e was born Nov. 4. 1915,

WeirdelirSets:

In spile o f the persistence of partly cloudy skies over the eastern portion o f Oregon and Idaho yesterday, the.> afternoon temperatures were two. to five degrees h igher,; with^ few ex­ception, than-the previous after­noon. The exceptions were in the Baker. Ortr; area where readings,-were a couple o f de­grees cooler, and in the Upper ■Snake River VilHpy frnm Jrlnhn

IdahoBear Lake. Boise Buhl Burley ' Caldwell Castleford Emmett

- Fa lrligkt——

High Low Pr.40' 21 T 48 30

■48 27 47 21 .50 24

,^52 24.-92 25 -

---- 35^^-4— T.• Gooding ■ 47 27

Grace 44 28 Grangevillo 39 17 Hailey ■ 37 12 Idaho Fails 3S -24

■ Jerome------------------- 48-25— —- Kimberly 47 22- Kuna 50 20 T.

Lewiston 42 28 Naiad 48 - - Mountain Homo 49 29 ' . Parma 52 25

• Pocalello 42 27 Rupert - 53 19 Salmon 38 26 Soda Springs 38 25 Twin Fails 48 25

EmbarrassingLOS ANG ELES (D P I) —

Mrs. Jerry Samoiloff called the animal shelter to report there were a number of

—dogs-running-ioose in a-sec- tion of the suburb of Wood­land Hills.

The lo s Angeles Depart­ment o f Animal Regulation sent a man out on patrol and Mrs4 Samoiloff was right, .tix-<tog«-w cF«- takeiv in for^ io la tion o f the city’s leash law.

O n e 'o f the dogs a mixed miniature poodle answering to the name o f "Skippy.” was daim ed; b y^ lts—6wnet— Tuesday night — Mrs. Sam-

-TjttDtfr— -------------------------- --

Skier DiesKETCHUM — Richard M.

.Patterson, 41, S e a t t l e , died Tuesday of an apparent hMrt attack while skiing on Bald Mountain

The body was sent to Seattle }fn r scrv ir r t hy .R irfl Mnriiiary...

Fails -Tiorthr- were three to lower.

five degrees

Maximum temperature read­ings reported at this hour show Pcncileton and Mountain Home the highest .with readings of 49 docrces. V

The overnight low tempera­tures under clearing sky aver­aged three to five degrees lower than ycstei^ay piorning under variable cloud c6ver.‘

The.disturbartee which was off

the West Coast yesterday morn­ing moved across Northern Cal­ifornia and then southeast over Nevada. Precipitation spread across Carlifornia and Nevada. Siiow Is falling on Eastern Ne­vada and ^Southern Utah this morning.

The extended weather outlook for the period Saturday through Mojjjlay indicated mild daytimeIpmpprntii^pg wilh r <■ n rf i n. p -mg-niy. lr\'tm!~SO.'. at luwcr vation and the mid to-upper 40s in the Mutheast Idalio high­lands.

Low temperatures will range in the 30s in the west with 20s to scattered low 30s in the cast.

Chance o f rain or snow Mon­day with lower temperatures.

Spring farm activities and or­chard cleanup, and early spray application should make good pro^frera during the remaitider of vveck and over the weekend.

Magic Valley HospitalsM a g i c V a l l e y M e m o n 'a r i ^ C a s s i a M p m n r in l

AdmittedKelJys,Coates, Edith Given,

Mwr- r* 'D .........

AdmittedEugene Dru.ssel. Robert'. Hil-

Mrs. C .^R. McWilliams, Julie jliardr Mrs. Harold Mariin«ale. Brown.-;,^Cgr^_ .Ray John.son. Allen Ostvhout. M rs.. Sidney

Larsen and Cheryl Carlson, allBeatrice Pullem and Harold Turvey Sr., all Twin Falls; Kari Moss, Kimberly; Mrs. Joe Alli­son. Filer; Robbin Veneman. Burley; J u l i e Watkins .jKid Laurie Watkins, both B u h l ; Julia Self and Glenn Bessire, both Murtaugh; Donald Friel and Oscar Johnson, bothJHan- sen; Leonard Seifers, Dietrich, and George G iy ’. Jackpot.

- ^ . Dlsdiissed Mrs. Ace Johnson, Mrs.~MI-

chael F. Beley and son, Mrs. Thomas N. Moore and/son, Mrs. V e i j E. Barnes and/son,i Mrs. David R. Rounds and' son. Mitzi Baihbridge, Reed Woodland. Alfred Hayes. Mrs. Karl. Bohr^ Bobbi Ann Goidijy and Mrs. Bea­trice Pullen, all Twin Falls; Milton M iller and Harold John- son, l» th Jeryme: Mrs. George Trenkle anH^on, Dietrich; Mrs. Enid Wolfe and J. H, NeI.son. both Buhl; William Elliott and Verlen Allred, both Paul; Coijn J. Campbell. Kimberlj;; Mrs. Ervin R a s t, Wendell; -Scott Whltely.' Oakley, and Cherri 01-.snn. San F i^nri«-o,-C^lif,--------

BirthsA son was born to Mr. and

Mrs. Keith Herrell, Twin Fajlsl

sheep interest, working for the -• I J^dsenbaum Co. until 1932 whenWorld-Day

Of Prayer > -W ENDELL — 'World Day of

Prayer' .services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Baptist Chii;'<^'in Gooding.

Women of- 'Hagerman, Wen­dell,. Bli.ss and Gooding are in­vited to attend. Rev. Helen Davenport, o f the Gooding Bap­tist Church, w ill speak on the

in 1891. When h6 was 15 years .Colome, S-D. J h e came to ^-EaUs-in- -M59-fron»—Love^ Nev., residing at 426 4th

e. W.Mrs. Pullen was a member

of the LDS Church. ;She Is survived by one broth­

er. Roy H. Scisson's, Winner,■S.n_________1 _____________

Nolen ancT Swift arid Ca.. work-|J; ing for them until Sept. 30, 1906, As_a_.sheepjiuytr.-i—

In 1905 he started His own

: oui-ugfr:'Others who are taking part

are Mrs. E ffie Danuser of th«- Gooding Catholic Church, Mrs. Robert S. Slagel o f the Gooding Assembly-of God. Church. Mrs. Mae Snively" of the Gooding Lutheran Church will lie the or­ganist and Mrs. P eggy LaRue and Mrs. Helen Lucke will bring messages in song.

Gooding Episcopalian women will have charge of registration and name tags. th<f, Gpodihgi Methodist Women will ik W

_ own eep business. Mr. Newmain

farmed for many years in Good­ing and Jerome countie.s. A fter retiring he sold his holdings in 1957 which included property in Blaine, Gooding. Jerome, Lin­coln, Camas and Custer coun­ties. _ . ___

On June 30. 1908, he marriod Rachael F«rguson ijj» Ha()ey, They lived in Shoshone until 1928 when they moved to Twin Falls where he had resided since.

N e wman was g iven rcF~ ognition for his outstanding pro- motion arid welfare o f the agri

and a tea will be served by the Gooding Baptist women fol-

culture industry at the Southern Xdaho Hall o f Fame banquet in 1963. He joined the Masonic luidge in 1918 in Shoshone and \Vent through Scottish Rites and the El Korah Temple in Boise April 19. 1919.

He served six years on the Idaho State Sheep Commission and was a director of Producers

Survivors include his widow. Twin Falls; three granddaugh­ters. Mrs. Sharon Jenkins Gar-lowing the meeting with cookies

b e i n g furnishetf" b\* various 1 ner.' Delano, Calif.; IMrs. Nina churches in Wendell, Hagerman [Jenkins Bartlett, St. LwiS, Mo.,a j^ .UQQdjnc.------------- ---------------[ana Mrs. l.mtla iirQvviL.'Mr-nniiR

A nationwide offering to be all, Boise; three great-grand-jnnd Mrs. Linda Brnwn.'Mr-nniiE

taken un this day for a world wide witness.

Burley: Mrs. Cyril' Hawkcs, Paul; Mrs. Cnrla Jellisonr<Mrs; Duane Drussel; both Rupert; Mrs. Price Simon, American Falls; Mrs. Gene I-airchild, Cafperon Critchfield. Mrs. .I<>- -seph Callahan and B. Howard, all Oakley.

DismissedRobert Bray. Mrs. Danny Or­

ton and .son, Mrs. John Alman­za and.-son. alj Burley;- Angel R. Carter Jr.,' Hcyburn' and Mrs. Michael Cranney, Oakley,

Births•Sons were born to Mr. and

Mrs. Price Simon, American Falls, and Mrs. .Carla Jcllison, Rupert. .,

Farm Supply Store Opens

Priiicipafe' Rev. Eugena TJarks driving Hown Second Street South’ . . . -Trav is- Edgerton,': Joi^me-.- bi’ai ^ - ging about baby daughter . ' . Glenn-7 Simmons -tilking-rabout^ Gooding news . . '.. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Jones,. Billings,. Mont., attending CSI-Ricks basketball gdme with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Peterson .. . . Jo Cole looking

IsJ^pec^dRUPERT — Announcement of

new principals for Minico High school and the! two new Junior High Schools fbr. Minidoka Cpunr'tV is expected made by ----------- - . - -officials after the school board'forwafd to ^ e k ^ d skiing . . . meetirtg 8 p.m. Mondajj at the Herb Gormley, Fairfield, ta lk-'-. centraTschool office. ^ ^

Doyle Lowder, assistant coun­ty school superintendent, said

ing to former Camas Prairia resident : . • Mr. and Mrs. r .

___ S. Tofflemire c a r r y i n g skinine ' applications have heeh equipment into jwuse . . . Kenny screened and some Inteirvlews McClain and Kenny-Straughnm ade" » Ireferring to friend’s kitchen c»r-

Classrooms. In the Hew J2.2 peting as “ leopard"_ patterned

buildings, currently under con­struction, will be usable Jjy Aug. L School will start Aug. 28.

Bids for five 66-passenger school buses were accepted dur- ine a special board meeting.

^ Hanrei m iw . Rupert, won ing Funeral services will be con- ^id of S3,745 per unit for chas-

ducted at 11 a.m. Saturday at clark Motor receivedWhite Mortuary Chapel. Burial|,he bid of S3.1I5 per unit for will follow in th^ Twin Falls bodies. The board alsoCemetery.

FriMds^may call at the mor­tuary', Friday evening and Sat- urday^ntlM0;30 a.m.

Mrs. |laddixH A IliilY Mrs. Sarah R

Maddi^ 9S. dted pt Wood lE

approved to’ purchase a com­mercial washer for the athlctic department at 'Minico.

HistoricalrnnsangsEenr: Group Slgiig

Jong illness. ___ ' _Tuesday of a Jong illness.She,'was bora July 20, 1873,

in Gilford, Mo, (Her husband died in 1918 in South Dakota.

Survivors include three sons, Cleo Maddix,- IfCetchum; Tru­man Maddix, Bishop, Calif., and Melvin Maddix. Ketchikan,- Al­aska; two sisters, Mrs. Lillian Thompson, Hppkins, Mo., and Mrs. Mary ^herryi Stanberry, Mo. "i? / „

Funeral iSfe^ices. will be con- ducted F iS a y in Stanberry. Lo­cal arrangernents are under tne direction of Bird Funeral Home.

Rupert Meet■ RUPERT — Directors will"be elected and bylaws established for the Minidoka County His­torical Society at a public meet­ing at 8 p.m. Friday, in the Rupert Civic Building, reports Bill Whittom. publicity chair­man for the newly formed group.

Mart O'Donnell. Rupert, has

UrS.-Russiaiigran

sons-and one great-granddaugh­ter. I , He was prtieded in death by twp laughters, Mrs. Laried Jen­kins and Mrs. Thomas C. Brown; one son, William F. Newman; one grandson, Wil­liam Jenkins, two sisters and five brothers.

Funeral services will be con­ducted at 1 p.m. Saturday atPAUL — Hall's Farm and

Home Supply business opened White Mortuary Chapel with Iti' the former Hansen Building Twin Falls Masonic Lodge No. on North Main Street. Paul ''S in charge. Friends may call

at the moriuary Fridajj and Sat­urday'until noon.

Mr. Cosentino

APPRO VES MOTION

Minidoka MemorialAdmitted

Vera Meuleman, Wilma Paint­er, Mrs. Richard Davis and Lila Neibau, all Rupert; June Kidd, Decio, and Robin Stevenson, Burley.----------------UlstriK5ed----------------

Ulsa Osborne, Heybum; Mrs. Tim McKnight and daughter.ADDIS ,A B A B A „a jP I ) - T h c -

o rgM M tton Of African Unity. (QAU) Wednesday ;iight unani­

mously approved a motion condemning airplane 'lijackinps

' and urged members to take ' steps to stop them.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES TH E TIMES-PJEWS Twin Falls, Idaho

By Carrier"rt^nt h ________

BirthsA daughter was born to Mr.

and Mrs. Richard Davis, Ru- Pert. y ______

Goodinp:. MemorialAdmitted

Dcna Hill and Thelma Young, both Gooding.

S t r B e n e d r c t ^ 5 T ]J e f o imAdmitted

Mrs. Lydia Wamboit, Edward Ahrens and Bob Blamires, all JerOimp, and Robert Gety; Twin Falls.

Dismissed

Owned by Forrest O. Hall,Burley, the new business will

*be majjapod by Charles Thomp­son, Haul, Hatl tunipany em­ployee since 19(i6.

I The bu.srness is an expansion ol Hall's Farm and Home Su[>

' ply located on South Overland,Burley.

Hall's has developed from awas employed as a cook ment.''"ft "came" Vf'ter Va'rTierl George Michael, ^actin'g^city

Vuclear Pact Takes,Effect

spearheaded the drive to, form the county-wide society and last -month the Rupert city-council authorized the group to use the old city-jail, thought, to be one of the oldest buildingirviin ,Ru-

TB—basis.topen. <iri a. rer promote the fe'sthBftSfi'ment of a museum in -the county.

Mr. O ’Donnell has met with Dr. Merle Wells. State Histor-

- :ica l-=Society^i»yctprF=»«d-filed articles of Incorfloration. both with the state and county

“ visiting’-.’ "With wife . . . Morris W. Carlson- trying to regain composuce . .. . Porter Ingram watching basketball game. . And overheard. “ Way to go Csi Golden Eagles."____________ '

He Came CleanWHEELING. W.Va. (U P [)

^ Kenneth Haney couldn't understand why he was ar­rested for yagr^ncy.

He udmitted l o a f i n g around the C i t y - County Building but said he saw no harm in it . , _,

I The police did. They said Haney -had been-doing lit.\laundrythe building.

Rifle Bought, Taken From Policeman

Terry Quinn Joined the TwinFalls— Police— De partment— ------Sunday and Wednesday was his day off.

Since the sun was out and spring was In the air he de­cided to buy a .22 caliber ritia nnd grt into the desert for a

Bjr NICHOLAS DANILOFFWASHINGTON (U P l) —The

United States and the Soviet Union formally put into force {4 - t T.,-,'today a treaty to halt t h e l A l C l e I S j l C r e spread of nuclear weapons, then focused on their tWO'-way n^otiations to avoid a 'hew super arms race. .

President Nixon and Premjer Alexei N. Ko.sygin presided at ceremonies in Washington and Moscow at which the two countries officially cnmpleted

To Inspect Dierke’s Lake

James'Downs, Department ofNicholas Anthonu C o s e n t in o , [the process of ratification ot

53, Jackpot. Nev., died M o n d a y , the nuclear nonproliferation en route to Magic Valiev M e - treat;*.morial Hospital of-a sudden ill- WashlnRton ceremony

Housing and Urban Develop­ment. San Francisco, and an as.sociate will be in Twin Falls Wednesday to inspect progre.ss

was' held at the Stale Dcpart-jO" Dierke'i Lake development.

i*fe-no known survivors; Funeral as m London.

M rsrD o fls Knight and*TrTrs. Amos Watson, both Jerome, and Mrs. B. D. - Ainsworth, Hager- man.

BirthsA son was born to Mr. and

Mrs. Gene Hunt, Buhl.

"manufnctwre - d irect" "buying arrangement to pass the savings on to the consumer.

The Paul store operation will c e n t e r a'round the farmers' needs in all areas of farming. irom_iuils-arid bolts to cultiviai- ing tools and irrigation, supplies.

Blaine CoqhtyAdmitted

John Merccr. Carey, and R. T. Floyd aiiJ Lucre t l i Pmialiut!7 both Hailey

Dismissed _M rs . Jess -B au ges^n d son. jCarey. and Edna Fields, Ketch- um.

G «n < l opening is tentatively set ter March 17, —

Meeting Held By BPW Unit Here

service.^ are pending at White Mortuary.

LegislativeLog

By United Ptycx |nt*matlona]Slgni^d by Governor:

that the nonprolifer.

Kosygin described the treaty as among ’ 'the most impiortant standards of internatipnal law,” but concentj^tcd mpr^ on the forthcoming strategic-j iarms talks scheduled to move'“ in full swing '■ In April in 'Vienna between the United States and Russia.

He said the Russians were" p r e p a r in g in all e a r n e s tn e s s " completed.for tjiese negotiations. Hei

jer, said Thursday he has been advised the two will spend one or two days in connection with the federal and local proj­ect. ' ^

A federal grant of about J76,- 000 has been authorized under HUD programs for development of the area as a public recrea­tion facility. Mr. Michael said road work Is currently under-

■nd rmbalmersVHn4-"H tS<>««ion« bI)—Eit»bliihe!» an

XAti*rn Idaho Voration«] Scho<4 In Bon- ceviMe County

Howard Allen, Twin Falls jew- ... " ' i ' ” ..•".''v"’ * Providri elor and. past president of the ,.,h . ^Vh.b,iii.?;*„'T.” sr.m''iorp/r'.oni, ""w f"!" nuclear powers -l««»»l— Ehomber—nf—Commerce.— ---------- -jmu — — other— state;— tt)— dtr

ation treaty "does not liquidate Class In Firstnuclear armaments so far, adding:

■"Therefore, It l.i ver>' Impor-

was guest speaker at_ a receni 'n 'h<'ir power to ....... . - • ^ obi*ii'««d 'Stop the nuclear arm^ race and

SOUia (Fipanc»>—Tran«f*rrlnf from I !;j^cd UD DrOCrC*?!?

(Datlv & Sunday) Bv Mall

Paid In Advance (Daily & Sunday)

1 Month

C.25

«.5 0Months

1 Year .......................23.00- Mail subscriptions accepted onlv where Carrier delivpry 1* Dot maintaltied. ’

tIMES-NEWS2UBSCB1BEBS.

'Rggistrars Are Named

Twin Falls News In Brief

World Day of Prayer services will ho held at the First Bapt.st Church in Twin Falls at p m. 1-riUav. ■ '

riieoting of the Twin Falls Busi- ness and Professional Women's'-lutr" Uy to *«l/rifi^nd W«f«, <13.100 for

He spoke on the background «ppropri«(ion tor Public Employe* of the diamond and its alliance bric. wh.ohWith, love. — ' - 1 h*ndV »‘at« dfmund’ d?po»it« for ra»h-

Greta Smith, past president of I the BPW, spoke j)n a recent ° s'ri'iJ “v «i. Afr.im'-Author.imi r-'ry tour of Southern California and '» >>« invmcd lo city coupArizona, statingvthat p r o b le m s ,E d „ c . „ o o > -A u .h ,r , „n ,

p:o>e» to work part-time for afennVt supervittoa of Stats Board of

♦►mp.o'J cai.on

At Jeromeannounces tna'-nMnes of the reg- Utrars' for Jerome county prc- cincts.

AJI voters who arp not regis­tered^ to vote should. do so at this .time so.

Patricia S. Daniel, daughter of Mr arrd Mrs. Jack Newell.

jTwin Falls, has been admitted i to the professional education progra'ftTiii "EaT^TPrn'Washingtiin Stale College at Cheney, Wash. Mrs. Daniel is a graduate of Twin Falls High School and is ■9—senior—at—tiw—collcgc,______

The regular meeting of theTwin Falls Shrine Club will >b€ at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the Ida­ho Room o f the Alley. William lewbrv. nrpsidffnt nf.-hp Pnr.i

,u . . ., speaker. He will speak on the

_East_ A ite4Jocal‘ Shrincrs becoming involv­ed in an antique show project; Guests are welconie to attend with the Shrin^rs.

concerning the hippie influence which she encounter?* ', -

The dihner meeting was at] .sbuss (Finnnf )—Tr«n*rernnt rrom the Roundup Room of' the Rog-l<^"P-*t ouIUV lo currrnt nppn p fl.two orson Hotel. President Ina Knox ‘ ppropfi-iion <« th.conducted the meetin(>. Spring table decorations were arranged by ^ V e rh a Rudolph.

/ ig Waming^LONDON (U P I) The

British^_Foreign Office has - that if they

have a passport ptolo laToen while wearing a wig they had better wear it when en­tering or leaving a foreign country.

1‘Biiiifinnit

ppropow«trial Affidfnt Board

.SD:4:M iKducahon) — Aulhorixmf Stafr Board of Education to hold litic to rral

-jmrpf..,SUUftT tEdur.ition) — Authonj/nf ♦•d-

♦ ral granii to h<* contidrrrd rrveni»<^ f.ir putpo«»* of fund.«g rrvenu# bond* w . Jun­ior- <»nttipr« - • . - »•

SniSf-J I A,'»nrufturf) — on hvp«:»ck' to provid* fund* far d i«ra «« con­trol . '

(Local Gov«mmenl) AuOior- l*r« rnunly coronrr* to nama dfputi *

SB'SIS (Stata Affairs) — Rpdpfinfs wage ha»a .for ca’culatini, unnnploymfnt

TTTfrIntroduced la lleuw

HBC7) (Appropria'ion«) ApQjopriatrt from r.eperaJ Fund I3*«.47S to Depart- men of Public Atsi tyire for Medicare rfKuranf* and nurttfTf hdmt rare

linATi (Way* A Mr«n«> -» Prov dea for PuMiC *Wht>oT Teacher

______ . . .towardgChtfai ahd“ 'c o m ^ f » ■disar­mament."

He said Russia attachs great importance to the strategic arms talks.

' )BalloonRICHFIELD — -D-Sp. 6

Jdh/i E. Ale.xahder writes from Chu Lai. Vietnam, that he, h.-is been made wardmas- t^r for the pre - operative

-ward in the surgical Tibspital of the 27th dtv’isiop.

The hospital is made, of- 20 interconnecto(i quon.set hilt units, each 20 by M feet. Alc.xander. a nurse in the medical corps. Works with Vietnamese children. as

. well as- adults, ^ nd -Ame r-ican servicemen. He says they still see that each child doesn't leave the hospital without a bar of scup and a billoon. To help {ay lo r .

Aid Held Here t or State Police

Half of the State Police ofti- rers In -District No. < atte a first aid session recently at the Twin Falls headquarters In preparati<ln_fQr renewing their Red • CrosV cards.

Lt. Dean Bennett said the card.'! are about to expire and in view of this a practice and

■bru.-jh-up ses.sion was held.Other officers from the dis-

twot will meet March 15 at Uic Cotterel Port of Entry.

few hours of hunting.He never made it.Officer Quinn purchased the

rifle, then stojjped bj» the sia- tian^to-slioit the weapon loJck .low officers before'----headiifgsouth into the desert. ,

Always alert, detectives Cheeked the serial number nf the weapon and found >1t had been stolen in Indiana.

Neither Officer Quinn-nor th» dealer from whom ho purchas­ed the weapon wcra aware It was stolen.

But stolen it was.And now it is . in tha custody

of the detectives.Officer Quinn? —“ Nothing ever .sei^s to go

right. I think I'll JllicU lo _ing." . ■

Area OfficersWa^Attend Law Institute

Tw a-and- possibly three law enforcement officers, from Twin Falls will be attending an Insti­tute for Local Law Enforcement

Moscow. 1Sgt. Galvin Bernard, second

in'command at Idaho State Po­lice 'District headquarters,jand Frank Barnett: Twin Falls Chief o f Police, said Wednesday, they definitel\j will be. attending. .shecif f .Paul gQrdCf has-.nQt,..yct.decided whether he will be able to go, but plans to if possible.

The institute, sponsored by_ a __Bureau of Public A ffa itLResearch of the University of Idaho in cooperation with the Peace Officers Standards and Training Advisory Council, will feature speakers from the uni­versity and branches of law en­forcement.

Races SlatedH AILE Y — Rotorun ski clasi-

es will not be held this Saturday because • of the invitational ski races being held at the area; this weekend, according to ski instructor Ralph Cisco.

The lessons will therefore fix- tend to March 21, concluding the five-week course.

REWARDFo r inform ation

leading to w hereabouts of

JERRY SNEED- PHONE

7 3 3 -1 2 7 4 or 7 3 3 -&Z 7 2

-VUUNU l bPUBLOtfWDRTTOSri^^Friday,- MarcK 6; 197X)

. fq r aorvice on Paper , Dellvaty-

Call your carriermrnt

k fo r a i p^in. d o ily or

.... mnwnrmgThey are Bishi

ble Beveri8ge.precinct, Ma-

O ffW ol d f y o n t j C o u n ty h U w i p o ^ : M«nlMr of- Aa^lt tonm, «

J Oaili, Thuradoy l» h«»>V -! « - ih> dor e f iWnlssi^ « " Whkh . -tvk) b».jwbll»IW<t

doO^ <m<I Suftdoy. g awt SatmOav, at UO-awSia'5r<MrWmI, Twin Foth. MMwi, 83301. br Mogk VoltayMnMpcvan^ Ik , ■

id an mcmkI don molt i

C. 32W3T17 Caoyonside. Na- De4ne McCay, Roiite 3, 5 milds sbtit^ three and one - quarter m iter -wfcst, - 324-SOSP; Cfeurl- house', • Harry Forbes. <05 ^th AVe. East,-3a+-072; Falls a ty , Mrs. Neat Perkitis, Route three; on» i mil> wwth at thg -Fall C ilyadhoti and 'oiie-tenth mile east; Ml-5i73;. Grandview.. Dorothy

■ ~[ters. Boute T 'tw o artd n ie-- miles north, east side of

r o « I , 32*-5ISft; Northeast, I ^ h - erine 'HeATric. | «7 " North-Fill- ■morev » W ^ : Notthw est. Mrs. ‘n iora G<Rlgh, m 4«h Ave. W « t . J J «e8 if-& u tb «a s t; Mrs. Ster-

JtduBon, 32S East Ave. D; ^oufh%^sC M ary Thcu-

soo; 5ds West Avit. G. 324-4635; Edn, Opal Newbrv. Edciv JB2S- 5J35; Greenwood. Mrs. ,Herbert Bntaat, Route-T, Hazelton,-fnira th^ Kasota .oyerpais,, one^nr&e i»8 iir~ W 8-MI5;-- «nd -rKaaehoitr Mri , teiner w A g iag ja r

H ie Uacoln 'School smorgas­bord is-scheduled ttattu-S p.mJ to 8 p.m. Friday at the school,

by-ithV PTA . ----- —

The Vota-Vita Class o f the ~<5hwrch vrill i » r ^

a pancake "brunch" at 12:15 p.m. Sunday at the Church. 910 $hoshone St. E. J fie public is -iiwfited. The eha fga w il l 'i ha W for adu lts.i^ cents for children under 12, and $3.75 for an entire faniily. __ ________

Any organliation Interested I^ ’ ig a progranri’ o il 'Envilron-

mental Quality is asked to con-having

would be within their rights if. they refused to k!t them

jin to their dountries," a.spo- ■^esman said.

Tea Slated- W END ELL — tSe^SmeneatF

-apoBsof

, HB-M& (Judiciary, pylM * Admlns«tr»> tion) — ProTidej. ih«t when « w»rrhou»e- man or carrier it unabte to deHvrr (oed* brcsu%e of damaie or destruction by fire thft hurd n ot e<itahlt«htn| i« mifhe per*oa*‘ «n fil> ^ i '(e - r «c « iv « th* goods.

. I»msae4 b y H m iMSBIS24 fflusine'twi) Provider ffiat pub­

lic drpoattorle* p »y In i^ rs i on itat* or public funds at maximum rate authorised 6jr Federal R e «e r »« hanka or Federal Deposit In «u ry c » cqyoratton'. «c I - 'y ^

yaini <neaiaiaO I.. Umdtle a for candidates -for Syringa Girls' State to be held in Boise 4it^una'-at^lhe Antfrican-Lagion Hail at 2. p.m. Sunday;' Candidiitu’ 'Wni be ju iced ' « panel o f judgM from out-Tjf 4»wn * snrriHl iW ilatinn is nf- fered to members o f organiza- tioi)s who are helping to sponsor a girl to the meet.----------- :-----

fo r tdhr fimthr mediately needed. «l-0.

I S B im (Local Gov«fTSto»>«t A TaM>>«n) — Provides for eiempttrif certain trmttr^ w»T”gr^ tatItiWe rttaiiiiJtkun fium 'iff Ttlorem -U U s.:.C ia .

SB1S94 (BD$ine*a) —' AHova school dis* trtcTi lo MMejr Iti planl. fs^nides re* serve fu*»d to repojr loans, from-commvr> xial Jend;tif m»tituiio:>«. CT-»

tact Vernon E. Snriith. 916 Blue Xaltes -^lvd..,,Twin Falls, state

man o f . T<i}i^ al~^Wildlifewsw. H* ' m ay'P* .m en■ejtairr

PAY INCREASE BACKED^ BOISE (U P I). — H0US4! mein-

bers acceptf^ a conference com­mittee recbmmendatksn bn the execulive nay'increase, bill Wed-

IfceMe-hofders preferenre In drawm* tor permits to htmt big g«ftie in special con* UoUed4uiiU«^€34

HBM1 (S I « t « lA n iln > -G lT n X o » S « l - lag . Board odditidnal attthonty to- «dop( ru!es knd regnUtioss. CS}.

HB«a (Rcwado a Tax»Uott>-^roeU*s that prof^rty he'onginff to . a chorttabte

*^ation has bpen .«;nt to him by a- Richfield church group.

Truck Damaged In Rupert Cr^sli. .RUPERT-:AU>ut tl.OOH M m - ■ge-to-y 190» liiwi ilttUwmt Ifucg resulted from----- -------------one vehicle ac­cident 9 p.m. Tuesday three and mcJialt-milesr-rs on Interstate 80.

Drivtr-of- tht tnick, D>rreld H. Hohnjlein,.35, Heyburn, tbid Minidoka County Sheriff^s deiv ' uiy ihdi a ^ar ^ sseo his truck and cut too close in fronf of him—He-pulied-to-the-Tight to avoid, a collision and got onto the shoulder and during an at- temjRt to pu lt it back onto the

-7 ;3 0 p.m. Efks BuifHing

FEATURING -

iiesjJay anti ~.ient the ineasurft w H zrtB T lB Q H irT Z r^ B S S ca F

■r«in«L

or«aaixatten ia suh)ect<^o taxation un!r*s n ig h w a y , . tbO trUCK ^ fllp p e d C

titartnnx wpm inOHt-TrtBt

Congressmaif Orval Hailsen■ t k * ^ 1 avaltabl* at, Conj[. Hansm^'s TVIrt

Jm .

c — ‘

i ' ,-v^

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/■ \ ■ ... ?

■ -I“ ■■ '''Thursclo ^ aijc .5,

l:!!Jii ii

TH E THREE SURVTVING Dionne quintuplets, from left, Yvonne, Annette and Ceclle, attend funeral services for their

^ ^ te r , Marie, In St. Bruno, Quebec. Marfe,^ often rcferrta - tp -

as the ypungest o l the quints, died of natural causes. The Dionne quints were the World’s first quints to survive to maturity. Tlmy weiw burn May 28, 1«M. (tJP l luli'plnmt)--------

Sun Valley Airlines Gets T. F. Route

BOISE (UJ»I) — The Idaho Public Utilitioa Commission has amended an earlier order -to authorize. Sun Valley Airlines, Inc., to provide air service be-;

-tween—Twin Falls antUJiaiJejt-- Sun Viilley.

At the same time, the com­mission prohibited Trans Magic Airlines from offerinR single-

-----plane^servi^e betTveen-Boise and•Hailey-Sun Valley.

The PUC said Sun Valley Airlines asked for a rehearing after the Civil Aeronautics Board allowed A ir West To dis­continue direct service from Twin Falls tcL_Hailey-Sun Val­ley ' for three years.

Sun Valley, the PUC said,! poidted out that Trans M a ^ had been given route authority between HaileyTSun Valley. Bur-

---- ley and—Twin—FaHs^-Beeause-of Trans ^ag ic 's earlier auth-| ority from Boise to Hailey-' Sun Valley, the Sun Valley Air­line m aintain^ Trans Magic would be able to fly directly j from Boise to Hailey-Sun Val­ley and thus eliminate Sun Valley Airlines’ protection on Its Hailey - Sun Valley ■ Boise

~ scheame;---------------------- -The commission said that to

re.'itrict Sun Valley Airlirves to a Boise-Halley-Sun Valley flight would- not-be in-tlhe-public-in-^ terest b>ecause It wi'oultf have[ the effect o f allowing no serv­ice by the airline to Twin Falls. -

The rommisslon also notedthat its jurisdiction over mtra- state airlines was only recently- Itwiovated and said “ we do not believe it « in the 'public; interest » severely restrict the operation o f either airline in the first years of operation: under the jurisdiction of this

"~cOTiii i i i s > io n . " ------------------------— --------

-StaterEolice.Patrolman Is Named

T h o m a s C. T h om p son . 24. now : s e r v in g a t B each ers C o rn e r Port o f E n try . Id ah o F a lls . h jiinJ^on- n am ed to rep la ce Joh ii BreweV. S ta te P o l ic e officei;?< 'fJom g u - ' p e r t , w h o re c e n tly re s tgn W : , I

Mr. Thompson’, who will b«.. promoted to patrolman and as­signed t<* the Rupert area -of District 4 effective April 1. l>as been with the State Police since May. 1969. .

He b the son o f Mr. and Mrs. Chad Thompson, former Twin Falls residents. The elder Mr. Thompson was a mOTlicr o f the Twin Falls Police force for-severai years and later serv­ed as sanitation inspector for

' the city.

a £ ~ *5lEr ^ 'ilq>ir?ment.

Johiiiny C^h iSas Boy Named John

— .-^iW SftvnTJ>,-.Tcnn flrPQ — -<'tfi«'Tc?EaHny"amshr star -wto

sings- a aong.-aljout tuuning his I sonl‘,‘georee_or_Bill .or, anything

1)ur~s>ue" nas settiea on John - Cartdr-Cash.^- ■ ^

• Johnny Cash’s wife, singer June Carter, gave "birth shortly after nopn Tuesday to a. aevep-

GIRLS’ DRESS

..SALE!Jusf In 'tim e for Easter! Dress­es from .our ow n Carol collection for .big and little girls. Everything from polyes-

’ ter/cotton voiles to cotton p op lin i to polyester double knits . . . rrvany Penn-Prest*, too. Coma eorlyl

R eg . $ 6 to' $8 N O W88

jyg RIN G

COALSALE!N o w , w r t h p l e n t y o f S p r i n g ' vv/eather a h e a d . . • C o m e , c h o o s e f r o m P e n n e y s r b i g b e a u t i f u l s e l e c t io n o f c o a t s

Reg. $27 to $34

Now 1 5 ^ ^ Off

- t 'T h *n t ^ r . father and son at* doing Just fSnej;;^^»«W Cmsh’i •liter, Mr*. Rate HaucoeJt.-^—

cash has fo^ '^ xh O d r^ b y a tJrevlons marria^ atHL Miss Carter tvro.hjt-pixyions..,ffl*Crria-

-~ex

X h ^

SPECIAL OF T^E .WEEKA FULL CA R LO A D O F 'W O OPEN STOCK GROUPS . ,FRENCH PROVINCIAL A N D EARLY AM ERICAN M A I^ E A T INGS. • r ■ / ■'

' B - i r / ,IS

M

-# ColonialMaple.PlasticTop |

I BEDEOOM PIECES! |

.' - f'l' •

3 /3 or 4 /6 Panel Ised

3 /3 or 4 /6 Bookcase Bed

N ite Starild.,3 or 4 d raw er ch est

5 d raw er ch est

8 d raw er ch est > 109 .9 5 8 9 .9 5

Bookcase hutch 4 9 .9 5 3 9 .9 5

C o m er desk 69-95 ,4 9 .9 5

S tud ent-d esk 7 4 .9 5 ■ \s9 .9 5

S in g le d re sse r w /m irro r 1 0 9 .9 5 7 9 ,9 5

Double d resse r w /m lrro r 129 .9 5 1 0 9 .9 5

P an e l bunk w ith guard ra il S. ladder 7 9 .9 5 59J95

Sp indei buhk bed > ^ . . . . . . ” f,F'^ j99.50 7 8 .0 0

X ru n d e l bed ” '• 1 0 9 .9 5 8 9 .9 5

Bookcase bunk ” 1 1 9 9 5 9 8 .0 0

PROVINCIALWhite with gold

H73 o r 4 /6 S p indel bad

4 /6 Boc^calM J m kJ '

R E G .

- « - € a 9 5 _

NOW -S S4.QQ

3 /3 o r 4 /6 P o ste r o r canopy bed ‘ 9 9 .9 5 7 6 .0 0

3 d raw er ch e st 6 ^ .9 5 . _ 5 4 .0 0

4 D raw e r ch est . . 7 9 .9 5 6 8 .0 0

5 d raw e r ch est on ch e st 1 1 9 .9 5 8 9 .9 5

2 d raw er n Ite stan d«*»

Bo okcas« huten----S in g le d re sse r w /m irrtor

Double d resse r w /m 1rr6r

4 9 .9 5

5 9 .9 5

4 J ^ - 9 5

1 69 .95

3 7 .0 04 9 . »

129 ;.95

REGISTER FOR 5 6HAND PMZESVw ^

■A- Zenith T V M ohawk Carpet Hr Quild iSwiv^l Rocker9 R r ^ v , < ; p r ; n / j c ^ P r i g i ^ ^ n i r a :n ^ | ^ ^ \ y q s h e r -

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- ^NDBfeW TtniY

V . , . • /- f ^ M ^ t g ie - V a U e i^ a - H p n w ^ e W t ip a ^

Thursday, March” 5,1970A l WESTEMWrt

Publli ■

^sBsmSi

...... . ................ •-

PHONE 4^^3-0931

WXSHINbTON-=^'Thes*rtJnit-'— the-«cllvWes-of «^mBthIngTialt^' I-< jo "n o t—nowr wha«-«Is* «d States, and especially Wash>-. ed: the. Women's' Liberatlbn'. <women can be liberated fromf- ' Ington, are teeming with female. Front|_jvblcb-view«-m«o-dlmly—^but-perhaps-r Jt_ia._man*8 - duty. '«ra c le^ th ^ days who.g9 .about (hrou^ a haae ^ _«n teerp 8Ta- !to tave^hem from themselves., I-warning^thatiiian had betterbe-,^ noia. the 'samted Atlantic 'Fbr'lnalahce, thei« Is behind hipve or the’w^meri wilKlske^^onthly, which used to' a the. current nagging tbb ..sup- idvfiT and, rasslbly.. d;cVare'vr6«nsib)e sort, of organ, devoted posedly shrewd reminder that ;,Wi8le3 Illegal.^ - a special section of its March there are ijfiofer women in the

Sy. Although always with us. this issue to assorted f^ a le dla-^ country than men, and that -for....-— . V------ --------------- ------ dames might elect one Of their'Ef-^AlfeoMgh-BlwayaJiyjth

'■ "tnoyement.has gained momen­tum iiu recent months through

tribes under the title,. ;*WOmen Against M en."

ffo ltu tio ri C o n tto lclub PjTeside^

/.

■=i.- ‘Please Someone!”

tion otfHtrbl T>e e * «» at Rome by Ttr rectin^ that the federal £pvemment forthwith halt any of its practices th ti^ -^ lln te - the environmeft. .

An immediate improvement in the cleanliness o f our surroundings can be accomplished almost inimediate- ly i f everyone makes it his business to refrdin from adding to the litter^ that unfortunately mars ,the streets, roadsides, beaches a n d parlts throughout most of the United States.

Look around you and you cannot

j ^resldent-Nixon-has-set-ian-exam-— problem s of pollution^ - - - r ,_:— pie for every Am erican in his ac< chief importance, ho\<^ever, isceptance of the p r to c if le ^ a t ppllu- as_ a . in j^ s u r ^ f _tharpsychok)gical

----- — -• Livolvem ent and hit|biest.. ot.th6 P Wpie at large in jreally coming to grips with the" jjljbblems' o f clean air, pqre water, anjl-the ecology:

Until ihdividual iAm eritans cara enough to keep their Streets and: al­leys clean, they i r e i^pt likely to insist upon smogTffee automobiles, sewage in streams, and, Industrial pollution o f the air and W ater. Ajt, a matter o f fact, most industries are striving harden than fhe aver­age Aniericati to protect the^en- vironinent.

_

- '-This,Is supposed to givem aleji ■ pause and'perhaps make-them

atop being late fpr dinner, and In sojne ,pf the n ^ q re - jn iv ^ g

’ precincts it has snci hlghtype men—which Is to say.', the majorlty-T^ire going right on living their merry and iprin -. cipled. lives, and a touch."more gin In that martinI.'Tony.: They •re . not scared because th e y r ^ l lz e that no matter how m any,. women there are they will still bo womeii and therefore, bless their more-or*les« feminine fluf- fines, congenitally Incapable of taking over. " :

Mathematically, the t i m e

nation to commit natlonfl suic- ide and etect a woman Presl-

( dolls seem to nave uie

ovidenee;-A downtewn------ Tho ordinary- toxpaye rfe<street in a lproud city X® the recep-

tnc1(;), f t~ discard;^ soft drink oana,- ^ r i d y and chewing gum wrappers, 'Newspapers and advertising folders. And it doefili’ t seem 'to make ^ y difference it there is a trash r e c ^ tacle on every comer. Nor if there, is.an nrdinnnce or law against litter^ ing and a fine it cohvicted.

Americans don’t like to act as agents o f law enforcement by re­porting liti!srers they see in action every day and the're.j?. difficulty in

-cat<*ing-^the—speeding aijtomoblle : from which is tossed all kinds of trash.

A d m it te d ly , p re v e n t in g a ll l it t e r ,'on the s tree ts and h igh w a ys isn ’ t

But it would save a lot of unneces- i sary expense that could be — and ! must be— applied 1“to the ^ r g e r

niostjof us feels ; land rightly, that iaxea ar«5~ a!» liisli as thSy 'should' go. President Nixon ha§, said that ta-xes should not rfse-mncht higher^ and could not, without handicapping the whole nation in its efforts to r i ^ t many social Ills. |

T a k in g tim etrash receptacles Taking care of th^w ise w ill w o rk o n ly p a r t o f they t im e and it w il l c os t a g re a t d ea l o f m o n ­ey . T h e c h o ic e is you rs . A n d i f you do yom "^pa r t , y o n ~ w ill a f f e c t tliuse around yo u and soon l i t t e r w ill b e a th ing o f the past. M o s t p eop le re sp ec t a c lea n a r e a and a re re lu c -

'tan t to sp o il it^ But d ir t y s tree ts , p a rks , an d"P e aches-ttre a n - in v ita t ion- to add y o u r b it to the m ess . ■

W ho c a re s? .You shou ld . I t is yo u r en v iron m en t.

Learning G uaranteed; Teaching gim m icks are a dime a Bronx began taking the program

■ ; dozen, except that they can entail two years ago. It has also been in-; the outlay of many thousands of dol- troduced on a sm aller_scale in 50

__I_lats_by schooLlioards,^ with no cer— -other cities.-------r—------ -------------• - o f success in raising students' Developed by noted linguist Dr;

' ^ **'" ***®thematical Sullivan and Behavioral Re-skul^^r^whateyer. _ • .*oar.cb- Laboratories of Pa lo Alto,

d e n t ._______votes aiid undoubtedly there are plenty of shiftless wenches with ambition. But it won’t ever come off.

Women are too catty to vote one o f their sex' into the White House. They talk a lot about equal rights and giving the girls a voice Iri.Jhe council' chambers, but jio wbifian in herl, right, feminine mind could stand the thought of another woman- lording- It over a wto|e country'of females.

That is to say, ithe basic ol> K tH rlf t Is th w f p v e r y _ w n m a n . thinks the other woman Is tho wrong one for-the job. Mrs. Atty. Gen, John Mitchell might consider herself eligible, but I do not see her casting a vote lor Mrs. Bobby Kennedy. Would

Sophia Loren m «rk m X op. posita Uie name qT M ia Farrow? Or Mrs. George Romriey cam -'

algn foi? S W il^ Temple Blacf| .ha common charaeterlsUc^ female -polltlclana is /atrond

. mindedness, and ; a; cb^antioh dominated by datnes Would be

, still- deadlocked a t ^ Last■Tr\imp.- ■ -,— ------ , (

But the really compelling rea­son why jnen have noithlng to fea f Is that girls are too ^m irt to want a . female President. Woman are much more coldly, practical than men ' and they

• recognize that, with the world ' In such awful shape, it would be sheer idiocy to assume re-

(There is. o f course, the dls- . llnct possibility that a womRnPresident, out o f eheer habit; would manage to- blame the country’s woiwi on some male, preferably her husbaqd, but r ii

■ think about- that tomorrowt)I At any rate, although women ■ ^aro-'always acc(isihW,man of

— making a mess W things, they ' don’t really mean they desira

to run the jo in t I t ’s merely a , means of keeping men loose up

there at the platet'rTljey see. convey. omin^'usly,,’Jthat if *i were not enm ged in more.-imj^" portant - tfuMes,. like reading French novels and wolfing hon

_ *d—6h ^ , two about running ,a - govern­ment......

Besides, women got whal they . wanted a long time ago, court­

esy of a girl named E ve .-H I»- name is Man.

. I ' M - * "„ 'Tfliothing. icm llpther- GEORGE C. THOSTESON, M.D.

PenicillinDear Dr. Thostesonv If a per- Dear Dr.- Thosteson: I have

son has a bad reaction when a friend, aged 60, who Is both- given penicillin by m o u t h , ered w i t h acid indigestion.

action if given by injection?- Mrs. C.E.R.

Yes. exccpt more so.Reactions from Injected penl-

ciH-in are more sudden and more severe. Indeed, penicillin

Tiy mouth cau.ses far fewer re­actions,, than injected penicillin does.

I f you have had a reaction from oral penicillin, tell t h e doctof to "avoid using penicillin in rtmx form. Other antibiotics can be substituted. —

^ t ^ n private » : o m p a n i e s ^ « t « t ^

' t ?' lish'lanftu^gcris'^fo'ken down to itsconfidence fi fm e ir simplest forms and Ifien put back

■ . t. » . togi!lher by the individual student, M ore and more merchants o f working at his v n pace with a pro-P a ck a rd teach.jig prpgram s^jre.. grammed text. ' -

_ doing just that — guaranteeing to • . _u- -— -<^ch-a-studcnr^hat~they^ss5rtt ie y So e ffective Iras

ROWLAND EVAISjS AND ROBERT NOVAK

Nixon’S Welfare TrapWASHINGTON—The stunning­

ly sudden emergence o f Pri'.si- dent Nixon’s welfare reform bill frofn the House. Ways and M(^ans Committeo was explainctl *

can teach him and in the time they say it w ill take to do it, or your m oney back.»^One o f the latest Is "P ro jec t Read ." , w hich has been receivin_g^.^

been, that B RL has announced that it is now offering it to school dis­tricts around the country on a guar­anteed performance basis.

Here's hoping all such education-rave notices in New York City ‘ " -"al entrepfeneurs"make a bundle, for where 40,000 studeir^ts of a ir ages in the nation’s school children would 44 schools in - Brooklyn and the be the real winners.

MR. SPECTATOR

Something For NothingV e r y fe w p eo p le w ill g iv e you

som eth in g fo r n o th in g — but 'th e S ta t e 'o f G e o r g ia isn ’ t one o f those •’p eo p le .”

T h e c o m p e tit ion a m on g the v a r ­ious sta te !; — and a c lea r-cu t e x ­a m p le th a t Id a h o m u st be a le rt a t a ll l im e s to c o m p e te — is shown in an a d v e r t is e m e n t the southern sta te in serted in one o f the nationa l m a g a z in -w ix ile ,.lo o k ing- - foi^ jndas-^ - try .

I t s ta r ls r ig h t o y t, and is to the poin t. T h e tit le ? “ t t i jV T o G et Som e-

, th ing F o r N oth ing,.’_l_"B u s in essm en d on ’ t exp ec t to g e t

M m eth in g fo r n o th in g . I t takes p la in

"A n d i t ’s f r e e . ”So th e re you-ha|l/e .it. C om p^tftion

fo r in du stry . Can Id ah o stai'td up to such o rg a n iz ed com p e tit ion anda11ract n ew industrv?____________________

KTF7 S p ec ta to r th inks Id ah o is on the w a y — but w e h ave a long w a y to go to b e so m a tte r o f fa c t abou t find ing a “ h o m e ” fo r a n ew indu stry in the G e m State.

A t N IG H TL-ying a w a k e , look in g a t the stars,

W pp d erin g i f tha,ti. ,i?ne_js...Ven^g, o r M a rs '

O r a sp a rk lin g d iam on d in ju s t the se ttin g ;

I ’m b ettin g .

SanSlaiucRlo poUHcar terms an offhand remark Inst week

diirlng a closed-door session of the committee., JRep. John Wahrf o f Kentucky, thie committee’ No. 3 £>emo- ciiat, turned to (Rep. Hale Boggs o f tourslanapl-the- eommR4ee^ tfo. 2 'TSemdtrat, and whisper­ed: "W e ’ tell'going to pass he hill Just way Nixon wants it—and then cram it. down his throat."

' That' Is precisely the calcu­lated strategy .of the commit­tee’s Democratic majority in

.this week’s approval without m ajor chang«( of Mr. Nixon’s

‘ welfare reform — including a — revo lutionary plan f or 11.600 in

wipoorc payments for « family t)f‘ .four. Rather than g ive the Republicans ,a,i-19M . camoaign Jssue 'by blocking the Presi­dent’s major domestic Innova­tion. tho Democrats ai;e gamb­ling that the package, once pas.s-

.__edL_V!dJL be n liahllify fnr Re-_ , publican candidates.

“ I think that once the ped^)le of tho country see how much this is going to cost and how outrageous it is,” one Demo- cr.">tic committee member told us, _ _hcII about It ." Agreeing, some Republican Congnessmen, un­easy over tho suaden coopera­tion by the Democrats, fear they may have been lured into a trap on the sensttive welfare Issue.

Besides, he, might bo providing K^publican C o n g r e s s m a n a whipping boy in the fall elec­tions-.

Thus, when the Wavs and0 a n s Committea resumed

closed-door sessions Feb. 18, Republican committee members wero astounded by tho swect- nsss and light. A ll at once, tho committee was fairly racing "to­ward quick approval o f the Prssidem ’s plan..

The new Democratic coopfjrij- tion began to verge on the rid i-' culous. Democr.itic Rep, James Burko of Ma.ssachusctts, who earlier had sniped at tho pro-

PAUL HARVEY

gram, now Insisted that no amendments be adopted and that this be Mr. Nixon's package and his alone. Republican Rep.

_Barber Cnnahle of New Y ork_

Dear Dr.' Thosteson: I plan to -marry a man, 32, who has an enlarged liver and' gout. At one time ho drank a lot but now only four or five an €Ve<- fling. I

Everyone'tfells me he will be a sick man the rfist o f his life because of the damage to his liver, and that Is why' he has gout.

He looks very healthy a n d holds a good Job, but if he is

to_be_siclLjLwDndec-jvhat-chided Burke that ha was coming a Nixon rubber»stamp.

The , '-*■<’ which theDemocrats~wailt Mr. l^xotr fully respoasil^l<n5r -his ftfiorm Is shown In the disavowal of it-by the committee's ronioi:=Bewi5i-:

,crat.. Mill?, who probably will vote against the bill on the floor, will not bo Its floor man­ager. Burke, the comtpitJcp’s fifih-ranking ' Democrat^ 'j/mw ' end up managing it. '

fioin&„.^ -----------------he will be like when he is 50. Do you advise me to risk a lifetime wiUi this man?

Please answer as I have a lot of friends who are interest­ed.—B.P,-N eve r mind the friends. It ’s you and the ^young man who are important, ' .

Your friends are mostly right, though. , . , .

who tohsum^s any alcohol at ' all is running a v.ery gravo risk, jnd **four or five " beets a oay Is a lot of alcohol under the circumstances.

Damaged jivers have consld- crablo power§ of recovery, but not when they have to cope w ith alcohol.

bicarbonate o f soda every day, sometimes , as much • as three teflspoonsful. <

I- haiJe heard that soda tends- , to cause .hardening' o f the ar­

teries and other side pMccts,—^ I would appreciate' your think- ing.-J.F.S.

I ’m riot Impressed with the "hardening o f the arteries” no­tion, and doubt if there's any­thing to it. But I'm against the ■‘bicarb'’ habit. The blcarbonatw

—cmmreracts acids in the stom­ach (the stomach needs some ac id ’ to digest food) but after .., a time a “ rebound effect” prtP"' ducpg more acid than b'elbre. Than more bicarb, niore soda, and an uncomfortable acld-al- kali merry-go-round. I f y o u r friend really needs something to reduce th« acid a little, his docwr can suggest some mild­er antacid such as one of Ifie aluminum preparations. If ynur friend has h i^ blood pressure, tho soda shguld not ba used.

Note to "S ick at H e a r t " : Please stop being so depressed. Congenital syphilis ( I f you are

...bom with4t)-ls-not-transmltied-as acquired syphilis is. You had suitable care when your chil­dren were bora, and you now know they ar-a-all right^So just forget it—unless' ySu have an­other child, in which case your

"-doctor can take tha neccssary precautions. •

What ■ b o n t constTpillon? Many can be relieved of it, both mentally and physically, h reading the booklet, "The Way To Stop Constipation." For a copy write to Dr. Thosteson In

stamped envelope, and 25 cents

I f you were to misbehave In a courtroom — s'hout obsceni­ties at a judge, profane the jiiditfi.'Uviolence uind' vilencss — you'd bo thro\vn out and looked up for contempt within minutes.

How come some accused pro­fessional disturbers of tho peace are able to get away with it

Pago two.Maybo it was once true that

there were two .standards of justice in tho United States, one for 'the rich who could afford highfaluting lawyers, and an­other for tho poor wretch who

But the new law says "In­tegrate,” mix up the t«ces how­ever necessary. And Carroll

transfer to other schools.Tho mayor of Monroe, W. L.

Howard, much respected by both races, went to Carroll High and told an assemby of 600 students that they did not

—have—te leave -<he<r:-school—if-

__ r rwm m WjA aUBIjV IJUUlldo with his gout, though.

the way, you make no mentton o f his having treatment

Such treatment is available these days and Is

Just doesnH nay much'attenTion to his health, and if He did 1 am sure JK) .lifetime risk would be much "less.

in coin to cover printing and handling^

Dr. Thos'teson, welcomes all reader mail, but regrets that. due to the tren^ncjous volume received dally, he is unable to answer individual letters. Read­ers' questtons are Incorporated in his column whenever pos­sible.

ness. And very few people offer free help. But Georgia docs,” ' ■ '

That’ s jusMhe start — the teaser. A moonlight nigh.t can never com- The advertisem^rit continues; in pare

’ .'part:------ =— ---------------- _------------- With-a-sttHr—„ ’ IHere's how_JL, works. Yoii—te lL__ everywhere. ........." - Stars in the Heavens, . p glorious

-o f the welfare ■bill assured, it .Js likely that tho freer-spending Senate w iir {?tt(^n its benefit";, ijhe ^'esident then may end-up ijot with an un[Ms.s^^ reform

deriibly.'m ore costly than his mlddle-class white con'stltuehcy

w o rk e rs you And what you want thfem to

r g ia r-; ' do. •— “.We find theirr BTRn:raIh“ OTeffT ■ to^your specificatioiis. free.

:.v.— ploye^s. ^ » « g r a m —set- tip to o ffere m p lo y e s a n y w h e rs 1ft G id ir-

- giaT'^.Ki*?!---------- ------ - ■“ : “**G!eors5tsr"C&n do this because we

have 25 state-supported technical training centers d evo ^ 'e x cK is iv e iy

’ to industrial t ra in i^ . And we have

Th ?y make for ine ,a wonderful night.

--------- . . . V .-H e fdF ile r -

^ ^ T N O T »e fio R !3 s5 een !S ^ m o !e Iy possib!«»-Jnsr two weeks ago.

_ Rep, Wilbur. D- ^ l l s o f Arkan- ^as, chairman of the Ways-and Means Jlpommitlee -and one of

. .U l6 jnir1x)wers’ih Conm-eSis. ap­p e a l^ to be- d l g ^ g his heels

— iiv-r » galntt— family assistance paymerjtsl_jUlhcK)^ he had ho

iblic-jOsmon.Jie-Was knnwa.tg

use,. passugH— tusr touk hi.s lumps and went summarily to Jail.

Then came a scries of Earl Warren Court decisions Inteftd- ed to protect the rights of the poor wretch but the court over- ran its heBdHgha-andT^mw-We fTnd our courts protecting the rights of wrongdoers at the ex-

J tL

they did not want-to. Ho prom­ised that no policemen would arrest anybody for attending Carroll. High if ^ or she want­ed to attend Carroll H'gh and the mayor got a standing, cheer­ing ovation. . . _________________

BEReyS WOBLD

T iacra lly it-increasln

led man

R E M IN D E R ?- - • -A —Virgin ia" _

?tate to aljolish its official Song,"C a r iy W e B ac¥To-T irdTm 'g in la r-----S concocUng his ’own more - The song itself, but especially its niodeat version. His" relations use of the work darkyT” ~ls~ffft*"iil- with Secretary RoberT'Finch-ofsuiting -rem inder of his peopIe!a___the H eal^ Mucatoin and Wej-

.tilfl-jCHE3K)--Depatiiiusntr--e4

Sy-cfm «!-i»-lncrea3 ing times faster than our popula-

—t io a is. increasing^ In JKashing- ton, D.C.. crimes of violence in ­creased 36 per c ^ t In just the past year.

And a court order from a federal court in Shreveport to "show cqusO'* why he should ro t be cited for "w fllfu l inter­ference with a court order.”

--- What Is it we ’re seelu_„,Americans? Are we demanding

'htmiogenized IntegratloiirTWltf - blacks sprlnklM-^Among- whltas,

and by coercion if necessary?Or_^are we seeking, in the

American, tradition ‘ which al­lowed us to assimflata and-ab.

,___ _____ , ___________ , sorb all other ethnic groups.Chicago courts a r ^ . io ham- equality and cultural

,andrbifg}Bfent tliaf ^ i iy plUraHam^-— ~ locked-iip jnrles-ara now awrvlrig- T'ha taw shoald -be- in ore^ limg. than- ara-it*.-criwi-— blinds

lie vmge,’to work for a rear

And r a o i « r ."'GeoTgfM has- a tea m o f U dastr ia l

rp^et^opm eot apeciaHsta- badcec) b y a cbm poterized id te selection sys-

he lp you an a lyze location D e fa iled in form ation is now

; t o t m prw thirn a w C eorKia

'in ta v s -This is p a sp in g^ a n ge .For the shame o f sla'C^ery is not

that of the enslav ed, o r his descend— ants, but o f the enslavei*. and his. ,

nals. - . In New 'Vork State, school Similarly, Ih our race to erase student*eiquita_properlyr-are al-

ra c ia l-w rones in - th e -a re g - t if— loWcd to choose Which school school segregatioil. We’ve gone they wish tn nifanri.

m iniitratloii sponsor o f th(> bill, w ere frigid,

What chamwd -Uila mood was some deep contemplation by

so fa r : in the' tHJpoSita .direSim that we are hurting tha blacks ■we’d meant to help. , ,

In Monroe. La .. Carroll Hlyh

G IV E A W A Y D E P T : - '. We have' a Brindle Terrier puppy

■ to g ive away. ’Thfi" name is ."’Sprite” ad 'the dofe was ‘ ber^— Christmas

m o rp in i^

M ils doringJthe Uncohi** Birth- day racess. o f Cbqgreaa. Ha could almost surely bloc pass­age this year.-But without c » dperction from the Admiiiistil|S- tioo,— passing a a — *Uernativa-

f e airnileun — ir; ih~'nn:T r

School is an all-black neighbor* . howl lias lin all-black faculty— and stydent body.' Carroll High is academically excellent and

. a tH loticaU y-.su oerla tive; its- - tearn^ have .clobbered every-“ '■ >od3r '“■

ably they usually chodas tha one nearest home. Tho law say, they mayi

— But the lawwhlrh.mir fwleril, imment Is saelcing to en-

fOurgoverfutTK

„ M [here Is much race and

n »r -t)H- t lw • clUttM oT Southern autea aays ’ ’If yon are black you' Kav* to, move wer- there; If yoa’tie, i^ lte ytiu-ha.ve to move- fowr there. .-Tha^ctwirts areir--

T T sn is :1 ^ ^

e w»y

mrefcSSflS?

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' ■ \ ■’! ■\ - .*C. i

A SCHWEIZER 2-22 training saUpIane of the Associated Glider Clubs of Southern CalUomla uses updrafts from , on­shore winds to ridge soar along rugged SOO-foot cliffs over the PaclHc Ocean at TOrrey Pines. A modem sailplane, a ship so aerodynamlcaily efficient that It can rise even In

Potent Force In Politics

gentle upci^Mttts, can on a. good day stay aloft more than three hours tiefove returning to the gliderport atop the cliffs. These durations are often accomplished with a wind launch of only 600 feet abovis the precipice. (UPI telephoto)

ihecfc of the c lttV 2-22 training'ship iiefore a flight at Torrey IWnea. AC ^ Sheffle Vruhs the wing** for a fellow club inemlier. With Just one main wheel, “ running the whig” Is iieceaaary until thent... Is enough airspeed for the pilot to balance the craft. More than half the members of Sheffle’s club are coeds. CUM telephoto)

about ^ .8 billion last year, with about 23 blllinn plew s pf mall being plowed through the U.S.

Post Office, almost 80 per cent of Its total volume.

yolutionized direct mail’s appli­cation to political campaigning,

re-Jjnalung/ituposslfile 10 zero In un

almostbloc.

conceivable voter mal In politics has not been fully tested," Viguerie said.

p ro ^ m m th g , ave as great an Impact , on

HARTFORD. Conn. (U P I )— What do Sens Eucene McCar- ttiv, CicOTige McGovern, former Alabama Gov. George ■Wallace and Soviet life have in com­mon?

All of them have been turn­ed down by Richard A Viguer- le, ■ -

If you’ re trying to Identify Viguerie, chances are you may have received a Jetter asking for money from this politicaldirect mail expert, or.-ratheiv — Bsginnln8- » » ' a pol itlrni fund- from one o f his clients, solicitor through the mails, V ig-'

lAmong-the dozen or "fu ll combined his knowledgeservice" direct mail fit ms in direct mail with his passion the country that create, package pronioting the conservative

though he refuses to ^o business with Democratic or Jiberal Re-

No. 1 C an s V ets C h icken , R e g ., L ive r^MnSlTcan caraWates,

In a recent visit here, .Viguer­ie, 35, a conservative Republi­can, told how he got into the business five years ago in a

DOG FOODone-room, inxi-a-month office on Capitol Hill. The fVansplflnted Texan has iitice . parlayed his dirt?ct mail genius into a multi­million dollar computer opera­tion..

10 CANS

and mail an entire campaign._Viguerie-’s- ■ firm Is considered one of the best In the political field, even

Bone AgeK IM B E R LY — Burglars"

have been Im o ^ to ply their trade wiTh some unu­sual tools, but Twin Falls County SherifX’s officers this week investigated a case in­volving one of the strangest,

A television and a stereo, each valued at about S200,

' ~were stolcn-this^ weclr^xMn the Charles Newberry farm near K im berly.. The resi­dence was entered through a broken window.

And the tool used to break the window? A foot-long dog bone!

cause." And he has a numberWash4ngton-— bftsed ot^ Jmprosiilve -c-anipaign vie

Suit Asks 8150,000 In Damages

-11S0,0tf& In___ Hcd againct

the Puhl School"District, "Fifth District court records showed Wednesda>4.

Larry Allen, through, his Fa­ther Earl A. Allen, filed the suit alleging that Larr>- foil in to an o ^ n fire pit June i and burned him.self. It is alleged the burns have scarred Larry ’s body permanently. The c o m- plaint states the pit was cm the school district's property and the district was in neglect In teittng-ihe accMent"liappen7|

The plaintiff also asks medical costs and courts costs.

tories for which company takes most if not all o f the credit. Among his clients, he cites the 1968 primary win by conserva­tive Max Rafferty, California’s superintendent o f public instruc- tion, over former Sen Thomas H. Kuchel, B strong liberal Re- fiufellssiL aniLGQP. whip in-the Senate, and the election ot Sen. Edward J. Gurney, R-Fla.

More' recently, Viguerie- han­dled the direct mail vote and fund appeals of the successful congressional campaign of Rep.- Philip M. Crane, ft-Ill., In a special-election-held-Iast-yea;

He also had had-his'defeats. The election of Nfew York City Mayor John V. Lindsay and Sen. j . William Fulbright, D - Ark., over Viguerle-backed candidates are not recalled with much glee. • . ■

Still, armed with hi*. IBM 360 IBM computer and a fully programmed list of 1.5 milll6n names, Viguerie is confident he can elect Republicans -with ’"enough money and good can-didates.” ---------------------- :____

"We insist on two things.” Viguerie said. "That the cli­ent approve all copy and that he receive, count and bank allj money. We never see am mon­ey that comes In.” For tfll tws. Vigiierlt 4 firm pprccnTnjrc of iBc iv tui II. ’

His company made headlines last year when it was learned he handled a While Hou.se mail­ing to the news media to pro­mote support for the nomina­tion of War

46 O z. Texsu n U iisw eetened

Grapefruif Juice3 0 3 Stee W estern Fa m ily

GREEN BEANS5 CANS

C I X U C

U.S.D.A. C H O IC E -

ROUND STEAK

barren Bury»r to the U S. Supreme t-ourt. T"

Altjiough he expects his firm "to be involved in a number of Senate and House races this year,” he l^-moving aggressive->y ,opening a

Into the non-p^itical field, branch JB-'-Houston.

mall Is a growing" business,” he said. r

The dirett maD industry spent

CUBE STEAK. ^

RED RIPE SLICING

■itt'...

FAttS^ BRANCr ^

• FA N C Y R ED D E l^ IO U S

La v h sV- 0 0

WIENERS 2 ... W‘ i U a rg e 6 0 O r.- 7 c O F F

WESTERN FAMILY IBISQBICK

. . 39^ :FROZEN FOODS

ii. 6 O z.LW astam Fam ily . j K ---- t f k I

3 0 3 S »Z E L IB B Y P IT T E D .

Rijie OlivesG IA N T N O FTTH ERN A S S O R T E D

L A R G E 11 OZT

BAN<3UET DINNERS

L A R G E S lZ e - r- 8 C p F F

; !■ -• ''-M. .

eia— ' B tliAVENUETH R IFTW AYM ARKET ♦ . . . . . TWII^ 1, STOUT'S DRIVE-lN THRIFnw Ay .MARKET. . . i Kl>

- t TRIf^J^S THRIFTWAY V- •

- c n i l i t fc.r <~n r nr F R w R - N - i ^ C R c A A A - ■ J O R D A N ’S t h r i i^ a v M a r k e t ?

L E E -»O R I^ W AYTHBIFIW AY MARKET

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■jS'V Tjifiiejr.News, ^ ■ thursdayi’ ^ rc h 5, T970

iiiij>ther C|iangft Tn..Bi*4ftniifi Liinit tidn Law In Senafib

___ , __, -rJ h a-Sgna Apassed'«nd sent to the j^ouiit W«ednesday the latest version, of a measure to chai^ge the. con- •troversial four-per'cent proper­ty tax revenue limitation.

Only Monday the-House ap ' proved without debate its ver­sion of a repeal o f the limitation and sent i f io the Senate. |limUatien alturitnlierr

Senate' version, The Senate' version passed Wednesday provides for a five per cent limitation and has three

. escape valves for taxing units.Under the Senate version

taxine units rfiuld exceed the ! per cent limitation by appealingto tlig ittj i e tax i;uiiiml!alun. -M r a vote o f the people oc upon unanimous written agreement by county commissioners.

Floor sponsor Sen. John Pea- vey. R-Rupert. said;, "Th is is a good compromise knd will af­ford the relief i f i t is neces- *ar>'."

He said, ‘ Th is is a compro- inise bill, but'the name of the game is politics.'* ^

Romance

here has tu'rntd down the town’s civic society request, for more lighting along Riv-- erside Gardens.

Councilor William Saun­ders explained "it is a ro-

'mantic setting aod_ couples like to do their courting dis- creetlv. It has just the right Smouht of lighting for a ro-

“ mantTC atmusphcre.^ -

“ f

emos Told Pai*ty Win Is -Pesgible ----

BOISE (U P I) — A legislator

r ..JKayna.iC ldwellJfc

$i\id that the measure per cent limitfction. fai others, mainly b'ecaiu^-thl ty comVnis^ioners . Muld grant re lief when necessary; '

Gov. Don Sa’tnueKon- earlier in the -session vetoed a Senate b ill that would have lifteid- ihfe

A house-pa^^ed bill>.with a 5.5 a little more, palatable*’ than pass' the legislature.

■Dredge LawGets Heavy House Vote

BOISE (U P I) — House mem­bers approved 50-1 'Wednesday a bill to prohibit d redg» mining o f Idaho's "w ild and scenic" rivers.

Earlier the bill passed the ■Senate' hy a. 18-15 VQle ^ _ in J toHouse, only Rep. Paul Worthen, R-6oise, voted against it.

Bringing the bijl to the floor for debate 4l>«n aonrovin'c it by such a large margin mar- ked a departure from previpus House action on the bill. E iirlier, Republicans prevented the m ea­sure from being dragged . from committee for action.

Chairman J. Vard Chatburn, R-.Mbion, of- the Resources and Conservation Committee, floor

legislature later could decide to permit dredging " i f in the fu­ture we feel it Is necessary to obtain- minerals from the beds o f these rivers."

In his c losing remarks on~~the bill, he added that "w e do think the beds o f these rivers belong to the "s ta te of Idaho and we want''fo protect them,”

Elsewhere in his debate, Chat- burn noted that Attorney Gen

li. S. Bombers Streak I^to;Cambodia In JNew A tta o ^ .

of Saigon in the Plain o f Reeds sector^. . , , I — J'

American A37 jet fighters Ifflocked o u f at least sljj. anti-

1- By B A R N E Y ‘ SEIBERT ,

SAIGON ,(U P I)-U .S r figh ter- bombers streaked Into Cambo-di& to pound conirhunTst «»»*'* — an--positions which had iired on li estiniated 15 comrnunlst trotjps South Vietnamese district town . retaliatorji strikes in that in the Mekong Delta,-Americai^Incident. A t least .six of. the military spokesmen revealed^attacking U.S. aircraft were

damaged but managed to make it back to base.

Saigon, received about mortar rounds Tuesday after­noon from inside Cambodia.

Cavalry about 80 miles north of Saigon and only three rnilcs from the Cambodian border.

were ordered RJ fly «r series of strike.s against the mortars to "suppress" the fire, spokesmen said.

'■‘ ‘The U.S. command has prevjQusly stated that if fired upon from enemy positions outside the Republic of VieJ- nam, U.S. forces are authorized to return fire,’ ’ , a spokesman for Gen. Creighton W. Abrarai said. "This is an Inherent right o f self defense against an atUck."

Americans one killed and two Svounded, spokesmen said, while six o f the attackers were confirmed-killed.

The .battjie, occurred In the same general area where other U.S. Arm y troops killed -is communist soldiers-Wednesday.

firs? maincident reported inside Cambo-

IQr

. SENATOR R A LPH YARBOROUGH « f Texai. r l ^ , tdlks to reporters after the Senate labor and public welfare commltr tees approved legl^atlbn 't^ avert iTitirlKe ot railroad workers

. for the next S7 days. Senator Jacob Javlts, New York, looks • on. (U P I lelephotto)

State Legislature Back In Tui’moil WhenO I ■

oral Robert Kobson is claimmg that Idaho holds titi? to the

Iheds of the rivcra^even though. ilatorjheds x,,from eastern Idaho told-the A d a ^ e j i arc in the federal wild and County Democratic Club Wed- scenic rivers sy'Stem. nesday the Democratic. Parry

tltt> governorship-winNovember if unity prevails.

Rep. Melvin Hammond, Rexburg, told the regular lun­cheon meeting o f the club that the party has what he termed "a great contingent of charis- ipalic leaders seeking the gu- bemjitQrial nomination."

He urged his listeners to Vhelp make the -state functkmable and the only way to do this is to get rid o f you know who." For those whctldid not he referred

—to- R - - ■ - aon.

Hammond called for an occa­sional change in leadership and contended that the Republican Party in Ada County had “ stag­nated'' th « political process.

-M oney^yen For _T5¥0 Job Centers

BOISE (U P I ) — The Senate approved 28-7 Wednesday ai<

7«ppropHifitions bill which would give tb# state biiard o f educa­tion $50,000 to -HiaintaiR and- opcrate two abandoned v jo b Corps centers.

Sen. Vern Brassey, R-Bolse. floor -sponsor for the measure

Tires

new

WASHINGTON (U P I) — TTie Transportation Depart­ment proposed Wednesday that recapped passenger car tire.» be required to meet the same safely and, per­formance standards as ones.

In arule-making. F ede^ I Higti- way ! Administrator F . C. Turrntr noted that retreadecT tires i r e exposed to the same road conditions as new tlpes and .should “ meet the s a m e federal stan- dardil.’ *. He called fpr data and

^epnMhenta^from- the rubber .IndUstty and s a i d they w o u l d be considered in drawing up a final’ rule which would become effec­tive Aug. I. 1971.

Kennedy-BOSTON (U P I)—Sen. Ed­

ward M- Kennedy returned here Wednesday from a tbree-da\i

said the buildings could be used visit t » Ireland, 'saying he was

Senate Rejects Education Budget Figui’eBy P A lfL M. QUINN

BOTSE (D P I) — The Idaho SeftSte^ Wednesday night threw' the 's ta te legislature .back into turmoil by rejecting a compro­mise figure o f JI.5 million for higher education and moVing again into direct conflict with the 'House.

The when thi

hold firm with the J1.29 million figure.

Higher education .■iopplcmcn- tal funding is considered

uppersurprise action came‘P - -

26-8 in favor o f the "economy bloc" figure of $1.29 million in stead, ot following

thikey to adjournment.

In debating for the full SI.47 million, Sen. Pred Bagley, R- Boise. said not funding higher education in this amount would be "one of the most damaging |

thement to the bill to put figure at Jl.35 million.

In debating against the $1.4'? million bill as such. Sen. John Barker, R-Buhl, referring to priorities for higher education

cSaTber l o ZHe said students are revolting

agreed to in at least Republican do not feel that the people are caucus, to go ahead with a upgrading educaUon^enouKh. compromise figure a ccep li^ ^ ythe House of $1.35 million.

The actitn-by the upper cham-

.■iaid,t im em e OCUOB-W.v itic upper tiiani- - j hieher

ber was in Amending downward f„„riinp ofthe original -higher education figure o f Jl.47 million as set by the joint Finance-Apprt>priation Committee.

An effort was made first to pass the Binance-Appropriations Committee measure unscathed, but'this'failed by 'a vote BMl-23.A short tim e earlier," the House Appropriations Commit­tee informed Hou.se leaders it intends to silbmit>-a letter to be

‘W e've known for a long that emergencies flave

hy Uu: ,Education,.system - a t a ; “ extraordinari^ w e l l - r e e v e d ” I ’m and that the disturbances which•’real savings" and added

a little fearful this may not be enough money, but it’ s been cut fronx-tlOO.OOO in the interests of conservatism, so that‘.s the_bill."

The Mountain Home Donter___ ^WQuld_J?ejisei:.bjL,Boise .S tate.-----Cnllegn and thn Cpriar P la it rrn.

ter bj» Lewis-Clarki Normal School, bui final plans would have to be approved by. the federal government.

Son. Robert Rowett, R-Moun-

avtiwing any parentage of^ap- propriations liills.

In this letter, the-eommlttee said it will point out that it reached what it considered to bo the proper figures and that these were rejected bu the lea­dership and for "po litita l? rea­sons others were inserteij.

The rommittee memljcrs said. , _ , Is T n ^ 'd ir ^ c r co-^^^^^

"A visit to Ireland is al^-ays a p ^ n a iio n s bills to expedite,^ other-Spproprialion," he for atlion of the legislature, but • __ .

marred his v is if were to be expectad by any public figure.

Arriving at Logan Interna- tionair Airport, Kennedy said^

Tgieducation. Ade

quate funding o f this is a 'true

I

that w e re b e in g a rgu ed , sa id that if B o is e S ta te C o lle g e has such a b a d p rob lem su p ix irtln g its in creased en ro llm en t " I t w ould be best fo r BSC to cut out r e c ru it in g ."

The action in the Senate In amending the higher education bill at $1.29 million left .Thurs­day action up in the air. The House has taken the attitude that it w ill do with all appro- ptiatipns. bjlls as it pleases. .

FARMAUCTION

groundfire from inside the nation brought down a U.S Army light observation helicopter about 100 miles west

Carnival SetGOODING — Plans are un­

der way for the Gooding PTA Carnival to .be.JifiJd from 5;M p.m. March 13 at Frahm Junior High School.

This annual fund raising proj­ect raises money to support school projects, scholarship.^ and other PTa budgeted-ttemsr The theme for this year's car­nival is "Rocket to the Moon" and will .feature such booths as a magic booth, make-up, spookIley and duck-pondr-—-----------

I M B A O IIin t l) AMIMCU ;

GP m Asts AMitno

" ‘• '" it niMoi it'Mwmto..

I

STARTS FRIDAY! !

emergency .He urged the upper chamber|

I?forget— 4hi*— potty— bickaring- over dollars and come down and face this issue ..take out your wrath on some of the other appropriations that might not be true emergencies."

Sen. Richard High. R-Twln Falls, argued that the $1 47 million did n«t contain jdoquate priorities under recent informa-

■ ■ s;tate depo rf ment of educating.' "t^g is lative intent should be put into this,” he said.

Sen. Richard Egbert. D-Telon- la, said that "somewhere along the line we are going to have to tighten our belts ' and jt might as well be at higher edu­cation.”

"Even.' appropriation we make

.m vfei^nptlv. IrTinnys harg

be forcaticnal -facility' highway department would be able to use three buildings at the Mountain Homo center "a t a savings to them o f 160.000.

many . memories o f John Kennedy and his -visits there.”

Referring to the demonstra­tions -in Ireland at which students waved copies o f Mao

~ ' "s wflfiiigs, Kennedymore than jast an edu- said, "A ll Of us in public life

enrf" said the-can expect that kind o f thing

thev want it made clear tnevno responsibuitywere takmg

for them. 'Earlier in the day, the Hou.ie

and Senate Republican Bjajority had agreed to the " cornphomlsi n ^ r e " and it appeared that the

A 10.a4-vota klll<vl-lhB- imendi

WOULD RESUME RELATIONS:' l CAIRO fU P l^ ^ J gvnt is rea

Tdy to resume diplomaticsession was moving cjoser to relations_-w;th the United States

from time to time."T h ey said I was an

imperialist—that w as about as far as it went

fin a l ad jou rn m en t.House Democrats continued lo

renn.ain aloof in the battle of the budget, and Senate Demo- crats had announced thev wouM

if .Washington pressures Israel into inm i^ ia le withdrawat o f occupied territories. Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad said Wednesday.

W est, 609 o f Rupert.Idatio, or 2 m iles W est, 7

- lies— North— nnd— hi— m ilea- W est o f Rupert, Idaho.

SATURDAY. March 7.1970Sola T lmaz^lQ A .M .-r^u n e h -n t )thuckw/agon-

TRACTORS A N D TRUCKS- ;M Trac to r, w ith live hydraulic, 3 point hitch, w ido front

end.A C -W D Tractor, w ith ad justable rear w heels and wida

fron t end. ■ . '1 953 8 -N Ford T ra c to r , good tires, exce llen t m echan­

ical condition.1 95 5 G M C 2-Ton T ru ck , long w heel base, 2 speed

-----"V io ri»r<-inrli»ti-|ln«»rt-mr>»nr-<onB VWTirY ___^ ______ ___1953 Q M C 2-Ton Truck , long wheel base, 2 'sp eed '

axle, new m otor, (on e year). f 1 94 9 Chev. 2-Ton Truck, 2 speed axle, overhaul one

year.1946 Chev. lV & -Ton T ru ck ,'g o od m echanical cond i­

tion. ( no title).1955. Chev r o t « r ^ $ ^ o r i PTa<up. ________ _

■ 'to T A T O A N D .BCI-T EQUIPM EN T 'Curl P o ta to H arvee*or, A C m otor, p ow ered , h y o r^ llc

control. 2-royv, brush and b low er dev iner.B au er P o ta to P iler. self-propelled , exce llen t condition. 2 Lockw ood Bulk Bods. . ‘ _

- l « t is f 'f^ }b n a T 'B » « t 'fo p p o r , « n o ’ row r'l!ooe) icondtWon.'^ ■twt ^ n at ional B — t T n p p iT h r a a . B a e t-B ed a .

o n » ,row,.. Bood fo r parts.

GROUND W ORKING EQUIPMENT 3 International #39 T u m b le P low s. i.O-Wt. international. Jarulaixi tiisc^A S ection H arrow — Land Plans, m ade ot M inlcoi

4 Section H a r ro w ----Land Plane, m ade at Minicp.B a u er B eat C u ltiva tor fo r 8 N Ford trac to r, fron t ^ mount, com p le te s e t o f tools.B S led-typa C o rru ga to rs ,— 12 ' T o o l Bar.5 Shanks and C lam pa, fo r tool bar.R e a r Cu ltivator fo r ^ a t s , 3 point hitch, 3 bar.

ftlAMmE66AB TH E M O L U riliM IIIR B S

ENDS .-TONIGHT_______

UST NIGHf At-7 -^ , g;lS

SHOOT HORSES, D O N ’T THEY?*' 9 ACADEMY AW ARD NOM INATIO NS!

TQNITE AT “2” THEATRES

' la r r a c a B lade. J poin t niTcn.

-KAYiNr. FmnPMFMT N e w Holland 69 B a ler, tw ine tie w ith m otor.N a w Holland S id e D e livery Rake, chario t type. In ternational 7 ’ M ow ar. 3 point hitch. - .8 -N Ford M o w e r ----Johnson. H ay Loader.

MISCSELLANEOUS L a rge stock tank: ca tt le oiler; 1 .000 l ' : x 6 0 " and 72 lum inum tubas ; re a r platform w ith point: ISO- _

w e ld er; A cety len e W elder; 45-T baler fo r parts: grind e r ;-e le c tr ic fen cer : battery charger; ram and hoses cu ltiva tor tools; bolts: iron.

Follow ing Item's Belong To BOB HAMILTON TRACTORS AND TRudcS

- a a SB M a ls a y -Ferg uso[i_j65-TiactD iV -dle3eL_w ida--nnd- s ing le fron t end., 3-pt. hitch, good rubber, runs good .

1 9 5 0 C asa V a c T ra c to r , runs o.k.^ 9 ^ 5 QMC^

BOMaBa t e filE llIJ L w il l i l l t t i i l i i l i r B W »iifc»1w p1it— pnest^lwr. eeefceldkr Ikat tmm t y — alM iat f H ath i M t r i t o a f a bOi w kid i w m U t a ;^•n y Y w fc C i^ H * ^ * Cathate pm t. ( U n

J legislatimi t * appw w ’ arbilnUiMi in fba d B C I

1 9 5 8 Chav, % -to n P ickup , 4 Speed, good rubber, run* Rood.

1 95 3 C h ev 2-ton T ru ck , 4 speed , 2 speed , fa ir rubber, runs good . _________ , _ .

* " OTHER EQUIPMENT . ^ .1 9 6 5 M assay F ersu son B e e t Cu ltivator, 6 row , w ith

t oo ls.

1 S 6 5 M ilton Baat P larftar, w ith bean p lates.1 9 6 3 Inta'mational 12*. Qraln Drill.1 9 6 5 Edw ards P low , 2-w ay, 2 bottom , 1 6 ” , w ith .har­

ro w hitch. • ;1 9 6 5 Massay Fergu son P low , 2 b ottom , au tom atic roll

o ver, w ith 3 point. ____ ____ ; ______ _1 9 6 4 IH C lO ’ D isc, on rubber, ram opera ted .

T E ftM S : C A SH

JACK D, PAULStiN-OwneraERKED BY J.,,SU,',MEsisnSMnH of .Cm Stot* Kwhy, T w in Foflt

' iw V f w ».LL' — jo tiw wEBT it ^ m w ^ 'a rw r^ ta sm iw fFBvrl»y-f- WendelM -. " KhnWy— Jcrorn*—

678-W05. . 536-3M8 . 423-SW3' . ' -3 ?4 -3m '— r MANAGED BY MESSnSMITH AUCTION &IIVICT . “

■- .V

t4- --

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: .1 • ..

■• i- .i , / ■; ,_»aii.

. ' W r ■ ■/

'Ttiorsddy;rM6rcf'h57'^7lS?—^— T lrrtes*N ^»inB vri^F fl(l.> i;M* ■ '’T

CINDY’S RESTAURANT. located two nUIes south of Jerome on^ to be baUt In tifr«aite and they aU «U1 be nami^ Cindy’s.— ~1m l lltrrntatr' no, will hnljt a granrli.aptTiIng y!ffhin1iTy-“’T! - T».t . «ip»n ti Knur. Mr. Moon, who will manageSunday; The restaurant Is one of seven to be buUt aloAg the alt the restaurants, is from Burley,.X« .uld..tba..nQZt.oo» tAIntersute in Idaho^ reports G l^ o n (Ted) Moon, m ^ g e r , be*«uilt will be a pUot’s miMleL. and Is part of a chain out of Los Angeles. This Is the first'

Fam* ¥aUey Racer W ill Enter Meet

W E N D B LL-Four Magic Val­ley men will~enter the WorlcT championship 'chariot races at Pocatello March M - 15 and

20-22 • _ 'T h ^ re<?etvetl trophies for tlie

Siialoe-tever Racine Association at a banquet, in Jerome wilh Tom Webb, ' Wendelli' also re­ceiving the traveling trophy. He ■was first place- winner (o r ' the local j;roup willh Harold Peter­son, Filer, second: Morris Niel­son. Gooding, third, and, Walt Taylor, Filer, fourth. ■

In the 2 - year- old division.

George J4k<>r, Buhl, was first; ■Kenneth'Daiiiel, Rupert, second^ and Wayne Thompson, J.erome, third. Mr. Juker will conupete in the All-American cutler and chariot racing futurity at Tre- monton, Utah, .with 2-year-oIds frbm throughout the West enter­ed.

Trophies of appreciation-wereftrcsented—to—tiarold_Eeteraea.past president, Haward Haslam. ."wcretary; Dan Leach, starter; Clint Abercrombie, announcj and Steve Ewing, assistant star-

The AlmaniacBy United Press^ InternallpnaiToday is ThursdTyTMarch 5,

the Mth day of 1970 with 301 to follow.

The moon Is approaching Its ntw phase.

The morning ^tarj are

P eg jy McArthur, photograph­er. was presented with a trophy and a plant.

Fred Roy. Buhl, received an award for the best dressed and matched teams; Howard Ha> lam. Bliss, most valuable mem­bers. and Jim McArthur, Buhl, sportsmanship. These awards

were given after a popular vote .VjjUi ca^ by members. ‘“ XWfSers for the coming year were elected at the annual busi- ness meetmg hew a tlK e Y-inn Banquet Room at Bliss.

Dan Leach. Bliss, was elect ed president; Morris Nielson, vice president, and Jerry Love­land, Hagerman, secretary- treasurer.

Bud Roseberry, Jerome, has been named to the board of directors.

Mercury<and Jupiter.The evening stars are Venus,

Mars and Saturn. ^- On4hi»^day in-hUtoryi —

In 1770 British troops killed five "civilians in the Boston Massacre.

In 1953 the Soviet Union announced Prem ier Josef Stalin had died at the age of 73 from -whae^— was— de scribed^ 4is cerebral hemorrhage.

In 1965 a British airliner crashed into Japaals Mt. Fuji, killing 124 persons.' TIT1968 a irA tr-Francirjetliner

hit a mountaintop in Gauder loupe, killing 62 per,sons.

A thought for the da\»: Josef Stalin said, "In the U.S.S.R. work is the duty of every able- bodied citizen, according to the pHnciple: he who does not work, neither shall he eat."

fiiHTHiFaTiir WIIHfRICES Tflirwiti' WtliMYOUl miiL

I■ *• 'f

U -.,1

I

•ii

PROCTOH.8ILEXAUTO M ATICPERCOLATORMakH up to 11 cup* of delidoul ' coffee and kttps It piping Hot- automitically. Flavor ■ stieetor lets you dial txact flavor you d»> iire.

^ ^ V o l l o w

IT AU ADJiSm iU Jt FJtlCE iREAK-TltBM

l)rother ^ D IN G MACHI

BREEZWAY GIVES YOU GIANT SAYINGS----- F R J^E ^-S o viJig sJriie iL Amount To Approximately Free Groceries

For Your Entire Family F^r Two Months Each Year.

U3.D.A. CHOICE - lEAH TINDtRJ M A -K I D -HAW7-H8r4-IPAH0 RUSSfTS.

STEAK..fflt

SHORT ribs :

i POTATOES*I 10 Pound Bag ..

Shoppers 1

lb; PltlSBURY EXTRAJ,IGHT

I PANCAKE: FLOUR 4Lb.

m i'f’ -'i70S 06

I MIBAOE IBRUSH

as seen on TV

N O W O N L Y

COMPLETELY-R E M Q ff iS j jN EDANDRUFF, DUST . ORFOREIGM-MATERIAL .FROM YOUR FINEST GARMENT. .PURE NYLON RBERS GUARANTEED FOR 5 YEARS

i§ —3 QUA^T CORN POPPER

620.

SaiVM 3 quarts ot popcorn. Jn -jKlctteally no tiwe. See-through :a<att liU leu. you wwteh eorfi pep.

c iSa iTSO

B U t ONE OR A BAG FULL l a CR EM R

I

q o l d ^ t r i k e - -S T X M F ^ ^ ^ - b b l

.y --

handles, ratf y tino eolla h»h—tliM- .1 i m aid ficqovaUa 8 foot eord.

U N I V E R S A Lt Y O IN IH ilk lt . t L I C T R I O

WAFFLE BAKER/GRILLCombination waffla baker and tandwich 7 IU In gleaming chroma

' inlih with hwrm htH**____and faet. Taflon-coated waffle grids. Interchangeable, tntp-in chroma platad nndwlch grilL

Z 7 7 7 ?7 7 7 7 / jy y / / / / / / ^

X

mi ^

4^IW OOB^SH©FPIN0^ENW;v -4.

Eviiy Evtnlng

j - * : .

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- - “- ip v-T Im es-N ew «;^ w Irv ;F a lU ;l^ ah o ; ■ .-ThursdfayrMafch-Si^ 9 7 0 f- - - -

Au^rD fTC^nM re^ L O W , L O W P R I C E S !

Pork Lotn. W hola O r ^ H a l(.A G ood Chok* For A, C tto»^i» Patm M m I.

ROASTS I h a m sPork, Te n d «r A n d Exfra Lean. Unique In Flavor,

i 'Remarkable In Tdste. For Today's Active Peoprle.

SPARf RIBSF r«t h . Evtrio l* o n

A n d Maaty. For

T « n d « r 0 <jvoctom «

CotlnB*3 to 5 lb. a v g .

BONELESS

|. A rm our. O ld Fashioned. Adds Flavor M agic To A n y M enu. Captivating Fo ' A n ElegantEHeel.

LEAR TENDER^PORK STEAKS p YOUNG GRADE A TQM

FIRST OF THE MONTH STOCK UP SALE!

ZEE TOILET

TISSUEAssorted Colors To Match Every Pecor.

D o u b ly Soft 4 P o ll

: : ; r S 5 ;y r - ^ ~ -p jc 5 s _ 3 Q r

ALBERISON' SALAD OILCATSUP

D « l M o n t* . l u r « « T1i* B «s l F la vo r From Y o ur

f o o d . Z ip p y To tlo .

2 0 02.

B o ttle s

n il PcD IID V; OR BAlLARDM S ailTSt

6 E I U I I I I I G H O C O U T E C M E

tARGE 2 H.AYER

IB R O JE ltf-fO O D S IIBAMQU n MEAT PIES

■ lA >■<!.fM p h t. Astounding

Luscious Flayer. Th e After Dinner Tost* Y o d ’lt U t e .

uSUNDAYS_SLi4k:M.,lL£Jia.

108 W ASHINGTON ST.TViaN FALLS, IDAHO

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I Q

Politic^■ T } ^ Tiab^^-

:v ”

U ; ; t ■■ ' ■ X M W ^ y ^

f'l ■W M W * ;.r ..... •■■ --- -. ■■'?' «w!("';A'-' '■• -Vnk

IBg tn cx WESTWASftlNGTON (UPI>-AJter

writing the otlier day about' the profuslots of n ^ political labels

■ in America, I got to wondering where, our statesmen acquire

«(ri^ets that„they ap(^y to various groups.' '

So I sent my fingers tlppy- toeing through the yellow pages and pretty soon they stumbled upon an entry.:a^btth re^d:" The Tiffany Epithet, Co.

Fin# Poliacal Ub^ls Since 1805 • . ■

SUnley Y. Clept. Prop. r *'We. are iiidced the na'tions

larged supplier of polltiqalnflrmwl wtlfp I

e a l i^ at >|is place of-buslneis. "W hile our client list is confidentikl, I can assure j-ou that it includes many o f the most Important figures in Washingtonr-Here, let me ihow 3T0U around."

’ ■’"TFtoi^^irected me to a stately, s a n e lea "

BIRDS, SOME 5S,000 starlings and red wing btaeUMrds, - hsvo-invaded-Low land <C*Io.) Cem eterj^nigbtiy. City at-

tornys John Chilson, left, and Lynn Hammond, carrying protection, contemplate the problem. O ffk iab say 13 truck- limrtq nf dead birds already have been removed fr om the Ctm'etei^. (U P ! telephoto)

Role Of U. S. Adviser Jn Secret War Of Laos Noted■ EDITORS NOTC: Rclbert Kaylor, a paratroop veteran, has covered both the Vietnam War and the “ secret war” in Laos. In the following di.?patch he examines in detail tbo role o f the UMS. adviser in Laos.

V IE N T IAN E , Laos (U P I )—It was early morning. A sandy- halrcd young man in faded blue jeans and a sports shirt sat ona bench in the A ir America terminal, waiting for his flight.

He loqked alrao.«it like the guy ne.xt door back in the United States, The only giveaway were his short haircut and his green and black jungle boots like the ones worn by U.S. combat troops in Vietnam.

He said he was headed for

Thailand-Laos region say Ihre is an American advisory, training and support sj;sttm going far beyond these num­bers. It cuts across the border between 'piailand and Laos Some of ’ its members havi civilian status and some a m ilitary on tours of tempora duty In Laos.

In Laos, the hub . o f the system Is at Long Chepg. where

paneled’"cham ber lined with ffass cases., -*T lils is our showroom,” he said. l‘ ‘As you can see. we have on ieyhibit a. number of the more interesting labels that have been ‘ fabricated in oiir

In the cases were- disp _ such .labels as ‘ 'locofocos." ’•bucktalls.” "barriburriers.'' '•hunkers," ' "know- nothings." “ greenbackers” and "m ug­wumps,”

"W e here at Tiffany Epithet like to think that our labeling machines have played an indispensable role Ins American' political historv," Clept .‘said,

I said, ” Whal have been your most popular labels?"

"Our all-time best sellers were the ‘hawk’ and *dove‘‘ labels that were flist ordcMsd during the ICennedy'^dmfinistra- t io itr-^ ey were In l?ig demand all during the Johnson adminjs-W t io n__^---------

‘ Pseudo - intellectual' lajjels sold well dn 196& and this yeai' a few calls for ‘effe't^ snob’ labels have cdmo in.” , .

The next room I Inspected was cluttered with yardsticks,' pulsifc-taking instruments ..and other .mea.turing devices: Tm: floOr was littered with snippet.^ of/old Gallup Polls.

/‘This is our fitting room," lept explained. "Since all of ur labels are , custom-made, Itting is. a vital part of the

process.”"W hat is the biggest Job you

GAS STATION O PERATOR Harold Ballew conteniplaies the task. Wednesday, get- ttng rid ol tbe .7S,48t pennies he had collected to pay hack withholding taxes tcnthe Internal Revenue Service. The IRS threatened to close his station if he didn’ t mako payment, and when he presented the pennies they refused to accept them^^ Ballew, instead, paid with, fold­ing money that he wisely h ^ brought along. (U P I telephoto) . r " ' ' ,

Wreck ReportedA car aad..truck collided, three

miles w e s t-o f-^ uth P arlc W e d t j^ ne."«iay and a woman was hurt but did not require hospitaliw-t l o n . __

Twin Palls Coifnttr Sheriffs of-

ever handled?" I asked."W e recently made a label

for the great majority that silently supports Nucon's Viet nam policy,” he replied.

I said, "W hat materials do you use in 'political labels?”

"W e make moat of them out o f whole cloth."

fleers Investigated and said a car driven by Lewis Bellinger, 5i, Jerome, and a large truck driven by Emil Tvrdy, 42, Buhl,

:u!Stlinger's wife suffered face cui 1 ^ citations -were issued.

USE TIMES-NEWS W ANT ADS FOR FAST-SELUNG RESULTS

CONSTIPATEDO■kiip ■ a««i# M e M A n i HDUE TO LACK OF rOOD

BULK IN VOUR DIET THY , BRAH

•V- *' •

»$PEED , : SPKADiir- -

' stto ot iwaim-fAMVKlMDft

'^UM CuLHorrn

i . w i y -n '

W j WMJiints

• le o^ o

Lose Weight Tbis %eel(con help vbu bocom tK> trUn

»Tu«f person you w on f to b«. Odrin«l is a tiny tobl«r onci •o4>ly swoUovwAcL Contair s no dangerous druQt. No srarvin'g. No special exercise.'G«t, rid of excess fat and l<v4 longer. Odnnex has beun used succetsiulty by thou* sans all over the country fo« .over 10 year's. Odrine* co»t» S3,25,'plu\i to* end the largo econory stre $5.25 plus' tox. You n<ust lose u ly fot'or your n-koney will be refunded by your druggtit. No qvj«\t>o ns dsked. Sold wirh this guorante*-,. hyi CroWUy'i Phormocy - 144 M a in Avenue *

- M a l l O r d e r s fM m d ,

1 6 - t ^ S+ »O M

. l a wto

• 6>y>s<pM i,oeo«i-i«,

401b. B a g . 6 ,p 0 0 S q . ’f t >. ' . Covaragr

Olstri^qtgik For M o i^ re Pr^ductah.In A ll O f Magic Valley.

O r SecYeur Local Deolar

GtOBE SEED & FEED

l2 3 4th AVanu* Sou^ Tnick Lon*

th e a i r f ie ld a j L o i ^ Cneng, fa tw a"t3 'fie ad qu a rte rs o f th e "c land c-stin e .a rm y ” o f MlJj. £ien^ Van )? P a o , and .from th ere back to h is joD m the h ills o f north L a os .

rfhe American declined to saj» just what that job vras. When his plane was ready to leave he said Eoodby, picked up a military B4 suitcase, and left.

That, encounter took place some inonths back, before the current Communist offensive in 1^03. Lao military sources say that nothing has changed liMihsn-ljhd

tttat 1 Uke

InterverrinE— months, and— ttjat- there are other Americans the one at the terhiinal.

qlffiy areTS irt o f a cumplicat- ed infrastructure that has been built to prop up a Laotian defense establishment that Lao and American officials agree would long ago have collapsed without their help.

Part o f Ihe infrastructure Is vi.sible on the surface in th* capital T>f Vientiane. Part of it, like the American in blue jeans and jungle boots, normally is not visible In a country that is technically neutral and' where U.S. military Involvement is not openly admitted.

----— a- «ntal hf— about— S30.persons that the U.S. mission

^ackgawOfidgc*—ait-employed by the U.S. govenment in Laos, about M or so are military persorinel, working, for the U;S. army and A ir force attache offices at the American Embas-iy liuie.----------------------- -— —— -

Put m ilitary sourres In the

Vang i^ao s arniy o f - i_ao and Thai mountain tribesemeni. is known to be administered /and supervised by the Central Intelligence Agency (C IA ), an organization with a passion for 'secrecy.

In Thailand, the ,sj-stem works out of several centers. Am ong them are the U.S. 'airbase al Udbrn, aB ear 50 m iles' “ from * V ientiane;— an sirbase_at Nakom Phanom just across tfie Mckonjr R iver from Laos, and a m ilitary complex north o f. Bangkok at Lopburi, headquarters for. U.S. Green Berets in Thailand.

M ilita iy sources say the U.S. advisers are in a support and training role that meets the Nixon adminstratlon's guide­line o f no ground troops in Laos.

But casualties do occur. An American officer was traiIt Muuiig Soul iiut t» we!sr~pf Plain of Jars last year when it wa.s overrun by North Vietna­mese soldiers a 'n j was^TcTTTcar according to reliable sources.

In addition to the ground advisory efforts, m ilitary sour ces say there is also a sizeable U.S. A ir Force contingent operating in northern Laos on temporary duty status from Thailand.[These airmen support the

UT.S. air war in Laos, manning radar station which pick out ta.rects and run surveillance on

liaison between the Lao U.S. ^Ir sjijjport.-In__ ndriitinn— there— bis.^

officially acknowledged civilian contract airlines, A ir Ameck^ Inc., and Colitinental Air Scririces,. which support Lao m ilitan j forces. A ir America flic’s unmarked H34 helicopters Which haul troops and ammuni- WoB— and— bring wounded cutfrom battlefields.

Tenuous Grip On Democrai^By P H IL NEWStMW”

U P I Fore.'«n- New® Analyst

V/hen GuatemSan voters cast their- ballots on Sunday, March

n r 'th tT ^ 'w e re partibipatinR in •what was hera.Mcd as a ’test for Guatemalan dm ocracy .

An arm y colonel ^ n the presidential ~fSce, although by not a large enough margin to take o ffice autom«tic«Hy.. The Guatemalan Congress n o w mu-st select the eventual winner

•from among tha two top

And whether Guaf^mala will■ retain -its— tenaOus «rtp democracy remains a <jue3■ Incumbent President Julio . Ccsaf~MendezrH1ontenegro is -toturn, his office over to his, micr'essftr nn Jnlv_li---------- -—

If h« does »o, becoow

only- the second fr(fely elected president in tive nation ^^to^ to fin.isk his tour-yaar tftrm.

Soitie 20 persona d i^ in the violence nreceding the election which was won by ColrCarlos Arana Osorio, a right-wing law and order candidate. His total vot« of 334,975 t jp p ta b y 40.0pp tiiat aooorded -W a___ aooorded -fcia riieait^«PfX>nei^ Mario RieMes Pi»; rucctni^'Mbo tras.twched b y the goweniiac R « and ^ jn o regoweniiac Revotat*t>n*ry‘party,

more than 120.000 those won by <lie Ovfftian Democra.- tic candidate.

1% ■ -m u a hard JoSjn fbr (lie middfcr0f-die*0ad - Rewolutiotta-

iV t y m t iir f c , f h l T n t g K

, jfs -of rula^has '-aoogliti.lo jnoderateTefolrm* ia a

political dimata oT vioieoce i>toaghtr-«B .by. wmeBilnj.-wf iMUi kft and xJsbt. -

Page 10: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

10 Tlmes-Nows, Twin Falfs* Idaho Thursday, March' 5) 1970

-n e w Y O R K (UPIH-Slq^cks

were firm as-tfa3 i«g passed tHe halfway.-- point, ‘:with advances ahead o f . declines by a 7-to-4

Among the day’s most active stocks were RCA lip .% tind Federated Department Stores

R d S traded an early block of 196,100 shares jft 32 up %. and Federated a block of 132,0i00 at 39% up

Also heavily traded were Jersey standard V4 higher; Tfexaco liiichaneed, American Telephone up %, Xerox ‘ t'/4 higher, and American Cement o ff

Mdtors were allphUy higher,while steels toiiowed m irregu- lar pattern. •

Shortly before. 1:15 p.m. the U P I marketwide -indicator showed a gain o f 0,46 per ccnt on 1,507 issues traded. There were. 763 advances and 464declines. ___ _

The Dow Jones industrlar average was up 0,46 at 788.61.

A three^hour turnover of ai'ound 8,000,t)00 shares was about in lino with Wednesday’s p a c e . ’

1 P .M . PRICES

ForMfcIC .goFmMS-I.W Fruehuf. 1.70

• <■

GnAPll M g Gen Dynxn t -an Elec 3 60 GnFood l.fiO Gen HoatCp Gen ln*tr 3k GenMUli -W GehMot .SM G PubU 1L6Q GenSteel .fcd Gen Tel I.Sl Gen T4t « !g Genetc 1.70 Ga Pao M t G e»y l.Md Gtllett* 1 40 G l«o Alden G lo ^ l , MarGc»Sth j.nGoodyrT .U Grac» W IH

NEW VORK STOCK . EXCHANGE NEW YORK (U P ll—Silecled iiocki on

i l i « New York Stock ExchAtiee. ^SalBi(hd») Hl«b lo w U » t O i»

AeineNtk 2s ■■*TOnrtral Cp

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Am NtGaa 1 - — APBoM— .•

A Smelt 1.90 Am Stand I A Susar*a 60 Am Zino Ctt Ametek XO Ampez Cp Anacan ArmooS 1 <0 Armour 1.60 AnnaCk .M

. -AJ iJO ll 1.20 AtlRlchfId 1 Atlaa Corp AtcoCp 1-JO Avnatlne .40

Bab&W T M BanforP J60 Bath Indutt BeatFoodi 1 Btckm .13A BeechAr .75 Ben&HU .60 B eM U 1.60 Benguet Ino BetliStl I.U Black D 7.30

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129 42% 4:Ti— S80 31U 30»I 20’ i+ H

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Ddw-B y United Pr«fa Intematkttal _ .

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124 52t; sm gl'

Livestocfc^PORTLAKD (U P I ) ,— Livestock:

'r-OtUe'andcol'Wf»~75r-tr«d»-poorly

Grain_ P p R J L J ^ D i- (U P y ^ 'Cash grain, coast, delivery basis: White wheat 1.52

^ due to amftll receipts; individual goodalaughler ateer 28.73; higlj good-low choice ........... .... ..heifer# 28.75*23.00; cbwa uHliiyl9 75-24.00; I C f,f* u/h it» } ■cutler 18.50-21.56; vcaler* good-choice ^ m t e l . W ‘435.00-46.00; feeder *tteera good. 700:1,909 W h it e CluO n o O ld

■ Hard red winter ord, l.d4Oats no bid Barley 41.flO ^

Ibl. 37.00.3S.J5. '

DENVER (U P I)--- Livestock: Cattle _ 500; .slaughter cows

stead.v bulk suppljf Jeiedor cat­tle for afternoon auctioni Siaugh ter heifers few good and com­mercial 25.40-27.90; slaughter cows, high cutter and, utility 22.20-24.-fO.

Hogs 500; barrows and gilts steady to i5 lo fer: 1-3 27.25- 28.50; 3-4 26.75-27.50; SOWS Steady, 1-3. 24.00-25.35, ------- 1-

S^eep .50. No sales.

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1j-7 244 2JH 24»;+wW w---

20 25 244 2 4 '; - 4J71 693i 69 »;38 20 204: >«4 -R4 i '*4 + H3'.»»i J.S4 3S4 ...

13fl 4 « 4 S », 454— 42 '9 6R4 » 4 U 65 — V;

2S4 + *,454 46S+ 4204 21 — 4i .s

Macy R H I Mad F I 54d Msgnav 1 20 Mar Oil 1 60 Marcnrinc I MarMid 160 MnrshF 1 !0 N!art Mr 1 :0 Maisey Fr 1

/ -M«y DS -f60

.......... T ’p IWinnDx I <2 Woo:wh I 20 •XrroxCp 60 7.A 1 rCo rp m Zayre Corp ZcnlthR 140

57 25>v4^0 44.*;37 3:4 29 5''ti s't ilii' 254

--2D 4H4—»tr*730 30 r>»i 29\—M '35»< 35'i 35!t+ 4

— XY2-----4'T 9- 4 93»i*39. 4: 394 '41 . +14

5 474 4:4 424+231 36 35 354+ 4

33 33423 26H15 -34

—M. 12' 35H 354 3 -S S -t;33 22> 4 32 22 + 43-<l 364 36 3fi«;—

lfi7 3!»^ 304 304— 439 t S l 34S*^ AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE1 3V/ ^ 4 284— 4 YORK (UPI)—Selected slocks on

44 IS * 17^4 18 * • American Stock Exchange63 5H 5W W '. Sales ihds) High Low U st Chg

AcnUct^iS fl., a 144 134 141 *•-r-y^—nrr— 2T----75 ^ - r r Attrf- Control--------- 2 T44 PTti,- 4

4 25«l 25U 25«4+ v! Am Pet .85b 21 334 33«i 33«; w tM It' Arkrar, ;:n 37i, ?h4 4- u

McGHlll. 60 McLen .80* MaadCftrp 4 ' Mamoras -Merck atCo J M G M Inc'

53 294 2: 24ll294 294+ 4

, 334 24U+ U1 374 374 3714+ U 15 :07; 20’ ^ 204+ 4

268 124 l2#‘- 4 - ’ 4M 1084 ]07t/* 1074+4

M Kf M •*4 1 1« lOfT 1074 3M1; + 1MJnnPL \ 30 320 in*i ’ 9S+MnbOl 3 :0a 455 43

.V44t>i— >'<

Mnn«*n . I RO rn 3<’ i 344.+ »,Mntnrola 1 55 133 12i«;Mr T-'.irl 1 tft 14M’ S’T**! 1 31 3« 33% 324MurpCo ! 30

— N3r.'i

N-----254+

Nat Airl 40 JWl "''’ ■j I**NatBKcNt r «»h

3 20 I ?0 3K0 M3 14I

54 >! T4I —3

Orsican la 69 J5S 1^/4 154 + H■BritPrt J'b .JiH I l ' i 1:4- 4Bundy Cp 1 2 17 17 1:Orclo K <0 a 3fiH 2C\iCHa ry Corp 34 « ' i A B4 + 4Compiiteit' CrroieP 5 M

3 3J»* 53*4 33>,— ti19

- \ h 'Va

DavMn TSF.. 1*4 1

DixI>Ti Corp ’ ; 231, 22 33 — 4l-.lcor Chem 37 10 0*4 :o ■*. 4l-quity Cp il m sy* 5 54— UF«d Hokftur 64 5^ 5'<i V.Fclmont Oil 5 12H 12 ns-*. sFmCp^n ,.0 5 31^ 2 l \ *For<l Can 3 t3M 55 354Frnntirr Air ^ 44 7n C A C p 2k ;s J l ‘ i

I 'H30K 30*, 4.

O n H.ittrry i05 IH i 1: 4-Hu»k>-OI 30 !5 r .K .:13 12», 4. 4

OMAHA (U P I) — Livestoek:Hofi.s'.’i.OOO. Barrows and gills

under 230 lbs steady: heavier weights steady- to 25 lower; 1-2 190-220 lbs 28.25-28.50; 1-3 190- 230 -lbs 28.00-28.25; 2-3 230-250 lb27.25-28.00; 2-i 250-270 lbs 27.00- 37t2S-38.00; 2-4 256-270 lbs 27.00-' 27-.Ser same grade 270-290 lbs26.25-27.0.

Cattle 4,000. No calvej. Steersan d ' heifers fully 25 higher; cows steady. Steer.si high choice and prime 1.075-1,219. lbs 31.25; same grade 1,125-1,200 lbs 31.00; choice 29.25-30.75; mixed good ■ahrf^chbice .26.50-29.7S. n ei WfS' high choice and prime 1,100 lbs 30.G0; same ^rade 1.05Q lbs at 30.50; part load 1,000 lbs 30.35; high choice and prime 950-1,050 lbs 30.25; choice 28.50 - 30.00; mixed good and choice 25.50 to 28.75.

Sheep 800. Slaughter lambs fully -Steady; slaughter ewes steady. Prim e spring lambs at 30.25; choice wooled lambs at 2950-30.00. Choice and p r i m e shorn lambs 26.75; utility ewes 8.50.

SEATTLE "" (U P I) — Grain, F.G.B. Seattle:Soft white 1.51!4 While club. 1:52 Hard winter 1.65 Com 53.25-53.75 BarlcjjHl.25-42.00'

---l^ha Range] " a

Opep High L4Q|r , C lot* Prtr*

KANSAS CITY (UPI-USDA)—Livestock Wrdnesdayi

Curtle 2JOO. ralvt?9 COO. Dulk of supply feeders accumululmg for opening sale of new <iuctlori fociijtics. In ri'Kular terminnl

ding much of sjauKhttT steer andtu'irrr supply on bouytit to arrivebaais, S^JUKhtfr cows i*{vn(Jy. Bull* BJe-ody. Choice‘ 1<5C0.11I10 Ib steers 30 00- 30 250 choice i)30 lb , 29 50; ulilifvand commcrcloi coWs 22.:5.23.5i); hiiih drestmg 23 7.V24 00; commercial and «ooil bull! over ;200 lb. 26.00-28 00, individua 2S 50.

!{<YB*.-3.S00. Barrowi and gilt* stendy to sfronji. About 1)0 head US No 12 oround 220 lb. 38.25; No.* 1-3 200-240 Jb. 27 50- 28.00. Sows Bleady »o strong, spots 25 higher. No. 1-3 350-150 Ib. 24 78-25 50,

5ihcep 50 Coulpls locs rhoica 111 lb wooled Inmbi utrady o l 25 50; « « c s too few 19 te*t. (irices.

CHICAGO <UPI) — Livestock;H ors 2,500; bnrrows and gilti stendy

to »tfon}j. moderitcly active; No U2 ed 200-225 lb. 2S 75-29 00. sows fully ■teartv, fairlv active; No. 2-3 400-500 lb 24 2i-25 00. N)rtt9 33 50.

Cntfln 5,500, Crtlvo none; »ra(Hng on slaushier ttaer*' active; steady to wrnk e.irh. Ifiler slow, fully 25 lower; hich rhoire and bcltjw, *teadv to strong, in- ktuncct 25 hiiitiri. tilnu;;htor lu'ifers fairly active, steady to 25 hiRher; row* BTtd hulls steiidy; prime j.2n(v-|,4J0 lb 12 7i-::3 00;

nnrn^ 0'>0 )h «!aitfhTid comter hcifrr* 31 00-31 ?S: utillt

mercinl cow* 2l 2S:iOO; rnnner and rtit- ter 1 25-22 fvi; utility and commercial bulls :fl00.2S50.

Siieep non*.

CATTLE FUTURESThe following .quotations are

provided by Murlas Brotl^irs Commodities.

W gh- _ _____June 32.40 32:17 ^2.30“ T :2 T '^ ® ‘ “ ’ " ’' " ’ “ "y *’ ’8

■mtrOct. 30.95

ai.s.'i30.85

32.11030.90

- r a r-1-.05

Produce PricesO iirA O O (U PI) — Produce:

Cheese pb processed lr»af 85-04' ; burck muenAterdnrs: single daisies 62-6D'4; longlujrr»%

40 it. blnvki W '.,62';. '(wheels) too ^ew to report; {hIo<l<^:00 Ib ) gr»d « A 74-78; ^rada B 72*V7fi. grade C fi'VTS

Wholesale prices as reported by thh Chic.ngo .Mercnntile tschanp -Uulii

—WntTTT Mur 1 SOI Muy j jy 'Sip Dec• CORN • ’

Mar 1 21' 1 21^ I ? I i i l'2JH May I 22»4 I 22^' 1 22‘ ? 122% I “ Jly. 1.24 1 24«,i 4.21^ 1.24^'- J.Sep I2 1 !i 122 I2 IS I-H^4 I Dec I 18 MS M 7 »» I'.IS l.ISMar ............................ 103Vi 1-22

OATS^•VTar MiiyJly Sep Dec ,

RYE

*.58%.63*4

*.03»4.66

.MU61%.63S.63li

19 '> I joii

,• V ' :h a s..*

•MW

Mar ' a 164 1.18H J.19U <1.18 . 1 t6»iMay’ ■ 4-U'/* 1.13 I l l l . lH i M i ^Sep i.6 »4 1.09 i o l ^ ; U ® ' :' SOYDEWMS*Mor 3 U H 3.574 3 » * 3.551/ 3.574May 3.61*4 3.6I4 3 i 3,59t? 3 634Jly 3.65^ 3.654 3ft3 i 3 C3H 3.664Aug 3.BO/4 3 2.&21i 3.62K 3 64 4Sop 3 55*4 3 56 3SS 3 « 3 S6HNov 2 i3 2 M 4 3 52V

't3 534

Jan / 3 i : y . 3 5S 3 57 3 5»4SOYBEAN OIL

1335Mar 12 00 12 90 u .is- 13.10May 10 S5 10 R!» 10 60- 1065 11 00Jly io 30 JO w 10 07 10 10 JO 36Auk V m 9B6

I 70a-u a7»D a 99

.Srp 0 TO 0.54 9 65 9 76Oct 9 37 9 30 9' !5 9 30 9 33Pec 80fl 9.04 e 03Jon «.S0 8 89 S U • 85 s.oo

SOYBEAN A irA LM ar' Tfi 30 76 S5 75 25 75 3S T6 40M.-.y 7^15 74 60 73 75 73 75 74 15Jiv .73.75 . 73 85 73.15 73 35 73 70Au« 73 SO 73 50 72 70 73 050 73 30S‘‘p n 35 72 50 72 00 73 00 72 30 DO.t 71 10 71 :o 70 !50 70 90 71 :oDvc 70 00 70 20 S') 90 69 00 70 00Jilfl__ fiV*5 70 05 60 00 89 SOB 69 90 B

ACCEPTING TH E LINCOUM-IVtfiRCimY Silver MedaUlon Manager A w a r d s •‘M a n W r o (thp Y ear” (n this dls^ict Is BlU Roemer, r t ^ t , seriicA'fnanager fo^ Thelsen Motors, Twin

by Alvin Miller^ lef^^ tympany «<lstrtrt represeniaJva frtMft.Falls. Tto t>resentam>ri wai~^ D en verr '

BusinessToday

By RICHARD ROSSI U P I Business Writer

NEW YO RK (U P I) — Mov­ing to company headquarters in New 'York once was a career dream come true (or business cxccutives. Today, according to a recent report by the National Industrial Conference Board (N ICB ), it can bd the-first stage of a nigtitmaro.

Wall Street Chatter

NEW YO RK (U P I)—The market’s irlcreasing tendency to show indifference to bad- news lends support to the theory that the bear market of the pa it 14 months . is nearing an end. Shearson, Hammill & Co. says. TTie peak flow of earnings epuits fur 1989 has passed~aTRt

it— wonid— seem that most dLsappointments of la.st year have been discounted. Altfiough fir.st-quarter earnings are ,also lilely to be disappointing, "the effects should not be a;j great on a relative basis, particularly since the after-tax results \YiJl be cu.shloned by the lower sUrtax.”

Corporation'! are; finding It increasingly difficult to lure top men to New York "where the action is,” according to the NICB. Mortgage rates, soaring living costs, crime, pollution and commuting problems i5i)jse 'many key employes to turn down

Reynolds & Co. Is optimistic about the future course of stock prices and recommends being relatively fully Invested a t this time. "E ven though the prime rate has not been lowered," the firm says, "money conditions are leasing, and this Is what the stock market has been yearnltig for.'* It is finally "showing 'a tendency” to respond to goodlency"

s, it a

rcnntileI. /<i7 *eS5 r/ toVi

— probltiii— n — especially acuie' in New York where 133 of the nation's 500 fargest cor- poratians have headquarters.

The high cost of living and the harro%ving transportation dif- fj<ullies top the list of com­plaints many transferred execu­tives have about the big town.

" I f I were to go back to Detroit," .said an automotive cxecutivo who. has been here ■for two ycar< ,'"It would he the' iiqulualnnt o j gattin^ ft t4|000 «

It w lll.on ly be a matter o f time before monetary policy is m a d e less restrictive, Horn- blower & Weeks - Hemphill, Noyes believes. Since the market anticipates the economy

outloo^k for monetary policy, the market should regain strength atter the first quarter o f lU'/O. The current environment repre- .sonts the buying range in,which investor.s should begin to build positions in s e le c t^ equities, the fim i says.

Spot MetalsNEW YORK (U P I) — Metal

prices:Alurnlnum, primary. 99 per

ccnt plus, pure 30 lb, ingotsT O ir-------------------------------------

SuccessfulInvestingBy ROGER E. SPEAR

Q—^Do you believe Bunker - Ramo has appreciation poten­tial?'Could the lack of a divi­dend be a reason for BR's list- iess perfnrmnnr<^?— H R

A —While a dividend certain! enhances the appeal of a growt stock, a long r standing policy of earnings retention xanhot be held j-esponsible for "a sluggish perforraance. Bunker - Ramo's stock has been unable to buck the -market dovmtrend ■ despite an apparent earnings t u r n a- round. For the nine months end­ed September. 1969, share earn ings rose to 41 cents on a 6.4 per cent incrjjase In sales. Full- year earnings, are expected to approximate 55 cents per share versus 35 cents in 1968.

The combined companies de­rive over 50 per cent of sales from electronics components and the remainder from com- puter-based systems, numerical controls and deep-pile fabrics. J3ie comnanv holds contracts to supply terminal equipment for the Big Board's new Block Au­tomation System and to build and operate a new qMOlatlon .system for O-T-C .securities sim­ilar to the already established Telequote System.

In February, 1969, one such system' became operativB—nnd- another is expected In 1970. CompeHt'ion is—increashig I n som e^f BR's important product areas. However, a combination o f earnings recovery and poten- tlal*^<(}r the company’s newer systems gives the shares long­term speculative appeal.

Q—I have noticed a stock Jlst- ed as NYStEG is trading at levels not seen since 1,960 when earnings were equal to SI.88 a, share, Record earnings of S3 19 a share were reported for 1969. which ampiv cover the $2 08 — ....II” ......

and Industrial plants in the util­ity's service area should be re» fleeted in increased revenues in coming years. Shares are par- liniilarly nn ractive for thejr^vyell-secured income attributes.

(Mr. Spear welcomes q u e s- tlons for use in-hi.s. column but regrets ' he cannot answer all mail personally.)

FARMAuctionCALENDARContoct tha Tlmej-Newi Farm

Sales deparlmehf for complata odvertitlng coveroga of your form tala, hand bills, r>ewspapar

In Magic Volley) odvonca bill­ing.' AH or one special low rata. Every aala listed In This Farm Colendor for 10 days bafora •ola.

ANARCH 6W IU IA R O lA H IM E R a n d OTHER C O NS IG N M E N TSA d v a r liia m a n it M a rch '4

A u c tlo n ea rt: W er l, E iU ri, W a ll o n d M *>ftenm ]th

MARCH 6P E U A W A RD

^ A d v r t i im a n i i Mnrrh Ar a g — wa.Col Ga •! sa Com Ed 2.20 Com S«t Cp ConvEd ) ftoCflBTd MO CSnii<a ■ "■Conam Pw 2 Cont Air .50 ConCan 3 20 CooU Oil 14

, Contrl D i l « ComGI Cax Brdcail CPOntl 1 70 Cranv C 1.60 CrcmCoIl 4k CnmnZ 1.6® CudahyCo St

— cu rtu i w r i —Cyprus 1 60

DanRlv .SSd___DaoaXd 1%

DaycoC I f l D ayPU 1 80 X>eerc ACo 2 J3el Mn< 1 10

-xr-

3^ 3! y 3'il+ H7 40 J**;

104 401 +Ififl <14 2vl— ti101.. 14 'm/. ' -nti-— i ;

----- 2r ; ; 'r i ? T sU -srn—n ’3 a js - li54 r2% 7t>»4 7:?; + ’.7,

i y 25% 251/ ...J12 « j «3 4 ,-n ;IS 2.T> 2^« 33«23 7 0 \ :3»i 24 - I. 1 BanM 35», 3Si; 3M;~ », I97 3«t»; 3U; ^ ,OrrlrtfJPi-t 1

3 27 ?*;»' >»' f >c,<rr.rn tn*3 « U t i U * n.OHio } <1 1 H

■'alO iil il '"Ml"' Nut rirn 20 N-;r,)rp : rts

OdNe»j>w_ xaaS>wh.rry 1vrnsri !NinaMrt 1 '.0 NorfA,W«t « Nr»\mHk 1 :0No‘ fP«

2U

-rnr II. >;..

"2 - % 41

-----'1?n:«*■3-r>45 4 : s

... -lOb- 42t4 43 4 2 ^ — K - 3 »-

» i n 231;I'H! 17H 16»i 17»4

P « 4 i ; R1 *3>-3+ SW 1 T»; 171^ 1 7 « i+ I/.J»2 47‘ , 47 i ;

3fS+ % 33>-i 34ti— »;

KifbvInU 3S l.r«* Sti 3*,h McCulCp Ak Mrnn« FW 1 Mohwk .Afrt

H 204 204 2f>'l J ICH lOx, 101*

90 35«i 33J*

20'i 26-V+ ‘ i 2JS !? 1 H

42•n -m-iD.O-

7!4J'S ns

2-4S11 2I»,

2.^; 2J 17 4?^ <2 42 24U 23*4 237 *,

•TT' - T " * - i;

70»;_. I

JI424'» 1 21H ..25434*

I o inf

4« 234 2:>i 23«i434 I*JS 1« 1 « 4 - I ' 3J2! 114 Tsii 'S4 . ..

DetCdit 1.40 DIaShm 1 40

IWncri Club Disney .SOf DwneMa .90 I » w Ch 2«0 Dr»»*er-JJQDuPont DuqneL I-6S Dm*tnC .4«

EsttPra A lf 14« ITUF « i t Kod u leo nT.»\onY ! 40 _ 2\ 3«»4 • 35»'

nr«>.oNG I • 7*1 .2 «_ .JT3 257^ i t

- S r ^

845 I4rti4 1'54 i r \25 S4 53 51 * X,*! 73S 73»i 73»; -f T,« r 27S 2 « 'i P i•* JOflH *^S 4«5 25 24»i 2«% ...40 »t^ 9!i r , — 4

Otn.irVIn 4»f otUocu \ :oO'M I : rn 2 ntifSnrd M t Ow rr.«f <0 O ^^enl.l 1 35

ru Qji.r.s.,,Purl r( 1 fit)

Pa<-P«t I :* PrT&T ! in P«n Am W/y P.irih.ll • Cfi Park^ nv< I Pmn Ontrl P.»r>n^v JC I P*-nftm« P^nnPL 1 M Pr-V^,* I

3.i>; 234 23>i~ 45.1 -4 H4 uu—

24 4 24' I ... - * K

l'‘ »;+ 4 ’ 74— 4 214+ «, 4O4 + S25*,-. 1; P2’ ^ H 53'i- S

37<1 'I

93 22'\ IT 4«437 28: i 93

17fi 5 5 »i -----P .P -----___ir t

jr!:::* ‘ 4 24ii5J.

ParVM^ I-ftcN’wTel L* Pncum Dvn PubcoP 15d R rrv f» lnd» Sh:)Iiix;k Dn Solitrrm 30 .'ftdVi*:*! 5k Stiitham Int Sy-ntcx .40f Trchnclr 40 UnvCaa J>7«- Wtt Nuclear

C4 19S .14 78 510 U»i 8313 «S

* 442 5\31 >4H 33 33i\-

23 64 « 4 —3S 30».; 2<H< 30

3«S JJ4 3« — 1/.31 20V^.1!>H 204 ■*.

- n ^ - 9 - j ;« SH « 4

IR'u 4......

4 3 »« 44■«4 4154 i.'i*. + 4i!3 C3 —tH li

4>t* 4

67ij; M »cor/ fi5ViL|IS« irrrcutar; whitn larc* rxt

4«; medium 354-36: *landarda 33; chrckj iX •

open high

5'i 6*.—‘iH33 334— -

Apr.lunAo*Oct

MarMayJly

T.IV Cottft31 Si. 75 J.:.R5 31 TO 31 ‘ 5 30431 9<l- 9.5 3; 95 31 SO 31 K7 350

31 75 31 75 31 «7 3! 72 7530 fiO 30 30 67 30 77 42

Froxen Pork Bellies4fi 4-5- 20 M 4fi.20 4B 50 :022

year raise.'He noted that he now pays

'S23 a month (in tolls) ju.st to truss brlcl{i$S'-''Tn iravclfng to and from his home in northern New Jersey to New York City every day. “ My heating bill in Detroit averaged $21 a monthT *

3721 l% -70 2at45 :A 4

u\ ;34M 27 •

B4i» 3fV4:si ?5»;SS 5 431 IK

»<.S

31 4.

?«43fi 34<

JT.4 2fl’ - H2*4 2nv~ 4204 3oi;— 4:n 2i»;+ 4J, . . . ?

3«‘ i3-> 3f>4’ -f 4254 25S-f5A«j 50>,— •1’4 IT^i* 4

2'“4~ 4 .3544- %;

Ht)ivTCp~.WFvfmhsrpE r c ^ n o i^

-------------------------------- P»*HArrq --------- \------ i n i iU i i 4 54. — 4^ 13 113^3 2 113 +J>i•04 4 Ph^lp n J 10 31« ^34,51 53

.......................... II5»i 3« .+ 1

ir4- 4 Phi:«KM H Ptji!ip Mor

3»- - 32:

>55 194 !'fi 12 2«H 2«'

SU 2SH 2Sl*H4 H 2<4 .

Po'.arnid r iTjlWfl ~

244 24t4.24H r « 344 33V S44— 22: 7V'^ 2rr^

V45tF A h e i« »— A t — ----- «3 34 334

.5« ~ 3ff 45*4 4S FptrCim- SO**- - fO f '»U4-4M n4 M \ ^ 2 K

L-JAirfiil- -------.?<»-—“ .7 iT t; i:

74 34 ’ 33'________ 4* - .■«

--- rttSiSt- M ~ . M - W - W -J59 1 ITS Tr«i >n

Prfx-AO 2.fifl - PuSK: 1 W'* Vw PsrAO 1M

.Puilmn 3 W PuTTTCp S4 Purolat 1.60 .

.4(0J^ythorv .SO

3«: 1104 no n o t’54 334 23H 22«5 «4 2 «4— 4

24-^14 4'M *«5 n it 15- l i ^

4 «<» 69 « -

1*7 -

r ’ ljiTkatfC .1 Typwr-i:m~-

30 3SS J4»<

r M r Cp fS . Td Fairs M

17 2*H 34 14 19U IP

» 44% 43fi-44i

JS * »4 P»y-4t?5=" 4“54*i+ 4

W»yTot» 310’(^nST .:M

Pohshiw .70

S ' w 344+ 4KH AH'*- 4

. 334 S34'«' H *« 252 . 25«

n il 7*3+1U

Lomsville Nips Meinphis By 83r8Memphis 83-82

M EMPHIS, Tcnn. (U P I)— lonjisville. keeping Its hopes a l i^ for a berth In the National In\Tltation Tournament, battled froin behind Wednesday night to nip Memphis Stale 83-82 inMissouri Valley___ Conferencebasketball .action.

The Cardinals'led' early only - - -------- ----- ~

pull ahead-by-tl.2a-ih tl^tJirst half and -go—-to -the • drSS room leading 42-38 at the fair.

Mika G rosso, who scored 29 points-Jto* lead the Cardinals,

.. waa the deciding factor wlien

n:? ^ ‘‘ 'Loolsvilte pointl in the last six minutes of the game, pushing tSS^C4wllBatsr-t4r-*-76-TO-l«ad. -r^Ertd- Horton and James Douglass, with 29 aftd 24 pbiiltS Tcs[Kedv^. wfTo the leading scoreri for Memphis-Statei -

yi'iiuK w)»[i

«h 4-V M VI ,"Z i i_ • . I , . , ~ jkA/v *• »»<6 iiMn 50 46 »r <6 io <6 <5 07S he .sajd. Now Its $90. It now

take.s him three hours a day in traveling time — an hour and a half each way. "In Detroit it took mo about 20 nrinotes each way."

Leonard Dal^uest, a General Electric executive recently tran.-rfcrred here from St. Louis, will never forgot his first ride on the New Haven Railroad: a one and a quarter hour trip f rom Mew Gannon, Conn

« 2S. Jl> 43 45 4J JO 43 4J IM Pofatoes; Total shipmrnt^234; arrlvala

37; track 10«: supplies moderate: demand fair; market at>out ttady

Track » « ! « • r.OO-lb- U S. l-A>r MJ«n^ •rtta. North Dakota. Red River Valley roknd rrd< 3 TO-3 75.

New; 1 arrival; track 2; offertngi Uchl; ln«ufMcimt to

Onion*: A rriva l* ‘ 7: track 23j iuppirH moderair; demand good; market itr.uly

Track Mle*; Idaho yellow »pani»h larjte 3.7S-4 00; faJr appearance S35-JM; r*do yellow hirjfp. half car 3 75; medi­um to larite. half ear 3.10; Washington

Trap ShootThe Twin Falls Gun Club

will conduct a jeBistcred-ATA trophy shoot Ijeginning at 8 a.m. Sundaj^at the club grounds on Washington St. North at the canyon.

The shoot wflT consist o f

:.ifloifl>n*5. -A - r r o p n y '- w w - b e presented in eacii cjass’ and scoring w ill be n»ade under the ‘Lewis -«>:Slem; A ll Inter- ' ested .silooters are invited. "

■'The shock was pretty great when I had to stand all the way in to New York on my first day," he recalled.

Difficult as the physical pro­blems of New York livina can DC, the pj^jtchoiogtcal a d j u s t - m ent'can even more trou­blesome for the transferred ex­ecutive anILhis family.

Dalquest a id the citji seems.

d i 5 p ^ r S t r ^ 2 5 > l r 5 f ■ ^ ,7 , 1 '’ J®'- -- - - - really do little 4o .solve the pro­blems o f tht» Tn other parts o f the coufitry he said, "thtijniy- UWng in the -suburbs 25 mites awajjr Is doing things Ui help this citv. You rcallx can’t es-

-Twin-Falls JifadietsE G G S ■ .

t l l l i * ------ . . . . . . ...TT„:-.«Sfi-l? AA ................................ ..

■'— i?SS M«djttm- Aar-nvrr;<....;......... .s*

U g h t S m ............................ »< M «0 a «t . t )0Um v j Sow*

in (ibcr, box*&)

N H W T O R K B U T T E S MEW YO R K ( U P I ) — rUSDA>-«Btter

marfcH Thur«J*y: Off«hnf< stMdy, •!>»- iiMnd lifhr. 'B ( (^ a « l » f« l lb it price* M ceats per pound ihulk A < U tc o r *^ M H -a .

■ NCT 'YORK ec«s. N E V YO R IC ( H P T ) f U S S y t W E t S

mark«t Tfiunday: Orrcrtac* Z>«m«sd

per dorm (MtBmnrci 2» catn).Fancy la r ff* <Mln. JO per c tn t A A ,

7S per ccBt A . A T «ra | i < 7 ppuixU) « h l t «___ _________

PancT m ed lD B i CMia. ! • p e r MOt. A A , 7$ per e «f it A . a v t- <1- A ) whita

T^ocy «m »fl »oU#t« (Mia^ 7S p#r f n t

acksw t^ e Outlasts Miami

M IAM I (U P I ) — Jacksonville University fought off*a stubborn M iam i Uurncane offense in the first half Wednesday and took a' 108-87 win behind a -26-point per- formance by Vaughn Wcdekin^ - M iami kept dogging the sixth- rahked Dolphins, in. the first lialf>_butJHdth-4i4fi,tn:go. after

_____ ___ m rr .• m (M ia . M per c o t -V. t a r n -

Don Cumutt tied it at ^ 0 , the Dolphins palled ahead to stay on a jiimpar hy Wedekitig, ~—

Miami stayed cl-o s e urilil earlv in the second half, after rad&mvflle fciiiJt a si-si IntSi mi.wion lead.

cape from, ,tn some way, par­ticipating In improving the city iL-ieir*' ■^ T oaI itiajor coj poratidnf-^o-to

great lengths to entice good >-oung executives to~mOVe to New—^Vork. Some even have given the transferred executive an extra JO o r -20 per cent sal­ary increase. But most com- panies shy away from 'that ap­proach. As one executive pftt it "once you’ve built that increase into.the 'salary how do you lake it away 'when tljie guy trainsrers oiit -o f- Ncw-JitorlC.- -.— ____

Antimony, domestic, 99V4 per ccnt pure, FOB Laredo, Texas,' bulk^iiMlQlxah.

Cgpper, electroIyflcTcTlvered U.S. 56.00-56.25 c lb. lake 60.00 c lb.

Lead, common, N .Y. 16.50 c Ib,: St. louis 16.30 c Ib.

Mansanese. 69.9 per cent pure, boxed regular 29.00 c lb.

Nickel, elccirolytic cathodes. FOB Port Colborne, Ont. 128.00 c l b . '

Platinum, soft. 99 5 fine $130- 135 07.

Quick.'iilver, J455--I6.') 76 - bl. flask... Tin, N .Y . prompt delivery — 176.50 c Ib.

Tung.'iten powder, 9S 8 per c e n t ininimuiu ; n i r e , 83.00

paid out annually in dividends Compan\| scrvice area includes tho farming and re<ort area.s «r-sou lk- central Now York. Residenfial users account for 50 per cent o f electric and 50 per cent of gas revenues.

Agfjres.sive promotion of all electric living plus the expan Sion of educational in.yitutions

■parZinc, prime western, N.Y.

16.00 c Ib.; east St. Louis 15.50 c Ib.

FUTURESTJie following quotations are

provided by Mtirlas BrothersS tp B u f l i l ia

Malnw 'May 4.80 4.54 -4.6J -f.02

Uaho Potatoes<.16 . 5.95 . 6,00 — -W

Over The CounterQnotationa from NASD at approxi­

mately n<Hin. A ll blii.<> arv Intcrdcalar hida. lnt#rd*«1*r quotationa do not In* eluda retaU markup, mark down or rommUnlon. TTiese ouotajloon ara pro* r ldM by E. W . VcR obrru A Co.

BM Asked Bank of America 59.8714 60.37^ HqUHy Oil-----------11.30' 12.MFirst Sec. Corp. 33.00 34.00 First Sec. Inv. ' 8.25 8.75 Garrett’s — 27.00 29.00 Idaho Power Pfd. 50.00 55.00 Idfl-JiTSt N a fl. 33.50., .34.5ft.rntermtn. Gas 8.37Vi 8.75 J. S. Industries .7.50 8.00 Kellwood Corp. 28.00 2S..‘i0 Morrison-Knud. I5..S0 17.50 Pac. ^ g . & Prodx-lv!>0-----2t75-

Rogers Seed 16.50 17.50 Sierra L ife 3.25 3.75Silver Star Queen .17 .22 Surety,.J jfa- _ . ,4 .5 ft_5 .oo

T

A u c t io n » «r> : W *r1. E iU r«, W a ll a n d M a tta n m ilh

MARCH 6ElMlt a MtlBA SCHBfNK

Advartisam anr: March 4 AucH on*«rsi G a y lo rd PhitUpt,~Orv|

S «a rt ond Bill E«l*»

MARCH 7J. RALPH MOD&AN

A d va rtU a m a n I; M arch 5 A u c tio n a a m W trf , Cllart, W a ll

' o n d M a itartm ith

M A R C K 7 - JACK D. PAULSON

Advarfi<am arrt: M arch 5 A u c tie o M rvt W art, Eiiars, W a ll

o n d M atfarsm ith

MARCH 7 W A G N E R S IN C O R P O R A TED

Advartiaam ant: M orch 5 AUCTionaarii fvarton. Ho* ~

e n d W o o d

m arch ' 9k IC H A R O W . i l l i H t N A M P A

A d va rfltam a nlt M orch 6 — A m H awaart! C o l. B ud O io iid

a n d ElMf A lb rig h t

_MARCH 9 n v I N EN G LA N D

A d va rllta m a n t; IHarcK A A uctiow aan Mfttfara

• w m r rPETE tA R IC K

A d v «ftl»a m a n l: M arch 6 A u c tlo n * «r«: W art, Eilart. W o H ,

a n d M a «ta n m ith

MARCH 1<yJ A C K P O R T

A tfv«r^M M n«ntr M orch S AucHanoaff? W a rt, S ilart, W o lf

e n d M a «ta n m U h ^

MARCH n

A d ve rtisem a nl: M arch 9 A uctlo no o ri: W e ll

a n d M «v»a n m ith

MARCH 12'J O C O L O IIK

A «N * ftl«M M n l^ M arch 1 0 . ^

Corporations are -picking op tlie-.tab -lOn a wide variety of moWng- « iqmi|«<>g,r loaninge y for m orUge downpaymentsatli# . m ln ( their tnflllatira milhloca)banka to help key men set-morta0» money...

-..T - -

A u c t lw iM n ; W a rt, B I t n . W a ll «(»d MottanMnifH

M AR CH 12D O N G IE S U C C ftf T

3 a a iB ii i i»a n 8 ii^ Voo r W « t , B fm . - W o a

and-MraMimith..

n: Wm , BIm. W di-

Page 11: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

h . . . ,. •. .' Tliwrsddy. March 5 , 1 9 7 0 i; JRnet-NevwAyvf" W l* . • *»»» i t

- S E R V I u

SAvmes★ GMD-SIRIKE STAMPS

FRESH l e a n

PpRKLOIM ROAST;

LEAKI t e n d e r

PORr CHOPSVALUE BRAND

SlICED BACON • • • •

S turdayr March 7-10 a.nu to 6 |Lin.

EACH

H O S T E S S F R U IT P IE SJ____ __________ A N D _____________

M EAD O W G O LD IC E C R E A M M EA D O W G O LD G . L IG H T L Y M IL K

flOSTESl FRUIT PIES

V2 O A l .

C O U N TR Y STYLE

SPARE RIBS . . .

F R E S H

SPARE RIBS

BLUE VALUE

■ C E C A cCREAM

PASCO FROZEN

ORANGE ^

W ESSON PURE ■

WESSON OIL___________POnED HOWERS. . ‘2.98

DEL M O N TE

m i lN O R W E S T

CHUNKtS T E S T L E S

Q U IC KSEGO'

C A N N E DM tld C

HERSHEY OR

H O LLY W O O D

CANDY B A R ^

10 3ARf w m ^

$ m o o

HOOVER SMALL APPLIANCES

i?EO-RIPE

TOMATOESW R A P P ED LA R Q g .S O L ID H EA D S SUNKIST N AVEL .

lEnUCE ORANGES

'GERAAA N -C HQCOLATE^

^ ^ E SBANANA NUX

lOAF 1

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- ± -

lAIRlSPRAI^R « « -

1 I -1— : r y-l, ...— V ^ — -T— ;;■>---5- f.

Page 12: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

Hansen Ousts RocklandMURTAUGH — The Oakley

Hornets, exploding in th^ third quarter, dropped the Murtaugh Red. Devils 82-56 Wednesday night to clincti one or two berths in the state A-4 basketball tour­nament. Earlier in the sixth dis­trict A-4 tourney, the Hansen Huskies eliminated the R o c k- Mnd Bulldogs 7&S9.

Hansen and Murtaugh will meet in the loser bracket semi­finals at 8 p.m. Thursday night With the w ijintr~of that o n e going against Oakley F r i d a y . However. Oaklexi now is in the driver’s seat as it must be de feated twice in a row to lose the title artd it hardly- can be counted a loser now with the

STOCKTON, Calif. (U P I )— For the second time ^vithin a month-^he University o f Pacific is . in seafch~of a head footbaU; coach.

Doug Scovill quit the Job a fter , three y ears la.st month tostate tournament trip—assuied.

Oakley, which hasn’ t lost- take a position as an assistant since the second game of the wiih the San Francisco Forty

got help. from 'N incrii

ISU^Has: W aning Season, Eagerly Awaits Next Year

PO C ATE LU ) - r Dan Miller took a last - place conference

ond- team' and fooE It tir ; nlace. and-Pow-he^-lookinE for- ^ward with a great deal o f an-

es, but saddening M iller. Be­sides being^the slickest b a 1 1-handlcr -thief— outside.

► ticipation to the 1970-71 cam- ! paign.' M iller’s Bengals achieved the

first ISU winning season (13-11) ; since 1962, and the firsl ‘wiim i. conference record ( I M ) since• the Inception of the conference - in ^363•64. In addition Idaho State took the season’s series

-----.I-fFom— very conferenct•; ent Including champion W eber

State, who they beat in Ogden 87-85 Saturday.

Jn the first six years o f con- w ,» fe y e n c e lilav Idaho State 'won

only one g a p e away from homo' and lcisf35. The record is now

I 5-38 after ISU .took four o { sev-__ * en road tilts. •’The Bengal*’'w on

’ their first conference game ever• a t Missoula, Moscow and Og-

. J den.> Willie Humes, the leading con- i ference scorer at 28.9 and the « nation’s No. 6 scorer at 30.5, I has one more year and he as- « sures ISU o f a hlgh-sooring of- 5 fense next ^ a r . .Humes set an 1 ISU one - gam e record o f 51 { points and a B ig Sky one-game

- > record o f 48 mjirkers. His 433 '* conference points are a season> BSC mark.J Running- mate O’Neil Sim-> mons graduates, gladdening the

hearts o f f ive other BSC coach-

pripbn Simmons also is pnly the sixth man from ISU to ev«>r •vore over 400 points in back- to-back seasons. With Simmons gone the second guard spot w ill be up fo r grabs,

rnisj— Nmff^-fewer__than thrp^ frpsh and two-year letterman Trent Magner have a shot at it. 6-5

: iliggs JNamedriFish Bossh . .___ .

; At HagermanHAGERM AN—Kennetji Higgs

- -J-wll-l>e-assuming-cliarge-<rf-the ^ Hagerman National Fish Hatch-• In Jurie. upon

. a t a yea r­long managerial training pro-

' gram with the Department o f : th e ' Interior in Washington, •. D.C., John D . Findlay, Portland,

Regional D irector o f the Bureau . o f Sport Fisheries and WUdlife,

announced today.Higgs was;bom In New York

• State and nloved to the W ejt . in his earljjI.teen ^A fter grad- ■ uating from pigh school at Ukl- ' ah. Calif., he served four yeairs

with tlie Li.s. iNavy Including duty on a n^in^sweeper patrol-

Korea In l9$3 and 1954.In 1956. he enrolled at Hum-

. teld t State College in Areata,• Calif., where he received a B_A.

in Biology in 1960.During jN s cpilege years,

. Higgs perfbrmeC summer work witl^ the :U,S. Fish and Wild-

•, life I Service dUffboth Anchorage ' andiKodiaic^Awska. A fter «rad - •- uating from ffilmboldt. he began

T his federal fish hatchery career at HagermaA National Fish

_ Hatchery M'licre he is nosp re­turning as wanagifr. (

In addition to his

Terry Carodine averaged 26.7 for tn_ frosh and is the obvious -iholce -unless he ia- moved t&forward. Greg HaWklns is a hot shooter, and Terry Adolfsoij is an inspirational leader. Magner has the obvjous asset o f ex- p<;rience and is a fige playmak-

■ ^ n ter Charley 'Barber, for­ward Mikb Bumel and reserve guard- - forward Fred Trenkle Icqve and they will be tough to 'replace. M iller contemplates spending most of his JC recruit­ing tim e looking for a 6-8 or 6-9 horse ca b b ie o f playing We­ber’s W illie Sojourner one on one. "H t Is well-stocked in for­wards with returnees 6-9 Abe Gibbons, 6-6 DeWitt Wilton, 6-5 John Cullum. 8-1 Jim Bonner, 6 -4]^ Bpb Dickson, and 6-4> Jim Jackson. 6-5 frosh Bill Mi- n6r is available.

M iller thinlis Walton is the player o f the future, after his 15-point;-. 11 rebound perform­ance In Saturday*-? win over We­ber. Walton was looking down ■St—Ibe—rim most of tlie~evg^ning and even managed a block of a Sojourner jump shot,

Cullum had a hot first half of the season, and then played back to that le\>el arainst We­ber. Gibbons is awfully thin but is a fine defensive player and Jumper. Bonner started early in Oift ytarTDrcksori has two-yearsexperience,.and JacksonicBB'gett. -very-phys iea l,-:----------------

its walking wounded to get pa.st [ Shortly after Scovill’ s rcsip- the Devils. Crafion, a jun-:nation, , Ken Blue. . his ^ jfiL li^^ ietbalL tD unm m ent Wednes- lor, injured a knee in last q^istank. was named as UQf> s j g y ^jght while the Glenns ^

ry Pilots pulled away In the

Ql6nns=F®^-Miminat©s Shoshone-SHOSrtONE- -T h e-W e ideli ithird - quarter

Trojans fought back a fourth Shoshone’s Indians 65-52. OUartC'F^ rally tn nip incpirfH ~ In Ihn n-r-ip \ip i%f thn jliwlnr Valley 65-61 and remain' unde- varsity tournament, the Valley feated in the fourth district A-3, sophomores came from behind i

uarter to top

-and— eliminated be de feated—twic to lose llia-l--title and the coveted one ,berrth

week's opening rounds and was listed as a doubtful player.' But with only a two-point lead, Craf­ion entered the game in the second half and scored 10. of Oakley's points in the break­out.

head coach.Blue, w h o ' is 48, never even

got useJ tQ_ the head jodch'S chair in the athletic department before he announced lyednes- day he was quitting to take a job as a ■ rfefcnsive coaching

The first half' whiQh w’ou n i specialist with the St. Louis up with Oakley on top 34-32, .cardinals.was a scoring duil between „ , im p ic looklno fbr Murtaugh's Greg Bunger and „ coachOakley's Russ Hardy, the ta ll-^ . “ . ‘ . .est man on the floor. S ta n g e r t Athletic Director Dr. Cedric hit 13 of his 15 points in the Demp>i-y said he wiU accept TtTsr 'hai rw n iia Haray crumnu'd ]r>h

T “

through 12. But Hardy added i He emphasized, though, that 11 more in the final two periods, current assistants Chester Cad-

Tbe third quarter snw Oak- das and Doug-..Smith will be ley outscore Murtaugh 26-10 and' con.sidered for the vacancy.hoist the Hornets into an in­surmountable 60-12 edge.— In-tho-tir-st fam e, Rockliindgetting tremp.ni ing from Bljra:|lL ,HusWes a||(«i4ipr in the f i r s t half. Sim nit four buckcts in the fir^k-^uarter as Kockland •ripped into a 16-13 lead, only the eight-point production o f Cliff Barnard keeping Hansen in the contest.

Bnt-fHanaen -slar tcd

"Th is (the Cardinal job) is .something 1 wanted to try for some time and when the

^ early scor- opportufmy arose I feit— new v^'Jhe favored; was the tim e." Blue said.

Blue was Scovill’s defensive nssisiant fo r . three ■years at UOP. BTuei gamed a lot oT respect for the kind of defensive unit he built. His boiiei gave up oply three touchdowns rushing last year and «n

rage of only 84 .V yards perup ini the second period and!game, moved ahead 34-29 at haiftimel "This was a hard decision for and then iccd it with a 21-point; mo to make." Blue said.third quarter while Rockland managed only eight.

"m ostly becau.se of my accep­tance by the community, fac-

Bamard went en to .coHect-f'iliy and most of all thf! play- 26 points, a career high, while ers.’ ’Bird wound up with 1.9.

TO *rdlr)OtkJey tz ft pt jp Mur.Pulton 4 0 2 ^ ( i Sian««TMnnd!« 3‘ 1 *3 S Howard 3 7McLaw* 4 4 5 SchcltrfHardy • 4 0 23 tV<.orc;oAdami 0 1 2 1 Hynr>n Rbpwi 3 0 0 6 D S:ngr -S;mmoni I 1,0 3 I 0 0 J| . i r> • rr^n/M ter XTBaker 1 0 1 3 Fo%*>r 0 0 o A J -B L Q U E R Q U E . N . MR Rbnia 1 0 0 2 Jipurui 0 1 1 J ( I ' p i ) — N<‘ w M c x ic o ’s R onEtbert 0 0 1 0

New Mexico ? I i|Surprises UTEP

Crafioa*

ToUls n U 17 S3 Totals ' 23 13 ISMOald^y .......................... IT 3« 6nMurUurt ..................... n n . 41 54

RlflMSFree itntPearsooTaylorMoor*BmrtJCrockettV*w»er

Irokh 7«. RockJaqd S»

fg fl pf tp Hock. '4 4 J i: Bird X 4 ■* '% Munk5 f 3 Ralph*I A S 3 Morrif

!1 4 3 : « May 0 0 1 0 McLean • 3 1 2 Barker

, Nel»on w - .

t t ft pfft I 5 19 0 : 1 I 0 0 3 0

Docker scored 25 points as th€ Lobos salvaRed a bit of respcclability in its '.final Rame o f so.-^son hw »a!in fi

Dowler Quits As Player To Coacli

in the fourth quarti Glehns Ferrji 58-457

the— state— tuoi iiaiiieiH" lir Lewiston next week.

Although Wendell led through- oiit the ^ahne. it touldn't contain

U'm. Isril, pi Ip Valley fe l t pi tpThmn.n H 3 IS Clinf * 1 ' I 11Dr.ihiT-----•»— 1 4 17 Hichm«n S 10 S U .

Wepdell now advances to the, varsity finals while Glenns Fer-| ry and Valley meet Thursday 1 night to see which challenges | for. the title. The Trojans musti

Utah StateDefeatsBYU 86-73

G REEN BAY. Wis. (U P I) —■Veteran— Sreen— B»j(— Packer receiver Boyd Dowler unexpec­tedly announced Wednesday he was retiring as a , player to accept an assistant coaching job with-the Lo5 Angeles Rams.

Dowler. who has spent 11 seasons with Green Bay after ,

in 1959, is here Wedne.sday lo win its .iOth the Packers' second all-time 1 8 ^ * **9 season, leading receiver behind th e V T * ’ ® Aggic.s, now ^0-6. face

PROVO. Utah (U P I)—tjtah itate warmed up for the NCAA

Valley junior . Larry Ricjiman, who pumped VthitJugh 2 8 'points and almost brought Valley the upset victory. Wendell hit well in the first half, running up a 23-15 quarter edge and tak­ing a 40-34 at intermission.

But the Trojans cooled-down in the third periodsom ewhat as Valley came back to within four,—the—dn'vina-'-o f Riehman

KinsRo*lSi»»onAndr*nJUlanYbrfio

S S 3 :S KroNn3 2 3 S Jchn>on0 5 2 5 Rjichie

• .«!.0 [ 0 BIxhm-- i_ft H Kijimett

0 0 10

4 I S »? 3 5 S1 1 S. 3 I • 0 Z

-UI„L3_

taking its toll on the Wendell defetvse. The Vikings cut the. margin to one point in the first half u f >he-founh pe riod—1««-

ToKli IS is IB IS TMaU S IT » UW**nilcll ........................ 23 40 53 «5V .llcy .................... .i 31 iU t , .^

CletuM Fero ' tS. Shbahob* U liokcr out)

rc n pf tp siKMhoiw f i n pT ti»7 2 ; ;h John^oa S 2 3 18 2 0 2 4TTtnklf<- 3 1 2 7

S ro 3 :o llarrift 2 2 1 6 2. 2 4 «Hatiloclc 2 0 3 4

P Shrum S I 3 M So'nuj>a S 3 S 13 P Shrum 4 0 0 8 Urochoa 1 0 1 2

---------------^ ^ ---------llt iiiLT - '----1' 0 O' T ’

Totals 2S IS T iu Touts 22 I IS S2Shoihofie ......................Clenn* Ferry .............. 1# 25 49 65

G. F.CrpntrFarriiLitlleBroHn

famed Don Hiltsom — ‘'I— feel— my— ftrttjre— is— in coaching." Dowler said in making . the announcement. "Once the opportunity to join the Ram organization presented Itself, ^.felt J had to seife It."

Green Bay coaCh iWd IJCntjal manager Phil Bengtson said the decision "cam e as a surprise."

“ However, he has a fine opportunity ih coaching and we hope he will be successful," Bengtson said7‘ "Boyd had a great career as a player and a

then saw its hopes vanish when three regulars^ including Rich- man. left the game oh fouls.

Wendell quickly righted itself

uim YounB Univer^.ry 86-'* hiiline 10 .Shoshone gave Glenns Ferry

a battle through the first half bui in the third period Glenns Ferry warmed up on its outside

point advantage to 12.Both teams shot well In the

first 16 minutes, with Shoshone having the better of it 29-25 at

'missi.

estern Athletic Conference winner Texas-ElSaturday night, with the winner! advancing to the Far West, reglonals in Seattle March 12. |

The Cougars gave up the lead ■ for good with 4:45 remaining in the— first— haW;— when— ¥fm interrtiissinn But Torn L ittle hitTollestrup and Paul Jeppesen, the only .seniors-in the Aggie lineup, paced Otah State to the forefront o f the traditional battle.

A disappointed crowd of 11,020 saw the Cougars cut the

thred quick buckets for Glenns FCrry to open, the third quarter andithat seemed to pick up the entire team. While Shoshone

Basketball Scoresllitb School

DItlrict $ix A-4 H«n«ef» 76. ftorklatid 59 (lospr out) Oaklry S3. Murtaugh M (wtimer to

state)niairlei Four AS

G^ennt Ferry 6S, Shoshon* 53 (loserout)

WentJri; «5. Valley 61Dlklrict Four A>4

Rimrnck NamH^—-Chmiiao 44 Noius 60, Grrcniraf 53

Collrse NJCAA.. Region It

Blue Mountain 77, Mount lloo^ 78 llQutton 62, Creighton 5S ■ Lnuiwille S3, 'Memphi* Statt Q Utah Slate M. BYU 73 Ariiona 90, Aritona Stale S9 \ Weber 79. Seattle 72 JackkonvtUe. 101, Miami, Fla t7

_M la m I,U . bt. AAVier. O. ><-----

entirestnJggled through an elghvpdint third period, Glenns FeriV en­joyed a 24-point 6lnge and that

team man in Green Bay. and I lead to within six points several wish him the best o f luck in the ‘ ‘mes, only to have the Aggies

iced It.

future in lo)s Angeles."Dowler. a 6-foot-5, 225-

pounder drafted from Colorado, caught 449 passes in IJ seasons.

build up the lead to 10 points, which.the\i maintained through­out the secorvd half."

Both teams had five playersgood for 6.894 yards and 39 in double figures, with Marv touchdowns. He scored 2341 Roberts o f the Aggies and points during his career, and! BYU 's Doug Howard tying for was within 40 catches of game-high honors with 21 points Hut.son's all-time record. leach.

it{REGULAR7' D U E T O L A C K O r FO O D *

B U U ( IN Y O O R D IE T ■

WE BUY, SELL and

TRADEGUNS

Iuse Youi

BANK-AMEtlCARD RED’S

T ra d ln e P os t

Wcr^Tcm AtWeito Conference champs Te.xas-Kl Paso 78*70 .

D t*cker’s perfo rm arK re pav iir fl h im o v e r the l.OOO-potrrt 4«a.rk- In h is th ree y e a r c a r e e r a t N e w ,

‘ 5 l .;;M < ‘ x jco . H e b ec am e the fourth i 1 0 4 ’ L o b o p la y e r to reach U jai 10 2 2 • t a n 0 0 10

ur n.Tw*i< V , 12t SIIJ M 5 i_ 7 «

plateau.The win enabled New M cxli^

to ftnish Its 1969-70 campaign with a 13-13 o v t^ U rixord ahd 3^7:7 "WAC slate. 7 ^

. at .Hagennan, H lg ^ itworiced In varying ahpaclUeS' at L i t t l e

_ 'White Salmon-and W illard Na- . tion^l~^ish Hatcheries in the ' SLttti'Of Wasliiiigtuii. and Ennis■ and Bdseman Hatcheries in

Montana. While assistant hatch- ■ « r y manager at Eluiis, he ■wasl

■ presented' tt Superior Perfornr- > ance Award fo r effecting a siib-

stantial s a v in g to tlie govem -mCTt' ■

•; profiL em pEyln ff, Vextremriy It’ '- methods re la t iw to

^ Hjggs «riu be resUin* at i!ag- •rmao-wlth-bii-wife. Maiser-and-

' their toar sons. Danny,' Don- j aid, JiuMestrtad'David.

j Lakei^ And West JjPefeat Bjillefs

; BALnM ORE (tIP I)-r Jerry « West saved ISJoT his eante high

of 32 ^Inta for Uie final period »• to. .static the_Ltge2r™ig®le* J Inkers to W-91 l^ttonal 1 Basketbifl * —

over the :— WuiuMdiiip Might.

Th* £ a (w 7 jM := 9 M » a te r three q o w t e i # ' O * BuBett(ilR ed b O M 'a o K 'X Im im totie it A

itioB victocy Bullet*

MACHINERY MISCELLANEOUS

- STRAW -tX)RNHAYW a will sell th e fo llow in g loca ted 3 VS m iles w e s t

end ^ milo^ north o f W endell.

Satu rday M arch 7'S a le Time: 11:30 a.m. Lunch b y W e n d e l l G r a n g e

M A C H IN E R Y 1 9 5 2 Ford 8 N tra c to r , good rubber,

ROod condition .F O R D 9 N T R A C T O R — G ood shape. IH C S uper C T ra c to r , good rubber.

good condition .IH C m bdol 4 0 0 tractor, com petely

overhau led , p o w e r steerin g . qulct< ta tch , new w id e fron t end, real top and c lean unit.

IH C m odel 4 6 S tr in g T ie P T O Baler, w ith n ew k notters last sum m er, good .

rn planter-w ith 3-point hitch, p lanted only 4 0 acres.

F e ed d itch c lea n er w ith3 -pt. hitch. F resn o with 3 poin t hitch.M a ssey F ergu son 7 -ft . m ow er, 3 pt;

h itch, n ew type.F ergu son 18-ln. one-bottom , 2-way

au tom atic turn p low with 3 poirjt h itch. '

T o o l bar with 3 po in t hitch and 3 , ; co ll shank corru ga tors .

- P i— r b o ro s p r ln a s|>ank re n o va to r,sri cu ltiva to r w ith 3 pbiiif”

hitch.

litch. good .2 w h ee l trader.Z .M ^ T o n Steel h a rrow w ith draw bar.

M A C H IN E R Y2 section w ood h arrow with draw bar. 6-ft. tan dem d isc w ith 3 point hitch. S e lf bean cu tter.A^oline 12-hole gra in drill, on steel.2 w heel hay trailer.H ay p iler and m otor.IH C b eo t and bean cu ltivator w ith

corn and spud cu ltivator shanks. IH C on e bottom 2 -w ay hangon p low .2 section w ood harrow .

M IS C E LL A N E O U SFord Inck umhrBlla. lift hnony-cu t----t iva to r too ls . 2 s te e l head ga tes , posts and w ire. 8 ra ilroad ties, stock tank, g rin der and m otor. C ra ftsm an ro ta ry lawnm cjwec. g o o d jjn e : bulk o il square tnnk ana purriRij; s e t o f g a u g e w h eels , ru bber type; B read y . ga rden trac to r Xvifh i^b fo r. a ir com - p r o ^ o r . e lec tr ic fen ce r . Ford mark-

e rs i h dg lo a d in g chu te. 4-In. grain au ge r w ith m otor, som e 2x4 -2x6 ‘- l x l 2 " lum ber, forks , sW&’Jels' a n a '

• o th e r m isce llan eou s articles.S T R A W -L-C O R N

-o lfa lfB .- A p p ro x im a te ly 1 50 b a les straw . A p p rox irn a te ly 1 50 bu! e a r c o m .

■The ^ llo w ln g item* belong to the E.- E. ANDREWS ECTATE-

DavId'Bradley phosphate spreadiir<

F a ro n ru b b e r . .

2>bottom on»^vw■y plow, -F e u u s o n - ;-'14 -in ch .

'Q u a r te r turn p low . 16-lnch_R e a r end bean cu tter, fo r Ford o r

Fergu son .- In ternationa l 14-h o le sra in drill, on

steel wFTe<Bls.'~*t<iet~boy single discr__2 F ^ r s u s o n 6 - f t . d is c , 3 pfaint a tta c h.■— trail ‘ type,'new t>earingS.

T w o w h ir le d tra ile r .Two-wheeled wagon with some misc.

items -ort it. . \^1953 C M C pickup % -to n heavy duty

tires, motor needs repair.

■ T E R M S : C A S H

™ ^X 7R ALPiriVtO R G j^^. -SA LE M ANAGED BY -M teSER SM ITH A U C T IO N SERVICE

A U C T IO N E E R S :W awdall-

l i^ l^ E i le ~ -K it f lb e r iy

J i m M e s s e rs m ith7---- - ^ e m e-------

CLERK:, J . W;, Mesaersmlth o T 'e w n State Realty,.Twift Falls

Ever fry To describe Ihe tastq , of a w^hiskey to a friend? There aren't loo-many-words-youxan tise.‘'Smooth''..."mellow"...lhat's about i t .

W hen you're describing the tjisl^ of Seagram's 7 Crow n we thjnk there’s one more word you'll want to add. Th a t rare intangible.. ."quality"

You can't touch it. But you sure can taste it! '

■ Say Seagram^s and Be Sure. — -------

ta s te s ■~i

• J _ l

g e > y «m n iil i l lt r ir o p y a y t^ V d C , tVMiln^«.W

........'

Page 13: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

; ThursHdy. 'March 5..1970 ■ Ttmos-hiews. Tw in FoJI*. I ^ K ou n K k ' .ii

F l o o d I s D e n i e d

B v R i e k s 8 3 -7 <>The beleaguered College of

Southern Idaho Golden' ^ g le s , meeting challenge after.chal-

____lepge4 _n lpE^ the determinedRicks CbUege^iK ihgs on free throws 83-79 Wednesday night to claim the Region 18 junior coi-

=lstir--------importontcdly, theii fii.st tilp lu

the national tournament in . Hutchinson, Kan. Blue Mountain

' nipped Mount Hood 77-36,for the___consolation prize. ___

Tfie~“Eagles, ra lflc^ filiitK In the nation. Will be making their second appearance In a national

. tournament, having a pre­cedent by becoming the first junior college team to partic­ipate In the national AAU tour­nament four years ago. Since then, tlie Eagles havei gone into

' the.regional finals,three times

but until Wednesday nlghl had been denied what Dr. Jamer-L. Taylor, college president, had set fo r a goal when he an­nounced esiablishment o f Jhe basketball program.

It was a bitter defeat for"R rc ia r~ w W gin ia g~ i.- _______hara. pressed tnroughout the

Would In ■ e ffect have_b«eiL fre!e agent. He would have- been like a human being In Ap iericavVlio -has a iridf paid for it.Y

Baseball -^mmissioncr Bowie KuhM>said he-plans to look over the Judge's bulky ruling thor-

sidii. ir

ed ■ Flood in I ” courts

m t :.ib|iined]ail^

night. Although CSI never trail­ed and thrice ported nine-point leads, it boiled down to a layup by-TLn U asseU -W lth l :H _ r emainihg in the game plus a pair

by Rowith 30 seconds left. ■of free throws Dv Ron Behagen

The Eagles could point to two pivotal plays. The first was a swisher from the deep corner by Morris Moe that had, left his hand when the Halftime horn sounded. :> •

But in focusing on ths'garae,

the big play had to contie with sophomores, against freshmen about twQ minutes left and CSI but in the end CSrs frosh won trying to protect a 79r78 lead. It. ^

Over the first six minuteso.icks’ Gary Norman stole the ball and was driving 6n pS l’a Steve Hegens. He tried a move that could have put him in for

and he sprawled to the floor. Hegens scooped up the ball anfl threw it full court to Bassett who went in for the cripple.~It was the shooting of Hegens

and Behagen that carried CSI through this one as Ricks did better than break even on the

point -ic , _ point margin for three hiinutes before Wallace brought Ricks back to within one at 28-27 and it stayed close until the final 95 seconds o f the half.i Then Behagen hit four s'i points and Moe hit his last-second jumper to fashion the halftime cftunt

bacldjoards, particularly behind ^*'34 — »he biggest to that the all-round play of Steve W al-p ‘"i®- lace. The Vikings a lp harried defensively arid shot well /rom the qutside.

I t was «- matter of veteran

diirlns rough' afllon under the basket during the tfilrd period at Boston Gardens Wednesday night. He bounced back to «co r» Jl points and Jed the Celtics to. a 115-118 vlctoiy oyer CM San Franctxear'Warriors. (U P I telephoto); ■ _____ T.

X)xy^enX!ontent Rebuilding TnlWormoii Reservoir: EaLtent Of K ill TsJJnknowiiL

Ox>'gen conditions are ifriprov- Ing on Mormon Reservoir and

~Vne w im ertkill o f fish appears over, according to a survey made Wednesday by Bob Bell, regional fish hiologist for theId.iho Fish and G»YK|e Depart- jnent.

Bell and .Conservation Officer

Seaver Looks Sharp 111Tirst Stiiil

Bv FRED DOWN U P ! Sports Wriler

make

Don Saxman, Faijfield, revisit­ed the reservoir Wednesday andfound that the oxyge»i Content is improving but there is no way of finding .the extent o f the kill un^-the reservoir opens up and ^ 1 net censusing” n be con­ducted. Bell estimated the num her o f dead perch and suckers found in the spring area at 140,- 000. Tho men saw no live fish.

Bell said the ice-free area Is considerably larger than a week ago but the bullf of the reser­voir is still hidden l»neath 30 inches o f ice and snow.

The five oxygetTreadings were taken at sam

.'The

was not a m ajor factor In man' agement plans since the depart­ment has planned for a chem­ical eradication of trash fish for the past few years. The de- fiartm^nt has ^ e n waiting for minimum irrigation drawdown for economical reasons.

Bell said the rescrVOTf would rec'eive h e a v y plantings for tatchable-sized and finger- ling trout as soon'as jnow^aiid

Two inninps ■ don't __________successful sjrason but they did f),e past few days.

w6e1r^o.'The^ readings ranged from l.^ part per millkm to .5p.Trt rhrough the ice. The high­est reading of 4.5 found in the open water at the -springs. This build up would be attribut­able to wind-wav^ interchange

estat^M.sb W e d n e s d .B L ^ ,the world champion New YorkMets wanted to know about ^ Pgame winner Tom Seaver. another at the same site

1. Sea<’cr seems to have lo5l,o„|^. f(,pt deep was .5 parts nnne of his competitive sharp- niitlion.

Spackman said SO.OOO were placed in Salmon Fjlls Reser­voir Tuesday and T.I.OOO went into Oakley reservoir. Tho fish, hatched and raised at the Ha- german state hatchery, ran from two to three inches- in

4 length.

r-bo&qucl- o a - - th£t -—w inUx- c ir fu it .

2. He I.s ver>' clo<;e to being In shape for the new season’s opener.

The National League’s Cy.®® '"' Young Award winner in 1969, | The

"Seavei---- pitched---- tvn— hitloi

T3H r~reW are3^0ra f TSiTTnir

Kajirts City Royals’ Intra-squad

Russians

Skate AwardNew York Yankees

-two— hitlocs' arrived Bt- fu ll-m strr s tffn gth. ■innings Wednesday when the when they signed infielders

• Ypgi. BerraK— beat the Joe Jerry Kenney and Ron Hansen- T^ignata^os. 3-2. in an extra-' ...First baselinan Boog POweUj-’ squad game. Seaver gave up and 20-game winner TJave one walk, erased in a double | McNally remained the Balti- play. and left the mound, more Ork]lcs'_ holdouUi...Rookie btibbling-wjth~enthasia5m, “ jiJitchpr Dick"Sucl> and“ VWen(ir

T felt good and was getting ca tch er-^ o hjn.—R oseboM will the ball where I wanted to.” hc:'?rm the stlrting batt*iy for

i^ vc ira l «nd the Washington Senatpts inmental shape txjcause ed only l iv e .. banquets during the winter. Everjth itig looks

, -good for another good yea r."” ■ On other fronts: Hank Aaron — h irtw o 'run-prodnuing siitgles as

----- A t lyn a '."jBrgTg3* rprtHTTbeat_ the jesertrers^ 3-0__SteveGarvey drove in tws' njns-with three h iu and _ Bob Valentine went 5-for-< as the Roy Hartflelds downed- the—D a n n y ly o t- Orarks, 9-1. in the I «_ A n * e Ie s Dodgers' intrasqiiad ' • game- ...Tom -Htaller'*-^si*nlng_lor. an

e«F SSg.OOO ' left JeffTortK ii^ n ljt tmsigned Dcidger.

' Don Lode hit two homers aifil- G e o ^ T h ^ a s and Russ ~<3jbson bnt! ead i in the Boston- Rfed-Sox'intra-squad game.;.: Kirl^piltrjck and ueni d rove 'in

and IDenniS' Paeo

Manager Leo Durocher o f the Chicago Cubs said that he will not alter the top.four sppta^in- his ’ batting order regardlesT-of newom ers. Nos., 1-4 willC<m-K |pj.K'ige i . "Olenn 'Beykef f,

u anI, -ft—wUh.'the ■ Montreal

- K r a _ Billy4.-3Pli*in|

iti'Bftsch,IS and Ron Santo-

5E?S hifteTTnl#a, Signed-’ _____Expos'..Holdout ^ m m y Helms

Wednesday' aftei- faiHne,'-to r^ach a salary axreemenTMth Sheldon Bender, the CincinnaU Reds' d irector Tot nel.

M ike ,’aurmon

sr,‘ tSSCardinals’ ■ Intni-squaft Kitme —Dennis; SaoMleis. « | 21

----- - IB ■rig' -------

weather conditions will allow.ir In other fish news, Rex Spact^;;

man, superintendent of the Twin Fall.i hatchery, reports planting ovet_ three hurvlred thousand Coho fingerlings in Souchside

U U B LJAN A, Yugoslavia (U P I)—Irina Rodnina and Alex- ei Ulanov o f Russia successful!v

R e s e r v e C l a u s e

■''beyond th is ; 1 cannAt make any commcnt. at this t in » . ” Kuhn said.

Cooper listened to arguments from both sides on Feb. 3 -but

the courtj' ,»ald|] thabasebalF reserve clause v i o U ^ the 13th amiendment |the-

fedetal anti-trust laws;, , court’s decision today held only tbat an injvinction is - |!iiot appropriate a t 'th is juncture! U! the litigation/'^ Gojdberg «

ffitre wasn’ t, more than a three- point difference- until HeBCiis and A1 Qavis opened 'up a five-

St lit'ia tftu't '" flVffNEW yO K K (UP-Q—A feder-

deniedai - -judge— Wediitsday outfielder Curt Flood his request he be allowed to neeqtiate with any team he chods.es on. a playing contract ftyr ihe 1970 season.

iU.S.i' District Judge i.j^rvlng Ben Cooper said i f ' he prohibited baseball from impos­ing its rese;rVe clause by allowing - an injunction again.st

Larry Reitz opened the second '<s usa,, as Flood requested, it half with' a CSI cripplc but two "would work the type of unfair

was denied. 'Tliui Will

minutss later Ricks was back to within f o u r . Ricks’ first chance for ifie lead came on

lege of South placed three, all-tournan\Snted by sportsw-,-^-.------------and coaches at the two-daiyP; teurnament. '

Freshmen Steve Hegens and Tim Bas.sett, both from Washinigton, D.C., and soph­omore AlbCTt Diavis, Chi-

-caga, .Twrre telprled h y ' thftvoters. Joining-' them were 6-5 Gary Norman of Ricks, Spanish Fork, Utah, and M el Farris. Mount Hood,' ) Portland. Ore.______________

MUte

surprise and carry the same sort o f sudden effect” that the U.S. Supreme Cojiirt took great. tri pl-i»vpnf Jn. Jt.g. -gnrl>l>rdecisions.

ut-the.-oil Flood’s attempt to

at tH^.deil T h a ^ s 5 h X T ^ - '

^ played- (oi-” ithe sfja-siins, to the

ilijdeljhja Phillies. ~ fp op er Said.r ■' Flood . should , choose another Yiiethod to attack the rpserve (laufie, which binds a player to one club or to any club to whom he is traded or sold by that club.

"W e believe that ^uc-h— a -determination ■ (prelim inary In- junction) on a matter of vital lirpporiance to organized base­ball atjd with such potential floodgates to litigation must at iiMst he the resiiU-nf-.a.full triaj.

said. " I don’t consider it the ^lightest setback to the overall: cas^. This was a request for a

lejiminary. injunction before ...a tria l. I t ’w a i ohe of the few poi^bilitl$^fo..>n!ak<) .It.^pdsfnble f6r'Cu?t ® ip lai^S»flW ihV-^.se was underWay-i ari'i'sjiU ' quite confident of theoverall case.' t v ;

‘ *As I see the original injunction, it would ' have allowed him to negotiate with the clubs," M iller added. "H e

AUTO tNSllRANCE" If you have a va lid d riv e r's license w e can Ih su re you”

ri!pCRiSrAI|,IUTOMOpi|.E ASSOCIATIOr

4-w hee drive^ s ^ g - G l a ^ ^

n e w : ook.and not on the basis of a motion for a preliminary relief,” Cooper said in his 55- page decision.

M a r v i n Miller, executive director of the Major League Baseball Players’ Association/ said in Miami, ‘ ‘We are still

five straight Wallace points that cut__the deficit to 53-52 buj D p v i s , Behagen and Hegens reeled o ff "CSI bucket.? to put that challenge down.

V/ith I'b minutes left In the ____ .................. ..gamii, Hegens stole the ball and'quiie confident in terms of the •went for a cupple to give CSPoverall case." another nine-point bulge but that evaporated as in the nexf

(our.

The 32-ya^r-old Flood, whose salary amounts to S90.DOO a

It stayed tight as Ricks came to with'fn one three times,' the last time a 79-78. Then came Bassett’s cripplo and CSI went

without his consent made him a "s lave."

While his case Is pending In the courts. Flood sought injunctive relief that would htfvo allowed him to becomeInto a deep delay to claim its,,

third win of the year over the,[''‘ “ agent, ihat step would iVikings. ■«. have allowed hini. to play for

- ........... sofno' team besides Philadel­phia, but it was rejected by

The first game pitted-the one- two teams from Oregon with

staying ahead. Mount Hood, headed by, Oregon’s M VP Mel Farris, took the lead at the out­set and led throughout thtf first half. But Blue Mwintnln rniight

jiict Cooper.

■up two-minutes intty~the“ second half and after 14 mioutes of bickering finally put it away w h e n hulking Dave Sandies pumped through six straight points. That shoved Blue Moun­tain ahead by five with 13 sec- ontfs left and Mount Hood got the final four polnls to makiiTl close.’ '

Miller, who has given Flood the support of the Players’ As.sociation, was not surprised that the preliminary injunctton

GSI

CSI O , Rlckf T»jCharnpionship)

fs n pf Ip Ricki /g n pf tp__t t ,.1 J( l.aSriim 4 » J ft

7Wn:late )n 12'I • 0 S « Norn

“ ~ 2 V Bfhf

Boise State WillSans Coach

‘Mo#la3 3 I « I1 0 0 J Vrrn n 0 I 0 1 hrt"”’

.ntompsonje u 11 u Touif

CSI ........................ 4 2 -U

Blu* M m . 77, Mr. Hond 7<Blue Mttt. f t n pf (p Mt. Hood n pf tpi'rmrnv !fl : 3 :i 3 : 4 6T immrl 4 4 I -.2 F i r n « X 5Shiloh S 3 4 « Mut'V 4 2 3 10f tir»fn«rj 2 1 4 Simr>ctnn * 1 3 ITS indlri 1 ; 1 4 3.* S. hmidt S 2 3 13StoOdJirc) 3 1 S 7 Mnnnir* 1 1 0 3Brown 9 0 : 0 ?>luUCf 1. 1 3 7

BOISE (U P I) — Boise State College Athletic Director Lyle

A Smith reported Thursday the mn ■ 1 I) » a, Bronco basketball team will en-

5 <111 ter Thursday night's NCAA'col- „ ‘ Jilege division playoffs without 4 4 j 13 the services of iiead coach Mur­

ray Satterfield.Saltarria lri hneiihaan hi

ized with a blood-clotting ail­ment. Smith said. He- said Sat

This new wagon combines fra^TSn and elegant'styling. New grille. Sleek .lines. Plush now TnTelTtjfsrPtul olHhs cdmfort-optlonr-------7- 'you can name. And safety is built in.Jf's the only family wogon with 4-wheol drive standard equipment. Just flip o lever, you ' hug the highway confidently in any weather. O r jeove the- highwoy, and heod. for off-road fun through tnud, snow, sand, the underbrush. The ail new ‘Jepp’ ’Wsgoneer.

T « « l t I J t i i 17 77 f o u l iFl’gc Mntiniain .................Mbont Hood ...................

defended their world pairs figure skating phampionship .Wednesday night.-

Ludmila , Sm;vw>va and An- d ivi SuraykiiT, also <>r Russia, ^ r f r s ^ n d and East Gertna- ny's—H«sldemarie“ Steiner^ Ibid Hans UliriH Walther finished ‘I'ir'I. j \ ,

the first m inute-of their five-! minute, free skating program ■when • he was perif double saOcow.'

performing'

Melissa and Mark Militano o f; ',Kcie___Ynrfc.r-fjnithrrt ' eighiKi _ ------ — 1ainong the 17 entries for _ best— performanceLl__by__thei Militanps in their career. , |

Th* American coupte also-j won warm ai^lause from the -andiettc*- because’Melisttr luur Id skate with part of her face< covered with’ a bandage after she /ell In the warmup practice

r,pr<

i —

Page 14: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

- O -

e -News« T’Cvin Fdtls, tdaKo Thursqa^, AAiarcK 5,1970

a t B U D ' S D U D S M e n ' s W e a r

DURING THIS SALE WE W ELCOM E

BANKAMERICARDWALKER^NKARD

MASTERCHARGE

YOUR SIZE IS HERE36 37 38 39 40 ^ 2 44 46 48 50.

R EG X X X X X X X X X X JTONG X X X X X X S H O R T X X X X X X X-LQNQ______ X X X ___X >< X X X -

SAIE HOURS8:00

BOTH DAYS

M en's S u its-1 . ,

SOLIDS. PLAIDS HERBIHGBONES^ ALL FINE MAKE. FIRST QUALITYALL FAMOUS MAKERS FABRICS FOR MEN & YOUNG MEN

)^ANY (ME OF A m EXCELLENT SELECTION

VALUEST O

; QUALITY JAILDRING LUXURY COATS ^ D 3 BUnON MODELS

VftlUES

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■“U .

AnnivPirsary Ts ObservedGLENNS r a ^ V — M r. andr^

Mrs. ■ Floyd G.^M cK m , Glenns.. Ferry, celebrated their Wedding Annivers&lrji reqpntly irt Yuma, Ariz. The couple w a s— honored, with a banquet and la­ter with a garden party at the ’ trailer -court wherei . they a.T 'e , spending the wihter.

Attending were the couple’s four children, M,rs| Gladys M . ' Shul] and Mrs. Doris V. Steele,. ' both Van Nuys,* Calif.T ~ M rsr - Sharyn Byers, San Antonto, and Gerald McKee, Xos Angeles, and their families.

Mr. McKee’s sister, Mrs. Ruth Carpentier, Twin Falls, and his three brothers, Hallie J : ' Me- • Kee. Glenns—Eerr-yi—Gton- M. W cKee, K im beily, a iij l^ rn ie

- M cKee, ■—{Hmrona;— Calif.,

the 70 people present. V'isiung from Green City. Mp,, was Mrs. McKee's sister, Mrs. Eunica Y ds.

Other Magic Valley residents attending were Mr. and Mrs. Olen Hatcher, ^w in FaP j; Mrs. E t h e l . Smallwood. Kimberly; Mr. and Mrs. Flay Lawrence, Glenns Ferry, and Mr. and Mrs. Homer Qpbls. Mr. and Mrs. Harold BowW and M r. and Mrs, Ed Wheeler, all Wendell.

The McKees were married in .Misqniirl ifnrt .shortly thprpaftpr came lo Idaho aHld'Kegan farm*t

-ir»e-% v-ther area.—Later ;they moved to Twin Falls and finally <o Glenns Ferry. T h e two older daughter.^ were, grad- ilatcd from Twin Falls H i g h School and the two younger children f r o m Qlennli Ferry High Schpol,

* *

V.....

Flower ClubCASTLEFORD — Members <K

Castleford—Flpwer-jCdmpanions -the-home, of M rs., Joe

WHe^a'ver for theo, February meeting.,, - ,; ~

Ground covers and their cul- |*< iture-and plants to beautify prob­

lem areas arolihd the home w ^ - th,e subjects of the pro­gram presented hjiJklrs.JJ^\{er Kinyon.

Mrs. kinyon selected ways to landscape troublesome spots in both shade and extreme heat. The use o f bark pieces a n d white roclf was .described _a.s well as Hip iiffi n{ plant matoi-ial

M R. A.N'D MRS. FLO YD G. M cKEE

lS^f&T-QoQley Is '

Queen O f Club.

d rpynd Covers P fs e u s s e d fe y .

as ground cover. The Red Glory hedge rose was another land­scape—aid—she~iTOntionied:--------

Mrs. W ., E. .McCoy presided daring the business m atin g ;

Gifts o f bulbs, seed packejs and other plant material were giyen to the memjlers by the program chairman at the close of the meeting.

The next meeting is at the home ' of^lMrS. Fred Ringert Tuesdcy with Mrs. Joe Wasko as progrstm. chairman. "F lbwer Etittuetjei^-nfill -be the., subject o f iier program. •

* * *

-Thufsdoy, 5, VS>70 Jwlrt Falls,, Idaho A rl

'"Tft— a"- largif—swnet:— JtBhtty dibrown one pound of ground beef and one medium onion? ohoj^ I ^ . Add'.one teaspoon g a r l ic salt and four tablespoon? soy sauce. Stir in one can 'of tnush- i-opnl' soup plus three -cups '-of water.-Simn^r and add one No.

can o f Chines6- vegetables, one small can o f sliced Chinese water chestnut.s and one large No. 2V4 can of crisp Chinese

MR. AND MRS. RIClHAkD U BARBER

Events Miss Graven,The M ilitary Waiting Wives _ , •

w ill meet at 8_p,m .-Friday at:Kay’s supper Club; Further in- , D U I U t J I IX tS i- l - formation concerning the event ; i . t . I \ / \p n be obtained by^calling Bar- |\JUptlOl V O W Sbara Hanna man, '733-8676,

S t - *

Area Newlyweds A re HonoredSH O S H O N E — O pen ho use f o r ’ honor, and John D a v is . K d l y

h e w iy w e d s r M r . arvd M rs . S teven^lSurR ie and L o rn a I 'h o rn e , s is te r w in nt nJon Thome. «;as Iwsted re^cm lylof the bridegroom; maid of hon- Grange hall at 8:30 p.m. Sat® C^^T^Wn'^i-a'llT “ Carillon

Mickey Ixiuise Craven a n d

Birthday Fet'e Scheduled By

Goodwill ClubPlans for the 3Sth annual

-G00D«>«3----- Mekxiy-Squart's Richard L. Barber rr-pcatcd I ni3gy~dTHlieT~TtTr~the GoodWlttV lll n f tVi« _____ •_____________ • _ . .i__ /-»___i i i __ ___ . . . .

by his parents, Mr. and .Mrs. or.Burton R. Thorne, at their homel Main decorating highlight at here..

los'^Wns“ c‘ " r o ^ 7 d ‘'Q u e e i ' ln d W ed d in g ™ w s fo r the you n g C h ris lm .is t r e e tr im m e d in m cd-ie> v.aj» c r o N ^ e a queen a n a p re- l^ e re so lem n ized m 'a inm b lue v e lv e t b ow s and b a lksented a robe and ero;.^ at a double ring ceremony a r the “ Sroomsrten ^ combmation New Year’s an d ,Los Church T e m p l - e . Idaho the b r^ lo r^ n T Allen -^orne TOpS'cTub a r . 'h V i o u n 't . ^ t t >9 b -Presiden t John Pocatello, -and' Ctair Thorne!

.urda\> Myron Blis.s will call. Persims attending are asked-to

Ihff rercpt nn h:lll a flnrkcH i hnnj. nr rli'cs,.rr AM

"Barbara Hartey;Lester Cooley, son of the hon-

oree. pre.wnted her with a vel­vet rose corsage and a crystal

Pnrier. o f the IdahnI ..Fall.s.

I- to th e '.^ ,»°" ‘ « * ^ gift table was1- temple were his parents and ’ ’V.f'

vci locc « v .,o>-l: maternal grandmother. Mrs. i .necklacet.-rMrs. Thelma Bailey ■ Elizabeth Thorne; Mr. and ^ Corrme Ab-presented her with a low calorie ' Harrell Thorne. Shoshone; Mr.' c ' „, .•cake which shi; had baked and.and M rs. A llen Thorne. Poca-: Special gue ti at the reception decorated for the occasion..■yiuhner-up for the queen yt'as

Mrs.'G lenna Ruffing: Quarterly queens named include Mrs.

.Richard Jasper, Mrs, Rose Mencl and Mrs. Ervin Rast.Mrs. Linda Oliver waS crowned for the stork division. A ll hon- crees were presented rose cor­sages and little crowns.

Mrs Qlypnii Blrfflnp «ni< MrA Doroth}! Parker assisted Mrs.Harley as co-hostessej. The pro­gram consisted o f table gamesand Mrs. -H a r l^ read several poems.

» * »LUNCHEON HEUJ

F lI.E R — Past Matron's Club neldhome of Mrs. L. W. Hawkins. Mrs. E. A- Beem conducted the bu-siness meeting. The Filer Order of the Eastern Star will host a Fri«mdship Night-Marcli J4 at the Masonic Tempe.

S b : B is h ^ Bow^n! D r.^r^^M rs . H a ro ld JWIam and Mrs.Beverly Fredrickson, and Btsh-

Chad Anderson, all ,Idaho|-°|J;'r,^M r^.

_ ■ . . . - Eroorn's grandmother. Mrs.The br id egr^m s p a r e n t s j E liiiEetti Thorne, Shoshone. ,

hostj^ a wedding breakfast at| Refreshments were served Jothe W estbank Cafe D w in g R o o m ;g ue sts seated at round quartet after the ceremony. I tables, covered w ith floor-length

S jw c ia l gues t s at tJie b re a kfa st w hite c lo ths. CenterT>ieces at thewsre h S r'^ re iits , Mr. and Mrs. Francis Burgle; her paternal grandmother.. Mrs. Ernest Bur-

tablcs W r e m ad» of pine- with blue Oiristmas balls and bows.

Mrs. A r t e l Suitter, Idahogiei— her sister. Kelly Burgier Fatis, cut and sei-pcd-0w~calter

and Mrs. Charles Harriman was hostess o f the reception and « ; - si5fed with pouring.

The two-tiered wedding cake

Idaho Falls, and her aunt. Mrs.Vera Volmer, California.

A reception for the wung cou­ple was held in .a Christmas

no-host luncheon at the setting with blue color highlishts i was displayed on a m irror sur- no-nost mncneon at tne Centre, Idaho I rounded by holly leaves. It was

Falls, that evcnixig. iced in wbitc-and had Wue^ rose-The bridal party received the

guests in the red carpeted fpy er. The bride's gown of white peau de soio and chiffon jn « front, panel inset flowed to a chapel length. .The bodice fea­tu r e full sleev’cs, fastened jjgh t- ly at the wrist with miniature covered buttons. Her bridal veil was net illusion elbow-lenpth.

Her bridal bouquet featured a white carnation nosegay ;ur.: rounded by tinv white rosebuds encircled by holly and miniature leaves. Blue streamers fell from the arrangement.

Attendants to the bride wecE.Mrs. Tony Mason, matron • of

Marian Martin Patterri

-P is p la y

buds for decoration highlights.n>e younft couple honeymoon­

ed in Las Vegas, Nev.Clair ’Thome, brother o f the

bridegroom, was usher for, the open' house in Shoshone, and guMte wera registered by \lrs, Craig S. 'Hadden. J>rdvo. Utah, cousm o f the bridegroom.

Cuests were seated al^jfjuartet tables in the T hortje-fam ily room. 'The fables 'V trre rbVeroj' U-ith blue“Iace^ovci centered with arrangements of Christmas balls and lighted, scentcd'candles.

Gifts were received b y Dean­na Thorne, cousin o f the bride-

square dancers are- welcome.♦ V

JEROME — The Women at Heritage Ho.mes meeting h a s been postponed from Friday to-M.1rrh n ar the rprre,Trinn haM

*■ * *Royal Neighbor Lodge will

mpet 'at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the lOOF Hall.

* * *

Club were made when members met -recently at the home of

i. MrSi— Newton Everett. Mrs.is a daughter of Tyner, president, was In

eharge-<>f■ the bui 'The bride

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Annis. Ru-pert. The bridcKroopi iK the son of Mr. and Mrs, Leonal Barber, Denton^ Mont. Rev. Keith Max­well performed the double ring rites.— Peggy Jarolimolt, t itter of th bride, Byrley, wax matron off honor, with Bonnie Annis, sister of the bride, and Dqon Craven, both (Rupert, ag bridesmaids. Audrey-(Traven-was flowergirl.

The dinner, for members and their husbands, is scheduled tor March 13 at the Tw in ' Falls Moose Hall. The potlQck event will begin at 6:30 p.m.

•Thp f)^g _ wnq ,b.'Mrs. ja ck -Atkilvson ahd the prayer by Mrs. Ferrell Nelson. "A Penny For~Your Thoughts" was discussed as the rplC_caU topic.

h e 1 ^ S a .1 .r^ 'f lT fr t l" l n m ^-i-The 'T jridegronm was attended Mae Meader and.Mrs, C ^ rg e jj^^light ^ t ^thl -Twin ’’p '^ n '^ iby Craig Sparks, Portland, Orer, R , gd^ot<7 conm bm «^b.r^hdayMoose Hall. Live music w ill be presented by Junior_ Steams. A lunch Avill b e s e r v ^ ^ ------r—«r -

groom, and Jody Stimpson. Lor- na Thorne, sister of the bride­groom, and Cindy, Viki and Laurie Stimpson assisted in the servlug a rea, t g r lnda DUle and

best man; Bret Hilling, Rupert, ring bearer, and Darrell Barber and Rur.s« ll Ba>bar i bralhT t ofthe bridegroom, Denton, Mont., as u.shcrs.

The brieve-wore a gown of antique white lace over match­ing satin. The. (ull-length gown featured a rounded neckline, a

UK Biea. l^rliida D llle andUotachable train and lilypoint JuHe & p e handled the kitchen, sleeves. A bow made of the

Cuttmg the cake and p a r in g anUqua lace held her elbow - puneh^were aunts o f the bride- W g th 'veit of. filk illusion. The groom, Mrs. Garth Galloway, ^n de carried a spray of recJ Twin Falls; Mrs. Herbert Thorr carnations and whit6 pompons ne.JJurtaugh. and Mrs. Harrell [centered with a white orchid.Thorne, Shoshone. . , . ,

A reception was held after the ceremon\i at the Carillon. TheJjOdelsiafalff. was r,entered, with ' a .Ihrec'tfered wedding cake topped, with miniature wed­ding bells. The decorated cake carried out the .bride's colors o f red and white.

A Minico High School grad­uate, the bride is currently at- tcnding the College p f Southern Idaho. Mr, Barber Is a graduate o f Denton High School and of Montana Stite Un iyyrjity ’ and

"Has completed military serviced with-Jhe - Aift-JNational Guardi

-After a wedding trip to Salt I.ake Citv, the couple resides in Twin Falls where the bride­groom i->! currently employed with Asgrow.Seed Co,

(noiesjvirs. -Claude Severt was secretary pro tem.

The thought for the day was given by Mrs. Meader and the white elephant g ift went to Mrs. Tyner. Secret pal gifts were re- ceivelt'by Mrs. £harles Mattice, Mrs. Rigdon. Mrs. Meader and Mrs. Ivan Waring.

1C-MiRS^BETTY I A H I^ R O M

je t ty ’s Chinese Casserole (Creation'

noodles. P lace' In a Wrge erole. Cover and -bake a t 350

Serve with toissed salad aiid hot rolls.- I ' - ,- The TimOT-News v^Ill pay S3 '

each week for the-l)est recipe submitted for Magic Valley Fa­vorites. I f you have a 'favoriterecipe, Ju-it-niail-lt to-th®-Reope-------rspa’rtment, Woijten’s Page ^ itor. •’The, recipe becomes the propecty o f the TImes-News and cannot be returned.

WEEK-END.S P iC lA U

DRESStSiRegular to $29.^5

REDUCHED

THE

L Y N W O O D

T T

Marilyn Thome, Salt Lake City, cousin o f the bridegroom,assisted serving. — ----

"The bride’s table was covered with whiter ■with an overskirt of blue lace.

"The young couple will reside at 110 W. 13th St.. Idaho Falls.

* * *~ «H O W E iH H E L D M rs.,Robert Barton was guest

o f honor at a pink and blue. _____ ____ shower held" recently in Jack;.rre rbVer'ed pot, Nev., hosted by Mrs, Del- taffeta a n d ,fb ^ -5Barton, M rs... l.cwLs Wife

• 'liams,' Mrs. Otho Metcalf and 'Jasmine Booth. Game p r i z e s vrent to . Mrs. Douglas Roberts, Mrs. Irene Hays and Mrs.' R. J. Owen.

SAVINGS TIMFM arch 6 through 14 .

6 O nly R eg . $ 2 5 0 .00-$275 .d 0 ____

H q w c f lf e t l .. # 5- -a.-

R e g . ’ $ 1 7 5

~Lif

ni|i( ii i i i i r i » igraceful curve of the onllar— beneath all is s le^ atoideniess. •

~Liven up spring days — cJiooselirwn lrnit.»;___ I —------------- —

Printed Pattern S071: _ Mew.

1 % J0i4. av4. S i « 14V4 (bu«; 37) takes 3 yds. 35-in.

— Seventyfi 'w • cents for—each- pattern — add 25 cents for each I pattern far A ir Mail « k1 Special' Hai!&in^ to Marian .Mar­tin, Tunes-News, 395- Patterri, Dept.,, m 'W ^ I t o St.. New]

addc^ iriih Ziiv ,si2p" ajM styte-number^— ------------ -------------_ -Hlg. jne«t-SpriiiSbSumBtier_P»t- tem Catalog. I l l s t j ^ free pattern coomn, 50 cents. Instant Sewiw BoiA. sew “toda^'weaf; tomorrow, » . InstaitrPJiriiioB Book -^.whketivwear ansireTS.| •ccew oixcfipC TtjpatO t^ ll.

\ ....

” « t f a FANTY sroamos, ^ quanty. pwfact ,

ALL STYLES ARE INCLUDED . tWa “ ''= «« .IN THIS ANNUAL SALE: ;• Leesize Sheer Stockines ^Legsize Sheer Stockings V .

- • Agilon »

K i

L IM IT ^ E D - N U M B E R H A N D T I E D o r

T W lA C H I N E - W E F T e &R E D U C E D

D e lo H s D a n a

' T S S a O M

a e S E D ^ ^

M O N D A Y S

- R e g u fa r $ 1 . 5 5 s t y le s N o w $ 1 . 3 2 p a i r ^

_ _ R e g u J ^ ^ a C T s ^ - - N o w ^ 5 a - . ^ ^ i--•-Whisper Sheer SuRX)rt' ---- Stockings------ -------- -----

P a r lS r

X iy tm e a a m

Page 16: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

A^X TT rn e s -N i!^ T l^ > n ^ > > C Thuridoy; March ?, li 970 ' ’ , f ' ' •-

Miss Andersorir Cqmpbetl Plan . • March Wedding

Lynb Anderson and Mrs. Mai;^. lena Drexler announce the gaeemmt’ of "thetr daughter, Wanda,: to MHcheU R. Cat bbll. Twin FalU.

MBs Anderson ft a 1969 g^d>

: D E AR A B B Y : I am 51 yeairsold but nobody believes It. Ev- ■ersons "says I " could pw s ter

. 30. I ^ e s s I 'm one o f the lucky. OHM because I don’t exerciseo r do anything 'special to keep in shape, and I still haVQ the

■ figure- o f - a ' hI|h...*chool^g<#ltr -Also I.dottH -touclrup my hair and it’s flam ing red without any grey. • .

Last w inter m y husband and — r~w ere~at a r ^ 6rrTiotel7~anff ' a perfect stranger came up and

iuked if h i could take mj* pio- ture. I posed fpt him in my bikini, and his hand -shook so

-bad he could, hardly 'hold the camera. (I 'm not telling you this to brag on myself, I just

.■ .want you to know I am no slouch.)'‘ My problem Is m y husband,

-c:— rHe' likes to get drunk ever>’

armed forces, a fter two years of. fines, ja il, and I am s u r e manyotherexpertences;-Hi maDjf'other experiences he-will remember a' lifetim e, including draft evasion fo r three months.

The very fact that-jipur soil ¥Stumed home once — regard­less of what shape he was in-^ means that hom e'^nd his fam­ily meant, something to him in his confused mind and, heati. H e 'll come back. • '

So . when someone asks you where' your sorl is, just say, "H e ’s in New 'York working."

Take it from a mother in New ■york who said 'her son was "in California—workldfe.” Sign me

. -- . MRS. C.

CO NFID ENTIAL TO “ MRS. I. M. DOOMED” ; And M . Sus­picious.” I f yOur letter Isn't an

night arid he-s not gM d for S„en,pi at creaUve ' writing,»«•»<> me your name and add rfS and I w ill send yoix’ my..^^^nt^I

■What's— youF— prpblpm? ’Yog

have been living without physi­cal love for neaHy a year. Last

, ■ jilEht_ I_pub on mV. heels and -a black chiffon see-thru negligee and Ilf did a little dance for W fa ^ n d he didn't even look up from his newspaper. What can I do! Can you help me? .

SEXY BUT LONELY

• DEAR SEXY: It's your hus­band--who needs the help. I fhe gets his nose wet every e___nlng, he’s elittier an alcoholic o r a likely candidate. And the only “ help” I can suggest for him is ALCOHOLICS ANONY­MOUS. .But HE has to want to help himself.

DEAR AB B Y: We have a problem which I am sure has caused friction in many other families.

When m v mother nas.sed awavrecentljj, there were four pot­ted plants sent by friends, .as well as. a lot of cut flowers.' One o f the sisters - In - law

claimed T H R E E plants. becaHfe they were sent b y friends of HERS. i ______ - _______

There are four o f us children, so that would have- given each' family a pmlly plant to tttkg hohie.

I think that the distxibutlon o f those plants should have been made by our father, and he wanted each o f us to have one.

This may seenx like 'such a petty thing to complain about, but It nas' upset -me so much- 1 just had to get your opinion.

- ONE DAUGHTER

.D E A R . DAUGHTER: A 1 1 plants were Indeed tha property o f your father. And if HE want­ed each o f you chlMren to have

-plant,., that’j .

will feel better (f you get It o ff your cbest. W rite to ABBY, Box 69700, Los Angeles^ Gal. 90069. For a perisonal reply en­close stamped, addressed enve­lope.

W a s b i ' l ^ » § + p F v % - — -

Home Js-Topic O f Program

uate o f Twin Falls High School and is employed i a t the Idaho Pow er Co. ^ _

Mr. Cam pbeiris 'fi 1968 grad­uate o f Twin Falls High Sohool and attended, the College :of Southern Idaho. He is employed at Greenawalt's Furniture and Appliance. - . -

A March wedding In planned. *

RAMSfeN-cr An opening exer- ciasB on George Washington’s home Qt Mt. Verwai' and some o f th* questions asked on tours was given by Mrs. Mable Ar-

thenuiiit at the Frlendahlp-^ lifly meeting at the home o t Mrs. Lewir-Reed.

Mrs. Blake Froehllch sihowed, 4. book.QrkjChaxin_tor. young miyj and-Women which had beeiT written by a relative o f heiLhus band.

A fter discussion ir_______ 1 dPrid.ed to forego the party usually given this time o f year as a potluck with husbands as guests.

Mrs. Arment reported she sent foiH- birthday cards and a wed­ding anniversary card to the Kimberly Mountain View Con­valescent Home.

N e w Yearbooks Distributed By Area Rebekahs

B U RLE Y — New yearbooks were distributed and' - reports heard during the Rutfi R e t^ a h Lodge No. 107 meeting at Bur­ley lOOF Hall.• M rs. Nancy Johnson, n o b l e grand, presided during (he ses­sion and distributed the year­books.

Mrs. Ray King reported Tihemb^rs IravtlSd .tO Kupfi a friendship visit. Mrs. King announced three girls w ill be inicloted Into the Theta R h o Girls tnub Wednesday and all Rebekahs are Invited. , ,

Mrs. Stella Petterson reported 12 members traveled to Eden for the official visit of Mrs. M able Frazi6r,--Pierce, the as­sembly president.

It was announced 'that Sat­urday there will be a district meeting in Eden.

Mrs. Ted Arbogast reported on the painting and cleaning of-thtTlOOP Hail~with"the work being done by Rebekahs and Odd F e llo w . '

Memtrcrs. were reminded b: Mrs. Jim Wolfe of the Marcl 21 rummagei sale to bo. held in the lodge hall.

Miss Lawrence, Ramsey SlateJune W edding

Bernice tawrence, San Jose, Calif., and John Lawrence. Ston- yforri, Cnllf., nnnouncp—thp.. pn

— r- — a h o u ld h a v e b a a n d U l r i b u l c d -

. D O m a t t e r « 4 i> o s « f r i e n d s s e n t t h e m . -

DEAR A B B Y : Please tell that mother o f a hippie son not to give-up. H er stoiV is much likexnine___ - -

My son was also Icicked out o f school a month before gradu­ation. He was married at 18, and was a father before he was

Mrs, Lanny Wooten presented word games, with Mrs. George Nauman Jr., Mrs. Arment, Mrs. Dora Daw, Mrs. BUike Froehlich and Mrs. Dell Wright winning prizes. Mrs. W. G. Allen receiv­ed a special g ift. Contribul were made to the heart fund

Of Dimes.

A r i n | v e r s d r Y

Is ObservedSPRINGDALE—Mr. and Mrs.

Mdx- Barney, S a lt- ta k e . City, was honored on thclr..I3th Wed­ding Anniversary at the hooje

Then he went on his IftUe r ' Mrs Barney's brother-in-lawJaunt.

He' also tried marijuana and drugs, but claimed he wasn't “ hooked" either — he just want­ed to travel, "find himself" and have some mind - expanding experiences^ He had the long hair^ beard, andohs way --oat clothing.

He is now. 21 and with the

and Mrs. "Joeand sister, 'Mr.Beck:

The two-tiered wedding cake was baked and decorated by Mt-s. Paul Couch, using white with pink roses and t o p ;^ with the original ornament they used 13-years ago.

Guest!( were served at tables featuring a red and white mtfilf.

The group voted to serve a luncheon to the bus load of high school students July 10 on the United Nation Youth Pilgrimage annual trip. This annual project is sponsored by the Odd Fellows and Rebekahs o f A raerlcar^—

Refreshments were served bv Mrs. Faye Ullmmow, iwrs. Ida Anderson, Mrs. Lucille Ander­son and Mrs. Emma Thompson.

¥ * ¥

Area Pollyanna Club Convenes :

gagement. of their daughter, JonI Nadine, E.Ramsey, sOn''ePMis^iflJ}<l Mrs. Jack F .’ Ramsey, ^E ileciv

A June 7 wedding'Ts plaQijed. Miss Lawrence was graduated om— Ab<:ahaflt— fcincoln— High

School and Is a .senior at the college Qt Idaho, majoring inEnglish-drama.

Mr. Ramsey, a Junior at the College o f Idaho, was graduated

Estela Guzm an, Christensen Reveal Date..

Tho betrothal of Estela Evan- gellna Guzman is disclosed bjt her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Raiii B. ti^zman,?'gau Xake.vCity.

Miss- G uzm % and En«:: Ed: ward 'Christensen are maklhg plans for a June 12 wedding in the Salt L ik e City LDS Tem-

, P iP -.— M f^Christens'eir Is ther-gm-ot Mr. and Mrs. Lund E. Chris­tensen, HeyDurn.

college o f Idaho, was graduated <-entcr on tne evenmg or tneir from F iler H ig fi'T ^ K oS T T J F :'« 'P d d tn g '.^ cy wmTlTsoTbe hon------------ - — 1. 1— 1 — ored at an open house in Hey-

burn.Ramsey is a sociology major. He will be commissioned a sec­ond lieutenant in the Marine Corns when he Is praduaied

W EN D ELL — At the recent meeting of the Pollyanna Club, members an.swered roll call with "ThoughLs of the Flag or Other Patriotic Thoughts,"

Jaliian .^arton , presi^ dent, appointed Mrs. Bernice’

Gifts Given To Flower

urancn. and M ri. HelCrt Wardell toTheTlecoratlnrcom'mlnee for an All-Clubs luncheon to be held soon.'. Members voted to contribute

*ojLb? Q jrk ’ State fund, and SIO- W 'th e " Orchard Valley Grange. The group also donatM to the March of Dimes and the Heart Fund.

Mrs. Orth announced the Or­chard Valley Grange communi­ty sale is scheduled for March U at the Grange Hall.

Mrs. Delores Johnson and Mrs. Orth presented a demon- stration on low calorie snncks.,.

Mrs. Orth received the hos­tess gift. Mrs. A'sael John and Mrs. Howard -Nlccum. hostess­es. served a dessert salad lunch­eon during the social hour.

Mrs. Kirby Hill will host the March 15 meeting at her home.

Retiring officers o f the Coun­tryside Flower Club were pre­sented appreciation' gifts during a recent-meeting at the home of Mrs. Fred Nelsoir..

Yearbooks were distributed and .^secret pal names drawn. Mrs.'" Ly le Scrmitker gave-o two- phase program, one part show­ing the correct procedure for forcing branches from - flower­ing shrubs'and fruit trees. The secopd part featured a display o f cerdinic.i; fim ii puuring tiie mould to the finished product.

Mrs. John Pastoor and Mrs. Max Crother? r -^ e iv ^ jh 'e club, prizes.- Gifts were ^iresiented to M rs. Schnitker. Mrs. Pastoor and Mrs. Victor Nelson—fm- perfect attendance records for the past year.

^ 0 pieces famous brand lingerie

The bridal pair will be feted at a reception at the Reception Center on the evening of their

The bride-elect, who has been making her home in San .Fran- cisco. is a graduate ot iNormal No. 1 De Profesoras D ^ . Nic­olas Avellaneda in Rosario, A r­gentina, and is presently em­ployed at'U n ited A ir Lines.

Mr. Christensen has attendedm a il State University, and Cur- rently Is a student at the Acad- em v Of Stcnoeranhlc Art.s In San-Franc|sco.-J*Mia»-fuifillfed-Lan-

Northern Indian Mission. The couple -i.Will reside in

Washlrtgto'ii, D.tS,i:jvhero 'th e brideg’roortrwiH-be-employedHn- the'Court of General Sessions. .

:EchpJGera MeVer Plan Juhe W eddlr^^

SHOisHONE — Mr. and Mrs. -JM6n^4,G «rard, North Shdshoiie, announce the engagement ot their daujjiter. Echo, to- Allen Me jBr. son 6< Mr. and Mrs. Iterpld Meyer, Shoshone.

Miss Gerard Is a senior at Gooding High. School.

— Tarr~Meye r B a g radnaterof Shoshone High School and will be graduated from the Western, -Technical.'School, Denver, Colo, in' May.- A June wedding Is planned.

kdren Grdybeal B^corries. Bride O f Garrison

CASTLEFORD—Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Graybeal announce the marriage o f their daughter, Kar­en,- to 'B lli GwflW>n,- son of- 1 ‘ and Mrs. Bob Garrison, all . Castleford, at their home, Satb^ day evening, Feb. 1,— : I-' -i

Rev. (Kendal North, minister o f the C astle^ rd , First Baptist Church, periormeid the doublering ceremony, a Ittrge arrange- ment o f yellow mums and or­ange carnations decorated thearea. _____

The bride wore a street length gown of willow green lace over satin fashioned— with — l o n g sleeves. Her corsage was of yel­low rosebuds, centered with white roses, and trimmed with yellow ribbon and accented with rhinestones.

Vickie Inchausti was maid of honor. Tom Garrison, brother of the groom, was the best man.

■Thfl recepHon was held follow-

JEAN PATO]L)’S sprlng-sUmmer collection In Paris Inchides this charming white orgpnia two-piece wedding gown called J'Oul” ao4 presented' by a'model called “ Puce.” (U P I cabl*- phons)--------------—— -— ------------------------------ :_______________

Letter Concerning'Prisoners, Read By Buhl Jay-C-Ettes

ing the ceremony at the Gray- lal home. Lisa and Debby

sisters of brl.de, cut andl9epved the wedding cake- ahd-J>unch fifom the lace-covered reception table.

Mr. and Mrs. Garrison are attending the College o f South ern Idaho in Twin Falls.

Anne WodllenReceives A w a rd

GLENNS F E R R Y — A n n e Woollen, daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Woollen,. Glenns Ferry, has received the 1970 Betty Crocker Homemaker o f -Tomorrow— award— for— Glenns-

BUHL — Mrs. Richard Benck- 6n presented the letter she pre­pared outlining the Jay-C-EUes stat»d on prisoners o f war, wlieti tho Buhl Jay-C-Ettes met ia Twin Falls. The project is being carried on by the state Jay-C- Ette organization.

N ew Mernbers’ S

Are Installed

Ferry High School.Anne is captain of the school

Drill Team, a meinber of the Honor Society, is active In the Pep Club and GAA, and ^ays

The achievement has made Anne eligible for state and na-

iQlar3hlps,.JShe-alsoJwIir

■ '• B n H L M r s . Kelly Houk.and Mrs. Fra'hk Browrt were install, ed as memljers during the regu­lar meeting o f the Buhl Women of. the Moose at the M o o' s e Home.' with senior regent, Mrs. William Wnnpnherp. in rhnrpp o f activities.

March 22 was the date .<:ct for the annual Bohemian dinner for all Moose members and their friends.

Plans were made to attend the mid-winter conference in fioiie. The College of Regents made plans for a card party.

Mrs,— L b o —M onroe..w o n the'white elephant gift and refresh­ments were served by Mr. and Mrsi Floyd Daiss, Mr. and Mrs.

Dafs."i O de ll C h a tfje ld .

Girls-of-the-month for the past four months wefe named includ­ing Mrs. W illy Price, <j>ctober; Mrs.^i-^rrell Johnsoni Novem­ber; MW. Wes Rathbun, D e- cember, and Mrs. Bill Drillard, January, Mrs. Bob Fields,-pres^ ident,-gave ead i girl a certlfl- cate in fam gr-of-hec^wajd.-^^.^

T he ■flag salute was led by Mrs. Price aiid^Mrs. Marvin Lively Installed Mrs. Hoyte M ill­er as a new member. Mrs. I-ar-

J o h n s o n " gave inipromptu speeches as part' o f the *‘sp«U<'‘- ' up" program.

The -group voted to conduct (he Heart F und campalm in thehuglneKfj nf Jt)M rs.-Prlce serving as « r a ' ■ •

_ as chairman.' tHvely r epoftod—sijo has

been con tact^ by the Clark Hereford ranch to subnrvit a bid to serve a lunch at a cattle sale.

i t I f . i / i

Date SetGLENNS F E R R Y — Mr. and

M rs. D nvid D M iller, filenniFerry, announce the engaget- ment o f their granddaughter, Marva Jean Ladd, to Joe Pat-

Lyle “ ” <1 Mr. and Mrs. |terson, Boise.A June wedding Is planned.

be awarded a specially designed ? i l v * . d ja r m from General Mills, spohsor o f the Betty Crocker Search for the Am eri­can Homemaker o f Tomorrow.

NOW

Spring’s a Util© mor©beautiful this ye>ar...

' s i m p l y b e c a u s e o f B u s t e r B r o w n 's t h o r o u g h l y p r a H y

p a t e n t . E s p a C t a l l y * I n c » It h a s B u s t e r B r o w n 's ,

f a m o u s Q U d l i t y a n d p u r p e r f e c t f i t .

A . ... '■ .. , ' ' \ - . ■♦ .

■ » ■ ' . ._ ■*:__ .-if’ - - / ■ V . • 'f 4^ , ■■■ . '

r •

I ' • •

r •- . j-.

*; U . ^ • , . r -

Page 17: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

JoiiiTn Suit-^ainst^irm:JEROME!]— , The 'Jerome cil^i

council hais' instructed Richar! ■Seeley, city attoijiey. to. study a request that the city Jbin members o ( a .form er local In-

which runs soutb toward Main- -------------------Street: for a lot running north

vestmeht* f iro U ^ lr * ir ita m a 8 e Tgwawt~First-Avenue Wcsti ■Tliis.suit against a Salt iJike Q ty Investment firmM

Frank. Titus and Charies t " ' ‘Bank of Id a h o ' and"Herisson aslted councihneh Tuesday jjigh t.to , support them

,.Tri their suit against; the Jacob- ' .»^-^nvestm ent Co. wjiich, they

claim, did not live ttp to its promise to build a motel of not less than 24 units on the partdng lot next to the new Bank of Idaho." Mr. Titus-pointed put the city is losing money on-the ^ a c b

' o f contract because of th6 lost . revenue which the motel, if it • were~ constructed, .would bring

to the city treasury.At the time the land was sold

by ^.the, Jerome investriient

»en House Set At New

PAUL. — -Area residents will tour the newest ■onmieric.al- fa- ‘cility at Paul Friday and Satur­day during the open house of Kloepf?r Concrete Co.

The office, which coivstruction was recently completed across the street from the main plant on Highway 25. was built of

-tilt .slab concrete covered with rock from the Oakley quarries The buidllng features three of­fices and a conference room.

The business, whic-h was start­ed here in 1954 by Fred P Kloepfer, reibortedly i.» die larg­est roncrefe producer in the area and provi|detf^area farmers wjih their- first "do-it-yourself’ type concrete boat for pouring irrigation ditches.

The company operates with about 41 pieces of rolling equip­ment, which includes heavy equipment for hire. Its business utilize.'? about 50 acres at Paul and hauls gravel fjroni a Kloerv_____________sxa2__________________fcr-owned pit north of Oikley. About 35 men are employed dur ing “ peak" season.

To celebrate the event, Kloep- fers will award door prize.* of a 500 foot long, 16 inch con­crete irrigation ditch and a 20 by 30 foot finished concrete slab.

Refreshments will be served ~*nd tha publtu~i« Invited.

Filer Wants Exchange

ejcchange was' made' to jnake room for the buikling o f 'the

Woods Ca/e,Councilmen also: ,— Approved a request of

Kathy Aizawa, sophomore c la s president, for use o f the South city park for a. carnival April

—: Approved the resignation of Ben Crouch, as merdiant pa­trolman and jSured .Ted Beck to replac.e.him. , .

Chfef of Police Charles Punt- ney said he Is trying to get more merchants to participate In the night patfol, which v ras started some, time ago whfen there was an outbreak o f fires in the area. Since fear o f the fire ' ‘bug’ ’ -has diminished, mer- chants have lost interest in thf; merchant police, who' is p&id jointly by the merchants and the citj;.. Chief Puntney said he be­lieves it helps to keep burglar­ies down.

-r- Decided to convert the coal boiler In the city hall .basement

of Mel Morris, c ify works di rector, who said prices will go up 15 per cent by April 1.

— Heard Marsiuill .Everheart report on problems at the city dump where barricades are con­stantly knocked down. Persons bringing refuse to the dump leaye) it on top instead of down in the' pit, he said. A man was cleaning the site today.

— Changed an ordinance to allow carports to be built with in five feet o f the lot line, with Che eaves as near as two feet, if—the caiToort-ha»—three-^i sides and is made of bustible material; ...

— Set March 23-28 as Cletnf

[ tife With Prayer, Faith

JANET CANNON, daughter ot. Roger Cannon, Twin Falls, former Logan residents, still traihel^ the thiee-hbur trip cach way to Logan to continue playing w«th the Northern Wasatch Youth symphony orchestra. The gtolip plans a conceftta-the

'Mexico City area March 7-ApriI 5. ------

T.F. Girl Plays Bass With Yoi|Elr§y^p]Sony to

up Week. They urge residents not to block alleys with garbage cans, but to place trash cans at'the side o f the alleyway.

Gem State Suspensiun List Told

The drivers license suspension list for February was relea.sed today by officials of the Idaho Department of Law Enforce­ment

-Student-FILE R — The Filer commu­

nity and-high,sdiool would like to be host tp ,an exchange stu­dent from an European country and a committee has been or­ganized to formulate plans and to choOse a host family, ac­cording to Rev. Joseph John, who represented the Filer Mih- insterial Association at a meet­ing in the F iler High School-library. - - -----------------------

Rev. John, who was appointed chaimnan o f the committee, slated they have contacted the ■Youth for .Understanding Orga­nization for more Information about the student program and also have asked to have a. stu­dent selected to live in the area

-jmd-.-attcnd F iler High School - for-the-l370JI term.

Cassia County, John XJaiTratir Manuel Lopez. Melvin Passey, Kenneth Ronk and Joe Vigil, all Burley; Gordon Edwards. Malta, and C h a r l e s Morrow, Declo, all driving while under he influence of alcohol; Orville

Mnrf nnH Antnnlr. OrtiZ Jr., both

A I6-year-old Twin Falls High School student will perform in a .series of concerts in Mexico this—spfirig with the Northern Wasatch 'YoUthi Sympiiony O r ­chestra.

Janet Cannon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Cannon, was a member o f the NWYSO Tor three years while tne jamily lived in Logan. Mr. Cannon, a member of the U. S. Forest Service's regional staff, was

youth ensemble to present sev­eral concerts in the Mexico City area during a 10-day tour March 27-April 5. The orchestra will go there by charter au'plane.

In addition to pejformiaj; with, the bass section I o f the orche.s- tra, Janet has pVepared Capuz- zi-s- Stringrflas?^'Concerto—■toIo ' uffei iug uii KUinB t)f '-flnrtour programs.

Janet began he/ musical ex-.............. .... perience in the fourth grade in

transferred to Twin FaVls last “ school music program in Lo- August, but Janet wanted Now she is a student of

Audrey Bush, principal bassistmaintain her affiliation with the northern Utah group.

She was among lSP young mu­sicians who auditioned for plac­es in the 90-piece NWYSO this v(gBT— -itn. was accented.

Btlrley. both drag racing, and 'Sol LTOnard, uecfe; rnd Barry Rich. Burley, both inattentive driving.

Gooding County, Hugh Johan hsen,- Gooding. and=-Lyle—Mc. Cammon, Bliss, b o t h driving while under the influence of a l cohoL and . Conrad Matkin and Kurt Matkin, both Wendell, both reckless dViving.

Jerome County D a l e Dryer. Phyllis Preckel and Guy Wilson, all Jerome, .and Alonzo Maldo-

under the influence of alcohol; R o b e r t Charboneau. Richarxl Gassert and Melvin Moeller, all J-e r o m e, and Edgar Huettig, Hazelton, all reckless driving, and Sheridan Brown, Eden. faU> ure to appear.

Minidoka County. Grant Dar- lev _ajid_Dennis Price, Rupert, and'lrel .'Rent, AceouiaV W driv-cequi

- theGetting -an exchange student-in g -whiie-Tmdcr the. infhicnce In the area had been suggested o f alcohol: Monte Drvden. Paul.’ ™ S d T

.she made arrangements to trav­el to Logan — approxjmalely a three hour trip each way — for rehearsals.

Janet plays the strlng~ba5s. Either Mr. or Mrs, Cannon transports her, the bass and youngor titter Jiilie—to__Logan

of the Utah Symphony Orches tra.

In Twin Falls she performs with the Twin Falls High School Orchestra and the Magic Valley -Symphony

rehearsals. Julie plays bass in a younger training orchestra as.'Jociated with N\^SO . The trips-Jiave_been„-taking_^;^ce since October and are HKorh- Ing more frequent-as prepara­tions for the Mexico tour are intensifying.

Mexico’s National Institute of Fine Arts has jnvited^tbe Utah

Gooding^ets Finjdl Meet Over^udget

— GOODW G-— -=6ooding- e l+y

Plans Seen For MentalHealth Funds

An- .application for federal staffing fun~3s for a regional nientaL hPaith-facility-in-Mftgic V a lle jrw ill be made within the next two weeks, members of the Twin Falls Mental Health Association were told Tue.sday.

Tentative plans call for an application of $165,000 in federal funds, with $55.000 to be added

■ Thursday, March S, 1970 , 'tlilrws-NawisVTwfn f t

Placement Of Stop Signg fe

GoI^Sanders Star-ts Ne y-

By.CQ L. H ARLAN D SANDERS highway was rerouted, we were atelbyvlUe, Kentucky . — . - .

Some people spend a.. good share o f their lives planning for retirement, but ‘ the Idea has

I gu e^ I ’m from the old school. I believe that God ex­pects- us to be productive—in some w av^n ll nf niir days. It has long Keen my philosophy that'a man will rust ouL..a l(^ sooner than he w ill wear and'that is why today at age 7i8 I have no Intention no desire no. inclination to sit down and get rusty. ■

Col,Sanders

tuu^liwas a few years ago. My feet and-legs bother me sometimes and my wind isn’t as strong but I. have no complaint. Teddy Roosevelt I believe it was said that 90 per cent of the work in this—country is done by-peoplewho don’ t feel well sq I've got company,

I had a good chance to retire at 65 but I couldn't se« any percentage In loafing. At the time, I was located in, Corbin, Kentucky where my wife and I had settled in 1929.

We— wont— there—ffonv-Ken^i lucky’.<), Bluegras!^ country and opened! a,,c^eTVice^.station .afte» the 'Depression hit. m e station evolved Into . a- restaurant and motel which by 1954 had grown quite successful. That was about the time a mSh offered me $J 65.000 for the business.

-fJow, i f j ’d been planning to spend the rest o f my” life sun- anning-this—w ^ Id havu^been

till; t iiin; -111 •Jump.'~Sut~myTffirt ' and I decided against selling. Wo liked the restaurant business becau.se it brought us into con­tact with people — and wo love peoplf.

Then the blow fell. The state resulK/feyed the road that ran in front of our place, Sanders Court and Cafe; and when the

ife a d r

councilmeii h a v e work on- the 1970.,

completed mcmticrs, " f s to meetjvith bothissmnel

to that from local sources, it was reported.

R o g e r Abernathy, a Twin Falls psychologist and faculty member at the College of South­ern Idaho, told members o f the Twin Falls association all neces­sary paper work has been fin­ished.

he-neart step, fie~TiiZ3S£

h e r earc inve.stigating a "heady" theft which was reported « t the Lady of the Snotvs Cath­olic Church here.

Some 23 gallons o f wine were taken from the church .sometime last week pnd the theft was discovered Sun­day when preparations were being made for Mass. The loss was estimated at about $80.

Castleford SetsBasketball Gatlin

c a s t l e f o r d — The annual Father - Soil basketball gam«, sponsored by the , Castleford PTA. will be held at 1 p.m Tuesday in ihe Castleford gym

The Fathers, team ..will -Ix coached by Glen Wiggens. They -wrflF^Siy-^^ ffie—team—eompo* » of the seventh and^^^eT^hTl grade boys, coached by Ralph

cut o ff from the traffic. Business fell o ff and by 1956, we were lucky to get out with enough to pay thn h ilh '

seemed so. M y wife and I were completely discouraged.

W e were talking about our next move when my first Social Security check arrived. I t was to r $105.- “ That won’t go very far,’ * I remember telling her. Then I Had a wild jdea. The restaurant business was my line, and fried chicken our specialty. Why couldn't I take our recipe for fried chicken on the road and try to franchise it?

At always when on stran footing,-which I asked Cod to direct liSy steps and bless Ibis new idea if it was right. AH my life I have given Him 10 per cent of every­thing I made in my work.

Cashing the $105 check, I loaded into, my 1946 Ford the fulluwing item!;: -j — pressure cooker,- a 50-pound tin o f flour (containing a mixture made from I I herbs and.spices> and a bianket-to sleep under., M y offer to restauraneurs was

a simple one: I would show them how to ,fry chicken'In ex­change for fheir promise to pay me 5 cents for every chicken they sold. It would bo on the honor system. I had no intention of auditing anyone’s books,-, because I figured It would take a rather cheap thief to' fudge on that arrangement.

I drove all over the country, sleeping many nights in the ,car ,to save money. Quiteoften I got

auranrfriends. One of them, Pete Har­mon of Salt Lake City, bought the first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise, The second sale was made in- -IndianikpoIi.<i and the third in Kokomo. Indiana.

By 1964," in just eight years 1 hari 600 fmnrhi-ie^ np the— honor— system. more

knewbookkeeping work than what to do with.

When I -was offered two m il­lion dollars for the business I sold out, but agreed to continue working In a public-relations capacity.

I f ..I have learned anything In l i f e . - i^ a n be summed up this way;

Hard work beats all th6 tonics and vitamins in the' world.

Jhn therany of workfor you whatever your age. Will Rogers years ago said_JJfE_hc= gins at 40. Times have changed. People are living longer, fuller, more creative lives, Sp I say '■UfC' can- begin at 65." It sure did for me.

C op^ght- IBS9 by GuIdepMts Associates Inc., Carmel. N .. Y . 105IZ.)

Nejrt— Bill Nelson, Wisconsin writer, tells the thrilling and in* spiring story o f faith at work when a car plunged Into a lake.

StudiedB^rBU RLEY — T h j Burley city

attorney,. Bill Rarsons. ls draw^ iog an ordinancfe re fla t in g traffic, prior, to the piactment of stop sigils on Hiland AVenue. Parke avetiu^ and other pointi in the city.

Mayor Garis R ^ .r ts o a re­ported at the c ity council’ Mon­day night ‘that George Warrell, former police chief, started Feb.

working as city safety di- rector. A fter disctission th( council set h is.sa lary at per month. Mr.-WarreU w ill ire- port'to the mayor In his position as safety director.

Other',business transacted at the council, not reported in Wednesday's Times-News, (in­cludes:

— Approval pf. building j>er- mits and' gran ting 'o f a .trailer park renewal license to Wilburn Roberts.' Renewal licenses were gr&nted for plumber, .journey­man and gas cohtractors.

un^^ suspension of couiicU also -passed - an ordi­nance uhdeif' suspensioh' o f 'the rules stipulating that vehicles left parked on ciW streets more than -18 hours w ill be impound-

and -violators shaU be proMctK* ed. I t wfls pointed out by tha c ity attorney tEat according to c ity ordinance pers(>os coulo I®" ceive up to $100 flna for- thu

Xttl-season players n « ^ p l j y temporary h o lts as provided b y the coarse malntenan<» crew.- I t was -pointed out that even w ith .th e fee raise ttie B n r iw Municipal G olf Course Is -stlU lower In fees than other muni-

JnterestJn , Idaho Moon Spot Shown

c r a t e r s O F TH E MOON - Moon flights by the Apollo spacemen h a v e captured the Imaginations o f many and now it seems the next best thing to.visiting the moon on vacaion is s^eing^^iT '^u iitBrpart-^oir ea '

- ^~FrHr;-supcfIntenden the. park here, said the monu­ment ' is- -being considered by many as a vacation spot this summer. His office hasi received inquiries from M states and one Latin American country during the past week.

.(JuestiQiia_aislteixampgrniinrt.____ facilitieiactivity, w il^ ife and- geology to plantlife. "

Many - plan-, to Include side t r i p s to 'Yellowstone and thfe Grand Tetons, Mr. Fritr said.

He added That the open winter season at the monument has had an impact on visitation - to date, with -registration n e a r ­ly seven times larger than the same period In 1969. A- total of 2,600 visited the park in Feb­ruary, compared to 380 fo r the

‘ft r n n j><? fm rrr fng~-S. volcanic

TttiiiB period last yeaf: dalTo date. 4.269 visitors have

ijeeti counled, c o m p a r t- to ■'VlS for (he same period last year.

CHILE

— D « ld e a - l6 ~ *a v « r t lM ^ ft » r r sale, through 1>lds, the 1966-f^ord w h k * has -been used by t l » chieif. o f poUcB. . a « l the three- wheeled motorcycle. Bids h av « beetv K ce ived on th e ' m otor­cycle; ■ r

— Heard Ken Bapry. « 5 t i ^ chief o f police, Treport reos|^_ o f $2,875 during Pebruaty. Laat year $17600 w^s'feisoned7*~~r:

N ew 'ru les fo r the Munfclp#! G olf Coursa which were a d o ]^ ed by the councilmen stipulate a ll persons using a powered g o lf ■cart on the course s|iall p »y . the c ity a usertee o f $30 par

la r o r each IS holes and ._ckers-use fee o f $4 per season shall b e_p a id to t l i C i^

r. ■n»e course shall ba to aU p lay on M onday*

cipal courses.

January Total On Sales Told

The sale o f savings bonds and ..jtes ill Idaho during January totaled $764,765, m akftg it thehighest monthly total in the past 11 months. Jam es S. Kinney, district satHngs bond chairman, said.

i)istrlcfr-sales fo r tha month amounted to .511.260. he added.

Mr. Kinney also said the in­creased interest rate o f flv<P%er-____ _ _ m d s ,- «* e n -held to maturity, has helped to ijoost sales.

Hearing SetGOODlN'G-^Preiiminary, hear-

nK. th a rg ^ wltti fgrg?rYi. hM _n set for 10 a.m. March 13.

The date -was set by Probata- Judge C. E.' Spencer when Test­e r ’s arraignment, begun last week, was com pleted., Monday. Tester - w4s brought back to Gocxling ft'om Anchorage, A las­ka, for court action In Gooding.

Whereabouts o f his estranged wife. Marge, 40, still Is tiot known. She and Tester both dis­appeared Feb. ' 17 from tha Gooding area. •

t n t k Hteacir^ raat I Xmjp ts o m M IO .-

.ytntmootybmdu MMUprirl*'

COMPLETE SHOP EQUIPMB(T DISPERSALA> I have sold my International Harvester. Agen cy I w ill te ll tha fo llo w in g a t

AUCTION SALE___ SATURDAY , j^ R C t t r T th ______

L oca ted a t W a gn e r ’ s, Inc.; on N orth M Bit>-Straati-G9odipo,^W aho-:

s t a r t in g a t 11 a .m . SRW r P T X J N C F T O F r a

by the local Key dlub and Rev. John and Arthur Chatbum, prin-

_ cipal o f the Filer Hiyh School. ' a|tended a meetfng in 'Jerome last fall where citizens from Jerome and Gooding met to dls- cu-ss the matter.

Hie minister noted a foreign exchange student living in tne area could acquaint the com- munit^ and high school with lifein other cotmtries, givinft 8fl IH- slght on culture, education and home life of the p^p le . -The project has already been dis­cussed by the siudmt body o f the high school who have stated prefereiice for a Ijoy between the ages of 15-17 and preferably from Western Europe.^

The organizing committee w ill iuJp-,^select a host .famiiy, raise

and Rot>ert Wortand, R u p * -r reckless driving; D o u g l a s Klamm, Paul, driving while li cense suspended: Jock Bell, Ku pert, accumulation of violation points, and C. John Williams, Rupert, drag racing.

Twin Fails Coutity, James Erickson, Humberto Garcia, Lewis Roy, Milton Sorenson and Clyde W illiams. aliJTwin Falls. 3finer

money for inckleritai expeX-ses -of the student, and assist with anv problems■ which, might arfse, ' ' ' ~

Dan KauffMan. F iler mayor, was elected vice-chairman, and

"Mrs. W ilfred Ife frettt rcpresan

CTiiier AliiuiiiJj^Hr cheL' and " Roger ■ Shai BuW,.and E llis Arnold, liimber- ly. an driving while under the Influence o f alcohott "Fred Lewis and Frank Sanchez, both Twin Fails, both reckless driving; Charley .Hfannon, Twin Fails, driving on a suspended license: Craig Hill and Clifton Worms-

both-T w in FaHsr and-ivti-

-of $307,233.27 wit slated at the March 16 meeting, reports G<;orge Silva, city clerk.

This yefar's budget is some $9,000 more than last year's fig­ure of $285,000. Estimated in- corne from the 47.6 mill levy includes garbage, $23,000; water works. $52,000; irrigation, $27,- 500: sewage, $41,000; taxes, $70,- 257.88; capital- improvement__________ -and—miscclUn.eous ana funds iMild 'III lesuive, t77.3#7,

&pendiiures listed- In the budget include general fund— clerk, $12,000: streets, $50,000; police, $43,000; gart>age. $23,000; street lights, $246; library, $7,- 700; airport, $4,632; fire derpart- ment. $5.480: irrigation. $27.500:

■ch IS and he saidthis dead­line will be met.

Lloyd Webb, president o f the Twin Fails group, also reported recent lenslation in the mental health fi^d will extend gov?i^- ■ment. involvement bj» 10 years and w ill -V -— - - o f the

'double the e ffic iency D roeram ."

HatchDelbert Alexand e'r and Bis

group will provide entertain ment. Mr. and Mrs. John Co- thcrn are in charge of the ar­rangements for the event. Mrs. Maurice Guerry is in charge of prizes.

Ranks GivenJEROME J im W i f tmnn and

S H O P E Q U IP M E N T ^M ech an ic ’s w ork bench w ith v isa .E lectrica l circu it tes ta r .5-ton hydrouMc p ress . ......M oveab le lio is t frarrie.D iffc , ntial chain b lock . 2-ton ca ­

p o -tV -S ioux va lv e grind ing m ach ine, exce l­

lent con'ditiori— drill stand— envll.P o r tab le s team c lea n e r, n ew co ils

and pum p, ga s fired .A ce ty le n e w e ld ing s e t. gauges, cut-

Citizens conference will be held at'the College o f Southern Tdaho March 19 through 21 with Dr Melvin White, a Utah psychia­trist, the featured-apeaker.

Everyone over 60 years oLage will be guests o f the Twin 'Palls association during the confer-

chael Stokesberry, Filer, all ac­cumulation o f violation points: Tom Beck, F iler, failure to ap; pear;~~Artlnrr~EsIlnger. T -w^«l Falls, revocation, and John Xar- soit^Mid ■ Steven-’ Sharpi' T -w i n

tativfr' -oT~lh§j-. F iler- Womivn’a -C-ta;br-^W(8 chpsfn itcn U iy ^

treasurer. Lawrence'Knlgge, K i- wanis-eiub

parks and recreation. $15,000; water works $52,000'; sewer sys­tem, $41,000. and , capital im- prDxcment_fund-$3,077,27...

It, was reported the city has ^qu ired title to land at 224

Street where a new cltv

ent.% lun<;heo.n ‘M arch 21,

tution designating the duties o f —the committee-end- fnembers.

Other representatives at the - meeting included. M H ; Don LieCL

marirdlaJeErCivio-- ChibT'^Ohtt■ -w a fS K

j y is/ d rag- r i ^ g ^ -----

__' i > '• J Councilmen agreed to pay th*l i n i l l l C c l l C J S n Q S r C electricity to operate a puinp for

“ ' ...... the sprinkling sjiMem at theM fii w i iw in . . i iai) r If j i m t i m

Ne wsOfl^ecord

j i i i i i im ji i 'i i iDuplicate Bridge Club inet re­cently -at Sunny V iew Courts.

Mrs; M ;-"D- i and M rs. A . J. Lihde-lefc H a itiu ft

committee met with the coun­cil Monday, i>i^t.-^um m euprinkling-rates will p into effect ^ r c h 20..Cbun-

DISTRJCtiCOURT..T>rta Falls County .._____

Divorce actions were filed by

$nd Jon Brennan, student §9dy preskJent. ,___

Social HeldB U R LE y — Members o f the

iPMimjr a

-al-Woman’s -Glub^hekl-a-secija^

B. Humphries Jr.; Uoyd T. Brown against Susan L. Brown; Elizabeth Egan -SMinst. B. Em -

---------------------- ---------------------. ----------------------------------- ,est Egan: John F a l r . c t i L diner.-firstT M rs. •Winfanr-Coog atm eir decided~tg^ ca ir ftir b ids TtgaliBC OHnlO lttiFW reM d,' iftdand Mrs. J^E. B u rg e ^ Mcond: R . G. Sass and J. R. Burton, third;^ c ; Jt._Tnncker.^«nd J L J K iTucker, fourth, and Mrs. R. J.

for gasoline Jor the city'a Vt- hicles.

«tthe home of Mrs. Anna Lann Westrom. • .

Bill M rf;ill. owner of ( h » a fFtowetr Pot,

-ments' daring the nott -which will.be at 7 p.n.. ____

r r - c ife.- Guwtt wnrat tUs spej^

n p F m m — «

Life rank at a court o f honor held by Boy Scout troop 141 in the Presbyterian c h u r c h basement.

Phil Barrett received the Star rank'. The awards were present­ed by Jerry Diehl and Fred

"t in g,~artd Dral&liiK luiclies. "Welding cal l fui aeteyt« Ha_ eutfit.

Clwbb. Maynand Mrs. Jack Russell were spe­cial guests.

W eld in g trench w ith 5-inch visa. W h itaker f lo o r jack, S-ton.M & W d yn om eter. In exce llen t c o ntJI-*

tion fo r m easu rin g trac to r horse­p ow er output and m o to r tune-up.

A t la s latha w ith un dercu tter a ttach ­m en t fo r a rm atu re w ork . etc.A llen t ee t-« ta (\d w ith -r e m evab le te at

Now!Tepsi-Cola 3 i n O n e - W ^ >

N0- b6p5StfBottles!

unita an d cab inets.A llen g ro w le r fo r ta s t in g arm atures. M nw aukea , a » p ead drill w ith o ffs e t

-----h ea d a ttB crm erit^ , ria\y’, 'V ise . 6-Inch, iir ex c e llen t condition ; .S iou x tiench g inder. h ea vy siuty^------

_S io u x -~ va ly ■' » aat .' liftara. ^H ydrau lic a la eva pu ller. In axcella fit, c o n d i t io n ._____ _

. M arqtieit b istfery c h a r g e r .^ v o l t .

stand. • . -— ■Air oomprassor. 1 h . p . -------Cham pion air o p e ra ted spark p lug

c lea n e r an d taster.2 jnatal work stands for motor*. *te. Lisle ^ In ^ e r hone — Rod alljpnlpg

S H O P E Q U IP M E N T Staam c lea n er, w ith a g o o d .pui'hp

and m otor.

* M A C H IN E R Y .N ew 'G u s ta fson c ro p duster, 3 point,

m ounted w ith, d u s te r fram e.- T oo l bar a tta ch m en t fo r C o r

S u p er C trac to r.16-inch p low , e x c e llen t cond ition , f o r - fa s t hitdh S u p e r C 2-way.2 Ford 16-Inch olovwi. 3 poin t. raadVL-

to go . ' Wohn Ot r» ',a -w a y ~tft-U>cli hydrau lio.

turn plow , 2-tx>ttom.OlsO’n hydraplic loader for H or'M .6-ft. p ickup f o r com bine, n ew .3 new C p low s, less bottom s . J M any Farm hand load er parts.2 fie ld renovators, tra il ^ p a .7-ft, IHC tandem disc, good con-.

dtli(ElectroViic o pera ted g a ra g e d o o r w ith

c a r tran sm itter. ■ , ,

' M IS a U A I^ O U S 'SH6p .:-TOQC1’ -<-O THglt--tTEMS-

gauges, w h iserpu llara . b ea rM g puliv ars. SRfi9d_ indiicatora. h ones, 'h y -

jaqks. a la ctric d rills, .a te ,: ither Iti

drauTic Many oi

M IS e B J :A M E O U S IT E M S Attachments fo r various tractors anrf": - Injplamants. bam il stamlt. traetagl a ld a s r-b a W ie n r io n r iM i^ , ': I M C 'I g w ^

-frames. Wisconsin m oters~lW tsLTJgast^Ine tanks some IMC— ' I

tractors and Wisconsin nnotors, vatw — tous-jizgt„of t e a l atiaftlng. b a m i

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-V— Trr-- --- r—J -*1* '

I.

Hme»*N«ws, ^win Falls, Idaho T*iur»eJayj Mqrch 5> W7d . .. .■-. — r -^ ^ .— t - v r i v•j...L______ ’ M ’ -I " r-':’ • • • J ‘TTT'T-

^ y rs^ g y , Morch 5 ,1 970 ., Tfmes-New», T y th fa lU , tdofo M •

Watch liie homemaker ho knows how to get the mpst€(ttEer moiiey

► insists on tc^ quality and. low prices! And that’s why she chooses Safeway

Discount She finds the finest in meats, fruits and vegetables, groceries, frozen foods, dairy foods, and the other

good things she wants for her family. She buys at low, money-saving prices. It’s easy to be a Smart Saver. All you

have to remember is Safeway Discoimtt

' Band Box Ice Milk Vanilla or Neapolitan

Half-Oallon49

SUPER SAVERSA

• m ,

S e a T rader Tuna Styl*

C arnation T u q a sX"''

D en n ison Chili

Chunk /*6Vi-or., ( "tan

6H-OX.can.

DISCOUNT PRICES

P iz j ;a M ix Chasseburger ~

t i » M ir - Chaf BoyAr-OgaP iz z a JVIIX Saunogo M ix

P iz z a M ix

P iz z a M ix Pepperoni

P ied m o n t M ayon n a ise

N u M a d e M ay on n a ise

T ab le Syrup

2 9 /

3 2 /

W is h b o n e D ressing il?a^

7 S e a sJ )re is in g

J iffy Frosting M ix e ^

4iffyi/itxesi:;:S ’ 13l

Beam

16-ox.boHl*

7V4-OI.

15*>6-ez. C Q , pkg. D O f

pkg.

'To" 5 6 /

'" r « 5 8 /21-01.

- boH l*

Instant B reak fast

Instant P o ta toes °“1

W a ln u t M ea ts

Pecan M ea ts

Lucerns lO^oz. Q Q ' , Varisties pkg. 0 0 ^

10/

Broken Pieces '' pkg. 6 3 /

Thrifty

McCormick 5-or.

McCormick Broken Piecei

3 4 /

S a fe w a y C o ffe e Groimd

S S e w n y C o ffe eAlreadyGround

'b t 8 5 /

C 1 . 5 f '

mirdtneeseSafew ay Cheddar

-ra c -o ff- ia b e i20-ox.

loaf

^ ttag e CheeseLucerne — A ll V arieties

1.19ftaif 6aliori Carton

Check & Compare These Discounts

FR O ZEN FO O D S

DISCOUNT PRICES

M D Tissue Colon

Bel-air VegetablesFrench Stylo or Regular Green Beans 9-oz.

— refioppBd-BroccottrGt'een Peas 10-oz.Y hIIq w Squash. Turnip Greens 10-oz.

Soiffeway .Discount Stores lift All Of These-Towns:Boise Blockfoot Idaho Falls Rigby Payette , Montpelier

Weiser Jerome -PocoteHo—

tt-Twin J q lltMtn. Home

Ontario, Oregon

Rupert Burley ©oodtng ■ JCnldwelL Nampa

Super Saver Prices Effective Through Next Sunday. All Other Hems &

Prices Are *Everyda^Discou^nt Prices^*5ufa|»et To Chang*

Chopped or le a f Spinach 12-oz. Mixed Vegetables, Peas & Carrots 10-or.

Bel-alr White Squash 14-or.

Your _ Choice

Each

S ta te Fair C e rea l

B a n q u e t M ea t P ie s Varieties pkg. 16/ S ta te Fair C erea l

BanquetrDmnersl^lt^r'^^^^ Fruit Drinks

t f i o c a a t ^ a k e

PuffedWheat

PuffedRice

S : 2 9 a

S ; 5 2 /

DISCOUNT PRICES

Blue B on n et ; £ 28“

19'

Froien

G ra p e Juice Concentrated "S I; 3 9 /

Canq^j^elf O y ste r S t e w - 4 6 /Bel-alr Froaen Concentrated

— TZt t t55 /

O ra n g e Juice

jQangeJuiceli1S;S A p p le P ies s r -I l _ _ x n i ^ _ Manor Housei Beef, I O jf V i e a i r i e s Turkey, Tuno, Ch.cken pie 1 7 f

wan sonfiitreew'ofchee.r’X 38/

R osarita B ee f Tacos

R o sa rit^ T o rt illa s—

" . Z 5 8 /

^ 5 5 r

Ivory LiquidDetergent — Sfjecial Pack

U

W hip fp ipg C reamLucern* holf* None Finer pint 3 5 /

ile s s e r t t o p p in g Aerosol:

GradelOTiggsCream O ' The Crop

■Large Size

DISCOUNT PRICESPetroleuriiJellyV ase lin e

Cot oii Swabs-?rI! * T a b le t s

3 9 /Reg. or EUctrb-Perk

C o f fe e

“” 4 9 /io<t.

-M e d iu n u Slze - d o z. 51c__

C o ld e n e L iqu id

V i c k ' s N y q u i l " M F d r c r n .

^ I i 7 9 7

8 7 / C o o k n Bags Nine Varieties pkg. 2 4 /

22-or.Bottle

iJ essert T o p p in g

jkssert4oppint

1S>ox.con

lucern*Aerosol

Blossom Time A^osot .con

75/ DISCOUNT PRICES DISCOUNT PRICESDISCOUNT PRICES

BumbleBee

DISCOUNT PRICES

PRODUCE at Discount Prices Everv Dav!Sauce With 15-01. . Mushrooms can J §

» i « ^ F e w x k v i ; -

R a k f i S h n n

------Out O f The OvenA nd Over The

_ Counter ToTYou!2 Lpyer 8-Inch

CakesFresh Ran3h

Coconut Macaroan^Cookies

L e m o n

C r u n c h C a k e_ Tw o Moist Layers of Golden Lemon Cnkw ' “XTovered With a Sv^irllng Confection of Lemon

Buffer Cream Icing. To Top O ff This Superb Cake Our Bakers Cover The .Sides With Delicious Crunch

Chef B o y -A r rD e e

Chef i o y ^ r ^ D ^ ^ lru:d"^’i’e;’^ ^ 3 7 /

Salad D re ss in g

P ink Sa lm on

L ib b y 's R e d Sa lm on

M e d iu m S h rim p

T6-OZ.can '

Sea Trader 4V4<-«z.can

86/

86/8-01.

Vick 's V a p o r u t3M-OZ.

J«r 89/A n algesic T ab le ts Irmd"' ' K 4 9 /

Safewo/ Red,M ou th w ash Blue or A m b e r

Aeroftol

4 6 /4 - 0 * .

-Spray, 1 9 i

alivDetergent- * — Ivory SfiQw Detergent Thrill Liquid Detergent 0}g/ dol Detergent Cheer Detergent Dash Detergent

1t19ia-M.

. .

58*86-

1.44

t .9 9 -

' Wtshbone -ItaliflO___ btm.; 39/

C ocktail Sh rim p Brod

l a r d e Sh rim p Davained

Ana

4V4-OI,can

3 6 / N o x z e m a Sk in C ream

8 9 / Johnson 's B a b y O IL

4-oz.jar

Dreffr-Deterqgnt

1 6 -0 1 .

boHla

Salad D ressing Gotorie Russian 39 /

Salad D ressing

M u sh ro o m sGreen Giant Stams & PT(c»'

4-ox.can 2 9 / Dristan T ab le ts

SO-ct.betlla

59/ Ivory Liquid Detergent 1 70 Liquid DetergentsIr j l . Tide XK D e t e r g e n t 2 . S 71.72 Premium Dui in ::: 79*

Wishbone low 8-o«. Q Q j Calorie French bat. J v /

M.J.B. C o f fe e c L .. 3 :-J

Crisco S h o rten in g 3-lb,can

2 .4 9

9 0 / ; W h it e K in g S o a p

DiSCOUNT PRICES 1 S aved $3.34On a pur h4*e o£S35.63

1 Saved $5.43On a purchdse of $33.94 ♦

1 S a v e d $4.J3On a purchase of $42.00

my groceries cost' $4 13 less <B o g F o o d sp«cioT>oci< boo" 2 .8 8 iny grocerje cost'$3.34 less my groceries cost $5.43 less

D o g F o o d l l - i r ^ i t 't 4 8 9major Food Store,— _ ----- major-tood-Store.___

rmajor l=ood Sitore.”

SpecialPoet ^ 9 9 /

Detergentpack..# o r t e h i o f f a K l| g W 3 ^ 8 6 / W h it e K in g D

Idaho Russels lLSJ?te.2's

TexaSweet ■ -Jo

OISCOUKT Qur Bakers Ta k » Great Delight -Hn-Greating Specioi^ rT O f

G r a p i ^ U ; ^

Oranges

20 A 78< Red R a d is ^ -fet- Asparawis

or Gre«in ___ ^OiJdffs

All Green Large Size Jt&m m

California Tlill Pui’po**: fantyLDates California^ IVi-Ib.

Zahidi UnpiHed bog

-SeoiHesiRaijliii&10

SUPBtSAVBlS

Wlieii. WO nmIca~on' exceptionol■ piirchase^ receive' prom otion ^llow dnces froni.m a n o fd c tJ u te c s , . j j y g J ig _ v ^ ^ _

EV E d a y sS S A i u Ru a Y A t S A F E W A Y DiSCO UN

to pass ourTisovings citoh to you. 6e cause these are teinporary extra sdyings, we - rnark fhenv-^Super v « r ^^Stq ^ up v ^ e t)ies(i|t extra Mayings or* in -

■*rr

S A V E M O N EY E ¥ i5

...

A,. ••

i iiiie r s M C I- i o t w m .;; h

\ f p |J \ f ^ ^P A Y ::>A^EV¥AT uv^-j^M.yrU;r-;r1

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P R O F SHOWS P O P IL DOUBLE SQUEEZE

The new pupil had 4earned enough about bidding so. that Her Jatn'p' tO' fo u r heartr^iraa^ mad^ quickly and firm ly. W est

-Icashed ,'the ace. and king of ■'spade?'and gave, Tiis partner' s'

spade ruff while she followed suit helplessly. .■ East returned the kipg of^lia- m on d s . She won wilh the ace. turned to the Professor and said, “ I guess_I have' to go down one. The seven of spades is n ’ t Rood, is it?”

“ No, it isn 't," replied the Pro­fessor. "Run o ff your trumps though and see what happens. Just be sure to discard dia­monds from dummy at first."

The pupil did a.s ordered. When she ied the last trunlp, dummy was out of diamonds and she discarded the seven- o f sp.ides.■‘Now lead a club,” said the Professor. •

She proceeded to take dum-

executed a p e r f e c t double squeeze."

South certainly had done- ex­actly that.'.Furthermore, it had­n't" required any skill. As long as she played out all her trumps •West had to discard dawn to two clubs, in order to hang on to the high spade, whereupon she was able to discard dum-

Home^Bttyers Evei ^ 25-Yfe^ Mortgages In Full

m y's last spade.This put (■

He had to keep the queen ofput the pressure on East.

NORTH4>76 4 8

Q «7 _ _

♦ 532 * A K 2

'yg/gST------ ■— X A B T "— » -. * A % 9 8 4k!T2 V 8 4 V 6 5 .

♦ 876 ♦ K Q 1 0 9 4+ J8 74 4bQ1085

SOVTH (D )A Q J IOITA>KJ1032♦ A J A 63

Both vulnerable •Wett. North E u t SonOi

a . * ^

P m s 2 V v.P»aa Pass P »s »

'Opening lead—

diamonds. Otherwise South's ^ c k would haye been good, ^ u s he also had to discard down to two club.s.'

A ll o f which goes to show that- there is nothing- to be lost by playing out all yojir winning tricks and hoping that some­thing favorable w ill happen.

TH E t w o ' MAJOR "C r flE S wherein a sing le. g irl is most apt to find a matfjmonial mate are said tb be. .San. Francisco and Petroit . . . OUR NAM E G Am e m a n reports Connecti­cut birth records show a couple there named their daughter JEn- cyclopaedia Britannica Dewey . . . . TAK E THOSE FAM ILIES who buy a ne'w house with a 25-year mortgage. Only about one In 10 goes on living in the place that- long."TH E RAZOR'S EDGE — Am

asked how long meh have been

CARD SENSE S h or t W b '« —

shaving with safety rarors. Just 67 years, I thiok. Wasn't King Gillette’s device the first such on the market? That came out in 1903, A t $5 .apiece, incidental­ly. By . 1914. howfever, the price had gon» -d o wn, to 10 conts a

Q— The bidding has been: t r e a t N A i l h EUst . - S o n O i

I *-Pass-----— '- - "Tasi - -XI

2 *T

Paai IN.XS Pass Pa)u 2 V Pass

■you, -South, hold:4 »A K 8 8 ¥43 ♦ A S Z « A J 7 3

'What do jrou do now?A —Bid thrM no-tminp. -7oiir

partner is telUnc you ha has heai^ and yon Iiave ! •

nlco Jil«h-card points.TO D A VS Q USSnON

Instrad oT hiddinK^na nn- -fiump over ’your one quide, your partner ha* bid. two apades. What do you do now?

C apta in C a n

< !A LL r r .B t 9 r iC E i t p i t o i u s e o • n e / S A

razor. The blades came wrajt, p6d in white paper. A lot ihen gave up'the razors imtts*-

lades without removing t h e wrappers. There were h i c k s then.

HAIR — Generally/women's hair tends to be darker than men's. Odds run nine to one a man will be bald by his six­tieth birthday. If a fellow 's en­tire beard growth went into one whisker, it would get to be 50 feet Iqng in a day. That's not «1| that’s on file here about hair, but it's enough for the' moment, certainly.

OPEN QUESTION — Where did we get the estpression "well- hw led "?

LOVE AND W AR — , Before a .young man and his ladyfriend marry, they ought to be engag­ed for nine months. Such was <he -conclusion o f sociologisfs Ernest Burgess and Paul Wal­

lin . after ,a' lengthji study of jxjung married couples. The vit­al statistics, they found, indi­cate couples . engaged n i n e months are least apt to get di­vorced.

CUSTOMER SERVICE — Q. ."On whose show do the com­mercials cost more, W a l t e r Cronkite’s. or Dean. Martin’s?" A . A ll I know is the dinnertime stuff doesn’t cost as much -as the bedtime stuff . . . . Q. "A R E THERE as many people i liv ing"in the U n it«T Swtes to-' day as were living in thfe" en­tire world at the timeChrist?" A. Not quite...............'Q. “ SO AMONG the African animals it’s the crocodile thtrr kills the most people^ is - It? What animal comes next?" A.

hippo.' Moatiy bacume he- tips over a lot . of boats and steps on the contents thereof.

CLOSE SCRUTINY o f ' those the rdinantic rqis-

behavior of American husbands indicates southern men tend to be a little more faithful than northern husbands . . . . THE SCIENCE BOYS say those rain­drops falling on your head had been moisture up in the sky for about three weeks, average . , . . ONE GOURMET — and only one. I ’ ll warrant — rec­ommends we try a mushroom in our martini instead o f an olive or onion. Not today.

J IAPID R EPLY — No. sir, professional acrobats never get seasick.

■Your questions an<J comment.i are welcomed and will be used jwherever possible, please ad­dress.your mail to L. M . Boyd, McNaught Syndicate, Inc., SO E. 42nd St., New York, N .Y . 10017.

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, ■ Thursday, March 5,1970

□MeiriearGLENDALE. Calif.

Tatzumbie Oupea w a s . buri Wednesday in Forest Lawn Cemetery. She was 120 years did. ■ j .

*■•— TaUumfyie; the Piate Indian name for "Beaiiiiful .Star,” was

~ E c l I c ^ to have been, the oldest

New York^ G ravediggei*s D o B attle

ALBANY, N .Y. (U P l)— Both houses of the state legislature prepared a bill Wednesday to impose compulsorjs arbitration in the New Yorl< gravediggers strike unless ( a v5lun seltleincnt or agfcement reached within 4S hours. ■

Gov. Nelson Rqckefeller, who had requested passage of the measure, was cxpected to sign it Into law immediatelj^- The strike began Jan. 1? with

persBtt' In tji6 United-States at the time of her' death Thursdi^.-

R ecords '-of th^ Bureau pf India'n Affairs substantiate her claim that she was born on July. 26, 1849, in Lone Pine,

lik e " many a woman, she claimed she was 16 years younger.

In her last years, though,-she took great pride in her antiquilji and -told long ^ r i e s of her childhood with memories -lhat.^5retche4 from the assas­sination o f Abraham Lincolq to that of John- F. Kennedy, from the first rail line linking the Ea.st and West coasts to man's walk on the moon.

Her lifetime saw the nation engaged in six wars, from the Civil .War to Vietnam. Her

NOTlCt! TO CREPITOKS1 COUKV OFW.IN FAU-S'^OUNTVT STAVii

INTW.INIn tiie Matter at the Es|atCL-o(

LUdTjdH CiAKN^H. pecea»uu.NOTICE IS rtEiKiiiJy'tilViiN, hy

the executor to Cne creditors qi oaU air pcrjions huvtng claims Luster Ourner,' u6ceu&ud, or hts estate, to exhibit taem with tne oocwi*ary vouciiera.* fourmonths after toe urst'l>ublicttUon

lE G A rA O V E ilT i iS ^ N T SAJDVEKTlSeMENT FOR BIDS .

-SeiU<(ft pN)pOMls for. the jm»taing.siockpitlng or roclt oi*

-myct—wni" t?D - recgivea umir -ilOO

ot ints nottctt, to.thuuaid ex'ucuior . ... ___ ____ ___________iaw' of/iccs of^-L’toyU J. t^i^nct; .huttintf-^- poriioa oX Ifaethe

Waikcr,

i'M u M.!>.T...J^urch 12. 1970 in tlie office, ^f the City Clerk and then *viu ,oe puolicly opened aod-neAd in tne CotnnUssloA Qiambcra of tbs Twin ’uiis City Holi. ' —r’, Tiie work contemplated lAcludet

the crushing of 29.185 cubic yvds Of rock Of iirayeJ witlf 21.3S0' cubic yardf . for^t.ie- City and 7W cubic yards ior. the Twin Tolls . Highw^

P.O. I40X. 2.T,_ TwinGalif.r-aUhough-:'at-'onc— timer idaho.-xnTs-toeufg the 'placed fueii lllffl ' nianu a ti/nman shn Iraniucuon of the business

Of said estate. ------- --------^^Duied tnls 10th day of February,

LESTHR TTxeuJuJF

LLOYD 'J. WALKEK.Attorney txcculurP .U . B o x .23 -Twin i-'uJls. IdahoPublish; l-eb. 26 and March3, 19<0»

.NOTICE TO C|U:;DIT0RSIN T im PUOUATii COURT OF

............... i COUNTYtw in f a l l s ___SI ATE OF iUAiiO

In tUvj Matter (if tue Uslate of;MAILON iiUEST. Detrased.NO i ILL IS HliJUiUY GIVLN. By

the adminl&trntor to ihc crcdiiors ofmother was killed , in an

' ......................... ‘ ‘ them with thewithm f o u r

■ > II — ——• iirst publication, to postpone the awari.. Valley .of-JJuj noucc,- lo im- i,ald udmlltl!.- Iran /nr a pcrlpd not to eKceed

for years. She moved to, o(fRc uj kr.mei-, •"j'-y (jo) days, and in accejAngeles in 18,J9. w4stE j««. J ;«y_^rTw in 'i u County

-xrr

rt ' »»» •••• oiiMtttak maiiun VJUC91,^??igEcrs ,^ r th q u a k e when she was th ree ] “ > exinbit t.men"? lived wtth her'SSK,*h“r ' i , . r ’iji^ "i.n-ment— a , grandm other in Dffath V a lley .o f.^u j noucc,"io im-

crtiahiirt r«ki-tu_.,^_________ ________■ It tnc c iiy'i u.nd Highway L,li.ii;ict'i Stockpile situs*. The raw material

la to be piovlded l)y*the Con­tractor. and this slm shall be within a 2:>*milo radius o( ths City of Twin

Contract documents, including spe* cifications are on file at the office, of Uio city Clerk and are open lor

■ ODt1btiainedare on file at the office. Clerk and are

nspcotlon - Copies may , be from the-City UngiQeer.•-All bidders Shall be licensed asftublic works* contractors under the uws of the state of Idaho.

BUtdvrs wjll be required to furnish bid security In the form of cash, torclfiud check or bid bond. In the 4imount of five per cent (5%) of iliu total amobnc of the hid.

The kucce»sful bidder will be re* quircd to furnish a 100% perform- ance bond and a 100% labor and materials bond for faithful-perform­ance of the Contract In . the full amount of the Contract price.

The right is reserved by the City

She wrote poetry'^ the

rejoci any aud all bruposuls ant!d of the Con*

proposal that is. In the -opi

Indians and one poem ends: f*Lel me be ready Wfien H

proposalholdings In their k>resent condition

I-_uiuj County of the City Councli. ln theIdaho, this bulHB ofjhe City of Twin S ? ^ o i » “ al shall be' 'b^sed upon

illdin\ t «Ji »uunu. vni5 DUinuthe plac« tlxud'/or the trunsactlon of the. business of said estate

, D«Le<l this lOth day of Fe life 1070. -------

waiklhj? 6IK Ih e ir jo b s a t tlw« unjetr

-..dmmlKtralor ~ iKRAMF.r piftNKi-Y n Mr,r:.w„<

with clean hands."expiration of the union’ ji_lwb • year contract with the qemcte-

r ie s _______________A ll bu ria ls h a v e stopped since I K o r l l ' l f f ' l / k ' n

thon w ith the ex cep tio n o f V ie tn am casualtie.s and those w hose re lig io n req.uires p rom p t b u ria l, m a in ly O rth od ox Jew s.

T h e g ra v e d ig g e r s a re seek in g n $32 p e r w eek in crea se in each v c a r o f a tw tv y e a r con trac t.'I 'h cy now ea rn an a v e r a g e o f S126..W p e r iw e«;k and have Curiied d ow n a ^22 p e r w eek

— inrrcTOr

"M y spirit will come to you

Could Be Caiicer Root

Twin Falls, Idaho Attorneys for AdministratorFuhlished; Feb - iy,./2G and March 5.

NWrCE OF TIIE TIMli APFOINTUD

. FOR PnoViNG WILL IN THK PROBATF COURT OF

TWIN FALLS COUNTY. .STATE OI* IDAHO

•In Ui^MutlLT of the estate of VlPTIlNIA T. 1- FATNOn*.Dcccuihed.Furhuwnt lo un OrcU-r of (ho said

Court matlt* on the It Ui day. of J eh-_ ___ _ - . ruMry. 1970. Not-K-e .Tf^ereby GivenC*11ICAG0 (U P I)—A ruclcaT that l ‘u«sday, the lOth day "of Mareh.

1970, at 10:J0 o'clock In the foTn1o<»n i » f rrrni ' ■! -------- - - '

new con trac t.r tw o y e a r s o V a ,i,a^ jn v is ib le ra d io a c t iv e

gu.ses fr o m n u c lea r re a c to rs m a y b e the cau.se o f dn intH=eastng— in c id en ce—“o f '—hmg^! c a n c e r and o th er non -!n fectious re s p ira to ry d iseases . ,

Teachers Ratify New Jersey Pact,End Long Strike

J E R S E V - C IT Y . N .J . ( U P I ) — f i ib l i c school tea ch ers ' W edn es­d a y o v e rw h e lm fn g ly ra t if ie d h n ew c o n tra c t te n ta t iv e ly ap ­p ro ve d e a r l ie r In the d»>-; and

SSS Stht; S 'Sr^ar;;)-eb. 9., .

Cla.s.se.s were .«;et id open Thursday !n (he stale's sorond

D r. E . S tern class ,, p ro fcs* so r o f rad ia tion ph ysics a t the U n iv e rs ity o f P it tsb u rg h and a d v is o ry ph ys ic is t fo r the W cstin gh ou se R esea rch L a b o ra - to r ies . p rese jited a p a p er on recen t n uc lca r s lu d ies b e fo r e the M id w es t C lin ica l C o n fe r ­ence.

“ l.o w le v e l ra d ia tion from n u c lea r fiss ion such a s that

m a y a lr e a d y h ave p rodu ced seriou s e ffe c ts on the hea lth o f our popu la tiori fa r b eyon d those

Bids mu&t be submitted, on the ^andard enclosed form. Envelopes containing bids must be aealed, ni.'\rKed and addressed as follows; -

HID FOR CRUSHING. MAULING AND STOCKPILING OF ROCK. t;iTV- ....... .. ..... ............—. TWIN rALLfl. II)AHq

CONSTANCE J. LEISER. City Clerk

Publish; Feb.-26 and March 5. 1B70

IN THl-‘ PRCTBATE COURT OF THE COUNTY OF TWIN FALLS. STATE OF IDAHO In tlK; Matter of the Estate of

PEARL BRIM, Deceased.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by

the uniterslRned Executor to. the crcditpjs of and all p frsons having claims ac^lnst Ponrl Brim, du- ccuhed. or his estate, to exhibit tlrt-in with thu neccssary vouchers within four months after the first publication pf this' notice to said EXecUt(>r> i»gHu»--w offlcrs of Ray-

■ . In

Court. Ill the Judicial Hulldinn -the City and County of Twin Fulls. State of Idaho, have hi*ciT appointed

, born. Rtiybom. Webb and Pike. ... . thfi; mnk of Idnhb CIW oL

1 win' I'uiis. county of Twin Fdls7State of Idaho, this being tber^ljicefixed for Ihc transaction

the time and ploriy for provint; i.l^nHil'. Patnott. dr-

censed and for hcurlnu the nppllca* tion of Oscar C. P:tJ/ioit for issuance to him of Letters Ti'stumeniarv. when . nndr-wht rc -Any- person 'Inter- estcd -miiy appeiir and contcat the lame.

DATED this 16th day of February. 1970. •

. EVELYM M* Hl^iTZE .Deputy rierk *

Publish February iO. 26. March 5.*070

NOTICE OF THE TIME APPOINTED

. FOR J»nOVlN£L>VILL IN THE PROBATE COURT OF THE

COUNTY OF TWIN FALLS, -STATIv OF IDAHO

In the Matter of ihr cntntf of 1 l.sn-: s. ('ARL.SON. iX'ci-used. FuThuutit lo nn ortjer of niUcT Cc»urt.

on the liJth, duv of iM-brunry.

thejaiiie.>s or saio estate. pnTCd~TtlIS I7lh flay of FebxUisry,

E.. M. RAYBORN. Executor of Estate of Penrl Bflm, deceaseds

rubllsh: Feb. 26. Miarch 5. 12 and 10. 1970

larpcst s^thool system. New- present f lr k ’a.,,, __ liiLiam___ — fe n rh e r^

radiationwere -Dfl g tnnfly foiumtateU and adopted/’ he said.

standards TurHday thr loth U:iy of1970. at 10 00 oTiock am.

n W iC E t o CREDITORS IN THE PROBATE COURT’ bp

TWIN FALLS" c o u n t y ; “ STATE Ol- IDAHOESTATE OF DOROTHY REYN­

OLDS l ULLER. DECEASED.* NOTICE is hereby *lven by John L- i'Ul^^, Executor of the abow c itate. to the creditors of and all persons Oavmg claims against Dor­othy Reynolds Fuller, deceased, or her estate, to exhibit them with the iicccssaiy vuuchers. wiUiln iour (4> month* after the first publlcatioo of tnls notice, to the said Executor at the onite of Parry, Kobertson, Daly Hf Luisun. I'ldelity Bank Building:,

is, State of Idaho, this bvtnu flxi'd'for Ute transaction oi

jkuid estate.March, I. Hrhrmrv Ji. lB7n, ■

ts) JOHN L. FULLER,ExecutorEstuto of DorothyReynolds I'uller. deceased

Publish: February 2Q, March 5, 12 and ID. 1070.

lE G A t ADVERTlSEMENtSN o n c e TO

JN .THE PROB—T5VIN- FALr •—BTATr -, , ’ATE o f IDAHO Jo tiM Matter ot tM». Eatate of:

JULIBN S. BLAYE. Deceased., NOTiee-iS-HEREB.Y OtVENrby

the AdsUaUtratrix to th6 creditors oC- * od «U penoni bavtng claims against Jttllea 8. Blaye, deceased. 0r..iiU-«fttat«,-t0:-«xblbU-th«m-^th- the oee^ary vouchers, witl la four montha alter Che first publication of this notic«. to the said Admlnls. tratnx at the law •Tflces of Kramer.PtnMk»y A M»#>hl 310 .<?iifthEast. City of .Twin Falls. Coimty of Twl9 Falfs. Stat0 of Idaho, thl being the place fixed for tlie transaction of the businesr of saJd estate.

Dated this 17th day of February, lajO. - — . - — — - •• .- -

• Frfinc^s Blnyo Administratrix

KRAMER, PLANKEY & MEEHL Attomcy* for Administratrix 210 Sixth Avenue EastTwin Falls,’Idaho PUBLISH: February IB, 26. March

5. 12, J9T0.

NOTICE OF-INVITATION FOR PROPOSAI^ FOR THE MOVIMG

AND PURCHASE OF ^. OWELUNG «HOUSES

The City or Twin Falls will accept proposals for the removal and pur. chase of ady one or all of five |S) dwelling houses In tho City of Twin Falls. The houses are located at 310. 314. 320. 338 and 344. Third Avenue East In Twin Falls.

The City shall terminate all pres­ently connected uUlity services and

' shall bo based'on (he

■The proposal shall be based

r complete removal of the bulldlnc ^ltdli»jes._ wlth_ proper provlslans

of Iof curbs,

for all permlta. handling

LEGAL AOVEKTlSEMEMfS__U S U »k M O ^ s '

IN THE DTs TBICT COURT OFTOETH E -S Tyre^r-tO Aliy ^ N an d FOR THEV^OUNTY OF TWIN •FALLS. O R E E N A W A IA ^ S ^ ^ R N IT U R E &

App lian ce* iNt:.. a corporatioh, and MERVIN llANDALL. rimolttfs.

vouchers within four months after the first publication of this notice w Jhe_sald„«x«c«lrliL_«l ttusr nftlcea. ^ Rayb<»rn.» Kaybc>rn. Webb , and f’ ike.- Bank of Idaho Bldg.; >.0.< 3ox 321. lo the City of T^n Falls.this being the place Hv

- ----- ihe-1

-^B«TRAfc^VAtt;EV-TOin>J TNc:; . ___a' Corporation and LEE LU-&<C4{t nr h««'Defeadahts. „ , exhibit them with the

l.EE'' LUCICH »nd ‘ MA1Y LV- ’C'ICH.. husband an4^„wtfe,. Cio>splalilt£fls,_ - - ____ I

• Tvs. ^ ___ ’<iENTRAL VALLEY FEED. INT..

an Idaho. Corporation. GRi:CN.\WALTS fu r n i t u r e & APPLI ANCE. INC.. a Corporation. MER.VIN *ANDALL.-«n<ri»l«v-«it-olher persons unknown claiming anv right, title, eftiate or lien In the leal prop­erty described In cros> pUlnhffs* cnmpl liit adver.se to cross plain­tiffs’ ownership or unv cl)ud upon cross plaintiffs* title thereto, Cioss ctrfendants.THE s ta te o f SENDS

GREETINGS TO CENTRAL VAL­LEY-PEED. INC.. m Idaho Tor- poration., CiR«^MAU.’ALTS FUR­NITURE St. appL iaxce. inc.. a Corporation. MERVIN RAr.'DALL. and also All oth< - persons unknown cialmirTB anv’ ripht. title, rufaie or

, - ...... fo r the’-{4r.uik.tct4oii—of ‘ ■

estate.Dated thU 24th day of February.

1970, '*•DOrtOTHY ADELINE STURDEVANT. Executrix of Est«i<» of Adcltaert George Gould, decea^d

Publish r Miirch i. 12, 19 ft 2€, 1970.

line In the r<jal property drscrtb^ Iffs* complaint‘'In cross plaintiffs* complaint ad

verse to cross pinintlffii' (>*ner ship or iinv cloud upon cross nlalntiris* title thc.retor You are hereby notified, that a

Counteri l^im.. aqrt. .C.ross .. complaint has t»een fik*d against vou In the District Courr of the Fifth Judicial District of the State of Idaho In and for the Countv of Twin Fall* hy the above-named cross p!alntlflV and you are hereby olrected to ap­pear and plead to said Counter-

..... .S*""* complaint withintrafflo control. protection | t t ' e service of

streets, shrubs rtnd »ide-1 j -.Summons: and youwalks. iHie founllatloVni. bjisementa! fm-thcc-'fioiifird that* unlessana outamidingr shall bu IpU fot-city demolYtlon” ThcVroposalsVshHlI cross complaint withinbe based upon the followiifg s c W e d t t l e - h o r e i n specifieit liie cro^s for removal: ~ • * P'alntlffs will take Judgment ai*aln%tYOU ns prf\)ft<Mi»----

After April I. 1970, After AprlLJU-iaia

310• 314 ______ .

320 Aftfr June I. 1970338 After April I. 1970344 After April I. 1970

The proposed amounts shall be due and payable prior to any build­ing removal and the bulldlnps shall be removed within thirty (30) davs of that shown on the above schrdulo.

Propo.sals'-will be recelvt.-d at the offiro of the City Clerk. 321 Second Avenue Eust. before 4:30 PM. M S T.. Thursday March 12. 1f»70 Said proposals shall be opened and puhllcally rejtd on or about 4 :\0 P M nn twM Hnti» tn tha rifu Ci i.«^

laiiiirs.rW IN FAJJ.S.

:e j . le is e b ..

Chambers.Tht» buildings may fee In.snerted

f)v making arrangements with tiie ^itv Building Inspector.“ The“ CIiy reserves the right to ac- cepf or relect any or all proposals and to waive Informalities.

CITY OF TWIN FA IDAHO

By CONSTANCECity Clerk '

Publish: February 26 and March 5. 1970,,-^ ..---- ' - .

T^OTTCE-tNVI HNQngfPs4 " -NOTICE Is hereby given that felds

will bo accepted by T\vin Falls Coun­ty until the hour of 10 00 o’.ciock a.m.r-'March 10. IH70 fort Liability Insurance for Twin Falls County and Magic Valiev Memorial Hospital for ■ term of from March 14. 1970 to Morch 14, 1971. '

All bids shall be presented or otherwise deUvcred. under seale<j cover, with a" roncFMs statement marked on the outside thereof gener- hllv Idcnjlfvlng the expenditure to which said bid pertain*.

•Sperlfkatlons mav be obtained at the offlcv of the Board of County f'ommissloners in the Twin Falls Co -

•-me

and cross corflplalnt.TtdsacMon is , brought to deter-

Tmrn'^fTf^ndversc claims to nnd clouds tipon thr title to the renl property descrlbtHl In the -roNs Cf m. plaint and counterclaim and to ff're- close cro^a plaintiffs’ i!.?n tnereoo.

All that part of the SW!i of the S\v»; of Section 24. Township 10 South. Range 18 E.n.M. de ■crihcd as commenclnp at tha Southwest corner of said SW«i of the SAVt; of said Scrrinn 24 runnins .thence Mast alont the .South lliie of said Section a din- tnnrv nr 115 feet; thence N(.ith Ifl rnds—I font anj

*^ence West tl.S feet lo sideof mui .«;<‘rflon: running thcnec South nlono «ald Section line 18 rods. I foot. 4 Inches to thw place of he nntntrr" e cv'nt a strln of land 3t feet wide rn tbe Westerly » ‘<fe- thereof herrrrTorF conveyed to the Stare nf Idaho fnr r>uh*le hlr^wav; a'«o

,„.to the right of urav of II S. Hlqh- No no nlontl iin^.

o said PfOAeriv;- T'’>iieiher >vi»h »M lmprAv!»m4>nt«.^»i]!*»*oa,—liv chidlnn hut not llznVed to hc:»t-- Thg pTnnt air ■ cOndltrenlnif unit pad v*s pumos.WITNK?;.<; Mv I--- rt nni ilii ti il

of thU rourt lllli ll.ii <>l»i rrbru' ary. 197n.

(») U A. LANCASTER Clerk . .

KRAMER, PLANKEY & MEEHL 210 Sixth Avenue E.asf Twln-Fulls. rdaHo Attorneys for cross plaintiffs Publish; March 3. 12 19 & 76. 1970.

NOTICF. TO BIDDERS The State Purchasing Agent will

receive sealed bid at hU offlcv. Hooin 20S. Statchuuke. Boise. Idaho until: 2 00 P M.. March ill. 1970 for the followiaK: Reg, No. 8721

LEGAL ADViERnSEMiENtSNOTICE TO CRIW tlO RS

IN THE. PROBATE COURT OF •THE'CefUNJY OF TWIN FALLS,-46IATE OJ^IDAHO------— i— ^'In the Mvner .of the Eitat* at

ADEUBEiVTVPEORCE GOULP. Po-” t o S c e he« e b v ByIho Undenlined ue<nitrix 'mkt the

County of Tyrin Falls, Sta'M of Idaho,i£rt?ne»s - ^ a td ^^^^^^/thii-~34-day - of--Febni»iy*.

I9M. DANiELS,Executrix

KRAMER. PLAKKEY * MEEHJ- Attoroeya for Executrix 210 Slxtli Ave. E«at Twin" Falls, Idaho , -PubUali: March a. 1?. 19 *nd ?«||I970

NOTICE OF INTENTIOr«TO LEASE WATER SHARtiS

Tl»o City of Twm Falls. Idaho.. wtU lease to the highest bidder- five hundred and n«>-hundrvdth8 (500.00) shares of Twin Falls Canal Company water tojc the 1970 sca.son. Sealed bids Will be rctclved at the office of the City aerk at the City Hall. 21 Second Avcnw East, before 7:30 o’clock P.M., Monday, Marcts 16. 1070. 4vblch bids will be. opened nublicly on or about 7:30 o clock P.M. on said date during the meet* Ing of the *rwla Falls City Council. ■iHids' wili be iccepted on any or alH^hares in blocks of fifty <S0) shares or more. Lease la due and payable within thirty (30) daya of bid acceptance. . , .

Further lnformatU2tL. IS''W at the offices 'or the Cjiy Clerit, CityuffRu uuuis:-------------

The CUy reserves the right ccept or reject any c

Ip. yuivftjWmmalhlrsaAd

CITY -OF TU'IN FALLS. IDAHO

By CONSTANCE J. LEISER.. Cliy Clerk '

PublHh: F«bniAry 2« and Marcb 5.1970.

LEGAL ADVamSEMENTS-m oiiE e t o cA jb d itom

IN' TtiE PRObA'lK COUIW OF . . TWJN FALLS COONTV, STAIi? 'OP-jtWJttr------------- -------la th« M attw of t h « ' of

DWXCttr W. o a n jE U i, OMjUfSd. 'NOTICE IS H E W ^ Y W ySW , K (

iht exccutru to. d>* e r n n l^ «* and aU pcraau . Marine . e l» lin »

Avcnua'^Eatt, City- ot TffU- - . t;o»a.y M Tw > fJ u ,this iMlnt the pla< transactton of tbaestato.

busfaeu at a«l<l

NOTICE OF ir«rENT10N TO W A.iiK SrtArtliS

The laiy ot 1'wio 1-alu. loaao. will leue to tn« bigncjil hundred on* aim Tnla-.ilrediu (401 .Si) >hatc« <K Salnacs Kl*er Canal Company water tor (M lu'.u «eM»o. beulca bid* w lU ^ ^ . rewlved at the otilce ol tb* City Cierk at me C «y Hall, M l ^ 9 * 5 Avenue tefora ?:»»VJrt.. Monday. Harcb U, lV7t>, wnicb t>id> will be o ^ e d puoltcly oa or about 7;30-ocloclt P.M., oo date during the mactUic ol tba Twin t»iU Cliy Council.

Bide will b« accepted on jm y or all ibarea lo bloclu -of fifty (90) ihare* or mors. |>aa« U dua and payable within thirty (JO) day* ot bid acceptance.

Further IfilormaUon < la avalUbta ar: the,jMHcca-^<^ the Airport Man-

Hall, durinr otnci^lKim.. *V. -

B y CONSTANCB J . L E IS E R , - C liy C lerk ' _

PublUh: March S and. 13. 1*70. .

C L A S S IF IE DLoti and Fdund .1

LObT; Medium sUe ^a> m^le Poodlb on Highway 25. near TutUe-Wendell area. Wedaesda February 2. tb. Rs'ward; Call led. 726-3U2.

JlOU KEWARD (or Information pt i::‘ alumlri\int bout, stolen March 1st on the w4st‘ilde_,of the ^lager-man refuge. 53&-2607.______ ______

. OUND: Large male Samoyed dog. white, very friendly. Call 733>ll9ft.

Spedol NoHcm-

'THE COVE-B E S T FINGER S T E A K S

IN TO W N . O R Q E R S T O G (X _ .

733-9844 496 Addison W.

HYPNOSISFor weight, smoking and mem* ory. Phone 733 M20.

Http Wanffvd 18TI J E R S d N N E L S E f t t ^ l C E '

O F MAGiq V A L L E Y — sfcYN-WIfcSGN-----

689 Flier Avenue — 733S562 ( 1) Womnn who works well with hands, part-time now, could b«i full time lAier. Typlns alto nee- essary. (2)' Hotiaelteeper. no llva In, good pny, good taoun, good . job. (3) Experienced aecretarles and general.office slrlt Always needed. (4) Experienced tire-.inain-nlae-bnike '■ntt • ----esperience alweyt helpful. (5> Young rann for full time perma­nent joo. Neat appearance, good

-credit rating essential. <6) Ex­perienced male.bookJieeper. han* . die paru and help unload. (7) Need neat', ambitious youas m«aior Job loqulrlea.______ OPENINGS FOR

Q U A LfF lED PEO PLE STR ICTLY C O N F ID E ^ f^ A t No registration fee charged

A R EA MANAQER103*year>old company seeklnK

organisation for'TwIn .Falls area, l^xcellcnt opportunity to It^creasa family income. Operate from your home. Flexible hours. Cali Mr.*\Vaj^er. 733-4690.

t Thursday. S-IS a.m„ Friday.S x p e 'iu h n c c d ^ ^ ^

hnvc also been on .strike.T h e tw o -y e a r p a c t ' lncrease.s

the basic sljirtinR . w a g e from $7,n00 to $8,000 the. f ir s t y e a r and the top s ca le from $10,750 to $1.1.200. la th e .'iecnnd y e a r the s a la r ie s jt im p t o $8,700 and $11,100 re s p e c t iv e ly .

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS

Youth ArrestedA Ifi-vonr-oM hny WnQ

rd b y T w in Fall.s p o lic e W cdnes _ d a y and charprH w ith seH ing‘ "a prOf>i.TTpi;uii lI i u«v------------ —

Th o youth has been re lea sed l o Ihc h is p aren tsp en d in g fu rChef actiun. • -

NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE PROBATE COURT OF

TWIN FALLS COUNTY. STATE OF IDAHOIn the Matter of the Hsiate of

WOODY T. SEAL. Deceased.Try li • hgrrfr

creditors of andKjven tb nil

persons havingcinlma agolnsi Woody T. Seal, dr- cl-a'scd' or his estate, to exhibit them with the mjcessnry vouchers withtn four months after the first publica­tion o/ this nutlcu, to the said Office ttf P:Yiiy. Tiubcriiun. Daly7<r-t;arsoTrr Fidelity Bnnk Building. Twin Fnlls. Idnho. Countv of-Twin Falls, this N lng the pinco fixed for the tranit- juaJon Of the business of »nld estate.

DXTtfft.J£ebrunry 3, 1070.- (s) DORTON

Publish: Feb. 12. 19. Z(T aud-March n; 1970.

COMMUNITY .NEWSIf you have new s about your, com m unity you'd like pub lished in the T im es-N o w s, c a ll or w rite your hom etown rep o rte r.

ALMO*• A'fi, WoMaca Tnylof. Almo^

BUHL

TbI 82n-2321

'Mrs, Pohen boy, Rquta 3, BtjlU. Tel. 543»54^3

BUHIEYMr». LePoge Layton, 1 450 Orlentol Avs., &url<jy, Tel. 67I>S9Q8

'■— ' Mrs.Teoa Peck. Bo* 96. Corey. Tel. 823-3291

castlifohd'*Mf». J. L. W iecovar, Costleford, Tel. 537-6582

oecLOMrs. Nolon Taylor. Bo* 63, Decio, Tel. 654-2501

DIETBICHSheilo Sorenson. Routa 1. Diefich

EOEN-HAZfLTONMr», Boyd -Hogon. Route 1, Horelton, Tel. 829-5003

faibfielo. Mr*. M. L Doniel, Bo* 276. Tel. 764-2427

FIIERMtt. Reubao Liermon, Route 2. Filer, Tel. 326-5454

^ a y ; BT— tlTD— Ciju u 'R>/tTTn— kt............Court, at the r<nintv <'ourt Houst* In th«j'Cltv of Twin I'alls, ( ounty of Twin Fiills. Ida'ho. hus been ahpolnt- ed as the ilnw nnd ^«ce for proving the Will of said Elsie S. rnrlson deaented. and for hcnrlna the appll> cation oC Agnes L. MnrtIn for rhc issunnro ' tn her of • l«nter* testn- mentnrv. when and whvre nnv per son Interested mny ftnncnr and rnn.lest same

Dated Februarj' Ifl. 1070. s Evelyn MJnf/e

Drriutv t'Irrk PCIDLT.SH; February 19. 28. March

5. 1970.

NOTICE TO CREDITORSIN THE PROBATE COURT OP

TWIT FAI LS COUNTY STATE OF IDAHO

In the Matter of the Estaie of- WILKER r. PARHAM. I>><eas#d NOTICE IS hj:reu_v C/VJIK^ t?y_

fho ailmlnlslrttti4»*fb’ <h«* i'rvduora. of and all per.sons having cUilms 'rtgalnfcC— -Par-nam. -d*-----

ipened In the ofnce J rmung Camera of the Twin Falls County Commls- ^uw Enforcement

NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN TH& PROBAT . 'T W IN F A L E

•loneri on "March 10. ii)70. « l I h e ' , hour of 10:00 o'clock a.m. In Lhc Twin Falls County Courthouse.

The Board of County Commlsslon- era reserve tha right to refuse any or all bids.

Cards lu> tUTTStatg Department

OK IDAHO IN 1/lE MATTER OF THE ES-

TATE Ol* MARION A. HOLLOWAY, Deceased.

L N0X1£:E-1S h e r e b y g iv e n by ^................................... } ■

Heber J. Loughmlller, Chairman Duiiid uf County r iiHiintiifen^ri rWkfr haUs' County. IdaKb

ATTEST:H. A. LANCASTER. Clerk of lh« Board of County Commissioners Publish February 10. 1970, February

M. 1S70 and Murcli 9. isio.

Hulluway deceosad. to the crt-dlKira of and all persons hgvrng cralms against &ald ' decedent to exhibit them wnn the nei.eft*ary vcuchvra Vkithin four moeiths a l i r r the f irs t nublltaiiCMS or notue to the Mid fc*«-ctrtnsr-«t—the uffiLV of W U llim .h. f.anglf>v. A iiiA r«er Ijsmt, 2t§ th ird Avrnua l.a«t. 1 wta' Fa lls .

i?ii. or his estate, to exhibit them with th<* nrcc*A (iry vourhrri. '•ithin ff»ur months after thr firtt puhlUa-t finn of this notlc«, |o iht* »ultl «d-* mlnl tr.Trrlx nt ttif» l.iw KT AMTTR. PLANKfrV ft MM-m 210 Sixth Avpnitp rn^t. linx TJik Twin Fnlls, Idtiho. thu h«»inp »h#> pln,r fixfd fnr th<* tru/mruon of th<* bu!lln<• s of f ald esthtc

Hritcd t ls 10th day of February. 1070.

s G i.irtvi F Ot'on Admi'nlstrntrlx

KRAMfrR—FLANKliV'fc MTTt HL2lO Slxth AvV'niif Hast Tiiilw. Pnl|>, Id,

f d x o f f rbrujiry.

A lto rnrvs fnr Admln»stratrtx PiThllsh Feb. 19. 26 and Marrh ?

12. 1370.

idTihtf.'ttm t»rmg tnt nia<< fiBgti T»if trant.«rtivn of !/:.« fekuVloesa Of

»uTd l »A l i * 0 t

1970.!I A MAY HOLLOWAY I ;T: RNfl AHPTr ---------I ulna

Puhiuh; j,t>. i». March 5 and 12. i»:o.

' N O Tic i: t o C R E o rro R Sl.'J THl. PHnHATi ir iim r fiP

be-r«c«lved until 7:30 P.M.. local ttme on March 19. i97d' li(ine^offiC4: of th« School'AdmlnlstratiOftj>y the Uo«rd of Trustees of Twin Falls School Olstrlct No. 411, and tben «cttl—bo—iHtbllelr' opened—end"Tewd‘ aloud. Bids received after the clos. iNf time will be returned to the bidder unopenad

_ COUNTY. STAT^i OI- IDAHOIN THL MArrF.n OF T1IK FS-

TAT g o r WILLA ITD«*‘ crt*«*d

LiLH NH AWU I

thi’NOTICI- I.S h e r e b y OIYXrl by

underngncd. Herfry J.. G«rnhurdt^-txecwor of llifi_L«sl WUl and. Testament of WilFa R. .Gcrnhardt,

S U M M O N S <Jrccascd. to the creditors of andIN T H E I'R O B A FE COURT OF ull perions 'having claims ■ against

T U IN F A L L ii COUNTY, S T A T E said deccdept to exhibit them withOK IDAHO lhc ncc^4»ary vobchers within four

HFOTT------- - ~ ^-.JT* Wr». Weiley Goodman, O. Drawer P. Glenns Ferry, Tel. 366*20_37

GOODING ' - •Mrt. David Metzger, 1745 S. Mbln. Tel. 934-5535 '•

, HAGEDMAN-BIISS ^Mrs. Ed Larson, Hagerman, Tel. 837-4436

S\n. Gena Bolton. Box 531, HorTey. Tel.‘768-4475

HANSENMri. Dorotheo Srpeltmlth, Hansen, . Tel. 423^54j)8

NOTICE INVITING BIDSI ** h|?rC|b .giYcn Mdi' “wrnoe acccptcd'by use Iwin halls County Commissioners until Uie hour of lu:OD o'clock a.m. March 1970 for a new cash control system for the District Court of-tm> 1-lfUi Judi- xtal District.

JffOM EMr>; Robert Bell, 6)6 E. Av«. F Tel. 324^741

KiMBEBLYr^»dro Beiohordt, Boyte 1« Kimberly, Tef. 733^696

KlNtfHIlTtr. Kina Hill. T.l. 3 *6 .»i5 i _____

JHri. Farnum Wart, Murtaugh,. T«l. 432-2779

"Mri. John aiJyerl, BOX 41 MuiTAu h. TtL 431.1MC

tlCHFItlO ' ---M ri. rj^na .Bnnh, eichfieW, T« l. 4 (7-3900

*U P n T ''Mri, Jor-sch»^pri(oot» srsop»in—'T«t.-M S=»»2 j---------

SHOSHONl -1 ' •Biw, 364, Ihe«hon«, T « l H » -»0 7 1

Turtu ___ — ^ :----Mn. Rsynord WHght, 1, Hagwmaiv T » l. • J7r444t

V liWMn. I i . BurJ*y. - T « l r * « : a 7 i i r

wm iKU- Mn. EoH Schnnk, Be> S6, Wwidtn, m S 3 4 4 7 U

■; .......itere;! nf ririRnriM irt?UA’VrS and KUVAN W, DAVIS, Children under lA Ycara of Age.

THI; .STATE OF IDAHO SENDS GREETINGS TO

MARJOKIL.. |)AVLS YOU ARE llliK liUY NOTIFIED

a Pi-tamn. pursuant to thv Child Proicritve Act. has been filed In the Probate Couit of Twin Falls- State o f Idaho, by t »c Petitioner. Dep^ rtment of Public Assistance. State of Idaho, and you are hervby djrccied lo nppear at the hearing on lald Petition, jjt 9 00 A..M. on the 9th day of Mnrrh. lf>70;-tn-the Prohate Court of Twin J'alls County. Idaho.

(hi* notioe lo (he said Executor at* the office of ' William J. Langley, Aitorncy at Law. 248 Third Avenue I-: . Twin Fall*. Idaho, this being the' r><>< e fixf'd /or the tronimctioa of the business of said estate,

i PATED this 17th day of February.'1970.

U^UENRY J_GERNKARt>T,Exccutor

PuJ>ll*n: Feb. 19, 26. March**5 and 12. 1970.

WIT.Na .'* my bond and the seal of *aid this 2-ith. day of Feb­ruary. 1970. ‘

EVELY.V.M...HI.STZE* __ Deputy Clerk

Publish; February 26 and March 5. 1970:

NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE FKOHATH COURT OP

TWIN f^LLS COUNTY — aTATC OF IDATTCr In the .Mauer of the Estata of:

GEORGE E. LISTER. Deceased. NOTICE is HEREBY GIVEN. By

Hhe~«dmlffTsiratr*x to -the credit of and all/ persons having clalmi againtt George E. Lister, deceased/ W his estate, to exhibit them with the neccssary voucher*, within four months after the first publleatlon of this notice, to'the said admlnls-

otherwise dcilve cd t*iM2 dlf>«AaaJed cover,- tonay Clerk t>f the ^ a rd -cf Couaty-Commlsratonrrs. wlth -a-ron ic«ntjin.x«t»t.,. aaffcad->»n iho ~ *

aide thereof generally idpntlfving ih* »^>eiidlHu-e to whicn said bid per

All bldar.ahAil' contain one (1) d the followl/ig forma 61 bidder’s se- curUy: f ••-T s rc a «r *

Attorneys for, Administratrix i^iiihHsh^; Eebv'J* * '

12, 1970.'

-a.•'^he^o

-f.k i-1#- mmtim p«y«K>«to'^e'^Couaty.C. A Certtfied.cbinlc mede. payableto |J»« COBhtV,--:..;..... ........D ..A bidder^Cboad executed by • <juaMfled .1' aurety -^company, rnade payable lo tbe County. The mcuV- Ity aball b« at least XD% of the amount of tho b|d.Specincatloas may be obialned at

the'offlc* or tho Clerk of the Diatmi i ^ r t j « ‘'tlie.Xada..J'alla County Ju.

c al AQMjr Bonding 'a t Sth u d loahone Street. Twin Falls, Idaho.Bldf bo'0Mt)M in the -orn'ce

■alUTCoflaty Ceor-tho>Tvin Fal

R. A. . tX tm a r iit . cierk of,tn»

Pliinkcy A Meehl. 210 Sixth Avenue East. Twin Falls. County of Twin Falls. State of Idaho, this being the pl.icc fixed for the transaction of the business of said estate.

Dated this 10th day of febniaryFrances M Llstir AdmihfslrlitTlx

KRAMER. PLANKEY Jb MEEHLTnr sixfT)' Aventir E iir*

---------H » T tCC-t >F T H E T IW SAPPOINTED ,

— ------FOR r9LOVftfO-¥n O i ~W T H E P R O B A TE tO O R T O F

III iim Matter <4 ih« Estaio ofM A RY V. O LM STEA D , Doccgsed. P u r s u a n t to »n order ot-w ittf

court« made on the ICQs 6kv'at ^et>> ruary, 1970, ootlce* la beroby bIvm .that Tuesday, the 10th day oC WajttA,

o js. of 'amidl970.™aL41;00 o’ctatfc*:deyr^t-Uio-CoortrooSror_____In Judicial BsUldtng oM tu Cunua tr^oortb ouM In the Q ty TwUC ~^alU, Cooaty ot Tw lp Fa to , Ida-

Bidden will be required to fur­nish bid security lo the form of fash, eeriitled chrck. or bid bond In ITie amounl hf five p«r cent (5%) nf the total amount of the bid. The «uffgyiful bMder jrlU bc.-r-u4uire4 to furnish a 100% performance bond and a 100% Tabor and matrriaU bond for faithful perfomisnrc of the C ontract In the full amount, of the Contract Price.

TTie Boa7d of Trustees re«.er\-es the right to accept or ielect anv Md atT btd

All bids Will bo pubUcly opened and rend t_. iha—aWve--Umcj arid plucc. FOrms statmg conditlmu must be secured before bidding. These are available from the State Purchasing Agent’s OXflce

TCI* CRAMER £>utto Purchasing i____ ______ *ing Agent

Publish: Murch 6. S and 0. 1970.NOTICE TO CREDITORS

IN THE PROBATE COURT OF. TWIN FALLS COUNTY. STATEOP IDAHO--------------In thv Matter of the Estate ofu:----- -

ccascu.Nonce Is hereby given-* to - tb<Lherebycredittir's of and all pc

c l a i m s aga'inst Kussell Tbrallcrsons having

aiul' 10 ifiilVr all iiilui malUte . No bid -Shall b« withdrawn for a period of thirty (30) days sub- aeauant m iha noanlag-ai:. iha-Bld' Oeneral Contractors, Subcontrac­tors and SpecUIty Contractors shall ba rqulrad- to -have-.a- Public. JVorks, Contractors License at the time of th»-op«nlnff .Of thg~bwif as sve^lfletf by the Idaho Code.

Plans and Specifications , may he aecured after March 2 from the Architect. Harald E. Gerber. 109 — ‘ - jinrth “ ‘ "

iho. for a Plen Deppsit $50.00. The deposit will be refunded to Contractors who' enter a vldeO'ithat Plans and Specifications are returned to.the Architect within Ti ri days aft^r the date of the open* Ing of the Bids.

{s) J. T. ANDERSON.Clerk

Publish; Feb. 2«.*M^rch 5 ft 12. 1970.NOTICE TO BIDDERS

^The State Purchasing Agent wTlI receive sealed bids at his office. Room 205 Stalehouse. Boise. Idaho, untir 4:00 FrM'w March -n. 1970 for thg followlftg; Re<T

' ■ It U---- --------- .'or the HighwayDepartment at Boise. Idaho.

All bids ’Win be publiclv^4>pened and rend at the aoove time and

laee." Forme startng the conditions, must be secured before blilding. These are avallabla from the Sute Purchasing Agent'e Office.

TED CRAMER,State Pucchaslng Agent

Publish: March S, € and 8. 1970.IN V TTA TtO N TO B ID D E R S —

P E TR O L E U M PRO D UC TS COLlfGE OF SOUTHERN IDAHO

Junior College District Sealed bids, fn single, will be^e^

celvod until 5:00 P.M. MST e^ FrK

Graves, deceased, or his estate. t6 exhibit—them with the necessary -voufhe r s i - w l th In-foor-TnontHiriiTtc r th« .first publication of fhis notice, to the aald Ai^lnlktralrU-of aald estate ut the Xuw Office of Earl 1*. WaTRvrr^aa Ctli A vc. .North, CUy of Twin Falls, Countyy^f.Twin Falls and Statv of Id thn,-this being the place fijtrd fur the transaction Of th * busini’jis Of"fald estate.

Duicd February 3. 1971..............MAtTEC c'oUlSlTnLY.

Administratrix of the Estate of Russell Thrall Ciravcs, Deceased

Publish; February 12. 19, 28 and March 5, 1 9 7 0 .__________________— N o y c iAPP01-------

clotning rtpair. "Fhone Ta3!-7376.160 Monroe. _______________

PersonalsliARN UP TO JlOO — each week

.howlns I.E VOV.S cxclu>(ve lln-lerjfl .and AT-.hqKie f ash io n s .No iavestment on sAmnle '

■ lime. Write Uok U^Jl;News.

"lrrtga*ln^**S'

EXERCISE thehe naw way. Rent-erciso and health cqulpmenL speed bike, massage roller, b lt vibra­tor. actloocycle. BANNER Fuml-

~ 14il.___________________ANONYMOUS. I'wlo

Falls Courthouse. WednHldSy «l 8:30 p.m. For Further Information. 733-4030. Al-Anon 3rd Floon* 733 9457.

work and furrow irngatihs I _ summer. Help feed boof cow nerd It) wloter. Should be capable of plaanlns farm work ahd dlrocUfiit other help. Codd pay. 3*bedroom houaa trailer furnubed. 543-4909, days. 543~«748 evenings, BuhL

feXPERIEfiCED” tody ahd , feeder man. Paid__.yacatlQns. li

P R IV A T E Investigtl0fc=2Liiour-Seri VlfiiB. AU“ coafldejtUl. Pboaa 733* 0631 ^ n l^ t 733-5773.

ILU~K0R PROVING WfLX IN THE PROBATE COURT QF

THE COUNTY OF TWIN FALLS. X.TA.TU- nv ii\Aur\IN THE MATTER OF THE US-

TATE OF MARIAN NEtTIE BEUSMONIGOMifcRy^-Dat^asaq,-----------“ Fursuant'to an order of said Court,

-made dll thr tweniy-aliih February. 1970. notice is hereby given that Tuesday, the 24th day of March. 1970, at 9:45 o'clock A M.. of said day, at the Court Room of

Id f.min. iH Falls mumy"

r WILL no longer be respooslbla for any debts otMr than my men

16Bdby Sijtan-Chlld CaraOilLDREN-S VILLAGE. ChUdcwi:

M a^yow ood---481 North jLWK»t- Licensed, ^iterate rlaiiee > nur­sery, - preldndergartea . Kinder- garteo. Also day-cai« tor worklag mothers. 711-7080. 733-9010._______

.£in|iIoyin#nt A g tn d # « 17JOB OPENINGS at Personnel Ser.

vite of Magic Valley, 6S9 Filer Avenue. Box 1213. 731.550.

Personals

and retlremeot . furnished. Contact Theisen Motor*.

cations, insuranca prograift. Uniform ict Vilbur' Browo«

st)gNA(iRXFli6R—Shorthand-destnblB'mirBorMfAs^'aary. Wrlt|^c-o Time*'Ne«fs, B o x .

U -IS. : -!•kxPERlENCED, s^tresa.

f e x P ^ m NCBP traetor operator. 4 mile* from Twin FaUa. Pboda 403 — - ~

N lG K T f ry cook 'a iU night <dtrs))< —wasb«r<—A>ply_4a^-^*Mr»oa.—Rad-

[Itocl^afe.R u e d teneral Varmhand, axparW

enced. Vaar around job, Pboaa 9Z4-50M.

tAD ^ WANTED for evenliw. ...... ....4 p.m., Maxfe'a Pltca Oiren

lo jf jw k

EXPERIENCED IrHsator. Modern house. Phone IO0-5S06. Hatelton.

Ptrtonolf

JudlclarnDldg . m the City of Twin' tPalls, County of Twin Falls. Idaho.' has been appointed as the time and place for proving 'the Will of said Marian Nettle Beua Montgomery, deceased, and for h >arlng the «p-ifillcatlon of Lottie Jensen for the; ssuance to Loftle Jensen of l^ttei^;

lesiamentary. when and where any ' person Interested may appear and contest sahic.‘ Dated l-ehru.nry 26. 1970.

<»> c v c t rVN M m »rrzgi- Dcputv Clerk

Publish: March 5. 12 and 19, 1970.t<38-

AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF TWIN FALLS. IDAHO, A.MEND- ING SUBPARAGRAPH (I) AND <P) OF SUBSECTION If) OF pMRACRAPcKtC) O.' oECifON 2. ARTICLE 11 lOF CHAPTER -V, CITY OF- fw fN FALLS, IDAHO. CODE TO .rTCOVIDE FOR - A MINIMUM QF ONE-INCM SUP­PLY LINE PIPE RELATING TO STANDARDS. OF N A T I O N A L BOARO'OF FIRE UNDERWRIT- ERS FOR THE INSTALLATION OF GAS APPUANCES AND GAS PIPING.

ED BY THE MAY-OUNCIL OF THE

S IN G E R * SEW IN 'g M A C H IN E

CLEARANCE Sa U — SAVE ON

S in g e r F lo o r M o d e ls and t3 e m o n s t ra to rs L im it e d s to c k - C o m e In to d ay ■ A l l a t lo w , lo w p rfcO S ^

SIN^^^CENTER '

9%% %AA UO Main AUenoe North Open *111 9 every'Mday nltftil• A tfodamark of ihe Smoex-CQmpony_____

BE IT ORDAUO R ^ N P C ITY _____________ . . .CI5# OP Tw n r f “ALLS. IDAHO:

FREE

of the Business Manager ot the of subsection <t) of paragraph (c) College of Soothenr'ftlahTr.~44S 3rd I of Section 2. Article XI of Aventra Eaet.-Twlii FaHa. Idaho, and V. CUy of Twin FaHs. Idaho, Code

THEATKE T l C X m D A I I T ' ^Y o u r c h »c * ot l h » ^ l l r>«w C irw ipn . * M o f .V u . __a

th«a. pBb»c35t n mml/1 -b e -

llsted petroletun nroduetii for the average domestic condlMons. period en^ng April 1, — tI)-Jnig diameter .of the Supply

.• Ethyl ‘ jtasollne.. S.ooo gallons R^ular gasoline c.ooq •gafl^s

•.D]e«eU. fuer 1.000 gallons •nMotor .on SAE 3d HD•• MOIW- O il SA E : » HD

M gallon drum ■” ntirer6r " C H T S X E 3 ^ H o n -1 > H c r -

S5 ■allnn drum A 100 »anon ewrSer«F=lenlc

with BMeatal * hosa to b« fur* h1s1l«d bv Vendor.

** Altarnata bid—aama ofla la « ouart-aMU la ease lota.

Tha foregQteg ooantltica are all .esitmatarf’ rcqirireffienu.

~ aie dUtrtef la Heder a l-ta«___ .vales tax exempt on thesepr otfucu.

Point pe d^llsrerT v f l l h « ar the OoOey

jaasx^mr; tmieie dUtrtefr-

line from the meter shall not bo less than I Inch, in any rate.^ad ■ may be goveme«2 by the rotlbw- *1ng specifications for minimumto Tu ld e <ybuGSn *s; fo^ ho a ^ containing more than s ix rt>otna.. o r fo r cofnmerdats and tndos« tria l buildings and InstallatiOBS,

4>«baf^condlilona are unuagg- - _^coBsuIt the O ty laspactor oc _ le ' 'aa Company fo r apeclflca* .

tions, • ' , V —ptitlata to appllaftccs stvToM of a diansater. not leas thaa.

the ' dlatneter ,or tbe Inlat coo* — aectlon on the apoUaace:

f i ) - Supply TO e’ ’ - «E iH ~ li> e i* .tha line tnm (Im ( u mtttr 'lo the n n t nubte onUet or O nt

\

W ATOI FOR YOUR N A W r r a ■ APPEAR IN THE TIMES-NfWS_

C IT IF IE D , ^ I O N . _

.1. Several nomet. wlit ba sopttared throughout 'the Timas-News Clotslfiad Section doily.

^.-Nomet Switl ba p^ed ot rOnddm ftorh thti '. Moo>c Volley phona directory and Iha Times*

C.lossir*a(S r»ia. ' "3. V|iU».you W

Stakm, ytfu n < »* *8 h o u n to oalt. w r> l» , o r com* lo fho T im * > -N «w s O lid p itk u p y e w .

-----,05,;--------------™ ^4. Tk t»n oro good o potted o f tw » woola"

iiem Iho d ^ yeuri homo opp— i 'tn tho T lm -N o « « ■

5 . T U « t o n n----*.-Tl

____ BsmaBTHTnmr e r ■■ hM«. « < H o jKcoot

ttio W*-b r Md> to ?«

c S w r r A N C B J . L E 1 S S R . Clf* Ocrk

M l U r

Page 21: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

TImes-News. Twin Falls. Idaho - T hursday, March 5 , 1 9 7 0. ) ■:r

W a tc h Foi^ Y o u r N a m r A fid W in F re e T h e a tr e T ic k e tsW e n H 6 > r - ---------- ~ r r

F A R M EQ ,U IPI^E1ST “ M EC H A N IC ;W e h a ve an Im m ediate open ing fo r a* experienced ira c to c * nnd h a y in g .. equ ipm ent m echan ic.

1 T h is It a perm anent position und ' an ex ce llen t opportyn liy fo r ih e

rlRht m an. W o offer- an cxceU lenc a a la rv and outstundlns bene­fit* .

I t you aro-In terested and qutilU flec^ p lease w rite to :

B R E N N A N DO RN ' E Q U IP M E N T CO.

1022 N orth 7lh, B o jcm an ,. Ji-ton- tan a . 50715. ,

T H E C IT YI » , nbv,jic f.ep<m g to r ’p o llc c o ff ic e r . Contuct P n ve M unroe. “ t^ *,;C ou n clIm an . C ityH a ll. 5-I3- Buhl. Idaho.

Women For Light^Deliveryfo r T w in FalU** F lcc^ -W gh fcra AMQCiaTlon N ^ fi5 5 0 .- Fjar, Inter-

' v iew culL 7 3 y »2 3 y "' ....E X^r^R IENCEtf^^m echan lc, muiCjtoe

^ 0 m p I e 1 y •' taw 111 a r atO M .a n d e n g in e s . M o r ^ td u a t '. ta ^ f^ s n lp s a la ry iw n d com ­m ission , consum m ate with ab ility . G ood b eD e fltt..L eo R ice M otor CO., In c .. 1733. .-Main Street. G ood ing. Idaho . PhPne D34.4438

“F a y ft i W o r i c W d n f e c T ^ 3 - 4 = H b l | i e s f o r S a l e

^ M A N U R E 'S P R E A D IN O t E O ’S C U S TO M F A R M IN G ,

...............- T i le r . 32g»4703 ...... - —qU S TO M p low in g anywhenc. .18 ”

bottom s with. trushU urncrs, nUro;* uoh, p lo w d o w n ' a va ilab le a t Jew cost.- 3:*6..53ri5 o r 733-7240.

Work Wanted 7 *- 24Y O U R hnnd saw and c ir c le saws

•hurpenc-d — autom atic m ach ine process. L lo vd ^hane, 543 Sth A v e .

M a c i h , -733tZAM-..'-‘ - . ■G R A D E R w o rk o f a ll kinds, g o any­

w here. T h eo W lcke l, 2741 A lm o , Hurley. t37S«?5S3._______________

SEVVJNCJ, u lleranon ii. r «w «a v »n R unc m cndm g. Phono 733-4783, 552 3rd Avenue East. • _______

IN P IV ID U A L l.N’COM li tax form s epurcd. Rcusonuble. 612 South .ifn. •

W 'W S W r U E T IM l i l F in e sheep fer 'Tor 4avvjia i- var(t<*ns. W ill

fc..s'pread. M cverl.. 733-H753. .______A L l- T Y P E .scwmg cxporM r done.

P rob lem f lg u iv u spec ia lly . Phone .V-*4-J0t»J. Ju rogu v ,______ ]_____________

CO NCKETI-: w ork , patios, flr ive- ,\vav». s idew alks. F iv a estim ates. M;u 5.s.14. Huh)..

eat-ln. k ltcHeo. ca rp o rt, p a tio and fcn ced back y a rd . A lo t o f house fo r on ly ;J20.000.

C O U N T R Y A T M b S P H E R B . ._ F ram ft_ fln d -fir ick ,_a _b ed roon t:’.3-

ba lhs, f irep la ce : 'k itch en bullt- Ina. p r iva te w e ll, p a r t ia l base­m ent. ca rp o rt, sharp as a tacic. T r y $l»,9po.____ ^

6th A V E N U E E A S T . C lean and cu te: Z oed room . new

f:as fu rn ace , w h ite p ick e t fence, urge, g lassed-in sun p o ^ h . P er-

fect--^Qr r ^ r e d couphi. P r ic e /educed to $>;{iPO.

$1500 D O W N W IL L G E T Y O U

2 B E D R O O M , a ttach ed ga rage , n ice f lo o r p lan, on M ad ison .

J IO T O -T IIJ -IN O , c a r d e r s , farm new l.iwns. Call

■ >v«!^?<aTty^rcL 733-s!ift4

A N t tW .Y O U ? T ry 11 on fo r .Ue.;, a bU»|,ttes# ,Qt«jyour own. in yuur

n fftPWTiuntfy

^Nl O M E • la x • tv*t\jrns prepared, rea • B-.nal),lo r a i l -733-9312.IR O N IN G S , sh irts a spet'la lty. $1.25

per hour. Phone 7.*W4017.B AC K H oe, bulJdniing, custom dltch-

Ing. Call 4S7-1*C03.

ROTO T IL L IN G'.•Gardens. E lm o (J.irrlson, 733-8031

1,WII ■ imnnuMii-w. tui V».1H -t im e , fo r . on Income of y o u r own. A n d tho b ea u ty -*n d g lam our of A V O N----- COBMtST r r g:-----

vnnr fuCn PO RTABJ^E wekll.nuv lle lea rc andY tUi WT iii I iff . . i!ii.v,Vn um umitpp-

KVaU>-'P h on e 733-7413 or w rite PhylHs Mc- In tu rf. R R 2. Klmr>erly.

aIum>niH^r Si i i lnKtrm ainline ;qnd a»i.‘ »»j^*^^.^Work Kuar*

E X C E L L E N T opportunity fo r hon­e s t ambl*lous young man intcresit-

. ed In ranching and farmmK. VVj k - <ss plus^ ,|ienefU» comnu*nsuraie ;>vith experience ahd ab ility . W rite BOX U-10 c-o Tlm cs-Newa._______

P A IN T IN G . In.siilo. nr out» carpcntei;. • work Pnone 733*2367.

Business Oppoit.yjD.mss

G E N E R A L B O O K K E E P E R , down­town. Tw in Falls. 40 hour weekS iu jiiu g M ay n r . Health tn d pen- fllon benvflts. P leasant w trU inK condition . Reliab le firm . B ox U-14. c-o Tim cs-New .i.

S IN G L E R AN C H hand— yea r round — -ivork nn;irri ppff rodm furnished.

b6 able to irrigatv.*gen era l fa rm work. Jerom e, 324-

“ 5233;-ntt;~npDn Tsr'TvgnTrrRr T A K IN G A f P L ic A T io NS—re r -T n n r

timy; secretaria l se rv ice . Secre- tarlaJ Serv ice Com pany. 733‘ 1004.

- • _______

<>WA 'ffofntt " in the Buhl a rea experien ced In building m ateria ls . W rite Box U-13i c-o T lm es-N ew s

J9..%00 N E T fo r 8 months opt-ration ' in IPOD, r p l ly equipped drive-ln

fe x P E W E N C E D farm hand, ir r jga - tor, and livestock feeder, tenant house, H m ile North ancl 1 n.Ue W es t o f B u r g e r Store. J o e M ilte r :

W a n t e d : F uU tlm o m a ld . 'l in J e r o v e r 40. A p p ly in person only. Im p er ia l <00. *

T u b e i r r ig a to r wanted. M odern house. Relterenca requ ired . 829- 857B. Haxeltnn. ,

F U L L E R b r u s h needs m a le ond fem a le , p a rt time* $40.-$70 w eek. 733-7405.

1?ART T IM E day help, no exp cr lcn ce necessa ry app ly in persoo at the B u rg e r Chef, between au -.|v.m

fe X P E IU E N C E D cook. R e fe ren ces requ ired , app ly In person, H a rra l's N u rsing H om e." Buhl.

K > lP E K iii.M .>uu m m iiiu iiu tu wui K in C as tle fo rd area , m odern housep rov id ed . Call 537-6667._______________

B o o k k e e p e r (o r low ottico . W r ite B ox U-2q; c-o T im cs -N cw t.

^ S h e r r y W h ite the w inner o f « f r e e th ea tre ticket.

Call M r . Eddlns. 733^n32i__________

Form Work'Wonred 23- • iu S T O M p low in g w ith In ternational

♦-bottom , l» llh o r w ithout Anhv- d r a i am m on ia (n itro g en ). M5-6026, Buhl.

C u s t o m p l o w j n o , d i«c in g . har•~yew^lng, gpa frt p lftrit lrtg. A r t P e te r i

■on. 536-2253/ WendelHf t ^ N U R B H A U L IN G — ^^alnllne's

Custom Fa rm in g . B liss, Idaho. P h o n e 352-4462 or 352-4440.

tU S T O M p low ing. Call L a r ry Luper, 324-5500 o r G ary Luper. 324-2089. J erom e.

C u S T O M -p io w lirgJ 3-fapttOm w ith NH3^ o r w ithout. F lo yd Shepherd.

M A N U R E H A U L IN G — L llllb r ld g e Custom F arm in g . 733-R363

^ L A IR 'S C U STO M farm ing. M anure hau ling. .Phone 324^459. J erom e.

C U S TO M ^ o w ln s Phone 324-51 r>5. J e rom e, o r 536-2.180. W endH I

C U S TO M manurt* hauling Vernon O lander. 543-4572. Huhl,

T H Ii l i H s r ‘ pnter.lial .aub-divislon iiiound m T w in todaS'. Th is80 ncrcs TTJtrSs (. SI for ovi-r m ile . < a ll H aro fd K eith ly 733-2400 orLand O ffiuc nf Mrthn 071ti, gcroba from Sears.

FO R L E A S l i : Conoco ic r v lc o sta­tion In <it>odlni;. Exce llen t oppor­tunity fo r perbon inieresfcxl in ow n ing his own businc*.ss. Contact \’aUiu G ray . 934-4S7.t. tiood ln g . or

~ pp;in' ■/t Trr rfyfT.

irrrn— street— across— frorn— courr house In GQOdlnp. S32.000. Land Included. M ountain ..S tates R ea lty .^-n COT -«

S M A L L g ro c e ry store dolnj^ good business. 2 b ed room home. P r ic e R easonab le. 934-4492. (lOOdlnR

B ^ ow n er; 5 unit apartm ent house on jcpm m crc ia l p roperty . Id ea l for Investm ent. 73:w73rM __________

Reap Estafo toonj 38WAJvlTJiD: SSO.OOO fo r e.\pan«lon nnd

Ti‘ flnt»nce. W ill pay 10 p «r cent in terest on a 2nd. 4300 acres in recrea tion a rea , c-o T im es-N ew s. B ox T -2t^

Schools 44P IN IS H H ir .H sch oo l.a t ham c. n l- I pltima aw arded . O, I. npproved

courses, Fm; fre e brocJniri? Llriit ex- nluins how w rite A m erirun School D is tric t .o fflc i*. B ox 7G4fi, Boise. Idaho

Hornet for Sola -50.

Comfortable

Help Waaled IB

T H R E E bed room plus one In basem ent. M odern Kitchen with bullt-ins. Iv^rgo liv in g ‘room . N ea t fa m ily room w ith ,p as fire- p la ce .—T-ake-nvrr good Jo'rt'h wTnr“ 5 » i% in terest. P r ic e $19,900. ’

o f c itT . tliie e be d- room . 12-X18 liv in g roorn. I.a rse d in ing room ,a'nd kitchen. AH this on s; ' o f an ocrc . Good w ell. P r ic e d $12,500.

LY N W O O D R E A L T Y610‘ niuft Lakes North — 7^3^9211 A fte r House-: ?n3-7100 — 7;i3-S4T3

50

- Owner-Leaving ;B r ick 3 b ed ro o m . 3 baths^ fam Uy room w ith ba r. e x tr a kitchen laV basem ent, newr n ew t'arpeting; ‘

»4>uUMn-oven*-a nd ra n g e in-hom^y-^

2 B E D R O O M p l u s sleep ing porch, la rg e k itchen , gas fur­nace, c ity w a te r and sew er,'on H a c re w ith scads o f (ru lf tr «c s .

LOBEREALTY7 8 S - 2 6 2 S

33 ih^U ie Lakes N orth 733-2623—nrnr(> M frhnrr^ Ri»n1tnr 733^5457

B la ir O sterhout, R e a l lp r 733r5045 *A r t Ire land , R ea lto r 733-2340

• W arren U r iggs , R ea lto r 733-68M

LIVE FREEB uy T h cyv -^ hom es and ^he In­com e fr>»m the ren ta ls w ill mako ^our jx iym cn ts — w h ile you JJva

^om ot for Sd!^ ■ -UV- S O

O P E N v T O A f l M I R A T J O N I -

choiod ‘ northeast a rea . T o ta l 4 iied room a , baths. 2 f lrep la c - ><• e s ; ' e le c tr ic heat, a w om an 's

y ^ d r e a m k itch en ." $30,500.

1 -U V E LV ---- WU R T H S U N K lS E t •B r ic k hom e, o v e r 1,500 square

T 't fc e t. e x tra bath, 3 n ice bed­room s. hardw ood floors, a ll e lec ­tr ic , $24,200. L a rg e 6% luun can

. b e assum ed. M t^ *tra d e fo r homa - ' c lotfe tp 'to w n ,

’ iM m E 'P IA T E possession. , B rick h om e; 558 P ie rc e , 2 firep laces ,

' re c rea tio n room , la rge bedroom s , arid g a ra g e . E xce llen t term s.

• S H A R P A N D C L E A N : 2 bed-.. room s, basem ent, ga rage . 9jl0

squ are fee t. Im m ediate posses­s ion. new g a » furnace, fino term s. $7,400. 138 Quincy.

-MAGIC-V ALLEY-R E A L T y -------- :

.733-5580F e e l w e lcom e to ca ll os

at hom e evenings.G ordon C rockett ..............733*6.*531H a ze l O strander ............733-.'SR.30A l M organ ....................... 733-3IG9S erv in g oy reputation since 1949

Could Be Just What

You ’ re Looking

of..

^arnis forSd l« 52

IRea etup—200 A cres South W est o^ 'J iroh ia 1!0« Slrari-s at \9uter Th ree bedroom J home F o r m ore infoVmutlon on this

-4> m l-o H iy p - f« f f f l- «n U - fa n e h -b u y —

Btiiley Roberts Realty, Inc.

415 E A S T -M A IN S T R E E T .-- B U R L E Y . IDAILO P H O N E : OTg-inoi

FOR SALE OR TRADE - - " T W R F A R i y ^ .

* acres In O.M“arlo , ’.eSllf.. c ity lim its. C hal{i" 'llnk fence. 3 bed­room hom e. a ll utilU lcs Including sew er connection. Corra ls, out- bulldincS. uranus. trees . SS5.000bu ild ings.,igrupes, trees . $55,000

" I trade., up or -dow W a lla ce O. Heaps

O niarlo .t C a lif. ^7<i3-714.086-5Q15

.For The Best In Farm s IT ’S e A R N E S

Anything from 60 to 600 acres

733-3838

733-6015

423-5A59

1043 B lue Lakea B lvd . North

n e a r l y n e w — L o v e ly b rick hom e has 3 nice-alic*d bear(

tt larK e 3 b edroom nnart-fr c a ..............m ertt. A rare- opportun ity . Call today l S*rlca redu ced to $16,500,

2 Fireplaces2 baths end a c o zy fa m ily room' tth nn.»n hr-tim «Tr»ntnQ--Th<it

■ ..... — -e ldluxu ry features a re seldom In- c.ludeo fo r on ly $10,900. A lso 3 bedroom s.- ^ Iful carpeted IIv-TTTB'*YTraftT“ /Trtd tx c iiiie ft i Kitchen. Inspect this d es lrab io hom o to- d a y r • '

, H A M L E T T R E A L T Y

Pleasf* Call 733-4079 (a n y t im e ). Ann-Hoffmas{^rr.733"281Q (H om e )

S P R IN G 'S P E C IA tS -S bedroom doll house. F u ll base- ment. gas fu rnace, carpeted , neut as a pin. N orth w est loca­tion. $13,950 fea tu res te r r if ic low in terest ex isting loan.

2 B E D R O O M , attached garnfie. on Heyhurn Avenu e, new roof, nnd. com p lete ly repa in ted , em pty

r igh t tn. $11,250. is a fu lrptih?-. ..7*

TWIN FALLSRealty and Ins.

. 733-1662 ^ r r -r^G eorge H oney. 733-4609 even ings

10ST 2 a c r e s w ith Olegn.^ m o m Tiome^ w i l l trade for

• sm all house In town. $13,900.

N r-E D E C O I^O M Y? 2 bedroom homo w ith carpet, la r g e llv ina and dining room s, g a ra g e and te im s. $9,500.

W O U LD YO U B E L IE V E B rlrk 4 bedroom s. 2 baths, flneplnce

- a in f bay rmc nt, dm ib lq ' gttTage TOT $17.6501 T erm s. .

—REAdt-ESTATE-SERVICE^

Help Wanted 18

S H A R l* tw o bed room s, fu ll bate- -«MmiT-~c«ppet;—dropcsT^nm pToce, g a rage . $14,500

F IL K R . -neat 2 b ed room s , fu ll basem ent. flriplaPCCT'double—fa - rugc. $16.500._ ■ _______

GEM STATE - Realty and Assoc.

6J3 B lue Lakes B lvd . No. o r r a c 7iu-r»330 Lou 733-2291D ick 733-90C9 J im 731-4546Doug 733-3455 M o llo ry 733-6377

IsA A N X M rW O m A NFor.7V\btor Route ^

R u p e r t , B u r l e y a n d P a u l a r e a .

S m a l l C a r P r e f e r r e d

C a l l C i r c u l a t i o n D e p a r t m e n t 6 7 8 - 2 5 5 2

It H K N ew m oaern way>' to have 5'our own hom e. In ves tig a te our com p le tt line o f p ro cu t and sec-TRTTnn-----RflrriCsT V o u r

S T E R -S T A T E H O M E represt.nta

~2 baths, firep lace , bchutlfu lly ca rp etcd -apd draped. 11 base­m ent. It 's G61d MedalUon and w e a re proud to show it.

D O N ’T O V E R L O O K — Th is to- tal o f 4 bedroom s, fam ily room. 1 baths, 2 firep laces, new ly carpo ted , Ipcated In beautifu l L yn w ood .

A C R E A G E — 3 bedroom s, close- in.

P O r 'e C LO S U R E — It's « good buy.

R E N T A L S — 3 bedroom and* 4— b ed rp «m ‘.

W estern Appraisal & In v^ fm en l Co. 733-2365A f ie ^ h o u r s G e o rgs G o u k i 7 3 3 -9 6 4 2

N E W L IS T IN GSharp 2-bedroom home In ve ry good location in K im berly . Hiis Yuli basem ent, attached ga rage , covered patio, built-m ap p llanc- es, gab furnace, cem c'n i'Tn 'lvc , cu n 't be bent for $10,800.

TaylorAgency

M em b er o f Tw in Fnjls

••M LS" S erv lca D onald T .iy lo r, B roker

423-52b9E ven ings Kon T a y lo r .. Mason' Smith

423-5403733-5H77

W A N T . r u n .nr-ST burLmlpa ln_hom es — a c r v « R « r— farm s ranches or business opportuni­ties? P lease be sure lo call

••M em ber o f M u ltip le LiJitlnu**Edna Irish .......... . 7S3-0882Beth Wickham . . . . 733-5476

C. LOONEY, REy^TO R

'•M em ber o f Mu.UlpU- Listing**

$ bedroom , b «c m o j» t v lafj^e w i l l kept yard , out o f t0wtt.>*2i ^ 00.

% bedroom , p ractica lly new homa sunken liv in g room , double flrep face . custom built gold m edallion , choice area ^1,500

oiiiuv w a ter r igh t from w ell. $18,- 000. ^40 A C R E S , 78 shares w ater, 30 head private- - B L h l-1 lg l|lH' " ITd-• loinlno CinOfi n ** *fi nH r. t* v l aJoinlDg. Good hom e and corrals. $42,500, M ay consider hom e in town us p u n 'd o w n paym ent. Wen dell R ea lty 53(i>2274

J fcU Q M E , - £ t tn t y 350 a ero stock ranch. 3 b td room m odern home 1>’5 head co rra ls . $45,000 to im s S T O C K M E N S R E A L T Y , South Lincoln, J erom e, 324-4845. R odn ey

-a J5*55?4;— c a r ty To— p a ii f fC

480 D E E D E D acr«.*s, approx im ately 200 acvrs lease. 210 p low ed ...and ft-rlUixt^i. Exccllpnt spud Muii beet ground. 170 planted new (ia inos wheat. $160,000. G rant But-

'S.'WHU. \U\400 A C iiE S new uotato. beet. corn,

und mint gruunu, n ear Boise. Good 20" cased w e ll. A v e ra g e lift, sm allo r ' no ddWn paym ent” s ta rt pay- ments a fte r develop jnen t. Some- trades. 532-4312, even ings, Rupert

CO ACRES,,- u lr o f p r iva cy , ypnr round running w a ter , la rg e m od­ern 2-stor-y ‘-ftome, possession 30 days, priced at $3Q,000. Term s.

'Farn ie/ 's Reivlty, ^Bunl. 543-4650.40 A C R L S N orth east Buhl by ow ner.

«-room recen tly rem odeled .house. Hay. g ra in , pustune, v ea r aroundsiucic- -v/at«r...in im e d ia i» -posses-s.lon. $23,000. 543-4034. ________

F O R S A L E or le a s e ; 400 acres o f new ground fo r potatoes, 10 m iles from Pau l, good 20“ w ell, 300* lift and no pump. Phone Uurley Q78-72I3 o r Pau l 43ft-2855.

40 AC R E S , 4 bedroom home, pas­ture. hay, d a iry barn , outbuildings. North Jerom e. B ox 1/-3. c-o T im es- News

T O S ilA R liS N orths ide Canal Co. water. W ill sell in lots o f 40, 80. or m ore, Cali M a rk K ill, W endell Realty , 53t>-2274.

800 ACHESinjiiijir

A gency. 733-5532.

under nnmn W ill liMnrsn lU pJrc^hase. irarord 'J

T W IN F A L L S Canal Co. n lghllne ‘ ■ .5890. Buhl, rvs -

Cqmiw ater fo r sa le . 543-:nings.________ ___________________________

460 -ACKtiJsr'"doctfim “ a e i6 n ran ge’ land. No rocks. Phono 537-0567,

l)>stru:t N orths ide w ater. 423-5700

lots ond Acreoga 54■BY ow ner: C om m erc ia l zonlna 2

c resp lu s . W est Addison fron tage nd HruCtoen-.Stre

~rT)e?TF 2 " bTilhT65rS— t m S KH fi,000

FEE13TM AN REAtTCm'g"611 Shoshone St. N. Phono 733-1988

LARGER, o lder. 3 bedroom s, l ii- . — Iw tha, • s p q cT o a n iv lh g ’ room , fo r ­

m al dlnm g room , flrvp lace . cus­tom drapes, Wall to w a ll cnrpet throughout, full basem ent, largo beautifu l yard, quiet neighborhood.

~ l> c c - i*.2u T'apTnr.— T n c o TTir,5oor 733-2197.

B Y OW NI'-R : Kltchcn and hath de­signed for a woman. Th ree bed- rtioms up. one tiown. T w o bnths. fu ll basement, la rge garage, patio, fenced yard J23.000 r„>t> (iran t A venue Phong 733-60-17 fo r up- pom im ent.__________________________

_ - . n ^S tfeer South. 2 houses and double g a ra g e , ir r tgo llon wo.ter, 733-7J12.

N E A R T W IN K A L L S , near 8-acres.grd «k . y ea r ly rim n ln g w ater. O lder

--^ .t ip t jT D n m ^ D m er^ rrtitcs^ffest o7 South Park , % -m ilo le ft on le ft side o f road. $18,000.

eO R N E R -lO L .sewage. 595 H igh lan a Avenue. 733- 3811.

B Y O W N E R : n c fe S ie i in 5Tue Lakes sub-dlvlsion. V e ry peacefu l Jlua cxcc llcn t v iew —.733-4380.

Business Pro;>erty 56Com m ercia l P rop erty

A S P E C IA L T YFeldtm an R ea lto rs 733-1988

B H U 'K three bedroom s, two biiths. new carpet, fam ily r«»om. Kaiane Fcnced vard . N orthea it ar» a. $16,- 500. A ce R ea lty . 73.3-r>Jl7,_________

m ent C om p a n y . .733-0716. or_ Gene ^ lln D -k T n iT O -4 ^5 : •

B Y B U IL D E R ; T h re e bedroom s, two baihs. .lunken liv in g room , fine, place. faTTillv roonn, basem> ' — Ii . ■-.‘l i 3----------------mwn'ana inwnr;i ic w. aub dtv U loni- W a .SOO;--r3».W 5»r

M i 'S T S r iL L : N e w ly red ecora ted In- .^ldc nnd out. 3 bedroom s. ntt«»«hed RuraRc. fenced ya rd , low dcwn, low m onth ly. Ph on o 733-4342, 733-

C H A R M IN G 3-bedroom brick . W ell insiilatf’ d full fin ished basement. Trouble ga rage . One b lock from hu’ h school O w ner transferred . Phone 733-5532.

B U S IN E S SS E R V IC E

MAGIC VALLEY

D IR E C T O R Y■ BetowTTOT-wt}} ffa«J-m9ny-90TViee!»-flvaflable from Magic Valley Busl- nes.?es. Look under the town in y o u r . ir o a , . . contact one ol these firms tor th» - fuie6t in tarvioe and quality productt.--------------------------------- ------

C A R K N T tYC A R P E N T E R w ork :. R em odelin g i

sp ec ia lty , a l io »h eet rock, pnint in g , * n d c in d er b lo ck j 7M-OOC3.

A I M X t w h d t o — - c »n -o p r «c tD r r is T N o rth W a fh ln g ton . T w in F aU i P h on a 733r«7<l. ____________

D E tlV t«V S tKV IC tM a c s and D on* D e liv e ry S e rv ic e

Y ou ca ll — W e H a ill — anvth lr - A l » o g a ra g e , ^ la a n lt it . . 73«-2193.

FUEt O i l' T O R S T O V E and rum aca o il. e w

G em S ta te . OU, .7 i ; .5 s a * -O u r f i j s * m a k e , . la f fn frtenda.________________

• m o u « m o v i n o ----E x p e r ie n c e d . rea ,on ab le . p rom pt

• e r v lc e . f r « » etU nm te r P h on e 3Z4- 23S4. J e rb m e . Bob la y lo i'.

M P T ic T A M K 'a g t v ic rR O T 0.1lO O T E lQ r c iw - » « £ V l< * - S*w . ■ > r . j i n . « an d a e p o c u n it clean ing.

A l i oA .

John

fe E P T IC T A N K a a - a ^j t o * clean~inF

LAW N K A K IN O j*I .E T M E

-----yom --lawtt,-JRsMe$tlm atca . 7 P »7 0 < .

PAINTING)enn M ays. I 'am tm c. D ecorating

(In te r io r - I.v te r ;(.r ;, 1618 J-lndy Lane. T33-C7f,6

Hosp7tl»l beds, w r.rrl chairs, com- m >dcs. ctu tchrs, etc. Rent o r sale. C ro w lty Ph.TrmMrv 73VM7I.

W H K H L .rtiTTfT - ment, rrut

rf»r. i'a lc , K inK^buTv'» P h arm acy , 117 M ain E ast, 733-6574 or 733-9114

iTTfrs. rxPT fjstng equ ip-itches. w.Tlkcrs fo r ren t

m e SEBVtCE

T O W N & C O U N T R Y T ree S erv ic e Tr^m m inc. X cpp isx . ReinoTtng

J-ree Fstfm .ites — Insured 7.T3-6fl> S. Box 211, T .F . •

l-a rg f» 6f7>maTl . . . __W o Do Th cm ^A lL—

----V A L L l-V T l> '- '. r s l iK V IC ESee Te leph on e Y e llo w P ages

B ox S2 T . F . ^ 733*3331

T R E K W O R K . Custom' pruniric and topping, spring clean-up. F re e -E s - tim stes. 543-5M4. BUhl.

K O N IC E K T re e S erv ice . m ates. ;n :b S 5 «.^

EVERGREEN SERVICETrim m in g , prum ng. copping.

F r e e estim ates. .733-9353.

kkflfib-RGA*-H---------- .

P a r ts w a rra n ty and som e labor w a rran ties . Ilew F o r t 413 2nd A ve . E ast. 733-9442-7

CUANEKS

e r fo r f lo o y e r , F i l t e x v «n d K irb y V acuum c leaners . W e s e rv ic e and re p a ir a l l m a k e s . 'A g o o d selecUojn o f «>?uun r v a r t i r n m r . '- v r e i r V mC leaners o f Idaho. C o m e r o f B lue Lak es and la d A r c a n e E as t- Call 733-102?*.

VACUIJM Service Center; Parts — Hepalra on Kirby compact. Moat others. Twin Falli, 733-6041.

J E R O M E

M IIK IN O .IO U IP M B IT

Bulk rank tank a »i4 p ip e lin e aenrlce — — ea lea—H ew jffom n a l l r r jn « l lncfc i - L .u v e lL '» , J er-im e, S J M M l.

B Y O W N E R : three b»*dro(jm. full basem ent, wall- to w all carpet, at-

-f>«< >o.

N H W bed rxxm r" T h ro w gar*H«*i gas heat, fu ll baiem ent, 2035 Sher­ry Lane. 733-5179.

L A R G E brick duplex, near Barry:

celKent rental Income. 735-7.'»5. .

Out of Town Homes 51F IL E R : 2 bedroom home, fu ll base­

m ent, new gas furnace, ba r tilc ' roo f; ditch w a te r nnd ii;»rd fn spnt. - $8,900 good terms or w ill trade for

hom e in Tw in Falls t all Harold K e ith ly 733-2400 or Land O ffire of Id ah o Rt?nltors, 733-0716. across from Srars,

y o r m » f o r S d l « i ' “ -

CHEAP! CHEAP!40. exce llen t land, three bedroom hpme w ith e lectric heat. $24,500.

16* T ra i le r home. A r «a l dandy fo r on ly $850. '

L & N R E A L E S T A T E C gJerom e. Idaho

1.005-aicre ranch. W ood R iv e r V a lle y on U.S. 93. now a graxing association . $178,000.

<40-acra fa rm , near H agerm an.

— H A € i e ^ E Y ~ A e £ N e Y —313 Sho^yone S C T y . 733>4559

G ood Northside 80. 2 ^ ' m iles - t t o M — Hansen O verpass $45,000 SO a c res w es t o f J erom e $22,000 C a ll J o e W agner— -

u\f.SlNr..SS Hulldm’K. 2050 K im berly l^oad. 3.000 square feet, lot ,50x.3fi7‘ w ith renr en trance. Im m ed io ie posnession. H a ro ld 's A gency. 733- 5. 32

SWTSS V IL U A in the heart of beau-iifn l .Siiwmnth

ruasonable term s. F o r ^ rdormutlon on '~ lo l»—©r—our- s^IeTTToh ' o f^ rtn e mountain cabins, ca ll Swiss V illa . 73.3-0716. or Gene Hopkins 54.W6<^

FISHINCi resort, bar. cafe, cabins. — b . ........................................... ...... ‘ ■

Real Estate Wanted 62W IL L buy R ea l E sta te c o - tr * «t l^

second m oU £4ircs, - or- trust a l <llscount. N ot to exceed $5,000' ler contract. W r ite P . O. Box 11. Tw in F h »s , Tdnho__________

pe;111

Campers ‘ \ 63~19G9 C M h V R O L E f, »/i-ton pfckup. — C uuoxn_£a li,,.au tom atic transmis- -----k tStt— -------------------■KtfTTT—XO'n*' w pK du K i cam per ana

tJiffv fiw ider^ n ew . f 4.5^5.,....S4.3-32?tg.. I . \ V -- , 'EilJY t W iT BKiSfr^ G ^ t yw^^^

QG‘c>rn‘'T?»TTtper-~-DoWa. aTTd save. Spnt:tsman's Lodge , 1000 Springs. HagermnVi. fdtttm. - -

M o i^ l la H o m k t 64

M a g ic V a lleys L a rges t Selection

■0 MOBILE «O M E S M arle tte — T a m arack

0 TRAVEL TRAILERS T ra v e le ze — R oadruoflor-'- ' Concord — T e r ry

0 PICKUP CAMPERS Mel Mar — Sturdy-Bllt

W innebago-Sturdy B ilt

« TRAVEL TRAILERS AND PICKUP CAMPER RENTALS

Addison W est 733-2410O P E N D A IL Y : 8 a.m . to e p.m, O P E N SU N .: 1 p.m. fro p.m. E V E N IN G S B Y A P P O IN T M E N T

F a i m t f o r R e n t 8 4

640 A C R E S ,; good cllm iite . B ee t allot-

tr. N ic e dSepV *o il; N-_ rust h a ve financing .and e g t ^ . lent. W rU o C'O .T im et*N «w s. Box IT. ..................j : _______

H A G E R M A N : .*67 crop

h ‘o "r 'W u ‘M . « S l ’ « ?hom e, w lU cash L ea se r 'W 6sb *End R ea lty* 54»2i409. i30— B roadw ay South. 'K e a P a tte rson , B roker.

L E A SE o r se ll^ A ap roX lm a t i » ^ ? S ffcretr pienTy■“ Tjw ’ w nrer;— so-acrs beet allotraent, o v e r 50 acres hoy, 3 -bedroom m odern hom e. Phone a fte r 5 p .m ., w eekdays , 825-5584.

w ithoutI75 A C R E S row crop w ith o r achm ach inery . Good house. 82d-5608^

Hazelton>

JUST ARRIVED-F O U R N E W - M O D E L S O F

BROADMORBB_ -PR lC EO _JER Q M i -

$7,100Com e to the lot o f e v e ry d a y low

firlces w hem prices and quality s our goa l. ,

— SIMPSON—MOBILE HOMES

S om e location for 20 years. . ■I< .t744 ---

Rupert, IdahoO N E 1055 20' KInsklll. m odern , wllh

e lq c lr lc w ater tieu te f. ' <23-513<n rta —c m o r

10C8 B U D D Y IJ X 50, tw o bedroonu . a ir condltlonud. carpeted . $4,650. 734-2331. ■'

Apartmonls-Furni$hed 70

55 A C R E fu rip . T w in H a llj tract. South o f Filer.. N o dw ellin g . 733- 2601 o r 733-4617.

300 A C R E S h iiy .^ o u n d . 300 acres pasture.-phone 788-2594 a fte r 6.

O i h i r R e n t d i t - 9 &W A R E H O U S E , app rox im ate ly 3000

square fe e t, clean s torage , con­venient locatlo ji, easy acccss. W rite B ox U-18. c-o T im es-N ew s.

W anted lo Rent 88B Y A P R l l . 1: Th ree bedroom s, two

baths, basem ent, double ga rage . Lease cbns ldered ' on gootf loca- tton. L a r ry Ecklund. 733-96^;.....

T H R E E -b cd room hom o, jv o u ld pre­fe r northeast location . Phone 734- 2127 a fte r 4:00. '_______________

.F o rn i I m p l e m e n t r

• 1 - 1964 Farm all 8 06 d ie ­sel w ith cab and turbo

• a - 1367. Farmatt 806 se'l w ith cab

• 1 - 1964 Farm all 706 d iesel

• 1 - 1953 Super- M TA

O lh ^ r Farfw Products 96G R ^ * «o v e la n d ba.rley. A short ' s t r a y va r ie ty , 6»row ed . ou tyleld lngTfnuil— o t h t r " v a r iet ies; ■ grow n— o n - n ew land . C on tact K en M arshall. ' g ro w e r . T w in [Falls or Shields Seed

• Co.. Buhl. Idaho. 543-4309.C L E A N U P P E R V a lle y Ce.rtlfled

■ * atatoes. A lso 1st N"ear. out___ _ jen Tbgued. call 438-99Pa u l, o r 532-0033, •daho F a lls .

C H O IC E one-year-out seed potatoes.F rqm ^ certified and foundation ’

■^stock.*^ 'R a ised . oh- brush ground. “ ■iH-fIn«nee7-334^188>-

S E E D potatoes, certiried and foun- datlon . 554-3322 o r 554-3343. Dar* lington , I d a h o . ______________ •

A n i m a l B r e e d in g 1 0 0A R T IF IC IA L B reed ing to A B S g rea t

p roven sires, nation 's h ighest type

groduction sires. A lso a ll bre^ds .of e e f a va ilab le . Buhl co llec t, 543- 6102; J e rom e , 324-2652; Shoshone,

886-7587: B u riey . 678-9253; H azel- ton 829-5302.

S E L E c r ~sn <E & ~ in cD rpora tea.' A it nrcdsT "datnrr treefr-^tter'tettcli;

S E L E C T S IR E S In liorporated . A li breeds, da iry , ' e e f. W a lte r L e ltch , 543-4C58

101A u ^ i o n s

AUCTION. R AUCTION SERVICE .

’ Firet Sale , ' it

Sunday, March 8. 12:30S a le E v e ry F r id a y M orn ing

------ - a r t c r - M arcii 8,—H ra o --------— “

C o t t l e 1 0 2

E arly Con^ignmehts

__ . ■ -■ R no«- .......stcvr and heirL*r ca lves, w e igh in g 400 to 450 pounds.

50 H E A D good Quality bl {' nnd .black ba lly pure

h e ife r ca lves, w eigh ing , » t o 500 pounds.

1 - 1954 Super M T A

1 - IH C TD 6 C raw ler

1 - 1 ^ 6 4 A C D IO

B A S E M E N T , throe la rg e rooms..bath, w ater - sanitation - heat fur­

nished. Adults. M arried .couple, no peta. tim ' smoklna. $75.' 733-5122.

R E A L Tilcc^bascmcnt 3 room s. W a­ter. sUnltatlon. heat furnished. M a le adult. 73:1-5724.- even ings

F O U R room s, all utilities furnished. Adu lts only. $65. 415 3rd Avenue N orth . 733-2509.

A L L U tilities iteam heat. $125 a m onth. 720-8201, ____ ^

L O O K IN G F O R an apartm en t or house? Call Qullicl, 733.2940.

O N E bedroom , clean, close-in ; also tra ile r house. ,Phono 73a-8;>52-

Apartmonts-Unfurhished 71M tlW 'I ' W'O Uii'UiaHhi ap urtm cnt. C u ~

Seted throughout. E le c tr ic heat.r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$102 per -month including a ll util­

ities . .Stove and re fr ig e ra to r furn­ished. Maxlrhum inoom o Hmita- tlons. T w o people. $6,000. 3 or 4

-peophr,'f7,050. occupants must be re la ted . Tow n Crest M anor,. 733- 221B. days. - _________' .

fr igeca lcd . air condltluntng. vur- port, utility room ,' " carpeted throughout. stove. re fr igera to r, larua imtlu with •mall lawn a t m . near Harrison school. 733-2H91, d ays ; 733-8460, evenings and Sun- days.

A R E A L nice boscment opartm cnL -WWh- -water ■ e nd— Itn n furni4hc'df7

► 4 - IH C unit p lanters, b eets .an d beans

► 1 - U sed John D eere 11 fo o t d isc harrow, like new

* 1 - F-925 H R oller Har- rovii. .,^.a fo o t

GEM- E q u i p r n e n t

S a le s , In c .South Eastland Drive

"Y o u r John Dpere D ea le r"

50 H E A D good qu ality steer ca lves w eigh ing 450 to 525 pounds.

65 H E A D good bonfe top quality b lack Angus vat-clnated re-

— boif wrs— w»»lnhing -5.'>0 to 600 pbunds.

35 H E A D holstein steers 'and heifers . ’

-Fatts---------- BOm----733 -7272 543-4392

L a rg e and com fortab le. No- pets^ ___o r chUUun^-lI5^-l23.-4ab-JX.VAnuei f N orth . A ce Realty- 733-5217._______

VERY^ nlO0 apartm ent, liv in g room , k ltchcn. bedroom , and bath. W ater

.............................. ..............u noa th.733-0716 or 733-24D0.

N IC E three rooms and bath, close- in, heat, w ater, and san itation fur- nished. E ld erly person or ccrupic D fjefcrrcd. 73l;fil35>-. .

f^VO bedroom duplex^ s to ve^ a n d drapes furnished. See 239 R ich ard ­son D r iv e . 'T w in F a lls .-$87.5Q. N o pet*. 320.4417 for appoim m cnt.

C L E A N ’ deluxe apartm ent. R e fr lge r. ator^ stove, heat. wat«*r furnisheftf CU>se-ln. A dults nt l^cts. 733-417CV!

Houses-Furntshed 73F U R N IS H E D clean, 2 room house.

W a te r- and sanitation , furnished.733-0.141_______________________________

C L i'-A N . a ttractive three-room hcuse closo-in. AduUs only, no-pcts . 220 . » ln a - l akrtS-BniiUwULiL

’ U S E D I N D U S T R I A L

E Q U I P M E N T

C ASE rnodel WW ,iracidr* With dozer 4500/

* P E T T IB O N E 4-whcel d r i v e - A - lo a d tm J7500I - ~ -

• J O H N D E K R E ' 2010 d iesel craw ler , dozer, $3500IH C m o d e l TD18 c raw ler

—35 m rAn—vnrnntiten— rmTsiein heifer calves weighing 300 to 400 pounds.

A n o o n RU N of fht and feeder cows^and fat nnd feeder bulls.

GO O D IN G L IV E S T O C K C O M M ISSIO N CO.

“ In th e h eart o f the i>(xxi g ra s s -c o u n tc y —o n - th e M .iin lln c .”

'W H E R E you F IN D T H E IJ V R G E S T S E L E C T IO N O F T O P F E E D E R C A T T L E IN T H E N O R T H W E S T .

Ph on e you r • C onsignm ch i-! e a r ly

Genf .Ictnes. Grmdlng ...n34-57rv0Jack (ilese. Gooding ___ 934-5298

O M -IC r i - - 034-4.342

Angus Female SaleS a ^ r d a y . M a rc h 7

12 Noon

* 'C ream o f tho Crcyp" R eg is te red An gu s H e ife rs

Grad ing— ff ld a y , March 6, 10 o.m.

Judge— DarTsll Collitcn. Blnrltfnor, lAr,

'with aozer," $4500.• J;OHN D E E R E 450 cra tv ler

load er, lik e new. i t 0,000.- J ^ ^ N 'D E E R E S40 - scraper.

scrapers. $12,500 to $18.50Q, • C ASE W5 Loader, $4250.» Fu ll lltje o f new John D eera

Industria l -Equipment.

ELLIOTT’S111 O verland A v e , B u rley , Idaho

Phono G78-55S5

Bob Houston. rnrmo

16 "w iD B , 2 bedroom tJ-uilcr —r ftn t,-ca im -U 321 fi-a fto r 3 :3 0 ^

Houset4infurniBhed

edrooms- in basvm ent. Quiet neighborhood, range and re fr ig e ra ­to r ava ilab le . Elm Street. $100.

•'^65 o r 733-3011.. B E D R O O M bouse. ' com plete ly

-.reUftcorated. $11 p e r xfectc. Waxfir and sanitation furnished. LaborC en ter. 733-7404.______________________

VwO bedroom s driv ing d istance from Tw in Falls and Jerom e. G arden , sm all pasture, re ferences. 324-2251. Jerume.

S M A L L , two bedroorxis, basem en t.ilahed

W lD U -H O X .^ ck iip c n m p ^ foV sale months hid. 543 5329. Buhl.

Mobile,’Homo« 64. i' NASHUA . Mobile Homes

K IT - K E N .C R A FT ■ T rave l'T ra ilers

K IT CAM PERS ^’ 'In tegr ity Is Our Ch ief Stock In T ra d e "

I T Y e a r s S erv ic in g M a g ic V a lle y

BaKi^sMobile Homes

m > a a n r o jr W est

an<j "fiVwr. Good w ater^.axca llco t-c Iijm ate--hand Ie _ o i er^4Q0 c ow s - ca lves . One-owner fo r 56y ia r s . M dst aell because o f health. O w n «r -w ll i fa r r y papsj*. l .o w in­te re s t ra te . n ear_ CM nos F e n y ,o n ly ^ 5 .0 0 0 . C. Loo tley R ea lto r. 7 »-4 0 8 t. Edna irU h . 7 3 3 - (^ .

400 A C R E S , deeded. W ith 1.080 A cres B L M p erm it-a llo tm en t. T i^o hous- c s j . 'p iM good d a iry bam . Best w a te r r l ^ t In a rea . $100,000. O A ia , 480 a c res.- i w rimep-pasture. C a rry 300 y ea r lin gs . 'M u ffla y R e a u

- f wswr s•tylone,- W4^I0.

r.l0 4.-4781, -M4.

„ ______ e. -ThiTTiav«rttar-1fff f l- | ;rT B ^to cair you. 1< the telephone of any advertiser Ir this

ECTORY Is not answered, dill 733-3386. Tele- iiJitwering S«r»»e»i la ■ Tftyin Pay or

m anent pasture, p len ty *of w a te r . Th is w ou ld m ake an exce llen t atoclc ranch . J E R O M E "R E A L T Y A N D I N SU R A N C E . Ki\€K

M AGIC VALLEYM O B I L E H O M E S

Travirt*^ T ra i le r • ^ 6to r h om ei 3 ^ rallea w est o f ^ e s t 5 P o in u • 7 3 3 -6 U I — a o s e d Saturdays

' M O B I L E H O M E SSkyline • V an D yk e - V a rd o

^.Self-contained t ra v e l tra ilers___ , N om ad - J e t - A U dd in

~ ON DlSPUtv: " :

sXtESa » 2 b v e ^ n £ 2 Z 5 E S ! I - ^ 2 S ! Z

O L D E R tra ile r houss^ w e u l , 25

cd . R e fe r4:ncC“ r cirtri d r e h .P h o n e 324-512

~OTTt\

XW O bedroom • home.' gas furnace. 485 G ardner, near K6llw ood . Phtjne 733-2625 bcfdrc 3 p m

F IV E room s. 2 bedroom s, dinlnj room — liv in g room carpetet Fu rnace, Stoker. $R5. 733-4797.

T W O -B E D R O o )il house. G as heat, basem ent nnd garage. In q u ir i 351 2nd Avenue North.

TW O -bedroom home. 548 5th Avenue W est fo r $45 in Tw in F a lls . 423-

TW O B E D R O O M S, gas heat, car­port and garage, water-sanltation paid. Inqu ire m 4 Syrlnga.

fw o -h e d ro o m house w ith ga rage . .— Phone 733-1866 a fter 5;00 p.m. ilN C O U N T R Y , tw o bedroom s, th ree

m iles north o f F iler. Ca ll .54.3-5.331.

John iJw ro 95 ccm- L*r

1 L A T l i M odel bine j^ ith ^Pjjwe ^

JMSS p'lus l 402o'j'lkn*ljV .-'re ttim t l i T r a c i oi „

Im plem ent. 7M-8C87._________________

M O C Y N E U X M ach inery Co. T r i c lo f repa irin g , a ll roakci. Phone 73j-

ID A H O T R A C T O R ^aW agc. Cash for used tractors . Used partk at bis discounts. 733-8293.

S P R IN K L I-R la g lines, fit trym atlc , - or -aqua ,*n«#ve; P h on « 825-5CT3

I-flnn '

D a w s o n G o ertner. M id vo le , --- ---S o l»»-d »o frm o f»----- '•

Louia Dobo ron, B olts, Association President

S pon sored by ■Itlaho A n g u s

^ ’t A L V E Sb a b y and G rass ca lves a ll \rkinds, W fs t. South "G f ’ .K im berly 4j;i-5124 or 42a~580iJ II A U ( .m le

145 M K A l) H ols iem Springer h c ife is « w e ig h lr g from^ I.OOO 1,350pounds. L o t » i^ is e -n p heifers, fo r heiiflJ e rseytors. Can flndacd^*3'iEugene Huches 324-2415, J e r o m e ,-n

A n ^ jW a r in m e

35 R L G IS T E R E D Charolais bulls N o papers. These are w ell-bred bulls, a ll.fcn m r>r.« K «r,i -^aa cows. W ill sell any amount. Phona 934-5171 o r 366-7398 o r 733-8552.

F R E S H or Springer cows or h eifers. G uaran teed , u iiy o r trade for Springers o r beef. Hap o r Clvcto *^gtrps.--puM . or 54: w & "

TW O l.l-A-28 tires and rim s fo r util Ity tractof-s. 733-5<i43.

F O R S A L E : A lfa tfa le a f cutter Bees. Norland . Phone 532-4438

D U A L W H E ^ L lilt bed. ^Machinery t ra ile r w ith w inch. 324-4459

to buy: 4 P ian ter Jr.7X1--i7«o

Form Suppliqf 91t. Utility o r econom y, wood

chips, shavingsi sawdust. dirVct from the m ill. T a y lo r Brothers,326-5305. 32G-4G10, F iler.

7~F00T cedar posts fo r sa le 75 cents per post. 733-6255.A lv in G orrc ll is* the w inner o f fre e th ea tre ticket.

H o y, Groin ond Peed 94C A T T L E M E N and sherpm en i F o r

bedding needs, use w ood chip* and shavings. Dennis C lark, 543- 54/3 or G eo rg e C lark, 543-5653, Buhl, ........ *

R oom s^oard & Room 76X O S E *lN r^ c ic an, -a^c a S w i-a le e p iB i - room sr-p r lva tau in in in cs . A ir coo-

J ltionk ig. U 7 *th A v eo a e N orth .L IG H T housakecp inO od ina . C am era

C en te f 'H oU l. Sw Shoahone S treet

^O pERN, far-nmhny 7home. Two miles from. Twin Fans.

18-20 TO N S good a lfa lfa hay. T h ree rnlles

45 TO N S UlJrd cuttlriA good quality -^a lfa lfa no spray. G . A . K feh m

3 m iles aouth; l ; m ile w est o f Eden.

U V E S T O C K bedding, w ood and sawdust, <JelTvered. .S2t o r 328>4610 F i le r o r 733-a0g4.m .

F O R -S A L B r -T p p ^ iq o l in y O e m seed b a rley . $2.50 ^ t ^ C all 825-5103.

t u s T O M ' STE Aki^ t r a to roUttiy.. m o- b ile m olasaesr A l H askelX 423*SS80. K tm tieriy.

B u s ln e s s - O f f i c s R s n ta ig 8 0 second c u t t i i^ h i^ ,N O W L E A S IN O at.l637 BJne L a k e .

G O O D B ab y and pasture ca lves fo r sa le. A ll kinds. Phone 324-4162 o r 324-4028. Jerom e

^ L E O R T R A D E top quality H o ii Stein Springers and w eaner half- e rs . 53C-2203.

m ia g e iL cow *. n e ifers . uu iis to .jo a n . DiurrtU L y -. - __________ D a rre ll L v -ons. S43-582I, 5<j:^ft34. ^

P~AN G U S 2 y e j t old bulls, s h ed by a son o f Sugar L o a f Scottsm an. D ick H ow ard . 543-4915. Buhl

H O L S T E IN sp ringer heifers. V acc i­nated. M ille r ’s D a iry .- 'F ou r m iles north C lea r Lakes. 543-4744 Buhl

18 H E A D o f m lsed pasture cattle m ostly w h ite-face steer c a lv e s Call 733-4167. **

10 H E A D B red b lack Angus cowsT Cross b red steer c laves . 543-5198. ■

T O P O U A i . i r y llah t w eigh t ca lves ! A n kinds. IH w es t o f Buhl on H igh w ay 30. 543-4766.-

O N E R E G IS T E R E D G uernsey fam - Uy cow . Call 834-5227 a fte r 3:00p .m . ■_____________ .__________

R E G IS T E R E D H ere fo rd bulls Ona o r a Jruck load , E d w . C. £ a k ia

S IX G uernsey s jir in ger heifers . Call 438-5711, Pau l.

Horses. 1 0 4

' A r a B N T I O N

B ou levard N o rth .'M o tfem a tr con­d itioned 'Ofrica space. C ontact J im

sn, Idaho ^ v l i i f s aad Loan ,Bnsnna:Tai^aloi733-3\0l o r B ox 202;

F a r m s f o r R e n t

r 240 A C R E S ^ O B tR E N T i- -aw

)A 1 R Y p e l le u , $58 tott bales, $00ton sacked. GlQba mod > e e d . T w in "Fa lls .

_______ F O R reo t: Pastura , ooa to 3 head- . , horsea, K tm b e r ly R oad , T w i n .

BuhL V ^

H O R S E M E NNow accepting hofnes for ' 4»ft7-'l«'f'eak liig, lu in ins. w es te rs ^leasur»-'C5>w cutUng*, etc. At

Reasonable^RatesSuhvVailw HbrsaroeR-Cesiter ' Phooe^33^U. Eat. 2270 — Sub VsirW. Idaho

f4-4ir$.’ jaro^a.' ALL TYPES of horses, bougSt. soJJC*

-.■area. - T w o tnoaenrr. ".SIS’

allotment. .Must-have Hi

traded . P le n ty o f ranch R e a « a l e y . 7i3 .«055.

a ^ S A O D L E M A R E S , e y r a .^ e n U e , - .acund. See ow n er green bouse E astlan d and Addison E . .

P O R S A L E t - GoM youns a a d d la - — jto ra e a r-8 a S -te 7 3 :-e TW tH g g 7 TB a a & . ~

Page 22: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

I-

tftrJrtdeiy, March 5,1970 ' TIm#*-Nevw. TyrtrtFdll»,1ddl¥»

T h e ttlt^ T ie iie i^StlMp..

S b TSWEST will _pn9.!!iLia<H»«a

106ItiL Iambs for

Ooodlm. . Mlt.

Samoyeu—. ______ _ ____En«ila]i Poioten. Mac'i Kftnneli.________

|»000Lb Orooxaloi — «ud Mrvtce — pupplet. Chen MlU«r Xcaaels.

— WeitHi«dc«pr-xonier, Kimbiny,423 104, ________ ^' 'hvo^lniatur^ Poooies, one bUck,

one^liUc, both bAva papers and • *- •' ----------- c«!lu. 7J------' ghou. ir Interested

Asking >40 each 733-7055.

SAMyvMb________ pups, i months. Also,toy Poodle and Samoyed Stud Ser« •vice.«324>280l, Jerome;

" MiNMl'UnC Poottt »,uv.p.«.. , w«ek»; siiver; black TimnieV; Mar. ble colored male. 326-5468. Ftlor,

YOJ^po^ le j)uypies. registered. 423-i^IXED German Shoherd and Lab*

rador puppies, $5 each. Phone733-3204: ____________

Parakeets, local raised. Tropical flsh» aquariums and supplies. 2537th Avenue East._____

6L0E POINT Slameie f»miil*' 7 months old. $20 or best off£r.423-5214, Kimberly. _______

. REGISTEREDJEoillsh. pointer pup* , plvs»-champlon moodlinc'.. whelped January 7" J970.-Phone 32&S647.

■ l lwttock Wqn>«d - -M 4

Phone collect 733-8M5

YANKEE 7

^ T f M t

SHOP-Wap-sftiNON • coMM^'ciAi,; A o v rn is .-INO lY. INOIVIOUAU ONW.

Advertisements m u s t be confined to u s e d merchandise selling for less than $100. . -

COST: 10c PEB U N E PER D A Y .

CONCORD -300- Revcrie-a-Track. •oUd iiaie tape recorder, AC and buiwry^ OrlaTnal itoo, now *75. Koaica Jlr-35:mm«i» «nrim itam- era. U year, oldi ieiloejlejtt'i'eoi)-;

. dltlon. Original ?S40..

Snew MadhlnMAM F SKI-D A D D LER

ANO STA RCRA FT

J e r p m # I m p l e m e n t a n d M a r i n a

canvaa cover WM. Polarla^ n i 'CoIt SHcc motor, tunaii t'x- hamt iaso. ‘ Phone >n3-l'l»a.

iNOW maoliine. JSM 10 JiP polarit MuMmi, (ootf QOBdlUoa. R7S< CaU

Boat* for Sale 169LET^ OO BOATING, tea the new

IjW model boau and motora at BUD & MARK TWIN MARINA; Your Evlnruda'and Mercury deal­er. USX Blue Lakea North, T33-

Melofcyclek ik O

motor*. Cycle and Tratfer Center. Highway 30, 2Vi mile, west of '

SMALL UTILITY trailer, 4 * t. MO. After 8:00 or tlUl 733-

A u lo « For Sal«~' %00

JOsed-GatBttjfcIM9 DATSUN PL 810 4.dQor« 4* •peed; radio.18M VOLKSWAGEN with ' •

' iBCfiil. .ttanimltiic 1967 MERCURY COUGAR hard­top 3-speed.1M7 CHEVROLET CORVAIB 99 aport coupa

-S9«« OPEt-KADETT 3-door ata* tlon wagon, ■ 4-spead19M CHEVROLET Impala vi| 2-

door convertible, autnmatle transmission; ■

1904 VOLK^AGEN with 4-speed.lOCiLPONTIAC Bonneville 4Hloor

hardtop, automeitfc trans- mlsslon« radio. .

1963 OLDSMOBILH P85 Cutlass 2-i:oor hardtop. Radio, heat­er, automatic transmission.

coupe. Good glass, radio., tires,inspected. ruM good. $7 , 733.Mlg.

REFRIGERAfORSPROM FALLS

HIGH SCHOOL

Qt

Substantial Savings

NEW WARRANTYS'

M &Y ELECTRIC441 Main East

Twin Falls^ldahokllD-WINTEA clearance. Used re«

frigerators. AU working, all guar­anteed. Prlcdd from <25. wuson-■ Bates __________________________

Spot cash tor used flirniVure. pplJ.ances, babyRCH range, enamt*!;

real good condition. Phone 423-5755, Kimberly._________________tiShD furniture and used refrlgera-

tort. appliances and TV's. CAM* ERA,cT^T£R. HaU of Music.

kENMORE 600 dryer, brand new,---- - — - 6&)3.5135. Phone 733-'

Fiirniture & HHCoocfs 122

Used and Repossessed Furniture

Pull alzeoTbaon upright freeter

ntOltresS. _... .20 foot Gibson upright 10 year warf^nty

'T'fTgiaaTre nsfrtgerat'or, guaran­teed .............................. rW

_ eg Mobil Mafd dishwasher . $68 •Mohawk Shag nylon carpet............... *5.95 sq. yard

— HQuble oven Frlfiidalra. guaranteed ..... ....r-?

C A I N ’S, ..3(M Main Ave. Norm 73:

.' Beginn^tj s3J e r o m e B ra n p ii^

' E N C O R E A P F ^ A R E L .Curnpisia line of wearing

apparel lOO 's^of specials to outfit the entire family for the price of 1 aarment

Isit our Twin Falls Store for specials on Formals and playwear.

E n c o r e A p p a r e l 404 Blub Lakes JBIvd. N.

, 733-2801 141 West Main, Jerome

324-2932

THE COVETRY OUR FINGER STEAKS OR CHICKEN FOR LUNCH

496 Addison West«hcep camp

S to v e , bo th g o o d ; o ld b o tt le s an d c o w b c i js ; oil la n te rn s , Iro n

PCda;— Ooa— UO»y—heri-,— s iim U H l r-ttto ra ; b ra n d in g I r o n i ; Ice to n g s ■and \ c e lu w ; s e v e r a l o th e r o ldth in g s . » ......................93& 3rd

ce luw;. L ily 's Used MerchandlVe'l

wenue West. Twin Falls.HOKFNIAN portable stere&r-^-vol-..Wocla .2A .vQluma: aet~of itncycio- paedla Brltai>nlca. 6 mm camera

projector, like new. Set of tlrefc for Knrri

onythlng'^ o f N e w o n dused cprs o n d pickups.”

Ooodlng« Idaho*W«l f i4-4477 ’

___________ H-toh, Long wheelbase. 350 Cylinder. ^ *gpoc(j hstitor. ,

^ORD Patctm--Itanchero. 3- speed, heater.

iBrti FORn Falrnn Bnnchero, 3e.

4-speed.

Term s

dlfSE k'6i>TlAZ =^JERQME

Tk n j j?r, __,__rfCE^^S^BF'pIcli5p7 rtlt rifi^iijood condition. Safety

■ Ifto- ........

P E A N MWTOR

ln,pecte<l> ------- ------------------EbRb'- 'truck. ’" fuIT■•■uspenslon. dual axle, 10 wheel.

733-0114.

mifeiCIBflWr, -,ww <Lew beet bed. Wholesale, no

■ades. $6J50.' 733-5920.trades. $«,750.^ 6 ^ 6iO.BniW Waiys i."d6ora7M’

oneer. Good Ures, low mileage. 1963 Chevrolet ^-ton truck, with 733-6817.------------------

INTERNATIONAL. 1962 1800 lOT wheel. 20* bay and grain bed. New motor. M-6226' after 6:00, Buhl. .

dkaVftbiuBf ■ i96S "W-tori " T ^' i^tomatlc brantmlision. low mlla- !e.;tl.700. 5434566. Buhl

N 1959 Chevrolet M-ton plok- miles noriJt of Hansen.

cl :CoineV'Brothers

Aulos4?oi^Sal«— ------- 200

W E P A Y C A S HO R T R A D E F O R U S E D

* Cars ♦ Campers * Trailers Madron Sales & Service

Halt » Polnm Phone 734.2B«1

eo.PONTUCS

BUICKSCHEVilOLETSQLDSMOBILES

L E O R IC E M O TO R SGooding, Idaho

WANTED To^ltade, sporta car, 1968 Datsun 2000 Roadst<er, excel­lent condition. For good 4-wheel drive machine. CaU 1^8260 after 6:00. - ■ ' ,

EL CAmI nO. I960. Less than' 3.200 miles. Call -436-4249 before 9:00 a.m.aftar 6:00 p.m. or 436-6671,

»tERCURY, 196S Comet staUon wag­on. Good--famlly car. excellent cobdltlon. 1650. 202 Willmoro or call 733-6212 after 6:00 D.m .

Cornu.-----dard transmtssldn, iconomlcal on gas, clean. 543;5227. 543-5411. Buhl.

1067 FORD GALAXIE. 30,000 miles. Call after 4:00. 324-9039.__________19C3 INTERNATIONAL Trovcl-All.

Mechanically good shape. 733-6366after 5:00. ______

FORD. 19C0 Folrlane 500, radio. ---------- =rrr—=---- ;---------------- ------heater, automutlc. i.afeiy Inspect-; 1963 R“2 hero, extra iharpCall 733-0420. I -phone 326-5116 fl;00 until 5.00.

.Autof for Sell*

T A C 5 T11;$^ , Authorized.Uoslng System)

L e a M A N e w 1970 MaverlcH

For A s LKtte Aa $52.eo Par Month

Bill Worlcmah Ford

146 2nd Ave. East -Tw ln-Paitr -

Phone 733-5110

. 'Idaho’s' dldevt Llncojn-Marcury OaaliBr

1 9 6 9

Rupe«j ^W |cSHARP 1961 Chamlet 4-door Bal

Air. Automatic trantmlsslon. ax*celieiit coodlUofU 733-2629 or 733- •753.

PtYM O U tH S PO D G ES

^UCUKV MONnOO 4-deer, jV 8 e n g ln e . ,p f lW jE u ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ V fiu, troniiVilssi^ b ro n d -n e

1967 MERCURY Cyelonev GTSfldT Perfect condltlea. Low mUa«8e. Air. 11645. Phone 733-5240. •

ijlUSTANO. VtT^tereai vlhyl *^00. car owner. Low nilJeagiB.

■ ' J -L

^Irect Factory D ealer v

H u r b a u g h M o t O r r

1963 CFrEVRpLET Impala 2-door hardtopr?*^*''3-tpyed. Prfce .Is wholesale ~ 8520 cash. 324-40S3.

1951 CHEVROLET.,4-door, new.«n- g ln e . pe|>v b a t t e ^ . 733-9628,

WE.,HAVEmmTEEDRI1969 MUSTANG

G r a n d e ^ . r ln n r H ir rH fn p \ / « eng ine , au tom a tic transm is Sion, p o w er s tea rin s , radio.

$2199- — Charger 2-door hardtop. VS engine,..automatic transmis­sion, power steering.

$1999- 1967 CHEVROLET

BalAlt-Aj-dQor. V8 enaine.standard transmission.

$999 1965 FORD

G alaxie 5 00 4 -door. V 8 en- g I n e, au tom atic transm is-

SLWIN(» machlno clearance sulei Wc! also scrvlce AL^ makes and sharpen scissor*. .Skinners SliWINO SHOPPE, Savc-On- Shop.ping Center,________ ___________

WU FFLElis installed while you watr. Gf mplete luufflcr icfVie . tii. eluding custom .duals, Abbott'sMWaiS, ADD'Auto Supply. 3C3 Shoshone-^Ulh,-------------—------------- St.

JMAMPOO your own carpet, pro- -*-rBaipaal Asulta. Rest a CJarke

ahampQper with cofnpamon wet vabifiim«:^aan«r> ------------ -

A W ltX S ^ S P E C r A U

,1 969 HimaUTH FURY III 4-DOOR HARDTOP

"‘Radlb, heolsr, pbwt?'."tf¥ennft" VB. outomoftc. tociofy oif ccnditior>- Ing. full wheel coyers, white ildswoM tires, factory warranty.

S4309*60List Prlc«

, SPOT CASH■ For Fumitu «y> Appllane

. i Things blf ValueBANNER FU RN ITU RE

127 2nd Avenue West 733-1421 UNFINISHED FURNITURE, highest

quality, good selecUou. Mary Car> ter Paints. 331 Main Avenue East.

¥ M i m i

$5991965 THUNDERBIRD

_____ Fully. cquiBPftd ,____$1199

« 1965 POBTIAC -S ta r C h ie f 4 -door. V 8 en g i n e. au tom a tic transm ia- s io ili t « )w e r s te e r in g . '

$6991964 OLDSMQBILE

Musical HisfrumenU 124

T n i m r

GENTLE, he kind to-that .ex­pensive carpet. Clean It with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer %l. Cryennwnlt*. ^

— <H5PPP«'

Med-peciln -or.4 £«_2 lnut. To be sold as soon as posilble In this

...........smallpayments. 1st due within 1st 2 months. Call broker, KWnball Pl­ano Warehouse, 623 Main, Boise, 342-6579.

-■Bke upNght. -One _ _ _ :te. Excellent wndmpn. MASO^ER MUSIC, 221

usad Bungalow d Wurlltzer Splnette idiUon. MASONER ’

Main Ave. East. Twin------ -------NEW. Yamaha pianos; Used pianos:

Vox guitars and amplifiers. KLH stereo record players. WarnerMuHc. 131 Shoshone North______

guaranteed used piano's and bartr ‘mgcnimt?nTi. Teims. Ciaode- Brown’s Music ond Furniture Co.

WRLrrztelV-Th«m:........ .....ihoe. Like new.' r awson*» Piano Warehouse, phone 733-5291.

^IKE NE>) clectric piano, 8199.95.Paul Stone. 733-135 _______

wuRLirzER — Console planoT 733-5291.______________

Radio a n d T V U H 1OsED TV’S — Stereo omblni Gfw<_ leiertlftn nfar —

ance and Furniture ..and user. ?TW'a from 839^

Camera Center, ITwlo P tllt. (OLOR crade-lnat ^ve Quale Servlca Compan

^MOVE excess fluid with Pluldex and lose weltht safely with Dex- a-dlet only $1.69 and 98c at Osco

MUZZLE-loadln Vines. Cap and lack powder. Per- " * 'ds. Red ‘

MRCUtr Aon Beautiful % onny. I^ellov/; -w it h ‘ ^ h 'ife sidew o ll_tjres. p o w W stearin^, p o w e r b ro k et, o ir ce^fiitioni^fii ra d io , foe- tory w o rronM ed $ Z < 6 8 5

MUCUkf MOHTIUYBeoutifu sultano w h ite , 'm Intefter, fu lly e q u ip p e d . w i ^ i a | 0 bon- d IH onfng, one o w ne r, Iktrem afly Cleon. .......................... . . . - - . . [ $ 2 e 7 5

POm(AC BONNEVILU 4Mleer HortlfopOw\ied by. jj cot business mor> ond showi.it. Full powe? plus foctory oifcondUloning: tilt wheel, neorl 'new. Whfle . sidewoli tfret, real • reol>sharp. ........ S2388-OlOlkAOSIli VISTA CpUISM Wo«.n

9>poiieni; er, powar Steering, poi - ar brakes, 2*tone, rodio, heater, white sidewall tlrai, local owned, ur^- lieVobly low mileage. • • • • $2/9S

OPEL spqnx couPK 4-speed tronimljilon, roHy pock.reolly like new.......... . • • $1795

1967OU3SMOBIII 68 4-dear sedan

U9hr~gotd~extertorr'brown~nyfofr;tn; terior, outonNotic tronimlsslon, powec steering, power brakes, whita sldewalF tires, tinted g I a s s, axceptiopolthroughout.............. . $1690FORD OALAXII 500 3-daor hordt^ ^

Turquoise and w h ite,' snccellant cortai- tion, f ull puw Bi,. m iB ijw n e i'. Slflt lVia'

S14SQto .......................FORD 4-deor ledon Ottlaxfe 500! i

New cor trude Power tteennj), power broke*, ootomotic tronimi»»ionjpiCe ond clean........ *. « • S138S

--- MCTCUrr^^Mrr-Korinro; "Suho nq w h ite w U h blue v in y l , ip o rl ro o f .‘Oil leotlier rnterior7 p o w e r stii'er- Ini;}, p o w e r hroW ei. ra d io , hearer, w hite sidew o li i ir e i, g u a ra n tee d per^#ecf ................ * ............ $1765----M RCUWY-C•0^Ancrtiier one owner ear. •■celient Ihfoughouf, fu lly equ ipped . $1265

1966rORD HARDTOP LTD with evary occeiiory, ona

|iirr exceptionally nice. . $1490rxoMir

u_lriuit^f_lhii .nlce_ beouty................. .. $1000

PONTIAC CATALINA 4-dMr Sedan ,Beoutiful, well kept automobile that hat powfr steering, power brakes, automotie transmiision, white side-

-S t2 42 '

1965j ay gifI — ■'read^

JWlilEl_aXUiL-C^ntng carpets wl Slu» Lustre^^ent— irenie^fit poocr 11. Krengel’s Hardware,

NEW CARPET shamnpoo method Wuiu i wgrRent nosT, SI. Wllson-Batee, 702 Main North.

NERVOUS? Can't steep? Try Sleep-eri. Satlsfacr'— ----------- -money "tystclt.Drug.

eri. Satlsfactl^ guaranteed Jor :. 'Otery gffc Osco

SAVE money oh painting pickups, trucks and- c*rs. dents removed reasonably. Itnnsen. 423-5 34.

FEATHERS: Clean duck leathers for pillows. Poultry .Supply 213 5th Ave, West. 733-3168.

-a-way bed for rent. 13.00 a week. Banner Furniture, phone 733-M2I.

IOO-CALI.ON

ONE ROLli„ 100% nylon carpet. FHA approved. Double Jute back. Rei- uUr K.SS, Speclml S3M ■ aquare yard. Banner yumllure. TO-1«JK

POLES, RBEL.3. ^uhlng tackle, medj jnecbanju tool,, varmint. Tinet. scopei. reroady^~to«Ji aniT.cam.

DO BETTHti t

- V O L K S W A G E f^ 2-door sedan. Aadio, heat

"tpansmisslon. excellent condition $1095

S2195196ib» f a l c o n -Statlon>yligon. Heater, | automatic transmKslon ■' * •1 962 FO R DQalaxle 4:do«>r sedan, Radio, heater, power steerlnc. automatic transmlMlon $2981967 ~P LY M OtJT H---------=------------T "Furyl 4-door sedan. V8 enslne, radio. h M W , •teerjng. real clean, low mileage. # 1automatic transmlulon . f

196ia P LYM O U THVB 4 -door sedan. Radio, heater, powarsteering, automatic. SharpI Low mlleaga

1 968 V O LK SW A G EN~2 ^ioor-seder»r-Radlo,-heater,- 4-speed transm ission............1964 -R A M B LER Classic.4-door sedan . . . . . . . . . . . .

- 1 9 6 4 ~ F 0 R D T J0 N V E R T IB IIE VS, fully equipped v<(ltl;i radM, heater, power steering, autoknatic..................

1961 FO R D FJBfLCON 2-door sedan. Radio,- heater

~ and standard transmission ..................

$895

$198

W iH s^ M ofor_______Used Cor Dent. __ ____rmck Lan. W.tt ' 73^73eS

--------- ------sh a rp w h ite lln iih , bko utH ul t.rlor, fu lly p o w e rK i. . . . . S l f l B K

air conditioning.1 964 P LY M O U T H S fio rts F u ry . . . . $695 ,

Hardtop coupe. V-8 motor, automatic transmlulon, power steerltig.

j9 6 4 rT 3 H E V R O E C T ^ _T o n > $ 6 9 5

riirfBMKUsaaaBiisiiaik

l in t .d g la « i , 4..y>elld, ' t h « G 7 0 S O " J ire t., ro dio’ w H h -.f e a r «* o ». tp eo k e r, ra lly pock oge, fro n t a n d r M r n ib b e r mo4t.

W a s . $3649N O W $3649

BUICX WILDCAT Spait CoupeA ll over red fipish w ith blo ck leather Interior, aufcomotic t ro n im li i lo n , p o w ­e r ireartnig;;— p o w ar trnfcas.- C u r

* o ...................................... $ sooCHIVROLIT 4-daM Spatf Men

Bronze with block vinyl top, automatic trontmlsiion, power steering, power .bfokes. oir conditioning, looks broAd new. You muit sea It. •. • • SI 276

1964 & Older,I f 6 4 V O U S W A O I N

o w n a r ...........................M o k . O ffa r

l f » 4 C H I V I O l t T 4 -d « e r S w le n M a k a

1 ^ * 3 rO k O { T A T 1 C N W A C O N Belga, outomotlt-irShiftilnloo, powar »e4tf^. . . . . . ; . . . . . . Mok. OH*r

IMS Mncumr MONmir4 -d o o r M d a n , Sold n e w , M rvle e d tince. P e w a r > ta «r!n g , p o w e r b ro k at,

-fogtoiy

Qualify Cars^ r o r T i ^ ^ r r i t e n k i T i r C l T i ^ ^

____ ■ • : V " ■ .

1968 Fiat......... . $1095Just like new! ■ ■ _______

1967 Triumph . . . . . . . * 109-5Good shapM '

1 O A / l - n r r l K n i r o n♦^oerrCcylinderrtandard^ransml—Ion.

1964 Chevrolet BelAir . . .^ 7 9 5Real aharpi ____

1966 Chevrolet4 door, stationwagon.

$895

I y a s t - h e v r o l e t . .2 door., mechanics sp^Ia l..

1952 International VzTorv... $99

)odge-ton pickup, 4 speed ^nsm lsslon .

1:?67 Chevrolet . r^ . . . . . $1595ton plckup.ja8L3ftViUPllaaga.^rimoaHM<a

-----newr^cyllnder-englrie, 3 .spaad.

Page 23: tfplnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF...VOL. 66. NfO.,290 ii^ 0 c V d lle y 's iiQ i^ - pVIN FALL^, JIDA^tfJ».THraSDAY, IMARCH 5. 1970 TEN CENTS WASHINGTON

W c -

;■ -J A -lO Times-Newsi Twin F^ls, Idaho-Thursday; *March 5, 1970 .• ‘ — ' ' .

Japan; Gonmunist China ToT V S ch ed u lesT h u rsd a y , M arch 5 ; 1970

5:Sp2aU-NewsNews. ■

3—News .5— N^ws ,

4—J Lovd 'ftucy.

8— Daniel Boone 11— Fam ily Affair

6:00 4— ^Truth or Consequences -------- 2Sfci=Ne

3— News11—Don. Adams ■ —

, 7SL—Figuring It Out

7B-jThar Girl 2B—Truth or

• Consequences 6:15 7SL—Misterogers 6:S0'2SL—Daniel Boone '

-------- iB— Fam ily Affair— -----3— Family Affair4— Pat Paulsen5— M y Three Sons 7B— Ironside.8— Ironside

6:4S 7SL—Friendly Giant 7:00 2B—Movie. "Peyton

- P la ce "3—Movie, “ Peyton P lace” 11— Movie. “ Peyton P lace"

8—Marcus-Wclby, M.D. 1.8:00 4—Tom Jon>is i

5-rMovie. “ Peyton P lace" .7SU-TBA '7B—Dean Martin ' i

8:S0 2SL—Dragnei-----------------8—Dragnet

9:00 2SL—Dean Martin .8—Dean Martin ‘

- n i=^ean -M artm — “ • * ZBTtDon Adams 3—Don Adams

70007SL—Forsyte Saga 7B—NBC Science Special

10:00 2SL—News 2B—News 3—News .S.—News 7B—News-------

''S *“Don Adams 7SL—What’s New

7iS0 SSL' -li'oiisiile-------

7B— Bewitched 7SI^B ook Beat^

8— N ew s 11— N ew s4— P e r r y M ason7SI.— F igu r in g It Qut

10:15 7SL— C on im u iU ty .'A lcrt 10:30 2SL— Johnhy Carson

7B— Joitnny Careoh- • ' ‘8— Johnny C arson2B— M ovi'e. "B e a u J a m e s "3— M o rv G r if f in ,5— M e rv G r if f in

--------------11—B ra e ltcn 'g . W o r ld ------------

11:00 4—News 11:30 -1—Movie, "Ghengis Kahn" 12:00 2SI. MciviOr

MrCnv"S— Movie, “ The Wages of

Fear"

7:00 p.m written by rates.

F rid a y , Feb ru ary 2 7 , 1970. tf: Movie, "TTie Journey of Robert F. Kennedy, historiari Arthur Schlesinger Jr. John Huslon nar-

BeginTTfflt^On Trade! Pact____ _,_________ itfliMbetween J^apan and Com’munist China begin' this week, Vyith strain between tlje two go<rerh- -monti; at-itfc-worst-in -a dozen

had taken- the- posltloH: l'aiwairs~fulure was ."an Intern? al Chinese maftter.**' •

Furui has been- wacned by Sato and Foreign Minister K iigh l. 'Ajghi tliflt . Japan w ill

years.Yoshiml Furul. a‘ member of

the Jappnese parliament, is due ■in^ekjHR today-at the. head of a trade mi.s.sion. Awaiting)him Is a chilly reception from Chinese officials incehsed' at Japanese Prem ier Eisakii Sato’s "part­nership" policy with the United States.

Furui w ill seek a one-year renewal of the so-called "Ja- pan-China memorandum trade ^S^^tnenl” It is an iinofflrial pact, betwen the Chinese Communists and a private federation of Japanese busi­nessmen interested in 'tirade with Communist China.-The-twtt countries do not have diplorria- tlC relations.

First negotiated In 1DG2, the agreement is Ja'pan’s chtef source of contact with Mainland China. It allows Japan to w an ia1 fl~a Peking'-.

make no concessions to keep the trade' agreement alive Furui’s pleas that the. Japan

2B—News 7SL—News 3— News 5—News

■ 7B—News 11—High Chaparral

' 8— Land of the Giants— ^ = r■ xoW Tn icy

6:00 2SL—News3—News4—^Truth or Consequences5—News

_ _____ I I—Julia .2B^Spmething' Else 7B— Brady Bunch

, 7SL—Figuring It Out , 6:15 7SL—Misterogers

T>-:6r3fr 2B— Hogan’s Heroes ' 7B— Nanny and the

Professor 2SL—Name of the Game 5—Get Smart ~

------------------- » Boom aaa-3—Get Smart

-Tt—Bfifdy Bunch - 11—HOgan’s Heroes

6:45 7511—Frfendly Giant * 7:00.2B— Movie, “ Peyton

P lace”3—Movie, “ Peyton P lace" n —M ovie, "Peyton

■ P lacc”re r

It’s Y og i Bear”7B— Movie, ""QuarantinedR— Mnvif , “ Thn Tniimpy

~ VJjb—v ^ a f ’s New 7:30 7SL—Querry

5—Tim Conway 8:00 2SL—Movie, " t o Catch A

Th ie f”5— Movie, "Pev(on P lace" 7SL—Week in 'Review , 7B-~Bracken's World in Review T

8:30 7SL—NET Festival7B—Name of the Game 8— High Chaparral

9:00 4^Love American Style 7B—.Andy Williams 2B—Medical Center ,3— Jack ie Glea-son *■11—Johnny Ca.sh

9:30 7SL—Net Playhoucc 8— A<}am U

10:00 2SL—News • 2B—News

5— News ’7B—N&w»

■*:------S— New.s

^iy^nj|or

' K ite flying can be fun If —jaungsters JT?_apd their parents

'--heed e ighrtiinple rules. Idaho ^ P o w e r Company's safety.dlrec- , .tor polnted..6ur Wednesdaji. j A. G. Bfali^ listed the safety

rules, which he callM “ every kite flyer's commandments," as follows.: •

1. Al'wayg' use dry string—not ,-;Wlre or anything metallic. •

2. Always use wood and^aper In your kite—not wire or nttal.

3. Always fly your, kite on days when there is no rain.

4. Always avoid bu.sy streets 'and highways while flying ycur kite.

5. Always fly your kite away I, from T V and radio aerials.

REV.' W ILUS HUNKING

a missionary to Nigeriau m * V a i i u T M u tu a c r u t i 5 . , , , . . . m u .-6. Alwaj;s keep a w a y j iw r 'v l " West Africa w ill ^ the Hen wires. . fealured^speaker at 7:45 p.m.7. ^Iways fly you^’''Klte- fd C 'F fld a y at the Lynu/cod Ch'ap-

trade oiliceand a Chinese business. 1958 foreign car smashed into

repre.sentative to live Ip T ok yo .' u stone wall and r.olled out

from' power lines.8. Always call your power

company if your kite gets snag­ged in power lines. Don’t pull the strirtg or climb power poles.

arce o f f w ill'h e lp make kite flying en­joyable and prevent needless ac- cidehtsr'’ Blair said.

el.' Part of the World Day of Prayer, t\)e ^ev. Mr. tlunk'jig is a co-^ganizcr of the 1968 W e s t Africa Congress on

b3 A prayer , participation meeting at 2 p-tn. Friday at Ihfi chnptl.----1----------------—

and but of China _______ buslncs.smen.

The pact e.vpired E)ec 3T7 after-China i;ebuffed Japane.se efforts to have renewal negcfia- tions started in November.

The Poking Chinese wereupset o v e r Ih e res ii _______ ________________________________ .-visit to • President Nixon inl lhird Ave. N.. was driving the Washington that month. Sato[car when it hit some gravel, was promised the return o f slid into a stone wall, then roll- U.S.-ruled Okinawa to Japan, in.ed. He and his passenger, return he declared that "the Bito Cantrell, 16, 295 Lois St., maintenance of peace and security in the Taiwan (Formo- .■(a) area was a most important

TtTE----SCCtJlit'y----o f

SON INJUREDVIEW — Mr. and Mrs. 'W .

F. Qua.st have returrtCd' from I-ong Beach, Calif., where they visited their son. Chief Petty Officer Gareld L. Quast, who v^as iniured in_an auto.accident ■scvGral monthirgBo. Ho It cc

the U.S. Naval hospital

IRREGULARODUE TO LACK Or FOOD *

_^90LK IN YOllR DIET ■. B R A N

T jn w — for Japan.

This endorsfment of U.S. effort.s to protect Formosa, base of the Nationalist Chinese government, headed by Pres­ident Chiang Kai-shek, was a new departure by Japan. Previously, Japanese diplomats

late Tuesday

Robert F. Kennedy" 5—Get Smart

4— Perry Masoii 10:30 2S i—Johnny Carson

2B—M ovie ,'"Tho D jrk At The Top of The Stairs” " 7B—Johnny Carson8— J o h n a y -C a M o n -— -------7SL—Figuring It Out- 11—Movie, "The-L ist of Adrian Mcsscnc,cr’ ’li

-3- Merv G rif fin -------------5— Mertf Griffin

11:00 4—News-Tg},— F ig u r in g—la Ottt-

11:15 7SI.—C()mniun,lv .-\lort I I : JO 4— Movie, "The' Horror

Double Stamps

— C h a m b e r " ----- _ ^1^:00 5—Movie. "The Man Who

Finally Died"2SL—M ovie;” Tho ,

___T n m p ln rt" ’-----------------—

New T. F. OfficerFrank Lara. J y in Falls res!

dent for about a year, was sworn in Wednesday as a TSvin Falls City Police officer.

Officer Lara will be assigned as a jpatrolman, Chief Frank Biirnelt said.

He Ls originally from Califor­nia. He and his w ife-have four hiidren:------- -------------------------- :

TWO OF THE rules for safe kite flying are dem onstrated for three young “ pjlots” by A. G. Blair, kneeling. Idaho Power Company safety director, with the help-of IM(- lP. Ol­son, company serviceman. T^e rules: (1 ) “ Always fly your kite far from power lines,” itnd (2) “ Always call your power company If your kite gets snagged in power lines.’ * Olson uses an Imulateil “ liut >ilcK‘*'tu'fiTir"B-kltu iiiiuggua'lin r line.

Magic Valley'Gem ClubAAARCH 7th and 8th, 1970

Tw in F a lls A rm ory TW IN F A L L S , IDAHO

O O O R S O P E N 10 a.m . to 10 p.m. S A T U R D A Y lO B.m. to 6 p .m . S U N D A Y

Child re n under 12 FREE w he n acrcompaniod by pnrenfj

ADMISSION: .48 plus .02 state sales lax-Total 50c

Now you can invest in new*15,000,OOfHfssiie

R A D IS H E S O R ' C - .G R E E N O N IO N S ............................. bunch D C

3 0 oz. cans

N ALLEY’S CHILI . . . . . . 65c' L lb b y ‘ » P a m ily-t » ll can--------------------------------------------

PITTED OLIVES . . . ' r . .. . 27cLars* ’ ,

Q U A K ER O A T S .................... 63dCanned Whole .SWIFT’S CHJGKEN . .\ . $ 1.19

I JANr^HOSE Iw i

Askfan faingdraileK7% with 30-month maturity.

^l^AVlthJSft-m ontfem atiiflt^.

jS flP O f m o re in ^100 m u ltip le s .

in DC Ift i i\< i I

SECUR'S, M 11

/ tt U ; rii.’ 2

I ■ \

W " 4 ^ M ^ l t K E TIN S O U T H JP A R K

Interest b ^ fh ts tl^ of fnvesfitieiif.F . ... -r ----------' ■