hot pants hot pants hot pants hot pants hot pants hot pants hot pants

advertisement
•
I d a h o ..., 6 3 7 0 4
y.-'V
Magic Valley \aHome Newspaper
V O L 68 N O . 54
,
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Un­ rose garden before 400 gueSts
daunted by a light rain that M d a sadjjut proud f a t l « ^
=««a3
—¥he=ftesidenk-Kisscd-tts !iJ>minutes, Tricla Nixpn was year-old elder daughter on the
naarried Saturday to Edward cheek before he handed ^er
Finch Cojc as she had wished, over t<
oiitrinara In ■
th<»- iyhit<» HniL«ie'" New_yotl
TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, SU N D AY, JU N fc l3^ 1 9 7 1
vard law student, who had Cox placed a simple platinum with her husband, Tricia, who-';
raurted Tricia for seven vfears. band encrusted with 30 din- kissed Cnx jighUy nn thp rhwk
Tfie t-uqple excliunged thetr HUiiuis on 'Itlcia's Dnger, luia at me end of the ceremony,
vows at an altar under a the Rev. Dr. M w ard G .J ^ tc h paused brieby to kiss her
flower-bedecked white wrought lironounced them man and v/ife
mother on the cheek.
..... ..
Once the wedding tw ty left^
:bo just outside the at i;45 p jn . E D I.
“lUKOTTDfftce:
“thlsinoffleiit~ls~th6“bej:{irP the glistening garHen, the rain
ning of a new day." praved Dr.
wni
Latch, who is chaplain of the giiests scrambled for cover
U.S. House of Representatives, with as much dignity as
iir-4i#es— pesail
W g e ^ r , may theyi.be ablii_to
or hancuc^rciuets
. look bacic w d My how splendid
heads.
the day has been.”
Thfe proud President, escortThe drizzle which ended just ing his wife down- the .aisle,
■ ^ S }lP!:aaiden)..£acaiJ& lLM __ paxej:epnrtyrs.and.camBramendown a 90-foot white carpijt to a big “okay" sign with his
the altar began again, accom­ fingers as they headed toward
panied by a cool^breeze, when a champagne reception in the
the IB-minute ceremony ei.'ided. White House.
But the rosy-cheeked bride
Martha Mitchell, outspoken
seemed obUvious to it a l l . . __ jyjfg-gf-AttQmey General John
Smiling broadly and widking N. Mitehell, j:arried a yellow
arm-in-arm l>ack down the aisle parasol with white lace trim
and was one of the few women
guests who salvaged their
hairdos from the shower.
Evangelist Billy Graham, a
friend of the President, chatted
with comedian Red Skelton as
they patlMlly waited in the
drizzle for a chance to
congratulate the bride and
groom.
The weather lightened the
mpcKi.pf tlie occasion. Gtaham
BY CHARLOTTE BE: LL,
quipped that it was “a brlcM
“sKoweFT’T'eleviilon"
Imes^News writex ”
JiiK U iv iJi^ 'i‘he stauj’ posse unkieiier called h
meet being held in Jeroi ne has California weather.
drawn 190 mertiibers, from
throughout I d ^ o /fiMparl icipate
the
a fie r if f ^
Bosse -at- the Jerome
County Fairgrounds.
The meet conclude)i today
with awarding of tropliles and
a
i n
» nmlng^6f=TTlew^tat«r”^ a e ^ ^ ^
t a r g e t
Ann Hai-vey 6f Twiiv-Falls is
reigning queen.
Posses from eight ’-counties
are attending. Seveia have
[-entered queen cont'istants.
Tliey are Barbara Let ris, Ada
BOrSE — Faria McKinney,
County; Debbie Scheer Jerome Miss Twin Falls, was chosen
County; Mary VanZan'/e, Twin first runner-up In the 1971 Miss
B j PAULINE PAV—
Ealls CQunty; Betty J o JDuffy^ -Idaho— Pagoant^ In"- -Boise'
fimes-News Writer
Cassia County; Ruth Ciunpbell, Saturday evening.
^
BUHL — An 11-year-old
Canyon County; Le.iille An­
Selected as Miss Idaho was
derson, Bingham Couity, and Miss
Karen
Herd,
who Burley youth who was swim­
Marlene
Varin,
Gooding represented Idaho Falls. She ming with a group of ScQuts
County.
'
will represent the Gem State in drowned Saturday at Banbury’s
Paraae ana drill coinpeiiUon
was conducted Saturday night. Atlantic .a ty . N.J., l ^ r
Twin Falls County sheriff’s
Trophies will be aw^rc led to the year. Miss Herd, 19, a brunette,
Brst, second and third place is a coed at J M g h j^ Young officers identified the victim as
Darius -Naglerson o f a n d
winners.
___ _ _
University.
’
~Mr».-BuHon-Njiglc,-Buricy. the
—A -pofodc m afdw d'. tiifoug))—
downtown Jerome iiatur.day
Ann Buntin, Miss University boy’s body was found about
with the p o ^ members and of Idaho, was the second run- 10:50 ajn . Saturday in the deep
queen candidates part tcipating. ner-up. Mis^ Jannle Ellis, Miss . end of the pool:--- Officers said several boys
Todays events includc.; a break­ Jefferson County, was third
fast from 7:30 to 10 a. m. at the Miss Boise, Margere Hol- diving for rocks foun.d the Na^e
youth’s body. 'Hiey called a
fairgrounds; the queen contest InnH, wns fniiplh ninnpr-.iip
ra ce. events
P ic k
honors
M ewly w eds, T r ic ia and E d w a rd C o x
S o lo n s c e ris u r^ ^
BOISE
(U PI)
— The
executive board of the Idaho
EduSBbri Association issued a
censure sanction charging the
state legislature "negated and
abrogated its responsibilities to
education.”
The action came late
-STJ-NN-¥
y o u th d row n s
waa —the-victimwas4unong4ibout-100-retrieved from the water. Ar­ Scouts attending Bfi outing. He
tificial respiration was used said the boys had been in the
while waiting for arrival of an area for three days, but had
ambulance from Buhl. Efforts been travelled back and forth
to revive the boy were futile. He by bus and had not stayed
was pronounced dead bn arrival overnight.
at Magic Valiev Memorial — He sald.Satufday wag to have- ,
HospitaliT
1
ended .the day camp session^g^
The Nagle boy was part of a
laoice-Edvsards; Twin;J a ils
County cofOHefi-sald
is planned into the death. He remainder
boys was
said there was no sign of injury hiking.
UK Doy -indicating that he
(ileed said the victim was a~
might have hit his head.
membCT of Boy Scout Troop 110,
Dari Gleed, Snake'iUver ArM B^nwredby u e Burley EUghthCouncil Scout executive, salcL .Wnrrf i.nn n in i fji. ' ‘
gwft-the-M agle^alley—
orie-quarler mile race, flag in the competition ~at Boise,
race, toton race, thr ee-eighths iiiey were Beverly Iverson,
n ^ e race, three-leaf clover Miss Buhl; Cindy Anderson,
race, baton relay ra«?, 10 barrel . Filer, Miss Idaho State
race, scurry race, ke.yhole race University, >and Vicki Short.
flim hfllfjnllA rfliS> All pvpnts gnViHing M i .m — HH5e Sta te—
^ e oprrtirthe public.“Canege;
& K e i*
NEW YORK (UPI) —A
The other passengers left the
nervous young gunman hijacked Trans World Airlines 727 safely
a jetliner in Chicago, demand- before it took off from Chicago
ing to ' be flown to North Friday night carrying the
Vietnmn. He killed a passenger—hijacker,a-crew plfour and^the
and fought a gun duel in the air police cliief of Cary, ni., a partbefore he was wounded by an time U 4 , marshal who sneaked
FBI agen( and arrested on through the cockpit window^
landing early Saturday in New dressed in' a TWA flight suit
York. •
and carrying weapons.
^-.ThehUackerand-thepasaen- --.^TWAJlight 358 trom. Albu­
ger, a 65-year-old.!^usinessman, querque, N.M., to New York
t __ypnfi
three-^our s l^ drama in which Chicago’s O'Hare InternationBl
at least nirie' shots were fired. Airport shortly after 11:30 p jn .
The. h ija ck e r,' hit in the EDTT ^-almost three hours late
shoulder, was not seriously ■b e c a i^ of bad weatber —when
! # « = = = - ------ -------
States it U almost a lost art. Larry Is the'son of-Mr. and Bbs.
Victory Dcahl, tWln FUls.
WASHINGTON ( If f I ) -The Mark O.
vern-Hatfield - amend- -28 xrther senators.
war.
m ent,-- r-equirin^
trophy and hard luck ti-ophy will non-flnalist, non-niusical talent disengagement from Indochina would direct the President to were added to the amendment
be given. TTie recipierits will be award.
|
by the end of the year, appears end ,UiS. combat in or over a week ago |a-.aa:-eS6rt to
chosen by the Jerorihe Posse
headed for a decisive Senate Vietnam by Dec. 31 unless the attract support from wavaring
members.
In addition to Miss KfcKinney, defeat Wednesday.
^ e t y o f withdrawing U.S. senators —particularly Repobll-nP.t-SUBPOrt adpqi 'f te f'ynHjn£ nfJ pnngjrfprc tho rinan/-i.il f-ri-ic
include^ ■hawa ^ ^ eete ^
—OrleansTrtHHiave been-dlsenciffi®^
A Unitetf?Ri!wi^BifcT»ationat=#wc«=woi^—be^affeeted-of
public school educatJon in the Idaho public school education, traUer competitlbn.
in Twin Falls early this year, survey completed Saturday unless North ‘Vietnam hto ed with adnilnlstratton policy In
last session of the leglsbture.
Sunday’s races feiuture one- there were three
_____________
negotiate on the Southeast A sE r^
-But the“IEA also udupted a secretary of "the IKA, said the
resolutlor^ praising
th o «
lEA would also bring up the
tegtslalors iC said workrf for subject of a shortened school
tax reform and more money for year in 1971-72 with the State
education. The lEA s<-iid it Board of Education at its next
would issue a “score board" of meeting
•
________i.
J
^^TwltrralU fotiaj&itenrdQia^^5^~Mme~|MiE^
j ^ i ^ S S n e n t lo ss looiTisr
Washington County, Mary
Anderson, won the m usic^
Saturday after an all-day the voting records of
m atin g
...............................
censure S ection 'would be__statejsiilfi_
“primarily a public information
The executive board calle^
and political action campaign" for “town meetings”-to be held
aimed at defeating, those in every school district in the
legislators the lEA claims did coming year to discuss what it
— LARRY DEAHL, 11, Twg T M », Une> up a thbt'tt ■mirfaleii
game on a balmy iprlng afternoon. The game li popular among
hijacker naaraea:
— -Tte Y Bliagent wUu wounded— Tbe “ man7~ tall,' sUni-litd
the hljadter was tdentified-by—goateed, .. was—id e n tja « r ^
,
police sources as WHUam Gregory ^ i t e . 23, a Chicago
' Mullaly the same agent whoJ3 mi>!^i«n He had no bgagtofr
^--qgcto r J«PW E -3ennett31v J S t h ig M L
the measiu^, 37 for, 10 are
undedded and three w ill,
withhold their votes.
Backers of the amendment
bave,no l glVen up.- Further. HOUSTON (UPI)-Apollo 15 scheduled tor a J uly-26-launch
in » i » f m w u j i i p r i n i — ^Wimander— ttevid y — Srntt ar Cape tCennwlv"Saturday Scott broughttoisrshowdown --induding-a
vehlcle up some 30 feet,
poifsible compromise
TKTTttiB-m-ta-J uBfi 30- -im two short tests Satur hovered mnmwitarily whll>
Force belched water vapor, then
onrE.TT.ms: ~ ^ e a — aowir~qrf~ Rtiingtnnninway at an altitude of 300
But the surveyjndicated that July 30 moon landing.
feet.
“I was trying to leam how
there has bem little over-all
Just before setting the vehicle
change since last September’s chwge landing sites,” Col.
down the second Uim, Sq^t put
initial 55 to 39 defeat of the Scott said after guiding the
ungainly craft over jOO feet of it through two delicate pitching
prqposal. Sponsored by Sens.
maneuvers,^ The purpoae of the
George McGovern, D-S.D., runway d u in g the ^second test.
pitching maneuvers was , to
“Thing*lo<Aed real good.”
The sizHOoinute Bights ««re -determine haw
vehicle*^1 1
Scott’s 37th and S8th tesU of would react if ^ sudden oiocaO llip . lO H
-7 “The LLTV;- A p<^ 15 Is landlng3ltFduiq|[eirB«i3iai7.^^
L a n d in g s im u la t e d
into the galley. “He has a gun,” He wanted to go to North takeoff the hijacker got up “to
Vietnam. I^e wanted f7S,0(W in (d^fck out the back of ,the
she screamed.
' While the other passengers cash, a machine gun and plane.”
Joseph Zito, 39, the part-time
fled or ducked behind seats, ammunition.
‘
-^Howard—Fraiiks, head—otr-,-a. -Elder.pcrsuaded t’lie hijacker m a r s ^ l who is assigned to
management co n stan t firm in 'to let the three remaining airpioct security and had'never
Darien, Conn., tried to jump passengers leave the p t a e and flown before, was w a tc h in g ^
the“^ufuiSan7' There' was' ”a^ to have FVfiila’ boiJfy removed. H Jack » I h r o ^ a oneway glaffl
struggle and he was killed with The pUot told him they would in the cockpit d6or. He went
one shot in the head and one in have to' pidc up a l.arger plane into action.
h e a v 5 ^ ,
‘*I took two shots at I t o in s a i d
th e jja c k .---- --------- _ in New-Yotk-for the f l l ^ t to
the rear of the planeTHe fell
JVanks was the ftrst nassen- Vietnam.M AffllA (U P n - A ship carger
Ronakl^Dupuis.
31.
of
^
to
hijacking, accoirdiw to. the out ne was
Federal AviaUon M in in istra-later at a news confer^ce. NJ.,armedbyZitp„fired_twice
---d S a te d a i3 ia r a s E E m t
tion; The cooilot of a Newark,
Miss (j!ulver imdled— the
=-yr:Jv«» m a ia i IM itern All* Itljacker to ^ t with her. He told
hijadcer refiirijed" tire
{jae»
’ '
reported
to
.
ley;-wa»-kllled Marci»_J7, 1 ^ t ^ t be bad left a wife and two one biuQet missed Dupuis' head early Saturday that 18 -bodies
had been rtcovwed «nd- »™
in a hijacking that fa ile d .= ^ d iild K n -bd iin i—4b —Chicago tw two bidies.—
•n w a r expected of him,” becauae he fett h»» was *‘furt
___ ________ ____
to—
F « «i
«««: ••
-a-r^laTOi|g^JjW-.-YQdt-^Cifarl-jdn f i r , Wl« r he grabb ^ bar
•<
suu!) were miifliyTH^
I jSO a jn . "nie Sjactar
Bar- At least f i p ^ e
-tta e«>cera that leavg liv tlHT "
around the_
Eastern Air lines plane to
newwiMtyi^ofpe^raon.” ,
■•T"......
.......
Engineer Boo E. Welshlmer of Mme of the
stm be alive within tiie sb^
J u n e J lM -
r — . - i ... v - -
C
■» TlmM.Ni.w». Tu(ln Fullt. litohn
,Sunday, jifflia 13; T971
__
S e e n .’
“ Scores—of-ryoimgsters—end^—
adults
watching
circus
elei^ants haul tent poles into .
^placfi.;..^Mr8.Dale-BaU,^oi<ie,. drinking iced tea . . . Pat Ber.,
ST Alm^n^LV-— 3W JW »glA -^^b.
mingham favoring 'sore'^ kneii^
ifriPI* Valley tnembers of the Idaho year.
after motorcycle wreck . « .
Junior Hereford Associiatlon ■ The Oakley 'FFA- judging Cloyce Eklwards talking ^on
rieceived high honor^ during^the' team was the FFA ' judging' telei^one . . . Sandy
,.
rieent^aaaoeiation’rfield-day-at-BvehtT^Meinljers-Tjrthis-teain- T>rlhging“lijuich"td bo ^Ie n d
Rudd Herefords, St. Anthony, are Severe, Mark Alton and Mrs. O. J . Smith picking
Grants Severe, Oakley, was Mark Swan. Advisor for the asparagus . . . John McBride, ~
one of the top judges at the team Is ,fphn_Swan.
Burley,-eating-hindJ-#HElk» annual event and as a result
New o f f i ^ , of
-Abbte-Uriguen-
r ^ e iv e
h o n o rs
received a reRlstered Hereford goup were elects ahdL they
bslf«r.
■~ ^
^ • inciucie four Magic % U e j Pean K n m p wearing rnask.
DebbierrHoward. Murtaugh, fliembersT—They are Clajr ChM Browning with bruised
____ was named—the -1871 Idaho- Hairison. Hevburn. fii
Hereford Queen, "and will president; Kenny Tracy, Malta^ BassMt doing splits
.
represent the junior group as second vice president; Patricia' Behagemriding bicycle . .\ Mr.
well as the Idaho Hereford Larson, Burley, director; and and Mrs.
s.'Ron
<lU>n____________
Isaac -planning
A s^latio n at various cattle bepbie tiowara, reporier.
Sunday exWsion . .' . And
overheard. ^’Hiat’s absolutely
un-American to goNto California
and not visit Disneyland.”
C e n t e r p la n n e d L o n
police
WASHrnGTOTTTDPTT^he
government is planning to
finance a national center ' to
compile information on police
Hereford queen
NEW jPAHO HEREITORP
is Pebble Howard, Murrigibt, receives aTIlver platter froiTMrs. .{iDlui
Rockland, Idaho Hereford Anzniory. She was named queen «t
the recent Idaho Junior Hereford Association’s fieUf day in St.
Anthony.
M agic V alley Hospitali^
M a g ic V a lle y M e m o r ia l
St,-B enedicts
Admitted
Admitted
Kathleen Ross, Shoshone;
Mrs.
Gary
Nordstrom,
Gooding; Mrs; Jiinior Lwson
and Mrs. Pat Main, both
Jerome; Mrs. Darrell Hupser,
Mrs. Lee Garrison, Mrs".
William Goertzen, Mrs: Steve
H. Brtdey, Mrs. Jerry Olsen,
Peggy Roberts, Brenda, Roper,
Lela Annis, Patricia. Gomez,
IJ C U C . t U l l I l D ,
m l ^ r ' ''lV U ifiilJ
V
-T o p -
— ---- -TOP-F-FA—JUDGINGMeam-at--UH»-^reeeBt--Id8h<H^uniorHereford AssoclatlonViuinual field dsiiK near St. Anthony was
this team of thre^ from Oakley. From left, are Mark Swan,
____ __
. Grant Severe and Mark Alton.
V a lle y
N ’a i llo n
JEROME — Ray NaiUon, 61,
died of a long illness Saturday
morning at St. Benedict's
Hospital.
He was bom Feb. 25, 1910, at
H ouser
TWIN FALLS
B. Houser, 88.
resident, died of
Friday evening
Manor.
- Mrs. Ethel
former Filer
a short illness
at Sky View
U il' •
his family to Pingree. He came McCune, Km ., and attended
to Jerome in 1932 where he was college at Eimporia, Kan. Shy
married to Margaret Miller on taught school.
-—SHeroismafrfcd to JoM
He had worked as a mechanic Alli.snn nn June 22, 1904. He died
for the Ford' and Chevrolet in 1918. She was married to
garages and for the cUy of William W. Houser in Twin
Jerome for a number of years. Falls on Nov. 24,1945. He died in
He also had farmed in the area. 1970. Mrs. Houser was a
Dawson, "airSfiosfione; Gordon GreehKathern
Weeks.
Robert _fifildjndJilra. Elizabeth Hawka,.
Hudelson, Hope Bates, Mrs. lx)th Wendell; James Keyes and
liiffeL Howarf, Mrs. FVanJc Mrs. Jcuglas Albertson and.
T3niger, "Mra. 'iSirles ISHen, dau^ter, all Tvirin Falls; Felix
Terry Peterson, Brenda Roper, Madarieta, Hagerman, and
Patricia Gomez, Mrs. William Mrs. Hazel Jenldns, Wendell,
■Goertzen^JiBfey boy Kirkland, transferred to long term care
Bonita Baker and son, Mrs. Unit.
Charles Hanchey and—son,
Births
A daughter was bom to Mr.
Lewis Floyd, Adella Wilson.
Sherry Moorehead and son and and Mrs. Doug Albertson, Twin
Mrs. Elmer Annis, all Twin Falls.
Falla; Joseph Warr and Mrs.
Leroy Kohl and son, all Buhl;
Mrs. Harold Fitzpatrick and
P o lle r
James Luisow, both Eden;
Scotty Allen,' Mrs. Edmjmd
GOODING - Eucf—
Barkis, Mrs. Milton Thom'^,
~s. Florence Stroud
Hfeather Lai
Potter will be conducted -at 1 1
“Barker and Carolyn Rathbun, p jn . Monday at the Thompson
all Filer; Dennis Lewis and Funeral chapel by Rev. Edwin
Mrs. Allan Stevenson, -both Stanton. Last rites will be held
Hazelton; Cindy Lee Climer, in the Hagerman Cemeter
___________________ teiy.
Harold'Colbertr Wayne Beeves
She was txim Aug. 14, 18», at
and Barbara Lierman, all Three Creek and lived at
Kimberly: Kurt Westendorf. -fio&ewortli, but~spent~niost of
Gooding; Earl Brannan, Declo, her life at Bliss and Hagerman.
and Mrs. Raymond Ball, Boise.
■In. 1910 ,shp.. was-marriftd.-la"Blrthr
Herbert Stroud at Shoshone. He
A son was bom to Mr, and -died in ^932- In 1933-8he was
Tire
since then. He was ia member of" Mrs. Adella Ely, Twin Falls,
the Methodist Church.
and-Jdrs--LaVcrne--Willhight^
Surviving, besides his widow, North Bend, Wash., and four
are two sons. Ronald W„ gramlcbildren and nine great-,
'N a illo n .^file Moimtalfi, Nev., grandchildren.
and Hugh Naillon, Eugene,
Funeral services will be
Ore.; two brothers, Harrison conducted at 2 p,m. Monday at
Naillon, Hermiston, Ore., and Twin Falls Mortuary Chapel.
•two sisters, Mrs. Florence Final rites will be at Sunset
Christensen, Provo, Utah,-and Menriorial Park. - — Mrs. Donna Ringo, Reno, Nev.,
and five grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
A nd e rso n
conducted at 2 p.m. Monday at
Hoyfe Funeral Chapel by Rev.
TWIN FALLS - Elmer
Jot n N, Gah-atrfandt. Final Anderson, 87, 1238 Eighth Ave.
r i^ s will be_
'E'., I'Wih t ans, aied of a short
illness Friday at Skyview
Manor.
He was bom Sept. 23, 1883. in
W e a lh e r s
Sweden, arid came to the United
F IL E R — Mrs. iEmma States when he was 12 years old.
He did farm and livestock
Weathers, 88, Filer, died of a
short illness early Saturday at work in the Kimberly-Hansen
an area ntu'suig home.
area.
She was born July 3, 1882, at
Graveside services will be
Twin Falls Cemetery by the
P---------- --- rv^riwrmmay call at White Mortuary
Sunday .-Monday and until 10:30
a,m , Tuesday.
y
B
r i a ^
TWIN FALLS - Mrs,, Bess
Sinclair Weaver, 68, former
-Twin-Falis-resident and -Twin
Falls High School librarian,
died Saturday morning at the
home of a daughter in Albany,
Ore.
'
She was born June 5, 1903, at
I r a z ie r
Rathdrum, Idaho. She was
FILEfi;—Sanford Lee Frazier, raised in northern Idaho in the
87, Flier, died Saturday morn­ Bonners Ferry, Kellogg and
ing at ^!^agic Valley Mectiorial Rathdrum areas. She came to
Hospital of a short illness.
Twin Falls from Boise. She was
He was bom Feb. 22, 1884, at
lewel County, Kan., coming
School and received her B,A. been killed, some of them shot
They are Jack Hettenbach,
Twin F£iV1s from Oklahoma In degree from the College of down without warning.
Twin Falls, and Larry L.
1913. He was employed by the Idaho.’
LEAA gave lACP a $300,000 Larson, Burlev, _____ : _____
Salmon tUyer ^ n a l (^. m
Sho lived in Twin Falls for 40 annua^gralnt"tOTun1ta bomb
-worke^stn aditch ridef'f^th® years"ted was libr'^lOT~at"the~ data~center.“ operative siliee^
.Twin-Pall’^ CanaLCo^-untiUils local high, school for 16 years. July, it was given an additional
retiremeint in 1963.
THE
She moved to Albany to live $750,000 last week,
He m arried Esther J. with her daughter two years
In an inigoflew—with—UPIyF
A N T A S IK T
Holloway in Twin Falls' on Oct, .apn
—---^ ^ — l^e d iia rd T o r^ w the police
A
M A ZIN G
-30. IRl.y
She was married to Dr.^C. killings center as playing two
Survivirig, besides his ^dow,
VeaverJftJUigust, 1928, main rolfi.s—to wnm police
arc-a -da4Ughter,- Mrs.. Lorene. at" Evanston, Wyo, 'He"died‘ in—what kind of situations to be-on
Frazier, Oiidaw. Twenty-nine 1939.
guard against and to help police
-Palms;— 'BalifrT— a— grand­
Surviving are her dau^ter, morale.
daughter, three brothers, Mrs.
Margaret Brickley,
“A lot of misinfomnation gets
■G«or-ge—lii^r-azicFi—Michigan^- Albahyr^R^t^tluW 'sotiC tt^6lit"^''^*SitBi‘^ ‘tiiese^ killings'.”
Lewis^gi'aaier, East Alton, 111,, Oialres Weaver. Palo Alto. Leonard said, “Rumors go fast.
and Carl Frazier, Fairview. Calif., and Dr. Wiliiam Weaver This is disquieting to the
Okla,; twi) sisters. Mrs. Olive and Dt^. David Weaver, both average cop.”
Major, F.airview, Okla., and Portland. Ore.; two sisters.
Ai an example of the kind of
Mrs. Corai Yates. Harrington^ Margaret sniclalr:^ C a l d w e l l . l ^ t t g ^ s that sometimes UeveT tt* f J o o n d e a n t n g T i e v i w t t i o t - h Kan.
--and Mrs. Joseph Marshall. lop. he c it ^ Miami where
iw e a p in g
n o tio n . E v e r y h o m e ,
Funeral services will be Twin Falls, and five grand- poUce. responding to a call for
o f f ic e , t r o ile f . m o b ile u n it. c a r.
conducted at 2:30p jn . Tuesday children.
a
n
d
flo
o
r
n
e
e
d
i o H oky ^ nd w e
- help in a family dispute, would
n e e d l a le t lo d te t
in Reynold's Funeral Chapel,
Graveside services w i l l b e be shot from ambush when they
Twin Falli'i by Rev, Walter L, conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday entered the house.
Darby, Filer First Unijted In Twin Falla
---“Jn a matt<ir of wcoks.”
Phone
her John Wallace. Episcopal Leonard said, "the same kind
Lola Marrs
Church of the Ascension, of thing was perpetrated in
Rt. I Park Av<t.
Arrangements are under the rather cities,”
Twin Fall*---direction of Reynolds Funer^
Chapel. Memorial gifts may be
.
~
7 3 3 -1 6 0 5
The plant! t Jupiter is 1.200 made-to the CoUege of Idaho
is the
times as bit; as the earth.
Scholarshiii Fund.
biggest city m the biggest state.
O b it u a r ie s
dhjem, .Kevin Juegerl, Mrs. Wendell, and Mrs. Everett
Dick Stimpsori, R. Gregory' Campbell, Bellevue.
Swallow' and Mrs. Robert
Dismissed
^Matsuoka, all Twin Fags; Mrs.
;Mrs-l'ChaaieICIaU>Qrn^3r!£S.
Fredrick J. James, Buhl, and Junior Ijrsnn, Tinn Rivldlrk.
Kupert Morrill, Kimberly.
Leann
Reddick,
Martin
DismlMed
Humphries, Joseph Facilla,
Mrs. Steven Poelke, Alice Mrs. Harold Gray and Mrs. Ina
Hagar. Guadalupe E^am illa, Hogue, all Jerome: Mrs. Lela
Mrs. George Otto and daughter, Springer, Jeri Curry, Robert
to OUver Weathers on July 25,
1909. He died Ofr ^
couple came to Filer in 1947 arid
operated a shoe store th e ri^.ftt
number oT years,
Mrs
M rs.- W e av e r • .
a l l e
jm iN _K A L L S -Sobertakillings patterned from, the Koppes, Boise, Small Business
bomb data' center run by the A dm ^tration loan officer, vrill
International Association of be vi^ting Twin Falls Thursday •
Oiiefs of Police (lACP).
to counsel small businessmen
:&uneUmea-theae-ahoolinga- jm-Uie3erv1rfi,<inf,thB..SRA, .She,
run in kind of a streak,” said will be at the Chamber of
Jerris Leonard, chief of the Conimerce office.
^
Law Enforcement Assistance
Administralion (LEAA). “It’s
TWIN FALLS - Paul ft.,
important for a police cWef in Carlson, Twin Falls, has been
ChicagOi foF-examplerto-know- -named-manager~of the^Con---wiiat’s happened in New York solidated Freigbtways- ter­
City.”
minal in Twin Falls. He has
LEAA, an'arm of the Justice beeh with Consolidated since
Department established by the 1950.
1968 Safe Streets Act to give
additional financial help to
L ic e n se d
state and local police, is
negotiating with the LACP now
BOISE — Two Magic Valley
on the' center ■to compile ' men received el^trical jour­
Info i^tio n on the killings of neyman licenses from the Idaho
H O K ir
U A I
v ^ sa u s
W n »lh rn riii'r nrH rnnl rn"n*-
TJTck StimpMriTall TwEri Falls
and Mr, and N^s, FYed James
-Buisr---------- -------M in id o k a M e m o r ia l
Dismissed
Monica J. Niezgoda, Robert
Coffman and Mrs. Robert Lewis
M«rrell and-daughter, alT
Rupert; Susan Steffler, Paul,
and Marjorie A, Evans,
Heytam.
About 78,000 foreigners Uve
and work in Kinshasa, capital
the Congo, savs Nntinnnl
Geographic.
- ^
--
S U a iC R IP T IO N U A T E S
T H E T IM E 5 - N E W S T w i n F a l l s , Id A h o
B y C * r r l» r '
PifT Montti
( D a l l y & S u r > d a y ),
B y M a ll
^
P a i d In A d v a n c « ’ *
( D a lly & S u n d a y )
IMcnth
3Montnt
17.50
i:.7s
$7.7J
» U .5 0
*37.00
1 Y «ar
M a i l t u 6 » c r lp t lo « % s a c c a p t a d o n ly
" ^ • n i ~ c * r r t a r - i » e l f v a n r : 1* n o r
m a ln t a ) r > a d .
T IM ES-NEW S
S U B S C R IB E R S ^
Papar OaHvary
Call yoor ciTTiwr"
B *le r*« p .fn . dally or
lM<or« 10».m . on SuruMy*
PHONE
Or uM our <eH-«rMnumb«nt
Pmil-dMMr-Norland - tJt-tSSl'
fjwr-IUiyw^HotllWor JU.U75
l1ill>llliu'lSnn!ilii----
SheJwas Aipember of the Filer
CaHsia M e m o r ia l
Baptist Church,
Surviving is a sister. Mrs,
" ------Admitted-------Survivol^s include three sons, J,W, aifton, Amarillo, Tex„
Kent Bell. Jennifer Cpjnstock
Graveside funeral services Richard L, Taylor, all Burley;
Herbert Slroud and ^Harold
Stroud, both Bliss, and Leland will Ik conducted at 11 a.m, Mrs. Gerald Jordan and Ivan
Stroud, Burley; one sister, Mrs. Monday at the Filer lOOF Floss Snow, both Paul; Carl
E m m a' McIntosh. Gooding; Cemetery by Rev, Roy Watson. Qegg, Heybum, and Thomas
seven grandchildren and 11 FYiend.s may call Sunday attei^odn aiid until ITnie of seTgreat.^andchildreh,
Dismissed
Friends may,call a t Thomp^' vices .Monday at m ite Mor- , -M rs. Jla y _Clev£rly^ and
son chapel from noon until 9 tuary.
daughter, Mrs— Paul LaFon-p,mr ioday and-Monday—until- _ T
a
and dauglitei, Mrs. Dee
time of services. Last rites will • L f l U C V m b J P I C I lS Nicld. Steven Herbert and
be held in the Hagerman
Harry Taylor II. all Burley;
Cemetery.
FILER - Bible school ,411 Terry Torix. Paul; Mrs. Darel
begin Montoy--at-th«- JHler Darrell Winmlll and son,
M.ennonite Church, according to Rupert, and Mabel Brown.
~FYed Yoder, supenntendem. Heyburn.
'N a g le "
Classes will run from 9 to 11
Births .
BURLEY - Darius Nagle. 11, a.m. for two w ^ lu and children
A daughter was-bom to Mr.
-who—drowned__.Sfltiirdny at -bctwecn-the-ages-of-4-to-the- and-MrsT-Eddte-euriehrBurleyTBanbury's Hot Springs, was the. pi'ghth grnde are welcome.
son of—Mr; and Mre,- Burton'
Hagle, Burley.
He was bom in February,
1960, at.St, Anthony, He was a
member of the-LDS Church and
attended Dworshak Schoob'ftt
Burley.
Surviving,
besides
his '
parerits. are.a brother, Thomas
Ja Na^e, and six sistera.
Camella Jo Nagle. Vickie
Nadine Nagle, Lashelle Irene
Nagle, Charlene Kay Nagle,
Karen Nagle and Margie Nagle,
-Burley;- paternal grand-all
- -----------------.iatber— ftarold— E .
Burley, and .'maternal grand­
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Soiilh, St. AnUiony.
-Fui^,al ijer o ^
pending'.
J^our years ago .she moved
from BUm to Gooding and had
resided-here^sincE.
Funeral aervfces will be
conducted at 10a jn . Tuesday in
the Barley LDS Stakefaouse by
Bishop Dell--Waaaoups. R n a "
jrtta iJrifi "tie
Friemfi masrcallTit the Payne
Mortuary. Burley. Jtondav
aftcrntfDn
'eveutiitp in t f
Tuesday until time of services.
A D D J S O N W E h l U E EAST
T W I N F A I L S ,I D A H O
P H 0 N E - 7 3 3 -4 9 0 6 -
l a a r c H
i N i n s T E R E i t & i T v
F IR J S T
. MUwtm
A
T R E N D
b o th fo r
• 4 Mp0^ TwumtMhU
•4 S JU P M
$ S B 8
• A M - n tfta ^
Jleg.
O F
' 4 m >naaUty l^ aakan
$ 2 4 9 ’"
S A V E *170
W H IL E
C U R T IS
T H E Y ^ L A S T
C
ih « > p r < ilH D e p t s ^ : f o ir S
Buys Like Tfiiis
H t HE Bonos with every Sale
^ tfW E E lc c ^ ^ ld ^ O r in lc s ^
A
2 9 S S « . Im . C U a « «
Flctmr* Tmhm
-- m iy y ria y •
Im s ia m I r « t a y t B i i i i a « t «
Reg.
-5529’*
Paym ents Delayed
Till Fall . . .
' ” Y'A pprbved C re d it)
4
;
,
'
■
iJ .
J .'
U
-county survey results told
[X__^Tlie-^lai«e*t—facmtttsrs^ceaTuSrofTahds^sald-itot-opportuiUtieji-wereUUi^^
■
as«5SSiSfi««f^^
S u b d iv is io n o f
—:----- ------ ----- _r-- —
Sunday, June
i> i
■I
13,
J97i
T I ^ N o w ,. 1V<ln Fans, Idaho
~yT|•■C-'- |
i 1
I fl'
— ^— JWENDEXL--^'nie^large*t-::facllltl6s, s^Mces, ui5«r ofTands' ■said~ihBt"-opportunitie«-were_lL7ihadjiojOElnlen
and genelral
24per
per cent said
saidthey
they were
Ih a fluesUon
question on length of time ■
—
^ 1
-n
.
.M.
J - C * J IM
V F
percentage of
of residents
residents In
In th^
th^ in
in the
the abea
abea and
geiielral good; 24
Wood River Resource area have^|)i^»bl^s and improvement average; 51 per cen( said they students should have to ride a
^ ■an. average income-of between d e ^ e s of^toso answering the wwe inadequate a ^ 4 a p e t cent school bus, thb answers showed,.J
____^ .lM ja d ,| l(U K » ^ itp e E X fin t—q^itiohs^-l-^-- .
..r-. jialH they had noj p in t o o ^ ,___ 47.4 per cent said not more than
Hempleman had previously
the pre-school rating showed one-half «ui hour per trip or one . "T W IN T S H S — "nie Twin
' — according to report of a
For example, 73 per cent of
'recently completed survey those
answering
the 9 per cent who said it was good:,! hour per itoy, while 40.8 pfer cent Falls County Zoning board made application to establish a
condncted under supervision of questionnaire felt that a 24 per <*nt who said the pre- said one hour per trip or not approved Thursday night by a . mobile home park at an 8fraorftHoward Tankersley, Boise, "comniunity center” should be : school training was average; 40 more than two hom^. a_day vote of five to three an ap- site three miles south and a mlle~ :-- «tensioB
— devatbped-in- schnola . . Thia per cent who said it was would be acceptable. The plication' from Lynn; Hem- east o f Eastland >Drive and
Committee and C. M. Wilson in.charge of
~pleman to subdivide—land—Kimberly-RoadrThat-proposal---SHQSHQNE_
cent who reinalnlng percentage ^were ■
affairs and research,
' concept is designed to make the inadequate and 27
southeast of Twin Falls.
was. rejected by the zoning niembers for the Juiy 4 fireworks.
small and y'arled.
nieiour counties In the Wood school facilities available-more M d no opinion.
The vote, according to-Ed-commlssion.--- ^---------- .celebration__ lh__Shoahone,
Youth counseling rating was 7— Priorities for use of (he three
River Resource area are lin- hours pier d ^ to more ^)eople.
AriMns lq chairman
.the chanp^eiyjt
a dmii.iiHtrator=of-^thfr
-- coin, Gooding, -Cam*g-and— Servlcea nre to Include adulL per cent listed as good; 27 p6r million acres Ot national-focest.and iat.
land
— rB laln e .^e ^ii^e y T w a s com^ educatiOT
pleteiUln April and tabnlatloM haslums'rdr'yoUth and adults,
quaUty of environment, wUdlife approval of the project to the
made by the University'of Iddio after school hours and during no opinion.
=eomputte=S»viee=ahawed_42_ aummer. __ prosialon____ e L >Communications between the and fish habitat, production of' county commission whichwlll
,1^ cent return of a community recreational equipment which school iand citizens rating were: timber, llvestook grazing and havt thefhral sayunTKe iHBtterr
Bergln and Ferry Hadlock. riding club events.
attitude survey. It is from, the 42 can alw be u s ^ in the school 14 per cent, good; 39 per cent outdoor recreation.
Gilbert Pierson will be in
per cent return that the results curriculum are all part of this average; 31^ r cent Inadequate
charge of the flag-rfltsilngr The Baptist ' ChurcB .was ._
----and..l6.per.<yjt
and.lS.per.cent
had
no.
no-oplnion.
.
.
KART
—
—---■^eneeptr---~Sfg3nw~amiuuiiw l.
Under job opportunities for listed ^ the most popular radio
Eating of schools in the
Other-reports on Income
at 12:30 p.m^wUl be
showed 10.7 per cent m th6 BOfvey imow3^38 por r ent WtID— yonth;-the ratine sha»«red'0-per -atatf on; Tlmw-Ncwpi -'Twin
oirejjied Dy Kooert Miller, amT sponsored b!
cent,
good;
23per
cent
average;
Fans,
the
most
popular
$1,000to $3,000 bracket; 15.3per said there are good schools; 45
completed Thursday on core completing the sale of the 90- Roy Hubert.
July.
-traet—to^ -the “Dart-CorSpies
^
per'cent
no
opinion,
while
for
responded
to
the
survey
in
bracket; 17.8 per cent in the average^ 10 per cent who said
the foundation for the new poratlon, of which Tupperware
.M.~J. Dille will be In charge of
Harvey Peterson, new owner ,
K.lOO to *7.000 range; 10.3 per they were inadequate and six adults it was'O percent'! good; 35 much' greater number than Tupperware plant.
is a subsidiary. Completion date
per cent average; 48 per cent other-ages of people to whom
"cent in the $10,000 to $12,000 per cent who had no opinion.
Work at the site-one and one for the $5 million plant is ex- ®musical “Jam session" durlng- of the Snack Bar. was Introduced at the chamber
'
pected^arlv^in-lgT^ith-plans
afternoon,
--In-Jhe- -__-hLVQO|p tln n fll n p p n r t iin lt te .i. 9 Inadeouate,^, and 7 with no
One unexpected answer was stopped today because of the calling for 450 employes to
$12,000 to $20,000 range and 3.7 per cent said tliey were good; 28 opinion.
Those willing to raise their that 83 per cent of those-'an- rain, but is expected to comBall games during the af­ new member. Peterson took
'■per cent over $20,000 bracket. per cent said average; 81 per
start.
to "support
more swering felt that housing was mence as soon as the weather
The questionnaire include 120 cent said they were inadequate taxes
A recent survey for employes ternoon will be under direction over the business in Shoshone
questions, on county and school and 14 per cent had no opinion. vocational education were 48.8 adequate In the low income permits.
drew 851 applicants, of which of Kenneth. Blackburn and Leo on June 2. moving here from
In adult education, 7 per cent per cent; while 41.5 said no and-area.
government, all types of
Dr. Charlps Parker said 457 were from Jerome county. Senften, with Myron Johnson Nevada
at
^ D rilU
ROWLAND EVANS & ROBERT .NQVAK
"
-V
— T h ^M P ictu r^G row s B le a k e r
WASHINGTON
The" comes at a timg when top
'ITUyscenario of the FederaI-,probat)leisize,oLtfiar^Hijt:^:-estlmate-erflctlyrjlll:lillUon-Ja —‘ prospect ofHTe FeSgFal Budget economic officials in the Ad- government losing control of t23 billion.
1216 bi^on. t^anfcs to new
running aariyerSuSlyTTHit t)f minlstration privately admiC the b u d g e t ^ process aroused
However, Congressional staff. legislation passed by' pohgress
A l W M tergreit, Pobliih«r
PHONE 733-0931
SunWy, June 13, 197J
. control, loftg viewed inside the tliat inflationary expectations skepticism
from
Nixon experts several weeks ago and a rise in Interest rates on
Nixon administration as a have returned to the business policymakers
when
first decided that higher spending .the national debt. By the time
O H Ic la l C ity a n d C o u n t y N « w * p a p « r
A A a m t w o f A u d it B u r s a u o f C ir c u la tio n a n d U P l
potential
catastrophe
only
for
world. Such expectations are a enunciated in the fall of 1970 by and lower revenues 'wbi&d p u ^ 1975 actually i s ' here, the
P u n u a n t t o S a c t l o n 4 ( k I M - ld a h o , C 0 d « , T t i u r t d a y Is t i t r e b y d n i g n a t a d a s t h e d a y o f t t i « w e a k o n w t ilc t i
future years, is now liecoming major cause of tne unexpected Alan Greenspan, a private that deficit to 120.3 billion.
la g a i n o t ic e s w i l l b * p u b l l i t i e d . P u b lls t ia d d a l l y a n d S u n d a y / a x c c p t S a t u r d a y , a t. t » - ^ t i l r d S t r e e t W e s t ,
spending figure d o u b tl^ will
T w in F a l l s , ld a t i o ,< 3 3 0 1 ,b y A A a g lc V a l le y N e w s p a p e r i , I n c . E n t e r e d a s s e c o n d - c la s s m a l l m a t t e i; - A p r il 0,
an imininent menace to the and unwelcome riseTh
conservative economist close to
In recent days, however, they be higher stlU.
-lW,aM*iapoiH>Hlc*lnJCwl^E»imd»hoiM3!IUjniJ#fJhi.flcl:0LMflr.cliJUCSliL_j^___________ ^1_il
economy:
ternrlnterest-Tflte
h the Nixon administratiotrr-But-have-cale<dated-ah-additional---To-pre' .t-thi^the^^vem-■ae j i ^ , qarefuUy shielded bodes no good fo^ fulle< ibmic increasingly,
economists
in the ledOmillion rise In spending
______
____
.
„ and ment
Congress can^slow
■■gJr-Attnrinlstratton of.................
eye- 'Wmte..................................
Mouse, ■tBe~~oarat -ctf-an
addltionaldrjpin revenue of down the r unaway budget by
U c J ^ , is that the bleak picltjro
lurffier
cut...back~
Qontalned I n .
, . -on -spm^ng-or-raiae—
budget message, Jan. 29, h ^
Moreover, the • long-range around to Greenspan’s concept: 1971. r a e two-year deficit; $45.8. taxes. Since there seems little
' grown steadily bleaker. In four rendezvous with a national of the runaway budget,
billion, a tot^ never before Inclination to take either
-^rrrTnonths ,__ the:r::=:Etesident'a= flscal~cflflliFlias-beCT hastaned==Actuallv7^nd^v=~eWr^Took~ experiencBd ln two eonsecutlv^' course,- the-aafiir^^eJSrfion is
estimated $30.2 billion In deflHF by the speed of the deficit’s fully seriously Mr. Nixon’s years at a time when the nation simply continuation of a perspending over two years has growth. Thus, the time Is ap- forecast 6f a $11.6 Million deficit was not engaged in all-out war. manent Inflation to the peril of
grown to ran- astounding .$40 proachlng ' when -the annuk for the flscial year ending June
To economists, Jhe steady the nation. ---f in d — .
a g a in it is -I— MUi<MH>lug, according.tn in. ffW'4hot-ragular-and avoldabla 30,1972, basad as it was on—craep-of-gpendinfl-ig-far-mope--- Herein—lies—Min—Nixon^
-yott
dependent Congressional staff Federal spending will outstrip unreallstically rosy predictions disconcerting than the more economic Catch-22. To stop the
most interesting — that there were
someone tells you the people in
. tajifirto,
the PTtra rftvenue generated by P f ---Pi:fiiacerity.____ Private tronounced dron in revenues.__rpr«».i.sinn, hn Han wt nff nn an
400
generally
epposed
-to
a
natipnal
other states are not trying to snape
This spreading glut of red ink economic growth.
economists how agree that the That creep, theyrTifeUevie.— expin«lvi»^Tinaggi«g^llg;-in~park-Of-thisiiumber388were-froR»foretells year after year of surlng large deficits. But those
Idaho and only 20 were from out of
A case in point is the squabble
double-figure deficits carrying deficits, inflationary as they
the
state.
In
other
words
of
those
some form of perpetual in­ are, may help push up interest
over the National Park versus the
flation.
____' ratfiJL,
who oppose the park there are 95
IMafinnal Rep.r<»a t in n A rfta_in - th e ^
A“ grapHIc 'sam ple is the economic recovery. Thus, the
“arid'three-tenths per cent of them
Sawtooth-White Clouds area.
Administration's own long- Nixon men no longer are
from Id^ho.
Scanning a study of the hearing
range spending forecast for shrugging off aU that red ink.
We
also
find
the
total
number
of
data, prepared for use of the
calendar year 1975. The guess They seem still to i>e trapped in
people from Idaho either offering
made in January, 1970, was $206 the worst of all worlds—
Committee pn. Interior and Insular
.billion .-Just-oae-^eaMateiv-lo- 'SimuUaneoua—4nflati0B;;;:anji=-^
January,
1971, the
Adcame to 612. Of this number only
teresting.
jninistratioii
riilseti
that
D .e v q je ^ d X o J r .h e :jC it is e n 8 j) J lM a g ic lla ll£ y ^
We, find that of 478 people who
testified and who were listed as
being generally favoraUltTto some
kind of park-recreation complex,
224 were from Idaho and 254 were
from out of state. This means more
out of state people want such a
complex thaan do Idaho People. It
also means that 254 out - of -state
residents were so concerned about
what was happening in Idaho that
they took the time to either testify
in person or to get a letter in when
224 favored the park. This meana74
per cent of the Idahoans giving
“ testimony are against the national
park concept.
Yet we still find some people —
including Governor Andrus —
claiming that Idaho people want a
National Park. This is simply not
true. Idahoans want a National
Recreation Area but not a park.
Those who claim a majority of
the citizens favor a park should do
their
homework,
because
GEORGE C. THOSTESON, M;D.
The P ill
- Dear Dr. Thosteson: I ’m a
teen-age girl, I have regular
periods and I would like to know
at what age should a girl begin
taking ‘*theplll'’if she wants to,:
I’m lS“yeari) old. — Mlss~R:Pr
This Is about the bluntest
inquiry I ’ve seen on this subject
— 'the blunt part being that
phrase about when she
^‘should*’—start—taking blfl
control pills.
I don't mean this critically so
far as Miss it.P.'s letter-writing
ability goes, but I do think it is
illustrative of the kind of
tointog (if you want to caU it
not aware of what is going on.
hearing.
Jungle, Jingle
-Cigarette—com m ercials “ have
been banned from the airwaves
since the first of the year, but
thanks to an enterprising company,
those little ditties television
viewers or radio listeners used to
machiner^Cigarette manufacturers-are said to be seriously interested.
“ The id e a ,“ appaTently,~ ts to
psychologically “ reinforce” the
person who has made a selection
from the machine as well as tb
hftar — anri h p a r anfLhaaiuaiid-h«ar- _5uiggf¥;t tn nthprs who m a y
within hearing that they might like
— may soon once agaih'be hfeacd —
to trythat-brand, i f onlytcrlfearthe
and heard~anirheard^d'hBard.
jingle. Nonsmokers may be en­
The Castagna Electronics Corp.
tertained or irritated, as the case
has put toegether a device that will
may be.
play a tape recording of the ap­
It’s a rather cute idea — but ah,
propriate jingle for 20 .seconds
whenever a pack of cigarettes is
what if the American Cancer
purchased from
a vending
Society demands equal time?
PAUL HARVEY
Praise
'
Sure, "I was' young myself
once, and I know that the young
are fascinated with sex. l^-also^
know that the parents o f ,these
youngsters managed to grow up
without “the pill,” though. ,
Strictures of the “ older
m orality” have stretched
immensely since my day. I
know that. I don’t know how
much stretching m y liave been
;ood andTiow mucb
I'm not willing to concede that , But I do feel that there is
-anyl3-year-ola “siwuld’' use -some serious thinking to do
the pill. Admittedly some of about readily agreeing that the
them are doing so, and some of pill is the best thing for girls
them will, but that doesn’t mean who haven’t finished high
' Tor4banvoi=4iwtJhay_«oho^
have thought things through.
I wish they'd think about it
For one thing, there’s no and not blandly ask when they
doubt in my mind that the pill “should” start the pill. ___
has
contributed- to— thefrightening amount of venereal
Dear Dr. Thosteson: I've
disease which we now have. been taking a fresh lemon
Girls think there's no danger of squeezed in a glass of water
pregnancy, so what Is there to every day. Is this amount
worry about? WeU, V.D. is one harmful? Some people say so.
thing to .worry about.
although I feel fine. — Mrs. B.E.
For some girls, there can be
I don't see why it would harm
psychological repercussions — you, and it's a good source of
county police, these young some qualms about free^d- vitamin C. I prefer my vitamin
people are being trained now easy sex experience, (yes. I C in less sour forms, but it’s up
to-you.
pnri y i l heein-^text-month to-too»^ sorpe don’t rj rp )
jF private
t
' '
patrof
pai-klng-Tola,
eounty-iairaytf.sidf.nUal .flrens. vatlons as to the consequences
They will wear blue uniforms of unrestricted sexual activity hormones help me develop my
___
andpoUcebadges
but. unarmed. at 15 relative to the effect on breasts?—G.C.
their resi»nsibility will be to mamage perhaps half a dozen
No. It’s been tried in various
Setect
and VepoH ' ahT
^ p ic io u s ' or HTegal activity, elements that la unportant in_
mp ni t'/i mnny that M(^ WOrkifHj OUt the adlUStWieat
JIY fiu __ L;an ,_^tQp . Sinus _
Trouble!” is the title of Dr.
Squad concept seemed awfully period of marriage?
sUly at first. Nowrl don’t know.
Further, I -wonder, if sexual Thosteson's newly revised
involvements begin at 15. isn’t booklet explaining what snur
there a genuine danger of trouble really is and en­
_ getting into the habit of taking couraging sinus sufferers to dp
_
________ sex where you find It? And what something abo)it it. For a copy
does that do to marriage later write to lilm in care of tills
-en?------------- :-------- newspaper, enclosing a long.
H6dleaUy;:3he::iJlltlsrprEttr aelEaddffissffl (iise^iip code).
With thdse who are turned on
But it is not perfect. In^ stamped envelope and 25 cents
by the big rap, little more is somepercentsgrorcas^s. It can In coin to cover cost of printiiig
ngpriivi to stir the old legend. ca“se unwanted side effects. and handling.
Dr. Thosteson is happy to
It's all in the name of love, isn’t Furthermore, we don't yet
It? Gene's applauders never
wl^^ effecjg, might Jjg_ receive readers' giipstlon, and
liave looked-hard ~t o~3t- ___
much real love of people there is years — say from age 15 to 45. , his column. However, due to the
in his life.—
That'sareason why nobody can- , great voluma-of-mall recolved
McCarthy has been putting possibly say when a girl daUy. he regrets he cannot
piihUr “should" start the pill._________ answcr-letter^-individually.--life since forever. His roster of
unworthies is long.
— Elected to the U.S. Senate
frotirNBrnieaota In 1958.-he used
to buddy it up In those early
days with his “classmates" —
fellows Uke_ Senators Muskie,
PhlUp Hart of Michigan, Frank
Moss of Utah, Uale McGee of
Wyoming. But in private chats,
he tore those chaps apart.
In his 1968 presidential
campaign, two reporters lata in
the spring were busy compiling
.examples
of
McCarthy's
waspish wit. They both gave up
jolUngJibout it w h « j lo o k i^ at
i t l n ^ l ^ e , they concluded 90^
.pet. cant <5-1
f it simply put tte~
-other-people^
Poryears the greatesrtearTrT
Tiave TiTmindT'^
man's life was to be poor. It was
“ I was hoping for a $25 cut in
about the worst thing that could
salary/^___________________
happen. But gradually that is
“Twenty five dollars! That’s a
BRUCE BIOSSAT
changing. In fact, nowadays you
bjg slice. S m ile y . What have you
carTget subsidizeffTiousing; TieaTlfi
done to merit it?”
IZ IZ S
:apd~ dent^i— crrre— m w tcrsity
:;jjfefcwotked for tfaexompany-^Sscholarships and various other
years. Mr. Goodie. I've neveFlel
welfare benefits, provided you are
you down. My work has always
poor enough. Alf you need to enjoy
been up to standard.”
many of the advantages of life is
‘‘I realize that. Smedley. but $25?
that you’re disadvantaged.
Wouldn’t you be satisfied with a $15
Nobgdy can-cemplatfi-abetit-that:--- cut? We have-a budget~rtglit-ngwr
It’s huntan and kind. However, in
We’re already below the figure for
curing poverty society has created
last years' salary. And I hear that
another problem group — and that
the unioa is furious, tax wise.” .
is the middle class.
“ Mr. Groodie. a $15 cutback is
Nobody wants to be middle class
better than none, but my wife and I
anyiTigTe4)e<^ti3c-th nviddle-class- - h a v e - o u r -hearts set on a“ “$25^
--- ^^4ia&-an-awkwar^tamount^of-money- -xiecreaSer
— too much to be eligible to live as
“ How about $20?”
well as the poor, too little to live as
“ If 1 made $25 less I ’d be eligible
well as the rich. The middle class
for an apartment in the city’s new
wage earner is caught in betw^n.
develoiiment, the one downtown
Instead of living downtown (like
with a pool, sauna and tennis court.
. the rich and the poor) the poot sap
Besides, nay sonJAiould qualify for a
has to buy a crummy lot 35 miles
government scholarship and we
from town because that’s all he can
would get his teeth fixed.”
afford. And then he spends the rest
“You drive a hard bargain,
of his life trying to pay his bills.
Smedley. But you win. YoU get a
V®ducate the kids and meet the
$25 decrease on this condition—
4^jnortgagebecause nobody will help
that If y o u r work s H ib t you’ll take a
think of tfila-y«aw-iiBoS^----- dtTIvaH ^ obliqna ~thtnsts
him out. If poverty gets any more
$10 raise, no questions asked."
ess you, Mr. Goodie.’
we may run into at the office.
“And, Smedley, will you invite
*MrrGoodie, I wonder if I
“swirtT
moments he even slapped^wn
speak_to_you_a minute?"
r^ome-night-whm-yot^get-into-your->oro>of4h«<
. work files, assist in the lab, in unless it elects m avericks,' aipong his cjjief supporters.
IlWhat is it Smedlev. I ’m busy?"
now plnr<»'>
-the 'jilRstisgraphy- dark roamr—T>ntald«rg—
— other— tm—-‘n i€ ;y ^ r »d hlror^w < l- tW - ^^
‘It’s alx)ut my salary, Mr
“ C e r S a i f d y , s i r . I b e li e v e t h e p o o r
fo r- - ’
m e a d e cre a se ?”
“ Y p a h a d a d e c r e a s e le s s th a n a
y e a r a g o , S m e d l e y ,’
L fm fJftffS IS JU r------‘W h a t
s iz e
d e cre a se
d id
you
d ieck-patrol-cars.---;------- tr^uBtla ial types.----------
Presently the five ^
not
r i ( ^ in crqiaerSi are not doing
street' work, but all are
demonstfattngsQCh an aptitude
--.Well, itl^ s - p a s s e d a lo n j^ o - o s 'b y ir i: -{or^auLinteresijn police work
----~ S c e - M ille r, 'JK im b e rly ^ ^
. Juvenll^ntficerOitrY^teot. in
th o u g h )^ y o u m ig h t l i k e to r e a d i t . _____; , di#cge-.<rfi lha ,“nwd<(iiiad "
says the most important side
A'
t u n a t e .”
T o w h ic h M r . S p e c ta t o r m i ^ t
‘‘- a d d ^
i s i n t e r e s t in g , isB ^ t-4t^ --
"once?”> ----- ^-------- -
TV Mod Squad
The Mod Squad, the least effect of the experiment is the
likely series on TV, not only improved appreciation of police
-Bucox d o d —and
fiction but m real-life police and
fHe
improved
undepartments in-some-oities,-- T,dei:standingof.>young pec^ple by
It is not new for innovation poUce officers.
ficUon to precede fact. The
A im&ticaUon of the Mod
-wr4Bt~Fadio^was-invented by Squad concept isJacingxiplxired
cartoonist Chet Gould for use by in Lexington. Ky.. where 15
Dick Tracv: now anvbbdv can voiuie peonle. aees 14 to 18.
-buy-<
Pseudoscience authors and patrol.
artists were depicting rocketry,
Co-sponsored by city' and
and interplanetary_tray£Ly£ara
Iwfore pure science caught up
with their imagination. And it’s
amasiirig-4o-see-how-the-eovers—
of those old pulp magazines
previewed—today's^^aceships
and-lunar vehicles and in such
WASHINGTON INEA) precise detail a generation in
Good old Eugene McCarthy has
advance.
When TV’s Mod Squad was ’em twittering'again, with
Launched five years ^go. the talk of a “new party,” even
story of three reformed though he quickly said the presq
-youngsters—anplbyed" as un- was n iakig Uw ttiPdi~oHt:---Organization Democrats get
dercover police, it was scorned
by reviewers and resented by the shakes when they hear stuK
like that. Many privately say
lawmen.
- After a good many very good ^PresidentJ i ixon may,
scripts, the absurd program has that easy to beat in 1972; even if
survived and thrived and now his opposition is unified. They
the font___________
:pnltreZJTHigiilai^partr^De6Ble"eBn‘t
-t>eing adopteddepartments in assorted cities. (;^te make up their minds
In Waterford Township, about Gene. In polls, he's down
Mich., 30 miles north of Detroit, ,ln the small print with Senators
five school-agers (the TV Henry Jackson, Birch Bayh and
program has three) are Harold Hughes.. Some ap^'
working {krt-tlme as “assistant praisers agree with the wag who
policemen.''
said: “The McCarthy wing of
- -As part of their high school the party just wtnt by In a Fiat
curriculum, these fiVe do station wagon.” Others fear he
clerical work around the police m ight rise fairly high as
station and perform other rallying symbol for those who
say they hate “the systerok”
routine police duties.
PoUce Chief William Stokes,
No doubt about it, the young.
— adwd-faow-it's working out says. folk in jveralla-Bre o i
bi
— "I-don’t know why we didnf his irtyle as the amu
MR. SPECTATOR
No doubt some young people
-4ire,going to say I ’m a sour old
spoilsport for ^saying this.
Maybe so. They’ll
ask,
■'WerenJt. you young yourself
BERRY'S WORLD
noyed him.
In-their frustration__over
Recently some people who
“things as the are” the anti- know McCarthy were casting
establiahment people love back to 1968 I asked.them wfa^
Gene's mstrvekms i^-downs..
him Prrfa i^fifW lir
WitbOTt nimlng them, he toot r«^pptis^!^r'aii?lng they liked
Cbairman-LawAMice O’Brien ansnm^vd, almost in unison: '
MusUe'wd-Babert Hmtnlbrcf.
\
..
IS l« i kf uu.
■/ o b -a ^ fta T ^ iC you mentjoneS .that th ere
one BCftOn
but, tell m e, who IS this Howdy D w tdf?"-
wm
. -
• S u n d a y, J u n e 13,
T lt n e s NewSy T w in F a lls , Id a h o
5
Tim es-N ew s Public Forum
THE WAY IT WAS
EkUtor, Timea News:
A letter sl^ed by ^ Kemper
family was recently puUlshed
in this column. The Kempers
—— - ejcpresseil'ncrUlcism of our
courts and Parole Officer
because—of-: an “ admitted
At the time it w ^ undertalf^,
the mammoth canal system of
the Tvrin Falls Land m d Water
Co. was termed the “greatest
irrigation project ever un. dertaken or planned in the New
■
« M d ” ---- --— Jrue^in.that dajf_
The project, which ultimately
led to the watering of 271,000
tlje young njan-wa8-rielther
capricious nor arbitrary, but
was rather the end result of
thoughtful
and
careful
deliberation.;'The Kemper
famOy should try to appreciate
sylvania, ^ ntered^the-aampany
and agreed to put up the money
needed to carry on the en=======acces=o«ttid=soifcla:thls:3ectioft: Jcrpri
of Idaho, was the dream of one
By December of
nearly
m an. He was I.B. Perrine,
t l million had been supplied and
saw before all others fli'e onV durlngth'e time of/instruction,
thing needed to’complete *what“ datlnfTrom AprlT,“T5(Br more
nature' had fbrniedr- He-now—than-600men were continuously ~
rests on the Blue- l,akes employed.
---- r“ niD¥to"tlay sentence ■
■iij " the mbre~TnforiniPon concerning
penitentiary.”
the defendant's background,
The thing that la largely—aspirations,— and -the— c it
^«MrlM>lwUjn the^eihpei^etter^ cumstances surrounding the
‘iS'^the possibility:,that the sen­ crime, than-it would be possible
tence received by-flie defendant to obtain from community
was in the~l)est interestnsf his g d ^ jp n tti hot possible to lii^ e
'M d result, without a,JuU undeffltanding of all the faeta-and-admlttSTilFJnvolvenientreven - elrcumstances-updtf w hrchU he::
though the evidence against decision was b a s^. _
him was doubtful. This was an
We are very fortunate to have
important flrst step in his a Probation and Parole Officer
-fehaWitatiwH-with--the- ■
tnteerlty--and—BomThe “ninety day sentence" petence of Bob Kroush.
does not guarantee that the respect his efforts and abilities
defendant will in fact be place^,' whether or not we agree with
on probation in ninety days. Hie his recommendations in any
ninety days is a period of particular case. We are grateful
ev^uatlori "during w H cinK e TKat our courts place' a higher
defendant must demonstrate to priority upon rehabilitation
' the prison authorities, the than upon retribution. When, as
Board of Corrections, and the here, there is an excellent
Court,' that_. he is in fact chance that a crim ing defen­
dfiaetving of a probation. The dant will become an asset
actual judgment in the case rather than a detriment to the
Imposed a term in the community, and efforts are
____ penitentiary not to exceedJive_directed to that end, then
years,
with
Jurisdiction society is the winner of the case.
retained in the Court to com­
... Rudy Barchas
mute the sentence at the end of
For Rayborn, Rayborn,
the ninety day period if good Webb and Pike
cause is shown.
Twin Falls County Public
The sentence that was given Defenders
.w^ere it all started- Beside his
grave are those of his wife and a
son.
This hrigation project, in
■what—was—then-
veryMagic
Valley
It seems like Just a drop in the businessman that bleeds his
bucket to big Industry. But wlU own business with high salaries
-paid—to—executives—that__rkL
-the „
resoie of every business that is nothing bu.t occupy a chair?
afraid thnUtlB golng-hnnknipt-?- — 1-urge-all-Americana to write
-O r= wili=ye~faecon>e a ■-true—theti^—eongfe8smen"-to—vote
socialist state where the against tto proposal that will
government helps the rich get continue to bleed us of our tax
richer and the poor get poorer? dollars.' Don’t put it off — do It
The government with the lead now!
...Larry B. McKay
of “Tricky Dicky" is trying to
save-Lo<*heed-AircFaft. WU ---- -Route-One--Kimbeclv
they also come to the aid of
P r a is e T h e D P A
EMitor, Times-News:
My subject is the Department
of Public Assistance in Twin
-Falls.
Due to my husband’s serious
illness over the past 14 months,
we have hpm on state aid
^ircTrfnceiltv^tt
and the kindness is beyond
belief. They have helped us and
have understood each problem
that serious illness can inflict on
a family. It wouldteke« book to
tell of their dedication to this
state and about their deep
understanding.
Our special thanks to Mrs.
Warner, Pat Payton, Mrs.
CSrawford and-Tim Prtncie-for-.
their understanding of perhaps
■what were minor problems but
to us seemed unsurmountable aT~
the time. There is no way on
earth we can repay these
plfr except to extend a j)uMic
ihanks.
W^honestly believe that more
thanks and appreciation should
be given these people who are
truly dedicated to their •work in •
' helping others.
...Mr. and Mrs. R.D.
Fortner
Twin Falls
P R A Y E R E O H JH IS JO M E
I
b e li e v e
in ~ g u a r d ia n ^ a n g e l s r
God. Maybe I didn’t yesterday but
today Ido. Ida n ’tknow yet how our
cars missed hitting, mine and th a r
ave-
-droppedto sleep and awakenedijust
in time to pullback to his side (rf the
road. It ytms over .so fast, and all 1
could do was whisper, “Thank you, •
God.” Yesj there must be i
J H / IN S IO N X J O N E S -
H e W a n te d W o r k
Winston I. Jones, a member of
the Twin Falls CitygCouncil, was
-jooking-fef^^yoFk-aori tTiat’s hnw he
happened to end up m rflsrpj eseiit
job.
“By^vayoTexpIahation, we migHT~
point out his “looking" was not
because he was starving to death or
any such thing, it was just that he
had retired but really wasn’t much
at just sitting around waiting for
the ' hext day to come. His
retirement came after years of
service with the United States
Army____
193?. H is-new -job eamew h e n 4 i^a s - «j^»B ilW l4 u - tJi«4 P w iw ::
Falls Council to fill out the balance
of the term of the late George
TBeruiett'His term expiresthe endijf"
th is - y e a r^
^^^e - w a s- g o in g - to - at:ce p t- a n - «p -
pointment to one of the city com­
missions when the opportunity
"camfe for the council post,
“ I ju s t couldn’t see sitting
around ,” he s aid ,^^iio o kih e_jo b ,
Tlikp what I am doing and if asked.
^rtd“the"iJeople^re“ satisfied wiUi
the way I have dqne my work then I
will run for the post in November. ”
Colonel Jones believes that an
improved city is a good community
■4n w h ich-to ^lw % -Qa»4m provem ent—
n e e d ^ in Twin Falls, he says, is
construction”t>f-more-eurbs and
gutters. With more money coming
from gasoline revenues next-yeaiv
this could probably be realized in
connection with improvement
districts. But one thing is certain.
Col. Jones says it will be the policy
of the council to not make major street repairs or replacement?,
until curbs and guttere are in. On
the council his charge is the wafer
'department and he also maintains
liaison with downtown develop­
ment groups.'
"
•
^
•
But bis interests, he says, go to
all ^ t i o n s of city government and
local living. —F«r instance, he
belifves dtji^ns should be thinking
jdw ut^the-poesii^li^^ a regional'aomefa ne in the: j c 3ct is
years but adds that before this time
-.they should receive— all__the_
available informatioa on costs and
thaf a ll avenues should be
"4faoroutthly a y ^ r ed^
_ Thislthmght, basTcflly;zls::wtoti
Col. JcHies carries into ^ his city
activities. He thinks the facis
should be in before the m ind,is
made up.
But getting back to the real
ZjMasinn frtr-rMliiMiing-to-Twtn-FaHs-
after his long army service—he’s
here because he likes it here and
because he thinks this is the place
to live.
He is a native of Idaho and was
bom in Twin Falls, a son of Emma
Dawson and the late Charles E.
Jones. He graduated from the Twin
Falls High School and the
University of Idaho. H^ married
................
■
' ' 'JflckfoQ t Hp-mp±-
-her pt the University and shcrtoor
-ig
He entered mihtary “servftnrlir
1937 as a Second Lieutenant
-assigned to t— Civilia
------n Con
-- ^ e r v a tio n - ^ r iB ^ H e ^ o m n ia n d e d
=eainps=at
—and LoweUjT^ho. In 1942 he was
, assigned tgjEHe^ArmofedJ^ce at
ForTKnox, Kentucky and then to
the ^ o n d Armored Division and
He came-from^ diana -about
I as spillways.
1886 and was ^ e n about 22 still I
Ihe dam on the i
years old. When he setUed here
he selected as the site of his larger. All three dams were
home a canyon watered, fey a constructed with a wood core,
great spring. It was Blue Lakes which nms from bank to bank,
just downstream from the and which rests on bedrock.
present Perrine Memorial Double thicknesses of planka.,
were used In-making the-coreBridge.
Here, with the aid of a part­ and. these were spiked to
ner, ToinHelii&^.^hebegan a uprights ©very twQ=f««t"T'‘e "
long, hard struggle to change a core serves .to dieck- seepage^
barren tract Into orchards The total length of the th r«
which would produce fruit dams is In excess of 1,200 feet.
In addition to the wasteway
which one-day would win rib­
outlets, both islands have been
bons In a OTeat world fair.
'To- build a home-^it wal ~irovl Jed with a ayatem otwiMto
literally
, ____________
necessary to let dowm lumlyr g a t e s which
and tools over the edge of the honeycomb them, there
canyon by means of a rope and nearly 200 gates in all..
There
are
several
tacUe. For a time both men
stayed at the canyon and ■engineering feature* with the
started reclaiming the soil and work which, llke^the tunnel,
putting to good advantage the stand out above Others In in­
"water supply furnished by the terest.
Blue Lakes. Durin]^ part of this ’ Among these is the Dry Greek
time Perrine worked as a miner dam which was built about eight
at Butte to giet extra money miles from ^ e Intake on the
needed for development of his main canal, for the purpose of
-ftftw-homo
— .............. ~ Tivntrtln g - «id «taur-^=^everail^
It was in June,TVfHnf* tw^nt tn SJBi.
of Migtiiiiyh T_jke.
TBh"
I Th<»
In maria nf i»«^and.
dream — his sdieme — which in one place is nearly 50 feet
he had for diverting the waters h i ^ . It is several thousand feet
d the Snake River for irrigation long. 'Ihe I
__________nn Inw rtjffatinft
sm
riam wag . Qptnpic t e d jady.,
L and he, too, b e c ^e cowitoc^d-jftet-great .p^rseverSnSer
-that-the project waa. prac« Water had to^be brought-to U»
ticable.------. site from a spring four miles
Governor Steunenberg .AiMl.-.-away.
other Idaho men also became
liie'Tw elfth A m y G ro u p JF o U o w ^ ___
World War II he was assigned as
executive officer of ~the U.S.,
Disciplinary Barracks in M il­
waukee, Wis^ --------------He a tte n d ^ the advanced in­
fantry course and parachutist
-course at Ft. Btoiiing, Ga., and^
w a s th e n i n c o m m a n d o f a b a t t a lio n
i n t h e - E i g h t y - S e c o n d —A i r b o r n
D iv is io p ';
— D iirin g ^ t h e K o r e a n W a r h e w a s
a s s ig n e d to t h e m U it a r y a s s i s t a n c e
a d v is o r v
g r o u p to d e v e l o p a
Japanese Army defense force
followed by < assignmenls- as astudent and later an ^ tr u c t o r at
the Command ahd General Staff
College. He spent two y e ^ in
Turkey with th'^emifitajry aSsistaiiCfe
advisory group and was then
assigned to airborne and special
forces training. His last two.
^ig n m e n ts were as Chief of Staff
for operations in Okinawa and
professor ;0f military science -at _
Lafayette College at Eaton, Pa.
_ iHe bas received toe Legion of M erit the-Bponae-^tapf ^ - c o m meii(tetion Kibbdd,~tte French
Crnix de Guerre and the Belgian
Croix de Guerre.
tnakea Mg ^ mtu-in Twin
Falls. A son Ralph i* now a senior'--
ARTBUCHWAtD
T h e H andgun
WASHINGTON
—
The handguns or read about the
^bleeding hearta in this country—phiamtro they give
”
are starting to scream again for
“I’ll say you don’t,” I agreed,
the registration of handguns or
“The newspapers nev^cr write
-the Ucenalng of their owners, nhmit the fun people have at v
Fortunately for those of us *target
■ practice or shooting
— ■
*who love guns, the Nixon Ad- rabbits. or. yactidng how to
minlatration nas rejected any fasUdraw in front of a mirror.'*
teglalatinn that would offftnd the
“ Why don’t Uiey?’-»;r 1
gun lobbies in this country.
demanded. The suggestion by the
“ Because it'!( not newi,” .
National Oommliwion on the Wallab'y said. “Do you know for
Reform of Criminal La ws to ban every peraon who uses a banthe posltnlon of handgtns by 'l^un in a irobbiiry tU t« ^ a
all except the police has been thousand gin owners who have''
rejected by the President and
the attorney general as politcallylunsomd.__________
1
But deq>ite this, the antigun
people persist in wanting to
rfiftarm tb6 DBtion.
— Wtfflaby Hon»Wower.-^!hlet
r ----
“Yet you never hear about
them.’l l saki in dligint, ___
“ B ut,"
said
WaUaby,
Queuing, “the United States
will never ban the bwdgim/'
nhmrt tho
Madgmnf
getting.
own haftdgiga
every few yeart," Wallaby tnU
IW
Amerif* will nevtr
teoaian of their maiilwod;,nyMi
tofcn! th* ^fim aww from « HMUl
tfila n n f f n—
IP* tlir-im ih titiH
of7ldafaa-atid-^ -
daughter, Mrs. Hansi Gale, resides
in Seattle.
never shot anyl»ody?”
k)bbyist for the National Cheap , ,“ Etecai»e,’’ he said, “the gun
Hai>dg>in Awm.. 4»__not
_______
is
a aez fymbol.” -.
....... u m i H*-
-*-■----
vfriltty
i-UP -XU6 ----'
KBDI—
VH —
' CJI.
----
l» that theyVe ahrtyi itrittag gaid.
ItV tnH .”
abonttiiebK ltU i«iaband(im ■ 'rthe teaoUM ttiqg aboot lt
TlPM.-a beB J
J g lit la lH a a in ;
3 B uhi:
headworks was at Milner, about
23 miles east of Twin Falls.
Thus the town of Milner was
also bom. At that point the river
county had not, as' yet, been promlpeifL .'Uiis was ’the ideal
bom — was different in several spot for a dam.
Actually it was nec^sary to
material points from others
build three dams and the, work
which were then In the
'^3"'cofnt
dams were completed by the
S*ates.
By the Carey Act the lands start of 1904. To build the third
em^aced in ^ e canal system- dam a big tunnel-was-necessary
were withdrawn from thfc public in order that the dam~foun*domain by the State of Idaho. datlons on the ihaln channel
The
Carey' Act^ is
a might.be Uld. With the Snake
congressional measure by rushing through the new oiitlet,
-whi^ desert-lands-are turned the main jconstcuction startedover
t o ' the
state
for The necessary tunnel was 70
reclamation, that state in turn feet wide and 212-feet long.
contracting for this with private There were eight com­
individuals. The latter were partments controlled by eight
repaid for their work by the sale gates. The tunnel cost in excess
^
■
of water rights at a price fixed of $100,000. •
A total of 8000 cubic feet of
by the state While individual
capital was behind projects water a second was pouring
under the Carey Act, t h ^ were through the tunnel, represen■ting ■
the entire.waters of the^ te~ supen'
■Shake at that time. Tlie surplus
control.
----Peryine came to southern dam water, when the dam was
^ h e r e^ I t c n ir
into Congress HR-351, which
Editor, Times-News: ^
Tn 'ansW ^"TSnC. t M j ^ s ” cansT5r'the’^governmeiir6rthe'’
-forum-letteMf-May-a3rhar«-aF«— United States tn have the fuU.
some of the wheres and hows. absolute, complete and un­
hi 1945 the United States conditional ownership of the 12
Constitution was set aside and federal reserve banks.
We have also lost the right to
replaced by the United Nation
Charter which was ratified by protect ourselves, our family,
the Senate but never put up for our real or personal property or
atiflcation ~by the-^aTlous^^thers-iifimmedlate^dflrtger~;
States as required by law.
‘ fear of prosecution. Nebraska,
_ The Committee tn Re.stote the— In 1969, with a vote of 33 to 8,
Constitution has been working passed the Legal Jeopardy bill
to get Uie state legislature to -giving citizens these rlg h tj
Investl^te constitutionality of ^back.
the United Nation quarter. On
U would be worth whlle^if
-May a6,--19
: legislature, with a vote of 24 to at these and all other bills and
7, agreed to form a conunittee acts passed or about to be
"for thls purpose:
. . . Jerry A. Jones
In 1913 the 12 Federal R ^ r v e
Vice-President
banks were formed, thereby
Ship of State Chapter
placing our currency into the
Conunittee to Restore
hands of private financiers and
the Constitution
out of the hands of our govern­
Twin Falls
ment. Congressman Rarrlck
from Louisiana has introduced
ihterestexlVPi^ Ihat’tliiTC
about 1900 the projectors were
occupied chiefly in filing claims ■
for water rights and in having '
private surve^ made.
In 1902 P.L'. Kimb^Jyjand-
M
(
4 Tlmes-News, Twin Falls, Idaho
Sunday, June 13, 1971
S in a tro T s f ir $ t so n g
h i t l i f e ’^ s ^ b ta e p r tn r
IIIW d& irT T m F?W B5riraiz=onenrT T 6IIyw oiM
rtink Sinatra crooned his firstW vrho served a prison term for
t, “All Or Nothing At All," he refusing to ahswpr if he was a
didn’t guess the title would be a C^mmuWst—to write a screenblueprlnt for his Ufe.
play. Maltz later was disHe will make what he calls m lM ^ .
his ' final publly appearance
Sliiatra had the East Coast in
Twenty yefirs ago Burrud shows together.
HOLLYWOeErtUPt>-^BiU
0(ten he works-aeven days a
Burrud ia-television’s j^emiert collected everything from ele­
week. In addition t o . the
globetrotter In a literal sense — phant tusks to spears, sliield
production end of his television
(tevoting four months, a year ,to drums and folk.art.
“They-just turned out to be \show he also supervises the
fllnidng in exotic, countries
dnst-coUectors;“ —BUI—says^-*usiije8s-a<iUvitie3_----- ^
_
TWofl
And. the house was begiiuiing
It would appear that a jh m
Burrud.is the producer and
Ch^enfiin£.SeaL’flnd‘‘SafaritQ who needs a camel saddle In would prefer to stay at home
■ ^e ntu re .”
~
' ~the U^ng room?"
during vacations. Not
He
Hie Job is ideal for a
Certainly, not the Burrud talces the boys to the Sierra
-Whftlorl___ .
. .
■nefaiawo i,abrador retrievers wlldernesa on tishlnfi trips when
But Burrud has t>een married named Tippy and T.J., an he takes^tlihe^off.
Burrud does no / ^ ^ k
to his wife, Mary, for 19 years. English pointer who answers to
They are the parents of two Rascal, and a large tank of hojme. Not even at
barbecue. The couple entertains
sons, John, 17, and Robert, 13. ttopicalfish.
SooiJtobert has. aneL-otJlifi— in ,
The ■
family home is a
contemporary a l ^ f i with six most curious pets of all, a parties for close friends.
,'rnh mhirh iiv«<LJn_a---- Rnth-Miyy-Hnfl Rill find it
bedroomB-in-Pacific .Paligadf^ ■
overlooking the blue Pacific. bowl with a little water. more relaxing to visit nearby
Mary has decorated the house Whenever Robert comes into restaurants and go to a ipovie
with modem '.and"comfoi‘lable the room the crab scrabbles for than to attend parties or give
them.
attention.
furniture.
Burrud’s travels have taken
-Itjiraa Mary's influence thal JBurrud’S .work is such..that
eliminated Bill’s jyoclivity. for his travels are broken up into him to, every continent except
returning ?ioifl8 With me; 'three • and •' fbtir ^ ek— trip*;— Antaretlca.4i^w-countria*J3ava
mentoes and trophies from his When he returns to Hollywood escaped the eye of his camera
“ he must edit film and put his and the tape of his soundtrack.
visits to"faraway lands.
•Y
Idle queriesonTV
4WLLVWOOD ( UPI > —Idle
questions about television:
Doesn’t it somehow seem that
“Mission; Impossible” has been
'doing the same-^tory about
Latin American dictators for
about a year now?
And shouldn't the same series
beg Barbara Bain to return on
any terms? It has slipped badly
since she left.
Wouldn’t it be nice if Glen
Campbell were a baritone?
Now that “Hogan’s Heroes”
•has 6een"cancele d r !ilmuidirt
CBS-TV get a bad taste award
for giving a long run . ta a a phonier picturja ofJamlly Ufe
situation comedy that thinks, a than “My Three Sons?“
Could anyone swallow -for-fa
Nazi prisoner-of-war camp Is
moment all that nonsensically
funny?
Does Howard Cosell have a exaggerated he-man stuff on
“The High Chaparral?”
sense of humor?
And wouldn’t this series have
Isn’t “Julia” simply painful
had a much better chance from
to watch?
Could any series have been the beginning (it’s canceled
more misguided than the Don now) if the father figure,
Knotts variety show, which took played by Leif Erickson, had
-o-funny-fellow and made him been depicted-more warmly
and sympathetically?
nothing?
Have Marshal Dillon and
Does Marcus Welby believe in
•HbortJoir?----------------- MiBS“ Kitty—ever-gone awuy
Is there any series that gives together for a long weekend?
GERIATRICS l e t ' C o m e s into Us o ^ next fall with “The
-J^^mny Side,” new series starring Burt Mustln, 87, and Queenle
Smith, “about 70." Iliey play coonle in retirement home who
(feclde^ to wed.
has. been
^ Mustln
.
. acror
1 In movies, TV, for past 20
years. MUu Smith ilarted acting aft age 7 In New York, (UPI)
y. I I — r»pnetope P »tfc*op 4. 7b - F a it h for Tod ay
5 - Look U p and L iv e
0 - Or DoMftle
t:K )
2sl, 5 — S c ien ce U). A g ric u ltu re
3. 7b. I I -- R e x H u m b a rd
8 — Jo n n y O uesr
• :30
2b — T a b e rru jc le Ct>oir
3.
8 — Catfar>ooQa C ats
♦:00
2sl — S a cre d H e art
2b — R e v iv a l F ir c i ,
3 — C a m e ra 3
5 — D a y of Discove^'y
II o t Tru^h '
2sl
- M ovie
T a m ik o "
^
7b. B -•
Invight
M ovies
" H e ll's
Issu es
Auto R a c e s
"O k la h o m a T e r r it o r y "
O u tp o st"
and A n s w e rs
U :3 0
2b -- F la g D a y ttro g ra m
3 -- B ible Story^ ' *
II - Look Ujo and L iv e
13:44
-- pitm
• ■
■■
■—-----
-------------- --------------------------2b. 3. 11 - P in p o in t Bo w lin g
5 - Auto R a c e
1:30
2b, 3. I I
A A U In te rn a tio n a l
C ham pions
'
2sl, 7b, 8, 5 — G o lf T o u rn a m e n t
3:00
2b, 3 — F ilm
4 — M o v ie ; "O n the B e at ’
5 - My F rie n d F llc k a
1\ — Co nsu ltation
3:30
7 t. 3, I I — A n im a l W orld
5 - G o ll_____
4:00
2b, 3. I I -
C B S N ew s
—
fb.... Per'iarope--- ^—
2sl, 4 — B ib le A n s w e rs
2b — O ral R o b erts
1. -r- £ a c c ,.me N A iiJu i ■
7b, 8, I I — D is c o v e ry
2si, 7b, 8 - N B C News
2b
Death V a lle y D a ys
-J_: HqI nOQ
It IS WirlTTpn
T a b e fn a c le Chotr
O ra l R o b erts
K S L R ep ort
Skyh aw K s
P in k P an th e r
n
F a ith for Tod ay
10:30
2sl. 4, 5 — L e t*s ~'TrovH
7b, 11
F a c e the Nation
3
T h iV IS the L ite
1
Carri'^'a 4^Hfpor ts
7b. E- n
2b
11.00
McoV tho tVovw
Wagon T ra m
G ir l
Nam ed
nittis
10:10
• N e w s, W ea th er. Sports
10:15
N e w s, W ea th er, Sports
10:25
M o v ie : " D a rk In tru d e r"
10:30 C B S News
L'TJxc .■D.iAr.y.-ai—Anne.
F ra h k "
—»■
}--Mov»e^ “ The T h ird V o ic e " - 10:35
" I Rem em ber M am a"
F a c e 0 rji'i’l*' '
I
10:45
-—AAov
-T-h»-aLack ■D.ai.o"
.............lt:00 —
5:30
2si 7b. 9, 5 - D o cu m e n ta ry S p e cia l
2b, 3, 11
H o gan 's Heroes
e v e n in g
6:00
?b. 3 ,4
FBI
11
M ovie
'C u tte r's T r.n t'
' '
^
11:15
A B C News
' 11:30
4 M o vie 'B u llfig h te r
Lady"
4. 0
H
Jsr; s. ^,-6 — Oonanz^a
'Suddeniv-
Siilurn,
....
The evening star |s Jupiter,
— Thos<r~bonn)n' this day arc
under the sign of Gemini,
U,S, Army Gen. Winfield
He becamc a chum of Sen.
Scott. was born June 13, 1V86,
John F. Kennedy, then not so
On this day In history;
In 1877 the Russo-Turkish war chummy.
began.
He was ruled personna
In 1967 Ohio National Guards- grata by a whole country:
down a civil disturbance
Cincinnati.
In 1960 he drew the wrath of
many by hiring writer Albert
aN EM A #
B:00
2sl. 8 — M o v ie : "S a n F ra n c isc o
In te rn a tio n a l A ir p o r t"
2b. 3. n — Su sp en se P layh o u se
4 — M o vie " M a r ily n "
5 — M ovie-: " Is la n d of the Blue
D o lp h in s "- ----------2b — H a w a ii F iv e 0
3 — Gunsmoke^—
TQ D A Y i
- - "Bajiana4il.at_l2;45 -^..3:4s-r^_7-i00-=:tr_l0;00 p.m.
lh « Pqr»y^^ at 3:20
5:30 — B.7S p.m.
........
7sl
R e a lltte s
7b. I I
N B C Co m ed y T h e a te r
10:00
'7 5 ~~W6d Squad”
3 -• C B S N e w s Sp e cia l
7sl - 16 m m F ilm s
1 - M ovie " A s s a u lt on the W ayne "
10:40
the 5
W agon T fa in
" T h e O th e r W om an '
and
Newr^, Weather. Sports
M o n d a y, Ju ne 14, 1?71
At 8 p m on c h a n n els 2b, 3 and II
H o ffm a n and S a lly K e lle rm a n w e re
re la t iv e unknow n when th ey m ade
"H ig h e r and H ig h er, A tto rn e y s at
Red Sketion
7:00
4 _
Su m m e r"
M ovie
164th day of 1971,
The nioon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus. Murs .and
7sT:75rr--''jonnTiV‘xar50i^~
'TTTTir
5 '
Picture ami TelevtslonrlteUef-yachHorpflirtend-Mia-Farfow
F!und gala with Prinbess Grice and several celebrities to cruise
QUIET, PLEASE
Kelly as patroness.
the-New England coast. One of
It is fitting that the kid from the crewmen was killed, in an FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI) Hoboken will ring down the a c c i d e n t . __________________ An interim legidative conunltcuFtaDfwTfls^are^eF"fof a
His divorce =from Nancy Tee plans toreflearelFfeglalatlon---^-charity event: raising $1'million Barbato after a dozen years of on npise pollution created by
for oldtime show folk.
marriage made headlines be- the expressway and interstate
Nor would it be uncharacter- cause it freed him to marry highway system in Kentucky.
isUo-if-he-'got-iii-a -beef in-the-glamor-girl-,Ava_ Gardner, , a_ jStateJR«p...Bmc«Jlythe_§aid_______
process.
two-year mistake. his home near 1-64 was
I'he smger's marriage to Mia Tnunaattsa-tjy Uie noise from------The "mgreiil-lai timatra has'
been called the best saloon Farrow lasted only 16 months. trucks down-shifting for a long
!
The worst days of Frank grade.
singer who ever lived, the
greatest entertainer in the Sinatra’s life doubtless took
place in December, 1959 wfibn
world.
Perhaps he is all that, and his son, Frtuik Jr., was
RTdhaped at Cake Tahoe.
something l e s ^
Sinatra sued when a foreign
Ji-m an nf eirtrpmp.q
was nurtured on superlatives— publication ca
positive and negative. It is agentry and"won.
possible his retirement is
In the early 1960s
temt)oraryr-but~he-awear8-he-Ktank-.Sinatra.’;
won’t perform again in public, news: Dean Martin, Peter
At 55 the restless, charming, Lawford, Sammy Davis Jr., Joe
rough, diffident, kind, insensi- Bishop and others,.
At the nadir of his career In
Uve^.superstar-hardly can be
-Iflulted proJeMionally. But his 1952 When he-was best known
public-private life has oversha­ as Ava. Gardnert-ftflsband,
dowed his greatness as an Frank supposedly was washed
up. But he came back to win an
entertainer.
-- From" the beginning when he Oscar in ‘-‘From Hero--to
was a homeJy_kid, skinny and Eternity” in 1953.
For whatever reason, these
wearing floppy bow ties and
surrounded by swooning bobby- and other colorful events in
H O fT M 4 N
wxers, the public was more Sinatra’s life are what most
entranced with his personal people remember with envy,
'U m C B IG M A N '’
admiration or outrage.
imtics than his voice.
Paiw tson> 'hclincolor>
But Sinatra’s swath in the
Frank Sinatra made headlines almost every one of his 30 news eventually will pale and
yp„r-i In ihe limPlleht
hl.<i pontrihiition to mtL-iic will
He was Investigated by crime prevail. Generations of Ameri­
M O VIE RAT1NQ8
commissions In two states, his cans have at hand some 50
FORm RENTBAND
record
albiros
he
j
u
t
during^^^^
native-NawJersey andJ^eyada,
where he sold out his gambling career.
al UVrMMfl 14lo
TTiey represent a legacy of
' and hotel interests in 1963 when
the state revoked his license for The finest popular music ofTHe^
-playing host to San Qwnegna, a
man who sang It best of all.
.Mafia figure.
AIL A&IS AMiriEO
Sunday night he will bid
There were more fist fights
G
■O'
than can be counted, Including farewell to his singing career,
a 1967 one-punch fray with 250- motion pictures, television and
ALL AUS Aommo
-poimd Carl-Cohcn-in 1
GP
Sands Hotel which loosened jet planes, homes In Pahn
F rant’s. teeth imd his_contract_ Springs. Beverlv Hills. Acapulwith the Howard Hughes-owned co. and New York CltyrHe Is
u in ic n D
spa.
many times a millionaire.
4 - U T a t e s a T h ie f
7sl
Book B e at
10:30
• N ew s, W eather, Sports
11:05
" ITo nQTesTi OTTSt-ft^epor
4 -- M a v e ric k
7b -- B ew itched
fl
V iew p oint
M y T h re e Sons
4:30
7SI. 5
B ird 's E y e V ie w
2b, 3, n - H e re 's L u c y
4 — L e t 's M a ke a Ooal
7sl - M is te ro g e rs
7b • B ra d y Bunch
7:00
? s l, 8 — N B C C o m ed y T h ea ter
?b, 3, I I -- M a y b e rry
—4-----M o v io . " T h e C o u ch "------------ — — - Wtm f s Ne w-------------------9 Si
7b
M o vie
"S a n F ra n c is c o in
7b
A B C News
■te rn a fio n a l A ir p o r t"
10:00
7:30
3, S, n — N ew s, W e a th e r, Sports
2b, 3 — D o n s D ay
7sl
P a b lo C a s a ls F e s tiv a l
2 sI; 4, 5 — It Was a V e ry Good Y e a r
10:05
]1 -- F a m ily A ffa ir
- N e w s, W eather, Sports
7sl — H ath a Yoga
-5—r,Scucn ,SoJt ■
2sl, S. 7b, 0
Tb - H ard y D o yj
9 - H
P u fn stu I
"A
5
M issio n Im possible
7sl - Sh ep h e rd 's A m e ric a
'
7 b ----M ovie— “ Mun»ferr-et>-+4t>me^
8. I I “ Bold Ones
8:30
7sl
V a n ish in g W ild e rn e ss
9:00
5 — G u nsm o ko
7sl — M a ste rp ie c e T h e a tre
8 - M o vie "S u d d e n ly Lrist Sum
m e r"
n ~ B o nan/a
9; 15
Talon! Showcase_
S f'v e n ly .......................
5:00
TSBWrt.Vfle rhoTr
10:00
tw-th»-Antwer
a:00
m u rd e re r , a c a se th a l lea d s them to
an e e rie m a n sio n re p le te w ith ghosts
and n u m e ro u s su sp e cts
E v e n in g
4:00
J, i — rJfew'SrWiJXTPiirr, SpOfTiT'
4
T ru th or Consequences
Th is is Y o u r L ife
■
j - M6vifi—'XDTTor's-rnjir*----
— -------- ------------2Sl.
3 4 -and
n
o
3 — H a w a ii
7sl — F ir in g
3 — L a m p Unto M y F e e l
2sf. 4 — D ire ctio n s
5 — E le v e n th Hour
11:30
3 -- Look U p and L iv e
ss u e s ~and "A n s w cr s
5 - M ovie " P o n y S o ld ie r'’
A fternoon
Law.” a cflmcdy mviTcry iirmea irr
1967 T he plot ce n te rs on a husband
and w ife team defending an accused
11:00
A - N e w s . W e a th e r. Sp o rts
7^» — F ig u r in g
Ou*
- 11:30
?h — R ifle m a n
4
Dieck <ia ^ett
17:00
2sl -- M an to W om an
2sl - M ovie
" A G ir l in^ Eve ry P o rt '
*iALKROlLINS CHARLtSH JOFF[
k’tolxtoi
w oody
‘b a n a a a s
COIOR by Di.'Lu>e‘
Plus Fun C o-H it
G E T
D A D
A
N E W
Q U E E N
F O R
fA T H E R ^ S B A Y
T^rfm rooEEN^
SIZE SUN VAUEY
SLEEPER 1
M A T T R E S S
B O X
—
I
I
I
■
I
I
Peter Sellers
Woody Allen -—in—
The Party
M Q T d R ’V l J W M f f l f f f B I K T B f B B if W S lr iR A W D - v ij
n p iv E - i
" P H O N T T T T S T T S -----------
East on U S 30 lo Eattlond Dnve
Gates open 8:00 p.m.
At^:30 p.m.------------
2ALL-TIMEGREATS
&
Gates open 8:00 p.m.
At 9:30 p.m.
■
D P IV F - IN
-WONt 733-5938 ■
Wm I on U.S. 30 to Gfondwiew On
*A MOTOJtCYCIE EPIC!”
Mogazrn* '
WINNERS OF 8 ACADEMY AWARDS
BE.STP!GTURES0F]9G9
S P R IN G
o u s n iM
H O m V lA lM
JO IM
V fH O M T
am
PLUS IREtERAM i
r m E IC H H t F U « N IT y ii€ ^ - - R o p e w
^
ll M
G AM BLES ana aiM H m
Buhl
^
S K * G 6 S T O l W l T B R F - - - B iiT t e y ^ ^ &
B A N N ER FURN ITQ B^^^ Tw in fa lU
■ a i H i «■ H Ml H H i ■ ■ Ml a i H M l ■ M M Ml ■! Mi M i Ml ■ H B i ■
I
I
book about his life. He, is in
good health, he says, w d plans
another yacht trip in the East^
this summer.'.
Frank .Sinatra is quitting the
limelight but not retiring. He’ll
DUSnN
S e r ie s s t a r s
A 'h ira T ia c
S u rid iy . J u n e U . I«7I
At 5:30 on c h a n n e ls 3sl, 5, 7b and B
— W ild life , D o cu m e n ta ry Sp e cia l
One b attle In ttie e n d le ss w a r ag a in st
to rest fire s . T h e m en of the U S
F o re s t S e rv ic e fa c e rag in g fla'rhes
that can re a c h a fu rn a c e lik e , in
te n s ily of 3500 d e g re e s T h is par
■Tfcutjjr"btBTn*, ■Ignite^} ijy~ttotTtntngT~
tx jrn e d fo r eig ht d a y s
M o rn in g
4:55
3 - T im e for M ed itatio n
7:00
3, n — Tom and J e r r y
5 — L a m p Unto M y Feet
7b — A g ric u ltu re U S A
8 — Big P ic tu re
4_
“ Iv ilO IM IG H T
~ n m m s ts s m w
toiring,i»»awling cwhi jMisHrrlt iip In
o«A«BwQin/tb9w£l<h pfoaiKiia«--
I
■V '
Sunday, June 13, 1971
W ills prep«ires a ltern a te
Tlnie*-N*mj>'Twln Falli, Idaho 7
”^™ TcrrEvgIiuFliifr
WUbur D. Mills, D-y^., chair­
man of the House Ways and
Means Conunlttee, is worldng
out an.'alternative b'iil to
President Nixon’s revenue-
riBg-proposal-whirfi-woukl- -Speakar-Carl-Albert!»-p>^ivai
benefit only the major cities and dining room in the Capitol.
cost $3.5 billion a year, sources , The Mills proposal wo^ld
allorate money on the basis of
'siild Friday.
Mills, whose oppOsiUon to the need such as a city's problenui_
administration legislation has 'with poverty, education and low virtually doorped it,' was said to tax bases. Tlie key part of the
j Milli prnpQsal-waE.thitt the
a seg-et session 'earller^ttis help-to these special nee(Ja,
week.
'■
which compares to , the Nixon
It woi^d shift the emphasi^ to revenue sharing theory 'o f
the big cities and exclude direct giving the funds with ho strings
revenue-to-the-states.-countiesand 'smaller-^rftmunitieS"
proposed
by
the Nixon
program. It also WQuldJnyolve_
a temporary time duration of
fGTON (O f i ) — !5eH7 perhaps from three tofive years
j-Vank Oiuidii, D-IJuliortold 2,- rather than be p«rinar
Sources said ^t-wouldcost $3.5
000 senior citizenconferees Fri­
day that 1971 could be the most billion for the first full year of
■SlgnificanLyear, in lhe Held of operation rather than the $5
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Thfe
aging since passage of the 1935 billion envisioned under the
Pentagon saicTtoday Brig. Genrradministration plan.
Social Secllrity bill.
lidr^^erg-is grow---^nate-E)emoer-atic-Ieadep- Samuel W
ing support for bills that would, Mike Mansfield endorsed the West-Point
jn.^ffpjt,.-ramnup all plrtprlv Mills plan which h c - s ^ the lost one star for his role ih the
Am ericas from poverty. The Arkansas Democrat outlined at'
time for decision on this legisla- a meeting Wednesday in transferred Aug. 1 to Alierdeen
Proving Grounds, Md.
tion is close at hand."
—-Koster~wiU
A’'Siil repori£e3'by the House ’
mander of Army testing.
Ways and Means Committee
Brig. Gen. George H. Young
last month is similar in impor­
Jr., the other officer disciplined
tant respects to a bill earlier
by the Army for unprofessional
- introduced by Church for the
conduct in investigating the
W rrii BYSTANDERS holding fallen light pole, Log Angela
purpose of raiainfi incomes of
4968
PoUcSiiam Ketth“Dale 1« helped fnini wreckedTiatrol car by
older Americans above the pov­
Lai,~has-been-crvifems-Htfiremen after crash wliile he and fellow officer were aniwerlng erty level.
given permission to retire, said
armed robbery call Hiaraday. Truck and pattvl car collided. __ The Church bill would use the
Defense Department spokes­
Light pole trapped Dale tn wrecked anto. (UPI)
Social Security system to pro­
man Jerry W. Friedheim.
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
vide a supplementary payment
Koster was commander of
to bridge the gap t>etween what- "niree Idaho women have been
r v ^ ‘^ ia rs lc ii- it^ ‘^ ' ' i i r i ‘\
^^^^
‘•'Strict advi- the Americal Division at the
ual now receives and the povercommittee of the SmaU time of My Lai, and Young was
one of his . assistant division
jyjg
Business Administration.
commanders.
C h u fc h lS T FridajMthat h e
expects “irresistable moment- ''“f Hansen ^ i d the new aptum” to develop for this conare Mrs. Helen E L
----------M * .Q.
—!---n—I---- »---------------- 1
cept in both holies.---- ---- Mg^garet-^
D e le g a te ^
In remarks repared for deliv- Wood, both of TVin Falls, and
SAIGON (UPI) — President replaced Tinh as information
TWIN FALLS - Mrs. Luther
Nguyen Van Thieu shook up his minister.
ery Friday afternoon, <3iurch,
Petersen of Wen-Thompsonj-Twin-Fallsrwiii
"Jn^rchibaldr execu­
^ ® * ‘‘men have been appoint- the official delegate from Our
ministers and transferring an­ tive director of the U.S. Fair Committee on Aging, s a i d ,
^
two-year terms on Savior Lutheran Church to the
other, informed sources said. — Campaign Practices- C^nmiit- “With good reason leaders of
Tlie reorganization, viewed as tce, said he had found both nntinnnl nrpnni7.atibnA on aging the committee and wiU ^avel North Pacific District Cona move to strengtnen m e u s -flppdttfcnts UJld iiupputLKis u[ begari IWl With a swiiitiT^f rurc^tnrmTEtimTt affi_atga.SBegking to vewtoiroritm eficartutheran
groups and telling business Oiurch Women at Richland,
support in the Oct. 3 presiden­ liiieu thought he would win a t jo d in c a b o u t f e d e r a l i w l i c v totial election. Included the second four-year term in office. ward older l l e S s " ^
"
aboW *"
"A White House conference on m if‘stratioh and its program.
Thursday,
“I guess it’s the same as in
creation of a new ministry of
th U.S..” Archibald said, “The aging, scheduled for November,
-plSlining. .
IXvo of lhe--mmistcrr-re^ lvinnefT'l<riHg-to“lx;-The
1971, appeared at the Mgihwith the power and the ning of the year to be stalled or
placed, Finance Minister Nguy
en— Blcli— Hue—W l " Ethnic —money.”—
at least way behind schedule.
Minorities Minister Paul Nur,
6He said, “The administration
Dr. CHark Kerr, chairman of seemed willing to accept far less
were considered lukewarm sup­
the Committee |or ^"PijlitJcal in the way of Social. Secutlry
porters of Thieu.
Ha Xuan Trung was named Settlement, said the United tienefit increases and other reto replace Hue as finance States should avoid partisan fomns than did members of Conminister and Truon Nal Lieut politics but had a right to
succeeded Nur In the ethnic influence th election process
-4ninocities-nUnistry,-the-.sources becau.se of the American lives
and money expended
said.
Infomvation Minister Ngo country.
7T0iarTinh-wa»-shifted-Ia_the ___'"ITie present leaders in
education ministry, replacing V l p T n i l l l l i i i i f f K t — t o — r p n l i T P { h p
-Dr. Nguyen Luu Vien, who political process is going to be
remained a deputy prime watched very carefully by the
minister. Truong, Buu Dien American people,” Kerr said.
s a y s a id
to n e w jo b
O f f ic e r re sc u e d
m in iste rs
3 women
appointed
to panel
a
.
Your Boise C ascade Hom ea.,D6aler can show you m any (loorplans
and exterior dgsigns available in '2, 3 and ,4-bedroom models, with or
without garage and basem ent. Boise Cascade Hom es are built under
i.deal conditions, using superior building materials and the most
efficient building methods. Find out about the modern, sensible way:
-^to-buy a-n ew -hom ei Soo your-d o ale i^nowl------ ^-----------------P R IC E D
I JN T D E R
$ 1 0 ,0 0 0 t o
$ 2 0 ,0 0 0
:iJeTIvereaiQ ir60norw |th!n-f5^ays-SttercO TstruCtIO h“St^
Completfely finished and pai/ited inside and out. Appliances'¥iT3~
living room, bedrnnm and hallway carpet imiliided--------
M-
- r- r
.8 Tlmes-News, Twin Falls, Idaho Sonday, Jyn« 13^19n
fA
'S DuA
V
in T
i nHtEnR o
rti
Stennis
asks end
^ u r id A Y
_
JUNE 20
■ U
i a
, K
©
Shaving Needs He'll Like!
^
4 o - d ie la y
-■
A fte r S h a v e
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Not
___ tbp^ many months ago, Sen.’
4.75-OX.
% %\
lotion, limit K
^ 0 ^
have_seen the pend
swing.”JNobody is swinging a
^ vwider arc than the old
Mississippi Judge.
In fact, Stennis is going'just
about fall cirtle.
' -- ~
What was once cons(iderea a
blasphemous thought has now
t u m ^ into reality. John
■
“
What?
Yes, after years and years
and ' years as a master
practitioner of the old and
honored filibuster, Stennis is
-rebelling
What has caused ihis near
sacrUege? ' Spedficaliyr~H^bill
"
If re ck
^see ne —
BURNING DIESEL electric locomoMve lies alonjg Ulinois
Central right of way near Salem, lU., aiKer wreck which UUed
aboDt a dozeir perKBis and In jn r^ ceveral score on Thursday.'
Klost of ci^rs of train were damaged when they left tracks as
hour. (UPI)
,
for two nrwre years.
the t chairman of the
--- Senate-Armed-Services-Com'
mittee, Stennis wants Congress
to adopt the extension beforje
the current law expires June
30. Others, notably Alaskan
Mike Gravel, dp not and plan to
employ an old Stgnnts tactic—
—T M S A rH a w a riO T ’T J-TBr
the fiUbuster,
( ■ ■
To put a stop to the filibuster. families living along the
Senate leaders i ^ n to force a Mekong JUver c ^ stewanteM
cloture vote June 72 and it is Carol Dyall "the puppet Fady of
ther^ that Stennis will record Laos.”
Her colleague,-Marti U>wenhis first ever opposition to the
feld, is fondly remembered as
filibuster.
' Last .jM uary, while still the girl “who brings us luck.”
The two young ^wardesses
fighting against a weakening of
the filibuster, Stennis said, “We who voluntarily left the com­
have seen the pendulum swing forts of home and the glainor of
Asians better health
j
representauves ot the nonprofit drinking it, how to biiiSh their
medical group named after the teeth and use soap,” she said,
yomg ^ctor yho created 17 “They had never seen puppets
hospitMs and medical projects before and ihe shows were a
in 12 Asian countries before his tiig success and attracted huge
crowds. - - _
death. Puppet Hierapy
“Though they live in the
The^ewardesses have adapt­ shadow of war, the thing that
ed to Jungle living, endured throws (he Lao most is
epidemics and lived without sickness. They believe it is
modem comforts to work in cause(t~by" evil spirits.
uidt^, leuchertl
"~SeeET^~E5^ase~Fear8
liberals now—and I use the without pay in Laos brbugtit and nutrition arid sanitation
“ We teach them the true
term respectfully—who are more than pretty smiles to the advisers.
cause of- illness, and how t<>
------ irmnluing_t.ha_mrtrl/-HifA f/»n.
nlling vil1ngf>rl
For.-.iaostt^.being.^-l-Dooley—car^for'theniselves-physicaUyr'r
tures of rule 22."
The programs these dedicat- Girl” is a once-in-a-lifetime Some day these l^s^ns w ill'
For a decade jilibuster and ed women helped launch are experience. But Miss Lowenfeld eliminate the fear of spirits."
'^iiH rnyen r vU'tually synony - imprmrinn thp hpalth o f ncnnle and Ml[iy Dyall hope to mflKe it
\Iiss Lowenfeld spent a tour
nnous as EHxie senators (ought ■SfiKW«r~by fgiw^rahce and_ a way! of life.'*
^
in ' Nepal, return^ to her
lastKlitch battles against a supef&tition.
Miss Dyall became known as stewardess job and then
wave of dvil rights legislation.
Miss E>yall and Miss Lowen- “the puppet lady” when_her became the first “ Dooley Qlrl"
. But by last December, the feld were among a group of homemacte' puppets became stationed in the village of
pendulum had indeed swung all stewardesses and former stew- ^ ^iK a tipn d tppls_to -Jeach- O iR m p nggnk in gnilfhpm l.an q
=the-way7 wiOFSmate^bwala-^^irdies^ flown~~to thia—pic-— correct— health—haliits:— The~The ^arg e ~ flip— cards— withr^
piling filibusters upon filibus- turesque Hawaiian resort to pretty brunette, who spent two illustrations on them that she
ters-to-block-legi5latlon-4n-the=3r^ebFBte^the-10th=Bnniver3ai?— temui in Laosrdreased^np-hand—iised"to bridge ^e'^fingnage'^
dying days of the 91st Congress. of the “ Dooley Girls.” Elach puppets in colorful clothing, barrier have become another
As far
as
Stennis
is served at least one three-month constructed a stage out of basic tool that the girls use
concerned, there has been stint working for nothing but bamboo, m d tape-recorded a along with piippet shows to
enough inspection, introspwtiori room and board in Laos, India series of skits in Lao.
demonstrate health procedures
contemplation, thought,' and or Nepal.
While Dooley medics diag­ and child care.
debate on the draft.
Since the project was.started nosed and treated the sick,
The villagers showed their
by the Thomas A. Dooley Miss Dyall put on puppet shows appreciation by christening
-About four million people Fotwdation. 190 girls from 28 JoLthe^vlllagers,
Miss— Lowenfeld— !J il ar-ati&
speak the Yiddish language airlines have taken leaves-of“The sWts taught them to which means “she who brings
today.
absence to become volunteer boil the river water before us luck.
G oad Selection
Timex Electric Watches
Accurate - Reliable - Handsome
Good Wprking Watch
IV '. 'I
(l4Ae*d£<L
Coupon Worth $3.00
4^oa
S p e cia l
offer!
AMITY
T r a v e l K it s
Sheaffer
^ 2 7 J ia
V a lu e
HEW
S liiie
Pen&Pencil Sets
^,O 0O B'J'U.condenser is liletiipe ^bricated lor low m ain
tenance. - Sound absorbant W iilatinK in compressor
compartment, 2>speed fan . . . aulom atically switches to
at wii^t or yhyn hriowiaflg
--18HOP-AT-SKAH8-A N »-«AVK
Satisfaciion Gu'arantrfd
' 'ar y—
...
a o n v c x amo co .
"EHsy
IM P R C V C M C N T
V
Sunday/'iune 13, 1971
Tlme*-Newi, Twin Falls, l ^ o
9
zcm e j
PANMUNJOM, Korea (UPI) to cover up UNC violatloiw of from the buffet; lone.
tension on the Korean peninauTln moving the 'Korean people
—TheUniteidIjationsPomnuuid theIS-yestr-oldarmistice.
Rogers, the senior' UNC ,la,.’''R Q g m said. “All.that is towards peace and unity/’
!-'<UNG)^iropo8ed-Satur^-U»at-— 'T he-p«)po8a^by-lhS:'Airi^delegate^atthfrMAGjaaiaafter-HseeesaarH^Uw^tlje^smuhan--"— M a jr G « r HjuryontTOIPSr
th6-DemiUtaFi*ed-Zonfr4BMZ)—For«H-MaJ*-^Gen.-F«li—Mr-the-3.JHnill«-wkterlM-mlle4ong~d«^^ofT^your-dd^agree-^the--^N^
between North and South Korea Rogers at the 317th full meeting atrip was cleared of»military clearing of the DMZ in d to the proposal, telling the UNC “I
be cleared of weapons, military of the Korean Militaiy Annls-Installations it could be' re*'aUow Its development ffir r e ] ^ the so-called propQsal
inqtaiiatinna nnri sniHipra na H tice Oimmiialon (MAC) at. claimed for peace^ clviliarf*^Wlian use.
you U.S. i m p i ^ a ^ aggressors
means of lessening tension.
Panmunjom wisThe first sucn pursdlts;
^------ 7 —---- “tf-this agreement la^
North Korea rejected the comprehensive suggesUon by
“This proposal Is an earnest coming this commission will b( covering up your criminal
prop9sal^aU ing It an attempt the UNC for r ^ o v in g -tension attempt by the UNC to reduce have played a significant role _acts-and-deceivii^the-«rorld-----iwblie;^*----- --- -------- --- ^—
Han said the^UNC has turned
-4he-buffer-w>ne-lnt»^a-8tagtngarea, for^war, and cited a
number of alleged UNC viola­
tions of the armistice.
— ~ m
^ y o r ^ € t n s — ls m r k e k ^ e d ~
Rogers’ proposal called for
DECATUR. Miss, (U P D - unarmed joint observer t«;ams
O w ie s Eyars, the fl
. to suii
rs S M g e m ^
m-Misslssippi hlstory-Rmreunr aU mlutary installaUons in the.
SAIGON (UPI) —Retired even up to the day before the
(U P I)^
DMZ.
He showed photograjdis
Gen. Duong V^n "Big” Minh election,”
CALCUTTA, India ---, . u j « 1,1
--- ------------- said Saturday he will challenge
Minh met with U.S. AmbaasaThe mayor of Calcutta banned 80'^r™r,
North—Korean—fortifi
President NgiiyeiJ Van Thlett jn jiior EUsworth Bunker Friday East Pakistani refugees from P w ^ M ^ ^ d a y in h te n o m e to ^ positions In the area, most of
the October election but might and on Saturday With a U.S. his already overburdened city “
where ne
the ^ c h appeared to be concrete
bunkers
and
withdraw his candidacy if he group, “The (Dommittw for a Saturday and asked the state late Sen. TheMoreG. Bilbo, an reinforced
Political Settlement in Vietgovernment to help keep thfem arch segregation^t, once took trenches.
^ .
__
decides the contest is unfair.
Vice President Nguyen Cao nam." which h ^ offered to y t out-it:: 7 7
^
~
__________
M in h sets V ie t
Lalcutla
Cam paign
vote
election. The comnittee ! is
had . been on the verge of
candidate for the presidency.
d a rk Kerr,
breakdovim because of disease,
‘'*8hts leader,
Minh, 56, led jhe 1963 coup headed' by Dr. Clark
who wag
fuiiiinr pi'KiiiaenttifUii?
prK!iiaenttifUii? TJnlvur'UnlyEr-~Tn^s3ivc—
•
nnemployment— and^ Evara,
,
, . , kiltod-by-a
. ^
thatnoverth i w tlig latt! Pna- fuMiiui'
ident Ngo Dlnh Diem but was sity of California.
appalling poverty even before
.r r
n-anothep-coup-iess---Though—n«ithcF-hafi-speUed—the-rabellion^hwnearb}t-Ka8t .from the sgme_Netw o n _ ^
courthouse steps wbere Bilbo
than tliree months later. Minh out -a campaign' platform, Pakistan began March 25.
Since then, an estimated 5.5 campaigned 35 years bjo .
..was jailed, and then exiled to previous statements by Minh
and Ky have indicated they are million Pakistani refugees have
' Thailand for four years.
more flexible on the Issue of fled into India. Hundreds of
The general told UPI Satur- negotiating with the CommU- thousands of them have
FINAL TOUCHIES on Trlcla Nixon’s wedding cake are 1
outskirts of
T»vTHaBaceTartgrig{rNeirYori~gt^
who deglgned cake. can for my country. I will be a there should be no. dealings Calcutta, and an epidemic of
Watching Borte U Chief White House Chef Henry Halier. Miss' candidate. But if 1 (eel the wiih mem until North Vletna^ cholera ha^ broken out amdng:,
Nixon and Eklward Finch Cox were married Saturday at White elections are not fair then I mese soldiers pull out of South them.
---- —
House ceremony. (UPI)
—
— may withdraw mycandidacy Vietnam.
Medgar
BOMBROWM’
S
SAFETY SERVICE
F a iM fy
P an th er given
split verdicts
Hilliard was charged^th two
OAKLAND, Calif.. ( UPI )-A
jury of seven men and five counts of attempted murder
women Saturday found Black and two of assault on a
Panther chief of staff David policeman.
The panther official testified
Hilliard guilty of assault but
Phone
innocent of attempted murder he was walking to a babysit­
733-0342
in connection with a 1968 ter’s home when three carloads
of Panthers and a police car
shootout with police.
B L U E l A k iE S S H O P P I N G C E N T I R
— The^Jury^etumed the verdict „ pulled, lip and, the_ahQQtlng |
)PEN
M ON . - SAT. - 10-7 SUN
about 11 ajn. PDT after more started.
than two days of deliberatlon.- — Thepanel...incliiding U .whitea
PRICES^EFFECTIV&^UNiv M O N ^ N L Y H
Hllliard had contended he and an Asian, received the case
was not involved in the Thursday after final arguments
Panther-pollce shootout April 6, which erupted repebtedly into
shouting matches between1968;
The gun battle resulted in the prosecutor Frank Vukota and
death of Panther Bobby Hutton, defense attorney Vincent Hallinthe wounding of two policemen,
and criminal charges against
nPanther Kldridge “Creaver,
minister of Information who
later jumped t>ail and fled to
Algeria. :
9-9
OSCO B A R G A IN !
______ Tom Hannon, regional admi- Indians, but severaTdogs were
"^TaiCratof '
BlUiO up. W nj. uiwig
ces Administrat^n, said ^ e lot of_. pecaenal__ belongings
occupiers looted the island of brought there by the Indians,
• all its metal'cahle^ piping “and will be returned to them.
even the metal flashing from
An attorney for the “Indians
---- roofs;-^^------------------ -of—AH—Tribes" accused—th»
He said five buildings had government of a “total betray­
. befiiLbUrSSl _dQwn_and iinolher _ al" hy wiring the island in the
“ almost completely demo­ surprise raid.
lished."
U.S. attorney Robert Brpwn-ingT-explaining4»hy-lhe govern^
holdout Indians on Alcatraz ment decided to move, said the
Friday afterrtoon, turned the Coast Guard wanted to restore
island's custody back to the the lighthouse and fog signals
GSA, the agency in charge of on Alcatraz.
government property, Friday
He said also that the Indians
night.
had been harassing passing
Hannon sent teams of mecha­ boats by shooting at them and
nics, electricians and plumbers that wholesale theft of govem•g»iag.
the island. The government also
to replace the marshals.
They will restore the island's wants to^o ahead with plans to
-el«ctrical-servicerwatec-system_ make Alcatraz part of a new
and other facilities necessary golden gateway national park.
Collision
k ills Gem
woman^ 2 3
%
Transferred -
MISSOULA, Mont. (UPI)
— Ralph D. Klzer, lronwood7
Mich.,reports toSanc^int, IdaTioTTpa-Tliiinmonlh as the newsupervisor of the 1.059,915^cre
Kaiksu National Forest.
MOUNTAIN; HOME, Idaho
Kizer at present Is supervisor,
-<UPiy— Luejnuin Wallace, 23, of the Ottawa National Forestr
-
day v ^ n the car she was driving and. a Greyhound biis collldgH h<»ml-qn 11 miles east of
- Mountain Home.
State police said the womM’s
"c*r^weered"0ver^thc:center*liijc'
H A lM t lia D lN C S lT P lY
JgM lw' bns.iflfficifrs'wlrtTig v E r^
al passengers on thel)us sus^
tained minor injuries but that
: ' - -liSiarfverHarwy FrSnUth,-^
~
Tfolae;e6capedlnjtify,
IN UNIT OF 150
^ G O O O S a K T IO N -
M W H illfM B E r
sjuLsai
lECLlZJI
Y O N IY
OSCO B A R G A IN !
OSCO B A R G A IN !
New Unscented,
&Regular
^ J lm e s - N e ^ a , T w in F a lls , Id a h o
■ S u n d a y/ H ju r^ ’'1 3 ,'1971,
R
____ ■
,
Ct
V -•'
-:j
Brack & Oackar
Shrub & Hidge
----------- Trimmer^
'B la c k & Decker
13" Shrub & Hedge
Trimmer
For T lia t S ^ ia l Man
on Father’s Day
GIFI
Lightweight 13."
single-edge1
— Iftmmerr-Flnger^
tip switch,
sid6 handie.
idea!
M-'
Black & Oackar
nmihln-Frty Shriih
rn
( o r a n o t h e r , B o i h o ( w h ic h m a k e
a u r o . •'
foT
< '
1
.
,
^
H o u r 'D a w g
’
’
O T tE W tl
BONDED
ACRYLIC
:S K M r £ p fU '
& Hedge Trimmar
—t&^^lederwrap—
RftD''; hp-^t Rnller
bearing equipped,
wraparound
handle, finger­
tip switch.
b u c k l e s f o r o n e ih m { ) W i d o s t r a p s ,
c a s u a l w a rd fo b o
1 7
.
W h a t '* h a p p e n i n o - i n . c h u k k a s ? B o l d s i d u
t h o s e u n l i n e d H u s h P u p p ic ‘ 5 '
c h u k k a s n a t u r a ls (o ry o u r
FO
BAB
Black & Decker 22"
Shrub 8. Hedge
Trifflwer"
■
_ ,- ..
■V
INCHES-,
WIDE
LA -Z -B O Y
P
|i
1
I
/
li
W A SH A BLE
-’•] H f ji. S 4 .4 9 Y d .
■'r>
OPEN MONDAY 9:30 to 9:00
Shoes
„ E f l j L j b e „ „ .X
DOWNTOWN
Entire
Family
CUDS,
WaCOME
lYt^WOOD
Twin Foil
■ji^iS^SSXSESi
sM
'^ '" W O I V lE I N ’ S - J l j l M
O R S J ^
PANT
ST [IT S
SPRING COATS
i
Z'
PRICE
P R IC E ^
C o l le c t io n
d re sse s
of
e a r ly
fu rth e r
c le o r . . .^ ^ b m e n 's
rors s iz e s .
. . o il
and
fro m
i?’’™
s p r in g
re d u ce d
fo
-■• ■
fe .O
Ju n ou7
W e h a v e . fu rth e r red u c e d o u r c o a t s . A ss't,
s
M o s t ly p o ly e s t e r d oub le,^
k n its . . . o n s a le in -tinne
t o t o l^ o n va c a l K ^
W o m e n ls __rtncj J u n io r s
s p r in g s ty le s . . . S o m e
yy jd p k a n d _ a | l w ^ o th e r
Lo d ie ^o fld - J u n io i -S iz es
fr^-'beff<?t-nome-brand~4fylei. ------------
-- ^ i z C 5 ,
: . - '-i
^5^
o t t f
Y o u r
IN ICH T
^ fr< >
M ONDAY
!V 4 € H T -
is
^-’ T I L 9
^
A v .',V w _
P i S';'::'
I;-'I
O P - E N ^ M - O N t)A ¥ - ^ G H t
■
P F R F F r T
FOR DAD!
• y . ■
p5
V
h
E B -S
HAX
GIFT
SHOULD CARRY
TWO NAMES. . .
H a r n e s s L e a th e r
t ip p e r s
,'j 'Cv^i
||
R E C LIN E R I
T ir e T re a d
S t o r e
R e g . $ 7 .9 3 ^
88
YOURS
AND
STERtlNGS
O N L Y ^^ J l 3
per IVIonth
R ent. M ay..R e 4 p p Iie A --J o th e P ufM h aiie J^A cA
. Budget pnc^ — covered In
g*nu>A* Novgehyde*. Oorf----ifri>cted wfth Viln dried KoVcJ-jwoodr, ScfJd. Kiov>ri1iredd*d '
‘
r~iTri/ct»bn on3~iu*orfOu> in ti>«
~of*S d*«p~«Jown ccwnfort. Xn
! unbMtobW.value.
M U S I C & FURNITURB
J E jV E L R Y
CO.
"'W x.w rn'T T rA m 7T O N ^r57C F=i^
Sunday, Jude 13, 1971
Times-News, Twin Falls, Idaho 11
Tjiffbanon boosting
attrnctions^ahew^GLENNS FERRY — A home-, the Oregon Trail,' will be
made Coneatoga wagon, the presented as a gift by Clarke
fnrpniirtnRr of the prarfle~' ang~B5~^e. J essla. ITwUl be
schootier of pioneer faine, wiU made a permanent display at
.
be presented to Gov. C ^ il D. the parKT
. Andru3 w d ' officials of the yClarke said that It will' be
-a- !idedic»tcd-in-memn'-y nf «hp
—flE IRUT (UPI) ~ T >ih sun la Dame Rebecca west, bew l.
shining and In Lebanon It's the Sukarno, designers Pierre.Bal- sea&on of the' “ beautiful main and Anne Lambton, Fleet
people.’’_______ -----Street- magnates and Lord
I Thoms and Rupert Milrdoch,
Beirut’s society columnist who the Bolshoi Ballet, and maybe
plctured-the scene_at. a:jceceht Muhflmmari ah
black-tle charity ball for 900^ Lebanon hopes they will lead
gaMtS!..! . r . --- - -^=:^^thou8and8^)t-nonrVI^ laJBft“The feautifiil p e ^ e were mHp PMstljnp its- ao^gree^
ick*te back ...■|iie~banroom‘ temperatures. Its cpol mounsUvef and oralnge tainSj fabled ruins, good wine
pioneer c;xplalned that the bed schooner weighed about tw<)
of the prairie-schooner,-yhlch tons and.could carry up to 7.000
followed, was about 14 feet 16n£~pounds of freight.
and 4% feet-wide—It^was-boat^— r-in,-the ^southwest a team of
shaped --Inward toward -the- eight to- lO^nules-was- usually
center so the load would not. used to pull It. Oil the trail,
becohie. iinhalanred. The^ r<»«r mnlpg, hnrgi^ nr oien
i-ploneera-who^^eame-over—i-wheelSpW~ere.ffleJfee^3D3nch^_u.sed!. :The^1^r ,-wagon^.h5l!
lhETiiU‘ahTcSis5ea"tte‘Snflkg^lraiameter'and*lhefrontWer"soMeWIfflt‘T ^
River at this treacherous Three somewhat smaller . The Iron Conestogia fype of boat iragbn
hlHhri Ford."
tires' were exceedingly brnari wn.q tfip <Mm<» type which w m ^
The wagon made by Clarke is and were oiften “dish” shaped i. later constructed bjr John "
Clarke, wldely known pioneer of
^
area and an authority on a dufdlca^ dfthe originals. The for better traction. TJie .iiaudebaker.
— Tliededlcatlon'actlvities start
'F r id a y — evening— vrith
amateur, rodeo. Saturday^
events will Include a parade at
11 a.m ., the dedication
ceremony at 3 pjn. vrtth Gov.
Andrus as principal speaker,
and another rodeo that evening.
A free barbecue will be served,
starttng-at-S^pm
Special entertainment will
Include the Caldwell State
Band, a group of airmen from
Mountain H«gi» Air FartwH aa*
and Old Time FidtUers from
ir~Camas~Prairier"T>win~
Falls,' Welser and Mountain
Mrs. Harold
Waggoner, Filer,' and Mannie
Shaw, Corral, will headline this
portion of the program.
Kent Giles TsT^ehTraT
chairman : in. charge o f . the
celebration which is epxected to
attract thousands.
Gem flier
home again
CONESTOGA WAG<»4 made by Frank Clarke, Glenns Ferry
pioneer and Oregon TraO authority, will be presented to the
Three bland State Park at Glenns Ferry next Saturday. The
presentation will be one of the highlights of the dedication
ceremony. Clarke, in pioneer garb, poses beside the wagon be
ma3e1EnBlFGlSn8~FeiTyj!l]
W ago ii
b u ild e r
paradise
thet&_vtflaL_Xfi<L j:mts-a --hot^i^watar..^
even a siIveF'glrl, silver from sluing, ;'s,ki-flying. skin-diving,
top to toe ... flowing embroid­ skeet-shooting, gambling casi­
ered organdy and an oh-so-short nos, countless restaurants and
its-undemeathtTTT hotels.
iiunks of dlamons all over the
The teatiful people doh’t have
place....
to be rich—that’s one message
“Tons of fresh fruit, flowers he’s trying to get across.
M d tangerine trees and a
mouthwatering array of caviar,
and pate....
,
“^eryoh'e seemed to be on a
champagne kick ... It was all
too wonderful.”
MOBILE T.V.REPAIR
Wonderful Is the word this
year—or so the government
■in t r o d u c t o r y
fervently hopes and after the
OfFER
1967 Arab war with Israel,
,-Jan«*liachiflga-«ml-the-Jor3—
an—tfllousr^----^
civil war, all of which knocked
LS
‘ ^1 5 5 1 1
CALLS
Lrbanon’s tourist plans awry.
For 1971 the target is one
million tourists—getting on to
• COLOR •BLACK 4 WHITE
half- of Lebanon’s total
------aWlltO-----^
-popUtotti om— ^
---A list of recent and forthcom­
All maksi A MwilcIi
ing celebrlty<Visltors reads like
7 DAYS A W£EK
an excerpt from. International
Who’s Who-Maria CaUas, EUa
Fitzgerald, Claudia Cardinale,
Alain Delon, British novelist
B O B 'S
P r o je c t g a m s
WORKMAN, in hnrkgronnd, la dwarfed by the gfae of the new
bunding to house State Hardware, at the comer of Main Avenue
East and Third Street'East; 'W hence firm moves from Its
present location right next door, it will change its name to
“Pederson’s,” and will hmdle an enlarged line of merchandise,
including home-fumlsUng items and many o^en — except
hardware, which Is being phased out.
-
423-5758
BOISE (UPI)—U . Col. Ber..ird Fislier , Kuna, first Air—
Force Medal of Honor winner In
Vietnam, has returned to Ida^
ho as the new Air Force advis­
er to the Idaho Air Guard’s
124th'Fi^ter Group.
' Colonel Fisher was transfer­
red to Boise from an air base
at Duluth. Minn, lie won the
Medal of Honor in 1966 for his
heroic rescue of a downed
pttqt in the A Shan-Vall<^T
^
m
m
r s m
im
s T
E
a
m
s m
s
NATIOI^yU:PftlUC^UIDrBOO^^
BANANA
-J E L T
HEAT
...
■ ) ..... ....
i4 1 - w a n t- e a p ie s- o f- llie se
c o m p r e h e n s iv e G r a n d T e to n a n d YcHovvstone P a rk G u id e s . C o m ­
p le te in f o r m a t io n d n ^ c a m p in g , roads, tr a ils , s c e n ic spo ts, p a r k f a c il­
itie s a n d services. E ach g u id e is 48 pages w it h d o z e n s o f full- co lor
photogral)Ti& a n d m aps.’^T fn rS pncJifl
can help
your family
4(eep cool
C M llBT irrOlt AW) TBIMWSWlfflir
T h e s a m e f la m e le s s e le c tr ic h e a t w h ic h
your
f a m ily
in
th e
“banana
b e lt”
in
p u ts
v y in t e r c a n . a d d
" t c r t t r e t r s u m m e r c o m - f o r t ,- t o d . B e c a t i s e o f e x t r a i n s t ila t io n
and
d o u b le
g la s s , e le c tr ic a lly - h e a te d
hom es
are
c o o l e r in t h e s u m m e r . T h e y s h u t o f f o u t s i d e h e a t . A l s o ,
th e y a re q u ie t e r . T h e y s h u t o ff o u t s id e n o is e s . E le c tr ic
h e a t a d d s to th e q u a lity o f y o u r h o m e , in c r e a s in g y o u r
e n j o y m e n t a s it i n c r e a s e s p r o p e r t y v a l u e .
S ijr n m e F t if T ie ls ^ a ^ o o ^ t T m e lo
chan
h o m e t o e l e c t r i c T ie a t. T h e c h a n g e c a n b e r h a d e e a s i ­
ly , w i t h
little
in c o n v e n ie n c e . C a ll
Id a h o
p a n y-f o ^ a s s i s t a o Ge a n d ; p la n n i n g r t - . a n d
Pow er
a n a b e lt ” c b m f o r t , a c o o /- i^ te a l
Mahii^^Poyi^jl^
AHiici c c c cri c O T O ir' i
J_1
cr\ry
Com -
liv e ti n “ b a n -:
" W a n t f o T a k 'e lliF IB e a u ly o n i i e Parks H 0 m e 7 “ Sr0p ^frthe- S T g n- oH he - € hev j»R - 4 oM /ouc4 reeG r a n d T eton o r Y e llo w s to n e w a te rco lo r p r in t, w h ile they la s t. C d lie c t th e f o u r diffe rent re p ro d u c tio n s , a l l ^ n l i ” x,-t4" n ia tte finisTi p a p e r , r e a d y to s l j p ^ i n t ^ standard ~ 1 ram e.
„ 7^^.
^ [ lu id e s a n d free p r in t o ffe r av a ila M e tW s s u m m e r w ijJliQ - g a H d irtJu rc h a se a rp a fffi:T p a tfn g
jn d S ^ p ^ e n t ^ - C h e v r o n D e a l e r r i n C olorado, ■ l l l a h , M m fr a tm , W y o m in g , Oo u tfieasr -I d a h o ,
____ _
-ic 1Q7I
........... .................... ..............
s.
TIrneSiNews, Twin Falls, Idaho
Sunday, June 13, l ^ r
w p n , b lit n o t w a r
, NEW YORK (UPI)r^When "’th£niselves, the mood was more agreed .and added, .“even if
fiction led’in''a|iHt the final analysis, this
the acqiiittaL-Verdlct in the restrfdned.>£ight were released they can’t get any convictions,
««»*» #fc<»
InformaUon. Minister Eadridge they want to do.”___ _________ ipaUon IiMcks. u p ^ lts jio ® ^ ^
m4rathoh"Pahther^SltUl w4S 'shortly~aftCTWards,“ flve--were you'arrtleaTil)
you'areTleaTil) In-court^rin— ---- aeaverT has"done more thw
whosenon-MusUm
non-Muilim the
m «
CleaverV has Hone more than
^iM i-Om , whose
e power
of the gun,” ..... .:
.....................
t t . / i n r wew
y-oHr—fstate
'ticMTm-ottier charges and........
■
gtm=
= ^gtn efy||
p g i if you’re going to ideal
me poilM to aivia^ the pafty. nani» was liw
in o W ^^^^^ t i “And
Supreme Court In lower Man- are In jail,
people^
Kinshasa said “the party as of the Panther 13, said, “There with the power of a gun, you’re
hattan in May, the; courtroom
For the defeh^nts, ^ose who
Kinshasa is one of eight
such has iseen decimated, is no one, two, th r ^ , four, flye_ £^?lng to n e ^ another gun,” he
enipttvl Into cries of “R i(^t had spent up to two/years In rtffpndnnts rhnrged- with-kld- are thought of aniortg
set of rules for the _
said. “White people may not
On!’.' “Power to the People!” ^jail ;on the chargjfe, and 17 naping,
larceny and other Panthers.
.
„
set on the Connecticut charges period when many of —its - formulas for Cuba or China or understand that, because they
______.. and other expressions of victory months of courtroghi appearan- crimea'stemmlng from a prison
Soulre Is charged, along with and Lamumbda is stUl in jail, pr ln c li^ members wece in jail. ■other revolutionary struggle__rarely see the gun-twhind-tlia--for Uie ^fe n d ^ ts .
ces, the battle, much less the riot last October In the Long x>thers, wilh the holdup of~a
Squire hM started "anolHeF ■put that’s iSot important, were written in blo^.' We can’t other forms of power.- But
___ !_____ Defense_aUornfiya_kissed war, was not over.
■
Island City toanch of the New New' York subway, station in ball fund for the five panthers .anymgre^, .Ihe people have writa down put Oformula any blanks iinJppilanH that. Ttwy
some- spectators and, hugged . Of those released, most have jfoEk-City.pri.son. ,
‘
ZDecembetvf—1969;;-— He— was—still—iip~jgil;~1mt admits the undergone a heightening of easier.’
see thg^Run every day of their
■
6tMgreriSjTO|iath6flc^meinbery T)ther-rharges-pe»iding^gainst- —He maintalns, as do the other arrested-ln-eourt;Fcb;-r^; lOTlr- gotag^lirsloW; “We have gotten "poUtical“ awBrenes3;^Tcr=TTie"= “TTie' iiatlbn as a whole also lives.
-- 1—— nf tha hnr proffliilnnipri this thp thi»m. in what-theY-Con^der a defendants, that aince- thev .within seconds ofJthe dropping, .somp— mnm»y -.iip ,’-L- h « . aairi, ..Party’, ppr -ip.iiflnf>m!t-.r«allu...hnii--aii»riiiJiu-flritL..^tn«a— thn— »w«-n|i| know that"
—
“greatest moment” , in their"clear plot to keep thehiTn Jalir" were acquitted, they never of charges for lack of evidence “mostly from people who “gave matter anymore.”
~ original arrests Of the Panther not come a day when 200
professional lives and tallced of in court, or in police interrpga- should have been jailed on the bii a shooting in Harlem a last time. We just asked them
^ u ir e said abandonment of 13 In April, 1969, Kinshasa said, million people In this country
THonthr earlierr
to'Teave their InoneyT trthe^fhe rigid rules of order and ^datiributed.their acqultfaTfii will rise up in arms to fake
and thus away from the'black first place, and therefore there
can system of jurisprudence.
“When they had to dismiss fund instead of getting it back procedure which have bound part to that new awareness. He over the government. But we
Jurors said the government community from whi<^ they should be no charges arising the charges on the shootout, now that we’ve been acquit- the Panthers nearly since the said if they had gone to trial in ^ have to relato to the gun.
..cam^
from time spent In Jail.
party-’a incepUon-ln4te-mld*«0»^Ji!ayF^-1969, -just..-after the.
is where -the -—
Clark Squire, a computer
Inferences” about the Panthers’
Kinshasa is out on ball on else to hold me on,’’ Squire said
At the start of the Panther 13 Is a plus for getting power to headlines in early April about power come^ from.”
actions, and this they had systems analyst as well as a .thqse riot charges, but It in an Interview..
trial, chief prosecutor Joseph black people.
the bombings of New York City
Panther, fe’els “ if yon keep consumed valuable amounts oif
refused.
Lamumt)da Abdul Shakur, A. Phillips predicted the demise
“It’s jiis f a question of offlc^ buildings, “we probably
dropping
charges
on
a
person,
They had been charged with
time and energy to get him out another of the Panther 13, is of the New York chapter of the direction,” he said. “We look at would hav^ done some time.”
conspiracy to bomb police someday, sooner or later, you -Energy which he feels could charged -with participating in • Black Panther Party.
Mao, and Cuba and Mozam­
stations and area department are going to get a conviction.” better be directed toward prison
Since then,
rivalry between bique and even the FLQ
. riot in Queens,
.
■ N.Y.;
------------------. ^ in
The Panther credo about “all
ca m eh a cen ter
Another defendant, Kwondo freeing other “pbUtical” priso- plus bimk robbery conspiracy the Oakland, CaUf., chapter. Montreal. We are studying aU power comes from the barrel of
stores M d kill policemen over
OPEN K)« BUSINESS
Kinshasa, who used to be ners. as most black prisoners, charges, plus Connecticut char- .headed by party fomider % ey ^hese different sltuaUons Md_ a guft'” is not dogma now, as it
the Easter weekend, 1969.
.T W I N FAi*
"
"EastrCoasr“ w iin ak e it andcheck It out perhaps was once. Squire said.
D
B
I
I
G
M
I
B
I
C
H
B
I
H
I
f
f
i
}
Drug addlcflon Isn'f somebody else’s problem 7 .
.
it’s ours. Each of us is a loser when the
addict, ravaged by physical and emotional
.d a m a i
on his drug, turns his potential
as a person and as a citizen into frantic
scheming for \v a y r to get his drug and
p ay for it. To support his hnhit, hg_
aln^ost certainly turjis to crime. Most
a l a r m i n g a n d <^f grave concern
to parents—- is the spread of drug addiction
—
downward, into the classrooms of our hi gh
schools-and- evefv-gMtde-sehooTsi^lvefe-ofe^—
-)
. _ ^ ___ no easy onswers . . . but stopping drug
I ■
We all share the responsibility t'o educate
our^Tves ancT our chlTd r^ a bout TFe^^arT^e'-s
J i ugs. W e
Leofn the facts and fgttgClSS^
about drugs. Set a good example. Don't misuse
' drugs . ■■including alcohol and sleeping pills.
Be prepared to understand and discuss drug problems.
Support community efforts to combat drug
----addiction. By—roobillzing sound Jmowledge, w e can
help to end drug addiction and its problems.
S p o n s o r e d
a s
a p u b lic
J l o n u i J Q i X i c e : 5 4 4 J i l u e Lake.<i B l v d . N o r t h
s e r v ic e
w m m w m
b y :
T w in F a lls , Id a h o
An informatrv6> educational, package Which answers questions most
frequ«^ly-oskifrd-crbotrt-TJrogs-:fs-avcriloble^ f ree on request-fof-trrte^sted
individuals,"church groups, civic and fraternal organizations end schools.
Send your request to: Sierra Life Insurance Cpmppny.
83301
H q ilu d n o g tn t: m arijuana, hathltA ( r t e / t r s , joints, g ra st.
(dow nm n, b a riu , p h » an lat), tranqulllJTM ; Stlm ulantt:
am ph»tam ln»t (pmp p tlh ,
d itt pills; NarcoHcs:
(H , hors * , ju n k , w io w j, to d mlne ( s c h ^ lb o y ) , co- ■
~cMnm (eokm^~spiiii~1iaHs), -morpfhn* —^ all thrmatan^ iha
s e m
also was attended by Idaho's U . be isolated froAi the influence of
Ciov. JMOk.Mun)hy. .
the arts and bringing this in_____ ________________
The lamergence of the ideap^fluenee lhto~the~aany llros nf
basic to life's valuM and helnng Miss Hanks saiiL iiin irliUn f n i fntlTnflfftuid iy», tlii. onai
wmiWMBgOTOfoundly exciting all connected with h e arts. .She
Washln^on, d !c 7, diairm M of in .the varied structure of the urged those present to sWveTor
the Nation^ Endowment for the nation." Stressing her point that adult
development ' of
Arts, said Friday in Sun Valley.. art betongs to eve?7 one. Miss "audiences" for all art forms.
M iis Hanks was Iceynote Hanks said “ that means
“I think this awareness and
speaker
for
the' Idaho makin/.; the enjoymentJ)f them this activity is the s i ^ of a
Jiinnnl AytsFpstivalnnrt avallAI:)le to evei^bne "
ma|or change in the varied
Seminar which drew people
“It means beginning early in structure and idea of America,"
from throughoutthe“states^ho^ elementary school classrooms^she said.
are involved In the arts. _____with tioets. pataters, d ic e r s ,_ FoUow
talk.
The seminar, sponsored music.lans, photb^ai^ers and Mrs.^GIenn Cooper, director or
Jordan and Itep. Orval Hansen, Hanks said she feels no one n e ^
B la in e
Cam as
C a s s ia
E lm o r e
G o o d in g
Jero m e
H b ln e o in IM lnid d ica
lirw in tra ils
s t a r t in
Je ro m e
IV e w
E
m
le a d e r s
JEROME - WUlard Brown,
lager of the J g
.swimming-pool, ooid-Satunfajr
iwimming lessons will begin
Tuesday.
Interested persons may sign
up now at 4he pool for the
swimming lessons, he said. ■
Center, spoke about “the total
a r
human Ijelng and the arts.” She ntust be maintained and tUs is
said “all who live in the Suii;~why museums hold such an'
yBl]C)rJBr<w.mu«t-rtyiw 4<>te«fce~-hiitiuitaiit plate hi Ui b 'iiniliP'
it.the4ntellectual-and-cultural—streaniiof'artr
center_nf_Mflhn ■
’
---Following-a^ e h eon several^
feels efforts are moving in this panel -discussions wei% con­
direction.
■
ducted, moderated by Charles
Henry T. Hopkins, director of Clark, Hailey, superintendent Of
the Texas Art Museum, and Blaine C o unty'^oo ls; Mrs,
instructor of art history at Milton Eberhard, Blackfoot,.
Texas Chri^stian
.AlugUiL
Fort Worth, spoke , about the representatlve, and Dr. Ployd
role museums are playing In the P e rs o n , University of Idaho,
,arts.-Hopkin3,„a hative-ofr^ei ^Moscow.;
Sun VMey area,' aaid that
The festiv^ and seminar was
differences that a oneway event.
A c t io n s
r.l!
M a ^ c
V a lle y
o n
h o m
JEROME — Andy Anderson,
Boise, Idaho divi^nal manager
s e t
e
p la ir
council to amend an ordinance
controlling the garbage cans ih
Seattle,-Wa.sh,.,-is-M p8cted-to—last meeting "tie- “•didn‘t~care~
present a final plat^for a sul>- what the cans were made of so
division at the jerome City long as they have handles on the
_Council meeting Tuesday side of the can so the 'garbage
evening at the City Hall. .
m aii;;,-^s^t'have to piit his
Sunday, June 13, 1971
The council earlier approved hand inside of the can to empty
a preliminary plat for the it into the truck and not have the
ThecSc-will .be...a .charge of
subdivision mat will De located garbage run down his arm’T’”
$2.50, an increase of 50 cents
south of I street between Pavla
‘The 20 and 30 gallon oil
from last year. The fee will
and Buchanan. The plat calls drums will have to go; we have
include- 10 lessons for each
for the construction of 45 homes given the people plenty of
series.
i__
In a cost range of $17,000 to notice," he said.'
Oasses are being offered in
$18,000 under the low cost
five categories: water ad­
ihousing development plan
justment for small children,
approved by the Farmers Home
t>eginners, advanced beginners,
Administrationr
JE:R0ME - The board of June 28 at midnight with post
appointed secretary-treasurcr. intermediate and advanced.
The council will also hear a
Information on the time of the directors of the Jerome entries accepted at $1 per class
dinners of the Americanism
report from thepohce chief, fire
Chamber of Conunerce has up to one hour i>efore class time. chief and other council mem­
ly'contest" weVe"pre7enT^‘
^
appr oved a contribution of $15
awards Saturday
P®“'„ ,
. morning.
morning
bers who were assigned by -the
Members of the staff at the to hi?lp support the first annual
According to the show rules, Mayor to check into a petition
They went to Glen Graham,
pool
"thiS“
year^^re^
Jeannp“
Hagic^
regn:ihal^^o\^bF“
tH
eT
-ailTiOrsesTnust
be^reglstered
Boise,
first;
Fredericka
submitted by 10 residents, who
Wheeler. Hansen, second, and Burkhalter, head swimming. Valley Appatoosa club, set for with Appaloosa Horse club of complained that b-ees on the
WASHINGTON rUPll - The
instr
uctor
and
l
i
f
e
-guard;
•tlie
Jei
oiiie
faii’
g
ronhds
July~
S
=
~
'Canada. 1971 fuala negil~rrot~t)e~ southeast and northeast comer Securities and Exchange
Anne Wasem, Clarkston, Wash.,
Danny
Carroll
and
Betty
Oubb,
4.
registered but must have the of 10th and Davis Street are Commission (SEC), is conthird, all senior division.
Jorry C. James, show characteristics
_____________ to
„ be
„
__
easily
Junior division winners were life guards.
obstructinR the vision of siderlng a switch from paper
The
pool
is
closed
Liorl~Hancoek’r^i8 »T - fiF st
------- .SO._MPJfc-_:Cbairman,,saidthatbetween-300—recognized-asT\ppaioosaT=~
'motorists and (reiting a traffic ■secEltiM~tFTr~oornpu®i^"
Those wishing to enter are.
Bryant' Rudd, Twin Falls, days, open from 2 to-5 p.m. and and 400 horses will be brought to
hazard.
system of stock and bond
second, and Sherri Sweet, from 7 to 9 p.m. on weekdays Jer( ime for the two-day event, asked to notify James of the
The mayor instructed the jwDfitahljLand
from
2
to
5
p.m.
on
Sundays.
..................
Kamiah. third._____ ’
SEC Commissioner William
'com53[ttee to check into other
Youth leadership winners Thursday evenings has been
places in Jerome that may have J. Case hinted at such a switch
were, girls, Gwen Henderllder, deslgnatwl as adult night.’
the same problem and bring a in testimony Thursday to the
Boise, first; Janice L. Cook,
recommendation on what Senate In v ^ fp itlo n s ITub-™^
D e d i c a t i o n
s e t a t
Twin Falls, second, and Ann
should be done in each location. committee, which is prnhlng «_______
Louise Watkins, Caldwell, third
multimiUlOn "dollar racket in
Marshell- Everheart,
y—winncrs^oro-Steph"cilmen, is expected”to ask the securities thefts.
Cuddy, l^wlston, first; Scott
Ahla^om. Boise, second, and - ftie H F IE fc 0 = ^ elertion^toMark S.. Nelson, Sandpoint,
name a Richfield Library
'jOODING — There will be a King, Wendell, extend an in­
third.
trustee will be held from 1 to 7 fo irmal dedication and open vitatlon to all interested citizens
The most valuable students
p.m. Monday at the library.
house for the new Gooding of the county and Magic Valley
announced Saturday morning
Mrs. Marvin Webb la the-oriy -Gotmty-Courthousa at 2 pjn.-on—te-atten4
p i ^ l dent-of <he IdahiriBUm, Buiils
0. Russell, GnmgeviUe, second from left; Is William S. Hawkins,
CoryalUis, Ore., past grand exaultant- ruler. Others ar« ,^hn
Leiaen, Xh Iji Falls,,liiunedlate past president, and FraiA Iflsfe,
Corvallis, right, past grand exaultant ruler.
V .
E lk s c o n v e n tio n en d s
Je ro m e ch am b er
w ith b a n q u e t session
a id s h o rs e s h o w
TWIN F A U ^ - "PubUc Hunt, Caldwell, vice president,
opinion is the greatest weapon Idaho South; Norman Bauer,
we have today,” Frank Hlse, Sandpoint, vice president,
Corvallis, Ore., past grand Idaho North; Robert John,
axalted ruler otthf. Idaho,Flks„ JdahQ_.Palls,„vice_ptesldentl_
said Saturday during closing Idaho East, and Phillip West,
■session of the nnniml convention Preston, five-vear trustee.
In Twin Falls
Arthur Smith,.GrangeviUe, was
‘‘We are going to exercise our
right at the ballot box to protect
.. oa^{raedom&.We^»forgetting—
our social rights and putting too
much stress on Individual
frights. There is no reason why
-we—ean’t-alHllve—together^in—
peace and for the common
good," Hise said.
‘‘Elks are good people, good
citizens anct^proud-AmeFicans.^
We do not riot, uiimh or create__
dissension. In spite of all 'the
turmoil, we’re going to do good
“ ToflW less fortunateTTie Mid. |
Hise, speaking at a formal
dinner Saturday night, als6 said
that rehabilitation facilities
tbt FJkfl-4n-I<
-are—anrong" the" tinest m
nation.
GWEN___H E N D E R LID K R ,
New officers of tiie Elks in­ Boise, was first in the state and
stalled during the Saturday second in the nation In youth
luncheon were Burls 0. Russell, leadership competition spon­
GrangeviUe, president; W.H. sored by the EUks. She received
(Bill) Richardson, Blackfoot, an award Saturday during the
vice president at large; Gilbert state convention hi Twin Falls.
i n
SEC
co m p u te r
se tu p u se
iiF^Electiqn"(5553r^ COarffro use"
Blacldoot, first; Sandy Howell,
RnI.se, spf-nnH, nnd Peeev Jo
Pond, Idaho Falls, third for the
girls’ division, and for boys,
Allan Burnside, Post Falls,
first; Mark Nelson, Sandpoint,
second, and Eric R. Davis,
M o u n t^ Home, third.
TTie county commissioners, thoughout the county and
election. Any qualified voter in
the district may cast a ballot, F:ien Glauner, Gooding; Jim state present.
according to Mrs. Carl Paulson, F.'larlogi, Hagerman, and Nelson
Refreshments will be served.
secretary of the Uijrary board.
The Richfield Library district
includes both the city of Rich­
field and surrounding rural
.areas________________________
C o m m e n ts asked
District invites corpments hazard to traffic due to poor
concerning any potential en­ sight distance. ‘The inadequate
vironmental upset from a bridge there will be replaced,.—
proposed reconstruction of probably with a 12 or 14 foot
about one-half mile of highway. diameter culvert, Riedesel said.
The culvert is provided to
The reconstruction project
will be a new crossing of Cedar handle seeoaee from the
Canal. In
Draw, lOffltfid two miles south spillway of "!
and onejialf mUe cast of the event tee c a ^ treakg, t h w
southwest comer of Filer.
j i u a t be adequate provtolMf
According to Engineer Dale made to carry tne flUaWP
——
_Eiedesel;_lha-jUstriqt=la=nQtt= diverted ta:this-area.
SALT 1.AKE CITY (UPll,..^.-Party." he said.
U'Callaghan
said
ihe takipg care of preuminary work
C5SnOhFpf6]e5rOTlTiiriir
Political campaigns must be
-- built around good eandldatesi DemocrAtte. Party:; musl^ offep - ^ ^ cventBaFeonstnictfon-of a--thfri»eighbertM^ of $M;OOQ aadr
Hfi-tflld aiLairport^news^con-—
SAI J - LAKE CrrY-gjPl-)-- u_±!Th«r«
N e v ada's^v . Mike O ’Calligh- highly qualified Individuals to safe, satisfactory road for the with the Filer H l^w ay district
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind,, said w hathe^y^and wfiathedoes,’’ that he was “seriously con-.
said today In a keynote combat negativeJQtlPgJ>y-^he driving public and toTecetvethe^- TOidniraboiit40 terc«itliftha
_ .^tiirday thi> pnnfltrt
thA potcQtiflX POinC>gra.U<HpFCSi~
_____
^-mayJbe^
wins office by a negaUve vote, make public the intentions for obtained from the Federal
Democratic convention.
actions make him a “very un- will be a key factor in the next ag^essively with some of the
“ If we want as a party to he will lose that-office the next construction and seek any funds, if all requirements are
believable" president.
election."
problems facing this country." —™
h
melT liredesel said:-■-—
r.havff-.nRnwoi4ttB^.^^{ao8va w
to make.
been re-elected chairman of the must put forih candidates that he said.
TTie specific road services
If no one objects to the conschool board of Filer School are acbeptable toJhe public,"
f arm areas locaUy_and is an- struction
from
an
en-O^ iallaghan oiA i—'■
--- —— —
D fs S iit“ «T,""Timr==rn«
-----Ucipalei5™^”1)e ail-aast-west viftfHttlchtHf standpoint, the
Nevada’s first term governor
superintendent, announced
^ The~r?mntTrafterialjoad connecting^hlghwav' district wiU issue an
said that a demand by the ■OTTAWA (UPI)
____ -Saturday.
’"Lawrence Knlgge has been public for change is bruigng
1 includes Rork farm area with Twin informing th(» Fwlpral agency
re-elected vice chairman, and about negative voting. "Voters
Mrs. Lura Lee Farmer has Ijeen som klm n casl a baUot in blind
and unthinking opposition to an festival in HuU to bicycle races lUghway 30 East to Burley. It attention of the district, ways to
RICH FIELD - Beautiful Webb, WendeU, first; Rod Hess, more and Butch Edwards, both rehired as clerk treasurer.
Superintendent Turner said individual,and withoutconslder- and a circus on the governor wUl consist of replacing the solve them would be provided or
weather and capacity crowds Bliss, second, and Lyndell Richfield, Uilrd.
ing theTperson for whom they general's lawn. The National- existing ^tnicturc and raising reasons given for not complying
combined Saturday to"makB“~Cai‘lfer;"EdiSii, UJrff.
Scurry’ rfice — Roftnle the school lost an average; d^y^“Arts Centre's participation in the existing grade to provide for to such.
Richfield’s annual Outlaw Days
Stock horse race — Kirk Goicoechea, Richfield, firstr attendance of 27.8 at $340 each are voting,” he said.
the festival will be highlighted a minimum 50 mUe per hour
Actual construction of the
O'CaUaghan
said
candidates
with
a
total
loss
of
$9,520
of
state
a high success.
Webb, WendeU, first; Gayland CaroLPeugh. Richfield, second.
fuiids7~This~l5^^1ia5Ed~T)n'
Saturday morning about 1,500 Edwards, Richfield, second, and Rupert Goicoe<*ea, Rich­
structure is located at the and a half away, Riedesel said.
must be able to communicate and archers.
average daUy attendance.
people .witaeM the parade and and Don HUl, WendeU, third.
field, third.
Board members wiU have a with the voters” he added.
in the afternoon in the amea a
Thre<MigRas opCT race —
T^eani roping — Bob A.
’The governor said that
capacity crowd saw three hours MUw Robinson, Richfield, first; Robinson, Tuttle, and RoUy work day Monday at the new
baU field.
charisnM wiU help a candidate
~of e vent s . ----- -----Cr W.-Wardr-Richfieldr second.— Stanley^ ^Gooding firsl4_-LL4
in an election. But in the long
Parade winners include three
Turnback race — Lloyd seconds; Larry Patterson and
A thought for today: Platxi run it is “solid, honest adfarmers, RUey, Johnson and Davis, Carey, first; Omer Bob Mathers, second, and Ted
Arnristrung, firs't,. witli -an old" Cartw, EdeitrBecondr antl-Dee— cmg-gna Keltli SiiUtli, both Sun said. “No evil can happen to <> ■minl.<itrHtlvp nhllity that lg the
.good man, either in life or determining factor. This 'is
time f a n ji, equipment entry.: Wolverton, Richfield, third.
Valley, third.
death.”
especially true for a political
This entry also included an old
Calf roping — Harvey
Afco, first;—t t :ir
of the entry was “ 1907 Con­ second; Bob Mathers, Wendell, '
struction Outfit."
and Val Christensen. Rupert,
Second place went to the k>cal tied for second ^ d third, and
cheese factory with a float of Kirk Webtr,-BlU Phtterson,
animals and chUdren. The Richfield, t i ^ for fourth.
R ic h e r Cub Scouts won third
Ladies barrd race — Deanne
place with a float of Indian boys Ridcetts, Jerome, first; Dawn
and Daniel Boone.
Thompson, Jeroine, second,
— in-th«-fir«tal^at^the"^ day~carap be
Hubsmith, Richfield, was first; Debbie Hess, Bliss', and Bonnie are expected to take part in Girl Hartz, Twin Falls, will be 1n formed into units, according to
Randy Adams, Pocatello, Laughhn, Sboshone, .tied for ScOut Day Camp activities charge of the Pixie troop which their age, and wiU hold courts of
second^ and^Sld Letainiiv Rich- ^ i r i ---------- ^-------- -startlng-Monday-attheJ«Pom« wllU-conslst—ot^the j o u n i u honor. a f]«g rerpmnnv^jwill beffeid.‘iHfa::--------------Gtrts-barr ri rum- ^ ^ J n d y — caiiStyTflirgreDnds.------- a n a - g f of camp volunte«'f» held Mch day with all the camp
J20 race winners Include- Hess, Bliss, first; .Lora Bray, T h e day camp which is for the workers.
taking part in it.
tamie .Strfms; fiooding,..fir»t;. ■
Blit s,—secon d, and -Connla— Girt Scouta of Wel^borhood 1»------— Otliet activ ities
Gayle 'Bowden^ Arco; second, Hubsmlth, third.
will continue through Friday.
An: Innovation this year wiU fw H ng their
d of-youp,g- unpfire-(
third.
Mecham, Didc Simpsixi. and Mrs. 'nniman Arbdugh and Mra. sons of camp voIuale«tf weathff), demonstrations
Second kid's race. Brad Robb Pedk, aU C»rey, first; Mark Dyer, Jerome, both workers, under supervision
lessons in crafts, such as tie*
Johnston, Richfield, first; Tod Butch Edwards and- Casey <flrecto?i. Mrs. Gayle Bennett. JBoX—Scflut«_o£-We
the : tJnlfiTd-
\e v a d a g o v e rn o r
^ eaks in Utah
f iE iltm lll
Tete draw s K i g ^ r o v ^
GirJ S co u t d ay c a m p
o p e n in g at J e r o m e
440 race — B(A A. Robtnaon,
first; Ernie 9 t h m , sebond,
and Tom Webb, aecoad, and
_Caonie~flabaBiitfa7~thmL
John Umitta. Don Harris arid
George Arrosa, all Shoshone,
thtn i.^
diarge of the junior gtris. Bfrs.
Mrs. 'D a le
Ham monil, planned for all the scouts except
Bob Bnrigojm, Twio-Falls, and Brownie troop leader, .saitd the BrownlM who did not fly-«p
Mrs. Dal* Hammond. Jerome. Saturday that if the weatbia-' thiayear. A special breakfast is_
_Cocqfdes cow jnilking— Mr.- win smervte acUvltlestor the continnes to be tret and cokl Uie , iii«« plaim ^ for the Scoots
440race .^B otrA i'R obliM ^ and Mr9.&Qr..Adein)^Goo<iin8,
4 lO W
be in’
’ ^ “ '*■“
— -::«ndJT8ra:WeW»; W e n d ^ tJfinr Hdd, and R lc i CieiOer.-Pal^ charge ^ the Cadettes. The boUdinK;
potion by the «c«ibrfortheir
J IM s d J M 't rw T , m . Mnnty .firirt.. iitnyiljj^jmd KMy Pirfdn SaninT.-tronp, nntto. Uia,
■
"wfll' -be-'-aB' ■
■
’pt iHm .....j............— .......... ...........
»
■I .
'
■/
Safe ty^aide to
S u n d a y, J u n a 13, T971
■ n m e » - N e w » , . T w ln F a lls , Id a h o
M a n ^ te d
; .BURLEY - Mark Morriaon,
... 2S,.. Bin-ley, wair-cited—for—
reckless driving after liis car
collided with a Burley police car
■ ■
aa—r-.Ltvaaofa-a iK>
speaker at the Aiisociatlon of ,
1 ^ 0 Cities convention to be
held here later thiii week will be
Mari'in~-WagnerT^Washingtonr
D.C., 'legislative and judiqlAl
:;:analyst with the Ntitlonal-Hlgh-
ocal government involvement
n traffic safety"
-investlgHBar
The conventiQii will be
Thursday through iiatur'day and^
.Wagner will speak Friday.
Aside from.being ;a legislative^
' and judicial analyst, Wagner
—act3-in-the-capaci(:3/-o{-a-high
way . safety
management
specialist in the office of Alcohol
Counternnieasures
for the
vKational '~HIgHw<iy“ Traffic
Having formed one of the
nation's first tratfic safety
boards In Nassau County, N.Y.,
-Wagher-is^nsidere<l one_ot the__
kcnne
officer, was driving the patrol
. car. Neither driver waji injured
-md damage^ta-each-car-wasestimated at 1200 by Cassia
;y ‘'sheriff's .officers who
g e t s CO
*10” REWARD
RESUITING IN THE RENTRUPERT — The Project ficlency by improving
-Mutual-Telephone-CJorran-ln-^commercial-and-^ccounting— IMG-OF-A-MOME-IN-THE^
TWIN FALLS, KIAtBERLY
dependent company serving control plus central office and
AREA.
5,975 subscribers in five
outside plant operations,
counties from four exchanges.
Additional s^iJoling' will he
Smoll Fomily. exfellflnt.relis the first "company In Magic
•vaiey" td' lhstail i'bM 's new a u patoe'7»elreepanptoye3,-to ■ garden, garage or .shed.
system-3 computer.
learning ' programming and
W illing to furnish labor (or
Donald Dickson, general operation of the compu1,er,
improvements.
manager, said the new-system according to Gar UXisU, office
^
3 3 - 5 8 0 1
will increase—the—firm's ef-Jnanager.— ^---r
---- —
-MARVIN WAGNER
MemorlafHospltal for iSlcitade warmer whTdniaB tKriiWiil In thi
background of. this pb’otognqph. Prom left are Mrs. W. Gay
Jonesi-piresldentof the Barley Soropttmiat Club; &ln. Jeannette
Chamberlain, Project chairman; and^dney Hansen, chairman
of (he bqppltal board.
.' . !
"P re se n f
check
Reminder
C ra d le w a rm er
given h o sp ita l
______ BURLEY
The -Burley— Commissioners, accepted
Soroptiraist Club pri n t e d a gift in behalf of the hospital and
hooded cradle warmer to Cassia community.
Memorial Hospital. Making the
The hooded cradle warmer
presentation was Mrs. W. Gay
J ones, president for the past has already been put to use this
year, aSa Mrs. rjeanneire ~weekTrp<Mr"it3^"att’ivar“at~the^
Chamberlain, project chair- tiospital.
— The cquipm.
~man.
Rodney Hansen, chairman of many items needed at the $2,120,129.64 has been paid,
the Cassia- Memorial Hospital tiospital
hospital to maintain its ac- leaving 33.5 per cent to be
-faoardr°~and—-John— €lapki-~creditatiorvaccordingto-Robeft;—collactad>Jhia>ypiir-.Tnnp.20,
chairman of the Cassia County Barton, hospital administrator, on Sunday so payments will be
^______ accepted June 21 and if mailed
they must be postmarked on
that date to l>e accepted.
According to Idaho law tax
payments cannot be accepted
after June 21 until July 26 as the
V a c a t io n
sch o o l
SHQP A L B E R T S O N ' S FIRST FOR L O W E R P R I C E S EVERY DAY!
o p c n in g rM Q n d a y
tate-payments'arestibjeet-to-a
two per cent penalty and eight
ALBION — The Albion eight.
Thesession; will tiegin at !l:3Q. per'-cent intpr<*s^ rnti* figurAd
-^-^Churdj-of-Qirist will hold a
vacation Bible school Monday a.m. and en^ at •II; 15 a.m-. from Jan. 1. Mrs, Povlse^
through Friday with classes for dailv. A clo.sing prOBrem and added.
a.m'. Friday. Parents are
through the eighth grade.
Theme will be “ The Christian invited.
Closing exercises will be
F am ily.” Pre-€nroUment is
being taken by mfehibers of the directed by Mr. Farris and
-by— Mi^.— Arnold
Students will be held in the
home owned by the church and
the grades four, through eight
will meet at the Albion Grange
HaU.
BURLEY - The , Burley
Teachers at the vacation Ladies Elks Bridge Oub held a
Bible School will be Mrs. James no-host luncheon with eight
Monroe, and Mrs. Ray Green, tables in play at Elks Lodge
JE>ocateIlo, nursery; Mrs. Jim HaU.
Kell and Ann- Arnold, preWinners were Mrs. Joan Wolf
~scR5aiBr!
is open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
in the courthouse and will be
open during the noon hour June
14 through June 21.
Lu n ch eo n
U.SJJL CIIOICL CIMMlfc
h e ld
VALENCIA
Pqcatel lo, prim arx ;
Farris and Brian Farris, grades
four arid, fivej-James jjonroe
— and Rogei Ai iiold, gradca-aii-to
3Lbt.
Or Over.
La.
FAMILY PACK.
S IC K
ROOM
H EED S
BEEF LIVER T«nd«r Slk*dl Try
STEW BEEF
Extro Lean!
Hospital Beds
If W i t h O n i o n i t .
Swiss Steak
78'
.
.
X ru tches
W h eel Chairs
ilth - -
fuLSnack!
U.S.D.A.
CHOicm—f.
lound Bon*. LB.
U . S . O . A . C H O IC E Bm *.
W alkers
S w eet And
Delicious.
Z T io P E R F B C r m rt3EDDINGnANTS
Vaporizers Bed Tables
W h e n
be
it c o m e s t o
su re! W e
th e
can
h e lp ..y o u
h e lp
th e
c o n v a le s c in g
p a tie n t,
w ith
our
c o m p le te
s u p p lie s .
lin e
A t lo w
of
TURNOVERS
s ic k r o o m ,
*
s ic k r o o m
cost o r
f S S g f f i
r e n ta l. '
?S 0 S
COOLWHIP
BELT VfBRATORS'
:C a lljJ S
Gnncimon
Raitiril
7 7 ^
Com e In
T>«
is M d
M IT .
—
Md
M
c « n v * n i« R |
wf
ts
JSlpenJAAonHoy-
Nite2TilL9- pua^
BONBONS
rraun.VaniHa. Ilsi.1
OrjChvrryl 10 ox. .
ci
eawUmrtton' p>m
M |u t t m « n t s
(o
(Orf
M t U M U
m l At::.::
wetfam d«»>cn.
ltr»A
it r o & a
l OCT
fMAYONNftlSE:
?B T K > 0 D 5 Z ?ra r~
Z ip T o S o k id ilQ T .. . . I
m m
P»ginul Buttar. Craatny
^Or^Crwnchyi K « z . .ku .
1 If YOU DON I
la ^ ls iA L B E H T S n H
R R iS iiiv M iiiP i
jXlMCTi
ulEC..
t6 oz. <
' Cont
m m m t i M
,
S u n d a y , J u rie 13, 1971
T lm es^ N e w is , T w in F^oll», Id a h o
15
^ e s t e r d a y ’ s ^ p . m . P r ic e s
W areh ouses
Kvtntr
Bean
Gfo w e ft
Rahgeri/ Inc.
Trinidad
O ra in ( l i e . )
- M 3 ----- HQ ----- NO---- -N O ’ 1.45
2.25 2.25
>
; BURLEY
B e an G ro w < ^si
F e e d e rs G r a in
U n io n S e e d
D ECLO
A A o rg a n Lln d sa y
•-TJQ
1.43
— h it
F A IR F IE L D
>TQ
Bean G r o w e rs --------------- —
U ie s t e r B'. B ro w n
O. J . C h ild s Seed
Idaho Bean
AJIIson F e e iJ M ill
G O O D I N G _____
Beakon Bean
H A ZELTO N
Bean G ro w e rs
Conlda W rh se .
JE R O M E
- Bean G r o w l s ’
—
- Wr hs ea--------—
M organ L in d s a y
K IM B E R L Y ^ A N S E N
Bean G ro w e rs
H a n » ir. F a r m e r s E le v
V a lle y Bean C q
“W orgao L in d s a y
M URTAUGH
Bean G ro w e rs
PAUL
-Aflor gan L In d ta
RUPERT
Chester B . B ro w n
Flo y d E . l(Me W rhbe.
SH O SH O N E
Beal<on Bean
T W IN F/TUUS
Globe Seed L Feed
Bean G ro w e rs
H aney Seed
Idaho Be an a. E le v _________
Unfermtn Bean
South Side Bean Co
T . F . Feed A. Ice
W EN D ELL
W endell E le v .
NO
NO
NO
. V-^ ^
l .i 3
2.00
l.« L -2.1L.
— have
79 per cent of the
■71 orangpii t^arvBsted SQ_ far -tW5_
orange-crop declined during year, 61 per cent of—the
May, bringing the crop estimate grapefruit,_and 45 per cent of
• NQ
NQ
' Nd
NQ
NQ ‘
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
1.42
ED EN
Atorgan L in d s a y
F IL E R
2.10
NO
■*• ■
.1.42
1.42
..N Q
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
2.15
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
■7:75-'
7.75
NQ
NO
.7.50
NQ
NQ
NQ
■9.50
NQ
NQ
NQ
7.50
NQ .
NQ
NQ
7.75
NQ
NQ
NQ
NQ
,
NQ
CA LEN D A R
NQ
2.25
NQNQ
NQ
-NONQ
NQ
1.42
1.43
NQ
2.25
J.60
PO TA TO ES
JE R O M E
J . M a rs h a ll P ro d u c e
- K iM B E ,f ll- Y
H e n ry 's P ro d u ce
PAUL
M ag ic V a lle y ProcJuce
RU PERT
R o llan d Jo n e s P ro d u ce
M as H e rb o ld , inc
U .S .N o . I>
NQ
U .S .N o . 1>
NO
NQ
NQ
NO
C a rl G lib Co.
E . S . H arp e r
nq
nq
NQ
nq
nq
QUOTATIONS ARE provided as a service to both farmers and buyers. Quotations are
■given the Timea-Neura daily bv each btiyer. The newsDaper. tn addition, re-chedm eacff firm
twice-weeUy. Responsibility for the price listed is solely the buyer’s. NQ indicates the
buyer does not w i^ to quoteTrprice.
___________________
Support
b ill passed
by House
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
-Housei-d«spit« charges-house­
wives would have to pay mil­
lions of dollars extra, has pass­
ed a bill cgntinuing for three
more years premium sugar
prices for selected foreign sup­
plies and quotas and subsidies
r m n l n m e s t lG - g m w e r s .
T hrtnrT>asscd=^iEEBli
*passcd=11ie iaffliE :
complete with a provision allo­
cating a 60,000-ton slice of
the U.S. market to South Afri­
can growers. Opponents tried
unsuccessfully to delete the provisin in protest against South
Africa’s apartheid racial poli­
cies.
A roUc^U vote of 229 to-128
approved the bill, and it was
sent to the Senate. Hearings are
expected'to -begin soon-in the
Senate Finance Conunittee.
Rep. -Wiley Mayne, R-Iowa,
^ a id lth e ^ y s te m resultefLJa
American housewives buying su" ga^ u> ml
Ip^Ee:
line—1—conditiorisT ^e estimated~"thatntfocs^^ 8~~gr~
A g ric u lture
Dep artment trgzeh concentrated orange
6r t ^ Saturday. '
jiSrce were getting. 1.21 'gallon^
Despite the decline, ’ the from each box of fredi oranges
: estimate indicated the crop compared with last season's
/would still be the biggest on yield of 1.24 gallons per box.
-record;--------------------- -------------- — ^----- ,
The estimate was down .2 per ...- ' '
.................. ...... ....—
cent from the May 1 estimate of
'^l>4J-n;>imoiv4)<Miesr-but was 4— per cent above last year’s crop.
The previous record orange
harvest was last season's
185,660.000 boxes. The June 1
orange forecast for Florida rose
Contact the Timvs^Naw*
O T ^ tly from^, May 17 and Farm Salew^^artmant for
remained above both last year’s complete advertising cover*
crop and the previous state oge of your farm tale, hancf
nes-^t— bttls7~newspaper coverooitr'
in the 1966.€7 season.
(over '70,000 readers in
The crop reporting board Magic Valley) adyance bill­
added _ total
production ing. All at one special low
estimate's for all citrus fruits as rate. Every sole listed in
of June 1 were down slightly This Farm Calendar for 10
■from last month but 7 per cent days before sale.
above last seaaoa
---------- JUNE 17-------------Along with the orange crop,
CAMERA CENTER
TIME OUT from a busy scbednle of tourliig area agricultural the bo^rd estimated grapefruit
Adv«rtiMm«nt: Jun« IS
-operaUon»^a*-tak«i4^t-«-groiq[M>f-Fr®iichMd-Belglam-patata—ppoduction-at-60r400i00(MK>xe& ----- Ay««ione«Mr-W*ttr€ti*r«r~
W a ll & M « » M r « m ilh
farm ^.aD d goests for a picnic lunch at the Twin Falls County -and was 12 per cent above last
F^grounds at FOer. The 18 potato farmers toured the Snake year.
JUNE 14
UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO BRANCH
River Trout Farm later iirthe day and spent Friday morning In
The lemon forecast compared
Sun Valley, and made a trip to the Bell Rapids sprinkler with jin estimate of _16,^4XI0_^ ____EXPERIMENT STATION _
HOLSTEIN DAIRY CATTIE
irrigation project scheduled for Friday afternoon. They left boxes last month and 15,520,000
DISPERSAL
Friday evening from Boise for Pasco, Wash.
boxes last year.
Adv«rtii«m«nl: Jun* 10
Auctlonaart: John E. Hoy««
As of the end of May, the
& Larry Howard
board said the orange harvest
was' 82 per cent complete and
JU N E 16
the grapefruit harvest was 94
HOm'eOOBEI furniture SALE.
per'cent“completerTlie~lemon'
WENbElX
Adv«rtlMm«nt: Jun« 14
harvest was reported 59 per
Au<tien*«r«:
Wart. ElUrt,
cent complete. ■
— Wnll It, Mauafiroith__
board said processors
FARM
NQ
NQ
U q
2.2S
2.25
--- NQ-- NO--
1 43
9.50
2.20
1.43
1.42
1,42
7.25
Luneh
a t F ile r
F a m ily f a r m s h o ld in g
ow n a g a in st '^giant.s^___
WASHINGTON (UF*I) — p ro b a b ly h a s b een s o m e e d g in g c o n c e r n a m o n g s o m e f a r m
■ P a b l l e a t i o n " o f - a i n i E r i c u lt u r e — T t t» n y - fr o m - fa r m - v e n t u r € « - f a y - - g r o u p s ~ 8 b o u t - t ie w - a g r ic u lt u r « l—
Department review of cor­ the big, publicly held cor­ ventures by giant corporationSs
porate farming here has porations recently. But the The Study had been completed
reinforced the belief of number of medium-to-large in stages and all the data in the
govgmment economists that the family farms whith incorporate final report had been made
In
earlier
an­
triimtional family-type farm is their operations for tax and public
holding its~own against the inheritance reasons probably nouncements.
The summary confirmed thatinroads of giant corporations will continue to increase, one
expert said.
farming corporations are
farms.
The Agrteultui-e Dcpm tiiient -usMTly^much' TiTgirer "thafi'
The study, based on 196B
surveys, showed a total of 13,300 analysis of corporate farming unincorporated farms.
-corporations-cngagedMft-far-— was-ordered-injgfiLbyJmm^t-^
H A V E A S P E C I A L S E R V I C E to
O f f e r ? L o t W an t A d s fin d p rosp octs
ming in that year, about a third Agrlculture Secretary Orville
fo r yo u.
L.
Freeman
after
a
wave
of
of them in California and
Florida. They accounted for
only about 1 per cent of all
commercial farms- and 7 per-cent-ot-U^S. farmland.
Nearly 80 per cent of the
'c5fpofatroHs“TvEfe~Tfiinlly - or ■
---^SPgENim n*!r=:-eHiail9--m ov« .
at the 50th annual PiHRc
He~sal(l7 -^ne?^»niicEBttye -tnfUvlHiially-nwnpri operations,
Northwest Grain Dealers Asso- trade also has existed with Na- ana~irearly'-two*third9-had-no—
clatlon here think the easing tionalist China the industry Uke- other business but farming. Tlie
of trade restrictions with main- ly will move carefully in open- remaining corporations In­
c lu d e d
p u b licly - o w n e d
land China is a great Idea.
ing the mainland market.”
Tliel^ixon administration-an----“I—would -assume- that- we conglomerates engag^ in other
nounced Thursday the lifting of would not completely ignore business and industries along
a number of trade barriers with good customers to trade with with farming, and their farm
Oilna ana thirNorthwesTgrain - Russia-or Red-China7* ^ said7-ventures-included-60n»c-ot-the
"W ow irr Srcnck------^
dealers see-Hhe-move-aa-the:— The conventTorTcofitlnues largest covered in the surbey.
through Saturday.
Economists
said
there
opening of possible new mar...... -—
.........
^H eo v yrD ufy^
irW a *»i«r
Paul Tubbs, a grain elevator
operator sndTfiRhalrman o f ^
^
workshop at the convention, ex-
FaFm
G r a in
10 A .M .-J u n e 17. 1971
SHAKE RIVER AUCTION HOUSE
1 9 7 0 KIMBERLY RD.
"A n yth in g of value that will sell”
( B r n n b u r it e m r lm r l4 7 i5 f ^
DONATION PIES SOLDI BRING YO URSI.
FORTWTOEinNroRM^CTiONTrAtrirrrcRiEEo—
d e a le r s s a y
e a s e ^ F # s lr ic t i€ M i^
3 7
^ LengtFi
^MRVEST4(«
^ A tiN s-Tvw iE te A ttN ^ T w iN r
SWATHER GUARDS
to T it N . H . ,
BOOTS
Fuliy^Uned '
-Reinforced-shonk
W
T lm e s ^ N e w s , T w in F a l l » , IfJaho
Sun<tay, J ur>e 13, -iy71
ajh . beginning in cltv center races bv noon).* horse racing
By PHYIXJS J. HUFFMAN
-IdatKHDepM^^opaiiWFee- -onw thAiwn.w.ee(fang to tfae-par^ ( BoiiC,— Coemf~— <TAleire7
;,the occasion wil Pocatello)’/ Ladies’ and Men’s
and Development
BOISE — One of Idaha’smost
) -116th Mounted Cavalry State Senior Golf Toumainents
famous ghost towns provesJt_jrBro.J3ooding,'a..real_wagon at American Kalta, Saturday
"ain’t defiSTyef’ flus weekend, train', and manjLtopxi^Ung elute in lg h r
n ’s'^ld~Rudr-pays‘ liFldah(r~and sh^iff’s posses. Dedication ^eedway ai»d special two-day *
City, Complete, with hand- ceremonies in,the park are at 3 m e t a o ^ .car races in Black-K
" niuclting— andr—single-jack p jn. with.ic6fi,PUblic barbecue fooP^oV G a ^ Hill and Dusty
drilling contest on Saturday and at 5 pjn.> and evening square Nelson 'raSSy^anT Saturday.
old-Rudi—Dance-that—night—dancing—Throughout-the-dayi— r^lmraday'features-the-Blackfrom 9 to 1 ajn. in the Com- olAime fiddlers perform in the foot Night-Roded,-Idahn .High
‘munity Hall.
new park; and at city park in School Rodeo in Burley — M d ^
________
Band C o n c t^ for the wmimer
my>n, follnwwi hv a public antiqiip salff.___ _
b&rbecue (adults |2 and
Square dancing is king on in Julia Davis Park, Boise, ahd~
^ ( f r e n un<ter 12, $1.25, a log Saturday ^It Mad
a ty Park, Twin Falls. Music
sawing contest and grandstMd vention Center in Island Park. begins around 8 pjn., no cost
entertaimsent.-Add^ features If youVe never-visited-this part— involvedr
-thtr^ear~are performing-old- :oroBr^tate7pleasrtorNDtonly— —C A tttN ff A tL jV JS I’^
INTERESTED
time fiddlers, Swttish Highland is this the gateway to A N D
Bagpipe Band, children’s Yellowstone National Park, but RESIDENTS: Summer touM of
'-!Jack^t?it5r-and-'-«^
visitors to actually pan for gold. main street in Idaho — 21 miles. Court buildings in Boise begin
Friday and Saturday, it's Imagine!
on Monday and ,continue each
Three Island Days in Glenns
Two large lakes dominate the weekday uiMl Aug. 27 - hourly
Ferry as Governor Cecil D. area and 75 miles of rivers and from 10 a jn . until 4 pjn. Tour
Andrus officially opens the new streams — all “chuck full” of service is free of charge with
ThrM Islands Crossing State mountain trout and beautiful Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts
Park. Most activities are on .srpnerv. Whether you come to__ rominy from as far aw^v as
Saturday except for Glenns fish or “shoot” pictures, be sure Soda Springs and Idaho Falls to '
Ferry’s Night Rodeo wliich will and visit Big Springs, the act as guides, CJrews are not yet
-perform both nights starting-at—largest fresi»-water ‘ spring—in- -eompleterS<Hf-you know a teen8. Parade time on Saturday is 11 western America.
age scout who might be inother events for weekend terested, have them contact
travelers are: annual roado at either Ron Bromley, Ore-Ida
K a m i^. Mafic VaUey Western ^Council (324-6839) or Carolyn
Horse Show at Filer (Twin Falls ^w ser, Silver Sage Council
County Fairgrounds), Mackay (342^16) — both in Boise.
HAPPY FATHER’S DAY,
Rodeo, Southern Idaho Sailing
Regatta at C.J. Strike Reser­ DAD, WHEREVER YOU ARE
voir (no concessions available,
Safeway Superb
FarmFresh
Ground Beef ' Fancy Fryers
Jumbo'
Cantaloupes
W hole
G re a te r
s t a t io n s
MOSCOW (UPI) - Soviet
, scientists said Friday orbital
—
on3-3trch-a#”Salyut’-«re"
•forertmners of space cities with
“space gardens” growing green
vegetables and potatoes.
' "Soviet scientists hold that
the stations of the Salyut type
will set the beginning for
creating independent, longlasting settlements with a
iHlcroworld~trf~their~own.‘’^the
Tass news agency said.
------ “Tliesc'will-beiiyinfstations,
planets created to the pattern
of the earth. The scientists are
sure the earthly crops wU
become a permanent feature In
long-distance space travel,”
------ Talk-offreshMttic.e,-spinach,
carrots and onions for future
cosmonauts came as me uff5e“
Soyuz II cosmonauts who
boarded Salyut Monday kept a
close watch on bone, blood and
muscle to detect signs of
weakness brought on .by the
weightlessness of space,
Th “space gardens” will be
“quite different fields—auto-nnated to ttMdBMimunix^Tasfc
said. The stress will be on
green vitamin cultures—anions.
lettuce, cabbaee, radishes, spin-
e
m
t M
P
i&
w
s
■ there w® Hf®orl-slall(“wlieals,
potatoes, carrots, beans and
STTaiu sjieir---------
G r e e n O n io n s
Eoch 5 "
lb.
S l ic e d B a c o n
59"
D O U B L E K N IT S
D iip o ia b l*
— D o /t im *
C h u c k R o a s t rB l o d “# "C u r
*
69*^
Lb .
U ».
J *
9 3
S e H 4 ^ 4 X tiO H O if
H ot D og Buns
LOOKIGS
C o o k ie s
everyday discount prices
lis t e r in e A n t is e p t ic ^
G ille t t e
^
P lo tin u m
P lu » B lo d * >
S o n it o r y N o p k in i
1 .5 4
1 5 ^ .
1 .7 8
4-01.
R lg h t^ G u a r d ^ lI,,
S k y la r k
Perch Dinners
P a ck
^ fk A
B u »y B aV *r A t i o r u d
M o n h m o llo w
W kg.
P u ff.
N o b i i c o O r * e 'C r * a r n
i w
IS -O I.
S o n d w i c h « i _____
52"
Pkg.
SUPER S A V E R S
P o t a t o S a l a d ‘Z : : .
French Bread
S k y la r k
5 3
•<<ount
S lic * d
P o t a t o S a l a dI T a » t y
^Axion*d
H i - C D r i n k s ^■;Pruir Juw
R e g u la r o r S « t a m «
l>)b. loof
79"
Con
Jraditional
- - - 5 i f e v iirc ^ C o f f e o
^ i t h b e lH o o p s ;^
D e s s e rts
"XTr*o5y^i$r”
‘* r 5 9 "
4 > fe ll
Podc
1 2 ^ * 1
everyday discount prices
J t i i f fiW flY j l o f f e e
G la iU ra s h B a g S r .^ ;:M .3 6
- P u r in o 4 ) o g - C h o w
i> o o c h D og F oo d
C a t L it t e r k
" .:
fChieken
■
^
r .1 .1 9
Po<xh
72-01. 4
Dog Food Pkg.
Vienna Sausage!
Kraft Velveeta
TCforox Btwch”
iOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS
Ice Creanr
Sr^ow Stor — Fiv* Flavori
HoH-Oollon
loof I
H a lf.
G a llo n
i8 "
everyday discount prices
GreenBeans libby Cm!
Pineapple!
Tomato Sauce Tmt"
Pitted Olives
Pineapple •tftiby-Cru*h*d
Tuff Lawn Bags
'"SO O otion S iir* ■
10><oimt fockoyo
- D rJs to n
D#<ong*ilont
12333) Formula
T a b le ts 50-cownt 4 " ly
B«hI* !•/&
C o tto n
iohnion &
S w a b s
IB>«ount JQ()
1_-
2V
^ 9 "
^1.
Con 4 1 "
Jo hn io^n
■SPECIAL I ' l R C H A S E S A L E O F < M O D lF lE D
F L A R E M O D E L D O U B L E -K N IT S L A C K S '
1 0 0 % P o ly e ste r — F u lly W a s h a b le — = F in is h e d B o tto m s.
3 0 " to 4 0 " W o is t i in N a v y , B r o w n , N a t u r a l - O n ly S I 5 .0 0 .
Pockog*
B ab y
L o tio n
------
GREAT BAKE SHOP DISCOUNTS
S o itin e
Nobiico
Prtmtum
HI .NOREDS Of OfHER FINE DOLBLE-kNir SLAfkS
P - b y D a ^ s - f r o m 5 1 8 .0 0 to 5 2 7 ,0 0 — O b y - R « U o n - 5 2 0 . 0 0 ® b y K in g s rid g e a n d H a r t , S c h o H n e r & M a r x - fro m S 2 8 .0 0
C rackers
14b.
Boa 4 0 "
S t r a w b e r r y
D IS TIN C TIV EfR tE GIFT WRAPPING
J e lly
S a f e w a y D is c o u n t
S to re s In A l l
O f - T h e s e 'T o v m s r ~
R o lls
Tha Largeit S«l«ction Of fine Quality
Mo ist—Te m p ting S p o n g e Gq keW ith D e lic io u s ^ ^ a w b e r r y J e l ly
and ’
*Bois«
S P O R T C O A T S
6f 1050% Polymter
:iSCOL‘NT
'Jaroma
Blacicfoot
*We««r
-Montp#B«r
-Bxpwt
»CoWw*H ■TTwbi FoH*
Bitftoy
, - Anij
I f it’ s fro m R O P E I T S it ’s R f C l i T r
m
w
m
n
A l ■■M n M ■§ Mi M l ■ M ■
T Wlii:Pally-Btirley«na|»ert*PiiW---
4 0
t2 ^
Jo h n s o n
Lorg*
HENHOUSE
32"
or
with a new 1 /2 top— y
jBertSe’^ i
C dn
Wrdcle Whip S“ ..
everyday discount prices
we welcome
FREE SAMPLES!
- 64"
iW .D . T is s u e All Colon
R o y a l B urg er
I
I
59^
F is h S t ic k s
B a th room
pocket for easy access,
J
!,
|
418
C a p l o i n 'i C K o ic * S o l * o r H o d d o < k
^ 1 4 8
S u p « r o r R * g u la r
style andcom fort
FRESH P O T A T O
SA LA D
C on
B a r J i e c u e B u j is L u : : ^ *7.“:' 3 3 "
-lnskJeadiustm ent-|
I
u. 4 9 "
C anned H am s t :l :r
-24=pi:
J e lO e s s r ^
w m
u. 7 6 "
T iiiio f F ille t y ^ r jr ''
C Q 0
T h * P i* c*
B u lf*rm 7 T 1 i
S ty l*
at
W ith
A A «a t
G r o u n d C h u c k __________ -U». 7 1 "
everyday discount prices
Klmbies Diapers
Leaded
'W h i t *
R o u n d S t e a k s i! » ° *
C h u n k B o l o g n a , ';
ALL POLYESTER
2
B e e f S h o r t R i b s cu-
P o r ir C h o iif ;„ ,c .„ ..,c „ ,
" O r a n g e s A^ll *P"u r p o s e
F ry e r B i^ a s ts
3
F ra n k fu rte rs
'S o f * > w a y
efa.and3imrr:
---- For—variety and starches"
12"
G o ld e n B a n a n a s
_ R e d _ R f l f c h e t J : : ! l ^ -----Each 5 ”
FATHER’S DAY, JUNE 2 (r—
s ^ E
lb.
R e d P b f a f o e s 5 . t OOP
FOR A DOUBLE KNIT
fo re se e n
U .S.D .A. In sp ected For
W h olesom en ess a n d G ra d e d B
B u y A n y Size P o ck o q e Y ou N eed
A t This Low Price Per Pound
^ m e R ip e n e d r F la v o r
Fniit
jCheese Cake ^ T Z l . ^
SM ART
7 6 ^ S « § < if D o t g l i f ^
98" Gfcned Doughnuts
bAVERS
SHOP
A T
5^
Nttc»rSimdoy;~iaiii » r i 9 7 r
*H m m StorM Opan Sumiciy
5"
S A FEW A Y
D IS C O U N T
!.
Sunday, June 13, 1971.
Tlmes-N«w».Jw in Falls,, Idaho 17
WASHINGTON(UP I)—Many wdth cequlrements for
n u i ^ g ‘ homra under the adequate .emergency-electrical P«* eeniot the. patlenta In thoae
Medicaid and Medicare pro- service.
states were deemed not to
grains are hor recdvlng the ~ GAO officials" said the defl- require skilled nursing
^
Cpmriierciahcarrierroirljeih
______
Atlantic decided
-kind^fc;care^for-=ivhlch the—dencles-««-ground» for con--- gutting-Into -slrillri. niirainL
government Is paying.
c ^ , not "only <because the homes patients who could
Ihat conclusion was reached health and safety df~^derly cared for properly i|r other
by the government’s General patients may be jeopardized, tfldllties not only results in
Accounting Office (GAO) on the Jbut also because they indicate excessive costa, GAQ inspectors
~faasiB~of~a-Ttetailied-^idir '"f~~*”*P” ™'^‘^ ^-°°^ ^ ^ ‘^
said, but also makes uimeceasanursing homes in three states moneyJs worth for the $1,6 ry drafandiF^on—tfae-natiM^
— Ni)w- yorkj—Michigan—and—W|lion^B—year-spent-through ^already-inadeqoatirrsupply o f
Oklatoma.
Medicaid -and Medicare to medlc^ and nursing personnel.
GAO inspeptors-fourid-that^provlde skUlednursinftservices-— After.reaiiin^a-prellminary
homes they checked were
failing in least one major
respect to comply ■Wth federal
r^u k e m ^ts .
Of the 90 honties’indud«l In
the GAO sample, 47 were not
that each elderly patient be
seen by a physician at least
once a month.
In some c a s e s ,m u c h - a s
seveji months elapsed between
visits by a doctor.'
In 48 homes, patients were
not receivmg as much nvrsmg
attention as they were supposed
to get_iuordet-to qualify as a
skilled nursing facility under
-fedfT.al- xBgiilntlnnfi, a hnme
should have at least one
registered nurse or lic'ens^
practical nurse on duty 24
hours a day, 7days a week.
Nearly 20 per cent of the
homes inspected had no full­
time registered nurse, and
aboOt a third of them fell short
of having a qualified ijurse in
charge of each Miour shift.
Inspectors also found that
—T1infIff51I5TniraIn|niSH53’^Sre~
deficient In meeting safety
regulationsr**^—Half—of thosechedred=were“ not” complying
The problem of excesdve cost Department of Health, jPfluca
-is compounded, GAO inspectors tion and Welfare ha^ prpmised
reported, by a wides?>read to take steps to tighten
tendency to admit to skilled—enforcenwntof federal-require-*
— weatherrepoitrfrair«lnliiiie3sil9nc^ an acblevement thaiu
nursing homes ad ttly j^tlents m » ts for a nurdhg home to
pafflctdariy advantageoiH, according to Tisf Newi Agency,
whose actual needs could be qualify as a skilled c ^
oiB gB>f.Myj«nuthe-Eirth . j boat=
■ada'quatelywith -lew facility,
dangerona weather development! in different parti of the^
It also hopes to issue within
intensive and less costly care."
world.’’ Shown here Is the orbit itatlo(i Salynt in the assembly
This finding applies primarily six months offlcial criteria for
t ■hop at Moscow prior to orbit. (UPI)
to Medicaid patients. Hie Social detominlng when Medicaid
Security Administration has patients require skilled nurs
Should any taxpayer ask why
spelled out explicit tests for
Servicemen
determining whether Medicare Medicaid officials can't walk
-patients require skilled nursing down the hall to the Social/
-fSfcEcare. Bui the Department ot Secunty AdminiatrattBrr
Health. Education and Welfare borrow a copy of their criteria gland (UPI)-Magistrate Guy had no effect bn the youth, Messerly, communications
ied sentenced an 18-vear- .Blampied added, “a short, ye*oman seaman, daughtw of
—an operation that could be
(HEW)-has-noiines for Medicaid patients performed in six minutes ^ d youth to eight strokes with sharp sentence wim tHrM years Mayor and ~Mra. Earnest Dde
probaUon m ^ t dp the trtck.’*- Biesserly, Glenns Ferry, has
-excfipt that their admiaainn to-a, instead of six months-the a birch rod F44day after finding
ltTTasrthe~tost~tlme:lirtliree retu m ed- to-her-gtation—a
skilled nursing home must be answer, is that in the federal him guilty of traffic offenies,
bureaoracy tliinga_jare never- disorderly behavior and resist^ years a birching was ordered Norfolk Virginia Naval base,.
recommended by a physidan.
onXJuemsey.----after a 10-day visit with her
ing arrest.
Michigan was the only one of done that simply.
family.
Saying that a past stretch in
the three states which had
attempted to plug this gap by
establishing Its own criteria for
admission to a skilled nursing
facility at public expense. But
Michigan health officials who
accompanied GAO Inspectors
found that 79 per cent of the
pfiUentS in the homM ‘viSltM
“did not require skilled care as
definedin Michigan's criteria.'^
Whcff "the—Michigan—niles”
Space
T O sT
Stinging sentence
G em d ru gs la b
u s e in c r e a s e s
9 J f E A R S J M IH E lR
~
BOISE — Use of the drug" dismissed aceordlng'to the
Identification ..JaJipratory findingsof the drug lab. U su^y
, operated by the Idaho Depart­ five to seven tests are made on
ment of Health continues to each sample: E^ren though the
increase, according to Robert analyst may feel sure of the
Lawson, laboratory director. identity after completing a
' p n tlr e
____The., ■■jpeclfll lab-was-set up_
three, y.earsjgo_when theJdru&, battery of te.sts Is run to be
problem began to mushroom In absolutely positive.
Tdaho. Law enforcement ofSophisUcated equipment and
gcers needed speedy and ac- expertly trained ai^ysts are
curate'^ IdentifieeUoB-of—druga__ne^ed to keep up ^^th the everseized from suspects. The changfiig^^^<Smt?nl»--o{--modenL_
-health-department-had-tbe— iiabused” drugs.-New-drugs-are—
diversified technical equipment being s;^thesized. daily by the
and the highly specialized illegal manufacturers, making
personnel, so the law was drug identification a complex
^ K l o r <tt y ^
m ada
. lit
lo lo
w it h t h e o n e d e tig n -
lo T C o m p n # n « r ^ y o u r i i ^ i v i d u a l
lig u r t f ; l o r g e o r t m a l l.
■phpna.
tola Morn
Rt. I Pdrk Ava.
7 3 3 -1 6 0 5
“ ClrarterRTHHrrtt
Announces the opening of his practice in
P ERM ATO LO CY
June 21st, 1971
Suite 14 —' 676 Shoup Avenue West
-T-win-EoilvJdobo------ -----By AppointmenU?hone_Z34-3145
NIGHTSSLEEPYOUDESERVIflnazrsiaWEST-PRICES
4PREEf
sale!
TWM FALLS CEMETERY
2 A D U LT
SEALY
T W IN
SEALY
S IZ E
FU LL S IZ E
W it h P m r p e t u o / ^ a r e -
-or-
Box Spring
or
Box Spring
SEALYMIEENSIZE^EAL^Gm
-from.
- fro m
~ ~ m grtfg?^pnyd1g'5t>SY^^
A .W - "B ill" M a d la n d , Pr«*. a n d M g r,
435 M a in A v « n w * E. T w in F a lb
on«
M ATTRI^
college level and below at the
end of the school year.
Kopan said 2.5 million
vfJeraas-and-aervicemen-have
Tw nTals Cemetery Ainlii.
B ro Ih o t w o i
LOOK at this one. We purchased a complete
warehouse of mismatched odds and ends, etc.
servicemen had trained under
the current G.I. Bill in Idaho as
of June 1, the bill’s fifth an­
niversary.
I/iryn E. Kopan, director of.
the Boise VA Center, also said
that nationally, 1.1 million were
-Solect-CLcompanion lot while y o ^o re 1ogeth-_
er rSWe offer d”choice of fla t m orkerr roisedT
lo ( l u ll a n y
P R E S E N T lO C A U Q N
trained under the flirrent iiill
(PL 89-358) so far, compared to
COMPANMMSPACES
W h/ buy o
_ M o r n , a I r o i n a d F i g u r e H e C o u 'n -
A STOREWIDE SALES
Jurisdiction rather than under
According to Lawson,' the
law; enforcement.
-|jBt-y<>ar 1.39fi Ramples-wcre- -^eak cimbination.i throw n^^togetjherbyjhaaj^
■submlttp.d_tn the.. la i„
saidrThiswas chemists—represent—a—
analysisrLa;
more than * ible the number- .danger.to iisers -of-^D-and----e a < : h
submitted. the previoua year. similar hallucinogens. BoUi the
Marijuana accounts lo r buyer and the ipaEier are in the
almost half of Ihfe'dniH sentln ; d a lfa b o a ifa cont^tK oLmame.
■MnwreiamiBgrot ''^spceg^'tma' ~5F~^e pills' m d capsules, he
hallucinogens such as LSD also aai'H!
Samples received at the lab
are high In number.
---6«tei»9ive-te*4i are made on —haV e .^ ^ ide-fgft|}»-»H>Ot«'Cy-each sample submitted to in­ He pointed out that an aspirin­
sure accuracy since criminal sized pill could contain enough
charges often,^ are filed or LSD to provide 3,200 trips.
BblSE — The Veterans
Administration, today an-
they could not wait for a rat^
setting conference in Montreal.
June 29 to make a bid for the
business of affluent youth, who
have repreaented-0Ply-2-ia-3
per-cent of airllnas-DasBengerftpreviously.
The industry'has been in a
np M d l^'ews~tHg"summer~
travel season as its chance to
recoup. Belgium/s Sabena Air­
lines set off the'wain reaction
THREE RUSSIAN coniifliuat| orbiting Earth in the Salynt
by reducing the |5M round4dp
“laboM toij^ ac&leved
fln t tbla week by sendLy -fareu:—from—N ew ^V ork— ^
•och
M l
O p e n M o n d a y N ig h t s
SET
(<iiynip|t>yqpp^n^«^
—
J
I-
18
T I m e s . N e w s , T w in F a lls , Id a h o
V a lle y I f e a tlie r K e p o r t'
. I d a h o
T em peratures
Bv FRANK R. SCHELL
!.P,R..CaatlefQcdi—^We
rPgwilea-thaLjiAllincgja^
S.‘*’ Bolh sides ttfe real cle^_
“■fflid-ihot^^ni very-much. -We
would like to know'what their
va]u£ is.
Answer: I am sure you are
___ypung collectors—and I am
always unhappy when I have to
— ^--- — disappoiflt-^><Hing^p6ople,-Ihe-, 1942-S Lincolns are extremely
--------comnnmT OverOa;3-million of
them were'ii^fea; intTm o^of*
them are still around. The coin
is worth 3 cents if in “very fine”
condition. Sorry it is not worth
more_______________
From F. H.. Rupert; Do
German Reichsbaiiknoles dated
in the yi»nr \9fa. hnvp any value
in cash at the present time or as
collector’s items? I have the
following:
One, 500-Marks, dated 27
Marz 1922; one. 1,000-Marks,
dated Spet. 15,, 1922; one, 10,000
Marks, dated 19 January 1922.1
-underataind-at one time ■
ainccthe war they were wofth their
face value.
A n s w e r :T h e
G e rm a n
are completely worthless. Some
collector's m d dealers handle
them, but » cents Is about the
value of an uncirculated note,
"nils was inflation money and
got to the point where 50.000
marks would not even buy a loaf
of bread. As „ far as I can
determine from research, they
have never had any value since
thpy wpro Hkr-nntlniipH-------
Pouehes prime
S u n d a y , J u n e 13, 1971
^ " N a iio n a T "
Tem peratures
i
•
ttjlleves target
WASfflNGTOrrtUFD'-Mau--- Earlier,'a 1
pouches full of valuables are so tor testified that organized
Mught after by thieves"tlurtrthe crime is able to j ^ e r millions
underworld has even resorted ' 61. dollars yearly from Wall
to- gangland— executions— in—^ e « t —banks—md~btykerage— —
■
scrambling for the loot, accord- K o u ^ because ^p lb y e s —and
TngTo a io^T»std~offfcIalr= ~wmelmies even top- manage— B^QHlfWsia^lHSPBctor W. ment —are in cahoots:w ltlah® =:
J. Cotter; testifying before the mob.
&Aate InvestlgaliorSSTUbcom-—^-------- — ------ --------mittee Wednesday, said thefts
LEGAL NOTICE
of valuable air mall wcks have
NOTICE TO BIOOERS
been cut "almbst to zero” since
T h e S t a t e P u r c h a s i n g A g e n t w i ll
^ghteipsectuity-^
feceTOe~seai«i~Btas~«nn&~offrc"^
Honolulu
Kansa&Gity-t^s Vegas
New York
Ph9enix
Portland. Ore.
St. Louis
SUNDAY SHOWERS areforecast for the gouthem plains bnd 'S5«Xaire“CTty
the Great Lakes area, but skies will be clear and temperatures San'Diego
—wajtn^ver-mo»t-ot4tere«t-it^the United Stgtfis.-Hnt-aeather-: 'SeatUe____
will continue In the soutbem half of the nation. Extreme nor: Washington
Wichita
thwestem cotper of nation will be cooler. (UPI)
„
Saturday
Saturday
ice June 1
ice Jan. 1
Last Year
6.90
IfJ ia t is
SO r a r e
90
75
71
65
"82
84
66 1.00
45-^
61
50
® ~D2
70 .02
Clouds to screen June sun
Magic Valley. Twin Falls and
vicinity, North Side, BurleyRupert area:
^ c r e a ^ g ^ cloudiness, today,
becoming cloudy with chance of
s h o w ^ Ifltfi-Sunday night and
M on^y. High today near 80,
low tonight near 50. Cooler
Monday, with high in 70's.
Camas Pfairie. Hailey,
1.0wer Wood River valley:
Increasing cloudiness today,
becoming clouding with chance
of showers tonight and Monday.
-High—today—Wsj-low-tonight
near 40. High Monday near 70.
Moderate winds decreasing this
evening.
Central Idaho mountains,
south of Salmon River:
Increasing cloudiness with
chancc of showers tonight and
Monday. Overnight lows,
mostly 40’s. High today 70's,xoolet^Monday with highs niid60’s. Locally gusty wiijds at
times. ..
— ~ An upper level low is slowly
approaching the Pacific coast.
It is expected to move inland
gradually over the next several
days, bringing increasing
untTI: n :3 0 - A .M .. J u n e ,J 3 , 1971 (o r
th e fo llo w in g ; R e q u isitio n No. T-1306
- for - K e y - R in g * - lo r th e — H e alth
Cotter tesntied at the second D e p a rtm e n t at Bolse^ Idaho.
A ll b ids w ill be p u b lic ly openeo
day of hearings into suspected and
rM d a t the a b ove tim e and
mob involvement in ^ e f t s ” Df" p la c e . F o r m s , sfa tin g the conditions,
m
u
st
se c u re d before bidding
stocks, bonds, government T h e se be
a re a v a ila b le fro m the State
notes and other securities — P u rc h a s in g A g e n t's O ffic e .
year ago.
cloudiness to southern Idaho,
with the probability
of
precipitation increasing tonight
and Monday.
— :
Temperatures will raftge in
-the uppef-70^-to upper 80’b
today, cooling about 10 degrees
Monday. Normal high and low
readings for Twin Falls are 81
and'48 degrees.
estimatBd'as a J200“niillton^~
■year racket. Top officials from
the treasury and the securities
called to testify today.
7 -------------T e O - C f t A M E R ,
*
-----------
'
n C E T il- flin D E R i.
T h e Sta te P u rc h a s in g Agent w ill
re c e iv e se a le d b id s at h is o ffic e ,
Room 205 Stateh o use , B o ise , Idaho,
u n til: 4:00 P .M ., Ju n e 25. 1971 for the
Cotter said from 1967 to 1970.
some $T6 r ^ i o ^ W VaiaaH^^^^
was reported stolen trom tne H ig h w a y D e p a r t m e n t a t B o is e ,
.mails —the biggest haul when
,
thieves took a single registered
.Uilng thQu<ondUUw»..
mail pouch loodcd with ncofly—
corr
u st be se c u re d before bidding
$22 r ^ io n ii) securities and m
T h e se a re a v a ila b le fro m the State
travelers checks from New P u rc h a s in g A g e n t's O ffic e .
TED CRA M ER,
York's John F.
Kennedy
s.,.e P u rc h a s in g A ae ,
Airpor4-thr«« yearfrago-------Pobi«tv- june 41, la-i, 44, rtj
^pend,
A
fmsUoms'
bv H u h d c y o f Y t y i. U d
V ic t im s ^
_____ ____ lurley; ---five Liberty-head nickels with Ik
:iV” lQn Jh e M cH: They are
dated 1901, 1901. 1908. 1W», arid
1912-D. Can you give me the
value of these coins? All of the .
dates are verv clear on them.
re co v e re d
ESCALON, Mexico (UPDAnswerr-The Liberty nickel
An evergreen planting or "harden off” the rosCs in a cool informal look then do not shear
TheT7~slceletons"^xhmned tJilff
”Ws~TimTnIflt6irin-n883-ancr*-fl<>^r-be«l-^««^“ l<><>>‘-^i‘S“be»^lHCet40-to^-degreesrfor*nr--iHFpIant. TSlce'a pai? of cEF
until 1912, when it was replaced unless you put a good , edge to eight hours. This permits the pers and pluck out a shoot here
week at this railroad crossing
by the Buffalo nickel. The dates around it.
S lJ t o t o take Up water. Arrange and there so that from a bird's
250' miles south of El Paso,
trom 1883 up to 189G have some
Some gardeners like a the stems in deep containers so eye view the shrub is more or
Tex., were identified Thursday
collector value in the circulated
}°_that at least one-fourto to one- iess zigrzaiu)r_.at^-shaped,.___
as the victims of a W oo^ clash
'^ a d e s . with the 1885 and 1886 ^haveone wim sIightcurvMin. A half of the stem is submerged:
between Yaqui Indians and
Upright yews can be sheared
good
edge
is
to
your
planting
Pancho Villa’s troops in the
being the most valuable “and
You can use a floral into ti pyramid, broad at the
whatanecktie
is
to
a
well-dressed
Mexican Revolution 55 years
preservative, obtainable in base and tapered toward the
scarcest. From 1897 on to 1912,
man.
One
way
to
tell
what
an
GENE McNEE
most flower shops and garden top. Or it can be ‘‘plucked,"
they are very common in the
ago.
edged
border
will
look
like
is
to
lesser grades, except for the
A 76-year-old retired grave­
centers.
nipping out one shoot here, one
lay your garden hose along the
digger, -Manuel Cano, said he
Don't l>e discouraged if a rose there. The important thing Is do
1912-S, which is scarce.
personally-had-buFied th»-mcn,
TT]C cloamffsg of thp dnT^ on .
-or two wilte. Just-Gut-an inch^ff^sOMB-pruning-two-or -three
-the-eoift-^oesTOl^re-me'mtjch— it^should4»^ o naoid for-a -wildL the stem end-( witli sharp kiiifet “ limes' a yeST: Many Btt
14~of ' UiKiii Villa troopers-anti
of an idea of the grade of your edge that cuts half way into and place in vase of warm evergreen is ruined by planting
'the other 13 Indians. He said he
coins since they are graded on your lawn and it doesn't have to water untU It perks right up. and forgetting it. It you want
had buried thie Indians in the
the word “ Liberty," which is be .too deep.
Warm water is thinner than your landscape investment to
center of town and the
Once you've gotten the edge cold water and goes up the stem be a thing of lasting beauty and
found on the headband. If three
“Villistas” on a hiU on the
letters of the word “Liberty” you want, take a spade or axe easier. Incidentally, if you get service, plan on spending a few
town's outskirts.
are readable, the coin evades and mark the curved line. Once roses from your florist and they minutes two or thre times a
Through the years the battle
“very 'gobd" and in the c ^ of you’ve ^ 9tten the m arlr made wiltj-it doesn’t mean they are year. just . trtmmlnB— yirar“
and the im provis^ cemeteries
TJie Trtiiid IS lo
TWIN
FALLS
Former
your coins, the 1901, 1901, 1908, into the 's ^ or soil, then you can old. It may have been cut in too evergreens.
Shoshone resident Gene McNee had been forgotten until this
use
a
dull
axe
or
spade
and
start
the ‘ H untrak’
10909 would be worth about iS
tight of a bud. Having been -a
B.H. of Shoshone: “Please has boon-nam«d~aa—tha—new week when Mayor Raymundo
( l u l l 'f a f t h i o n ^ d A n t r« > n * n y l o n )
cents each, and the is)iz-u aooui 'edging. All etlgc one tor-two commercial florist tor
years, tell me why I cannot get lots of
Palacios ordered a public works
inches deep is sufficient. I can vouch that some roses are bloonv from our garden mums. manager of Young’s Dairy in crew to dig a ditch near a
60 cents.
S h o rt sle e v e c la s s ic s a d d le - s h o u ld e r p u llo v e r in B a n Lo n *
Twin
Falls,
effective
July
1.
Deeper means you'll have tricky to arrange. Some wilt tor Our plants get worse each year.
k n it A n tro n n y lo n , lo n g F p sh io n p o in t r n lln r n n rl. .i.h u H n n
y all. the
MrNee has .■ipp.nt nearly two former barracks, now convert. . . letters.. of the wor4 tj ouUe I imiiliig tlm luwii iiiuwm no good reason at all.
Soine viarieties
p la c k e t . R ib b e d d e sig n ch est p o ck e ^ K n it fu ll- fo ih io n e
Escalon is an important
=^EtAN!TSiNEE0JHQN-JXX):_ -ticUlium—wilt a — fu n C U3 _ t h a t ^ ^ T r i n n g lc I l a i r y In poi.se. A s
fo r e x c e lle n t fit o n d sh o p e -re te n tio n . M o ch in o w o s h a b le
jy to-define-your flower bed. Plants r a n t tnlk~when they are
sti
a
tegii;
^
If
it
ih
HiP'
Md«C^n~
~
'SSSirgr'Sen()liKt[hgS_Ci;^an=—J,ungry
fornutrienta
but
they
do
ttie-plant^plumbing^systein-^ Tcsponsible for all jiccoiHinting
—9
1912-S tieing in the $1.50 class. If
-dividual plant---- ---------- shew
____ signs which we should The result Is slow death, functions tor both Triangle
;le ahd Revolution whith ravaged the—
" aQ"the'letters ol "Uljerty" lye
Once you've made a good heed. For example,—if -the yellowing and dying of leaves
country—
from—BM—inte—thesharp and clear, and the com
products.
Young’s Dairy
;TffTSVimJ'»ri!S
edge, you can apply your foliage is yellow, it could mean
In lliin llr y o f V „ r t . 1 Id
■gpaiin ‘ nt' 'thcytioMeaa ' 3^ tho- f e f i s i M i a a e . ___
said
the
bodies
6
t ffie pTihT Nematodes
often cause the
wreath, on the reverse, shflw".
as peatmoss, cocoabean shells, cannot get enough iron tor same problem. Poor tlower%g pany of Triangle organization. exhumed were “nothing but
the coins are ‘‘extremely tine,”
McNee replaces Uriel Sim*
buckwheat hulls or beat moM. A
iiara—bonagi" -bul— gtiU_badrjiLorpphyll. Thfi,,,,oea.
4 'th» fiw t touF" woMld bf ing
thin Iayei= bt nriffiJi th“ah 'e<l^fe<f leaves of an iron-deficient plant
summer, has resigned effective J ^ e M
'about $1 each. The 1912-D,
border will set your whole house start to yellow between the
Generally, no variety should after having been affiliated with
extremely tine condition
off. And it will do a lot to keep ''®^s.
be pinclied.hack later than July. the Twin Falls dairy for more some p^ple to believe that it
worth about $15,
weeds down, moisture in the
Gradually the veins yellow 4 pinched later than this, than 22 years, the past six years was a recent massacre." he
Soi , I Can’t come any closer ground, besides beautifying and the entire loaf becomes shoots do not develop well nc manngpr Hp plan.q to enter said. “But that Isn't true.’,’ ,
wtthoBt^seetng~the '"your home: ■ ...
Explaining why' the tiodles of
white ahT^dropsi TTiTsTs callett "enough for flowers to form, private business in the Boise
GANGLY
P H IL O D E N ­ chlorosis. Iron chlorosis is Also, some varieties ar« heat
coins. Liberty nickels in the
Valiev, company officials said. the Yaquis all had bullet holes
circulated grades are not DRON : If vour philodendron
senslBve. High late •summer
McNee. a native of Twin tn-thFlreaa. Palacios eijjlaljrea"
-that—4h«y^ ~wora -positioned
-scarce- aml-can-bc-puixhased________ -It^bfough-about- by "tBmperatures'cause-Jreat-tlelay'
from any dealer.
clinging to a tiark totem pole, too much lime in soils,
of flower bud formation and High School. He received a behind small holes in the
The column is still most in- try rejuvenating It this way;
ThU ties up iron making it buds do not have time to degree m business trom the barracks and Villa's troops
Oatach it^from-the bark^ slab,^-unavaUade-forplnnts^o-take-it- develop before trost.
’
University of Idaho in 1952, was' -Bred at smoke puffs -coming
readers who have merchant's then turn the vine down toward up. One way to unlock ■this
Also, too much shade causes assigned to the auditor from the holes and cquldn’t hit
tokens (hickeys) and trade the pot, and again turn them immobile iron' is to add plants, to be tall and spindly.
them anywhere else other than
general's office in Los Angeles
checks, or know ofanyrWe have tjacknp. Hold thq v in e p la c e micrdnizedlron, extremely fine They need full sun. Aphldsnand and Fairbanks while .serving in the head. ^
now ph«tographed and recorded with string or plant ties. If you particles-of free iron which-is leaf spot disease are ofJicV the U.S. Air Force. '
about 1600 trom Idaho, but are make two 80 degree turns in the readily absorbed by plants. A factors contributing to poor
If you are planning a motor
In 1954. he began an ac­
interested in any new material. stem, you automatically con­ material on the market, known flowering. Also, tarnished plant counting career with Boise trip vacation it’s a good idea to
Drop a card or letter to the centrate all of the foliage in one- as Green Garde is so rerined it bud sometimes prevent flower r^scflrip rorpomtlnn, while.Jn take alonie vour common sense
oiluimi, if yuu' kn o w o f-■snctr -tliini uf tlif original lieiglit. Onc~ contains 50,000,006 particles per
1958 he began a year and a halt and good Judgment, says the
material being available.
third of the leaves v ^l be upside cubic inch'. It's .rffective ‘tor ^°™ca‘J ^ s blooms to open only as special agent for the Federal Idaho State Police. 'Take along
down but they wUl graduaUy supplying a plant's need for iron part
way.
Spray
with
Bureau of Investigation in Los good driving habits which have
(Questions on coins and rearrange themselves.
or correcting an iron deficiency malathion. Let's face it, mnun\s Angeles. He returned to Boise kept you out of trouble in the
currency should be sent to The
Kerp in mind that no amount (chlorosiaHyhen^t-takefl-plaee^— a r ’^
ter" 6ut,
"peier"
oui,and
and It'S
It'saa g'goo^ and worked as accountant for past.
Money Box. c-o "nie , T>mes- of “tricks” will substitute for
EVERGREENS
SHED
News. Twin Falls, Idaho 83301.) good culture. Philodendrons LEAVES: Don’t worry if you Idea to buy new plants from various local businesses. In 1966
time to time. Spray your mums McNee becamtf Executive
like a humusy soQ (one third see some yellow leaves on your with zineb or captan to check' secretary at HiUcrest Oiuntry
NOTICE: IMMEDIATE
each sand, peat and loam). evergreens. Many including fungus diseases.
Qub' in Boise, .where h t was
Poor drainage means the lower Taxus,
boxwood
or
responsible
tor
general
leaves wUl turn yellow or brown rhododendrons, are shedding
management of the club. Three
Water for cockroaches used
. and drop oft. They do not like old leaves now. Keep them
yeys later, he joined Triangle
direct sun. but ao best in a watered well during the hot to be available only in-4he nq hpflH m n t r n l l p r . .
.
^kitchenT*Now, "iir many* homes
s a v m g ^ u e
winaow th a rsr tsrightr“Wl5err
days.
■ t o avid outdoorsman and
they’re attracted to water in
leaves get smaller and smaller,
Q.UEST10N BOX
^ r t s m M , McNee is also acBOIS& fUPl)— B e c a u ie l^ — ortkinotsplU. it’s a sign that - q u e STIo N O f'tM E WEEK: air conditioriers,--humidifiers; tive in
community
and
,
...
„
vators in the new State Office there’s not enough Ught tor Oie x.F. of Twin Falls: “Two years and even the moisture in those
.. _ ---MSKSSOmiTMmrAT
.organ^Uons. He
Buildinc are receiving less than , plants.
non we out in some Japanese n o t^ iu itj^ p^ty^ l^er cans, says and his wife.
Patti, have two
Shopping C T it« a .in Twin
a p p o in t s
m anager
E le v a to r
ance contract.
outer petal jusl sians w unioia.
Robert Lenaghen, acting di- Use a sharp knife and cut to
; -irector of administir^ive^ serv- leave two“ five or more leaHfit"
i^',~ f*id Friday
re^~ leaver <m
p Ja« belb# ffie
—
—
but 1 think il should US' IMt 6fl.
Am I right?”
afraid. your husband—is—
ri^{--Soof,eryouTl
BHve-tfft rini ' ti Hj yews, er ttiey
C o i h in o o t h « b o o m in g p o p u lo tion g r o w t h w it h a (« K C * iif u l b u t -
FOR
-ownlo o mod»c»<, m --
are the foodmakers. Next, place fyfyy ynnr than_to let them—
- rose immedUtely in g ^ w into a Jtmgl* and then
theOtisEtevatorCo.. Salt Lake
Qty.
•
~ deep, wamnrater. covering the hack th e m ^ c k . If. you want to .
m^benn o'fOi^Jclfy^growlKjp
t,enaghen said the state ‘will . lower two4hirds of the stem, shear the sprea<Am into a
now pay. $3H-81 per month on Remove
leaves bwn the compact form, take a
of
•m aKe i;Up|)crs awl ahjatf-ofrttw---- w ntwc«1t!....trtiM i ' runs—
riEe_________
throagO une 30,1970.
rot under water. Qnffltlon or furry' growthl U yuii like the—
i
I
iqow unj Umu^K
rate for mosf~everyone''
M i A a S t a t e A ir t M M iU f e A s M c f a illa a
424 Main North
TWIN FALLS
' 733-0636
-...................................................................................
.j r h e . T r e n d ^ S tO - th e ‘ H i H M m o c ’
A'nlron* nylon)
Citing ih o p p ir t g c o m p lv x . 6 * {o m «
s y t U m o f h l g h - q u n l h y . C H lL O f t E K '^ . .
■f e » « n
bvying di»covntt oi> top
bnsAd*' cIotKiftg. Inveitmcnt reqvircd. for full informotion ot no
obligotion, wnte; S«tt» 4>7-420
S*<uril»«» Building, Billmgi. Moo♦of>o, 59101
5?_1Q1. or coll 1•406-252••CTTr f e a ' y o u .
iU « v . p u l l o w by, t he popuiorm o c tr lu r« *o « I< :^ F ^ (% W o tie d r 8on-lon» k n itT ^ lit in 100% “ '
Mathlrte washable and dr^dble. Sm tfie
'HwntmocLhy__Txend
ift'-o
range of fott—
vHod«s.
0
* IH iP o a r« R ^ . T .M .
T H C T H r 'IS T O H i:'
f.____ ' I f
. J...,.,,
‘
Sta te P u rc h a s in g Agent
P u b lis h : Ju n e n , 13 & U , 1971.
VV.
i ... r '
S u n d a y, J u n e 13, 1971
•rim es N e ’w * , T w in F a l l i , Id a h o
1? ' -
, *ppi
By United Press Interiiatloqal
When she had lived in the
. ,------- gaindaMdiatrUly caUedher J«hite JB qum^
only a. fe.BL-
the “^toward Hughes gf the months she signed Qn„a3-a
WhlterHeuse”Tjecause like the summer “reader” for the
~ z :. m ujtin^pnaire buslnessnuui Urban Service Corps. a-Vi
she o^faiid~drd-go where-she^~tegrservice~giu up which-w>rka
— — -Wanted.and alnmsr never m th Waahlhfitairi-a jpubUc^school
announced her plans.
children and helps those wlw
Dui-ing her 214 ye^s in' the ‘ need special tutoring or trainWhite House, “^ e Presiderit’s ing.
----- elder—daughter^guarded—her---In-the-fall-she-resumed-her
----- privaey-cIo3ely7-and^even”kept^ work;-tutorinL
secret for two y e ^ her inner city elementary school
—
engagement to EdwaifcFinch—three tim(»__ a . week. No
Cox.
reporter ever was allowed- to
Tricia Nixon is a petite, blue­ accompanv her. This was part
eyed blonde, pretty and with of Tricia’s private life.
flawless skin. She weighs 98
She also performed duties of
pounds and fits comfortahly
stat^. She was her'father's
into a size 3 or 4 dress.
representative to the honorary
She virtually teethed on
board of the U.S.' Capit{)l
politics. She was bom Feb. 21,
Hiatcrjcal Society, and she
" jM 6 r a t“Whttttdrreaiir,Tiine represented him again in
days after her father anr
England in 1969 for the
nounced his candidacy for
investiture of the prince of
election— to-^-Congress.— She— Wal^SfiFs«^ves~bnThTboara~
attended schools in Washington
of trustees of the Kennedy
and Los Angeles, and the
Center for the Performing Arts.
Chapin School. of New York
Much as Tricia loves orivacv.
where .sheL met
j n e L her hu.sband-toshe loves her father 'more.
be at a Christmas dance.
Tricia was graduated from When Nixon asked her and her
Finch College, New York, in younger sister. Julie Eisenhow­
1968, the year her father was er, to help in his 1968
f l w t a PresidenirHw~polllicar campatgnr~she” dia
philosophy is somewhat to the enthusiasm.
But now the most important
right of Nixon's and considera­
bly more, conservative than person in her life is the young
man she will' marry Saturday,
Cox’s.
Like her mother, Tricia who she has described as ‘‘my
believes in volunteer service. one and only love.”
A L L e O tC T R S r
ALL T YPES!
A L^ READY
J D O X ;a !
P L U S R O L L E N D S A T G R E A T S A V IN G S
“
C O lV IP L E r E W l I H ---
BUNKETTE MATTRESSES
B O X S P R IN G S
AND
MATTRESS
S P E C IA L S !
A I K COTVDTTrOTNfER
-SA -¥E -
GE Fashlonette
Model AGKE105AA
5000 BTU/Hr.
'tr&>(AN'*"Molcied Gase=»Never™“
Rusts
Easy Mount Installatiop
Quiet "Mini-Rotor Compressor
Low Cost, n b volt current
^
■ WASHINGTON (UPI) -One
‘‘Princess Alic-e, President
White House bride almost was Theodore Roosevelt’s madcap
left waiting atTIicalfaE^
daughter, and House Speaker
moon by escaping with her more than 700 wedding presents
bridegrobm through a White for their marriage Feb. 17,
-House-window;------------- 190(>,“ They-were-deteFmined-toIn all, 15 young women have enjoy their honeymoon in
chosen the White House as the—priyacy, and-accomplished-thisplace to speak their marriage Jjy making their escape through
vows. Tricia Nixon will b& the
White House window,
eighth daughter of a President
’Two of' President Woodrow
to l>e married there, and the Wilson’s daughters were mar­
first to choose the Hose Garden ried in the White House. Jessie
as the site. She will marry Wilson,
_____________________________
whose wedding presents
-Edward-FincH-Cox-JftBKHS;---- InelBdsainvgTjusnels ot bermuMaria Hester Monroe was the da onions, some potatoes and a
first daughter to be married in coal scuttle, married New York
the White House, March 9, 1820. attorney Francis B. Sayre, on
It wasn’t a lavish affair. Nov. 25. 1913. On the night
President James Monroe spent before the ceremony her sister.
only $100, mostly for candles, to Eleanor, sat up ___
aUnost until
-decorat»-th8-AVhite-HouBe-for--dawirTcniaklnOea^ieces~{o”
Maria’s marriage to Samuel be worn by the bridesmaids.
. The headdresses that had
Gouverneur.
Elizabeth, daughter of Pres­ been purchased from a shop
ident John Tyler, was wed to "were complete and hideous
William N, Waller, ‘‘a Virginia failures,” Eleanor explained.
scraps
of
information
are passed muster, but the bride
__ ayaila.ble _o^_ut th e _ w ^ d in £ jO m ost was^
H in g
when President Johnson's
3a"ughter, Lynda Bird, was
married in the E^ast Room to
Marine Capt. Charles S. Robb.
C o u p le
tn n ^
p ln r y
Qpp
9
fall and slender, clean cut. Cox
P IE C E
C T T
^ Jt B E D R O O M
• S e lf A d ju s t in g
I n n e r L id
$
• A d ju s ta b le T e m p e r a tu r e C o n tro l
• F its in S m a l l P l a c e
1
~AS.
95
o
2
9
^
M E D IT E R R A N E A N
o
CONTEM PORARY
© S P A N I S H — --o M ODERN
ALL AT R E D U C E D PRICES!-
SHREO COMPONENTS
-I
y
•
o .SOLID STAH
.SIIRUIII StK
o r t WATTS PHkm!il(
TBwrr-—
‘----------
G .E . C O L O R -----
PORTTABLE T V
AFC.
DARI
Model
~W M 25;i1W U
. AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING CONTROL
.
.
_____
STRAmt
u;it-Spectra-8rtt&H3ictui:e4ut>e~
G E " In - L in e " p ic t u r e tu b e systenn
I 9 0 d ay c a rry in s e rv ic e
1j>fi7,
m e t a t
. By United Press International
---Edward Ftncli Ca r, Wtde~
groom of the President's
daughter, met Tricia JNixon at. a
school dance in 1963.
Together they kept the secret
of their engagement for the
first two years she lived in the
. White House, and though some
—persona were confident the
relationship was mdre than
c a si^, there was no confirmatjon from him. Or her.
Cor told one persistent
reporter he would answer
•quesUuiis if .thgy
personal... a restriction-which
Tocltca"ouf'the pjssibillty of a
^Bie-to-wedding-plans-
7T
• C o n v e n ie n t C o u n t e r H e ig K t
GrainTwa^ when he returned'tS'The W H ^
toasted as the "pet ol Hie House, the' guards had to l)e
nation.’;^ Her f a t h ^ President persuaded that Sayre was^
Ulysses STGramt, was reported indeed, invited to the cefemohy.
to have spent tlO.QQ6 fOr the-- f .jpangr Wilsnn wag-maiTl<idgown -she wore when she . Mav 7, 1914. to,.her-iathfir:a_
married AlgemoriSartoris. It secretary of the Treasury,
was an emotional ceremony. WUliam 'Gibbs McAdw. The
Even the b'ndegrsom carried a cerenjony was small and quiet
lx)uquet, with a pennant pro- because Mrs. Wilson was
daiminfT “Love,^* Btreamlnf serlousTy'EI.
from the flowers. Grant, who
The last White House wedto t)e married, went to his
tjedroorrT and wcpl after' the
couple left. She was not quite
________
IV O W !
BEDROOM SPEC IA IS!
C O M P A C T 2 1 6 lb . CH EST FR EEZ ER
sih7:F“rie^papm "D f the “time-aitaivT^eTiervous-Bridegroom—
h p lip v p H hie H a iig h tp r tivi y o u n g
each
-t'-
ROTC t)attalion commander.'
and now holds the commission
of a 2nd lieutenant in the Army
Beserves_He.will bemfticrtwo.
years active military service
when he is graduated next
year.
At Princeton, he was a
member of the Dead of
Students’ A ^dem lc Commlttee_
and^fas^ne ona select-grtrap'
accepted lly the Woodrow
Wilson School of PnbUc—a n d ^
Intemational Affairs,
AS
LOW
NYLON COVERED
SETS.
fr o m
^
A C H A IR _ T O F IT
EVERY DAD!
3 JB IG llO O M S
Couch Sc Chair
End Table* ( 2 )
Lamp* (2 )'
DINETTF.SrI with Chairs ( 4 )
Bedroom Set'
A S T Y L E TO F IT
ANY ROOM !
lOO
____
Cot met Ralph Nader,
consumers’ champion, throu^
^
taught oil “the corporation in
•moaeru aooicty^'Kader- later
^
New York Qty,
—graduateiL. from
and was during the summer of 1*8. _
Princeton
TOs wis the investigation
He «6mt a
.j e a r _ at the Vale School Qt_{rom
-A rchitecture»injM giM LW 3tl?5il
CCoxm
_domprdeJiialhreC:^Ea)Li»urs«
at Harvard Law School.
a staff writer for the New
He Served in the Army ROTC Republic magaiine. and last
wwnmtr' atudiad...Spanish in
-at -Priinetan. *‘iia' twa
Cuernavaca. Mexico.
P*!!
SO FA
SLEEP ER S
! £ “a "i S » » » “
i^
nKNH
iiK r
5 5s#S t !
! MS
FROM
i
II
I
EVERYTHING
fO R
IHt
r<0
CoM ^ bofs in v it e e n t r ie s f o r
----------
M a g ic V a lle y b a t b o y c o n t e s t
n thmiigh—FaHa.~
01vmnlft^Beer^.Eoi:dii^iAanipton-i8 crowned
Any-area -boy- wiishing^- to-and the drag appears taio heavy-,-liome^phone,-and^addreaa.^
hernme a batboy tor Uw-Maglc for amfll]ei^ boya.______ .________ entries must be In the Cowboy
Fazio said those interested management hands by June 21.
Valley Cowboys is Invited to
Fazio added the batboy'
.ahould_write^a_l)rleL.pfiraonaL
«nteF-a—batboy-contest.
Carl Fazid, co-business history telling something of his selection will be one of ttie
CTew_m e(h^cal piled.up errors and Rodeway' came up roanagBr7 Kalti'twbattK)ya~wHl -~ownbackground in baseball and—items^to be-cleared-up-prior-to
t h e ^ ^ with 10 hits.'^’Ilie defiaUve
blow- be' needed—fef—n]j—35—home
*’** the_speiiing iioitie. ganie.^ltie
after that ^ ’s . was Bowlea’ double thatplateg : g n ^ „
fn r
would like t o h« hathov. AU Cowboys open at Jaycee Park
with the
^ e ^ c^ f Y f eyerrora~anra^.1^ia& ^^-oFTian^alla^"^rilP^^toa^ttU»^«m
eiiaotLS;m-im
suiprisingiarunoutbrust in the - m iet Royal Lounge. Twin FaUs.:
Rodeway t a ' s j ^ t h
------- —la s t 1 nnlng“D M tr'second gam e;
a t - 11:15 a jn .T h e - m e e t- w ill
ag ain st D e l-a -D fiW b trtin g tw
couldn t^get anyone^ out.^ Th ey
the tying and yriim lng ru ns-w ltti
w in be assu ran ces—th a t th e lfsn trie a d jo u ld ind ude the boy'a
---------------------- T B j a t S w r ^ F l i W M e r a l o » T w l n “
c o n t in u e -.S n n d a y
u t t « r iy -f « n t * 8 t lc r -llie
e o im n lt te d
tw o o u ts ;
s u cc e ^fu l
: o n til
a
T w in ^
a
c o u p le
of
bad
Ulirdefeat^^teiui&'rat
elusion Saturday of- the _fltat
day’s action In the Twin Falls
dowpitchrsoftbalt-tnvitational
H ie two undefeated teams
will meet in the championship
semi-finals at 1 p jn . Sunday at'
THe Itarmon Park field
following two loser bracket
quarterfinal games. Action
resumes at 10 a jn . Sunday with
the Turf •Qub of Twin Falls
zJBeer
”
' _
'
c a n d id a te s
June 25.
w Ul
teim rij^4,ijgW;_cQntestJs ongn tn nil bovs 12 to
Royal Lounge.Jlclan«.^^p-t^ve-^
_______________fourth inning,
dropped Olympia Beer M . John
Root’s tri^e capped the big
Royal inning.
last year’s fourth place finisher
in state, a 12-8 set back while
Coors-First Federal used a walk
and a glaring outfield error to
-uip-defending champion Turf
:aub 11-10.
In second round action, OlyFord eliminated Grasmick 8-3
■withT’ratt’s'siirgrg'fflatirrgTfiB_ decisive run ^n the fourth
‘ although" the winners’ added ,
three in the sixth. Turf Qub
came back to eliminatej
Olympia Beer 10-3 with singles
, by Herbert, Krumm, Dale Orist,^
' w d Kurt Kinghorn sparking ^
four-run first innhig. During
that inning, Crist collided with
the Oly cathcer in a play at
hom ^ plate "aifd wound up un­
conscious and on his way to the
hospital. However, he was
released a short‘time later with
what doctors described as a
mild concussion.
The Coors-First Federal
battle with Royal Loiimge was a
S o g g y = r a ^ i
tourney
BRISTOL, England (UP!)—
Arthur Ashe and Marty Riessen
survived first and second round
..
-matches-in-the->48;000-Wills--W"
‘ tennis championships Saturday,
but three other Americans fell
as rain finally let up to perjnit
play.
Ashe, of Gum Spring, Va.,
whipped Owen Davidson, the
. Australian left hander 6-2,6-4 in
only 46 minutes in a first round
''iMTch'vOTeTlcTsMnlttVercamfe
Bob Lutz of Los Angeles, 6-2, 6-
t,i„h age is required Ijecause
---- Ithe
high
boys-will have-to-drag-the-in-^
Held just prior to each game
CALVES
GEMS
ARRIVING WEEK OF JUNE 15
games in the major leagues
last s e a s o n : California’s
Clyde Wright, O a k l a n d ’s
Vida Blue, Pittsburgh’s Dock
Ellis atid Los-Angeles’ Bill
Singer. .
YOUR IN SPECTIO N IN VITED
Phone 73 3 -1 6 6 7
llr e $ f o n e
23° Field e>Road'Bears
P ic k y o u r s iz e
T IM F O
PAY LE S S
TikeprlgDSm^TiMX mngWnmr
•t prlcM thAt e«n't be beat
0^
m
Charlie Pasarell of Santruce,
P.R. fell to South Africa’s Cliff
Drysdale 7-6, 6-3 and Dennis
E a a iE B iiE ie E B il
bowed oiif to
Emerson, 3-6, 7-6, 7-6.
Nikki Pilic of Yugoslavia,
who had eliminated Wimbledon
champion John Newcombe' on
Monday, was a surprise victim,
~(Wr6-3 oT South-Afrtca's -Bob
Maud.
HeadTng
fftfi* home
First Federal ttf ’Twin Falla defeat defending champion Turf
d a b of Twin Falls in the ilrat round of the Invitational slowpltch'
SatfiHI«of7Tlilrrbii»ecoaaiTte«tt^^
Turfs third baseman, Keith Cheney, watches the error that
proved the difference tn the 11-10 contest.
P o r s c H ^ ^ ^ i n i n a l ^
L e M a jis
^ANAHEIM-( UPt)-i^A two-outdouble by Dick fimings drove in
two runs to highlight a threerun sixth liming rally Saturday
night as the Washington Sena­
tors— edgfid- the— Califnmla
Angels, 3-2, to snap a sevengame losing streak.
WttninQlon______ C»tHofn<«_______
ab r h bi
PHILADELPHIA (UPI j- lhe
PhUadelphia Phillies took ad­
vantage of three first-ii^nlng
e n d u r a n c e
todefeat the & n EMego Padi^^^^
,Brandon.. combined for the
shutout.
Steve Arlln, who blanked the
Phillies oiv-June 2, was the
victim of tfie first inning
defensive -collapse—by - the
■
Padrcn.’Arlin'fl troublca^tartedwten te fanned Teniy, Harmon •
to
the game only to have
-cat<*CT:3oB=BaHoifi^mlS^
ball and permit Harmon to
te s t
H a r r A h 1 % 4 1 3 0 A lo m a r 2b
M a d d o x 3b 3 0 0 Oi S p e n c e r 1b
H o w a r d Ib 3 I 1 0 C o w a n r»
F e r n a n d a ! it 3 0 0 0 F re o o s I i *
M c C r a w If 0 0 0 0 C o n i a l e i i<
B ll l l n g i r f
3 1 1 3 A tle n p
C a ia n o v a
^
a t m i d p o i n t
I I98t46 I 337.38 | U .94 I
*AU prioM plot Fed. Ex. Ux and exchanfe rear per tire.
TRACTOR OWNF.RS-NOW'S THE TIME Tn RET MAXIMUM FI.OTATiniV
y i r e » t O W» rABM TiBE
T if e s f O m ^ G D n r a G M P
Hitfh floUition fronta and wa^^nUrea
with
ca|Mkdly...made with
Mduaiva FirMtona Su^H>Tu|<S>
lontf-wearins rrubter.
#o r n oi
3 ) 0 0
3 0 3 0
Mexico's Pedro Rodrigii
uez driven by West Germans Willi
n_l
LgflfcrK«iihsen=and—Retnhold—jteat- ^g*^^ 4 0 0 0 St»phgn<n
Three "loiig-talled'' p o rscil^
Briton— ^ackie-r:
R u i i ph
10 0 0
3 0 0 0 Repoi rf
3 0 0 0
an p
917s still held the lead early maintained a three-lap lead another two laps down in third . CD roi sm
0 0 0 0 A^ose« p h
0 0 0 0
enda p
over
teammates
Dickie
Attwood
spot./
_______ _ P e o * p - 0 < > -0 -0-a a frv^ c*------4--UO-0Sunday as the Le Mans-24-hour
10 0 0
L ln d b ia d p 0 0 0 0 H a s t ie r p
sports car race neared the half­ of Britain and West German
O 'B r ie n ph
1 0 1 0
But
Austria’s
HeUnut
Marko
F is h e r p
0 0 0 0
Herbert Muller,with another 917
way mark.
------------ Ifthninn If__ U lJLft.
and Gijs Van Lennep of Holland
T o ta ls
3 5 1 T o f a ll
33 a « 2
gave the German— factory- W a s h in g to n
- W O 003 OOO— J
0 » - 3
supported cars four of the top C aEltfForemslajo s i O P W a sh in g to n0001, 000
C a lifo r n ia
W a s h ln g to n 5, C a lif o r n ia 7.
aixjUacfiS JaL*flking_QfiiL Blac^. -2.7 t TL OBBl!-llT
K » .- S p g n c r r - 3 t r H a r r a h
........... * 3 4 “’
M 4 9 « ^
F.E.T. $11.89
B U Y N O W and S A V E on W ID E 7 8 S E R IE S C A R T IR E S !
^ W e s t - b .o a s t s J x m -
IS
tH-Boise ‘‘B
douBuhg aHaiW ar~»oui liig w>-B-^^JPagrea ^ Tnlant M d ^ g r ty Minn»M»i»-wfld^tiltch.-. - ------_ _ _ _ _ Bowdisn of Dartmouth.
----Bob N ^ o f N e ^ . B ^
Ridunto, of, tM tenla uA
- S tr e a
W
O a k la n d 13 H tw ^ X o fk
i
*<fid—not- “get an- Invltatioiir
ahogcd-tq3Lanyftray» gnt a
21 « ,jn M'H |p.,...tba-.uiOO.. U caui e— of— a.
3
wiihdrav^l, and woirtlie eveut
1^47.4 with California cham-'
■piUOTTnnyKriyin«iBfcnf.f»arrim
Grove second in :47J.
-H —
7t
37
.447
T D B E tE S S
'iu £ a d C
« 1 SI
<0.SQ.13)— -------« - u m ----- ----- $ 3 L B 0 -----0 78-13 flheO -M i— --------- SOiSS — ------ —
------- h9B- E 78 -1 4 17 J6-1 4
2.21
2LOO
2 3 .6 2
B7S-16 17 J5 -1 5
2.22
F78-14 7.76-14
2.38
2 2 .3 1
25.1 2
■
>
F78-16 7.75-15
07S-1 4 (8.25-14
G 7 S -IS (8.25-16
2 4 .s e
2.65
2.64
2 7 .3 7
All prieaa ptoa taxaa aikdtiro off }Tourcar
A
l . l . S IZ E S
to
w
F B K IK D
O N
T ip « « to n « T lU llS F O B f
T H n n K ■TIH ia fl.S » W « I I HHUW |MBMHIi rM IIIIP n H
a s lo w a s > ^
fo / 4 3 ”
Hw «L« w «r4S fbd. Kb. la s m4
a ssk a ac* lir a aaek} alaa C .rB * ll«
•
2 § » it a n d in g s
Smith and singles by Kirkland
ad.Icsyat^nlatsd twrfcutiMinft.in
to
TU BELES3
T . F . twice.
ntkttsrw (7). SS—Srrewd.
a
i ll! ^ (replaces)
m a r k set
Sox halt
O rio le s’
win skein
^
r E f f i f f S R S W S I Z S S ^ I a c k or W h ite
football game June
Plunkett Is the , 1971 Heisman Swtzerland pulled Kto^the pits
Tiutiiy wijuier and the fU^i
-tamwiiwy
ner to play in the coaches
M a so n 3b
1 0 0 0 B ra n d o n p
Ughtfood of Plalnview^ Texas
B a rto n c
3 ao 0
game since 1967. Hixson holds bers and replace the fan.
A r lln p
3000
The stop dropped him from set a national high school
B ra v o ph
10 0 0
four NCAA passing r ^ r d s .
second to 11th spot, from where record of : 13.4" in the 120 yard
Je s t a d t 3b
0000
Receivers for the Plunkettn e f 0 T o ta ls
3« ] 4 3
T o ta ls
he began working his way up _
U nD U »o
OOP PQC eo fr- Q
-Hiisoa—
tosses—
wiU—
be—
noW nnBW pR Ta
300 000 0 0 * - 3
of Detroit won both the 100 and
problem. The west boasts Ernie
Held.
E --L e e O ?
P h lla d clp M a ] L O B ~ S a n
D iego 7. PhM ad»iph~a 4
-^JXheBoise “B" team swept a Jennlng of the Air
The record pace on the dry 220 yard dashes Saturday to
' T B - 'C a m B T c . L e « 'S B ' -C a fn p B «T r Bowa'
highlight a 15 event All .
doubleheader from the Twin
ip h r ar bb so
i 3 i Falls “ B"club Saturday, taking Chuck Dicus of Arkan.*ASy (5tto 8.3 mile trprk pmvpfi tnn
V- Afilfli-XJ_____
Ke lle y
\ 0 ^-0'-0 0 1
Stone of Iowa Siate, J. t t Hill of a strain on 15 of the « American High School“ Track~“
—
______
; 1 0 0•3 the first game 2-1 in eight in­
of Arizona State and Pluftkett’s starters. Among the cars Championship.
B rando K f llc y
1 0 0 0 0 1
Lightfoot, who had equalled
BurvMng W 4 I
7 1 0 0 0 3
nings and the second 7-3.
own Stanford teammate Bob sidelined by mechanical failure
B ra n d on
3 l 0*0 1 3
the previous record of : 13.5 six
TTie teams meet in another M o o r ^
H B P - B y B u rw irH ] I S p e ijio l W P Arlln
was
the
Sunoco-Ferrari
of
Mark
P B — BarUyn ~r
A - ir.C 3 t
times this year and who once^
twin bill Sunday at Jaycee
TTthe air attack is groui.d^. Donihli^.-oTMedia. Pa., and
Park, the fimt one oi<<-ning nt 11
I an a wind aided .13.4, said he
Devaiiey i;an count-CB me David Hobbs of Britain \rtil<*
a jn .
footwork of two top running Saturday evening worked its ran his “t>est ever" race
, The first game was the backs -Nebraska’s Joe Orduna „ay up briefly into second spot, Saturday, and iielieved the hard
track helped him.
tightest. Twin Falls took the who Devaney is used to counting
The old record was held by
lead in the fourth when Jim heavily upon and Leon Bums of
4
Bill Tipton of Michigan and
Hopkins lived on an error, Long Beach (Calif.) State.
Richmond Flowers of Alabama.
moved up when Gary Irish
The «ast, under the direction
Lightfoot said he would-next
walked and came around on of Louisiana State Coach
“ atKInrtftFXTfiiversity of l^xas.
ground dills.
Charley McClendon, will have
B y U n ite d P r a t t in ta rn a tio n a l
Dill, a football halfback who
Boise tied it in the sixth when the quai-terbacking of Ala­ t,
East
W t pet Ob plans to attend Southern
Ba l t im o r e ( u p d - Rick Smith was hit by a pitch, moved
P lt n b o r o h
37 33 ,i1 7 —
Reichardt drove in five runs up on a walk and scored on an bama's Scott Hunter, LSU’s N e w Y o r k
32 33 S I3
Vi
California, was clocked at :09.4
Buddy Lee ajid Ohio, State’s
L o u is
3S 16 .574
7 'i
wjth a twcwun homer in the error. '
79 y> tr) r-7 for the 100, a tenth of a second
Rex Kerri. Kern is expected to,
J
34
19
iS
3
»
’
■
»
sixth inning and a bases-fiUed
slower than the record, and
■Hie decisive run in the eighth
P h ila d e lp h ia . ..
. 2 y .2A . jKU
double in the seventh Satui^y came when Kendall opened with , also see defensive, duty---W ast
:20.i in th^ 2id rompared lb the
___-Tn<. Profit of Northeast
-night-as'the-Qiicago-Wliite Sox a single. He was fo rc ^ by
record of :20.2,
40 33 us
a n F r a n c is c o
Louisiana heads the .^ast SL«is
33 31 .S33 7
A n g a le s '
halted
Dave Merrick, of New Lenox,
. . th&
. Baltinuce
. . . . Orioles' Douglas but a walk, another hit running threat. Other backs H o u sto
n
30 M .500 V
~xn»mr“
7 » 34 .457 1 7 - . lU.^ r a t ^ the class of the hlgb~
! ^ 7 f ^ ^ ± " ™ “*‘™ ^ ^ ^ 6 v e r i h r o w - a t thiW
"iiuaikte JLrti“Bfaxton of
ci«.™,.n
34 i S .407
with a 7-3 triumph.
•■
thelame.
school distance nmnersrwaa
30 40 .333 I t
V ir ^ ,
Mickey p>fko' of
hard pressed to win the two mile
^ I s e Jumped ahead 3-0 In the -Aubum and-Jim .Llvesay. Of Safi Franciico s Naw.torn
ln ^ 5 5 ;0 , finishing about 15'
siroud cl s 0 I 0 Buforo II s 0 3 I sccond inning of the nightcap Rlchniond. Receivers a re . ................................... - ............ 3- InlsM)
A K I r « M 3 6 4 1 I 0 B l* ir c l
5 0 10
_________
___
___ 1
A _
_yarda. jUiead-of-Tian^Haltr?^:
IB
5 1 J 0 BRoomin 30s 0 1 1 . When Douglas and Ames. Duke’& Wes Cbeason. M
' i d l i - P D H adatphia 3 S a n O ic o o 0 ( n io h t)
MJlliin V,___i T 1 n
rt <H I n__
•Woraga, CnHfe7^ n e d la 1>;OO.S.~
Houston 3 . A tla n ta 7 (n ig h t )
tf 3 1 7 S John son
4 I 3 0
But Hale never was more than
iO h n iT D M r f 3 1 0 4 P o w ctl lb
3 0 0 0
Douglas. Ames then stAle boine .3 ^ ^ 's John Tanntf and .
•S t «
A r a a r lc a a Lm
C « a A < - - • 4 I I > E lc ft a b r rn < 4 0 0 0
7 “ t o w y a r d s behbst^he wliiner• y W irttW frm % ♦•♦araaitoaal
-- Alvarado.a*.Vl.J3a-0^1ano«r-ii-2..1-0 0 and was safe when the catcha* jMt's^Johh Audrews.;
__________Rait
W ood p
4 0 -0 -» T > o o w n p
. — ^^lit-fee-final 50 yardsr
W I
. 0 0 0 *o .-« ,p r s s j j a r o p p e d t e e m i n ^
Rom o 0
Five playing for the east,
15 70
held the head briefly with, 220
-----janotwrp—ffTnTB came in on a passed bfifll.
. 32 25 J * l
Boston
-lilt
T>in Falla got two
in the including one offensive and four De troit
37 74 ^ 7
4«^ yards to go.
37-^
v a ta n « -*WAn ' uninvited conteatant.
®"> ® - fotarth when CharUe Brown defensive men -are- linem to CU»«am
Yoffc^
15V»
Frank B m y of LOS~Arigrfes,
singled andf
and Jim Hopkins HJHir
_tUMt ltl~> ( k n ih i e d b e f o ^ B ^ &tbr. In StUlwagan of OWo State, Davr
w I pet §b who was on the prelfminary list
U J d e m s t if t -L O B — C N C W
JO M l ftaffimor* 10.
tbe eOi. KIcTSprtfp Ued it by Roller-. 0{ _|C«tiKkj^ , mck
of-potentiiW ruftD«»,-tHit-who—
30 n
a
4 0 ) 0 P la n 3b
4 0 t 0 F r a * d rf
4 0 3 0 B o w a ss
T t r a a f o « »
Belgian Hughes de Fierland and
Briton Alain de Cadenet.
■“’niree^T-U'^-sevSn-ft
Nebraska dropp^ out. with mechanical
trouble within eight hours of
T)Ul P»i'w jierto»r‘n
nth
C a m p b ll. 3b 3 0 1 0 M c C a r v e r c 3 1 0 0
,S ta h l ph
1 0 0 0 AAontanei c f j) 1 1 I
B ro w n rf
L » « If
_
ii.n x iiM E n E i M » M i r w
P tiils use
3.0, as Jim Bunning and Darrell
-
.............
MARKCOOMBS
fa r fn Tire Specialist ! /
f f o r o ll y o B ir f a r m
n « « < ls
c a ll M
a r k
t i r *
a
t . . .
a q a tiq M d f o r
ow-THE-awyt
•e r v io e ^ f
p r e s e r v ic e .
Ji-tlfirF a ra L
h - tlB s F ie M i-^ if n
9 9
m'mmm
W M L US"
( Iw r t phoqa no.1
lE n f f lO J U O K W l
B R M IM
^
4r3 3 >s a i -1
BEQ.A1
.—when and whM?e
yen need ill
try,,ml
---• _
• •
'■ ■
::
. ■
Sunday, June 13, 1971
Times-Newsi Twin Falls, Idaho 21
fa m
K
a t h
y
W
h
i t e
o
r t h
F in a iT T t a i n s
uajrr-, ,^ _ _ io _ _ io u pounds since wore cotton pants for the first KU nllTijn
73 M 7 4-3 tA
Bob Lunn held onto his one-shpt Christinas, iimk a four-foot putt"^ time in ihree weeks;“ -he“saidi— Biiryr«tr
71 70 74
1 after for hia first Urdifi ^ f thpHnynn
hrcn \
Y?aVinff knit nlnckn t****
7 J 72 I 1 - :
rounds of the S150.000 the |^r~5 aB-yard ninth'hole~ for—ahmit -fiiree :Wl»lei—but
77-7 37 1-2 14
Rh»ao jr .
Kemper Open Satitfday ylth a and made the turn 10under,
yesterday I change tFcottbn Mogh Roytr
74 W - 7 3 - 2 1 *
>2 71 73—2 U
C « « r ,S*f\udd ~
imei^Lnder^jjarj-TWor ■
a =54Jiole==Iamnr;3
CunttrSlfforir^
- fio b - .S m lt tT —
■total o^^lO■unde^pi^ 206. toiriAngelM^^
parred-the c ^ d n ^ swlng^”
.
0
«v«^Stocklofv—
,..j.U Q .T\-,2U
Lunn1)lrdledthe 9th and.Hth
next four holes and/added
ArT wan
73 71 73— 214
Bradlty Anderioi^
72 74 7 1 - 2 1 T
holes, against a single bogey,
another birdie with an eightJe rry Barrier
75 49 7 3 - 2 1 7
4»6k^71-204 D*y« Elchslbenjer— * -72-71.74—
217but he dropped out of the lead
foot putt on
U and brlfeffl
■
- Bob C.
-7>4W
. . . -317—
temporarily oiTthe front nine went l l ’under. He bogeyedThe
phvw
49 74 7 4 - 2 1 7
'Wtan—TtT—
it ™
when Douglass njade a <^rge. I6th, when he missed the green tSI^^wJu'kopi
71 73 7 3 - 2 1 7
j;
Jofin j*coM
Douglass, the 1969 Kemper
and two^utted.
73 73 7 1 - 2 1 7
73 70 *7 — 2(W
A l M e n a c rt
73 73 7 2 - 2 1 1
Open-ehampr-moved-out-in--- ^The-course-played-longer-Muitt^^j
--- 7j,70^4—3 iy _
74 72 7 2 - 2 H
front with a pair of birdies on tpday,” he said. “It was a little l!5l(»“R^iph
49 77 7 3 - 2 1 1
the front nine while Lunn was
hazy and hard to see and
73 7 3 7 2 - 2 1 1
73 72 73— 218
Jl / l i t sl ! T.rrT'wMlcox
shootihg par ■golf. But he to Judge the distances —that Bruo crsmpion
74 71 74 -219
74
71 7 5 - 2 2 0
faltered and bogeyed three was one of the troubles.” o«rS.'A?Sir
o „ Flo 'd
71 7 3 7 ^ - 2 2 0
M a r s h a ll
75 71 74— 220
times coming in to also wind up
Umn said he had a lot of
7 4 7 1 7 5 -2 2 0
with a 71 aritfX207.
birdie chances, ‘‘but I just
Hi»»ev
Lee Trevino, making a
couldn’t make any. They Just
L a rry Wood
727 3 7 5-2 2 0
74 70 a - 2 1 3
Oen« P trre ll
7373 75-2 21
determined bid to overhaul the
didn’t fall In, but I felt like I
M 73 7 1 - 2 U
Tom 3
fotTTonntt
,
very wet
Oan'
S
lK
n
'
-7 2 7 3 M -2 1 3 7*4737»— ^24
Marti
for the day, for a 208. Also In at
Douglass, who had nine Kermlt Zarley
72 71 7 0 - 2 1 3
L a rry While
737 3 7 9-2 2 5
72 -7 3 4 » — 214
208 were Gary Player, who shot birdies against two bogeys for a Bud AIKn
Bert Weaver
74 47 e i - 2 2 7
Julius Boros
72 71 7 1 - 2 1 4
t > W lll W e a v ff
74.73 S1— 227
a 69, and first round leader record-tying 65 Friday, said he Ron Cerrudo
74 6 7 7 3 - 2 1 -1
“
"
’■
T
-:
Howeil Fraser
71 71 7 2 - 5 1 4
Tom Welskopf, who offset a was disappointed with his Lou
Graham
■ 7 * (7 0 ':M ~ 2 T 4 ■
Lionel Heber
71 7 2 1 7 1 - 2 1 4
bad beginning with a four-birdle putting game.
Dick Loti
72 71 X rT = T IT *
rally for a 70,
;
“I-three-putted twice today Bob Rjo&bur
7 1-744»— 214
CUSTOM STEAM
37171-2
Geerge J ohnaon-alflo. strldod and once yesterday. It was sort -S,'ivKf^
jrie s Coody
---- CliANING—
J f f r y M cGee
71 72 72-215
into contention with a 67, of a blah dayj ” he said.
Sam Snead
7271 72-215
joining Arnold Palmer, with a
“ I thoughH'would'be aUe to Phil Rodo»ri“
7r6973-7ir“•"mUCKrtlRAHERS---747270-216
68, at 209. MlUer Barber, Rod get something going M d do Ralph Baker
• ROID&FARMEQUIP.
Funseth and Mason Rudolph some good, but I wasn't able to.
• DAIRYBARNS
GARDEN SEEDS ARE NOT
were In' at 210.
I Just kept faltering.”
• OntkelobLocation
A5I0EUNEBUIARE_____
__ While. PQuglass—waa„ busy. - Trevino said he-changed his ____
HANDLED YEAR AROUNOM
picking up two birdies, Lunn trousers before he came back
steadily canned pars on the Saturday —and that changed
F & M Mobile Wash
first eight holes. The 26-year- his game as well.
- 'Twin F a lM d ah o "
old, slimmeddown Sacramento,
“ I finally figured the reason I
734-3694 • 324-2252
TWIN FAIXS, IDAHO
Calif., pro, who reduced from had a bad round Friday was I
Idaho’s new oatdoor football itadlnm In preparation for the
university’s first game Sept. U against Boise State College. In
addition to 18,000 bencMype seats on a concrete foundation, a
nninlmal amount of snpport facilities such as rest rooms, a press
box, and concession stands will be constructed prior to the first
eamej Althou)gi next fall’s eimies wlU be play^d on the existing
grass tiuf, Diversity officials said they pU^i'to add artificial
turf latef and cover the stadium._________ _______ _______
N ew Id a h o fie ld
m
-mm-
s e i z e s
G LO BE
t h
i r d
- r o
u
n
d
L
P
G
A
l e a d
SUTTON, Mass. (UPI)— fourth .with Miss Austin.
tournament sponsored by Eve months off the t^ur, exploded
Pressure-wise veteran Kathy
Another veteran of the LPGA cigarettes and officials predict- for a nine on the par four 17th
.
Whitworth, hunting hier' third tour, Sandfg"Haynle, liuU a 71— ed. a latgei
xrowd• for-Si
foi-Sunday's Saturday, a hole she acorcd
strai^t victory, shot a smooth in the third round for a three scheduled final round despite a 10 on in 1,966. The ^ disaster
-----three.under-par-70-Saturday—
................
‘
......................
' ’ ■
‘
'
cent chance of showers.
par 78 in the round and a 225 '
to take over the third round place.
The veteran Mickoj~Wright, total ' that -plunged her 11 '
lead in the $55,000 XPGA
A gallery of 11,447 followed
the proettes Saturday In the attempttng a comeback after 11 strokes behind all-time tour
championship.
money winning leader Whit. The 31-year-old Miss Whit'___________________^
^
___________ '
worth.
-wnrthj -a. Tftian-.iyhn wnn the ,
Sandra Post Elliott, the 1968
LPGA c r o ^ in 1967, snatched
1 1
LPGA champ, had a 75 and
the 54-hole lead from young i
I I
I
dropped into a sixth place tie
— Kathy-Ahern-witha-three-round— \- i C a. I M-t .^ I I C . l .
—J J l —
— i_
th local , favorite Janie
total of 214, throe strfakes'up on
Blalock at 221.
Blfl'ock of—1
Miss Ahern who had shared the
— PortsmoutlrrNdHr^at’^ ^ ”*"— |
^ r s t roundlead.
the third round.
Miss Ahem, a 22-year-old
Miss Whitworth was even par
Phoanix, Anz. resident, shot a
CARACAS, ( UPI )7-Canonero Bunker Hunt, owner of Pre- on the front nine Saturday with
73 at sun drenched Pleasant n , the Venezuelan-bred winner terldre. Canonero II's fat‘ ..
one six-foot putt for a birdie
Valley Country Club to take of the Kentucky Derby and
The sale of Canonei u II was
over the second spot goinR into Prenkness. was sold Saturday ■conditioned to the iact that and one m is s ^ five footer for a
Sunday’s schedul^ final round. for $1.5 muiion, owner fedro ■TOptlKla will have the-hoiw bogey^. She explained that the
pres
Debbie Austin, the freckled^ Baptlsta revealed.
four times a year for breeding -wben.^
~tgced7'appte^ieeked-glri~from- Baptista told reporters thaF with Venezuelan mares.
10th hole.
Oneida, N.Y., who had sported the 3-year old Kentucky-bom
“The horse will probably run
“I felt like I was going to pull
a three-stroke edge at the horse has been sold to a trust three or four times t)efore his
midway mark, bogled five of integrated by the King flanch use for permanent breeding” , my hair,” she said. “I was in a
bad frame of mind, I had
the first seven holes on the of ■New York and Nelson he added.
concentration. After the
back nine Saturday for a slxEarly__________ _
itingJhe pressure
~gver-i)Ui-79 and a 54-hole totalthat the King R ^ c h had made
and it siertcd
release.
of 220 that left her tied for
an advnnre_of , SIOO.OOO to
fourth place, six strokes o l F
Miss Whitworth’s pace. Judy
^^S^e'Tus? w L"°w ^tK
Rankin—who-hadj2r-was-Jn_
t o U T S T r & y iir d i^ a t e
Q U IT T IN G B U S IN E S S S A L E
l A
C
I
i N
’ C
FURNITURE - APPLIANCES
902 Main St.
Buhl, Idaho
Cubs grab
5 -2 -M ^ n
B rew ers
-the-Bdmont-Stakes-last'weekly
Canonero finish^ fourth Ur the
-Belmont:------------ ----
from Rp?t^
r H T r ' A n n ( I T P T )—tfp n H n it? - ,
X a n o n e r p J L - w l l L a r t i v e h e re _ , —
•Stmda y nlglit' ir
f rom -Neir
Baptists
ista said ......
that " I.........
will
the seventh Inning Saturday but
relief ace Ron Tompkins shut have
-------one'or two colts ready for j p L n m
~TH3fr!r“tittr*TOT
loss spell
third
■^'‘^ lE V E C A N D --- fUPft-Daj?— thedoor-againat^ndnnati and
i
t h ,
next year-s-participation-ln-the
TTipl r TTcwn—TscesMay drove m inree runs and tne cnicago' CUBS PSa^' W
-Vnitecl‘ tajui wi aiuuiui' uini I intiivei"agy ■HReds-.-S^i:—“
Holtzman had given up jusf same procedure as it has been
Morris picked up his first
gph^T»r1ny one hit, a scratch single in the done with Canonero. I think
.clcuiiy u l-theDETROIT (UPI)-Slngles by
imlhga—tralrifer-juail-AHdft-aiKl jooltay
as the RniwauKee Brewers
■Cfesar 'I'ovar, W5 fOUTlIl Uf Hie
snapped an eight-game losing before Johnny Bench rifled his Gustav Avila will be combining
streak by defeating Uie Cleveland-Indians, 4-2.
» '« > » 'P .,., t , A n,.,lc.„
a ch " ,
Gedrge Foster said.
May, who had driven in 11 doubled and Tledrge
Inning Saturday and
runs this season, lined the first walked, ' Tompkins replaced
brought the Minnesota Twins
of his foi^- singles to right field Holtzman. Hal McRae singled
out of a four-game losing strfiidc
with the bases loaded In the to ^ o r t r ig h ^ ^ M _ th e base^
-with a-5-4^win ovei^ the Detroit— |
second Inning to give Milwauk­ but Tompkins rHired~~piiichTigers.
_
. ......... _
“
ee a 2-1 lead and'singled home hitters Ty Cline and Al Ferrara ■
Mickey Lolich carried a 4-3
Tommy Harper, who led off to end the threat.
lead into the ninth and retired
with a double in the fifth. May C in c in n a t i a b r h b l C h ic i^ o « b r h b i
the first two batters before
Ro%«
r
f
4
0
1
0
K
r
»
t
in
g
«
r
%
%
4
2
7
I
took second on a sacrifice and
---- —
scared^ on ~TVonk' TpppdineCSA.n 1 Willi.i>
_____ a
} 0*0
»0 '0
single to left on a 3-2 pitch and
B e n ch c
3 1 3 1 Santo it}
J I I 7
single.
P e r a i 3b
3 0 1 1 Pepltone lb 4 T J 0
■ Steve Braun walKed.--------C l« v a la n d
M ilw a u k M
ab
H a rp e r 3b
3
AAay cl
5
B riO Q i H
4
V o ti n
5
T » p * d in o lb 3
Kufclah H ,------ 3
Roo« c
3
A u a rb a c h i s 3
S U to n p
7
M o r r is p
7
r h bl
a b r h bl
1 1 0 N e ttle s 3b
3 0 10
1 4 3 P in s o n c t
1 0 1 0
0 1 0 R F o tfe r r l
3 110
0 0 0 Pe^te e
3 0 10
0 1 I C h a m b ls t ) b 4 0 1 1
» 0 « Oeket €«----------3 - 0 - 0 - ^
1 0 0 U h la e fK lM ' 114 0 0 0
1 1 0 L e o n s s 1b 4 0 0 0
0 0 0 H e id e m n n i s 3 0 0 0
0 0 0 H a rx ] p
10 0 0
M in o o rl p
0 0 0 Q.
H a r r e lt n ph 1 1 I 1
■ C o lb e rt p
0 0 0 0
F o r d p^i
10 0 0
H e n n ig a n p 0 0 0 0
u « t 4 T o ta l!
> 12 4 3
07* 6 0 « ~ 4.
To ta ls
M ilw a uk e e
C levaiand
E H e id c m a o n O P M ilw a u k e e 3. C ie v e
la n d 2. L O B M ilw a u k e e 9 . C le v e la r K J 5.
i®«0)0»»~ a
-- 78'Cn»mBIT«7
S Briooj. KvblAk.
l a 1i r a r b b sd
S la to n
^
4 V I * 3 3 .3 . 0
M o rrit W l O
‘
4 t J 0 0 0 0 3
H a n d L _ Q 3 _ -------------------------------- S i 3
,
P o tte r c f
3 0
M c R a e If
3 0
C oncepcn s s 3 0
C tin e ph
1 0
W o o d w rd v s 1 0
M C G Io th lo p i 0
S te w a rt p n
10
AAe t r I t t p
0 0
0 0
10
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
H iC k m a n r f
D a v is cl
D B re e d e n c f
H o it im a n p
T o m p k in s p
3
4
3
3
0
T .3 - 3 t
A 11.3*3
0
3
0
I
0
0
1
0
1
0
NEW YORK (UPI)-Home
runs by Dick Dietz and Bobby replaced Lollch.
Bonds keyed a three-run eighth
g a m e ^te a d of
inning rally Saturday that » K ^am e wlnng,^w ^^ y i e l ^
"i^rara pr> TTTinP
C a r r o ll p
0 0 0 0
B ra d fo rd p h 1 0 0 0
T o ta ls
» 3 « 3 T o ta ls
7f S 9 S
C in c lM v a ti
too ooe 110-3
C h ic a g o
1 ftl3 1 « M « S
E B e n c h D P C in c in n a t i 3 L O B C in c in rvati 7. C h ic a g o 5
3B'Ke% s>r>ger, D a v i t , P r r e i , M a y H R .
K e s s in g e r ( 1 ) , H o llim a n (1 ). S a n to (1 3 ).
S B e c ^ frt S F P e r n SB
B ench f ) 4 )
Santo
ip U r e r bb s «
AAcG tothhrr L 3 4
5 7 5 5 3 1
r i t t _______. - ...........................- , 1 - l . a 0 0 0
C a r r o ll
3 0 0 0 3 0
M o *trm * n W 5-^
4 1 - 3 3 1 1 3 4
T o m p k im
3 3.1 3 1 U 1 3
5 * v e T o m p k irv % '(3 )
1 0 0 0 1
1 0 O C -i
0 11
3 1 0
p itc n e d to 3 b a tt a r s in
H e n n lg a n .
0
0
0
i
0
use
pow er to
freaTlVlels
i ' . t . jiiniprs
play Tuesday
^ ^ t n a 5-1 victory over the
New Y o ik Mets.
__ „
ut
a
After a 2&fliinute rain deliiy
Tom Hall won his second
at the end of the seventh game iiv relief against four
inning. Bonds led off the eighth ><»scs though ^ a g e r BW
with his nth homer of the
b r o i^ t m muchs e w w er the right^enter buffeW ace Jun P e ^ to get
field fence off reliever Ron “le final three outs of the
Taylor. T^d outs” Taler, Kai~8»m«:
^
;
!flfenderson blooped a, single to waMioia • b r h ttf D e trart
«b r k M
r i ^ t and Digtz then smacked t~.,
t 14 1
3&
3 0 0 0 K a lin * r f
S 0 10
another homer over the left Ckrew
K a il p
0 0 0 0 Jo n M 3b
3 0 0 0
R e « t « t f --------- r e r T “ l f t r w m -Jb '1 1 0 ♦ field wallr-- ------------ Kiit^brasw
0 I C C u t ia r r c z 3 b 0 0 0 ft
M aw V e m
O liv a rf
S 1 1 3 M orton N • 3 1 0 0
Sam FrifActsco
- Oondt € f
»
. S p e icr %i
4
„ M * y » id
3
M * T H > fr«ji.rt.4
Di4rtx c _____3
F w « ^ t n 3t> 4
3 2 1
0 Y 3
0 0 0
1 *
13 3
0 0 0
h u rr* * »0 » ' 1 » 3 0 0 8
B o tw e ii 3b 3 i n r D
S*f»9»»ton r< 0 0 0 0
S h a m ifc v If
Ciandertn i d
A t p ro m A t
L a n ie r 3t>
3 1 1 0 6rt>te
G*fof9 cc
Retoeroer
R e < >«ro«r p 7 0 0 0 HH#^hhnn ccf
3 110
1 00 0
^a \a Aiara*iMvt ja3 0 0 1
A ly e a 11
HOTTtT
3 0 0 0 S A tn lry
-0 O O
# r « e h « o -c
4 D 3 1
4
T l » c n i « U u - o 4 0 1 0 & ct>erm *n ^ 0 0 0 0
T N t m p u i 3e> 4 1 1 0 G B ro w m pft 1 ft 0 0
W illia m * p K 1 0 0 0
---------4^'
-..
' tlie annual
r O * ft
3 0 3 0
P e rra n o tk p 0 0 0 Q
-rlinif;-9i>lt toumaroent
•»0 O
McJAetet p I g «
"sta n te d t^ d a y
a O.OJ’
_
___
_____________
.
M
c
G
r
«
---- -out by rain Friday, wHL.be
»» S
i ? «• »}*
T»tt«
»!»• »
TM M *
Preftcktco OdOO«tt»— 5
A "a c 6 td iT a r^e i> BTittngrit played Tuc9d«y. reports Muny 225&1«n
4
^ YerV*'—
^ -ftMtuJM . T
o r Mn Fr'KhCfie
will be played Sunday
a- Mem 7
TT the ~Twlii F»B»^ municipal
• R irrw w i f i o . r r — h » n t S ) 0 « « v i W ,
—rjxjux
Omj
■ CMTOme* ( 7j .
.
^— '
3B s n e m a v
course, reports professional tee-ofi at S ajn.; J l- p a ^ ySedeclL
T « r fcfc ••
l.
.
groups.at
9
a
jn
.,
and
tbe
13
and
W
illia m s
4 4
TT
I Thomsen.
-SWEDISH AUCTION
B id
on
pick
u p
u ps.
F o llo w in g
after
C a s h
t e s t i n g
sale
fixtures
en d s;
R egister.
A p p lia n c e
p ic k ­
Electronic
e q u i p m e n t .
counters.
3
to
D i s p l a y
No O p e n Accounts. A ll Sales Final!
a . m .
to 7
p .m .
1 on ly B ean Bag C h air
-R e g -$59795 . . . . roduceKMo
1 3 3 3
4 only G .E . Clocks
v a l u e ............... reduced Iro
r$6 - 9 5
carts.
PURCHASE ON :
• CO N TRACT • CASH
• CREDIT CARDS
1 0 :0 0
1 only Stu d y Qesk
Reg. $ 5 2 . . . J . . . refluced to
63
T only Bon e t night s tand----I Reg. $ 8 9 .9 5 --------- reduced to
1 Only G al Style.5 pc.
Dinette >«g. $349.95 raduc«d 10
11 o n ly S ew in g C hest
r Reg. $ 1 8 .5 0 . . . _____ reduced to
*9“
W E E K D A Y S
lib B n ty - iy u ltw c K D w l E n d T q b t e
. . .
9
to
6 O N
S A T U R D A Y S
D EA LERS
R « f l. $ 8 9 . 9 5
_____ r e d u c e d t o
r O « s k l.H « tc k -
W ELC O M E!
I R e o . $ 1 6 4 ;.5 0
r e d u c e d to
S O R R Y . NO PHONE C A L L S
ftlL PURCHASES YOU HAUl DELIVERY CAN BE flRRANCFD'
l A C i III .APPy.ANCE.
AFFLI.ANUL. TV.
I)
iU ^ L s s l
onu
e a s t
FH RN lTH Bi:
STREET
^
BUMk
Slowpit^h
® 3 u tm ie y -
slated
Twin Falls . slowpltcb.
league! will-tiim to thoughts-nL.
championships this-week with
all 18 teams competing in the
annual city tournament.
run nine miles with hihi.
here last year, IM .
“I decided I might as .well
The new pole vault training
I didn't-even-know-if-t
“f m elated,” Johnson saidT would have enough moTiSy
Jan Johnson’s performance pu^ed the meet record upward
hereSaturday nighUn:iheJiiiith_nine inches when he.cleared 17 “I never expected to clear such pay the toll road fare.”
—Johnson;;— eompetini
annual United States Traek-and feet, three and 1-4 i n c ^ '
WICHITA. Kan. (UPI)-Pole Kansas vaulter, now attending
vaulters. m a y have a new the University of Alabama, ,but
D rtfm top 'kels record,T^akes
$ ^ 6 ,8 0 0 Bow ling
cap
TTip p v p n t w ill n p p n w it h fo ur.
games Monday night and
— proceed~io-Ti—conchision—85— games—later^- at _A 1 5 Pim- _
^itu R lasr
The first-found -pairings inide—’Mondayr^t*6~-p;m^—— ^—
Varsity Barber^op vs. Keebler
Cookie and The Alley vs. Master
Sheet Metalr8 p'.mTrCuUlgan^
Caswell vs. Lynwood Chevron
iub vg, Oly-Eord^and----
white headband to hold back his
long hair, has been working out
-in-Lawreneer-Kanrr: and-came-here late &turday, for the
meet. TTie ^Chicago Hei|
native asked that the bar be set
at 18 feet and 3-4 inch for a fry.
at the world record, 18 feet, 1-4
inch, held by Chris Papanicolapu, of Greece.'Johnson hit the
bar with his lead leg the first
two attempts and ran through
the pit on his third attempt,
Winds gusting to 15 mph kept
,-15i>=m^Haney-Seed-V8=-Seller
klectric and L and L Roofing
vs. Coors-First Federal.
The'S^year-old mare, second the course record, was second,,
In last year’s renewal of the ' 1 3-4 lengths back of the winner
race, sped the 1 1-2 miles on under top w e i^t of 128 pounds,
turf in 2:25 4-5, clipping 1 1-5 Practlcante was a.nose farther
seconds off the old mark.
away in third place after
-Fort Marcy.— Inatwinner, and previous holder of top of the stretch. •
of the book, although 14 new
Ejemplo, conqueror of ^Can- mju-ks were set and-one tiea.
onero-Il in South America last
The Kansas wind dipped to an'
year, was fourth' In his allowable margin o{_4.473-mph
American debut after briefly for the 100-yard d a ^ . The
BVU SHORTSTOI^ Wke Staffieri sales over Harvard cenholding the lead a quarter of a University of Color^o ' dash
teif leld Dave Ignacio dmlnK play between Harvard and BYU In
twins. George Daniels and Cliff
mile from home. __________
the 1971 Cttllege Wnrlil Spripg. Ignarin wai niU hut BYirrimppfd
Drum top, carrying second Branch, were given the same
a 4-1 decision. (UPI telephoto)
A U iE O V A N U N E S
highweight of 124 pounds, time, 9.2 seconds to tie the
The four letter signers-from eamed~$34;080 to boost- her meet record. Daniels was given
MOSCOW fU PI) - The
^ A o r v d tt r jL iic A ir
University of Idaho Friday Washington are David Hersey, winnings for the year to first place and Branch second.
A C im ^ 7 3 3 J r 3 7 t - ,
Pushing the Coloradans were
! announced it has received Arthur Miles and Milton $227,203. The daughter of Round
W« d on't m ov«
national letters of intent from 21 Newport, all Bellingham; and Table;, ridden by Chuck Balta: the celebrated hematoligist Dr.
zar, has now won six of nine Delano Merriweather, of the
high school football players who Robert Russell, Seattle.
fu rn ltu r*— "
Both of the California races this season, five of them Baltimore Olympic Track Club,
plan to enter the university this
Wf* mow*
‘residents
come
from
Fresno.
earning
in
stakes
competition.
: faU.
,1
and Ivory- Crockett, Southern
Drumtop returned $8.80, $4.00 Illinois, both timed in 9.3.
Head football Coach D<»n They are Ben Everson and
fa m ili« s
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)—South­ try’s No. 3 team, blasted five
and $2.60. Fort Marcy, 3-2 Merriweather, 27-years-old, who ern Illinois’ Salukis broke a 4-4 iiits in the first Inning to take.p
; Robbins called the athletes the Maurice Rana:
Honolulu
is
home
for
the
pair
favorite, paid $3.20 and $2.40, started running competitively tie in the bottom of the 8th for 4-0 lefld. But, Pan American,
' result of a highly specialized
’ recruiting prograjn and said the from Hawaii, who are Charles with Practicante, coupI6d with within the past year, was third
win over Pan American in rated No. 2, evened the score
FWriandez'and'BrTan
Jacobsen.
Lbudr showing ar$2.40^
'
. staff feels they will adS'mucfiTo”
aiid CToWetf w ^grven“fdiii-th7 the final first round game o f ^S T three runs in the second
the football program.
Bill Elliott of the Pacific 'the College baseball World and one more in the third.
. ___ Included in the list are elpht
Coast Club, high tumped a ■SpHps .Sfltiirriay night
— The lais waa the ath-lnjSa
■ ft- athletes from Idaho, five from
meet record 7-1. He turned his
Earlier, defending champion games for Pan American and
ankle on the first attempt at 7-3 Southern California clipped the victory was the Salukis’
• Oregon, four from Washington
- and two from California and
and passed the last two Seton Hall 5-1 and Brigham 41st in 48 contests.__________ 1
Hawair
“chiiiices.
Young University ousted -In the first three games in
. The Idaho AtWetes include
Sid Sink successfully defend­ Mississippi State from the the 25th annual series Saturday,
:: Mike Andrews, Lewiston; Kirk
ed his three-mile race cham­ double-elimination tournament, Gerald Cardon t>elted a three: Dennis, Wendell;’ Ross Godpionship. The Bowling Green i i .
OAKLAND (UPI) -The Oak­
run homer In the 8th to give
■: dard, Idaho Falls; a in t Hall land Athletics treated Vida
distance runner grabbed the^
The winning Southern Illinois Brigham Vou^ig University a 3and Jim Rainer, Moscow, Bruce Blue to a 20-hlt attack Saturday
lead midway in the race, and run came when Danny Thomas 1 win over Mississippi State.
^;_SchanihoP8trGeneseef-R!chard -ffna—tKEr-y5ung—tisfthioraer----- IN G tEW eeD reaH h-fO Ph^—with-irterrific-kick-the4ast-t50
Southern L^l’s Trojans, rated
1J _
1 n _■K n
n —-- > m J
...
. .
^
4
m
m Vx *
^ mm
^ 1* A
broke
the meet with a single to deep shor^, No.
Brown, Glenns. Ferry, and Nick cruised to his 13th victory of Songwriter Burt Bachrach’s yards and
1 in, the naUon going into
—-Nead; Coeur d'Alene.
_
!he_yeaL^wlth_a_13JLlrlump![L Advance Guard scored a head record with B time of 13i23.4 .stble--seC0nd-^anaz3K£iIzegmti-^the-^erie3r-3ent-eight m en To
victor^ over heavil^favored
Norman Johnston, competing home on a single by Dan
Representing Oregon on the over the New York Yankees,
the plate in the fourth inning to
’ Idaho frosh team which will
All but two of the A’s hits Manta Saturday, in the 31st for the Husker Striders of Radison.
-=^[rtay'three-games thls-falhare- wl^sTngles as they teed'off'on running of the $78,800 Ingle­ Iincobi-,”Neb~won thTfr^decatha“»i The Salukis, rated the coun- take a -4-1 lead-over . Seton
Hall's Pirates, ranked 8th in
'' Jay Buse, West Linn; Dennis three New York pitchers. Mel wood Handicap at Hollywood Ion with a strong second day
the •■ntion.
performance. The former Iowa
1 Hennessey, Portland; David StotUemyre, who gave up 12 Park.
Doubles by Craig Perkins and
It was the third loss by a State all-American hurdler won
cMonnes, Gresham; Curtis hits and ei^ht runs in 4 2-3
Daryl Arenstein highlighted the
1•
Parsons, Beaverton; and Mike innings, suffered thi loss, his head or less suffered by Manta, the 110 meter hurdles and the » w
three-run rally.
- Woolridge, Grants Pass.
queen of the feminine runners discus today for a totaTof 7,298 f l O m e r l l l l S
fourth In 11 decisions.
__ Trojan pitcher Mark Sogge
-in—the—Westr-and^it—took— -points, This gave hitn—a—205----------------------'•irrm ji------had little difficulty in re|
6 2 4 \ prolonged drive by~7rdVaHTCr-po1nt victory -pver f ir st d a y
C la r V 2D
4 0 0 0 C a m p n rs
1UETiI^3th victory against a
6 3 4 3
A lo o cl
3 1 1 0 R u d I If
Guard in the stretch to catch leader David Johnston. unatM un vo n c
3 ) 0 0 Ja c k s _
single loss.
_----------------- ^ T " T 7 D ie ta r y rf I I 1
lie >-year-old mare who was tached, of Uttle Rock, Ark.
4 111
C a tt^ 3b
4 0 1 0 E p s te in lb
The decathalon winner won
racing against male horses for
Jack Donovan hurled tne tu-st
E ll i s lb
10 0 0
4 0 3 1 D a v is 3b
W a lto n r l
4 0 0 0 B an d o 3b
3 3 3 0
the first time. Far To Reach two events of the first day's
seven liinings for Seton Hall
M ic h a e l IS
3 0 0 0 W e b ste r lb 0 0 0 0
S io t t ie m / r p 3 0 0 0 M a n g u a l c ( 5 3
was a distant third and The five events Friday, the shot put
and took the los^, his fourth
Jo n e s p
0 0 0 0 D uncan c
5 1 12
MONTREAL (U PI)-Jim Le- against seven wiiis.
Field was fourth among the six and 440-yard run, but trailed
W o o ds prt
0 0 0 0 G re e n 3b
3 ) 1 3
febvre
smashed
a
three-run
W o o ds p h
0
0 G r f t " 3b
3 113
horses^that contested-the race_-DavitLJi)hnstQa.by__54jJfliiit5 at
_Southeta_Cal!s-^win_waa_lts_j
M c D a n ie l p 0 0 0 6 D ro w n 3b
1 0 b 0
t 0 0 0 B lu e p
S 0 0 0
Advance Guard hjid done the midway period. David homer tn the first inning 49th in 61 contests. The loss
HAYW ARb,'"liiui. (UPI)— TH«aUn st »e n ph 31
3 S ) T o ta l*
«4 I ) M 13
Saturday
night
to
lead
the
Los
most of his racing on the grass Johnston, without a win in in
brought Seton Hall’s mark to
000 130
3
Jim 'Ryun, who decided at the N a w Y o rk
0S3 l ] i — U
and won three of his last Jour Saturday’s five events, com- Angeles Dodgers to a 5-3 17-13.
last minute to run- in the O aek-la nC da t e r , Jo n a s W > -N3)0
ew V o r k
1.
victory over the Montreal
Pacific Association’s AAU track O)3a k la n d 1 L O B - N ew Y o r k 6. O a k la n d starts including- the Cortez piled 7,093 points for the
Mississippi-State
scored its
Expos.
■
---------r
^
»»
. . . _____' .
position--_and—field— champinn.ships— at.
-JKtuieXUlL- Handicap.______ — ------- runnarup
The world record sho t -put—
— ■The-.Ia-xjuuscra—
e dgers —kept«cpt—-mcirtheir—only run agamst h y u m jt e
IP »
AdvaiifeGuui'd ra m l' Uigoiig
the- 800
<j j 13 I s 3 3 and one-eighth miles in the fair holder, Randy Matson who record_intact, scoring at least fifth when Dave Voss doubled,
‘ meters Saturday in a mediocre S lo t t le m v r e i? 4
I i-j 3 3 3-1 i
g stretched fils USTFF mark five run's in aH 14 games they wa3'Sffcrlflced~t«rthlrd and
- irw x
Park tame! B6tne on a bunt single
vvTday tfam ii'M i ''i : r tB"S8M 3^
!—.Montreal__joined the down the Tifst base line by
^SeCCHiTClralCEn
to y«flrg-agOr- Bobby T ^ obb
Ing, Advance -'Guard
Cardon's game winning ho­
Willie Crawford led off the
— '"t/.aj, TOO and $2.40. Manta, my best or as good as I'd like
give DAD for
the 4^ favorite of the crowd of to be, but I've been throwing it first with a single and, with two mer came after Terry Sanford
Jfeeak out until the turn starting
doubled
-and
-Oifck-BeUlston—
outj
Hiohie-,^en-followed
with44,TOO, p^d"|Z:40 ah'd^.TOr'Far in thc 67s lHtcly,-so it’s nice to
JFather-s Day . r .
the second lap.
To Reach paid $2.80.
get back in the 683 for a another single before Lefebvre walked with two outs. The
- -Ryun, now in training at M o v e m e n t
imgr was Cardon’s 5th of the
. conntctedjor.
___
'J
Kugene, Ore., for ' the 1972' — Pt5RTt3»JDt«P?t—
threw my best ever run of the season' over the year.
^Olympics tryouts, t<56k the le a J bia River-system fish count for let-Mantia-get-far. aw aiJrqm " I
Mike Priffitt, a lefthander,
Advance Guard at any stage-of indoors Ihl^ yeai- and I WBs rigbtfield fence,^
from pacesetter Ron Penning­ June 10:
hnried the^di.itanceJor Missis?
Bonneville — chinook 953, the race. At the start SociltJ' 0 . hoping for my best year
ton of Stanford at the head of
a b r h bl
a b r h bi
C ra w fo rd
3 110 sippi State and took his second—
f 4 2 3 1 Jo n e s II
. Jt by
_________
liiEJbadLatrgictu-tben gave the
the hor^s rounded the first my worst, so ril proDaDiy go P a r k e r lb 4 0 0 0 H u n t 30
3 110
famed Ryun kick to win going 31,
f
4 1 ) 0 S ta u b r f
4 0 0 0
win went to Jfeff Dusek who
The Dalles — chinook 408, turn his lead had been cut to pretty heavy indoors next year AL ellefenb vI re
away.
4 13 3
7b 4 1 1 3 F a i r l y 1b
pitched the first eight innings
H
a
lle
r
c
4
0
0
0
B
a
ile
y
3b
4
0 3 0
Dennis Foster of the Univer­ steelhead 14, shad 7, blueback 1. less than a length by Manta. and then take a break before G a rv e y 3b 4 1 1 0 O a v ct
3 0 0 0
John Day — chinook 1,217, Advance Guard was closed getting into the outdoor sea­ v i i f n r i n e ss 3 0 i 0 S w o b c d a c( 1 0 0 0 for Brigham Young. Brad Olsen
sity of California was a distant
W ill* ss
0 0 0 0 B ate m a n c
4 0 0 0
relieved for the last inning.
behind the horses were bunched son.”
steelhead 10.
second in 1:52.0.
Sin o er p
1 0 0 0 W in e ss
3 0 0 0
The loss left Mississippi
University of Florida pole O rew er p 0 0 0 0 F a i r e y ph 10 10
McNary — chinook 782, steel- -going into the final turn.
- Eddie llart of California, the
^utt7«Ttrrq t O« .
As - they came into the vaulter &ott Hurley, received
S to n e m a n p 3 £T"i3'D~
1970 NCAA 100-yard dash head 7.
G
o
sg
e
r
ph
I
0
0
0
with a season record of 32^12.
Ice Harbor — chinook 933, stretch, Laffit Pincay Jr., small contusions on the back
.champion, qualified for the 220
B ra n d ph
10 0 0
34 ] 7 J
>4 S 7 S T o ta ls
The win lifted seventh-ranked
aboard Manta, sent the mare when he fell into the vaulting T o ta ls
;yard dash in next week's NCAA steelhead 4.
)10010000— i BUU to a 32-15 mark on the
Los An9*(«»
practice. His M o ntreal
W 006 OOO— )
ychampionsEip at Seattle. WaSi., “ Ivower Mbriurrienlal — chipook 'Sriving arid she opened up a box during
OD LOS Angeles :, M o n t re a l 7
year.
but he . -L
_______were only slight,
,
- B d t h c l o d u n g - i n a. heat -1.515. steelheoA9,„ - ........ lead of nearly a length. But injuries
2Q.9iir.ycy. !Li:r!v.
_
a v is
Mlsslsstppl^Statr lost ■tjr
little Goose — chinook 1,426, Sioemaker had Advance Guard was unable "to compete. He HR Lefebvrp (AJ. f-a ir ly Ip13)h Sr B» rDhb
■
race. Hart, who has been
SO
Tulsa, 5-2, and Haryard defeatmoving in long strides that returned to the track before the Singer w S9
3 3 3
' hampered by a pulled ham- steelhead 2.
T- 0 '-ft 0 O-'
^ Brighain Yourig74-l. in ^he
until" finish‘Of ■thc EVBTTtTntdTatcrhB^
■
fsti mg must ot the year..did.not - l^ i ast Hnpies - rhinnnk Hi}. uaduallv but the
lirst twa gamca ^ the oefteathev • were nose anfl josc—was alrai(H >e-would be-ont-tne
-stay around for the finals of the steelhead 5.
Singer pitched to 1 t>at1er m aih
Friday night.
rest of the vear.
Save Brewer (61 T3 11 A 31.574
— Wctls-=--rhlnootT75;"
approaching the wire.
-220^
NEW YORK (UPI )-Dnimtop
overpowered six male rivals at
Belmont Park Saturday to win
- the 14th running of the $56,800
: Bowling Green Handicap in
~ course w ord-titM —befeF6=-a=
-crowd of 41,387.
Id aho signs 21
freshm en gridders
WARBERG’S
H igh -flyin g
Cougar -------
Southern Illinois^ USG stay
undefeated in NCAA series
Bachrach’s
jsJuatteii
Yanks 13-3 horse wins
Inglewood
Ryun wins
easedlip
half mile
IDodgeFS——
past Expos
•you a re $>ill
Iff
GiveIlimapair
IS—
REDWING
Nicklaus faviored to take U.S. Open
Power will not play a, big
ARDMORE, Par(UPlt-=sJack-^-one of, the-established-players' -part.
- Goody-assured that- with-his^
.
-;Julius—Boros, -controversial winning list with $146,213:
Steve Melnyk, who won the surprise, two-stroke victory in
-Nicklaus, in hardly a unqique to win.
At Muirfield, a comparatively’ Dave Hill, Trevino, Gary
t position, is favored this week to
"It takes ei^rience to win similar course, Nicklaus used a Player, the -1965 winner, and_ British Amateur tjtle June 5 the Masters. But Coody himself
>win the U. S. Open Golf on this type of course," he said. one-iron off the tee in winning Gene Uttler, the 1961 cham­ and then said he was “supersa­ was not sure of a spot In the
-championship — a tournament
pion.
turated” with golf, withdrew Open until he sur^ved the
"Many of the players who the 1966 British Open.
- which thi-M straight years has have come on the tour in the ^ Tlie same result is possible
Hill got himself in trouble from the qualifying rounds as qualifying last Monday at
' ended in upsets.--- - -last- year when he compared did- former Opfinj champ Tom-, Atlanta,
last-five-years haven't--cxper* again.
-.:
_
‘---t Nicklaus, fiis dream of a ienced a course such as this
There are only two par-5 Hazeltine National Golf du b , my Bolt' still suffering the
Trevii», Palmer, Player and
effects
of
a
recoit
bout
with
~professional Grand
Slam one. There probablv are onlv holes on Merion’s nar-70 F.ast the Open course,, to a cow
MiUer Barber all are al.qn
—smashed by-Charles Coody-in five holes where ITT use my Course and of the (toien par-4 pasture, but he still nriisK«lnpn®nmonia7above the $100,000 mark for the
With Melnyk out, the fdp year, behind Nicldaus, going
- the Misters, heads the field of driver.”
holes, half are less than 380 second in the tournament and
traditionalists
n s o wtUch begins playninrsday__N icklaus, himself a
yards.
; at the £1011^ Merion Golf Qub Open rhampinn, _finiai»H—y»---The $JU,U00~fir8l prize figures will enjoy Merion.”"
Wadldns,—thg-coi rcfit U. S. K e m ^ C^jcn at Charlotte, N.“^near PhiladelphlaT
strokes behind Jacklin last year—to go to .a player who rCilr* Sam SnMd, w ^se career has Amateur champion.
a
Veteran pros Dah Sikes. Dow
” -But, altho u ^ the tjallc always^ at_„Chaska_Mlnn. A year control Ms drives and can putt been marked by a' failure to
Palmer, golf ’s top moneywln■the .slick, win the Open, did not .even try Fihs’terwald, Jabky Cupit and ner of all time, has not won a
■a big tournament, the last thrie- c i^ l stfokes at Houston.
to.;..qualify_this_year_but„hi9—George^Knudaon_were_;amDbg HMjor pHarpplonjitiipjnnce the
quick greens::
“ I Just dgnt feel that the nephew, J. C. Snead^is in' the those who failed In the 19« Masters.
::’Open chiunpions were relative
M ^bn , at 6,54+yardsj is the
'
<jualifying rounds.
-^unknowns before--tlsey ■won— shortest—Open course since young players will-do well,’.’ field..
He recently played a practice
Z
Wiviity- -WmTit WafeJ t
_____
Nicklaus needs-only about roo«l'^7al_JMerio^ w e a r ^
'K!plaus'ss]rs;
—
_ _ J.t;,-.^ong with Tom Shaw,—
-Tanri I^^'-TreviPOv-Of-the-^hree,—:
be..Lan e ^ target
'BBWesr-Nicklaus, the field IVevine, Pahner, Player and $43,000 more this year to finish ey^asses but he. _saii--he;
tn « n » r
|n
^ o n ly Jacklin ever had
jB^because of 124 biniiiers; oiirsf— indodes-ArnoU^ Palmer, four Uttlei^are two^Ume winners on with th6 best" moteywinninf
his
er-n^but harxrta~TllE
ttesaoBnwunao t—bacauBB-hla
have__
to wait at least_________
one.more eysightJs-gQod
. - ithree-time
______ ___
_____
ami *a *^e|c“ “th ^ 1 ^ only Open title in i960, tw<^ Nicklaus is^ the only
™
' cKirnra Bill tiasper and winner and leads the nionev year to try ^(ir his 6rand ^Jam. thcr^
time
■
/
BOOTS
Choose from the largest
selection in Idaho
2 4 Styles
in 108 diff«r«nl tii*«
Silas 6 to 16'
AA to E S S
T o u r Con^Iete
FaffiiyStioe Store
^. .r'— 1—
^ h o rg e o r
B a n k a rd s
MWNTOWN
AND -
iWTOWF
Sunday^ June 13, 1971
TiniM 'N ew s, Twin F a lla , Idaho
23' *■
I ,
S A L T L A K E C IT Y ( U P I ) - A
ludKe in a c a t e d S a tu rd a y the
sq uab b le su rro u n d in g e ffo rts of
the U tah S ta rs to keep th eir
i> coach, B il l S h arraan, fro n iv
ju m p in g to the r iv a l N B A a s
JM acb__ n f— the— Los— A ngeles
L a k e rs m ay. w ind u p in a court
.M a L
T h ird
D is t r ic t Ju d g e
D.
itained b y the. S ta rs
to
m ai^e
tbe
Fam k
W ilkins
ivent h is b re a k in g the U tah
com m ent— after. - a — h e a rin g .
involving attem pts b y S h e rm a n 'c o n t ra c t ,
to dissolv e
a
15
m illln n ' W ilk in s
tem porary re stra in in g o rd e r noon T u e sd a y tp p resent fu rth e r
— a rg u m e n ts— a s - t o — w h y — the
-tem por a r y u rd e r sh oo ld not be
------------d isso lv e d .------ -— ^
' ‘ ‘1 fih'd i l h ig h ly u n liiie ly that
any _ court would uphold a
-pr«Umlnai7 -restralnlng-ordei
against the defendant’s desired
move,” said WUHns.
But in ~the same . veiRrrhg
4 r 39 .6 " a t 7 th e*~ R o se~ f 4 s t t v a h
^ t. u
, added the contract between
Y
o
r
k
A
t
^
e
^
u
b
i
h
^
^
In v ita t io n ri— tra c k — a n d — f id d -
in fe a tu re ofTRose F e stiv a l
P G R T L A W 3 , ' O re. ( U P I ) -D o ris B ro w n -o f S ^ m e .^ W a sh .,
edged to w ith in three seconds m eet.
,
of the w o rld m ile re co rd for ■ C o m p e tin g f o r th e F a l ­
wom en S a tu rd a y by setting a con T r a c k C lu b , M rs . Brow n
new U n it e d S ta te s m a r k of topped h e r A m e rica n m a rk of
4:41.3 set le ss than a week
ago. She a lso shattered h e r own
m eet re c o rd of 4:45.4 set in the
•M aria
G b m m e rs
of Ih e
N ethe rla nd s set the w o m en’s
w orld m ile re co rd of 4:36.8 in
1969.
G e rry
L in d g r e n , C o u g a r
T r a c k O u b a nd .io rm e r W ash■ineton State stai-, tvon the th ree
ST. L O U IS ( U P I ) - A l O liv e r m ile w ith a fin e 13:16.1 under
h om ered w ith two out in the cloudy s k ie s and cool w eather;
ninth in n in g S a tu rd a y nig h t to L in d g re n , who holds the U.S.
g iv e the P ittsb u rg h F ^ a t e s a 4- re ic o rd o f 12:53, w a s d ia lle n g e d
3 w in o v e r the St. L ouis in the la s t h a ir o T T H e r a e e by
C a rd in a ls « n d a t l - 2 g a m e lead Ken M o o re, E u gene, O re., who
in the N a tio n a l L e ag u e E ^ t .
won the A A U M a ra th o n last
O liv e r’s h o m e r ca m e off week at E u ge n e .
C a rd in a l re lie v e r R u d y A rro y o ,
W orld re co rd h o lder R a ndy
who took the lo ss in h is firs t M atson, T e x ^ S trid e rs, throw ­
decision of the season. A rro y o , ing the w o rst h e sa id he has
the fourth St. L o u is p itch e r, s in c e ,'1964, took’ the shot put
entered the g a m e in the ninth w ith a toss of 6S-8 1-4. H e sa id
Cards, pad
loop lead
U
R ichS^ CC a<r r ^
, \ p®S C^j , ^ J f .
X
4:05,
Lo rsch -led
Astros
nip B raves
Daniels appears vaUd. “ And if
this
I
the co u rt w ill a lso find
v a lid ,” s a id Ju d g e W ilk in s.
W ilk in s re fe r re d to a seveny e a r co a ch in g co n tra ct S h erm n n s ig n p H
in
IB fiT w i t h t h p - I A t
Ttaigel es S ta rs r-T h e -t e a m -w a i
p u rch a se d b y D a n ie ls in M a rc h
1970 a n d m o v e d to Salt L a k e
C ity . T h e co n tra c t is d u e 't o
e x p ire in 1973.
S h a rm a n s a id h e fe e ls be
should be a b le to b re a k the
H O U S'lD N l U P l ) — KooKie
c o n tra ct becau se D a n ie ls
K e n Forsoh sca tte re d seven
re so lv e the question
hits and Bob VVotson a cc o u n ted „Q f_.^ i,e th e i^ S h arm an -w o u ld -b fr
for two runs with a trip le an d a g^ygu
option to buy fiv e p e r
ru n-scoring' sin g le
S a tu rd a y cent of th e _.S tars w hom he
night to sp a rk the Houston coached to a n A B A --cham pionA stros to a 3-2 triu m p h o v e r the sh ip la s r s e a s o n . S h a rm a n also
Atlanta Braves.
c la im s D a n ie ls re n eged on
H o tn to n
a llow ing h im to p a rticip a te in a
•b r h
J b r h bl
4 1 7 0 pension p lan n o rm a lly offered
M llla n 2b
4 0 3 0 A lo u r l
2000
Jack& o n O 4 0 0 0 ^^o^gan 3b
i M 1 only to p la y e rs .
A a ro n rf
4 ) 1 0 C e d e n o II
4)31
K in g c
4 0 1 0 W a t» o n lb
0 0 0 0 ' D an ie ls, w ho w a s fo rce d to
L u m If
4 1 3 0 R a d e r 3b
3 0 M
W illia m ) lb 4 0 0 0 M e n k s 1b
lea v e Uie h e a rin g F r id a y due to
4 0 0 0
—ittr t' Tint—
— t7py*v —
- M id 4 0 3 0
C ep ed a ph 1 0 0 0 E d w a r d s c
4 0 0 0
a fte r co m p eting F r id a y night in VR ee er sdaslleps »» 33 00 00 00 FMoer ti cj gh^ p M 3 0 O'O S atu rd a y he and . S h a rm a n
g ivin g u p O liv e r ’s hom er.
C a r r ld o ph 1 0 0 0
d isa g re e on both those points.
___ M u d ca t G ig n t . who allo w ed a m eet a t W ich ita . Kan.s.
Bar-ber ^
‘A s th at co n tra ct stand s
L a r r y S tu a rt o f the Southern r e t a i l
34 3 7 1 T o ta ls
31 3 • )
one h it in th ree in n in g s of
A t la n t a
000 000 1 0 1 - 3
rig h t now, S h a rm a n doesn’t
re lie f, p ick e d u p the v ic t o ry to C a lifo rn ia S trid e rs pu lle d out a Houston
M1 000 00k - | 3
E -Ja c k so n , M llla n , V e r s a lle s . L O B — h ave an y option to biiy p a rt of
w in the ja v e lin but h ad to com e
boost h is re c o rd to 4-2.
■
s, HQuaton ?■ ,
.... .......
S n c h ^ l i i e r , Jo s e C a rd e n a l T m T H T H S T m a B T ff^ B n ra tt D iia i- 3 B - - L u m 3 B - - M llla n . W a ls o n . 5 ^ -ttnrc tnti;‘- s a ld 'P a n lc l ^ *lf cm ly F o r s c h . M organ S F - M e o k e .
states w e w ill a g re e to tolk
p
re
p
ch
a
m
p
io
n
R
u
s
s
F
ra
n
c
is
,
tied the g a m e fo r St. L o u is in
ip H r e r bb so
7 7 D 3 3 4 about that p o s sib ility .”
the eighth w hen h is s a c r if ic e fly P le a sa n t H ill, O re., w ith a RB ea er bd e rL 4 4
1 1 0 0 0 1
S h a rm a n s a id
la te r that
9 1 3 1 0 4
o ff G ra n t d ro v e hom e L u is throw o f 267-1, beating h is old F e r s c h W 71
W P - R r ^ d P B - E d w a r d s . T -3 07 A —
V in ce B o ry la , g e n e ra l m a n a g e rM elendez, who had sin gled , m eet m a r k o f 249-3.
33.876
F r a n c is , who held the old
p re sld e n t of the Stars, had told
went to second when Ted
h im in - M a r c h - 1 9 7 0 - t h a t n h e
Sizem ore T va lked and then p re p re c o rd of 254-11— threw
co ach d id n ’t even h a v e that
s a c rific e d to th ird by D al 259-9, fo r seco nd p la ce . H e w ill
-e n te r-th e -U n iv e rsitv o f Oregon
iig h t ^
in the fa ll.
“ I took the jo b s with the
P lt ls b u ro h
S t. L o u is
a b r h bl
a b r h bl
T o m W h ite of the Southern
(U ta h ) S ta rs b e c a u ^ I needed
C4ish 2b
4 a Q 0 B r o c k If
5 . 0 I Q_
^ U f o f f l l a S trid e rs took the 120
D a v a illlo r« 4 1 0 0 A l o 'u 'a ~
•S O T O
~ - & e m oney a n d I felt I c o u ld .
H eb n er 3b
4 1 1 0 H a g u e lb
3 1 )0
y a rd hig h h u rd le s jn .13.8, w hile
w ork o u t th ose points denied
S ta rg e ll It
4 1 3 3 B e a c h m p lb 3 0 0 0
O liv e r ct
4 1 3 1 T o r r e 3b
5 0 11
co -re co rd h o ld e r’ E >v H a ll of
m e by D a n ie ls ,” added S h a r­
R o b e rttn Ib 3 0 1 1 A A cN ertn y c 4 0 0 0
the S trid e rs fin ish e d a d isa p ­
S a rtg u llle n c 5 0 0 0 M eler>dex r f 3 3 1 0
m an.
A llt v ss
3 0 0 0 S lxerrH )re 3b 3 0 3 0
pointing fourth w ith a 14.5
D efense a tto rn e y W . R o b e rt
B r ile s p
3 0 3 0 M a x v ill t s
3 0 2 0
R H e rrv t d i p 0 0 0 0 T o r r e z p
10 0 0
c lo c k in g . H aU ’s best U 13.2.
KA N SA S C IT Y ( U P I )— C h u ck W rig h t s a id S h a rm a n m u st be
G ra n t p
1 0 0 0 S a n to rin i p 1 0 0 0
M eet re c o rd s a lso se t-in clu d - H a rriso n ’s th ree -ru n
B u r d a ph
1 0 11
double “ im m e d ia te ly fre e to a cc e p t the
________________________________ ^ c h a r v P
0 0 0 0
1 ^ E vyans.
a n s . wocinon.j
Stockton Trra
c k .ignitod-tha-ati
' ed
“ t Lecj^
.acK
_______
__________
.
< in__
ce'TrSf’Bffnar
~A»r-OvO^-p~
- adttyy- -RRooyals
y a ls to a - f iv e n in firs t- th ey m u s t -p ick~ ar n e w -p o a c h r
D ra b w s k y p 0 0 0 0
T r y e r , S .C . S trid e rs, 14:05.9 in Inning Saturday nig h t a g a in st p ro b a b ly w ith in the next two
T o ta ls
34 4 I 4 T o t a ls
34 3 11 3
P it ts b v r g h
003 MO 001 - 4
the tw o -m ile w a lk ; Stan W h it­ J im Lonborg and the Boston’ w e e ks.”
I f . L o u is
001 001 OlO • 3
ley , C a lifo rn ia T r a c k Q u b , 2S>^ R e d Sox, Igiving the R o y a ls a 7E S lie m o r e
D P St
L o u is
1.
LO B
.A fter the h e a rin g , S h a rm a n
P itts b u rg h 13, S t. L e u is 10
in the long ju m p ; A rt Sandison, 0 victo ry behind the eigh t-hit said . “ T h e la s t I h e a rd I w a s
2 B S la c g e ll 3.' H a g u e H R O liv e r (31.
S B C a sh . S C a s h .'M a « v ill S F C a rd e o a l
C
o
u
g
a
r
T
r
a
c
k
Q
u
b
,
1:48.6
in
pitehing of D ick D ra g o .
s till the L o s A n g e le s L a k e rs ’
I
Ip k r e r bb M
the 880 y a rd ru n ; and W es
B r lle s
^
4 2-3 9 2 3 1 3
Nn. 1 ch o ice. W e ’ll )ust h a v e to
-------------- 7 -J-T -3 i r ^ W llI I a m s , S im D ie g o 'S ta te 7 5 0 n 3 ' B o sto n
Torrer-'
K
a
n
s
a
s
C
it
y
S a n to rin i
4 3 0 0 1
a b r It b l
r h bl w a it u n til T u e sd a y to see w hat
Z a ch ary
3 1 0 0 1
in the 440 in term ed ia te h u rd le s. G r i f f i n 3b S 0 0 0 P a t e k s s
3 1 0 0 develops.
A rr o y o L 0 1
33 1 1 1 1
3 0 0 0
Don Q u a rrie o f the S trid e rs A p a r ic lo s s 4 0 I 0 S c h a a l 3b
D ra b o w s k y
1 3 0 0 0 0
“ T h e te rm s betw een L a k e r
A
j
e M A
4
S m it h r f
4 1 3 1 O t il c f
3 1 0 0
T o r r e i p itc h e d to 4 b a tte rs In 3 rd
tied
the
m
ee
t
re
c
o
rd
of
20.4
se
t—
Ys^trxmsk
it
4
o
i
o
Kirkptrck
n
3
3 3 1 g e n e ra l m a n a g e r F re d , S ch au s
T .3 ;S S . A.34,SA5
hy John Carlos
and 'iiiv s e lf w e n in t f in a l izedAtlanta
BETTER THAN NONE l« the onlyTlectoion left-for-VlcUWrigley
faat ttc t«fl ■ecdoB<t the an t potmd mapper to a shark while reeling In her catch near
Daytona Beadi, Fla. She itOl won the ihlp’i pool for catching
' ihelargMt edible Hsh duringthedaj^rUPIteli^luto) ~
H a l f a f is h . . •
..............................
G y m n a s tic
team p ic k e d
P H IL A D E L P H IA
(U P I)— A
seven -m an g y m n a stic team w a s
p ick e d S a tu rd a y to rep resen t
the U n ited States th is s u m m e r
at the P a n A m e ric a n Q a n ie s in
C a li, C o lo m b ia .
-J o h n —C ro s b y , of Sm ithBm
C o n n e cticu t Stote, led„ the
q u a lifie rs in the all-a ro u n d
co m petition in s ix events to w in
the top berth on the team .
C ro s b y w a s the fir^ t A m e ric a n g y m n a st to w in a G old
M e d a l in in tern a tio n al com petiUon w ith a v ict o ry in the floor
e x e rc is e at R ig a in the-U. S. S.
I V __________________
.
H e sco re d lOD-points d u rin g
the two d a y s of com petition
h eld at T e m p le U n iv e rsity . T h e
s ix even ts w e re fre e e x e rcise ,
sid e h o rse, s till rin g s, va u lt.
.............
W T B tJr^
Mrww;
p a ra lle l a nd h o rizo n ta l b a rs.
Tom
L in d e r o f. Southern
Illin o is w as second,
SELL and
TRADE
GUNS
U se y o u r B a n k C a r d s
REWARD
V e iH r C A W M I
B Y C A LU N G
Royals^
roll past
Red Sox
MnuIvt
SEEN THE DEALS
■njAT CAv c n
" W illit iiT iin n it ..^ f a r m e r .
- (P-1 la-cre^A =^=— —
/A
slakes win
State-star.--by:-lwOTtentfa3iO^
.wpond
__ Tlant p
second in the 220 .
a n ie B arto , B ritis h X 6 - L a h o u d
V e teran jo ck e y M e rlin V o lzk e
guided the sophom ore son of
R e a l G o o d D ^ l a ro u n d the
m ile test in 1.36 and withstood
Uie clo sin g d ia r g e o f B o rq u e. It
-w a s= ^ h e = ln ltlH }= 5ta lt5s= v le t6 i7 =
fo r C la s s A w h ich pa id $52.60,
119.20 a n d f9.80.
B o rq u e re tu rn e d $5,00 and
$3.60. R o c k B a th ($7.00) c a m e
12 to fin is h th ird and T im o teo
w as fom U T
W f .-a n d M r g , E . B., J oh n ston
ow ners of C la s s A, fin ish e d a s
the m ee t’s lea d in g
m oney
w inning ow ners. T h e ir total
p u rses e xceed ed $ 100 ,000 .
. ..The c o n clu d in g 30-day T a n fo ran portion of the lengthy seaso n
produ ced a . d a ily .a v e r a g e
m utuel handle of $1,001,368,
m a rk in g ' th e s e c o n d t im e a
N orth ern C a lifo rn ia trade had
topped tbe m illio n d o lla r m a rk .
T h e a v e ra g e m utoel handle
in c re a se d fiv e p e r ce n t o v e r
la st y e a r ’s T a n fo ra n m eet.
A ttendance fo r the 30 ^ y s
dght per cent over last year.
-Juantkxnalez finished a s the
Bryson ' Cocpir as the top
apprentice. Both received silver
belt budtles.
Ttainer Walter Greenman
and his assistant, MJ). WeQ~wood, also-received bucklM-ag—>
35eJoo condiCoriEnjirte^ttn:
■
-U K T D M W lH S W A R N E n - ^
S A C R A M E IfK )J M t _ O M L
—A bill m a k ^ it a feloiiy to
vdl “K m to.ag''.pr any other
e |t » ir u a a g t g ja « ^
h ia U w
Senate.
^ n ft »
ph
10 0 0
w e e k s’ ^ g 0 7 ‘ W e - d ld r h o w e v e rr
a g re e -that I- w o u ld - r e c e iv e - a s a la ry e q u a l to the one the
- " J 4 3 T T 'T O f 5 i 1 I —
o r % 'iJ o a t a r w ln n a v a r ^ * 6rtDofc—
both the 220 a n d 100 y a rd B«,ton
oo« »o ooo- 1 w ould o ffe r m e a m u lti-y e a r
rlaahoG
h p r mArk«i
4 Kansas City
410 001 00*— * co n tra ct.”
cmsnes. Rnth
O O U l n e r Ilia r iU i,
d p -Boslon 2 l OB—Boston 7. Kansas
« n d r - 10 ;& r-w e re — w e ll—o ff—the — aiy
______ ________
A L B A N Y ,' C a lif. ( U P I ) - C l a s s w o rld re c o r d s set b y O i l O ie n g
A bolted fa st fro m the ga te a nd
th is m e e t la s t y e a r,
le d a ll the w a y S a tu rd a y to w in
O th er w in n e rs in c lu d e d J e r r y
the 120,000 added P a c ific a -C u lp , S a n D iego State, high
iS tflkftfl b y n leng th In a n np«ipt lu m p . 6-10 1-4 : Sa in .C a ru th e rs .
a n d co n clu d e 85 d a y s of r t c in g G a l T r a c k Q u b , pole v a u lt, 166 r - T im V o U m c iy - IL S — A r m y.
'
0 0 0 0 A b e rn a t h y p 0 0 0 0
3B--May, Harrlion. 38—
S m ith <11), Sco tf ( B ) . K I r k p a f r I c k (4 ) S B
P a t e k S B re tt S f - H a r r is o n .
ip h r c f b b u
T la n t L 0 »
1 3 5 5 3 0
B re tl
S 3 1 1 3 5
Lee
3 0 0 0 0 0
D a lC a n t o n W 4 3
7 1 3 7 3 3. 2 4
BAO-START~
I I I M
tJu d y u
I
iM T ir;
m
< k jv r.
.
m m .......... !gei
f
¥■
/ mui
'
flm e s Nows, Tw in F a lli, Id a h i
Sunday; Ju ne 13, IW l
Danger
warB y P H IL N EW SO M :
U P I F o re ig n N ew s A n a ly s t
T h e h u m a n su ffe rin g re su ltig -f r o n ^ P a k is t a n ^ je iv U -w a r
s c a r e e ly - e a n - b e - o v e r is t a t e d ; ?
U if-x h o le ra ^ a n d
sta rv a tio n . d ie in uncounted
| = t h o u 3 a n d a - a n d - t h ^ um be r - b{.
re fu g e e s p o u rin g ' a c ro s s the
In d iw
b o rd e r T fo m
E ast
P a k ista n re a ch e s- an estim ated
fiv e m illio n , one thihg rtiore
co u ld m a k e the tragedy com
lete.
TTBat
is
the . v e ry ' re a l
posstbtUty^f~war— bctweetr
_
_
f I n
a
J
P a k ista n a n d In d ia .
A n A m e ric a n diplom at in
D a c c a , c a p ita l of E a s t P a k is ­
tan, h a s e stim ate d the ch an ce s
“ ju s t u n d e r 50-50.”
A t the ro o t-o f the pro b le m
a re the re fu g e e s whose n u m b e rs I m ciu d e
both
M oslem
B e n g a lis of E a s t P a kistan and
H in d u s of w hom som e
10
m illio n n o rm a lly re sid e In E ^ t
P a k ista n .
I n .I n d ia th ere is a su sp icio n
that P a k ista n P resid e n t Y a h y a
K h a n inten ds to push a ll of the
H in d u s out of E a s t P a k ista n as
p a rt of h is d eterm ination to
W A L L O F W A T E R w faldi f l ^ e d dow n g n lly n e a r F ru lU a n d
a ch ie v e a m ilit a r y solution to
T b o rsd a y m o rn in g c a r rie d anto an d p ic k u p ow ned b y R u i e l l
E a s t P a k is t a n 's sece ssio n ist
H y att Into h is potato fie ld in W h itley Bottom . H y att s a id d a m a g e
m pvem ent.
w fl] be In th o n sa n d s of d o lla rs . E a rtb -fille d Irrig a t io n d a m In
T h e re is fu rth e r, the m a tte r
g u lly broke, re le a s in g w a te r w h ich ca sc a d e d p ast H y att home.
of p ro v id in g m e d ic a l c a r e and
________________________________
(U P I)
food fo r the re fu ge es w h ich is
e stim a te d to cost a m in im u m of
$10 m illio n a m onth.
R e p o rts fro m both sid e s of
the b o rd e r Ind ica te the In d ia n
a r m y is keeping to its p ro m ise
to sta y w ith in its own fro n tie rs.
But P a k is ta n i “ freedom fightei s ” who ti-a in i nsid e In d ia
s trik e a g a in st the P a k ista n
a rm y a c ro s s the b order, and
th p ..iv n r k p f f i r i p n r y in r r e n s p d i f -P a k is ta n i— shi^lllng— of— the.
cent of their in c o m e in d ire ct this e v e r w a s to be a ch ie v ed , fro n tie r p ro v id e m a jo r irrita n ts
taxation and at le a st another 12 he said.
between the two countries,
p e r cent in in d ire c t taxation.
In d ia n P rim e M in iste r In d ira
F o r e co n o m ic e x p e rts the G a n d h i’s s y m p a th ie s openly a re
Y e t there a re a ll the sig n s
h ere of an a fflu e n t so ciety. U .S. w ritin g on the w a ll w a s w ritten w ith
the
E ast
P a k ista n is.
autos, w hich co st fiv e tim es la rg e in the fig u re s of the la st T o w a rd the co n flic t itself she
four
y
e
a
r
s
—
p
r
ic
e
ris
e
s
of
th e ir o rig in a l A m e ric a n value,
h ad kept a h an d s off attitude
abbund on the h ig h w a y s. T h e re between 20 a nd 80 p e r cent, but h as w a rn e d :
___
p e r c e n f and
T [ n h e w o r ld T o e s lio n a k e
a p p lia n ce s. M o d e m apartm en t taxes a lm o st doubled. Th ey heed, w e sh a ll be con strain ed to
b lo c k s rise lik e m u s iiw m is in a rg u ed if the boom w a s n o t . take a ll m e a s u re s as m a y be
controlled it w a s going^^to bust. n e ce ssa ry to in su re our own
the m a in citie s.
It a ll w a s a fab c r y fro m se cu rity and the p re se rv a tio n of
A cco rd in g to the econom ists
the answ er is sim p le . Is ra e lis those p re -w a r d ay s of four our s o c ia l and e conom ic lif e .”
a re liv in g on w h a t Is known y e a rs ago.
W hat M rs . G a n d h i h as done
Then the co u n try w a s in the is to w a rn the^. m a jo r pow ers
h ere as "th e d r ip feed.” In
p la in language that m eans throes of a re ce ssio n , the w orst c le a rly that they h ave a stake
s in c e - - J e w s -c a m e — b a c k — to- - in - t h e P a k is t a n i-c o n flic t ; n o t _ c re d iL
in-------P a le stin e at the turn only a s it a ffe cts P a k ista fi but
O ne of the m a in vo ice s of resettle
--------------w a rn in g bfelongs to the gover- of the ce n tu ry ,
In d ia a s w ell.
nor of the B a n k o f Is ra e l, D avid
In fla tio n threatens
Is ra e lis p ro sp e rity
fo re the 1967 M idd le E a s t w a r,
the m o st m om entous of th ree in
le s s than 20 y e a rs, the w orst
re c e ssio n in its sh o rt h isto ry
g rip p e d Is ra e l.
N ow , fo u r y e a rs la te r, at the
b e g in n in g of its th ird decade,
J s r a e l^ j s , a cco rd in g to its
" n iilit a r y le a d e rs;'
it s m ilit a r y m ight in the m id st
of an unprecedented e co n o m ic
boom .
B u t It is a boom that could go
b u st u n less sp ira lin g in fla lio n 'is
co n tro lled , econom ists constant­
ly w a rn .
S in ce the w a r Is ra e lis have
b e co m e perhaps the h ea vie st
taxed people in the w orld,
~ S fu d e n r
‘BorBwiti__Becaitly__he__sa)d“
aid asked
—
T W IN F A L L S - T w in
re sid e n ts who would lik e
h o st parehTs"to A m e rica n
- S e rv ic e students who w ill
F a lls
to be
F ie ld
be in
_ ^ 8 p ter. pre.tidcnt,
C o v e r.
She s a id there w ill be 38
fo re ig n students h ere on a bus
I s r a e l m ust in c re a s e its exports
by 19 per cent a y e a r as long as
im p o rts kept r is in g 10 p e r cent
a^m ually. H o m e consum p tio n
w ou ld havc>(o be c u rta ile d and
A t
m
e e t in g
Co., T w in F a lls , h a s re tu rn ed
f ro m
a m e e t in g
of
the
a g ric u ltu ra l e q u ip m en t d e a le r
fo r 20 of the students. She s a i# Burlington, W is. H e w a s
th e only- stipulation is that the__ IjL. d e a le r a _ J t i e n d l n g
th e —
stud en ts a re provid ed w ith th e ir m eeting, s e rv in g a s elected
nwn hpH _M r«i C o v er ca n be r e p r e s e n t a t iv e
fro m
th e
re a ch e d a t 733-8194.
w estern states.
rAKtNI5
Y O U R C H IL D C A N B E M O R E
SU CCeSSRA.
W SCHO O L
in n r r E B R D N ir it F f t m H t t D R E ii
1. A one-to-one^ relationship
2. Accelerated learning in math, reading and
spelling.
3_ A prepared and learning environmenf
4. Time
a1 To the child
b) To the parent
c) To the teacher
d!)
V To the manager
5. Piersonal Motivation
6. Free diagnostic testing
7.-Definitive analysis of ability and present
---- academic status
---- '
8. Guorontee of all services________________________
ExactTecord of all daily progress, in o number
of academic skills
p1LfelgAed.aadjafiid_teadirig
t
r
—
f -A a ^ u i u
~Corri|3rene'nsion ..
^
Vocq^ ioryincreose
10. W
^ k ly conference
with
parents
11.
Graduotion
Diplomas
ond
Motivations
School cpordibotion
V
.C A L L ^ M
B R O
e iU U X O
7 x d .s 3 B a
D A
suits
D o u b le
_
k n it m a k e s
pop
th e
t a lk
of th e
f a s h io n
fa th e rs
. i a / g e - s e l e c t io n o f - c o i o K - a n d tty t«- < ;u ls . . v le * y o u r
dad
s t a n d o u t in a n y
crow d
. Q d o u b l e ||.nit s u it Tor h irtiJ
. D o u b l e K n it
-H e o d q u o Jilfir^
ond
be
happy
;
you
^
choose
- r --r r 1J i S r ' W B
JShfl
4
'
,
- ' i f
M
G e t t in g
o c q u a in t e d
CHAPLAIN AND counselor af the Idaho Youth
Ranch, Rev. Dwight E. Wilcher, visits with one_ of the
ranch residents. Dean, during one of their counseling sessions'. The youth ranch was organir^rl in 1Q‘iA
by Rev. J.' R. Crowe and al present is licensed to
ffandle 36 boys.
Idaho Youth Ranch facilities
o p e n for public tour today
By JE R R Y H ER R M A N N
T tm e s-N ew i W ffie r
R U P E R T - B o y s betw een the a g e s of
10 and 14 that ju s t c a n ’t se em to fit in
witli Uk re s t ' of so ciety, if tliey a re
lu cky , end up a t the Idah o Youth
R a n ch , IS m iles- no rtheast of R u p e rt.
H ere these boys w ith p ro b le m s h a v e a
second ch a n ce to becom e m e n of
p ro m ise , a cc o rd in g to H . Lee C W lds,
e xe cu tiv e d ire c to r o f Tdaho Youth
R a n d i, In c ., a non-profit a n d nondenam inational co rpo ratio n.
"Hie y o u t J iT a n e lr w a s o rg a n iie d In
1956 by B e v . J . R . C ro w e, who w as
co o vin ve d this w a s a good p la c e to m eet
—th cm ea te'iBf'b o ys w i th -p ro ld e m s rT h e p u b lic is invited to to u r the youth
ra n c h V f a d lit ie s T ln rt n g T t r o p a iliO n s e '^
today fro m 1:30 p j n . on.
In 1957 the fir s t boy a rr iv e d a t the
youth r a n d i. O v e r the y e a r s it has
g ro w n u n til it is now lice n se d to handle
38 boys.
C h ild s sa id the youth i-anch is fo r
p ro U e m bo y s w h o h a v e -b e c o ra e -th a t
w ay throfigh abandonm ent, a b u se or
neglect.
A ll of the boys that e v e n tu a lly e nd up
at t l^ youth ra n c h a re re fe rre d b y the
D e p a rt m e n t o i P u b l ic A s s is t a n c e ,
m a g is t r a t e c o u r t s a n d the Y o u th
Rrfiahlllhitinn- D pp artm w it- the -onlv
_ ih r e e le e a l entities in Id a h o a b le to do
th is.
R e v . D w ig h t E . W ilch e r, youth r a n d i
s u p e r in t e n d e n t , c h a p la in a n d c o u n “ s a b r 7 ~ s£B J"that“when a boy is^ co n 8t d e r e d - f g r ^ r in t ia ir iM r t e ^ t liF i« ^
dow n and look t h e ^ d i o v e r a n d a t
sam e p n ie l H them Took h im o w r . ____
I f the boy is t t o accetAed he co m e s
't o U v e In pne of the th re e
s r n r m i a s . ^ '... - - r j s r r
Once a boy co m e s to the ra n c h be is
g iv e n t e s t s 't o se e how f a r a lo n g in
school he is. If b e is found to'be no m o re
than a y e a r beh ind in sch oo l w o rk a nd
c a ir t H H d f e n f^ u la r s a io M
n m rtifin n n r th m h f <ittffnrfii n m <*f ♦*»*
pofaUc sch ools in M in id o la C ounty.
-------- H uw evw , B Ig U I
job
with the o th e r s t u i ^ t s in a ll of th eir
c la s s e s ."
W hen a boy. fir s t com es into P o tte r’s
school, w h id i is found in the b asem en t
- o t ^ o e w i^ .c ^ ^
te st^ _
Ju st.w h a th e k n e tw s.A » m e o f4 h e boys he
—
i i p_to- f i ye
years behind in these three fields
Some of the reaaons tor theJwys-^
lieihg so far bdiind. Potter said indude
Jwy5 wmaTt etirriuraga "gTBt
’fie sE ”
re < » rd s a re exam fiaed. I f no d e ^
p s y d jo lo g ica l p ro b le m s a r e found the
^Jkssty
in sch o o l and c a n ’t a ^ u s t to it so cia lly
O T 'e m o tio n a lly 'ffieii h e attehSs the^
school on the ra n c h .
•T h is & h o o l is ru n by B ill Potter, who
~ has~b e cn w itli ~theT a n d i.fu r one y e a r .—
P r io r to c o m in g to the youth ra n c h he
re ce iv e d a ro a s t e r’s d eg ree in the f id d
of sp e c ia l e d u ca tio n at the U n iv e r^ t y of
N orth ern C o lo ra d o . B e fo re re ce iv in g
h is m a s te r's d e g re e Potter w a s a s o d a l
w o rk e r in C o lo ra d o .
P otter s a id , " T h e p ro g ra m re a lly
ch anged th is y e a r. W e 're doing a lot
m o re t e e a d i individuaLl boy and
h andling m o re boys. W e d e cid e w h at
,, e a (* to y n r e d s a n d then M
— a c liie v e n h is r '—
" n iis is ju s t one qf. the re a so n s, he
~ said,‘" l h a r w i^ t r y to ru n a c o m p le lc Q r'
in d iv id u a liz e d school.
In t h is x o in p le t e l y in d iv id u a liz e d
■ school only th re e su b je cts — re ad in g ,
m a t h e m a t ic s a n d E n g lis h — a r e
taught.
P o tte r s a ld . 'H - t lif it K q ' c a n iia n d le
— these-tfarae -»ubj€aet»-«s,profiriM itly,.<fl
other stu d en ts in the re g u la r school we
“Some of thip boys may never catch
____ «~hate .»idiiroT." he said.
To try_^ help theacimyajjgocationaL
education irertrurtor was hired a month
ago. Chnce this Dmeraxa £eta started.
eas± .
aectianics, weldiogjwoodworking and conduct driver's
educatian classes.
In this'way. be said, it is hoped that
'the tx ^ c a n at l e ^ be tau ^t a s ^
(hey can iise alter leaving &e randi.~'
-- For~tlie-boj«-(n-the
year ratmd. They have a regular nine'month Ktedt y tx r and then an 'eigfat-
week su m m e r sch o o l session.
'T h e su iA m e r s ^ o o l s ^ o n w iIT fe p n
M onday. In this se ssio n , Potter de cid e s
who w ill be in it on this c r it e r ia : " C a n
— tlnrboy stand It?
to get into re g u la r school th is f a ll? I f het
is in the re g u la r sch o o l now ca n w e keep
tlim fro m fa ilin g nnri p u L h im h a d c .in -lt
th is fan?”
Of the boys P o tter h as had in school,
th e ir a b ility ra n g e d fro m tbe second to
ninth g ra d e a b ility level.
H ia su ccesse s h a v e been the boys w t o
h a v e m ade th ree to fo u r y e a r a c a d e m ic
grow th d u rin g the p a st school y e a r.
O w C T t h e jp M t j'e a r .P o t t c t .s a W ^ t h e
1 »y g -B tte H m flg T tiO icB o 6r B a v e ^ ^
th ree hour school d a y . T h is
w ith the
addttlon o f the vocational edticatlon
c u rric u lu m it w ill go up to a six -h o u r
s d io o l day.
D u rin g the n e x t y e a r Potter hopes to
be a b le to do m o re Tnnrhitii* te a ch in g to
h elp tbe tw ys t e a rs m o r« .e a sie r.
' A lw ','lie p la n s io h ave & e te ach in g
n u U a ia l& Ja iie d .jQ -tfa a L th e bizys .con
listen to th e ir lesson at the sa m e tim e
they a re r e e lin g it.
F ^ t t v is nl«n p lanning to ta ke the
boys on m o re f i ^ d ay s next y e a r to
h elp them g r a ^ better w iiat is in the
co m m u n ity and to h elp them in th eir
s c h o o lw o rk .
F o r the boys w ho a re n 't intereste d in
-B o y
______ _________
w h ^ they ca n h a v e tb e ir own p ro jrc ts
— And,-for the-boys ^«4io-are c o n c e m e d w ith th e environm ent, the ra n c h h a s an
e<-0l 0 i» v ~ iM )T P 6 ttCT~is~als0 l h e a d v is e r
chocolate padding.
ROBERT, a resident al the Idaho Youth Ranch,
Rupert, selects a book to read frofti the youth
ranch school library. All ranch' facilities are open
for public tour beginning cl 1:30 p.m. today.
TEACHBt at the Idaho Youth Ranch, BUI krtier,
and one of the boys. Bill, ^o over some *>t the
corder.
T S S F h o y on the. r a n d fin d s l i e is
assig n e d to som e fo rm of d a ily chores.
T h is Ts espec ia ll}^ true duh n g
5.. sch o ol
trtirfa fr Potter Ifi a l in its .Smut m aster.
J W X V fltlTT; IT O h m ri
-^ trie sto ta k e
on outings. T o d ate they h ave visited
the Q t y of H o ck s, weiU fish in g and
• ra ftin g o n 't h e Snake R iv e r . T h is
s u m m e r he hopes to t ^ them on a
w e d c’s s u rv iv a l cam pout if p o ^ b le .
be sa id .
T h ro o g h these outings the boys a r e
YOUTH R A N C H r « k fe « # 7 < b b ^ . m tkH the
^ - M n u £ h r o J C o w in 0
Library
facilities
s p A t a d m g ih t io f t p m g i
Scan fibs
S X E C rn n ^ dimetor v f .ik e Jdaho Youth ^ m ch,
in c ., Imf ■
dtUdt',- ^mts
uitii ttm m^anaxiikiri’s v ffnx
m a ts m
fS u k
-mrifh ■boutmptirmfit,'Mrs. J oe i <Co|»«r.
New membei
welcoTned
Camp discussed
— t*..... • ■
Idaho Yqufh RancH7fodby~
- ib t r S M tia » T n B B p g 4 - a q n b
---------- ■*«>•«—
I" ~ ■'r j t"
RIC H FIE LD —One
ne
member wits welcomed an
aimed tbe bylaws of Richfield
Chapter No. 72, Order t>l
PMiem Stir; when - it
One of the reasons they gavte to the
Minidoka County sheriff’s office was
“ because the food at the ranch was
terrible.”
After h a y ^ sampled a regular noon
- m ^ a t the
Ceotinned !n m iwge IS .
able’ to prove’ to themselves that they
can go places and do thingi a lot of
other boys their age don’Cgetto. A lot
-of-thwn hail M ver,am eed out before,
he Mid.^
il
H ip
q ^ _ d n r ii^ t o
r f H i t y J o B y h je ;
------------ —
i® 5 r jit o i6 o U F t e t i
Mr«. A. G. Btawdl.
matiaDfaad^bliuvpoe I
worttqr patron, pretdded at i
business meeting.
The members voted ta5ynm «~iic« gave a traveloguel on
i b ^ t r ip to A ia S a lla a a otter
i pnlata.. of interest. While in
i Sidney,' Australia, they at­
tended
the
international
Botarian's meeting.
Mrs. Biswell reported on
Grand Chapter o f OES sessions
hdd at SoiK the past week. She
ser% ^ as delegate to the
SSlOO*
Show
W in n e rs
F/KST PLACE in iris arrongemerifs went fo M rs.
Glenn Draper, Burley, left, and to Mrs. Ruth Duggan,
—Ruclay^.'lnr "Qiuiftn. nf .the ^how,” ..Iha. aw,nreiii. vnfre
. given during the }9fh annual Iris Society show held
in:Bubl.
Ir is S o c i e t y
Women meet
for brunch
sh o w
w in n e r s a n n o u n c e d
___RtTTTT — Mr. Hiirliiy.Pinrtrr
was awwded the Silver Medal
for showing the most flrst place
«rWhH« . w w the 19th' Annual
~ T i6 ~ S o a ^ rS h w l t waa antoday. '
Mrs- A1 Ttoberer received the
rtwm> Mjirial fhr wiAiod place
md Mrs. CLW. V a i l ^ ^ w
third, accordtaig to Mrs. Sam
Vbnenberg. show chairman.
, “ Q «w n of the Show” went to
RnUr r>igpm who alair
w «» a one-year membershtp in
theAmerican Iris Sode^. Mrs.
third wim- her entries. Uon
____ J waa awartted
„
for his “ iris of the ya r.”
A1 Kramer waa Brat in the
artistic sweepstakes and Mrs.
Glenn Draptf was first with the
best iris arrangement.
Doug Chadd received first in
tfa* youth dtrisiiai with 'Keven
Dramer receiving second, and
third, newt werdlfaio nwarri w*nt
to-Mra. CLW. Valtette and the
beat edocatfaMMd exhibit wfts
diaplived by Mrs. &w: £^nifli:
JuBkir w t e n ^ in Claas I were
Brett VKstsoo- and K erin
Kramer, and ia daas-II, Doog
Chadd. First piaee winners in
O a ssH I m n D t o t HwolBFaBd
lEevkr Ksmbw. Bcent Ctooks
abaim kiinrptM efai daasIV
aad VI, wMb Kevin ^:ram«r
stmt. _with 35 exfajbOtTs. The
show is sponsor^ by the Magic
Valley Iris S od e^ in conJunction with the American Iris
SBCtHy. Ftwt plMse-TVlnnera
awarded outstanding Iris
specimens by the society,
donated or purchased by
membersT
Door prizes were won by Mrs.
PW Burgner. Mrs. Ottie Burbtuik, Mrs. Ruth Koch, Mrs.
Hazel Reichert, Mrs. Phoebe
Thomason and Mrs. Pearl
Howerton,
MURTAUGH — Ktappy Hour
Club members mirt at the Idaho
Pbwcr l ^ k f o r brviu£ this past’
week, with M rs. Hubert
Syverson and M rs. Morris
The white elepftant gift was
won by Mrs. Oliveir Johnson and
Mrs. Syverson received- an
anniversary gift ffffH UBIT
secret sister.
Plans were made: for a 1 pjn.
luncheon June 23 at the Twin
Falls a t y Park.
Secret’sisters viure revealed
and new names di;awn.
Flans were made for the 6:30
pjn.'potluck dinner to be'held
June 24 at the Masonic Temple.
Mrs. John L e m m ^ , Mrs.
Manuel King and Mrs. Agnes
Powell are in charge of
arrM gem ents. Mrs... Anna
MdOssick will handle Uhle
decorations.
Plans were also made for the
annual Maaonic-Eastem Star
family picmc-to be held Sunday,
Aug. 29, at the home-of Mr. and
Mrs. Biswell, southeast of
Shoshooe.
Mrs. Cfifford Conner and Mrs.
Clarence Lemmon presented a
Father’s Day program, with
Mrs.. Biswell paying tribute to
all „ fatBers present and_
presenting them a gift.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Edwnrrt .«;phl<tler and Mra.
Berk Albert. The table was
centered with a pink rose.
by good behavior," he said. Hie boys go
nsn
ranch,. Itmming how to move and set
Irrigatioiii'pipes-uid-other-work-done.
—nthttn argtw hig for the lawiis, helping
t ^ c o a ^ beeping the iqalntenancrman—
w b ft in the 3 W r y 2 1 o r other^
miscdlaiienis jobs.
Childa pointed out that boys don't just
c o m to the ranch and stay there for a
period and matiM. ‘They go th m and
work and plav with other boys and
mature throiiigh learning experiences,”
he said.'
He also said that like any other
run away on occasian. During the past
two years there have been two groups
that ran away, be said. Both were
caught shortly after leaving the ranch.
This past week ooe group ran away.
Spring, weight sp irts cgatjsJo-caoL
.oFpblyester/vvoor and pol^^yester/Knen single breostedr BeHof plains
- W B P p g c _W1BWW»- ia c w a g r ^
SelecHon o f good tboking sum­
mer vi«eight spor^ctjotr:—
88
i o r t r e l** p o l y e s t e r d o u b l e r
s la c k s . C b n t r n e n T d T ^ s t y l-
in q , f a s h io n le g , s o lid c o lo r .
00
Dreu Slacks
for Dad
lo n g w e a r in g w o o l/
F o rtre l^ fjo ly e ste r D o u b le kn it pot^ k ic k s :
00
Shirt a n d lie set, boxed an d rea d y
to gfive. Polyester/cotton shirt in
blue, sunbeam , cucumber,
pink,
ecru—of^jw s—with—p€i#e»ned^- tie.
Sizes 1 4 to 17.
^
Q O
SHOP
Mon. ilc Tues.
J w
9 P M
.
I
industrial arts se<Slon~~and—regular
dasiamin-area in itRev. WUdier said if the ranch has to
^ ~ » te ctd g w fa fa A w m b e ^ iu ia 4 ir s t .-h c f ^
tHp gyrfiniiViliim 'ithniiiH have toppriority. This eHdlity helps boys with
coordination problems and brings out
teamwork and individual spoits that
everyone can participate in.
When this complex will be completed
depends on when the funds are avail­
able, both men said.
They also said that eventually the
all over the state so that they can serve
the needs of the youth of Idaho. As it Is
now only a s m ^ portion can t>e served
by the youth ranch. The rest end, up at
St. Anthony or Blackfoot.
' ;
Gifts to make Dad
“
comfortable. Low prices
to comfort your budget
FATHER'S DAY
T a iT r 'f a n o y
randi hopes to be able to’ buUd a school
as a fonxiD on vywjkgTKls.
A can opentf should tw.sfiarp
enough' to TTmkp a smooth,
dean c u t One way to keep the
cutting edge sharp is to wash
and dry it after each use.
.Bf4-hnrlf. «;tYli»<
be any oomplaints about the meals.
~ n iir f ii g -th ii-> O T « '* w y ‘jr^ ~ th e T ro u th
^tojaiotiw a n d o llli^ reiiyi-^itUinAeventeL:
p o ly c ita r B U n d , i l o y i
'
A demqnstrandn on diBaiiing~
tack was given by Kdley and
Mary Jo fiy n e .
Literqtui;e
course set
-Otjun V o H e y
L in d a O t s e n / M g d le y s a y V o w s
?vn<tay. Juria la. m i Tlmea-Neuix .TwIn Fnlli. ldaho-,32.,
TWnSf F A L L S - U n d a D ale
O lse n , d a u ^ t e r o f M n tm d ^ M ra .Jo h n . A. O lse n , K is q b e rly , iand
D o n ald U o y d M t d le y , w n of
" IS ir . a n d - M r s . R o ® B e d lie y ,
'W C A fiflX irrT rS X JT ::;^
'K im b e rly ,' w e re n ia r r ie d on
“literature course ofjerlri^ the
M a y 28 a t the C a rillp n R e c e p ­
.study of npvela by,20th century
tion Oeaiter^ T w in F a l l s ; authors such as Hemingway,
T h e b r id e w a s g iv e n in
Faulkner, Mann,
Kafka,
m a rria g e b y heri fa th e r and
Lawrence and Joyce will be i
m nthi^r In la— d o u b le — F in
: M « ed atSun Valiev June 21io
_ o e re m o n y p e rfo rm e d b y R e v .
“T if l y 3 T ~
.
- J f f l n B T C Sfeta.
Itie course is offered by the
D sjm ija M e d le y . b ro th e r o f the
UahO'State^ UniversityDiVision
^ b r id e ^ o o m , w as' soloist, ■ a c - ‘
-e o m p a n ied b y - -M r a ;- 1
T h e n a m e of the 'c o u rs e is
' D enton, org an ist.
E n g lis h 354, T h e M o d e m N o ve l.
' M a id of honor w a s M a r k y
^ t " 6 ffO T “ stUdents~th^ee“ t r a n ” O ls e n r s is t e r 'o M h e ^ b r id e r w it ^ j
sfe ra b le co lle ge cred its . T u itio n
—D e n n is-M e d le ;
T r t l l T f e i a r i o r cred it students
— ^ D e b b ie M ilt o n r e g is t e r
- a a d J 6 & .io tiih Q 2 e - H h a d k b i M
r r g u e s t s r w h ile r ^ J u d y M ilt o n
take the co u rse for cre d it.
N a n cy M e d le y a n d B a rb a ra
R eg istra tio n w ill be h eld Ju n e
M e d le y a ssis te d a s g ift c a r r ie r s .
18 fro m 7 to 8:30 p j n . In the
T o m M e d le y lit the ca n d le s
C a m a s R o o m of the O ia lle n g e r
p rio r to the ce re m o n y .
In n in S u n V a lle y , a cco rd in g to
Th e re ce p tio n w a s h e ld in iB ill B y rn e , d ire cto r of con-'
m e d ia te ly a fte r the ce re m o n y
Unuing educatio n at IS U . “ T h e
a t the C a r illo n R e c e p t io n
e a sie st w a y to give d ire ctio n s
M R . A N D M R S . D A V tD W . S T A N G E R C enter. M r s . J a c k W rig h t and
“"for fin d in g th is Is to sa y ifT F n e x T "
" M rs , C e c il Ja c o b s c u T anTT
photo)
to the b ik e sh o p ," he added. T he
se rv e d the ca k e . M r s t-C liffo rd
I
c la s s m eeting time is to be
Staley, aunt of the b rid e , M rs .
a rra n g e d .
Jo e B ro o k s and M rs . C h u ck
The In stru cto r is D r. W illia m
Brow n s e rv e d the punch.
L . S h a rfm an , an IS U assistf^nt
Th e b rid e w a s h onored w ith
p ro fe ssQ r^ f E n g l i ^ . H e h o lds a
sh ow ers co4iosted b y M rs . E . ;J.
F I L E R — G re g o ry G ene
-B .S . a n d P h .D degr w s frnm>
-S o m m e r— and__ M r s ___ C h u c k K n ig h t , B o lflo , f o r m e r ly of
C o lu m b ia
U n iv e r s it y .
F o i'
B row n, a n d by M rs . J a c k
F ile r , h a s been selected b y the
fu rth e r Info rm atio n, co ntact D r.
T W IN F A L L S — O ur S a v io r F u c h s a n d T a m e ra R o b e rts.
W rig ht a n d M rs . C e c il Ja c o b s. E x p e r im e n t in In t e r n a t io n a l
F lo w e r g irl w as N o rm a Je a n
S h a r f m a n , c-o Sun V a lle y L u t h e r a n C h u r c h w a s the
A re h e a rs a l party" w a s hosted L iv in g to liv e a b ro a d w ith a
Lodge. Sun V a lle y .
setting of the M a y 22 w edding of R a p p , s is t e r o f the b r id e . by the b r i^ g r o o m ’s p w e n ts . fa m ily in G re e c e th is s u m m e r.
J a n e t E U iib e t h R a p p , d a u g hter R in g b e a re r w a s J e ff In g ra m ,
f^ t-o f-to w n g u e sts attended
G re g , a sophom ore at B oise
of M r. a nd M rs . C la re n c e I. son of M r . and M rs . O liv e r fro m C a lifo rn ia,' W ashington. State (A lle g e , is so n -o f-M r. and
of
the Illin o is, O regon, P o catello and
R a p p , a n d D a v id W e sle y In g r a m , .f r ie n d s
M r s . G e n e K n ig h t , B o is e ,
Stanger, son o f M r . and M rs . b rid e g ro o m . O rg a n ist w a s M rs. B oise.
fo rm e r F il e r residents.
V e m J . S tanger, a ll T w in F a lls . T ja r k s .
G teg , a sophom ore at Boise
G
u
e
sts
w
e
re
re
g
iste
re
d
b
y
T h e d o u b le -r in g c e re m o n y
. State C o lleg e, Is son of M r . M d
M
rs
.
N
a
n
c
y
F
leg
eJ
a
n
d
g
ifts
w a s p e rfo rm e d b y R e v JE u g e n e
M rs . G e n e K nigh t, B oise , fo r­
T ja r k s before a . b a c k ^ l ^ d of w ere a rra n g e d by M rs . Ann
m e r F il e r re sid e n ts.
M
ort,
c
o
u
sin
of
the
b
rid
d
,
a
nd
w hite g la d io li a n d blue accent
T lie e x p e rim e n t p ro g ra m h a s
P
a
t
r
ic
i
a
R
o
e
h
l
a
n
d
S
h
e
r
y
l
T W IN F A L L S D em on­
flo w e r s . T h e c h u r c h
w as
been e n g a g ed in in tern a tio n al
Houston,
sch
ool
frie
n
d
s
o
f
the
deco rated w ith w hite a nd blue
Rdiicattnnfll.p-»phflngp iiln rp Its stra tio n s h ighligh ted the C la s s ic
L a s s i e— 4 -H C lu b m B e tiiiK '
ga rd e n flo w ers. T h e pew s w ere lo'lde. ih e re ce p iio n w a s iJeliT
founder; D r. D onald B . W att,
T u e sd a y at the home of D onna
enhanced w ith w h ite and blue im m e d la t ly .^ t e r the c e re m o n y
p A in _
M e m b e rs of the
B rst in tro d u ced a gro u p of
s a t i n - b o ws ^ d ^ t r ^ l o v e s . —
C ^ S w M l l S ^ ^ e r s h e J l A m e r i c ; ^ y o u th s to t h e ir D o w n in g r----S P R T N r .n A I.K
-M r.
-------T h e - b iO d < > - w 4 .s - - g iv o .u 4 n - - m ^ Q ^ tn e^ M
Uieir - T O B i a i i u m U i f l t
ja
-g m raB W iiBB and K a tliy O 'K eete
„ T sy hfei- fA tnsr:.. s it e
M rs . R o b e rt W e b ster th is past co u n te rp a rts in S w itzerlan d In
g a v e a dem onstration on se a m s.
d ale, annou nce the engagem ent w ore a full-length e m p ire w aist ca k e . M r s . R e ta G ee an d M rs .
week. S p e c ia l guests w e re seven 1932.
M r s . D ea g le showed how to
-a n d “ fo rth c o m ln g m a rria g e of gown, fashioned w ith a ch a p e l C U fford O w ens se rv e d coffee
It now re p re se n ts m o re than
m oth ers of the g ir ls an d three
her
d a u g h te r,
Candace
tra in of w hite la ce . H e r bouffant a nd p u n c h . T h e b r i d e ^ s ^ ^ b l e : / ^ ^ ^
m e a su re c o rre c tly an d how to
60 c o u n trie s in v o lv e d in a n n u a l
c eo n tfoe rp
r e rf
d w ith n
a t h r e e -­
-------- J p B rent P e te rso n ^......vell..oLlU m inn w a s h eld -by k c e w a s p
ex
d
ia
iig
e
~of~so
m
e
5,000
yuuiig
A'
d
iscu
ssiu
n
w
a
s
~
tiered w e d ain g ca k e c a r r y in g out
son of D r. L . Eugene P e te rso n, flow ers.
L o ri
B u ste r* t a lk e d
the b r id e -3 co lo rs.
p r o je c t s
c o m p le t ^
Hot m en a n d w om en betw een the
stra ig h te n in g m a te ria l.
R e x b u rg .
T h e brid e c a r r ie d a bouquet of
U nited S tate” -" H 100 n atio n s
m e b rid e w a s honored w ith a
A n A u g . 20 wedding i s p la n n e d b lu e and w hite sa tin ro s e s with
^
at the Id ah o F a lls L D S T e m p le . a ^ w Jit te c a r n a t io n c o r s a g i^ sh ow er by M rs . V a n R a n k e n . A
M is s P e te rso n is a g ra d u a te o f” ce n te r m ade fo r h er by the r e R e a r s a r W l y W s T , o s t ^ y ^ ‘ * P ^ » y < ^ , ^ ^ ‘S ^
-Bickfe=Collage=:^Tand~Btlgliafflm nfteidegoom :^n»»ti>«‘V ” 'h n ^ lK a H o n o re d g u e s ts w e r e the
Young U n iv e rsity , re c e iv in g a m ade co rsa g e s fo r the grandillu stra te d ta lk on “ C a re of
g ra n d m o th e rs of the b rid e , M rs .
S. S. d e g re e in so cia l w o rk -and m o th ers and b rid e sm a id s.
Y o u r 4-H R e c o rd B o o k ." R a y
S
tella
C ox and M r s . C la r a
c h ild developm ent.
T o w e ll sp oke on se lectio n of
P e te rso n w a s gradu ated fro m - M a id of honor w as M a ry Httbb^U, an d gra n d m o th e r of
tro u se rs fo r pre -te en s, a n d Ja n e
- J U c k s C o lle g e ' and attended
B engoechea, sch o o l frie n d of the b rid e g ro o m , M rs . R e n a W h istler g a v e gu id e lin e s for
B rig h a m VoUng U n iv e rsity . H e the b rid e. B e st m a n w as John T h a c k e r, a ll T w in F a lls .
se lectin g h ose fo r p re -te en s.
A fte r a honeym oon t r ip to the
se rv e d a n L D S m issio n in the L o w e ,
a
f r ie n d
of
the
— lt - w a g ~ann<iunc^d—th e -n e x t north c e n t ra l states and p la n s to ..,h rlrf« p rn n m — t lrfiw a we re Ben- ■Hailey a r e a ,^ - t iy - c o n p lg
m eeting is a t 1 ;30 p j n . T u e sd a y
“T6t t a r d ~ p r o f S s I o n i r school in
K e rlin and Jo h n Pettygrove. re sid e ' In T w in F a lls
a t h o m e o f M r s . C h a r le s
C a lifo rn ia this fa ll.
B r id e s m a id s w e r e M a r ily n continu e th e ir education.
W ebster.
(Mike's
[ G r e g o r y K n ig lr F
Ja n e t R a p p , S ta n g e r
p la n s s u m m e r a b r o a d
rftd te n u p t ia l v o w s
August
wedding
planned
presented
M ini stitchers
meet in Paul
Suifnmer
PANT
IP
INFANTS ‘I
W
/
M ontiiChM jA
I f ! l if U t l M U r tQ U
l O v " i n u tOi\
froTrr
f
...........
m
m
m
m
SA FETY
u
m
88
t
-
"
-------- ---------
____
-
$ 1 97
18____V in y l
S e o t , F o ld s d o w n .
W ith v in y l p a d d e ^ s e a t .
p m
W A lK m
R e g . S I 3 . 9 5 . Lo c k s into a n y T e a ! iin clu d rn g
b u c k e t s e a ts
J j
C R IB
m
N U R SER K IT
----------4 -
BLA N KET
J U M P f f iS
8
R e f i . 8 7 . 9 9 . F lo r a l
P rin t V in y l S e a t .
R e g . ^ 8 - 9 5 . K it C o n t a i n s :
6 N o t u r a l A c t io n N i p p l e i , 6 5 - 8 o j .
P r e - S t e r iiiz e d D it p o s a b le F o r m u la
I,
M
6
H o ld e n , a n d ' C a p s,
1
ito m o tic E x p o n d e r .
R e g . S 2 .0 0 . ^ 5%
Rayon, 45% PolyestT ir3 6 " 'x 5 0 " PfUTt:------
still nothing nicer or more comfortable than
fas&GIRlS
D IA P E R
For oUTTdafto- ««ual_Muiy__cd_Jiyin^^,there's
a pant suit.
O V E R N IG H T
Sftlftctiqns grp just great . . . ^ p r jc e s ^ r
moderate . . . colors are striking . . ! fa b ­
PA M PERS
P A Il
rics are "easy care'^
— ^rriri-tr<-m-r#4ebfQting q-qofqqoOs4daho-suiiu-----
-1 ? -
□[{eg.
Plastic
pc5.
oble
G ian t Size;
S A L E
A IE
R € g .:9 5 ^ rT 2 'r^
cotton, w ashable.
P R I C E S
-
tner-with^a_pcmt-suit from' yo u rj^ a y fo ir.
,
DISPQSABUbUPERS
E F F E C .T f V F .t
IE 14 thru WED.,^
L
iM O N D A '
'til 9:00
28 Tlme$-New», T w in F a lls , Idaho
Qriqinal art^ ork needed
Tvrln Falls 00)1111/ Fair art
exfeiiUt, Mrs. Faye Konicek,
presiclejit of the Art Guild of
nstagTc VaWrSSTf£63 ^
She said any artist in Magic
Valley, Icfcho or in other states
are eli^ble to compete as there
■nriii ho r«Rh jiriie«:for best of
Mag iciValley Fa VOrites
Sunday,.June i j . iOT~
tv
'
t;^WM
SANDY SfOKER
..
i „ ■ ■ _
1.—
i ~i i
- '^ 8 0 - M o i m c V S » 7 T w i n T 5 1 i r “
S^TTrtrsaiiison feature speaker. Members of all
' „ _____
. .
i * .
AvenueClub w illin ^ i» t 8 t w n r -v e t e r a n — OFganlzations—and— HAW A n A N B E E P tO A VES
beef. Mix well. a»epe Inta two
rWednesday atihrlw m etjf^iJra-frienda-are^nvited to attend.— 1 - envelope brown-gravy-JMlx:!
J L m u m llk ____— ______ ^
bakii^.,pan.. Bake in a 3S0'
-degree oven for SO - ipliuilea.
teaspoon instant
T W m - F A iJ ^ ~ ^ o o n off~excess T at7~P 6ufX
T W IN F A L L S — T h e Ju n e F la g D a y T e a , sp onsored b y ^ m inced o rio n
are permissible.’ No one cares ^
.nlieffi your source material
.come^ from: you are completilylree t^get Ideas from
nature directly, ' from . other
-p^tings, from'pictures'cut out
of m^azines, or from dreams.’
- “In -depicting b scene at
rV
o n ly o rig in a l w o rk w ill be a c- p a in t in g ls to be a m o re o r le ss
cepted fo r the show. .
.fa ith fu l rendition, o r whether
L do not j f o r k -With a con- _ M in e elem im t^^
scio u s and s p e c ific co nvictio n o r o b j ^ t s a re to be em ^diasized
about a pa in tin g,’ sh e sa id . “ It o r o thers m in im ize d o r left out,
is a lw a y s open to ch a n g e and the com plete sketch is the v e ry
new asso ciatio n. It sh o u ld be a best k in d of re fe re n ce .
“ T h e y also believe that the
celeb ration, one of s u rp ris e , not
a c t of d raw ing is an e x p e rie n ce
one re h earsed.
“ Th e painting Is a statem ent o r happening d u rin g w h ich the
of m y identity. It i s a p a rt of a rtilit ^ c o m e s c l o ^ l y in y o lv ^
— ^— ^ y - w o r k - is M - e a n ^ - - r ^ e la t e f d - - in th e llttle -w o ria W - l^ g o ih g 4 o o r ta k e
to m y p a s t p a in t in g s a n d d e p i c t , . in t e r p r e t
p a in t in g s to- c o m e . I n a lib e rtie s with, and th a t he wil]^
sense it is n e v e r fin ish e d . O nly de velo p fu rth e r id e a s on the
th e essen ce is stated. T h e k e y is. points that o rig in a lly attracted
presented to the beh o ld e r for
h im to the sce n e ," sh e said,
futu re t ra v e l.”
She noted “other pa in te rs
R a lp h — M a y fit.___t e c h n ic a l
m ake.uae of th e ir f a c ilit y to size
d ire cto r fo r the A riie ric a n A rtist up t h e ^ J o r p a rt o f what they
M agazine, sa y s. ‘Photos used a s w a n t to-do-w ith a -s c e n e a t its
firs t im p act and re q u ire no
m o re than j a p id o r p a rtia l
sketch es.
MR. AN D MRS. LEE ESLINGER
“ T h e re a re som e unw ritten
(Mike's photo)
ru le s about what co nstitutes an
arid w hatlS 'not
le g itim a te ," she s a id . “ F o r
e x a m p le , one m a y lia v e h i s '
sk e tch
p h o t o g r a p h ic a lly
e n la rg e d and p rinted on c a n v a s . '
T W IN F A L L S A no^iost TTie Im a g e on c a n v a s is used a s
p icn ic w ill be held a t the Tw in a g u id e instead of a n outline
d ra w in g in o rd e r
p la c e the ____________________________________
_____________
FialLs P o w e r P a rk JU ne 23 b y the________________________
G oodw ill Q u b , a cc o rd in g to d e ta ils p ro p e rly on th e .ca n v a s.
T W IN F A L L S — S h a ro n T h e ce re m o n y .
M rs, EM O m d o rff. p residen t. Upon painting Uie im a g e Is soon A llen , d a u g h ter of M r . and M rs. ' T h e ch u rc h recreation room ,
of the _____
reception,
w as
M e m b e rs a re to ta k T T W tlu ck — b u r ie d - T h is — m e t h o d — Is - G le n n - R - A lle n , T w in F a lls,-a n d _
_____________
___________
'___________ frequ enU v used by p o rtra it L e la n d E s lin g e r , T w in F a lls , d e r a t e d w ith white stre a m e rs
— W FB ~W SlVpr P n r f W «^‘hfi^tp 4 .i- - p a l« teK :- B a t " l f ^ n e ^ 5^
w e d d in g voWS M thfe w itii d eepH iui K ruses peeKLig
for the la st m eeting, w ith M r s . e n la r g e s a p h o t o g ra p h a n d T w in F a lls L D S C h u rch . F ir s t ’ t h ro u g h . T a b le s w e re a ls o
Boyd Sm ith lead ing the fla g p a in ts in a fa ith ful co p y , it is W a rd O ia p e l, M a y 28. T h e deco rate d w ith clusters of d a r k
salute and M rs . M a e M e a d e r d e f in it e ly not a n o r ig in a l brid eR room is the son of A rth u r p ink a n d re d flow ers. __________
- -F ^ -l s . and M rs.
G u e st w e re registered by
s l l n g y . T w in
-we-prayef:— --------------- -- p a in tin g , .Some palnttngq h ave E----nhnt/\<n*ar\h*' nrrltton
T/\a
"Santee c ro s a e r. M arilyn
w ritten Jo
e D uffek, Je ro m e .
M r s . C a r r I s c o m m it t e e “co lo re d photograph”
Noy h an d le d the gift table w ith
H ie ce re m o n y w a s p e r f o r m ^
ch a irm a n fo r the n e w y e a r a ll o v e r them .”
N ov servlni^ fi ca k e
H o w f a r one m a y { o in using by B is h o p M e l V a n Noy.
- books,-and M r s .- E m e r y - T r e a t
F o r h er w e d d in g , the b rid e and N o rm a Allen, Naficy A lle n
gave a n outline of the books fo r p h o t o g ra p h y a s a n a id in
p a in tin g la a m atter~of~the a r- wore^a~white~ 5 a t in ^ o o n le n g t h — a "< l-P e an n a -G a m p b e ll p o u rin g 1971-72."“
,
^
A donation w as g iv e n to the tis t ’s Intentions, h is taste, and gown, fash io n ed w ith an e m p ire p u n c h .O v a t io n A rm y , to w ard h elping' T iis n m 5 M g r T ) r '^ x e c u t J o n r 'h e " 'w ^ ls t lin e T in id” lo n g — streef*“ B otli tli* b i‘id w ^ 4 * id e g o o m ;^
m u st
m ake
an
o r ig in a l sleeves. She c a r r ie d a bouquet, a re attending t W Idaho State
send a boy to s u n u n e r ca m p .
S e c re t p a l n a m e s w e re statem ent ra th e r th an copy o r of p ink ro se s w ith sa tin le a f U n iv e rsity . Pocatello,
ed^g.
A fte r a honeymoon trip to
re v e a le d and new ones w ere ste a l fro m M o th e r p ictu re .
W o rk s for the f a ir sh o u ld be
Jeannette A lle n w a s m aid of Y e llo w sto n e N atio n a l P a r k ,
draw n.
B r id e s m a id s
w e re they w n i’ reSraFirTPocateU o.
"a m i' ~fSB» o r com pleted w itliln the h o n o r.
M rs . R o n a ld S ch e ru p p w e re in la s t two y e a rs and not p re v io u s- JoA n n e M ik e s e ll, J a c k ie W ahl
ch a rg e of the p ro g ra m , with ly exM bited a t the f a ir . No co p y and D onna B ro w n fie ld , a ll Tw in
p riz e s going to M a rty W ild m an w o r k p ro d u c e d u n d e r s u p e r - ' F a lls .
v isio n is e lig ib le. A ll e n tries
R ic k T u rn e r, U . S. A ir F o rce ,
and Zored a F re e m a n .
P r iz e fo r the d a y
w a s m a y be entered fo r sa le . No w as best m a n . U sh e rs w ere
p r o v id e d b y M r s . N e w to n
- E v e rett;-w ith -^ 8 !- G e n e T y n e r ------ Ju d gin g-w B l be dune by Uu'ge— R n y T S l l n ^ . fill "T w H frF a n sT
re c e iv in g it. S ecret p a l g ifts
w e re r e c e iv e d
by
M a rty
W ild m an, D orothy M c G in n is ,
E^ra Atkinson and M a e M e a d e r.
-L y dia_S d lM :binski w a s a guest.
Goodwill
Club plans"
July picnic
- o littlfe - tsw eet-BOUL-sauce— over-.
loaves. R etu n L -tQ _ ftv e n .ib r-15 l
m inutes. H M r r e n u d id h g sauce
to pa ss. S e rve w ith r ic e r M akes
eight s ^ ^ g s .
~meeting-of thcTl^uth-eentral-tKe------Women’ s------Patriotic~*~®86SrsUgntly-
show, $75, a nd rw n e rM ip ,: I S O r ^ n f f i T M v a n y T J a ^ ^
Hbbon s- w iU be a wa r<t»il-fop:— e o m p le te -a n d -c a w fi “
w in n e r s
in
the
;v a r io u s s k e t d i executed on the spot. ’
m ed iu m s.
- sh e states. “ T h e y b e lie v e that •
-no-mattef-*rfiether-Hhe-flnal-
Week's Recipe Winner
briglnarpaintlhg
Sharon Allen, Esiinger
exchange nuptial promise
to
_GwenVan
Id a h o
D e n ta l
A s s is t a n t s O rg an izatio n s, w ill be h e ld a t 2 - - beaten:;- - v . — , :
A ssociation w ijl be h eld a t 7 p.m . M o n d a y a t the D A V H aU . ^ tablespoon sn ippe d
p .m . Th u rsd ay in the o ffice s of B e th e l D a y w ill pre sid e . R e v .
p arsley
D r. L in co ln and M cA te e . TTils H e rb e rt E . M o r ris of the F i r s t . 2 teaspoons soy sau ce
ddaeetlng.wiU b e to -:d lscu asL.th e __IJn ited M fith o d ia tC h lirch w illb e ^ teaspoon salt
jiaU -progrgiH r^ - -- - ......
^ efltara^ -l4 ^> > ^ to .-» terofaea^=<»^r,
^
a ll v e te ra n -o rg a n iz a tlo n s and - i - c v p so ft.b r e a d,abdut
IV
i
slic
es
K E T G H U M - K a th le e e n G a y f rie n d s a r e in v ite d to attend.
-,3- pounds g ro u n d beet.
S u t c lif f , d a u g h t e r o f M r s .
^an
sw e e t—
sour sa u ce
'a n d D r. R obert J . S u tcliff. R e b e k a h L o d g e w i l l ' m e e t
B oise , h as been g ra d u a te d fro m T u e sd a y fo r a potluck d in n e r at
- t h e CSoUege of N a tu ra l S cien ces, 6 :30 p .m T -aW h e-IO O F -H aU . A U ------In ^ la rg e m ixing -baw l....blen d_
Colorad o State U n iv e rsity , F o rt O d d F e l l o w s a r e in v it e d , g ra y y m ix a n d m ilk . Add inC o llin s , M iss^ S u t c lif f w a s M e m b e rs a re asked to b rin g stant m in c e d onion. L e t stand a
few m inu tes. A d d eggs, p a rsle y ,
g ra d u a te d with h onors w ith a item s fo r tiie auction.
soy sauce, s a lt an d pepper. S tir
m a jo r in m icro-biology. She
T W IN F A L L S - Th e la st d a y In bread c n im t e . A dd ground
m in d re d 'in ch e m istry.
T W IN F A L L S B ow l and
B lossom Club w ill m eet a t 2
e«ch l- weit k - f w Mttgle= y«llty-^
F a v o r it e s . I f y o u h a v e a
fflvnritp r e c lp ff jill t -m a ll . it -1ftt hh ee~ ^: R e c l p e i — D c p a rtm e n trW om en's P a g e E d ito r.
fO R T H C
f o r re g istra tio n for a d e fen siv e
d riv e co u rse w ill be M o n d a y at
S unny V ie w C ourts; A d d lso ri-
C o m p le te
S u x ia l4 ^ f 4 ~ f l^ U t f y ~
M rs'. V ic to r W. N elson.
T W IN F A L L S - D is tric t No.
1.
Id a h o
S ta te . N u r s e s
A ssociation, m eeting i s ' ^ l fo r 8
p .m .
W e d n e sd a y
at
S t.
T h e executive b oard m eeting is
at 7 p.m .
^
•
R e g i^ a t io n wUl be at 9:30 a .m .
a nd the c la s s w ill sta rt a t 10
a.m . TTie fee for ^ e r i c a n
A sso cia tio n of R e t ire rf P e rso n s
m e m b e rs is $1. A ll people o v e r
55 who h a v e a v a lid d r iv e r ’s
FLOORS
RUGS
A rro w Stono4 5 p U c« M t
take the cou rse.
T W IN F A L L S — T h e a n n iial-^
L ik e s a u c e p a n s , f r y p a n s
F la g D a y Tea, sp o n so re d b y the
sh ou ld be fla t on the bottom so
W o m e n 's
P a trio tic
O rganiM tlons, w ill be held at 2 food w ill brow n e v en ly . ^ u c h of
p.m . M onday at the D A V H a ll. t|je tim e fry p a n s - a re - u s e d - l
B eth el D ay w ill p re sid e . R e v . ^ t h o u t a co v e r. I f m o istu re is
H e rb e rt E . M o rris of the F ir s t used In fry p a n cooking, a tigh tU n ited M ethodist C h u rc h w ill be fittin g c o v e r is needed.
PLUS
N o rilo k *
Co ok 'n S«rv«
4 S p U co M t .
20 p[«c*
2 4 H o u r P lt k -“ P
tta r la r M l
$, p«Uv«>y ■
ttart
1 m i n u t e e o * it o f S h e l b y ’ i
o n A c ld i- k O h A v e
E.
733-5424
Buhl
95
co|uId h a rd ly w a it because L a r r y h a d n ^ ^ t e d m a n y g irls.
— L W e H , . 'r iK ik j^ r ijr jn J h is . g ir l. w a ] llrp<li jn l n e a rly fifln
Abby, sh e is so fa t! Th e poor thing co'idd H a rd ly fit into tlw
-b tg ^ a tt-ch a irr-w e -h a d r-W h CT- I - s e r v e d -d ln n e f-th a i
■ca ald n '^e a t'e^ o a g h . L a r r y acted kin d o f^ m fa arra sse d r
A fte r d in n e r Hiey v^ent fo r a' wallc and I w a s g lad o ur
neighbors w e re gone so tbey co u ldn 't see L a ir y w ith t h a t ',
g irl. •
She has a n ice p e rso n a lity and we iilced h e r a lot, but a ll
that weight m ^ e s h e r look y e a rs oidei- than « h e is. (She is
20 and pla n s to be a school te a ch e r.]
Should w e s a y som ething to our son? I m ean lik e suggest
that he tell h e r to go on a d iet? I ju st hate to think of that
g irl going dow n the a isle In a white gown and v e il to m a rry
our son!
' H E A R T S IC K
D E A R H E A R T S IC K : T h e way ib e “lo o k s " U only h a lf
the problem : T h e condiUoa o f h e r health is the oth er half.
T e ll y o u r io n (p riv a te ly , of c o u rse ) H u t you lik e the g irl,
but yon h^pe she ,does som ething about h e r w e l ^ t w h ile
she’f sUII young. B ut be a r In m ind, he' m a y h a ve a lre a d y
spoken to h er about i t
D E A R ^ B Y ; F o u r y e a rs
I su spected m y husband
had an a ffa ir w ith iiis t^ ic k e e p e r. I never let him know of
m y susp icio n s. T ^ e other d ay I found out b y a w id e n t that I
w as T i ^ . I s t iil sa id holhing^. but it bothers m e. I feel
"d ish onest” by co ncealin g th is know ledge fro m m y "Kiisband
now. Should I te ll him I know an^ c le a r the a ir ? It m a y start
an unpleasant situation if I b rin g it up. O r should I let
sleeping dogs lie and b ear m y cro ss. W hat do you sa y ?
S U S P IC IO N S C O N P IR M E a )
D E A R C O N F IR M E D : I vote (o r the sle ep in g dogs.
D E A R A B B Y : I h ave a fa m ily -to ca re fdi-, biit I try to
'40 m ile s aw ay.
T h is is w hat th e ir co nversatio n is like : ‘‘n i e w i t h e r is
too h pl. It 's too cold. 1 got a pa in here. I got a p a in there. M y
M M o irt-fe e l-flo goo d . M y n^ighb«
is d y ing of ca n c e r. Th e end of the w o rld is co m in g ."
Abby, I com e hom e W rung out. I w ill be 60 y e a rs old next
^ b irth d a y a n d X t h in k m y pa ren ts are_in^better^ health than^ I
am. A n y suggestions?
T IR E D
D E A R T I R E D : D on't let the sp re a d e rs o l gloom and
doom get (0 y o u . T h in k of so m e th ln g T o r .w i^ ch they c a n be
g r a ( ^ u l , ( l l b h a v in g each other w h ile p u s h ^ g 80) and h a rp
ASU bound
LOO K IN G OVER a schedule book for Arizona
Slate University is Joyce Guyer, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Max H. Guyer, Twin Falls. Miss Guyer has
received a full scholarship to ASU, covering the outof-state tuition and all-fees, including private music
lessons. The scholarship is rehe^'abie ■for her four
—y e a r s 'o f. undergrcrd oate-^tn d y^ n d ^ i l l total w ore
than $5,000.
’
M is s G u y e r r e c e iv e s
f u ll s c h o la r s h ip
T W IN
FALLS Jo yce
G u y e r, dau g h ter of M r . and
M r s . M a x H ! G u y e r, h a s been
selebted to re c e iv e a s c h o la r­
sh ip to A riz o n a State U n iv e rs ity
co v e rin g the out-of-«tate tuition
an d a ll fees, In clu d in g p riv a te
m u s ic lesso n s. ■
T h e sch o la rsh ip I s re n e w a b le
fo r h e r fo u r y e a rs of und e rg rad u a te 'stu d y a n d w ill, total
m ore- than $5,000.
M is s G u y e r - h a s been v e ry
student of M r s . D a v id M e a d fo r
the past fiv e y e a rs .
M is s G u y e r p la n s to m a jo r in
p e rfo rm in g a rt s in the School of
F in e A rts at th e u n iv e rsity .
S ie w a s a lso a w a rd e d a la rg e
sch o la rsh ip to the C o lleg e of
Idaho.
a n n u a l F r ie n d s h ip and In te m a flb n iil C ^ i^ w iU D ay w ill
b e ce leb rated . M w h b e rs w ill
d r e s s a cco rd in g ly .
A m e m o ria l s e r v ic e w as h eld
a t th e last, m e e t in g , w ith
m e m ^ s of th e O d d F e llo w s
L o d g e a s slpecial g u e sts. M rs.
Capps
w as
in s t a lle d . a s
m u s ic ia n by' M r s . B e n n ie R a y
T W IN F A L L S - M r . an d M rs .
W ebb , acting lodg e d ep uty,'and
-John. H , P e te rson, T w in F a
M r s. F loy d Silv a , m a r .sh a l. .IVlrs
announce, the engagem ent- of
W e b b w a s a ctin g in the absence
th e ir d a u g h te r. C h ris tin e , to
o f M rs . A,' G . fiis w e ll, lodge
“S t e v e tF D . 'H a rriso n , M oscow .
de p u ty , who w a s in B o ise l ^ h e
M is s P e te rso ji is attend ing the
G r a n d C h apter m ee tings.
U n iv e rsity of ’Idah o a n d w ill
R e p o rt w as m a d e that M rs.
com p lete the re flu ire m e n ts fo r a
G e o rg e 'Young is a patient _at
p tm o rr^ '~ ' R.S> d e g r e e !in b io lo g y in
. M a g ic ____V a l l e y .
A ugust, _ ^ e is. a ffilia te d w ith
H o sp ita l.
K a p p a K a p p a G a m m a S o ro rity r
R e fre sh m e n ts w e re served by
H a rris o n is a g ra d u a te of the
M r s . T . V. Strunk.
U n iv e r s it y
o f Id a h o
and
D o n ’t you w o n d e r what the re ce iv e d h is M .B .A . de g re e
m o d set w ill la tc h onto next— fro m S a cra m e n to State C o lleg e.
n o w that the tie-d y ed fashions He is c u r re n t ly e m p lo ye d by the
th e y Introduced h a v e w orked U n iv e rsity of Idah o a s p ro g ra m
th e ir way into -the m a in stre a m d ire cto r, u n iv e rsity re la tio n s.
A la te fall.w ed ding is planned .
of the clothes p a ra d e ?
Late fall
wedding
planned
T h e
to
T w in F a ll s H ig h S ch ool an d t h is
^ I r i g ^ p l M d - th ird in th e z
-N a tio n a l F in a ls nf thft J ja tio n a L
F e d e ra tio n of M u s ic C lu b s ’
S tu d e n t A u d it io n s , o p e n to
stud en ts fro m 16 to 26 y ea rs-o fage. a e h a s
a vo ice
I.D ,
th e
S to re
F
e
a
t u
r i n
g
A m erican Polynesian
Contenintal C U IS IN E
g e ts
k n it t y s r it t y
W
ill B e
F e a tu re d
T a k e - O u l S e c t io n
E a ch
N ig h t !
In c lu d e s . . .
A P P E T IZ E R S & S A L A D S
FOR RESERVATIONS
J* H O N E ; 7 2 6 -5 3 8 1
7 2 6 -5 3 8 2
W k tsh in g lo n A l 3 r d
K E T C IIIJ M , ID A f lO
d o w n
in
S p o r i C o a ts
Membership
^ 4 v e
“A B B Y T I a m only i S T ^ t I am jiifflin g to aU TKe
wom en who b o m p lain because th e ir Husbands n e v e r co m p li­
m ent them.
I know I ’m young, but I 'v e dated
~beUeve e x p e rie n ce m a tu re s you m o re tha^ age does. W ith
som e g u ;^, sw eet lie s bubble to th e ir lip s fa ste r th an a g irl
ca n h e a r them . W hy? B e ca u se they a r e oiit fo r a m ake. I'd
ra th e r h ave a g u y te ll me I look lik e a lo g [ if h e re a lly
thinks I do] than pot m e on fo r a ch eap m a |e .
--------F n r - m m e -m p.n,_sw iyi_H«irrtii Hnn’t /<nrji«»-^^n»lly. b u t the
-lO filLPf re a l a p p ro v a l in th e ir e ye s m eans
-M y -fa '
o r e » u p « T io r q u o litm o f ltX t% jK H y m i u iio o t » T » o q y ii|r u m j iiiiu m i mii i. m. i t— .
knit im poiJ» <J riehmr im rtu ri, afforltoiGr M M of mov»irwntTDmd roDr»>n« * rw »k W T»«i«t«tw ». A»w>.
"tinilnr«d_
id o b " ghws yoo 'unrivolad (adiion
'*** y**** o i w ^ w hcnw rt
t o > 8 0 .0 0 .
1/
x/rM fA
il
fothion «torm
liim o in vMiMtim* toon and oticJk o vi tivi»d
T H E I D A ...............
H O D............................
E P A R T^............................................................
M ENT STORE -
------------------- ^
J
____ -
.1,!
O N T H E M A L L ^ DOW NTOW N
-s
Birthdays
Tjbs^rvedTTf
lodge meet
30- nm es-N ew s, Tw in F a lls , Idaho Sunday. June 13, 1V71
Americ(^n Wcir Mothers
hold two-dqy meet
■Amgriean W a r M o thers h a v e
re t u r n e d f r o m 'M a la d C it y "
w h e re T R e State (J ia p t e r h eld a
tw o-day convention.
-Attending— w e r e - J J llla n ^ A r - .
m g a , state re co rtlin g s e c r e t a r y ;
L o ra D oss, ch a p te r pre sid e n t,
and M a ry T a y lo r, delegate.
W illie P a ris h w a s alte rn a te
~ M rs . A im g a wSSTiff^slECted'tora
fo u rth t e r m
a s r e c o r d in g
se cre ta ry .
7 R e g is t r a t io n ' o f
th e
99
m e m t e r ^ attend ing began at
the A m e r ic a n L e g io n H a ll,
M a la d , w h e re a l l sessions were,
held. In ch a rg e o f the se ssio n s
w e re E u n ic e W illie , sta t e
pre sid e n t; F lo re n c e G o d da rd,
state co rre sp o n d in g se cre ta ry ,
and L a u ra Jo n e s, convention
c h a ir m a n ,
a ll
M a la d .
M a r g u e r it e D a v is w a s the
assistant.
___ I l i e _ A n i . e r i c i } n J ia g w a s
presented by L a D e a n B a k e r
and V eda Jo n e s c a rrie d the
A m e rica n W a r M o thers white
Guest day
salad bar
featured
^ ^ T W I ^ A T X S - - ^ s . J.W .
M esse^sm ith w as hostess fo r
f j nnity
t f v * C lu b ^ a n n u a l G uest D a y
U
W ednesday a t a sa la d b a r
luncheon.
G u e sts in clu d e d M rs. G a r y
ScH roeder, M rs . T illie P asch en,
M rs . M a x R e c to r and L in d a
R ecto r, a ll B u h l; M rs. E th e l
l i ahneihr— B e s a t e - S co tt - w a a
ie rg e a n t-a tia rth s T
^ ^ ^ n t B p n g h t s -o rt h i-c o n v e
io chided a b r e a k fa s t - Io r ^>e
e xecu tive b o a rd ; a luncheorf
s e n re d b y the M a lA d c h a p t o ; a
gold a nd s ilv e r sa p p e r h o n o r iir ( r " |
a ll gold a n d s ilv e r m o th e rs; the
a w a rd
lu n c h e o n a n d
the
banquet.
a rrw ig e fn e flto w e re pp
to the c o n v e n t io n ■ b y the
A m e ric a n L e g io n A u x ilia r y a n d
W nrlri W a r - I - A ii« iH « rv — and
w hitep o tted ch ryS anth em um sb >
the' A m e ric a n L egio n.
A m e m o r ia l s e r v ic e w a s
fi-esentecl u n d e r the d ire ctio n of
the s t a t e c h a p la in , V iv ia n
H a w kin s, M a lta . State o ffice rs
and c h a p te r p re sid e n ts w ere
fo rm a lly se a te d and 18 taper,g
re p re sen tin g the ch a p te rs in the
state w e re lig hted by M rs .
H a w kin s a s 52 white ca rn a U o n s
ch a p te r
ctiapTatrts ITi ~ h o n o r"o f"T trre
deceased m e m b e rs the past two
y e a rs. M r s . A rm g a re a d the
ch a p ter a n d m e m b e rs ’ nam es.
F ro m the lo c a l ch a p te r w ere
M a ry M ille r , In e x R o ss, Vune
1-arson and E m m a B a isch .
M rs. H a w k in s p a id s p e c ia l
. ^ Q o f twpjdahoans who
cm
p re sid e n t; a n d E lla Robinson,
Je ro m e , fo u rth v ic e president.
M a rth a T h o m a s, Pocatello,
t r e a s n r e r r w a s re -e lecte d , along—
w ith V iv ia n H a w k in s, M alta,
c h a p la in . L o u ise Y 6 ung. Soda
S p rin g s, w ill s e rv e a s h isto rian,
I r m a Q u a n s t r o m , R u p e rt ,
w a s ' app o inted corre sp o n d in g
,do
ipairiage of,, their daughter,
dare Marie, to Paul Qrosjeah,
son 6f-lkir. and- Mrs. PhilUp
Grosjean, Afton, Wyb.
"
Susan Salle,
Stephens set
- .
J u lV
3
.
O O te
h e r 30 y e ^ q £ ^ m e m b tfsh ip j^
M rs . -G a rd o sk i h a s h e ld a ll
o ffice s in the lo ca l-n m it-a n d -all
state o ffice s Shd ia a p a st state[S e s id M t in the S u p re m e F o re st
W o o d m an C i r c l e b e fo re it
m e rg e d w ith the W oodm an.
P la n s w e re m a d e to v isit
M rs . N o ra P y ro n in H an se n and
present h e r a 50-year p in. She
h a s been a m e m b t r fo r 62 y e a rs.
-T h e ^n e x tm e etin g i s J u ly 13 at
the hom e o f E lv a E d w a r d s ’in
F ^ e r.
C A R O L l^ C A L D E R
. . ,
^
.M lS S
c
C
.
o
xx
o a T T e r W
i d
.
e r ,
L *"x '
Fresh and clean"
ilO t
. 1
g rad u ate bf T V in F a lls Hifeh
School arid w ill be a SCTior at
the U niv e rs it y ot U tah , SfllT
"L a k e
C l t v . - " m a j n r i n ; ; - In
se co n d a ry ^ g l i s h .
"
G rb sje a n is.a 1968 g ra d u a te of
A ftb nr Vyyo. High" School and
w ill be a se n io r at the U n iv e r­
s it y o { U t a h , m a jo r in g in
m e d icin e .
A J u ly 26 w edding is p ld n n ^ .
r llT e
name date
/
i
T W IN F A L L S — M r. and M rs.
T W IN F A L l ^ - D r. a nd M rs .
A lla n G . C a ld e r, Tw in F a lls ,
q
p gaUe' N am p a, a nnou nce
announce the engagem ent and
the e n g a g e m e n t a n d f o r fo rth co m in g m a rr ia fie ja f; th eir
th co n iln g m a rria g e d T T th e ir
d au g hter, C a ro le M a rie , to D an
d a u g h te r, S u san
K a y , . to
R . Satterw hite, so n of M r. and
M ic h a e l C u rt is Stephens, son of
M rs.
D enzal
S a tte rw h ite ,
M r. and M rs. G . D. Stephens,
R u p e rt, “
T w in F a lls .
M is s C a ld e r w a s gradu ated
M is s S alle w a s g ra d u a te d
K e ep the r e frig e ra t o r sm e ll- fro m Tw irl F a lls H ig h School in
from . N am p a H ig h ^ ^ h n o l nnri ia. ■ing freBh^..b y - s to rin g a n o|>^ .,.S y 7 o ' U d ! ^ p l e t ^ ^ 6f i r y e ^ ' at
e m p loyed at the B ^ k of Idaho
to x of b a k ^ g soda on one sh elf, c o n q u e r o r s B ib le C o lle g e .
trib u te to O ie la te W U Iia m A r m g a
N am p a
^ A w h iff o f the sod a a fte r two •portJand— ~
whUe p la c in g ca rn a U o n s. M u sic
Stephens w as g ra d u a te d fro m weeks tells you w h e re those
Satterw hite is a 1969 g radu ate
a n d v o c a l s e le c t io n s w e re T w in F a lls H igh School and the stra y food sm e lls went. T h is
p ro vid ed by the M aJad (^ a p t e r. coU ege of Southern Id a h o with odor-absorbing p o w er of d ry of Peridleton H ig h School and
.
.
. . . .
.
c o m p le te d - tw o
y e a rs
at
T lie 1973 state convention w ill an as.sofiate a rts det^ree and
b e n r a r a r S a t a o n , with the attend ed B oise State CoUege. s ^ c ^ ^ j i s e d O n ^ t ^ p a r t s - cSm querorH ^" B ib l e C o lle g e ,of the hom e. too. S p rin k le som e
p orU and
board m ee tin g fo r 1972 to be m
ke m n lo ve d b v J
R.
beneath the w a x p a p e r lin in g in
ISlaClcfOOt
,•
J
H e is now em p loyed by h is
S im p lot Co, N am pa.
the breadbox, in the used
O ffice rs e le cted f o r the two
A J u ly 3 w edding is p lan n e d at d ia p e r co m p a rtm e n t of b a b y ’s fath er.
A n Aug. 14 w edding Is p la n ­
y e a rs in c lu d e K a tie A. Schm idt, G r a c e
E p is c o p a l
C h u r c h , tra v e lin g bag, in the bottom of
ned.
B u rle y , state p re sid e n t; B ird ie N am p a.
siloes and boots.
G i l l,
Je ro m e ,
f ir s t
v ic e
p re sid e n t; N in e rv a H am m ond,
E d e n , se co n d v ic e p re sid e n t;
J, Uiii'd vice
A rnold G ie r, F ile r ; M rs. O rv a l
Johnson, M rs . E lla G iese , M rs .
E u g e n e G r if f, M rs . E d n a W a ll
and Ju lie -a n th H e irfr-D e te rsT -a ll
Tw in F a lls .
'
■ M rs . Benno D e te rs in tro d u ced
M rs. S ch ro e d e r. who g a v e a
b rie f h isto ry on the a rt o f
p la y in g m u s ic a l g la sse s. She is
SUSAN S A L L E
home-jnalntenanc«i-car'c&w~
— help—^th-vthe— martetingr
I ' record^ceeping and socializing
types of activities. with the
diildren.
^illiam-EUnerton annooncethe
... Hie-lgake waa-ba t ^ -rod—
decorated bv'MfSTBoya 'nrtonT^
L i l l i a n C o m in i, - p r e s id e n t ,
p r e s e n t e d a p la q u e , “ T h e
W om an .o f-W o o d craft,” to h e r
siste r, M rs . M a s G a rd o sk i, fo r
If thfire are any-nrgUBBflnto^
y«w4Km8fr«b<mt thc-dlvisloirofdiores, hear this: A Ne>» York
^-survey— shows— that—^Wtves
cdjltinue to do most of the in' the-honw work and that hu^
Jujy wedding
F A L L S W - A d e c o ra te d
» ltlh d a y _ ___c a k e
h o n o rin g __
m e m b e r s h a v in g b ir t h d a y s
d u rin g the p a st th re e m onths
n a s oqe of the h ig h lig h ts d u rin g
th e O iA aha Wood m e n m eeting
a t th e T io in e ~ o r ~ E l l i a b e t h ‘ H a v e n s , it w a s a n n o u n c e d
-today;— - t;— '— -------^ ------- ------ 7
,
■
Home chores
Miss Erpersori/
Meeting set
T W m F A L L S - M a g l c V alle y
C h a p te r No. 425, A m e rica n
A sso cia tio n of R e tire d Persons,
w ill m e e t - a t ^ p .r n J V e d n e s d a y
a t S u n n y V ie w C ou rts, A ddison
A venue a n d S y ca m o re Street.
A re p o rt on the State White
H o u se Confereijcs^Qn A g in g hold.<,
at Boise, re c e n tly w ill follow the
b u sin ess m eeting. T h e re also
w ill be a s h o rt 'p ro g ra m .
V isito rs a re invited.
R e se rv a tio n s fo r the bus
t r ip to the T re e Isla n d State
P a rk ce le b ra tio n at G le n n s
F e r r y S a tu rd a y sh ou ld be sent
to R o y ^ W e th e rb e e ■ , D u V a ll
C o u rts. C h e c k s should be m ade
p a y a b le to A A R P . F o r m ore
in fo iro a tio n c a ll M a r y Bolton,
7331^09 .
w
C H K IS T I.\N
SUPPLY
761> M a in \ v r . N. 7 < l;i-.l6 7-r
CLAREEM ERSO N
W ANTED
X-RAY
TECHNOLOGIST .
--------REG ISTERED
G O O D S A IA R Y
FULi FRINGE BENEFITS . . .
INCLUDING PENSION PLAN
TWIN FALLS CLINIC
666 SHOSHONE ST. EAST
TWIN FALLS
(208) 733-3700, Contact Business Manager
BOUMD STRIPES. THAT FIT JUST RIGHT
•
They're here at The Paris and we have the hat pants in all colors and styles from, luscious yellows to
-e€mely-ecme-sfr4pe&v-Tw€»-f>ie€e +ypes/-sleeveless-top-cmd-hoi-por^t-bottom;-including-black and-yellowpin stripe. Sizes 5-13. $T2.95. Tune in to colorful legs, wear Hanes Panty Hose, $2.00.
The Paris, <sDn the Mall
.
■----'
Downtown, Twin Falls
s e c r e t a r x .____ a n d ..... ^TuiUe.
this.
B u ch a n a n , M o u n ta in H om e, re M r s . S ch ro e d e r. who w a s a p p o in t e d V A V S c h a ir m a n .
—ta u g h t-b y ^ h e f— f a t h e r r-p la y e d — M r s T - B n c l r a n a n - h a s —s e r v e ri­
se v e ra l n u m b e rs on the v a rio u s m a n y y e a r s in th is o ffice. She
- s lie - g la s s e s - t ille d - ^ w it h - w a t e iv - h o ld s a "iiatio nal re c o rd o f n e verw h ich d e te rm in e s the tone. She m issin g a V A B S m eeting at the
h as ’been p la y in g fo r about 10 V e te ra n s H o sp ita l In B oise in 23
yea rs,
y e a rs. She h a s re c e iv e d m any
T h e Ju ly m ee tin g w ill be a cita tio n s fo r h e r v olun teer w ork
p ic n ic at th e M e s s c r s m it h a s a n A m e ric a n W a r M other in
' sn m m e rh o m e ~ in ^ e -S 3 wtoo ths ,--th e ~ V c te n m s h o s p it a l.
i
u rren
H ELEN W ALKER
I ’W IM t ' A L l ^ — I^ew sw orthy
d evelop m ents in s m a ll e le c tric
a p p lia n ce s a n d co o kw a re h a ve
o c c u rre d in the la st few y e a rs.
One is the in c re a se d use of
"apeeds. U nr
w ith
g e n e r a lly
g re ate r
re lia b ility . In te rm s of a d ­
v a n ta g e s to the h o m e m a k e r, it
p ro v id e s a n y n u m b e r o f speeds,
m o re p o w e r a t h ig h e r speeds
c o rd le s s battery-p ow ered ap­ to w e a r out. It w ill give
p lia n c e s a nd a th ird, solid -state «ntAnnatl<- <v>nfrril n t
ncontrob!:-------- ■............. ........
s ^ e p e e d , —S
S al
o lid —• L a i £ _
' T h e p o p u la r T e flo n is a co n tro ls a re sh o w ing up on
C Q ating ._..ap P -U ?d___ by.
the o ^ n y p o r t a b le a p p U a n c e s ,
m n n iifn p tiire r to the in terio r of p a i^ ic u Ia rljrH Ie S a e rs .
iiIi»n n U ' HmUmLllllA rinn't ntlplf
---------------------------^
When„ it co
m e s to c a rin g fo r
--------lO = H ® itii¥ a B h ln g ,ia « a slcr. N ew Jjfcle ctrlc a D b lja n d 5 lilt t lW w fn T T —
~Tig |fi y ~S»iBM 0 ~ 'W ~Tra stTi!i1'"’ Ti»Bl ’ wtat, Um' s a f e r u l e ie
d rie d and ru b b e d lig htly w ith the d ire ctio n book^ S o m ^ c tm be
vegetable o il before using. I f the dunked in the d lsh p a n and som e
ca n not. C le a n in g app lia n c e s is
___ pans a re not th o ro u g h ly ^ft.»ihed
after e a ch use, food sta in s m a y not always routine. _ For
nptg, the liuuiutaeturef
bu ild up ca u sin g darke n in g .
O verh eating ca n also ca u se T e f l o n - l i n e d
cautio n s a g a in st the stan d ard
pans to d a rken.
Th ese sta in s, in tim e, could m eth o d o f re m o v in g s t a in s
affect the re le a se p ro p e rtie s because th ere is an exposed
a lu m in u m p a r t w h ich would be
besides being u n s i^ t ly . t o
re m o ve the stain use a co m - h a rm e d by the a lk a lin e liq uid.
m e rc ia l Teflo n stain re m o v e r or T ills sam e situ atio n e x ists in a
m ix 1 cu p w ater, ^ cu p liq u id nu m b e r of ca s e s , so do ch eck.
h o u se h o ld
b le a c h
and
2 Th e w ise -o w n e r c a r e s for h er
tablespoons b a k in g soda. B o ll appU ances, u n d e rsta n d s th e ir
r e c o g n ic e s t h e ir
^ i s in the p a n 5 tirH H n in u te s o r u s e - a n d
is still
iintil the stain d isa p p e a rs. W ash lim ita tio n s an d if ^
and reco n ditio n,
newer„ u n ce rta in d o e sn 't h esita te to
— oeveiopm ent c a lle d T tfla n U IS" » «l r ---- M a il q u e s t io n s to H e le n
m ore re sista n t to scra tch e s a n d
p e rm its the u se of m e ta l tools. W a lk e r, P.O . B o x 8 , T w in F a lls ,
A p p lian ces coated w ith T e flo n Ida h o SS30I.
should l)e w ash ed and scru b b ed
( use p la stic s c ru b b e r o n ly ) w ith
hot w ater, so ap or detergent —
not Just rin se d un d e r the faucet.
D e v e lo p m e n t
of
s m a ll
lightw eight b a tte rie s fo r p o r­
table a p p lia n ce s h a s m et w ith
g e n e ra l fa v o r. C o rd le ss ap-.
[d ia n ce s su ch a s h and m ix e rs,
e le c t r i c
k n iv e s ,
sh a v e rs,
flA x h lig h ta
anH
/.r is e
su ch lo t t e r ie s . Ttiese a re used
w b m p o j ^ b ilit y is im portant.
T h e y ca n be u se d a n y w h e re —
GOLF
TOURNAMENT
GAME
*12®“
.G .A . f> 6 <
lilm t______
u se tk t t e rie s sh o u ld be kept
— t « c li« r g e d b y - t d u g g io f Into the
..........e l i K t i i c a t - o u t le t
a s ' th e
mmnfacturer recommendfr-sobe: ready
w it K e u t
O v lk k '*
—
w o K a v o a ( o t g o to U K tio n
^V »ol booki
B u h t^
performs at hi^icr
rr-
>
\
book
SIMKF1HVER COUNTRY
H o w long a b a tte ry w ill r u n on
o n e d u u rg in g w ill v a ry .
' D o n ’t be frig h te n ed by the
■■fBMltoa wMionl morita Piilfl
w o lk in g "
,----- N o w
Dui^-
HOT PANTS-HOT-PAIv^
PANTS HOT PANTS
hOt pa n ts h o t pa n ts h o t pa n ts h o t pa n ts h o t pa n ts h o t pan ts
HOT PANTS HOT PANTS HOT PANTS HOT PANTS HOT PANTS HOT PANTS
HOT PANTS HOT PANTS
HOT PANTS HOT PANTS HOT'PANTS HOT PANTS HOT PANTS HOT PANTS
B R ID G E
B y Jaco b y
H o w P air Scored a T o f^
12 ’..
N O RT H (D )
~ 4 rG S . ■ — V J
. « Q 109852
4U KQ 94
w Ie s t
ea st
4kQ98S42
AKIO
» "R T 8 T 3“
VXQ Tol
« K3
♦ 7
V 52
♦ AJ64
4b A J i o 6
;
N o r th - S o u th v u ln e r a b le
„ N o r th
Pass
3V
4¥
sV
D b le
* ♦
4 N .T .
Pass
Pass
Pass
E ast
1V
Pass
D b le
D b le
Pass
P ass
S o u th
D h le
Pass
5 4^
P ass
6 J|b
P ass
O p e n in g lead— y 6
B y O s w a ld & J a m e s J a c o b y
W hen to d a y 's h a n d w as
- d c a l t - i n - a n A r k a ns a .s .d iip l i cate, the N o r t h p la y e rs
p a sse d b e ca u se th e ir su it
w as too p o o r fo r a wteak twod ia m o n d calA. E a s t m v a ria b ly o p e n e d w ith one h e a rt,
South w o u ld d o u b le. W est
.
»-tt»re e o
h e a rts a n d the fin a l c o n t ra c t
w ould' u s u a lly be fo u r h e a rts
dou b led a n d m a d e by E a s t
or fiv e d ia m o n d s do u b led
and m a d e b y N orth.
T h e b id d in g in the box
show s h ow one N orth -S o u th
p a i r s c o r e d ' a top. W e st's
ju m p to th ree h e a rts w a s a
trifle in a d e q u a te . N o rth w a s
ab le to b id f o u r d ia m o n d s
T h is w a s p a sse d to W est He
went to fo u r h e a rfs.
-N o rth ^ s-fo u r-n o -tru m p -w a s-^ '
- v e ry
iin iis iia l
fn rm
n f th p
eat too-tast. lo o k o u t. T h a t's a sign o f •
insecurity, 'in a d e q u a cy , in fe rio iit> ^ _Q r^ !W _ sa y i_s student_oL_
the mind. H e claim s m en w ho bolt their d in n e rs len d to fret
overm uch. S u ch men, he avers, m ake p o o r iw im m ^ rs, poor
{EOlfers and p o o r lovers.
u n u su a l - h o -tru m p a n d ■ told
h is p a r t n e r th a t h e h eld f o u r
'C lu b s in a d d itio n t o 'f iY e o r
s ix d ia m o n d s. B a s t do u b led
a n d South w e n t to f iv e c lu b s
e a tJs e -h fr-W o u W -p t e y -t h '
h a n d a n d h e • fe lt - t h e - 4 - 4 - f it - m ig h t -y ift lrt . a n - f t x t r a - t r ic k .
5c c r e r a m b u io n as a’ youngster?
once; w a n t c d -t o -b c -a -d o c t o r / - J . R dgar H n oyftg, it*s k iio w n ^
w a n te d -to be a-, m inister. Sen. M ike M ansfield, a - io r e s t -
s la m b id w h ic h w a s d o u b led .
A s p a d e o p e n in g w o u ld
have d e fe a te d ^ th e ^ co n tra ctr'
ut W e st o p ened a h e a rt,
jo iith won the s e c o n d t r ic k
w i t h ' thQ s p a d e a c e , p la y e d
d u m m y ’s n in e a n d k jn g of
c l u b s and noted the b a d
b re a k . T h e n he le d a d ia ­
m o nd, fin e sse d w ith h is ja c k ,
ru ffe d h is la s t h e a rt, d re w
tr u m p s to d is c a r d d u m m y ’s
la s t sp a d e a n d m a d e the re st
of the t r ic k s w ith the d ia ­
m o n d s.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
— T in
' W h a t I S r H / S " T R U M P A P P ^ “ TJ-IAT T B R H IF IE S P A P P ^ - ? - i t i s a M U S IC A i^
i n s t r u m e n t IN 3 P A R T S - A M O U T T ^ P IE C E , A H O R N , A N D A V O K O M S K U L L . ' f
y o u JA M PARTS I A N D
■X IN T O P A R T 3
'
N (jrth
Ea&t •
VS4
#K93
It produces
T H E 'S M /E E T E S T
-M U S ie -T H I& S IP E . O F
N O T _ Q N R nor tw o but three relatively you ng L atin
women, e a c h ~ w in r a proStlnen t sij j -on her cheek. T h a t’s
- w h « t ^ “ su b sc rib e r' says^he saw ~on“the~stxeel‘ o n e ' aflernOOlT"
during a ' recent visit to New Y o rk C ity . C o in cid e n ce ?
Probably. Stilf. in P uerto R ic o itself, .it has been the
infrequent custom "over the years fo r a husband to slash his
w ife w ith a k n ife in that m anner, if he catches her in the
extrem e w ith a gentlem an fnen d. ,Our Love and W ar man
frow ns on that, too.'
“ AS T O T H E C L A I M that wom en have a h arder tim e
quitting sm oking .” w rite s Dave W ertz, “ nuts, m an. w om en
have a h a id ei' time d u in g anytluilg. D riving a car. y ia y m g the
guitar. T h e y ’ve never invented anyth ing o f c o n s e q u e n c e .'
never w ritten a sy m p h o n y , never becom e architects o f note.
I f we had to make d d w ith what w om en have co n trib u te d to
the w o rld ’s cultures, w e’d still be living in trees and eating
raw fish'.’ ’
SouU i
A M S K E P T IC A L L Y stu d y in g -th e recom m endation to put
a tablespoon o f m ayonnaise on the h a ir as a co nd itioner.
D o n T f c n o w . s6 unds" 6 ad.“ T fie scalp e x p e rf w h o suggestsntKis”
e xtraordinary treatm ent, a -Mr* R ed ding. Says it- does dandy
things fo r h air protein. We spells his first name Jheri.
Interesting name, A little too ch ic fo r m ayonnaise, though
W ould rather expect G re en G oddess. N o, th in k I ’ll stick to •
o il and vinegar w ith ou t the vinegar.
Y o u , S o u tli, ho ld :
4kK732
Blow."
y H EA V EN -^
^ a s he«?n:
W est
- T H E f^ V O U
c a p t m . N orm an V in cen t Peale. a po litician . J. Paul G e tty . li
traveling w rite r. H ubert H u m p h re y, a baseball m anager.
AQJG2
W hat do you do now ?
A — R e d o u b le . T e ll y o u r p a r t ­
n e r y o u hav e d e fe n se a g ain st
a n y s u it they r u n to.
T O D A Y ’S Q U E S T IO N
You
re d o u b le .
W est
and
N o r th jMiss ijn d Elabt rup.s to
tw o diam oiuLs. W h a t do y ou
do now ?
A N O T H E R T H IN G y o u can do at stop ligh ts is enum erate
the nicknam es fo r co ffe e . L ik e java. A n d joe. I f y o u were
old enough to d rin k it d u ring W orld W ar I I , y o u may
rem em ber coffee w ith o u t cream o r sugar w as co m m o n ly
called b lack out. A nd if y o u were I n a h u rry , y o u told the
waitress to b litz it. O u r Language man co u n ts 2 2 such fancy
term s for coffee.________________________________________,__________
A nsw er M o nd ay
LO T S O F P IL O T S have died in sm all plane crashes after a
few cocktails before takeoff. T h a t ’s w id e ly know n. Less
w idely k n o w n is w hy sucti. d n n k s are so danger<Jll4. It 's the
altitude. T h e m edical m en say one s tiff belt in the a ir can
equal fo u r o n the ground. T h a t's also w h y the citiz e n s o f
M exico C it y at 7 ,4 4 0 feet get m 6 re d ru n k at less expense
than the citizens o f any other msyor m etro p o lis. _ ~
• • •
Vour~questions and comments are welcdmeS ahd~will Be
used in PASS IT ON wherever possible. Please address your^
-^Utters lo
Box 1 7 0 7 6 ^ .£ a n - J llo t lh ^ T e x a s
76102.
A n tw cr
to
fr » iio u A
P u x iU
Music in the Air
1 Part~ora
miuica] staff
i Lowest male
. voice
"frPartyof—
pianos
12Troo
A U EY OOP
39 A ccom piiahcr
40 Place
41 A d u lt males
45 M a k ing an
in cursion into
49 BcinR reborn
51 Body of w ater
62 A ncient
count
13 Operatic solo
14 Border on
29 G enus of
15-AJscrian
---Ruvpn io i
53 0 rTe^J
fillinfl
31 M u nicipalities
16 HiKhest
inherits
m aterial
33 C oncludeti
horizontal
54 T liret times
9 D ark
138 T hick soups
tim ber in o
(com b, form )
10 C hristm as
40 P eruv ian
roof
55 C ana dia n
a n im a l
(Scot.)
18 Edible
province (ab.)
11 Fem ale aaints 41 B ia h o ^s
20 Rom an date
56 S m a ll island
(ab.)
headdnhMfT'
21 Posspssive
57 D ru n k a rd
(var.)
'
17 Repeat
pronoun
' appcarancc
42Scope
2 2 -—
roll
43 F e m in in e
32
^
Tlrries-News. TvOln F a lls , Idaho
-----------E v e r y - © ♦ for!
o lin iln d r e fa l& e a n d
m islea T:(in g
WE
‘
' th e tlrs ;t d a y .
- w t w r p n w u n o *n ji~CftrE$Tl‘R 3 ‘7Cff
a lw a y s a s k l o r t h e w o r d in g to be
r e p e a te d b a c k to y o o . Be c e r t a in to
„ C h f c K JhjL!iC5L^y_i>d_iippears,fo
TH E C O V E
T ry
us
fo r
lu n c h !
496 Addiscm West
H Y P N O S IS fo r
a n d m e m o ry ,
c a ll 733 0420.
C a n y o u f in d a p la c e In y o u r
o r g a n iz a tio n
fo r
a
young,
a g g re s s iv e , h a r d w o r k in g a r m y
v e te r a n w it h t w o y e a r s c o lle g e a n d
tw o y e a r s b u s in e s s e x p e r ie n c e
o w n in g a n d o p e r a t lp g 2 e x is t in g
T w in F a lls b u s in e s s e s , w h o w o u ld
lik e a c h a n c e to w o r k f o r y o u t o
.And
r e c e lv e a s a la r y e q u a l t o a b il it y .
If ' y o u
c o u ld
u se an
t>onest/
d e p e n d a b le , h a r d w o r k in g m a r r ie d
m a a f o r a n y t y p e o f b u s in e s s o r if
-4 in a n c ia L h a lp ,
o r w e re lo o k in g f o r s o m e o n e t o
le a r n y o u r b u s in e s s a n d p u r c h a s e
i t f r o m y o u u p o n r e t ir e m e n t w e
m a y be o f h e lp to e a c h o th e r .
I f y o u fe e l t h a t y o u w o u ld b e in te r e s te d In d is c u s s in g th is f u r t h e r ,
p le a s e s e n d r e s u m e to K - 8, C jo
T im e s - N e w s , T w i n „ - H a l l s r - 'Y 6u r
r e p ly w i l l b e C6n lid e n t la l.
D O N 'T T O U C H th o s e d ra p e s I L e t 5P o in t C le a n e rs d o it a ll. W e t a k e
■ 'th e m
d o w n , c le a n t h e m ,
and
re h a n g
th e m .
I d a h o 's
m ost
c o m p le t e d r a p e r y
s e rv ic e . 733
9805.
N U R S E R Y A T T E N D A N T f o r lo c a l
c h u r c h / - a p p r o x lm a t o ly
7 h o u rs
w e e k . A A a lu re w o m a n p r e f e r r e d .
326 5193.
fin e s t
$76.75. 5 P o in t C le a n e rs o r h o m e
a p p o in t m e n ts . 733 9905.
----- "Cord of Thuiikt
IN g r a t e f u l a p p r e c ia tio n f o r t h e
k in d e s s a n d s y m p a t h y s h o w n us
d u r in g o u r r e c e n t b e r e a v e m e n t ,
. t n e l a m U y o f P a u l V . B a n d y w is h e s
to
p u b lic ly th a n k
a ll w h o s e
m e s s a g e ) , c a r d s , f lo w e r s a n d
o f f e r s o f- -a s s is ta n c e h e lp e d to
lig h t e n o u r s o r r o w .
LEO 'S CUSTOM
. FARMING
Y o u r .'h v la o ® f o r a g e s a v e r d e a le r.
326^4703, 326-4964,
W ANT CAPAB^'l E MAN
Vernon Qrander
Custom Farming
CUSTOM G REEN HAY
CH O PPIN G
__________5 < i <57?, BUM
W o rk W a n te d
E X P E R I E N C E D F R Y c o o k . B lu e
C r o s s . A p p ly In p e rs o n a t th e
R o g e rs o n R e s ta u r a n t.
H A I R S T Y L I S T , T h e . S t y lis t . In c .
M u s t b e p iv o t - p o in t t r a in e d . A ll
o tt^ e rs n e e d n o t a p p ly . ____________
'^ A 'M U m U U S W O M A N — -------I f y o u h a v e th e a b i l i t y to m a n a g e
w o m e n , w e h a v e a p o s itio n f o r yo u
s u p e r v is in g w ig & c o s m e tic c o n ­
s u lt a n t s f o r L u z le r , In c . ( s is te r
c o m p a n y to C la ir o l) . H ig h c o m ­
m is s io n p lu s b o n u s p lu s e x p e n s e s .
W r it e R . W . O ls s o n , D lv . M g r . ,
16262 E . W h i t t i e r B lv d . , S u ite 27;
W h it t ie r , C a lif o r n ia 90603.
B u ( in e * > O p p o r t u n it ie s
c
y
7 3 3 5565
- S A A lL iN G W O M A N
S E W IN G
NOW
SAVE
P F A ^^F
l; iO T T E R T H A N A P IS T O L
IJJ I S l j u s t ^
n g jh e t im e
Fame us“ST^t/S
g
Sew ing Machine by Swinger in
"Paceseffer" Cabinef.
^ --------- ----------------------- ---------- - ........................
I N O W $149.95
I
I
[Save $40
This rrv.x:tiine darns, mends
Wirvjstitcfv>s sews buttons
t t i
_______________ 121East-AAainJ c ro m e . T d a tw ‘
-----------
c h if lo n to le a tfie r
w it f i lu s t th e r ig f ii
p u b lis h e r s h a v e
f 1 r r r ir/i/^ rlf ' “'iiiiii
rr1 1 '
m o t o r c y c le s f r o m $?9. M in . I n v e s t W ir e , w r i t e f o r p la n w it h b o n u &
- - M O B IL E .. 9 4 & a -n a y to n W A V .
H il ls , 90210.
4 W A T M tN O — W I T H o r w it h o u t
c o n d ir io n a r . B a lin g a l« o , AXt S i n ,
K lm b a r iy .
-,
C U S T O M H A Y t w c k in o , anyw here.
A A a sa a n g a r a n d L c w l i . P tio n c 3 }4 -
- C U S T O M S W A T H I N G . A r ly n K r o h n ,
p h o f » . * a s J O M . E d l« n .
s e e T O D A Y S W A N T ,A.CXS lo r th e
o e s t b u y * In to w n .
C U S T O M _ . H A y - c i m in g . ISSS C a s e
w l n ^ w w u P tt o n *
; B ib rr
O ftE G O N
B e a u t ifu l 9-hote go lf c o u rs e
o v e r lo o k in g
P a c if ic
O cean.
aquJopad. » ) l ) .0 0 0 ta rm s. other
~< r e w
i.
M
L
E
T
..
T
liv in g
iiii.
S P A C IO U S B E A U T Y
N E W L IS T I N G , E x t r e m e ly lo v e ly
X b e d c o o m t io m e — B r i c k — c o n .
s tr u c tlp n *
fa m ily
ro o m .
2,
fire p la c e s , h u g e d o u b le g a r a g e .
_ C a v e r e d p a t io , 2 b a th s , s p r ja M ip g :
s y s te m . $ 3 0 ,(m .
B R IC K D U P L E X . A lm o s t n e w , 3
b e d ro o m s o n m a in
f lo o r
w it h
b e a u tifu l f ir e p la c e , c a r p e t e d , f u ll
tH Tsem enr, E x t r e ^ i t o l c # ^
^
AAAGiC V A L L E Y
181 f^ o r th B lu e L a k e s
G o rd o n L . C r o c k e t t, B r o k e r
!
733-5580 ( a n y tim e )
E v e n in g s : 733 6531
733-5830 |
■Tmi y,
lE K V r r
r - „ - . .
■ ir a n w ^
Ha n o c s
E a rl, 4 2 3 - 5 6 5 9
m a
1 0 4 3 B lu e Loke« N o r th
case.
60t h
s u rfa c e
b a s e m e n t. : d e v M l S l . C p * n
_ ^ _ ~ M o - io r - s g J e r
7 3 3 -8 2 '5 7
and
ju b
L IK E
TH ESE
S 3} W o rn ln g s ld e D r i v e , a l l e le c t r ic .
1 b e d ro o m 1st t io o r , 3 rd In c o m p je t e ly . t l n H h e a , b a s e m e n t w it h
t a m lly ro o m . N e a t a n d n ic e . W i ll
t r a d e fo r g o o d c a r . Sea, t h i s o n e I
J1J.7J0.
2 B E D R O Q /a .
la rJ ie H y in g , ro o m , p r e fl
s in g le g a ra g e . O th e r l i u l l d i n g l i
lo t SO X is o :.. L o c a te d 1 « »
A v e n u e E a s t. P r ic e tV 4 » 0 .
LYNWOOD REALTY
ftlu e Laka a M orlh
-------------------- m t a n .
A FTE R HOURS:
k . J . S ctiaM ndlm an
. 73^7MK/
. ------ m * o j -
D O L L H O U S E , 3 bedroom. B um in
range 8(vl oven, m a n y cab in e ts.
Service room . F ire p la c e , carpeiad, - F e n c e d ^
-------- F T A W K E H ,'
a . x t - r m t r h m iT V
_
D ftV to E N A G E N C Y
r R ^ A U T Y . 73J-332J.
324-5232
402 S. L in c o ln
E v e n in g s f
- 3 24 ^03 2 o r 5 3 ^ 6 0 4
S K I P S P R IN G C L E A N I N G
M o v e In to t h i s ju s t c o m p le t e d 3
b e d r o o m r - 3 - b a t h » r - f lr e p l, a c e , e x - !
54
ce iJen t lo c a t io a * _ i 26. 0M _____________ L U » t» a n d A c f w i j i M
F E L D T A A A N - R E A L T O R S 733-1968:
JER O A A E. IDAH O
O u t o f T o w n H o tn a s
T T T
im m e d ia t e
s a le . S28,500.
G ood
t e r m s . H a r o ld K e ith le y , 733-2400 o r
l a n d
O F F IC E
OF
ID A H O ,
FO R S A L E BY O W N E R
R E A L T O R S 733-0716.
S m a ll 2 -b e d ro o m h o u s e o n tw o lo ts ,
g a r d e n s p o t , f r u i t t r e e s , p le n ty o f
O K — A C R E A G E H U N T E R S I S m a ll
ro o m f o r th e k id s to p la y a n d h a v e ;
t h e ir p e ts .__ H o u s e o f f e r s . Id e a li ___ a c re a g e e d g e o f c it y / Id e a l fo r
o p p o r t u n it y f o r t h e d o - it - y o i r s e lf i
c h ir a r e n a n d h o r s e s . ^ T b e d r o o m
b r lc k p iu s 2 m o r e in n ic e ly f in is h e d
f a m i l y t o f i x It u p a s t h e y N ke .j
L o c a te d a t 801 O r ie n t a l, B u r le y .
b a s e m e n t . S u r e t o p le a s e a t
I n q u ir e o f E . 0 . L it t l e f ie ld , 9313
552,500. B u y e r m a y a s s u m e to w
South E a s t M o r r is o n , F ^ r t la n d ,
in t e r e s t 't o a n . T h is is a g o o d lis t in g
f o r to v i.n -a n d < D u n try liv i n g a t Its
O re g o n 97216.'
b e s t. T W IN f a l l s R E A L T Y A N D
,IJ 1 S .A 7 3 3 .3 6 6 2 ___E v e n in g s a n d
N E W X IM B E R L Y L IS T IN G — S u n d A y s B l l 1__ R a i p h -7 -3 3 .1 0 2 1 .
‘"E xce T T e nT ~ C T 6 S « I r t ' T 6 « W r r ' T n
E s th e r Q oyle 733 540S.
K im l> e r ly . 5 -bedrcx>m
hom e,
2
b a th s , la r g e liv i n g r o o m a n d k it
____
o f l n o , p lu m b in g , a n d '
d o o rs . E l ^ t r l c h e a t, h u g e g v a g e , '
f e n c e d y a r d . *13,250. S a v e h e r e b y ,
d o in g t h o s e f i n i s h i n g
to u c h e s '
^ u r s e lf.
! 3 l 6 t s , 50 X 193, h o u s e s o r m o b ile
h o m e s . A ll u t illt ( e s a v a ila b le . 3265645.
A A e m b e r o fT w tn F a lls
" aA l S * 'S e r v ic e
10 A C R E S In h a y a n d p a s tu r e .
D o n T a y lo r . B r o k e r
423 5289
E x c e lle n t b u ild in g s it e . N e a r
W e n d e ll. S T O C K M E N 'S R E A L T Y ,
E V E N IN G S ;
.
600 S ou th L in c o ln * J e ro m e . 324R on T a y lo r
423 5403
4 U 5 ,.3 2 4 -3 6 3 a 823-5573.
M a s o n S m lt h
733-7706
TA Y LO R A G EN C Y
1
LU
-X M A rR L ^ S
1 1in
F o g g y 7 3 3 -6 0 1
Je a T 2 b e d ro o m .
c a r p e t s P a r t lin iih e d
- $ 1 3 , t 0 0 '. -
■ $14,500. H a r o ld K e lth le y 733-2400 o r
LAN D
O F F IC E
OF
ID A H O J
R E A L T O R S 733 0716.
1
■1
O O T H W E S T E R N ------ r — « a rfey M -t-M —
:T M 4 N ^ - W fT « - 4 H G - U ^ ,0 » « r « M h '
a r w it h o u t c o n d it io n e r . B a lin g .
f= ra « m a n b a la r . 713-SW7.__________
H A Y S T A C K I N Q . P h o n e 7 Z I'a 7 1 .
N o Sj t u r d a y c a i l i . __________________
A
S ou th o f J e ro m e .
T o o A c r e s , 'a ll in p a& f u ie a l W en
d e ll.
160 A c re s , r o w < r o p a t H a z e lto n .
350
A c re
s to c k
fa rm
near
H a g e rm a n .
t
_____
t o t A L O F 4 b e d ro o m s , b a s e m e n fV ’
g a r a g e , c w p ^ M ~ T rv in o ~ rw J T n ;
—^ H ir e p fe e i
» U U
200
80 ACRES
$19,500.
Q U IC K P O S S E S S IO N I S p a c io u s
" ta rle k h e m e w ith 4 t M d r o o m a. H t/gt^
liv in g r o o m a n d r e c r e a t io n r o o m .
M u c h m o r e l E x e c u t iv e m o v in g
a n d m u s t s e ll im m e d ia t e ly . L is te d
at $27,900.
D ave H o m U tt. Broker
P I« o w ca ll 7 3 3 -4 0 7 9 (o n ylim e )
« iL T V r m
I M M E D I A T E IN C O M E
E x c e p t io n a l o p p o r t u n it y to g e t in
C U S T O M S W A T H IN G
and hay
jn
th e g ro u n d
f lo o r
w it h
an
b a lin g
w it h
M assey
F u rg u s o n
x g a n iz a t l o n t h a t is r > o w s h a r in g it s
b a le r . H a y t r u c k in g . 536 2156, 324
:
s i M O S Z ____ - J N _______ D E M ^ N D ' '
“ SCOT.
•
--------------------_ ; d is t r ib u t o r s h ip s . I f y o u h a v e Tn " "
r e g r lt y , a r e h o n e s t , a n d g ro ^M h
H A R R O W B E D S ta c k in g , 2 w id e .
m in d e d w e a r e in t e r e s t e d In y o u .
- J im M i l l e r , 326-5157.
O ur n rn d u c ts
fa m o u s H U N T
G R E E N H A Y C H O P P IN G
m d B E T T Y C R O C K E R p u d d in g s
L i l l l b r l d g e C u s to m
a n d d e s s e r ts , w h ic h a r e d is p e n s e d
F a r m in g
t h r o u g h a u t o m a t ic m e r c h a n d is e r s .
7 33 8363
__________
R e x lb le p r o g r a m p e r m it s s t a r t in g
s m a ll a n d th e n e x p a n d in g - N O
CUSTOM
S W A T H IN G .
F or In ­
S E L L IN G J N V O L V E D . V a r io u s , ,
f o r m a tio n . p h o n e 53^2464.
p la n s s t a r t i n g w it h a m in im u m
V
ca»h
In v e s tm e n t
of
t7 M .O O HO USER BR O TH ER S CUSTOM
( S « c u r « d ) . F o r p e r s o n a l in t e r v ie w
r o t a ^ l l l l n g a n d ts ia d e w o r k . 733( w r it e : . .
- N o r t h ------A m e r i c a n .
2 1 6 i 734-244A.
D I M r lb u t ln g C o ,
N . C e n t r a l,
P h o e n ix , A r l s n a SS013. In c lu d e
C U S T O M G R E E N h a y c h o p p in g .
p tw n e n u m b e r .
D a le B o w e r , S43-4725, B u h l.
! C U S T O M H A Y h a o llo f l w l t t i fM r m
la r g e h a r r o w b a d , o r c a n b a (» a n d
h a m . P tw n a S M - j m a v a n ln g t .
GEM STATE R EA LT Y
|- 6lt> e -L e k e s N o r t h ------ - 733-5336
D ic k M e s s e r s m it h . B r o k e r 733-9069
H r s . 8 :3 0 -6 :0 0
Sat 9 :0 0 -4 :0 0
O N E o f o u r b e s t f a r m s . O n ly
4100.000. T e r m s . A ls o .
2 good
!L b u s ln e s i~ pf’O D e rttB r— In
—
S T A T E L Y O ld e r h o m e In e x c e lle n t ]
P ric e d to s e ir
lo c a tio n . 3 b e d ro o m s a n d d e n .
^
L
i
N
R
E
A
L
E
S
T
A
T
E
F o r w e l d ln l n o r o o m a n d d o u b le 3^4-4800, 221 So. L in c o ln ■ J e ro fb e
g jirA Q A P i»rtM r#rt fr\ S 1i.9 0 0
■ e v t r m w o s - ------------------I M P R E S S I V E 2 b e d ro o m h o m e .
D»ck G re g o ry
7 3 3 1307
J r 6 b e d ro o m a n d p lu m b in g f o r 2n d
E d S to ckto n
324 4180
b a th In f u l l b a s e m e n t. B e a u tifu l
fe n c e d y a r d a n d d o u b le g a r a g e .
Nfttie M aoei 7 3 3 -
4 B E D R O O M L S haped
. d in in g . Q o s e in . » I5 ,00 0 ..
C om pany, — ,
N E E D S -,
N O W . r e s p o n s ib le m e o _ a n d v««m en
to s e r v i c e h ig h
v o lu m e n e ^
^ o d u c l ro u te s ^
W E H A V E a w n o le s a le ’ b u s in e s s ,
a » l~ c a « i a c c o u n t s . B r e w in g b y .
le a p s a n d b o u n d s . W e n e e d a,
d a p e n d a b le a s s o c ia te In y o u r a re a
w M li t 1.sa a m i n im u m f o In v e s t In |
e q u l ^ a n t a n i I n v e n t o r y w f iT a ^
w t ll t u r n o y e r a b o u t t w o t im e s (
m o n t h ly .
I n c o m e p o t e n t ia l e x - ■
c a t i t l n n B l I V ___t i l o h .
^ r ttir p e i
d ls t r ib u t o r s jK c e m a b le . A ir r e p i
s tr ic fly
c o n fid e n tia lR e p lie s
■ w u i d . l n c l u d * te le p lio n e . n u m b e r
w ttti A re a C ode.
C O N S O L ID A T E D C H E M IC A L
CORP.
F r a e ie D r ie d P r o d u c t s D iv is io n
3SIS M o n tr o s e
S u ite 315
'H o u i i o n ;
83 A C R E fa r m c lo s e t o T w in FaM s.
in c lu d e s b a r n , m a c h in e ,?|hed._
c o u p , c o r r a ls ,
!® n d
3
b e d ro o m n o m e .
---------------
T IR E D ?
R EALTV.
H
-7 3 3 > 1 2 4 3 rS H A W ^ R ^ A L
‘___N a tto n a i A A a rk e tIn g
Form W o rk W a n t« d
S K I N N E R 'S S E W IN G S H O P P E
{
S a v e -O n S h o p p in g C e n te r 733 5S42
...............
N EED ED
2 i b y s e w in g y o u r o w n .
733 8211
— A v*
dovwn. D in in g r o o m , d e n , f i r e p la c e ,
-D IS T R IB U T O R S -
W E H A V E e v e r y th in g y o u n e e d to
s e w y o u r a v m s w im w e a r — .s p e c ia l
s w im
w e a r p a tte r n s , s tr e tc h
f a b r i c , e fa s fic , b r a c u o s . a n d a
'
SHAW
934-4354
G o o d in g , Id a h o
Bob L y o n
934-4623
D w a in B u tle r
934 5322
R o g e r K in n e y
934-5755
L E T U S m a k e it e a s y fo r y o u . W e '
h a v e t h e h o m e to f it y o u r f a m ily
« r d y o u r b u d g e t.
i
3 B E D R O O M h o m e w it h 3 b a th s
- F R B E - d e m o ~ E le c lr ik a r ,_ A M E B ^ .C H A R M lN < ^
T a k e a d v a r r ta g e o f a m u lt l- m illl
" can a r a d v e r il
__________________
c ro p
s e r v ic e
d e p a r t m e n t . A p p lic a n t s m u si
w e e k . C o m p a n y s e c u r e s lo c a tk > n s . ■
c a p a b le o f h ir in g , t r a in in g , a n d
C o m m e r c ia l a n d f a c t o r y .
w o r k in g
w ith
p e o p le
In
th e
N O S E L L IN G
a g r ic u l t u r e f i e l d . W e a r e a n i n ­
C A S H R E Q U I R E D $600 to $2995.
t e r n a t io n a l c o m p a n y , e x p a n d in g
F o r m o r e I n f o r m a t io n c a ll t o l l f r e e
o u r s a le s fo r c e .
1 800 344-7186 o r w r it e Q u ic k K u p
W r it e , g iv in g p e r s o n a l b a c k g ro u n d
C ftfY ip a n v . P .O . Bo x 1
a n d s e te s e * p e r t e f K e - t e - S o x - - A ^ lT 8749. S to c k to n , C a lif o r n ia , 9 5 ^ . ’
T w in F a lls , id a n a : ------G IV E P H O N E N U M B E R .
F A B R IC
H EADQ U ARTERS
iT^min niufl
1242,
IVERSON R E A LT Y
K H A R R IS O N R E A L T Y , 733 2322.
jrii<'T6TRiTrQ1=rT^ewbattiftrvdfqverr--TyeatiTrniTr-r^Mra$caDln ir— North-***
la d le s t o t r a v e l E a s te r n r e v
F lo r id a . P u e rto
R lo o , r e t u r n .
E xpense
p a id
tr a in in g .
$450
. m o n liiL y -^ ___ s a l a r y
th e re a fte r
__IQ r t a t Tp_n T j r n 1'$H>~d , ' *
P le a s a n t
p e'rso “n‘'a i r f y
tT e q u lr e m e n l^
SA LES
S U P E R V IS E R S
3 B E D R O O M b r ic k h o m e w it h u t i l i t y
ro o m .
C a rp e te d
llv ln g r o o m ,
c o v e re d
p a tio
w it h
c a rp o rt.
■ S to ra g e — l i i ^ d .
L a rf o e
If e n c e d
'b a c k y a r d . P h o n e 326
V/3 A C R E S , 2 b e d ro o m
s o m e o u t b u ild in g s . $6,500.
C O L L E G E A R E A , c u te 3 b e d ro o m
b r i c k w l t h d o u b le c a r p o r t . $13,500.
e v e n in g s
3 . B E 0 R 0 0 M B R I C K , la r g e M v in g
r o o m . B u y e q u it y , a s s u m e lo w
P R O F IT A B L E
D R IV E -IN
m o n th ly p a y m e n ts . 270 C a s w e ll.
re s ta u ra n t
f o r s a le . A t t r a c t iv e I
d e o o r ; b u il d in g a n d e q u ip m e n t , D IS T I N G U I S H E D 4 b e d ro o m g o ld
lik e n e w . B u s y io c a r k 7rr. $ 6 ,0 0 a w » » r
M e d B iir o n
hom e.
F fr e p ia c e s ,
h a n d le . W r it e P = 0 - B o x 7821, Etolse.
t e c r e a t lp n r o o f p , 2- c a r g a r ^ e p lu s
- 3:;::------------------------------------------ — — ---------- :\
d o u b l e c a r p ^ . S p r In k lin g s y s fe 'm ,
G IR L S — T R A V E L - '
A g < n l» « $ o la » m # n W o n t » d 7 7
...
1 1 8 ? .9 $
S » w a n y ta b rtc , fro m
:
j N a tio n a l fa s h io n
733-5045 — 733. J K O --------------------733j m s
B R I C K T b ^ r o o m s . b lrc h J O ? ^
N e a r c o lle g e . C le a n . » l 5Tbb^r A C E '
R E A L T Y , 733-5217.
38 S E A T C A F E f o r le a s e In c o n
lu n c t io n w it h b a r a t Id e a l d o w n
- P a r k i n g------ l u s t .
r e m o d e le d , f u l l y e q u ip p e d - d is h e s
e tc . G o o d c a fe a n d p iz z a b u s in e s s .
324-9939, J e r o m e .
W e d n e s d y ^ —d u n e —46th-r—14-4 • • ~ ^ a re n !s
w erodrrf^e' a t “ in
'
REG.
S « w > t t r a l g h i o r z lf r i a o -
swilch wilh a Itick of your
finger Get cxira wide
^iq-ziig stitcfies too'
S«w PTKtlcal aixt Fancy!
4
s e w th ro u g h
m e t a l I T h e o n ly I
m a c h in e m a d e f o r h o m e u s e to d a y
t h a t fe e d s m a t e r ia l f r o m t h e to p as |
. OFF^REG. PRICE
I
i
I
A A A CH IN ESi
733 3691
In te re s t lo a n
a ft e r S un d ay.
b a r n . $13,000.
T 3 S -2 *2 8
3 0!
s iE T H is
T io w a n d m a l a r a n o f t t ^ O w e r
t r a n s f e r r e d . $38,500, M O U N T A I N
S T A T E S R E A L T Y 733 5974.
U . S. C iv il S e r v ic e T e s ts
M e n w o m e n 18 e n d o v e r . Secujnc.
Jobs. H l g t r s t a r r in g
p a y . S h o rt
h o u r s . A d v a n c e m e n t. F V e p a ra to ry
t r a in in g
a s lo n g
a s r e q u ir e d .
o f— jo b s e p e n .— E x . ^
p e r le n c e u s u a l l y u n n e c e s s a r y .
F R E E b o o k le t o n Jobs, s a la r ie s ,
r e q u ir e m e n ts .
W r it e
TO DAY
g iv in g n a m e , a d d r e s s a n d p h o n e .
L in c o ln * S e r v lc e , B o x R -19 , c o
T lm e s - N e w s .
G O O D 160 S o irth o f ^ Bv^^\
R EA LTY
B Y O W N E R , la r g e . h o m e , e x c e lle n t |
lo c a t io n . $ 1 4 ,5 0 0 . N ic e
y fir d .i
s h r u b s ^ t r e e s . P h o n e 733-8241.
-| -
- A f t O ^ E R Q 1,1S s < itt.J tc ia K
f r a n c h is e .
L o n g t im e
o w n e rs
r e t i r i n g , A C E R E A L T Y . 733 5217.
h o u rs p e r d a y , 5 d a y s a w e e k . F o r
I n t e r v ie w a p p o in t m e n t c a ll bet
w e e n 7 a n d A P . M . . M r s. A s h c r a f t ,
73 3 2958. -
40 A C R E S v e r y n ic e h o m e , lo ts o f
o u t b u ild in g s . $37,000
LOBE
2 B E D R O O M h o m e w it h c a r p e t .
a c re . S6,600, $650 d o w n , $55 p e r
“ B A R O A tW - ^ F O R — C A S H .— Buslnesa:^ — m o n th v 8 3 7 -4 7 9 3 :------------- — ^
'
In c o m e p r o p e r t y n e x t t o 200 fo o t
f r o n t m o t e l.
B o th fo r s a le o r C O Z Y
IN
COM FORT
AND
- s e p a r a t e ly . 326>‘ 4766r e v e n in g s .
F \N A N C 4
b a th s , fu ll b a s e m e n t, p lu s h c a r
p H s . Y ou c a n b u y le s s , b u t n e v e r
F O R S A L E , L E A S E OR T R A D E
m o re
fo r
$ U ,0 0 0 l
Q u ic k
T r u c k s to p d r lv e - in c a fe In Bliss,<
p o s s e s s io n .
REAL
ESTATE
Id a tx ). F o r in f o r m a t io n , c a ll H a r S E R V IC E , 733-1416.
b a u g h A Aotor C o m p a n y , G o o d in g ,tdaho^, ^34-4112.
- - ....... - I
O w ner and M anager
624 Blue lo k e i N o rth
REAL
430 A C R E c a tt le r a n c h j v e r y n ic e
n e w h o m e , te n a n t h o u s e , k>ts o f
o u t b u ild in g s . E v e r y th in g g o e s
in c lu d in g th is y e a r 's c r o p p lu s
n e c e s s a r y e q u ip m e n t to o p e ra te ,
$85,000.
im p r o v e m e n t s . $600 p e r a c re
556 M a d is o n . W ill t a k e 3 b e d ro o m
m o b ile h o m e In t r a d e .
N e ttie
M a g e l 733-1242. S H A W R E A L T Y ,
733-0472.
B A C K H O E S E R V I C E c a ll 733 9 34 0.|
- D e E T T / ir G A M P B E L l—
v j i .
24 A c re s w it h in 7 m ile s o f T w in
F a lls . A p p r o x im a t e ly 8 a c re s h a y
th e r e s t In p a s t u r e . 2 b e d ro o m
o ld e r h o m e w it h t r e m e n d o u s v ie w
o f S ou th H ills f r o m k it c h e n . F u ll
p r ic e $23,000— 16,000 w i l l h a n d le
dow n a nd a ssum e 7 H p e r cent
a in u a t - p e r c e n t a g e r a t e - lo a n o n
b a la n c e .
T O P P IN G ,
W I L L F I L E T , c u r e a n d s m o k e f is h . ;
F re d
B e n d e r.
579
H ig h la n d ,
A v e n u e . 733-5244, 733-1232.
|
(1 ) A A a tu re s e c r e t a r y f o r I n s u ra n c e
c o m ib a n y .
(2 )
Loan
s e c r e ta r y .
S h o rth a n d
not
r e q u ir e d .
(3 )
D r a fts m a n . (4 ) C o u n te r m a n ,
s e llin g , h a n d lin g f r e ig h t , e tc . (5 )
See u s f o r o t h e r o p e n in g s .
f-^ c rS o n n e t
2 )0 A C R E S o f c h o ic e s o il, la y s g o o d
in la r o e fie ld s . E x c e lle n t w a t e r
i ^ h t s . 2-b e d ro o m h o m o , n o p u lb u ild in g s . M U F F L E Y
R EALTY
733 9642
AND
1N S U R A N <^E ,
934 4 78 1,
____
K
.enncth
-A
A
a
lQ
n
C
x-M
4
JQ
10
,
_
C H O IC E N E I G H B O R H O O D , e x t r a
n e a t 3 b e d ro o m o ld e r h o m e .
F ir e p la c e , f o r m a l d in in g ro o m ,
TOP
D A IR Y
S E T U P . 'L a n d ,
p a tio . $16,900.
b u ild in g s . 120 h e a d o f d a ir y s to c k .
In c lu d e s a ll m i lk in g e q y ip m e n t
K H A R R IS O N R E A L T Y , 733-2322.
a n d m a c h in e r y . $«4,000.
FAR
M E R 'S R E A L T Y . 543-4650 o r 543
4160, B u h l.
M IN I-R A N C H
A N X IO U S 'T O S E L L . 3 b e d r o o m s , 2
— b f l t h ii- g f lo d lQ C fltlon« flo ost .con
d itlo n , g o o d
p r ic e .
For
ap
fr e e e s tim a te s . P h o n e 543-6381.
|
p o ln tm e n t to se e c a ll 733 7492.
— ------------------------------------------------------------ 1
W IL L
DO
LON G
d is t a n c e
hay
N E A T A N D C L E A N , |u s t r i g h t f o r
h a u lin g , F a ir f ie ld , H ill C it y
^
s w d r e s u m e t o M r . H a le . :
So. AAain N o . 11, S a lt L a k e C ity ,
___________________
U ta h 84115.
80 A C R E S , d i i l r y b a r n , n e w e r h o m e ,
f ir e p la c e .
e x c e ll e n t
s o il
T r a d e a b le ,
S 35 ,00 0 .
ACE
R E A L T Y , 733 5217.
n t iTAS
444 M a in S ou th
A ft . h r s . G e o . G o u ld
B Y O W N E R . 3 b e d ro o m s , fin is h e d
b a s e m e n t, la r g e fe n c e d y a r d
g a r a g e , d is h w a s h e r . S14,900. 734
3634.
I r o n in g d o n e in m y h o m e , 11.25 hour*
o r S3.00 u n s p r ln k le d b u s h e l b a s k e t.
733-7388.
TREE
p o te n tia l.' C a l V j o i n S c h w a rz 625.
S60S, O f L A N D ^ O F F I C E - O F I D A H O R E A L T O R S , 733 0716.
30 A C R E S w ith 4 b e d ro o m h o m e ,
o n ly 7’/a m ile s f r o m T w in F a lls .
P ric e d f o r im m e d ia t e s a le . 14
a c re s a lf a lf a , b a la n c e in p a s tu r e .
C a ll H a ro ld K e lth le y , 733-2400 o r
LAND
O F F IC E
OF
ID A H O
R E A L T O R S , 733 0716.
W ESTERN
R E A L T Y CO.
RBD U CED
> 5 ,0 0 0 .
D e lu x e
Si
b e d ro o m ,
3 b a th ,
d e s ir a b le
d is t r ic t . C o rn e r lo t . P h o n e 733
0166.
A U T O M O B IL E A N D t r u c k r e p a ir s ,
tu n e u p s , e tc . N o r th o f J e ro m e .
324-4177.
N a t io n w id e
In v e s tm e n t
f ir m
d e s ir o u s o f r e p r e s e n ta t io n In So.
Id a h o .
L ife
In s .
b a c k g ro u n d
h e lp fu l.
M anagem ent
opD o r t u n lt le s , S to c k O p tio n s , «■ In c e n t a tiv e t r a v e l a w a r d s . 4 D a y
P ro f. T r a in in g In S an F r a n c is c o ,
in t e r v ie w in g J u n e 14, 15 & 16P o n d e ro s a I n n , A s k f o r M r . H a le .
J
P fif*
12 U N I T A P A R T M E N T . V e r y g o o d
~ n e t - r < ^ u m . - S b e d ro o m h o m e J n . H a z e lto n , v e r y g o o d b u y . S u b d iv is io n
p ro p e rty
a d lo / n / n f l
N E A R C O L L E G E . K i a c r e w it h 4
t e a r o o m s , 7 b a th s , f o r m a l d ln ln o
ro o m , la r g e
f a m ily
ro o m . 2
f ir e p la c e s . I t 's b r i c k w it h f r u i t a n d
S hade t r e e s . O w n e r t r a n s f e r r e d .
See to d a y .
O LD ER
H O M E . 3 b e d ro o m s ,
f a m ily r o o m p lu s r e c r o o m . V/3
h o th s , fe n c e d y a r d ,
im m e d ia t e
p o s s e s s io n .
T O T A L O F 4 b e d r o o m s , b a s e m e n t,
c a rp e te d liv i n g r o o m , f ir e p la c e ,
g a r a g e , im m e d ia t e o c c u p a n c y .
P r ic e d t o s e ll I
C a ll
H a r o ld
K e lth le y 733-2400 o r L A N D O F
F IC E O F ID A H O
R EA LTO R S ,
733-0716.
HOME
M A IN T E N A N C E ,
Law n
w o r k , o d d k>bS- Pt»one 733 9376.
i
EQ U ITY O R IEN T ED
CA REER
D R I V E R S . 25 o r o v e r . A p p ly in
p e r s o n . Y e llo w C a b C o m p a n y . 260
M a in A v e n u e S o u th .
F ll« (r.
Sal*
.^ [..C O L L E G E
AREA. O v ^ r
v e ry
a n ix o u s to s e ll 3 b e d ro o m b r i c k
h o m e . C h o ic e lo c a t io n . 2 b a th s , 2
fir e p la c e s , f u l l b a s e m e n t
w it h
e x t r ^ b e d ro o m a n d f a m i l y r o o m .
C a rp e te d a n d d r a p e d . C o v e re d
p a t io , d o u b le g a r a g e . A r e a lly
n ’e n i o i J u v s -tTD m e ! C a ll— E u n ic e
C o op e r 731-4 94 0 or L A N D O P F IC E
O F ID A H O R E A L T O R S , 733 07)4.
24
T I R E D O F M O V I N G H O S E ? In s m n
a n u n d e f g r o u n d la w n s p r in k le r . i
fr e e e s tim a te s , c a ll J im B ra w le y <
7 33 -9 63 3
or
TRI V A LLE Y ,
I R R I G A T I O N , 536 2393.
C o ll Of W f it r
J O H N REMSBERG
4 3 6 3 4 3 2 . Route 4, ^ u p e rt, Idoho
F U L L E R B R U S H n ee ds fu ll o r p a rt
t i m e d e a le r s . P h o n e R u p e rt 436
4391, o r T w in 733-7405.
In
O F F IC E O F ID A H O R E A L T O R S .
- 7 H . U / 16.------------- r - i ------------------- B—
-
BEDROOM
H O M E b e tw e e n
J e ro m e
and
T w in . iC a r p o r t ,
c o v e r e d p a t i o , g o o d lo c a t i o n .
$19,750. S T O C K M E N 'S R E A L T Y .
324-S o u th 1 I n f P in .
4>45. 324-2620. 825 5573.
E X T R A N I C E 2 b e d ro o m h o m e .
L a r g e k itc h e n a n d liv i n g r o o m ,
c a rp e te d , d it c h
w a te r . A
re a l
b a r g a in a t o n ly $8,600. C a ll N a d in e
K o e p n lc k 733-7297 o r L A N D , O F ­
F I C E O F ID A H O
R EA LTO R S .
733 0716.
C^LISTO M G R E E N C H O P P IN G ^
DUNROAMIN
CO N CRETE C O .
E X P E R I E N C E D c a n m i l k h a u le r .
C o n ta c t V ic k R o b e r ts , 382 N o rth
W a s h in g to n , 733-4272,
I
H A Y S T A C K I N G w it h h a r r o w b e d ,
N ie l R in g . P h o n e 543-4061, B u h l
To h elp co n stru ct corjcre te p roducts
-m fq ..g q iiL p m g n l _Must h f fcnow lgdcifobte in m e ch a n ica l d esig n a n d convtru ction , o b le to w e ld a n d 'b e w ill­
ing fo le o rn o th e r »hop procltces.
lo n g te rm e m p lo y m e n t o n d w ill o lf^ r
jntefe sf in o g ro w in g b u iin e s )
- r r
H t t ip W d n k e d ~
ATTENTION
AAR. BUSINESSMAN!
w e ig h t , s m o k in g .
F o r a p p o in t m e n t.
- -1 7
P E R S O N N E L S E R V I C E o f M a g tC
V a l le y , 624 B lu e L a k e s N o r th ,
p h o n e 733-5562.
W E N E E D Y O U R H E L P I F o s te r
h o m e s f o r te e n a g e r s a r e b a d ly
- n e e d e d In T w in F a U s c o u n t y .^ lf y o u
a r e in t e r e s t e d In h e lp in g th e s e
t e e n a g e r s , p le a s e c o n t a c t t h e
D e p a r t m e n t o f P u b lic A s s is ta n c e ,
634 A d d is o n A v e n u e W e s t. P h o n e
733 2323.
f r o s t e c i g la s s e s
a n d fh e b e s f f in g e r s te a k s a n d
to w n .
E m p lb y m « n t A g « n c i« f t
C U S T O M S W A T H I N G . C a ll G e o rg e
W a r d . 733 3892.
^
T w in F a ils a r e a . I f y o u a r e m a k in g
le ss t h a n $175 p e r w e e k , w r it e B ox
7643, B o is e , Id a h o f o r p e r s o n a l
In t e r v ie w .
b e d ro o m ^ h o m e
■ W ~ T 3 W N T E T tl J T b e S ro o m b r i c k .
‘ p a r t i a l b a s e m e n t, w e ll, g a r d e n
~ 8 p o t r f e n c e d 'y a r d r s i 3 , 2 0 0 . 733-9492
50
51
C O M F O H T A 'b L ^
. G EM STATE REALTY
__________
C U S T O M H A Y h a u lin g w it h h a r r o w
b e d . P h o n e 326-5350.
ATTENTION
RO U TE W ORKERS
B A B Y S IT T I N G , m y h o m e , f w c e d
y a r d , l o v i n g c a r e ', 'r e a s o n a b le
r a t e s , lu n c h f u r n is h e d . 734 2082.
UNW ED
M A T E R N IT Y
c a re y
d o c to r , h o s p ita l a n d liv i n g p la n In
M o u n ta in A A a n or. In c ., P .O . B o x
310, M o u n ta in H o m e . Id a h o 63647,
P h o n e S87-512B.
-L ,
S p e c ia l N o t ic e s
in
I D O b a b y s it t in g in m y . h o m e , a d ­
d re s s a c ro s s fr o m
K e l lw o o d .
P h o n e 733-4969.
..
CLEA N .
- L O V E L Y H O M E I n ' L in c o ln s c h o o l
d is t r ic t . 2 b a th s , f u l l b a s e m e n t, 2 i f f ^ r m t F o r
J i l .
b e d ro o m s o n m a in f lo o r , 4 In
b a s e m e n t. S 12.000
160 A C R E S , a b u n d tfn c e o f w a t e r ,
t i E W L Y R E M O D E L E D h o n ie ,
fe e_____________
d c o r r a ls , w o r k m g a lle y a n d
h e ot.
h -b
- c a r p el t h r o u g h o u t < 2 b e d r e e m s ^ l — — «shoo
L a rg
r gee-te
-t' v e t- fie ld » 7 - 5 0 -e c re » ^
n e w f ix t u r e s In b a th a n d k ltc n e n *
Ii r r i g a t e d p aa s t u r e . M o d e r n 3>h o m fc :a 3 g Q i,W E S T .E N a ^
~Juat=Mti790at-:j=:.
C C F flS rte '
. . .
f r g A L T T - f o r - a p p o t n t m e n tr r iia E r
w it h - f ir e p la c e -a n d c a r p e t . T r y
E LE G A N T G O LD
^ e d e in o h
4409. E v e n in g s 543-5886. 543-4578. •
F a r m H o m k o r m o n e y ^ ^ 73?^74
h o m e in K e tc h u m . 3 b e tfro b m s '. 2
- b a ih s ; f l r e p U c e » - - t m U t l n a p :
180 A C R E S H a n s e n . L a r g e f ie ld s
p ila n c e s . U 5 .0 0 0
18 A C R E S b a r e g r o u n d le s s t h a n
g o o d f a m i l y h o m e , e x c e ll e n t
— ilO O O -p e r— a c r e ^ B u y —t h l 4- _ a n d
— t e r m s ^ 9 3 . 0 0 f l_ 4 2 3 i.4 J 3 2 ^ M O U hT
s u b d iv id e . 423-4137 M O U N T A I N ~ 6 3 T B r o « 'la t ir N o r t t t ------------7 3 3 -5 3 3 i.
T A I N S T A T E S R E A L T Y 7 3 3 -5 9 yJT
3
3
-9
0
6
9
—D
ick
M
e
u
e
iim
ilh
^
B
to
k
e
r
,___7
- S T A T E r R E A L T Y 7 3 3 ^ 5 9 7 4 ,-----. H rt. 8 ,3 0 -6 i0 0
S o l. 9 ,0 0 -4 -00
160 A C R E S , B u til a r e a . 100 a c re s
lA A M E D IA T E P O S S E S S IO N . Q o s e
h a y . 40 a c re s p e r m a n e n t p a s t u r e ,
in . c o m f o r ta b le h o m e . R e a l c le a n
b a la n c e in c o rn . F u ll T w in F a lls
— w a r e m 'lg h t p l x j r - 100* * - f r o m w c l f r a n d ' cO te. P rIc e tf~ a T “ t6 7 B 00 ~ W IIK
g o o d f u r n i t u r e In c fu d e o . o r b u y
T h e m o s t re a H s tlc a ll,y p r lC 9 d i^ r m
w ith o u t f u r n i t u r e f o r i6 .3 0 0 . C a ll
in t h e V a lle y w it h t h e b est o f t e r m s
H a r o ld K e lth le y 7 3 3 -2 4 0 0 o r L A N D
a v a ila b le . C a ll G e n e ^ H o p k ln s 5434 6 4 5 o r L A N D O F F I C E O F ID A H O
O F F IC E O F ID A H O R E A L T O R S .
R E A L T O R S . 733.0716.
. 733m \ Y
—
■
3
“ sracKfngr^erih^r~RaridarfT"733r
0475.
Out df Town Homat
50
LAR G E W ORKSHOP A N D H O M E
C O M B IN A T IO N ,
S p a c io u s . ' 4JM i
b u s in e s s . d is tr ic t . A i r c o n d itio n e d
- J h p p - ........................................................
*23.000. O w n e r w i l l f ln a n c e T ? W IN
F A L L S . R E A L T Y A N D IN S ., 7333662. E v « > ln 9« - J i S u n d a y s ; - B I U
733-8023, E s th e r B o y le 733
M E^N
Hornet For Sale
HAVE
S P U D N I K , e q u ip m e n t, to
lo a d , h a ir i y o u r s p u d s . A lt o c u t
y o u r s e e d . G w g e O a r k 543-5653,
D e n n is O a r k 543-5473.
F U L L 'T I M E o r p a r t - t i m e b a r te n d e r
w a n t e d . P h o n e 733-3913.
W I L L B A B Y S I T 4 o r S ^ r ^ o Id 4 .'M y _
h b m e ; M o n d a y t t ir u F rrd a y r~ 7 3 3 “ i : A D T E 5 r T 0 P ~ W A G E 5~ f o m 3r o v e n
0066.
success
In
te le p h o n e
s a le s
p r o m o t ia n w o r k . P a r t t im e . E x ­
p e r ie n c e v e r y h e lp f u l b u t n o t
W I L L D O b a b y s it t in g , m y h o m e , 311
e s s e n tia l. C a ll M r . G e o rg e , 733A s h , fe n c e d y a r d . E x p e r ie n c e d .
4023 a l t e r 5 :3 0 p.nn.
P h o n e 734 3346.
R »nf
-e K e rc ls e a n d h e a lth e q u ip m e n t,
s p e e d b ik e , m a s s a g e r o l l e r , b e lt
v i b r a t o r , 'a c f i o n c y c l e .
BANNER
F U R N I T U R E , 733-1421:
L O S T : 32 c a lib e r r i f l e , ' w g ^ , o f
C a s tle fo r d . R e w a r d . C a ll 733 t821
a f t e r 5.
“ C U jn r O M " S W A T H I N G ; T . e . H u d :
t o n , 324-5046, J e r o m e .
I W I L L b a b V 'S ttr m y t io m e r a n y a g e r
d a y t im e . P h o n e 733-3097.
A L C O H O L IC S A N O N Y M O U S , T w in
F a lls C o u r th o u s e , W e d n e s d a y a t
8 :3 0 p .m . F o r f u r t h e r in fo r m a tk > n ,
733-4030. A l- A n o n 3 rd f lo o r . 7337932.
S m a ll w h it e p o o d le , n e a r
■Farter F r i d a y : - R v w
o ff e r e d . C o n ta c t 713 8351.
CUSTO M H A V
S T A C K I N G . C a ll
C h a r le s F o l ^ o n b u r g , 3 3 4 -2 8 4 4 /
•— J e r o m e:------------- ------------------—
A & R C U S T O M F A R M I N G f o r a ll
m >r4c. P ^ n e 334»4Q5»
324-48551
O V E R S E A S J o b * ~ - * “ “ A u » t r B tlB 7 f - _ :
E urr>pe« S o u th A nrte r lc a , f a r E a s t*
"^ O p B ffT T ilJ s I n ' o tt
t r a 'a e s — o n d p r o fe s s io n s . F re e I n f o r r n a tlo n
w r i t e F o r e ig n J o b s , BoH 3235 A M F
CUSTOM
HAY
h a u lin g
and
M i a m i F k > r ‘Id a -3 3 1 5 9 .
X m t : t > w f e N * 3 V I L L A G E t h i l< H : e f e r
L i c e n s e d . V / 2, u p . 461 N o r t h
L o c u s t, 733 7080, 733 ?Q10, 733-7795.
F A C IA L A N D B O D Y h a ir re m o v e d
b y e le c tr o ly s is . F re e d e m o n s tc a tlo n . S w ln g in Set S a lo n . 7330405.
LOST;
N E E D 3 m e n t o h e lp m e In m y
b u s in e s s . C a ll b e tw e e n 9 a . m . a n d 1
p .m . f o r a p p o in t m e n t. 734.2450,
M r T w iM ia m i.
MEN
Howw For Sq|»
46
t r a ile r s , fo c a l a n d o v e r t h e r o a d .
c a n e a r n h ig h
a i^ o r t ' t r a i n l n g r f ^ r a p p lic a t io n a n d
In t e r v ie w , c a ll
601-487-0767, o r
w r it e S c h o o l S a fe ty D iv is io n .
t M lt e d ^ y s ie m s , ln c . , c - o U . M . T . A .
C r e d it U n io n B ld o . . 2?3 W e s t 700
Sou t h , S alt L a k e C it y , U t a h B4101.
' ^ ^ v e d fo r V e f e r a n 'B d ^ t l f i . '
H A Y H A U j: iN G r ^ V « m d e llr - J e r o m e
o r EkJhl a r e a . P h o n e '* M l k e " 5343086.
e X P E R I E N C E D ------ B E A tH fK ^ fA N S ^
_ w a n te d . C a ll 734 3213 a f t e r 6 p .m .
J A C K & J I L L N u r s e r y . L ic e n s e d
c h ild - c a r e . - C h ild r e n —
— rrr.
cttPO l. t m j m - A '
P f^ W A T E I n v e t t J g a t o r — 24 H o u r
S e rv ic e . A ll c o n f id e n t ia l. P h o n e
- - m = 6 A 3 t-— - n lg h t ~ m 5 f 7 3 ; ----------------
MEN
or] f u l l
Baby SiH«rt--Child Cor« 16
L A T E S T F A S H IO N S In lin g e r ie b y
L e V o y s . C a ll C h e r l K o n F c e k . 73365*8.
lost and Found
p « rf
W A N T E D : .G E N E R A L fa r m h a n d .
a d u l t i o n lV f f o r fu n « f r le n d s h lp .o r
m a r r T ^ e . F o r f r d e r c o n f i d e n r m r — y e a r - e r o u n d ~ e m p io y m « f r - O p t I o n
to f a k e o v e r f a r m in g o p e r a t lo n i.
I n f o r m a t io n s<ind n a m e , a d d re s s
- ^ d : a o e ^ O - C O A W IA A T r P ; O r 2 0 6 1 2 r - ~ A A o d ern 3- b e d r o o m - h o m e ^ 37^ 97^
B J IJ In g s . A/y>ntana 59103. ' .
R E S T A U R A N T H E L P n ee de d , fu ll
a n d p a r t t im e . S e n d re s u m e to
P .O . B o x 7821. B o is e ;
P«rtonaf
in’ eiTh6r7he''crai5jnwDi-di5ptay—
D I S T r t lB lit . O 'R S
r e t a il,
Oth«r Instruction
*3 3
; S W A T H IN G
w it h
CDhr
~ d l ^ ^ e r , J e r o m e a r e a . P h o n e 334 /
c u s to m
•PAT rNG" B Y cijmporgrT-^tngty
C L A R K - M IL L E R G U E S T R A N C H .
H o u s e k e e p in g c a b in s . F o r in *
f o r ^ e t t ^ a n d r e s e r v a t io n s p h o n e
7 74 3535 o r w r i t e C l a r k M l l l e r
-O u e « — R ttnctV i— K e tc h u n y r- r^ d a h o 83340.
a d v e r t is in g s e c tio n s " i f th e p a p e r.
L i a b i l i t y f o r ' e r r o r s o r o m is s io n
s h a ll rx )t e x c e e d t h e c b s t to th e
a d v e r t is e r o f t t i a t p o r tio n o f s p a c e
o c c u p ie d b y s u c h e r r o r .
C la im s lo r a d iu s t m e n ^ o f th e
co*»r o f th e a d m u s f b e m a d e w it h / n
10 d a y s o f p u b lic a t io n . C r e d it is-i
.jH o w e d f o r firs ? f n s ^ r tio n o n ly ,
R jc e ip is m u s t b e p re s e n te d fo r
Crt'ih ro lu n O s
c h ic k e n
h o u s e w a re s ,
Farm Work Woiit«d
IS
B E S T L IN E
S IC V E S I
D O LLA R S . R AR E
C O IN S a n d
. G O L D . . C o n ta c t
u«
f ir s t .
I
S H ^R O C K
C O IN S , 140 S ou th
A A ^ n , P o c a te llo ^ Id a h o . P h o n e 233- A M 4.— --------------- -----------------------------'“
R « s o rtt
m a k e s u r e it ii* r i g h t . E s p e c ia lly
c h e c k p h o n e n u m b e r a n d a d d re s s .
A ll " H e l p W a n t e d " a d s v^nust
s ta te t h e r t a tu r e o f th e w o r k .
" S a le s H e lp " a d ^ m u s t n a m e th e
PlfOUUCl lu kjc
if lhd'pJyy~tS]'
'. s a l a r y o r c o m m is 's io n o r b o th .
- T h e : j > u b l i i h e r A , d i 4ijr n e s
no
. f l n a n c 'f a l :
re s p O M tb fH ty ^ r« » r
t y p o g r a p h ic a l - e r r o ^ , ♦ r r o r s - >n
- p u b lic a tio n .> . w r n n g
c la s s if ic a tio n s , th e o m is s io n o f
c o p y , ( p a r t i a l l y o r ( c o m p le te ly ) o f
c o m p le t e o m is s io n o f th e to ta l ad
in
< iR isfrA N h 6 u s e H o t l i n e .
e x t« n d o u r . h e a r t f e l t
expreisTonr™ oTniym pitfrv~ani
A d v e r t is e r s a r e e xpe cte< > to c h e c k
th e f i r s t 4 h s e rtio n . N e w s p a p e r w il l
B e e r s e rv e d
to
o ff e r in g s o f m o n e y , f o o d , a n d
f lo w e r s m e a n t ao m u c }\ t o u s u p o n
th e . d e a th o f m e m b e r s o f o u r
_____
f a m ily
_
T h e ) t f p ip M fa m T ly
--—
T)v^-M uod44K >oft-lam U V .~ »-^— -
x)Ot-ltft~r)ftsponsU»le-for-^r-ror«-a<ter.
-
w im
H « lp W a n lM l
^ f o n o l _______________________
— : r e < a t t v » t r a n d t > f f lJn li» t< < > n» -v^tw *
— tiavetto piacc tn these cotumn*7rrn the event of error, noHly the
Classified DepaHment at- onre.
^
S u n ^ y , June 1 3 / 1»71
^rd'of Thank*
;
' u _____________________________________ — —
3 > i A C R E S , c h o ic e la n d o n c it y
» e w e r a n d w » t e r 7 lu s h p a s t u r e , Jots
H E A R Y E a ll c o u n t r y s q u ir e s .'
o f ir r ig a tio n w a te r . K L IN K E
B e tw e e n T w in F a lls a n d B u r le y , a |
a g e n c y , -P h o n e M r s . P a s k e t t,
K ic e f a m i l y 4 -b « d ro o m h o m e , 2>
733-5740, a n y t im e . .
b a th s , 5 a c r e s . F o u r - s t a ll h o rs e j
b a r n , c o r r a ls , a n d lo a fin g sh ed
- > u « ln < l3 ! » P r » p » r ty ,
56_
■ tt»,000 w lttT -»4^S 00^dow n.--------------T W O T R A I L E R t t o m e s , tO x S S a n d
12 X 60, e a c h c o m p le t e ly f u r n is h e d
agt o " Z H l‘T g p a i» 1> IU»%- g ACe lle n f
tiome-bwysl
TH O RN E REALTY
886-2071, Shoshone
. A n n W ilw n , W endeU . S 34-3 41 7
HefWl~TKon>«.'Murfe~uoh. ^ 2 - 3 11T
120 A C R E S , 1 2 0 - S h a r a * - w a t e r ^ ^ ^
b e d ro o m
hom e
and
c o r r a ls
ts3 ,o a o . I
32 A C R E S . 32 sh a re s w a te r/'n o
buildings. 816.000.
20 A C R E S , double-wate^ rights, 4^ jo<hU4»m hunjerCTOse f6~T6wh
C o m m e rcial Proparty
—
---- A S P E C I A L T Y
J E » i a m in : R — itofs____________ z x u M
t NEW tZ-tiedroom u n its, superb ,
_
-
P E L O T M A N R E A L T O R S 7 3J.1 9M
K's Speciqis
I D E A L c o m m e r c ia l lo c a t io n . B lu e
t a n e s B lv d . No r t h .
13< f e e t
fr o n t a g e , WO fe e t d e e p .
HARRISON
-R E A u n r
'-'-I,-™
Soiiday, June 13, 197),
M « b il« H om M
lUt
Vacation I*r«p4rirty'
FOR SAUE In beautiful Savvtooth
.Motels, l(«flej, •cablftj,.
— catJn .-iJlpL rflnctiear a
cm
nm
g »,. rFpr
ur
in f o r m a t io n
w r lf « : W a y n e P a t— t e n o n * y o u r S a w t o o t h V a l le y
R e a lto r . L y n w o o d R e a lty B r a n c ti,
S ta r R o u te . K e tc h u m , o r p tio n e
774.aS47 o r r7 4 .3 M 8 e v e n in g s .
F O R S A L E A T M a f llc R e s e r v o ir,
1966 13 X 43 O ia m p lo n M o b ile
• H o m e , a ll lm p ro v e m < m ts In c lu d e d ,
— I t t c y - w a t e r - an d - x w a o e sy st e m .
P tK w e m.20StO .
C ? |«
***
t r a i l e r , s le e p s 5 / $500.
t t l — J W ^ N o r t h v le w
T R A Il S ^ S
and
T c a m p i f * Q u a lit y f o r . l e s s T ^
s e rv ic e o u r s a le s ! K it , P r o w le r .
W IL K IN S
T R A IL E R
S A LE si
G o o d in g .
v a c a t io n
VO LKSW AG EN
C A M P E R , 1958
Q ie v r o le t 4 x 4 s u b u rb a n . P h o n e
702.755-2238, JacJcpot, N e v a d a .
S IE S T A T E L E S C O P I C c a m p e r .
— > O W - ^ v e r » o t o n m a -C h e v r o le t-V . E x c e lle n t,_ 3 0 0
DAMAGED
9 -F O O T
T»7I
Jet
c a m p e r , f t t r s a lv a o e o r r e s t o r ln o ■ P tio n e 4 3 & - 4 m . ,
:
_3Q A C R E S H a o e r m a n V a tle v w it h
800 f e e t r i v e r f r o n t a g e . G re a t
p o t e n t i a l f o r r e c r e a t lo n , _ s g b : .
. d iv is io n , o r t r a i l e r p a r k .
-W ESTERN
R E A L T Y CO.
M A IN S O U TH
n a - jM S
D o n W a lla c e ,
733'7«1>
O th e r R m I E « ta t*
60
140 S H A R E S o» N o r t h s ld e w a t e r lo r
le a s e o r w i e . P tio n e M 4 -4 J48 .
!
ON TH E
CO LOR AD O
R iv e r In
W illo w V a lle y A r iz o n a , T w o .'0 x
I M r i m p r o v e d lo ts w lj h m o o ile
t > o m e r r 7 J 4 - 3 5 0 0 , C ly d e H a w k ,
K e t c t iu m .
SPEC IA L!
"Jh 9 Oea/er w ifh The
A>1osf £«p «rie nce "
BROCKM AN 'S A U TO
and TRAILER SAL^S
The Quality Buy
—CLOSED SUNDAYS
934 4623
934 5322
934 5755
C am p ers
AAay be se e n a t T w in
O " T ir e S to re .
R u p e rt , I d a h o
U ||ht Industrial Cqulp.
99
STRIAL
M a H e tte -C e n tu ry-T o m o rcck-S h e lb y
....
TRAVEL TRAILERS
. .
=
J O H N DEERE M o d e l 3 0 0 B o c k tu x - - ---------------- ---------- ^ _____________ J8 Q 0 0
E V E R Y T H IN G IN S E R V IC E FO R
M O B IL E H O M E S A N D T R A V E L
T R A IL E R S
M A K E Y O U R F IR S T STO P
THELASTI •
IHC M o d e l 3 00 Backhoe
$3500
IHC M o d e l 4 6 0 Bocikhoe
S 47 5 0
B A K E R ’S
F IN E H O M E S a n d
P IE A S U R E C R A F T
S4S0
CASE M o d e l D1 lo a d e r
S 30 0
C A T G ra d e r '
15 YEA/iS S E R V IN G
M A G IC VA LLEY
M AKE OFFER
IH C M O D E L 4 1 0 0 . 4 w h « « l
u
___________ _______ :
USED
f v l l linm o f
tr ia l mquipmtnt.
d riv e ,
_ ,
John
in d u s-
1 0 ' - 3 B e d ro o m
8' • 2 Bedroom
rerrT>j A ir a n g t d
* P o w e re d b y D o d g e
“
734 34*0
L O W E S T P R IC E D I N
H&W
Trailer Sales
2 5 9 O v e r l a n d A v e n u e , B u r le y
G o o d in g
P hb n e 6 7 8 -9 6 1 1
Bob H o u ito n —
S o le t R e prete nto tive
Hom e Phone 7 3 3 -1 4 9 0 .
1839 K im b erly Rd.
Twin Foil,
O p . n 7 d a y i, 9 to
T H E V A IL E Y
$3295
$1495
1 1 1 O v e rlo n d A ve., Burley, Id a h o
Phone 6 7 8 -5 5 8 5
8' ■1 Bedroom
9
A p cirtm « n lt— Fu rn ish ed
70
C O O L , C O Z Y a n d c le a n , 1 b e d ro o m
h a i a m a n t .a p a r t m e n ^ - U tU W e s f u r n is h e d e x c e p t lig h t s . A d u lts
o n ly , n o p e ts . 3J4- eth A v e n u e
N o r t h . 733-1914.
A P P L IA N C E
H O M E M A I N T E N A N C E _____________
R E P A IR
R E F R IG E R A T O R S ,
w a s h e rs ,
d r y e r ^ i ra n g e s . R e a s o n a b le r a t e s .
30 y e a r s e x p e r ie n c e . C a ll S h u m w a y A p p lia n c e R e p a ir , ' 733-6167.
R E F R IG E R A T O R S .
F re e x e rs ,
r a n g e s , w a s h e rs , d r y e r s . V E R N 'S
A P P L I A N C E R E P A I R , 733-5466,
875 F ile r A v e n u e W e s t.
P a n e lin g , f in is h c a r p e n t r y , p l u m ­
b in g , e le c t r ic a l r e p a ir , p a in t in g ,
d r y w a ll f in is h in g . F re e e s tim a te .
733-17a5.
-R o o fin g , p a in t in g e n d -h e m e r e p i l r
C o m p le te h o m e m a in te n a n c e . P u t
/ o u r s e lf In g o o d h a n d s . P r o m p t
r e lia b le s e r v ic e . 543-5656.
A U T O B O D Y R E P A IR
HORSESHOEING
H a rv e y
H o r s a s h ^ in g .
G a r y 's
a u to
body
“ ■»-pyiP7rtg-'CT-d-"l5iTrtfmgV 'Ta-jJ''
q u a lit y w o r k a n d s e r v ic e . F r e e e s t.
S t a n le y
S IC K R O O M E Q U I P M E N T
H O S jp iT A L b e d s , w h e e l c h a i r s ,
e x e r c is in g
e q u ip m e n t
con­
v a le s c e n t a id s — B u y m e o r r e n t
m e . C h o lo s to m y a p p lia n c e s f o r
s a le . K in g s b u r y 's M e d ic a l C e n te r,
- 733,)9 114 ; K ln | s a » r y i P r e s c r ip t ion
C e n te r. 733 6574.
H O S P IT A L B E D S , w h e e l c h a ir s ,
w a lk e r s , c r u tc h e s ^ c o n v a le s c e n t
a id s a n d e x e r c ls ln g r ~ e q u lp m e n t .
F o r r t e t o r s e ll:
-A B S O L U T E - P R I V A C Y — U m a t iir ff
a d u lt , . 3 ro o m s , p r iv a t e b a t h , a ll
u t i lit ie s In c lu d e d , $75. 733-5580.
B U Y O R s e ll y o u r h orses v K ie re
y o u 'r e t r e a t e d r ig h t .- P h o n e 3 * i5 1 4 }, e v e n in g s .
....AT:
A L L T Y P E S o f h o rs e s , b o u g h t, s o ld ,t r a d e d . P le n ty o f ra n c h g e ld in g s .
R e n H a le y , 733 4055.
U S E D H A Y ,B A IE R S -
2
—
New
H o lla n d
p r o p e lle d
b a le r s
1281
S e lf
( l ik e
new )
fo rm S u p p IlM
91
v v it h c a b .|
1 —
F re e m e n 2 0 0 S e lf p r o p e l
le d b a le r .
1 —
.
.
. 7 S4850
C a s e 3 3 0 P T O tw in e
$695
40 L E N G T H S , 4 " x 40' s p r in k le r
p lp r ; “ A m » * - C o u p le r s .- I^ o n e
J e r o m e , a 4 - 5 l< 7 .
H oy, O iq ln
oih I
f—d
94-
y .
" t w rn e ’ .
1 —
1_
John
D e e re
l^ T
P T
O
t w i n e .................................... $ 2 5 0
1 —
I n t e r n a tio n a l 4 6 P T O
tw in e
1^—
. .
50
PASTURE
fo r
SUMM ER
y e a r lin g s . S ta n le y B a U n . W r it e D
J u s tu s , 1024 R a n c h R o a d , Boise,
ld a h a ; o i* 'c a li 3 4 4 ^ 1 .
17 A C R E S o f I r r i g a t e d p a s t u r e f o r 15
p a ir s . U.OO p e r m o n th p e r p a ir .
324-4153.
....................... $ 4 9 5
In t e r n a t io n a l 5 6 * f P T O
t w in e
$575
N e w H o lla n d 2 7 1 P T
6
$295
B r a n c T i,
•^--J erome/ ^Ptiong 3>4i4?t»-er-
S E L L . L A R G E o u ts ta n itln a « - y e e r o ld
s a d d le h o r s e . O u ta ta n d ln a
- t > r o k e f g r o w K H t e d . - F r o m - p e i> e r e tf S to c k . V a n c e 's , 1145 O t te r f o h .
W A N T E D : U se d i - h o r s e t r a l le r . B o x
3<a.S un V a lle y , Id a h o , P h o n e 7 M ^
. :
M a s s e y F e rg u s o n 1 0 P T O
t w i n e .....................................$ 6 9 5
1_
A p a rtm « n ts— U n fu rn .
I b t'o k e i
f o r w o m e n o r c h ild r e n . P h o n e 733i 1* l a f t e r a p .m .
SEE THESE
2 B E D R O O M a p a r t m e n t , r e t ir e d o r
r e s p o n s ib le w o r k in g c o u p le . No
c h ild r e n o r p e ^ s . P a r t - t i m e w o r k
a llo w a b le o n r e n t . 733*6400.
1 R O O M A P A R T M E N T . See a t 235
3 rd A v e n u e N o r t h .
APPALO O SA
AND
QUARTER
H O R S E S . A ll a g e s . B ee e dln g a n d
p le a s u r e
s to c k .
G ood
c lu b
p r o te c ts , t e r m s . R ic k S a v a g e , 432*
R B C I S T B B g B Q U A R T S R . h o r se
s ta n d ir ig a t s tu d . T In K y's E s p a d a
b y T in k y P oo a n d E d 'i S ta r d u s ta r
b y S ta r d u s te r . F o r in f o r m a t io n
p h o n e 324:10«I.
B A R G A IN S
B E D R O O M S , u t i l i t i e s , d e p o s it,
r e s p o n s ib le
o ld e r .
p a r ty ,
r e fe r e n c e s * Y a r d • w o r k l e x c h a n g e
p a r t r e n t . 733-a538.
O R U M f U R N IS H E D , 1 b e d ro o m . 1
a c r e la n d in C it y l i m i t s . 733-8557,
a f t e r 5 :0 0 p .m ^ ______________________
a Y E A R O L D b la c k m a re . G o o d f o r
la d ie s o r c h ild r e n . Phone 733-4299.
___________ :________________ H O R S E S H O E IN G , t r im m in g , a n d
g r o o m in g . P
Phtio n e 326-4631.. D e n v e r
F in e . F il e r . .
th e r w it h c o n d itio n e r ,
rim o fT K $175. A C E R E A L T Y , 733-5217.
«eeJ
5 -Y E A R
O LD
P in to m a r e , e x *
c e p r io n a r m a r k ln g i; t>roke t o r l d i ,
lig h t r e in . S p ir ite d , n ot a k id 's
h o r s e . 324-5111.
« 1 9 6 9 9 5 5 C o s » 1 4 < o o t tw a -
—
Below yo u w ill fin d m a n y services a v a i la b l e from M a g ic
V a lle y Businesses. C h e c k w ith our S e rv ic e D ire c to ry w h e n
y o u 're in need of a p ro fe s s io n a l. The firm s b e lo w o ffe r the
f i a£yt~ iir^ervTce a nd-qw34Uv-OLrQducts. C h e c k w ith o n e a n d
SW A T H E R T R A I L E R fo r s a le . 0 5 0 .
PtK>ne 934-5377, G ob d in g .
* N e w 1 9 7 0 3 5 0 O w a to n n o
F U H N re R E T T T C P -A 'P T M E N T : gTrls
o n ly . C lo s e I n , n e w ly p a in te d ,
u t i l i t i e s In c lu d e d , $52.50, d e p o s it.
■
----------------3
S X O D S E R V I C E , P ln lo s t a lllo n r
A r a b ia n . B re d f o r c o lo r. C o lt to
S ho w . P h o n e 326-5139.
90
♦ 0 4 0 T T Y ^ P t N e — C M A 1 T M e R 7 ~ 3^
r o o m s , p a r k in g , q u ie t p e o p le , lo c a l
re f e r e n c e s ^ 733-2524.
, .
104
D A IR Y
K IN G
b u lk
ta n k .
1,000
g a llo n s , B 8 5 g a llo n s . U s e d . B R O O K
S T O C K M E N 'S S U P P L Y , 734-2773.
HAY
SPEC IAL
3 R O O M S , c le a n , c lo s e In . A d u lts , no
p e ts . I n q u ir e 636 4 h A v e n u e E a s t.
s
H R D L IC K A B R O S .
R o u te 7
C h ip p e w a F a lls , W isc o n s in
O ffic e :
715-723-1171
R e s id e n c e :
715-723-9158
S H E T L A N D P O N IE S for s a le . B u d
P r e s c o tt, to p o f Shoshone F a lls .
733-1227.
Twin F a lli A re o
734-2331
U n it 5 15 7
R E D E C O R A T E D 1 JM fd T O O m *___ _
c o n d it io n e d , u t i l i t i e s f u r n i s h e d .
C a ll a f t e r 6 P .M . . 660 AAaIn A v m u e
N o rth .
u
A p p ro v a l
1 U S E D M i c h i g a n 7 5 -A s h o v e l
lo a d e r , 4 w h e e l d r iv e , n e w m o to r
- o v e r h a u l. T w in F a lls T r a c t o r . 733^487.
2 S C H I F F L E R h a y lo a d e r s . 1 h a y
b a d . 2 o v a r s h o t f o r h a y t r u c k . 3265066.
;
F a rm Im p la m e n tt
H O L s T E IN H E I F E R
CA LVES
.
Callorwriie:
MOBILE PHONE
B urley A re a
-6 7 S -0 « ^ U n it 5 1 5 7
H u g h e s , B u h l. 543 M B o r 5 4 3 -M M .
D e liv e r e d o n
R A K E , D e a r b o r n a r c h t y p e , s id e
d e l i v e r y , - d u a l r u b b e r , $65. I n ­
t e r n a t io n a l 7 fo o t m o w e r f o r Ct r a c t o r , $35. B o th r e a d y to g o . 5
m ile s S o u th a n d 2 W e s t o f J e ro m e .
324-4011.
E L L IG irS
1 0 * - 3 5 e d r o o m - 2 Bonlibeds
9 A N G U S h e if e r s , y e a r lin g s , o p e n .
C a ll a f t e r 5 :0 0 o r w e e K e n d t. 534?V»f,
--------------------------------
-C A L V E S B a tiy a n d g r a s s c a lv e s , a ll k k id s , W
-L w e s t> _ W - a o u lh o f _ K I m h t r l y . _ 4 2 ^
5124. o r 423-5I09. B | i B C a ttle .
W A N T T O B U Y . S h e fle r h a y lo a d e r,
e39-5112, o r S29 5229.
S 500
CASE M o d e l 3 1 0 T ro ctor
P a rti ■S u p p litt • S e r v if ,
F R E S H 5 P R IN G P R COWS, H e lf« Y «
b u lls , h o r s a t . L o a n o r s a il. D a r r t l
L y o n 543-5124, 5 4 J .5 9 U
~
ID A H O t r a c t o r s a lv a g e . C ash f o r '
u lB r i t f f l c t a n . U a e d p a U i . a t b ig
d is o o im ts . 733-8393.
B A L E R , 5 6 -W I n t e r n a t io n a l P T O ,
w ir e t ie . In g o o d c o n d itio n . 5434915. D iC k H o w a r d .
S 65 0 0
t
PETTIBONE 4 W h«el D rivo lo o d e r
S6500
U tility T ro ile r D o o it
R E G IS T E R E P
A W JS U S ^M j * ^
s o u m , V w e s t 61 J e n im e . 3 2 4 ~ 4 « i r
D— H e r d .
-------------
iSD-Holal^liaifara flft haadu=
W A N T T O T R A D E : 15' b e e t bed fo r
s p u d b u l k b e d . P tio n e 324<2166.
M IC H IG A N M o d e l 8 5 -A lo a d e r
CHAM PION
Oood beby and pasture calw i Hr
w a y s to fin a n c e . O ne to fo u r y e a r s .C o w s In s u re d a o a in tt d e a th . A ll
h e if e r s o u a ra n te e d ; E U G E N E
L UUi G
i'i U
i nSr , 324rg 4 15,—rKin.'—
H
HE
JW m t T - ■' ■ - —
S U P E R -C
IN T E R N A T IO N A L
t r a c t o r / n e w l y o v e r h a u le d e n g in e ,
n e w b a c k r u b b e r * w id e f r o n t e n d .
423.-5963.
Is s s o o
A C M o d e l HD -11-B D o ie r
L o v e ly A te b lle h o m e , J4xS5. 4
b e d ro o m s, f a m ily
ro o m ,
a ll
U t l llt l x (iiir y r . r p »
d itlo n e d , c o v e r e d p a t io , s to r a g e
Shed.
$ 1 1 ,9 0 0
P T > o n e : 7 l3 - 2 ^ '
10)
< H A r 6 l a i S B u ll f o r s a le i'R a lp h o r
B i lly T a y lo r . P h o n e F ile r,
G R E E N C H O P w lt h o iit s w a th in g .
.-.J o h n . D e e r e 15-A f la il h a r v e s te r ,
$800. 8 ^ .5 0 0 7 . •
I D t t lt f M o d e l- 2 0 1 0 B a rth o e — '
S5500
.................................
T rtiv « l*z e • Terry • R o o d ru n n e r •
o lio R ental U niU
FOR SA LE
BY OWNER
'
oood-
N e e 0 -A -c A ft-0 R -N e w -M 0 M e ? ~
C o n s u lt i Q d ^ ' s W a n t A d s.
E Q U IP M E N L
IN T E G R IT Y
F O U R A K O O E L la s I n t e m a tk m a l
p la n t e r u n ir t ;m o u n t e d o n
t o o l.
b a r , h e a v y A fra m e < a u to m a tic
m a r k a r f . ' 12 fo o t K lw a n a e r o lle r
h a r r o w . S e v e ri A ic m e o o r r u g a to r t .
543-5749.
i -
OR TRAOE-lor:catttB“ Jofm“
U SED I
,
T ra c to r i
•P « t r « ^ liio : ^ 2 l^ T —ft g ia r
*
•»*‘r
4 3 A - 4 7 it.4
NEW
M OTOR H OM ES
1839 K im b etly Rd.
^3 <-3 440----- Tw ift ^ » IU
O p e n 7 doy» 9 to 9
2100 S outh M a in
• q u In ^ t/T w In
-Itn p. 4firm
i n ee n
t i it- 2C30 ~ > C T m tH rry ~ ~ R a itr
W A N T T O R E N T ; a - b « lr o o m u n l u r n l i t i e d t n u s f ’ o r d u p le x . W ill
p a y u p t o t io o p e r m o n th . D ia l 7332713 e v e n in g s .
J E 2 0 9 5
T h e M o d e m W a y To L iv e
A i A S e n s ib le F Y lce
F a lls " B I G
W Y . M t l a r n H I t i i r VBu a ll
u t M < a n n m a c t iln e r y .
M O L Y N E U X M A C H I N E R Y , 19*2
F lo r a l A v e . , 733-7547.
^ U R « V - W H ft C - 7 H £ lt t A S T / t
a fte r 5 :0 0 p .m .
OPEN HOUSE
ACCENT
By BROADAAORE
$1565
$2695
$2995
$3495
W E E K E N D S P E C IA L S
N e w 1971 2 4 's e lf c o n ta in e d
N e w 1971 1 6 'K IT
m
SIMPSON Mobile Homes
8 1 8 M a in Av«, South. Twin Falls
E o s f^ P o in is
7 3 4 -3 1 6 7
11th o nd O verlo nd , Burley 6 7 8 -7 5 7 4
1971 1 6 'T r a ile r
197 11 8 's e lf c o n ta in e d
1971 20^ s e lf c o n ta in e d
1971 24' s e lf c o n ta in e d
P L U S F R E IG H T
E ic a m
,
1971 M o d e l, T q iI.I,
fo o t A w n in g .
Your Authorized
^ re a t Lakes Mobile Home
Prowler Travel Trq^iler
Dealer
p r o x im a t e ly
7 m i le s
o f r iv e r
fr o n t a g e , 4 c r e e k s , s e v e r a l h t n
ch’ c d a c r e s o f m e a d o w la n d . A g o o d
w o r k in g c o w o u t f it . A ls o Id e a l f o r
s p o r ts m a n 's c lu b a n d h u n t in g f o r
a ll t y p e s o f b ig g a m e — e lk , d e e r,
a n d b e a r . $350,000. C a ll f o r t e r m s .
IV E R S O N R E A L T Y
Single W idet and Double W id e i
31/4 milei W cit c l We»f 5'^oinlt
O pen 9-6. unless by advonce
oppomtmenf
Phone 733 -6 14 '
K IT
90 Cattl*
r g e lo>»T
fr M re e i
tU
per
T r a ile r
W f ln l> d J o . K im t -
15 FOOT
-ROAIXRUJ4NER-
and
-J&
ilirg rfln<3ijjndgf-Jgri£ex-2^v^y„
n ic e s e ts o f im p r o v e m e n t s . A p ­
934 4354
n.
G o o d in g , Id a h o
B ob L y o n
CXvain B u tle r
R o g e r K in n e y
iAGIC-VALL^YOB.ILE HOMES .
A P ro d u c t O f
O n e o f t h e f e w c a t t le e m p ir e s le f t
- i n r n v r n v . A n p r o x i m m m y l a.ooo'
a c re s d e e d e d a n d le a s e d la n d .
M o u n ta in p a s tu r e a n d m e a d o w s .
B lo k e A t ^ A d d iio n '- tv«n F a lls
— MOBILE HOMES
JL
< J U N E 2 0 fh !
^C B N TB K
A m 9 7 -lM o d e ls
In Sfock f\AUST GO/
B U Y T H E B E S T . A il m o d e ls T r a v e l
Q ueen c a m p e r s . N o w in s to c k .
. S p o rts m a n L o d g e , 1000 S p r in g s .
H a g e rm a n . I d a ^ .
^ E W r d f f- K P P r r S T ir n e w la
u n d e rg ro u n d
u lll|tltl._ ^ g
p v M n q r M t l o s . la w n s .
m o n t h . E a s t ■ J -P o ln ts
33
GOOD M l't^lo^lm rand used hay
___ ___ __
_ _ av—
ttKkK&_.end-^ottt«r^-u*M-tiay
\l % 6 * BROADAAORE, 3 B edroom
R e g u k ir Price J 9 3 8 9
W H H .E I t LA STS
S7500
14 X 6 0 BUDDY. T o to f E lectric
RED U CeD JO O N LY . . K \
$ 67 50
1 2 x 6 4 FLEETW OOD. 3 Bedroom
i E D U c E a i o) O
< N ir
T R A p JO l
-SA LE -
m
~
"llmes-News, Twin Falls, Idaho
.. 7 9
DISPLAY SALE
A T E V A Y >
w h e e l,
c le a n ,
T A W
1 U S E D 6 fo o t c a m p e r , $300. P h o n e
733.6676.
u
Oiiari Fantltrmaktr't
'
M o b il* Hom a P a ik ln g
" e r a is s E ijT S D T B 'r
1943 10 X SiS F L 'E E T W O O D , 2
b e d ro o m k
d ra p e s , c a rp e te d ,
( u r n ls lie d , w a s h e r , d r y e r . «78-2S04.
1 5 * _ C A M P E R _ _ lo r . - s a ie ___S e $ ._ A tT o r h m y 's 7-11, S ho sh on e S tre e t.
G^Sk
h 6 U k e . H io n * 4 X M U n :
A l l b lS P lA Y U N IT S T O
K E N S K I L L , - a X 35, ta n d e m
a i r c o n d it io n i n g , v e r y
r e a s o n a b le , 733-1936,
f a c t o r y C L E A R A N C E o n a ll 1971
p ic k u p c o v e r s a n d c a m p e r s . 6
—m o d e l 5-?6~Ch<HS5e“ T r6 m T " P O L A R "
M A N U F A C T U R I N G , I N C . 502
M a d ro h a , E a s t Of J a y c e e s B a n ;
P a r k . 733 0443. O p e n e v e n in g s a n d
S undays.
i
R E S E R V E Y O U R m o d e m r e n ta l
v a c a tio n t r a i l e r o r c a m p e r n o w .
C le a n ,
c o m p le t e ly
s e r v ic e d .
W IL K IN S
t r a il e r
Sa l . e s ,
G o o d in g , 934-9955.
ia -P O O T -« O l.ls O H 6 M e ~ ir « H » r -
Mabll«rHsm«r-
P R IV A T E ,“ « :fic r« a ro frflL
* ' Wo<^ R iv e r .frontage. 2‘/j M M «
t4o^ti of Ketch um . 726-3500, C lyde
•H aw k.'
64
CUSTOM ST FAM gri lfi fflljlnil
m o b ile — m o la s s e s , A l
42J » I 0 , K im b e r ly .
t^ a s k e ll,
______
H A V FO R S A L E ;
1»0 a c re s o f
c t w lc e , v w e d - f r e e a lf a lf a h a y . W ill
Poultry a n d Rabbits
n ro r
W H IT E tX J E S , b u c k s , a n d w ir e
h u t c h e s . A ls o
AKC
G e rm a n
s h e p h e rd s , t r a in e d . 3 3 t^7 « « .
P a n a n d P a t S u p p lte *
110
FOR SALE: Blue Point Slameje
4Utten»^Ohona, Z33-ll3>7-llHf-«:Wp jn .
M u s s e y ’ ^ 4 l'u u J o ii 1 0 M o t o r
5894.
T w T n o T (o v e rH a u Ie d ) . . M 9 5
SW ATHERS
C a rp e n te r w o rk , s h e e t r o c k in g ,
s h in g lin g , c in d e r b lo c k s , p a in t in g .
B y h o u r o r |o fa . 733.0069. .
H U G H E S , Mobi\9 H o m e s . L o c a lly
OVNTied. In s u re d c a r r i e r . L o c a l a n d
lo n g d is ta n c e .-2 3 3 < 3 7 7 a ......................
C H IR O P R A C T O R
M O V IN G O R S T 0 R IN 6
A L M A H A R D IN • Q > ir o p r a c to r . 157
N o rth W a s h in g to n , T w in
F a lls .
■PAIM TITO "
CONCRETE
M A G IC V A L L E Y c o n c r e te ,
s la b s
and
c u rb s ,
e tc .
e s tim a te s . P ho n e 733-3610.
Pa I le t I zed w a r e h b u iU T C a ll WeTch
T r a n s fe r a n d S to ra g e , 305 5 th
A v e n u e W e s t, 733 1491.
w a lls ,
F re e
T E T Z P A I N T I N G , C o m m e r c ia l a n d
r e s id e n tia l
p a in t in g .
P a r k in g
s t r ip in g , r o o fs , F ^ o n e 734-3781.
I * ®
^ R 'y P R O C E j s m o
t X ) L L H O S P IT A L
R e p a ir - D re s s a ll d o lls . M a g ic
V a lle y D o ll Q in ic , 360 B lu e L a k e s
N o r th , 734-1804.
_____________
P O U L T R Y P R O C E S S IN G . P o u lt r y
S u p p ly . 213 5 lh
A v e n u e W e s t.
P h o n e 733-3 l a .
S A W S H A R P E N IN G
E X C A V A T IO N - C O N C R E T E
E x c a v a tin g arK l c o n c r ^ e f o r m in g .
-------0 4 « k ^ s -E x c a v a tk > r» “ a n d - € o r «
D IC K P O O L E R & S O N S . 733-4375.
FENCES
Q i ^ n lin k , c in d e r b lo c k s w o o d . D ia l
733-1785 f o r fr e e e s t i m a t e . .
FLOOR COVIRINO
T O R G IN A L IS B A C K . S « a m le s s
f t o o r ln g .x o u n t e r f m , b a th r o o m s .
F re e e it lm a t e s .
\734-349S,
733-6980.
H E A R IN G A I D » R V I C K
R E P A lR S o n a ll m a k e s a rid m o d e ls .
W o r k f u l l y g u a r a n t e a d ^ - A id s - f o r • s a le . 733-5709.
S H A N E 'S S h a rp e n in g S e r v ic e , 543
5 th A v e n u e N o r th , 733 2454.
S E W E R S E R V IC E
ROTO
ROOTE^
s e w e r s e r v ic e .
S * w e r l l n e i " * n d " t 6t^TI c ’ 7 1 n i r
c le a n in g . A ls o , a ll ty p e s o f e x c a v a tk x ) . 733 2541 o r 733-2509.
C R A V E N 'S S e w e r S e r v ic e : S e p tic
t a n k - s e w e r lin e c le a n in g . P o w v
e q u ip m e n t, f r e e in s p e c tio n . 7333053.
S H E E T R O C K IN G '
SHEET
. R O C K IN G ,
T a p in g ^ ,
p la s te r in g a n d a c o u s tic s ; P tto n e
x 7 3 3 -0 t7 9 o r 733-1409.
K O N IC E K
TREE
S E R V I C E . V.
T r im m in g ,
T o p p in g
and %
R e m o v M g v F r a # e s tim a te s , PtM jna
733-6S48 o r 324-4108.
I S E R y -lC E ...
D a n g e ro u s tr e e s . G iv e U s A C a ll, ;
733-3331.
■r o R a wf ie r l e n c e t f ♦ re e —M m r i e e i - # to p p in g , t r i m m i n g , r e m o v a l a n d %
s h r u b b e r y w o r k c a l l D A L E 'S :
T R E E S E R V I C E , 734:23*7. F re e :
e s tim a te s .
TRASH A OARBAQE SERVliCE
P A R K S A N D S O N S — 733-4441.
C o m m e r c ia l
and
r e s id e n tia l
h a u lin g — c o n ta in e r s — s p e c ia l
h a u ls — ih s ld e o r o u ts id e c it y
lim it s .
TV REPAIR
B o b 's ,
M o b ile
TV
R e p a ir .
R aaso n a u ie t a l e s. 7 'da y j- a - w e e k .
N o m ile a g e . 423-5758.
V A C U U M S E R V IC E C e n te r, p a r ts ,
r e p a ir s o n K ir b y c o m p a a . M o s t
o t h e r s . T w in F a lls , 733-4041.
V A C U U M C L E A N E R S O F ID A H O :
— D e a le r f o r K ir b y , H o o v e r a n d :
F llt e x . B a g s a n d s e r v ic e f o r m o s t |
m a k e s . 733-1027.
H ouses— U nfu rn ish ed
1 —
l- B E O R O O M D U P L E ^ O g a s h e a t,
b a s e m e n t— r o o m /
w a te r- a n d
s a n ita tk x ) f u r n is h e d . $50, N d p e ts .
733.8814.........._
D E L U X E 3 b e d r o o m , 2 f ir e p la c e s ,
s to v e ,
d is h w a s h e r ,
d is p o s a l,
c a r p e te d . C h ild r e n u n d e r 12 n o t
p r e fe r r e d ; ~ R ^ e r e n c e s ~ " r ^ u l r e t f .
733-2362 a ft e r 3 :30.
N E E D A N A P A R T M E N T ? R ead
to d a y 's W a n t A d s f o r th e b est
o ffe r in g s .__________ __
d itio n e r
1 —
H e s s to n 2 B 0
1—
H e s s to n 2 6 0
H e s s to n 2 2 0
1 —
M a s s e y F e rg u s o n 3 6
~ ? 5 T H II:R t O U i P M f c N I
TRACTORS
1 —
—
M o b ile w e l d i n g , f i e l d o r s h o p . ;
B a c k h o e , p ip e , c o m p le t e I r r i g a t i o n '
• s e r v ic e . B u r l T J ^ M -e n c e , 734-2050.
F O R S A L E : 1 fe m a le r e d
I r is h
S e tte r , t- w e e k s o ld . P tio n e 3 3 *-
Filer:
FO R
SALE:
F o u n d a t io n
seed
p o ta to e a . I . W to rtti M e , A A a cka y,
jjn b a jt
---------SORTED,
C E R T IF IE D ^
» e tf
p o ta to e s . M a o iln e r y l o r q u ic k
S oa d lnB . M a c k a y , 5 « - » 3 3 e r - U I C E R T IF IE D
1 —
M a s s e y F e rg u s o n 3 5 g a i
1 —
M a s s e y F e rg u s o n 3 0 g o s
C L O S E I N , c le a n , e x c e lle n t s le e p in g
- - ^ o o m s . P r i v a t e e n t r a n c e . ^ _ A lr _ .
c o n d i t i o n i n g . 137 4 th A v e n u e
1 —
M a s s e y F e rg u s o n 1 7 5 D
w i t h . c a b - _______ _
G o a d S t o c k O f T i a Y S f o c lc e r i
SEED
p o ta to e s
BOB'S KENNELS: Olfi dogt Abcdlence_tralnlng>
J . Boardlnfl
Heve some dogs for sale. 733-3330.
fo r
-C E B T IF IB O -P O T A T O -s eed. ap^
p r o x im a t e ly 500 s a c k s , b u lk . Can
d e llv a r . C a ll J .M . H e n r y P ro d u c e
C o m p a n y . K im b e r ly , 433-5511.
100
A o ln w lB w e d ln g
P U R E B R E D A U ST R A LIA N
Shepherd fMjpples. 7-week» old,
excellent working stock. 733-7*(Wk
A R T I F I C I A L B re e d in g t o A B S g r e a t
»-V ( - -
T H E R E IS A R E A L B U Y f o r y o u In
to d a y 's W a n t A d s .
i
--
A l l M O D E IS
I W I L L C A R E f o r e ld e r l y p e rs o n In
m y n o m r . ~ v a c MTir y - t i o wr. P tio n e
7 3 3 25 1 3.
—
O l i v e r s id e r a k e ,
la t e m o d e l
Hiwne P d rkifig
ta n n S M d
M a s s e y F e rg u s o n 1 6 5 0
R o *m s— B ea rd b ru i to o m 7 6
V A C A N C Y . P r iv a t e r o o m , b o a rd ,
c a r e , la u n d r y f o r e ld e r l y p e rs o n s .
R e a s o n a b le , re f e r e n c e .
K Ib b e 's
733^78.
_
F O R S A L E . 1 f e m a le B o rd e r C o llie .
3 -m o n th s o ld . B est o tf s r . 734-1308,
a t t a r 4 :3 0 .
M ic h ig o n 4 w h e e l d r iv e
s h o v e l lo o d e r
_ 2 B k P R Q Q M b r l c k d u p le x , g a r a g e .
w a t e r fu r n is h e d . N o p e ts . P tio n e
723-2346.
N E W C R O P a lf a lf a h a y f o r s a le , U O .
p e r t o n . T o m W a r n e r , W e n d e ll 5 3*-
317a
1 —
1 —
J e r o m e 334-3453; S h o s h o n e , t u 7 S I7 ; B u r te y , « 7 « -f3 5 3 ; M a ie lto n ,
t2 t-S 3 0 a .
;
AKC German Sheptierds. German
Shorthairt, Brittanys, Great
Danei, SMiwyede, MorwMlan Elk
ttounds,
Beeglet. P o o ^ s .
Shorthalr ■r*d Cngllsh
•
erosa. MAC'S KENNELS. \Wandell, S34.3I17.
O l i v e r s id e r a k e ,
la t e m o d e l
1—
f o r d h o n g - o n - s id e m o d e l
79
TWIN FALLS TRACTOR
M O B I L E ^ H O M E s p a c e f o r r e n t in
J e r o m e l P h o n e 3 24 -2 '
WELOIWO
I n t e r n a t io n a l 2 0 1 w it h c o n ­
: - i: 4 M P lE M iN T
S E L E C T S ir e s tn e o r p o r a t e d . A ll
b re e d s , d a i r y , b e e f. W a lt e r L e lt c h ,
S43-4«5I.
103
C a ttte
R e O I S T E R E D A N G U S b u ll s , lo n g
3 - y « r o t d » . S 4 j4 « n * . O t d t M o w a r d . -
FOR SALE- reaeawHUy, German
-AocMietr power*. 3V!imonili« Old.
s a - * m . Route X Rupert.____
CALVe», AU . -SIZESI All leiel
Holatein VMilteface, Anon* Ooas,-
AKC
7030
fo r m Im p le m M ts
L « r r v _ B n n « y . 3 W e e t. M S o u tti. H
We«, of M l . iM m .
'
-
C H A R O L A IS B U L L S t b r M I e . 350
e n d u p . I e r r v F lwwey . B u w 541.
4719.
r C iM t a
-
M IH IA T U R C
S c h n a u ia r t ,
IPfleed re»*ooa«e. (f.a W*'rHeybum. IdM ittfiM m; f
AOORABIJI P U R IM IO
ly i
tm
r4 0 » -
■O f l w r T q u i p i n S i r
WE OFFER
|^ 4 " H O U R SERVICE i
I
^—
|» It,
lf=the telephone o f any'adtvertiser in
DIRECTO RY js : not^ !^ « f< K l7 'C 4 A t:t73^T^'^
2386,~^TeKp hane—Am w gfing . Service in i
Twin Polls. DQy-&f-hJtT)rKT
nr<»».rt;c»rf
It
v^ill ^
i -■•■■I" -•
rtotifieH tn coil you.:— _ _ —
............
...............
'
' — Uted Trocfors—
1— J
1 — Jb»ntW e«Q O D m e<
" I — Jotwi Deere 7 3 0 D ie w l
. 1 — A IB t C h o lr M n D - I O
'1 ^ A a u g je jm e tt J C f d W ) Diesel
I ------ M m, D eere • « > f 7 O e e w
W in d ro w e r
'
H 4 '0 e « »
W ta d ro w
S eve ra l # o o d used com tM nei, *to » w y -F e rg u io n . J.l. C » e , o n d Jotm
D m » . re a d y M o n ---------------------
-BOlSeyAUEY CAtVES^
F O R -S A tE ^
Holsteins, Herefordt, Aodc Whiteface
STEERS OR H B FE R S
l a i a w t.
H o d tc n m a r
g — f n r m d u a o p ie s e t
^ }
stock cruHer (3 wideV
^
^ /i^ EQ U IPM EN T, Inc.
*
_________________O M t S herafM 7 3 3 -5 3 6 0 •
' » n a e r M e ii< n ii
_
.
---------M t M '» 4 3 - 5 4 S 2
-C A ttE.Z.- C A H L E CO M PAN Y, 8 « H 1U , Maridkm. Idaho
RON C RA V EN . 438-5124,.Pa«l. Idaho
T
;— 1"'
‘ 34
TIm.es-News, Y w in F a lls , Idaho
P*t» ond Pe» SuppliB* '
B A B Y S K U N K S r e a d y ' s o o n .' 1 ^ u t
o rd e r
In
now .
A ls o
m a le
D a c h s h u n d p u p p ie s . 8M -5A31.
b o a r d in g , s tu d
s e r v ic e ,
733-11M .
G R O O M IN G ,
6 r e o ls t e r M a p r ic o t t o y
p u p p ie s . P tio n e 733:8010.
a k
196 Auto* For Sale)
200
Truckf
ZOO Aulot For Sola
le o
140 Motorcyctet ‘
W » T 7T IItn b "e E S T 0 JlE 'm r n e « K « r nV «-CH BV RO CET^-toiirEXCellw ttr :4M$-t>OMT>fAC— Le-M an»— }-4to<N^ '» • ^ » l : V M O U t H - n ) a d ^ « r « • r r 4 • » ,
c t ia n ‘
Fov.Sol*
N O n e ^ to m o v e f u r n l t u ^ * to
c a r p a t t w it h H O S T . W a lk e n t h e m
r i g h t a w a y . R e H L m a c h in e S I-W IL S O N B A T E S , T w in F a lla a n d
J e ro m e .
P o o d le
Accatioriat & Rapair
J 82
W * » - F O R D - 3 5 1 - c u b le 4 n c h - * n o l n «
c o m p le t e - w lt t i a u t o m a tic I r a n
s m is s lo n , a ls o s e t o i ir K T
l t h - 1 I r e s , a ll. J » r f a c t .
c o n d it io n . 7 3J.2 M 7 a f t e r 6 a n d
w eekends.
H O T P O IN T w a s h e r , w e s te r n s t y le
^ f a , c h a ir s a n d t a b le s . F lo o r
la m p s a n d m is c e lla n e o u s a r t l c l M P h o n e 733-6381, a f t e r 5 :3 0 F r i d a y
S a tu r d a y a n d S u n d a y .
U ljlity Trailer*
BOAT
tedan, automatic trantmlialon,
power ataerlng and lirake*, good
1940 C H E V R O L E T - P I C K U P . 4. s p e e d , c le a n , n e a r ly n e w . t ir e s .
_ R e a d y to n o . 733-2079, e v e n in g s .
RAM BLER itatkm wagon.ji
cylinder, automatic, two. 733-23W.
T R A IL E R ,
195
13 In c h
w h e d ls .
1945 C H E V R O L E T p ic k u p . F le e ts ld e
. '/ i- t o n , V -8 , -i-s p e e d , *4 95 . 300 S outh
:« th A v e n u e , B u h l.
C h a ir , u n u s e d . H o n d a 50, 1 m o n th
o ld . 3 -sp ee d b o y 's b lc y o le i u s e d 5
vve e ks. Z e n ith 4 - s p e ^ p o r t a b le
s t e r e o . 1153 A d d is o n A V e n u e E a s t.
F o r Prompt Pickup
~ O tJ)e a d A n lm a l£ —
1959 C H E V R O L E T 2 to n w lt t i o r
■ * - w im o W T * M T ) « r ~ F B t r - c o t id lt lQ n T
t r A W N " BO V se lf p fo p e * la d - L a w n
la s t y e a r m o d e l, $ye a t
CaTJi'ar733:7T1
7 ]3 -ta 3 5 — T w in F a lls
9 W 5 4 1 i — G o o d lo g
--
n v t D O D f lF T 2 io n . o v e r c a b h y
b e d . 5 a n d 3. R u n s g o o d . $ 4 2 5 7 ^ 5 3 ^
5733, a l t e r 5:30.^^
u
19*4 C H E V R O L E T 2 '/j to n t a n d e m
w it h
M Is k In
h a y s ta c k e r a n d
lo a d e r . L ik e n e w . 324 5141.
M IL L IO N S o f
c le a n e d w it h
A m e rT c a ’ i T T f n
S h a m p o o e r $1.
a lm o s t
n e w
S e rta Q u e e n s iz e
- - m a t t r g ^ ^ a n d boK s p r in g s . >67.50.
P h o n e 733 8261.
C A IN 'S J U S T P U R C H A S E D S e a ly 's
P o r tla n d w a re t> o u s e I n v e n t o r y o f
o d d s a n d e n d s a n d m is m a t c h e d
fWW flss’
W K s p n n u & > t irtfTT
t u n , q u e e n a n r f k in g . S a v e u p fo 45
p e r c e n t a t C a in 's 733 7 1 U .
ru g s h a ve been
B lu e L u s t r e . I t 's
e ir R M t e te c trtc
K R E N G E L 'S .^
I 1947
F o r d C u s to m -5 0 0 '3 9 0 '. B e a u tifu l
p a in t , t ir e s , f a c t o r y ) i lr , p o w e rs te e r in g , a u t o m a t ic . E v e n in g s 7334 J 1 I - o r ^ 3 4 - » 3 9 ; ---------------------
im m a c u l a t e l y
FINAL CLOSE OUT OF FACTORY
<PiiprHASF 197Q PLYMOUTH FURY'S!
B O TH
FOR EXAMPLE:
1970 PLYM OUTH
4 doQ/ .hotdfop, Piyraoulh DiYtjion
lease ca t w ith r a d io , h e a le r, p o w e r
ite e rin g , o u to m o fic Iro rn m m io n , o n d
the b a la n ce o f S ye o r 5 0 ,0 0 0 mile
w a rriin ty
cr\ C “f C
WILLS MOTOR CO.
SHAMPOO
your
own
c a rp e t,
p ro fe s s k > n a l r e s u lt s . R e n t a C la r k e
S ham pooer
w it h
c o m p a n io n
vacuum .
B A N N E R F U R N IT U R E ■
733 1421
- 4 P 4 E C E -s e c llo n a l- n y lo n .-ff-e e ^ e .
. g o o d c o n d it io n . S149 a t C a in 's 733
7111
►
R E P O S S E S S E D 2 p ie c e
S p a n is h
— i i v in o rd d m s w : f m a a ^ 'e n o a n o
m A t c h in g c h a ir , S o ld n e w f o r o v e r
$700. lo o k s ilk « n e w , b u y n o w fo r
o n ly 1130. B a n n e r F u r n it u r e , 733
1421.
2 54 4 fh Ave W
- 1 W - € O R V f e T « - c o n v w t lb J «
f o r c t iu f c h w o r k . D a ys 734-2750,
e v e n in g s 714.304A.
- G O IN G -lN -TaS ER V JC E ,-m u < jall'„
1964 VolK$wag«t> but, rabuHT
tun roof/ b«o« curtalnt.
.P O N T IA C S
— ---------B U I C R i---------------:C H E V R O L E T S
T I S ^ fB----------TCE5~
^ n 4 U 7 U ^ G o o d in g ,.
"E X C E L L E N T
C O N O IT IO “S m m
-!-Eoau.-ji«M ehflw countrj; sedan. _
station wagon. Power steering,
power brakesj. *1,195. 734-3*93. —
L E O R IC E M O T O R S
G o o d in s , Id a h o
0 r u u i- Q p e r r R o o d
------- 1 1 9 7 1 A M E i J i e A N -
1971
PONTIAC
STOCK
REDUCTION
SALE
IN FULL SWING
"We want to trade
your way"
JOHN CHRIS
823
.
M O T O R S G R E M L IN
Big 6 a n g in a , w it h .o u t o m a t ic - t rc n t -
Lil9« new, y^h jo^ki, bounce-owoyi.^^ 5
Oai/«t*ctrl€“ refrlotjrmor- and fyr-"”
VBer^
m ittIo n , r f ldrQ; h c o f r.
1
|-M u s -S b H ~
in g , a n d fa c t o r y a ir c o n d itio n in g .
t $ 1 0 8 5 - - i
V-B engine, itondord' trontm iuion,
power iteering o'l^ rodio. Plenty ol
power fd r,pu llino . 6 fo rw o id .p o w " e r iJ o it r to n i: --------- -------------------.
. $2285
LUXURY 1 9 6 3
/
1970 T O Y O TA C O R O LLA
S ta tio n w a g o n ,'*4 ip e e d tra n im ii(iort, A M /F M ra d io , b ucket ie a tt.
N o w J u s t ............................$ 1 7 8 5
cellent rubber.
......................
1 9 6 4 F O R D F A IR L A N E
.
2 d o o r h o rd to p , V-8 e n g in e, a u to ­
m atic tro n tm iu io n , p o w e r ite e rin g ,
ro d io o n d heater.
S « e T h is O n e O n l y . . $ 1 9 8 5
D r iv e I t ! ................................$ 6 8 5
I 9 6 » JEE(> W A G O N E E R ^
V-8 engine, a u to m a tic Iro n tm ts iio n ,
PQwer tte e rin g , a n d ra d io . See th it
excellent u nit fo r 'Fun In The Sun'
(P lot o il y e a r u te ) .................
........
. . . $2985
1968 V O LK S W A G E N
9 p o ite n g e r d eluxe tta tio n w o go n .
in c lu d e i bucke t te o tt, w a lk th ro u g h
d e tig n a n d tp e c io l g a t heo ter.
____ ___________ ._11S85..
$985
1 9 6 9 J A V E L IN
2 d o o r h a rd to p , V -8 e ng in e, ro d io ,
h e a ter, 4 speed t ro n tm iu io n , b uck­
et te o tt, m a g w h *« (t.
$2285
1967 CHEVR O LET CO RVETTE
C o n v e rtib le , 4 2 7 V -8 e n g in e , 4
tp e e d tra n tm iitlo n , A M /FM ra d io ,
ttere o . e xcellent ru b b e r a nd e xce l­
le nt co n d itio n . i
L IN C O L N C O N T IN E N T A L
Y ou 'll hove to w e a nd d riv e th it
one to o p p re cio ttti Full p o w e r, e x­
Just
V e r y S h a r p ....................... $ 2 1 8 5
1 .9 6 7
2 door
ip e e d
S h o rp l
R A M B L E R A m e r ic a n 4 4 0
h a r()to p , 343 V-8 engine, 4
t r a n t m i iiio n , r o d io l t ir e i.
S horp)
B u y It F o r O n ly ,
. . . $1585
1967 Mercury Station W a g o n
1 9 6 8 C ^ E V E L L E M A L IB U
2 d o o r h o r d to p . V -fl engine. .lo d jg ,.
h eater, a u to m a tic tra n tm ittio n .
Deluxe 'V lllo g e r m odel 'w ith ' ra d rd .
V*8 engine, o u to m o fic I ro n tm ittio n ,
p o w e r tte e rin g , o nd p o w e r b ro k e t.
•Oft© o w n e r a n d very cleon,
. ..
S e e T h ii B e a u ty
. . - S1985
S e e T h is A t ...................... $ 1 4 8 5
1 9 6 4 JE EP W A G O N E E P
Big 6 engine, auto m a tic t ro n tm ittio n ,
p ow e r tte e rin g a nd ra d io . A very
cleon unit id eo l lo r b o th 'o u td o o r'
ond to(vn ute.
.
. $1585
T 965 C H EVR O LET
6 cylin d er e n g in e, s ta n d a rd tra n tj" m f jiio n ; T a d io , hea tec.B i r t h d a y S p e c ia l
.
. $685
B ill W o r k m a n
D O D G E CITY
U S E D _ 5 T £ A M C L E A N E R S FO R
SALE,
H IG H
P R F S S U ir E
W A S H E R S , C A L L S p e c ia liz e d
E q u i p m e n t , 733 2026 d a y s o r
e v e n in g s .
aotomaflc. tllght
dami|sa.
*750. Call >34-3011 or 7M-W1.
BROTHERS P o n tla c -C a d llla c
GMC
R U p e rt 71dah0“ « « 4 7 « —
b r a k e s , s t e e r l n f l^ a n d t a l l a a t a ^
D e iu k e - - I h le r lo r / eKceir<m T c o n ­
d it io n .
7 3 3 ^ 2 5 d a y s , 733-9587,
e v e n in g s .
Looking for
carefree
transportation?
you'll find it at . .
lik e N e w O n ly . . . ? * 2 D / O
D O IT Y O U R S E L F I
.1962 C H E V R O L E T }.< to o r t ia r d to p .
- V - 4 lr - a u t o m » t Ic — p o M W . M e e r In a
A venue,
Soutti
200.
Autoi For SbU
---------WORKMAN-------r^^r-
W A G O N , B Y O W N E R . 1»67
•M O T O R S
------------- 6 0 -l-M a ln AweoueiEaU
Twin F o lli
'■v. -7^3-
2 -O 0 e R -A N D " 4 -D G O R -M O D E L S ,
M U F F L E R S I n s t a lle d w h ile
you
' w a i t . C o m p le te m u f f l e r s e r v ic e
in c lu d in g c u s to m d u a l s 'f o r c a r s
a n d p ic k u p s . A f lB O T T 'S A U T O
S U P P L Y . 305 S h o sh o n e St. S o u th .
M O V IN G
T O r e t ir e m e n t
c e n te r .
SI500 t a k e s rre w d e lu x e M a y t a g
w a s h e r , d r y e r , M a p le t w in b e d s e t.
5 -p le c e c h r o m e d in e tte * r a n g e , 14
c u b ic f o o t r e f r i g e r a t o r ^ r e e r e r .
h id e - a b e d , m a p le d a v e n o w it h
. m a t c h in g ta b le , m u c h m o r e . 733
•9 0 4 a f t e r 9 a .m .
c l e a n
200
F IS H IN G
P O L E S , r e e ls , l a r g e
- ^ s e l e c t i o n , lo w p r i c e s , R E D 'S
T R A D IN G
P O S T , 715 ShoShOne
S tre e t S o u th .
V O tX S W A S tN “ D O N E B U G G Y o r
s t r e e t c a r , m e t a l b o d V - > h a rp ,
m u i t la e t o a p p r e c ia te . * 3 ^ . 343
• ' T y ie r o r - n j - 7 J » . ------- ----------------------
r S flO :
O Y O r A - t A N O C H 't M ^ t R - r
s o tt t o p , s e le c tr o h u b s . P h o n e 724
5J84, K e tc h u m .
1944 D O D G E
C H A R G E R , 318,
J lr a lg h l- t r f ln s m is s lo n , b u c k e t s e a t,
e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n . 324.5229 a ft e r
5 :30.
A u t o s J F a L - S a la
9 X 12 L I N O L E U M ru g s , a s s o r te d
p a t t e r n s , $7.95. B A N N E R F U R
— W T t t f ^ e r T w In F g ila ;
------
100 P E R C E N T N Y L O N K I T C H E N
c a r p e t w it h h l- d e n s lt y fo a m b a c k .
J3.99 s q u a r e y a r d af C a in 's 7337 n i.
F o K S n tB T
l
1944 C H E V E L L E S u p e r S p o rt, 394, 4
s p e e d , r u n s e x c e lle n t ly . 884-7504.
F O R S A L E , 1944 C h e v r o le t 2 to n
O m a h a b e d a n d h o lsIt. P h o n e 3245141.
w it h B lu e L u s t r e . R e n t e le c t r ic
s h a m p o o e r . $1. G R E E N A W A L T 'S .
132
ay
^b e d a
- "nHd h
h»x/
1931 F O R D 2 d o o r .tJO* J o b . g o o d
b o d y , r e b u il t 1940 V/-« e n g in e «>
tr a n s m is s io n , llb e r g la » » . fe n d e r s .
- w l l l - s e l L o r - t r a d e . A ls o , 1954 F o rd
s t a t io n w a g o n , V -8 e n g in e , 3 sp ee d
t r a n s m is s io n , - H 9 5 . 7 3 3 -7 0 7 3 o r 7339455.
^ar<i-Mork.-so-he-Cleans'-thej’-UQa.. -1 9 7 (7 " T
Furniture & HHGoodt
Io
1970 DODGE SWINGER. V -«, 4speed, excellent condition. 15,000
ti^llet. 731-3M after 5:30 p-m.
10-
1943 F O R O 1 -T o n s tla k e , r e b u ilt
e n g in e . 1947 C H E V Y 14-Ton V -» , 4s p e e d . B est 0 » e r..-7 3 M < 3 4 ,___ ______
A
1954 O O D C E , ? 4 o n , o v e r c a b h a y
b e d . R u n s o o o d . *423. 423-5733,
C R A F T S M A N 2 -< Jraw e r t o o l b a x ;
e le c t r ic I m p ftfit > ^ 3 n ch ^ r ‘/ i " d r iv e .
------------------- ------------P rin n e 733 18?0.
w c ^ ~ - x e n m w - - p « r n r e r « - - a T i n ^ — liv t i
w a s h e r,
o o o d — i6 9 ,9 .5 ,
5 S O A L L O N T R A S H t^ a rK e ls lo r s a le .
T e r m s . W IL S O N B A T E S . 733 6144.
305 B o ra h A y e n u e , T w in . P h o n e
733 2179.
M UST
S A C R I F IC E
30“
e le c t r ic
ra n g e in e x c e tle n t c o n d it io n . 733W
E S T IN G H O U S E A I R c o n d it io n e r ,
0623 o r 423-4272.
8000 B T U , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n .
$200. P h o n e 733-5275.
K E N M O R E p o r ta b le d is h w a s h e r .
V e r y g o o d c o n d itio n .
A vocado
H A N N A H 'S h O s b a n d H e c to r h a te s
g re e n , $75. G oodlr>g, 934 5055.
Applioncttt & HH Equip. 130
p a in t , w in c t i, 10 t ^ t
106
Trucks
I
G l tru c k ,
R E O -S T U O E B A K E R
excellent condlflon.'Ixw mllaaoe,
muit ietljj^93»-506»,
200
AufotForSol*
e « K lltto n ,_ S 5 *i? S M ,^ ___________
t r a l l e r , a 0 0 m l l e s o n e n g in e . S outh'w e s ro f-B U « r.-S » 3 -5 9 0 » o r-S < 3 -4 7 4 lT -r
b u r n e r c a m p s to v e . 934-4S46.
t o B U Y : . f lo a t s , d o c k s a n d
ii e w e T- P tlO lW - M J a T H ;:
w a n t
-
c o n d it io n , V . * , g o o d t i r e s . *1995.
P h o n e 733-4382.
| ><
S c r a m b le r , e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n ,
»S50. P t » n e S43 4»55 o r S O -4 M 7 .
t4 U T R l C I T E - ^ F O O D - ^ u p p l e m ^ t J ;
■- a n d , h o u s c h Q ld . .P fg tfV C » :
-W a h n h o rg ~
jS o n d y H a w k f 726^3500, ^ - 0 . i
1330 Sun V a lle y .
S tu d s e r
-T ‘ -T o m te r
K e n n e ji, . W e st R e d c a p c o m e r
K lm b e f - ly , 4 5I-5 K M .
PO O DLE
^ ncfay, June 13, 1971
110
FORD
W H ERr i ftE-DTOtNG IS G REAT"
OVER 100 CARS & TRUCKS IN STOCK
Lease
new
(- o rd s f o r le s s
p er m o n th .
M U L -T I-F A R -I-O U S
H a ilin g G r e a t V a r ie t y
•
T o r i n o s , M u s ta n g s , T B ir d s
a t iLl i i u c tts a ta o 'B v a ilB b lo :—
G I R L 'S B E D R O O M U N I T , w h it e
a n d g o ld c o r n e r u n it , d e s k a n d 2
b o o k c a s e s w ith s lid in g d o o rs , $78
a t C a in 's 733 7111.
A b b o tt ’S
A u to
S u p p ly ,
S h o s h o n e S t. S o u th .
M it< « lla n * o u t W a n te d
~ o NV r m F H E c n f
it x j
h ig h e s t q u a lit y , g o o d s e le c tio n ,
M a r y C a r te r P a in ts . 1936 K im
b e r ly R o a d 733 3493
.....
R a d io a n d T V S a ls
1970 F I B E R F O R M l » a l W l m " - n 5
- P A G K A R D —B E 4. V - 3 i l l - C 0 l 0 r . - I V .
' ^ o r s e p o w e i^ M e r c u r v T n jin jg e s ,
1 1 9 9 9 5 T e r m s V id L S O N B A T E S ,
LfilaL—llAkC-- u p h n l St i» rv . c a n v a j|_
I
T '
.-■ T
E O H M liic M t: b o a l- i llh
z u ra rz ,, 1 0 e r tia n :y ~ E v tn r v d e m o t o r o n - a n
g u a ra n te e d
lU 9 9 r
T e rm s .
, e a s y lo a d t r a i l e r , lo ts o f e x tr a s ,
W IL S O N B A T E S , 733 614A.
I p h o n e 733 7050.
uprigT iT “
F u r n it u r e ,
__ sclii 33efa. naif crYCfi
co n d it io n e r , c lo fh in g , Tots o f
159 M o r e la n d
m I s e e n rtn e o u s
A venue
2S0.
E k c e H e f^ f
1T9SS ' T W S u i u k l
c o n d it T o n . L o w m l le a O B . 'r S J t O r ' r
• Pt¥>ne B37-493y.
I_________ ;_________ j ______________________
C O M P L E T E L IN E O F
- A L U -T .Y P E S a n liQ u e t u r n i l u r e . j
-------c t o c k s T — s o m e - g la s s w a r e . - .
R e a s o n a b le p n c e s
S A L L Y 'S
A N T I Q U E S 438-5950
HUSQVARNAftifiULTACO
T r a il
C O U U M B 1a ' T A L K fN
A^CH' N ^ v ' ~ ~
______ J9 0 4 .
o ld c a m e l b a c k t r u n k s .
S m a ll c o o k s to v e 733^8875
la r o e c o lle c t io n
H a y e s F u r n it u r e .
For Sal*
M E N 'S O C M .F B A O .e J o u b le W e s te r n
~ E « g ta b o o ts .' S n t r t t . A A c d iu m 't iM ,
H a w a iia n . S af S«>allr>g b o i » % w oas.
, m j > 5 i . . i V l a r v l n Q f» « P «
- 4 9 6 7 -A A e « G y « ¥ C A P flf, h o rd to p ,
eng in e,
o u t o m o tic t r o n t m i t t i o n . p o w e r
tte e rin g .
t 1 7 9 S t4 0 W -V T K S '
— ~ 1 V 6 8 -F b R D
4 doQ f te d o n . V -8 eng in e, <
$2290
trq ntm i> » ion . p o w e r tte e rin g p o w e r
b ro k e n , . io c to r y -otr c o ito ftro m n g . '
vin yl co vered to p
3PtW l 0 ^500 2 Ton trucks
^ m
“* 5 s p e e c l • r o n j m i i ’s lo n , 2 s p e e d r e a r a x le s , b i g 2 1 2 f i o r s e p o w e f '
e n g in e s . 8 : 2 5 « 2 0 1 0 p l y t ir e s , e q u i p p e d w i t h e v e r y t h i n g y o u
WAS
J339t NOW
1968 D O D G E P O LA R A
WAS
$1765
S1995 N O W
--------- r » 7 » r i A T S P ID ER---------C o n v e rtib lf. b u t k « '
Ifo ftim m io n . f o d io . lo>-
$1280
NOW
WAS
1971 DODGE D-200 TRADESMAN VAN
< >P«<1
$1587
J 1895 N O W
H e a v y d o ty t h r o u g h o u t , V - 8 e n g in e .
to ."— ^ 3 2 4 0
REDUCED
1971 D-200 SPORTSMAN VAN
P o w e r v te e rin g , p o w e r b r a k e s ,
a u to m a tic
t r a n s m is s io n , V
-8
e n g i n p , t h e - U l t i m o t e ' in c a m p i n g o r d r i v i n g .
b
o
d
i e
s
__J
'7 0 C H E V R O L E T
„
) /2 ton ptckup. IfuiJom c-ob. biQ t>
engine, 4 ipeed tron»mi»vion pow
er iteenng, power broken, hitch,
650 . 16 6 ply commertial tire^
10.000 octuol mile\
i
:
r
lo n g w id e
Io n p jcku p , 6 cylm
der eng in e, 4 tpeed_ tro n im ittio n ,
tra ile r hitch
WAS
SI 9 95 N O W
$1795
J66- CHEVRO LEXJ/r. Ton
Long w id e b o x . 6 cy lin d e r engine.
4 ip e a d ,lro n $ m ^t^o n . 6 p ly tire t,
' Runt o n d lo o k t gocK,'
'68 JEEP
lo n g w id e p ic k u p , V -8 eng in e. 4
tp e e d tr o n tm ittio n , tro ile r hitch
w ‘-«rs
S1295 N O W
$1195
WAS SI495 MOW
'64 CHEVROLET
W a g o n e e r. V 8 engine, o u to m o tic
tro n t m iiiio n , 4 wheel drive , lo ck
o u t h u b t, o ne o w ne r, lo w m ite o ge f
1971
F O R D F - 1 0 0 P ic k u p
Long-W ide 1>o k , V-8 engine, a u to m a t­
ic t r a n im u iio n . w ith t* p lo r e r o p ­
tio n l e t t th o n * 0 0 miWt,
REDUCED TO . . . $ 3 3 9 9
☆
-I65-EORD C-7QQ,
36 1 v -8 e n g i n e ,
'6 9 IN T e R N A T 1 0 N A l2 V ^ Ton
T ilt- c o b ,
T n x k , X 46 V-8 engine. 5 tpeed
tronim itb on. 2 tp eed reor o«le,
pow er ti«« ring ^ m o tor completely
rebuilt.
s p e e d t c o n im is s io n ,
2
. ’ 1 9 6 4 C H E V R O IE T 1 /2
~~4
~ip«^'trainmijik5ft7‘'7~Tpwd " n.crr
- m r ff.--p « ~ « r r t « .r4 « o . OOO < ( . i O
tire t. Excellent c o n d itio n .
^
'65 rHEVR‘Oirr2T5^n-^“ "
1963 C H E V R O LE T 2 Ton
^
„o n w ^ I„ « n ,
r« .r
O . I. .
1971 DODGE D-lOO T/2 Ton Pickup
8 2 5 .M
. ir „
. $ 5 4 0
172'T p n T i c V u p
tpeecf trontmiliJon.
' 6 cy4ir>der engine.
“D E D U C E
0 T O -r-7 -r-$ -T 4 9 9 -,
-8 e n g i n e ,
s p e c ia l w h e e l c o v e r s .
REDUCEDTO. ............................ $3087
(With 8 fooi 'slide-in' K IT C a m p e r. . $ 3 4 9 9 )
DODGE D-1 00 1/2 Ton Pickup
-8 e n g in e .
7 T $ 3 6 8 2
(W ith 8 foot K IT C a m p e r.
1 9 )S 9 D O D G E 0 - 1 0 0
. $ 488 2)
1 / 2 T o n P ic k u p
A y to m o tK t ro n tm ittio n , V-0 engine,
c u tlo m c o b , b e a u tifu l red o n d w h ite
tin«»h
$1995
REDUCED TO
1 9 6 6 D A T S U N P IC K U P
REDUCED TO . . .
_____ $ 4 9 9 9 )
K lD T J C r o iO T
m ixtio n , g o o d ru b be r.
1969 DO DG E
'6 7 D O D G E
3 Ton, t ill c o b , 361 V-B *n e in « . 5
-
(W ith 9 foot K IT C a m p e r_____
. f n a t i c l r g M f D i s s i o n , b ig V
3 tp«ed tratU:-
--6
5
speed
t r a lo n g w h e e l b o ie .
----------- ---------- “ ^ J s p « d
"REDUCEDTO ..............-7^ —. ... $3613
P o w e r s t e e r in g , p o w e r b r o k e i . f o c t o r y o i r c o n d i t i o n i n g , a u t o -
T o n P ic k u p
r e o r a x le , 9 0 0 x 2 0 t ir e j, e x ­
'6 5 lh*TERNATION AL 18CX)
V-8 engin*. 5 tpe^d tronimlnion.
Aiitnmntic trnrm n ission. b ia -V -8 enginn^-poMtec-^tegring . ql.L
th e h e o v y d u ty e q u ip m e n t n e e d e d t o p a c k a h e a v y c a m p e r .
■1971
USED
r O MMERC IA t VAlU ES
$1295
Ton
USED TRUCKS__ LZ.
h Ton ; b i g 'a *-»rTytttrr3 i p w fO t
- on
m ,.„o n 3
re o r a x le . 9 55 . 2 0
$$$$
SAVE
___________
extro goVt^nkftf -
$3441
REDUCED TO
1971 DODGE D-200 Camper Special
s p e e d t r a n s m is s io n , V
'68 CHEVROLET
$ $ $ $
W D O W J E T rrT p n
P Kkup. V -8 e n g in e . 4 tpei^d t r o n i
m m io n , h e a vy d u ty tp rirv g i t.re t
?jrv< w h e e lt. e q u ip p ^ lo r com per
^ -1 7
i^ c t u
1971 DOE5Gr37^Ton pi<
M O N T E G O M X . 4 d g o r. V -8 engine,
o u to m o tic tr o n im it t io h . p o w e r tfeerm g, p o w e r b ro k e t, b lue o n d w h ite
,-fin ith S hnrp---------------
c
St 4S0
3 /4Jo n PTdcinjL
n i n ^ r o t g d u n l, t !
1969 M E R C U R Y
$2195
t d u o r ie d o n , v
o u to m o l
tro n » m » \jio n
p o w e r ite e n n g .
b rp k g t. new w h ite w p lj nv
io n hre\
W AS
P C tP G f.
E q u ip p e d ^ i t h p i w r e r - s t f t e ^ i n g . p o w e T b r o k e s , f a c t o r y a i r c o n -
- 4 y <omp»f-equif>p«<^*n44iKii
'66 C H E V R O L E T
YAM AH A
t ET^S G O CAMPING
V > » e n g in e . C S p g g < j-‘ lrO T > » m ti^ H
H ftflY x-d u ty th ro tfflh 9v*_______________
SU P ER SPO RTS
■REW COMMERCIALS
1968-DODGE
'7 'ip e » g ~ f jR r r - g itg ,
BYG O NBt
OR
DOGGONES.
a l w a y t ?n tto c V ! P e t t
S o u tft W a s h in g h jn { A ir p o r t R A M ) ,
733 23A5.
COMMERCIAL UNIT IN STOCK!!
$1480
4 door h o ^ l
ngine, o u to
b ro k e t, new p o in t
[ ^ M Wfr.-p c w m
te e rm i
r - W o i— — N O W ------- :— ^ ^ ----- p o w » T - 1 jn 3 lf« r focfoVy ■o ir ' cond*—
«i)t itw rrT rg —whvwt:
------------------T l ^ r V T C J K D ^
. v*«yl
*o p -------------— ----- ------------SOO.
UUtOlTTfltif tfG n 'lm iiv io n .'p o w e i ile e r- •
J?195 NOW ■ $1977"
g, p o w e r b ro k e t, like new w ith
-W O O - iw .U>,.-M ue-.e*»d w'hf
110
iR E A D T H E C L A S S I F I E D A D S
i R E G U L A R L Y fO R T H E BEST
1 BUYS.
11695 NOy/
_ t9 5 8 T )O D G E
F lb e r f o r m
M o to rc y c U s
$1483
$1695N O W
WAS
_ .._ ;_ W i6 9 = f© R O - — —
G ALA XIE 5 0 0 . 4 d o o r h o rd to p , V-8
e n g in e , a u t o m a tic I r a n im iv s io n .
TtTCrrtfgr
■■.po w er-'TtTC
rrtf^r p g w er-taToirgr ' f a r —
to ry o ir c o n d itio n in g
B U R LEY
NOVV WfTH A HUGE SELEeTION O F^
PICKUPS & CAMPERS TO CHOOSE FROM!
M O N A C O , 4 d o o r h o rd to p .
e n g in e , o u to m o tic —t fo n .4 m itn o n ,
p ow e r ite e rin g . p o w e r brokev. vin yl
top .
SAVE
F O R S E R V I C E on. J o h n s o n o r a n y
b r a n d o u t b o a r d e n g in e se e C e n tu ry
A u to M a c h in e a t C e n t u r y C it y .
W e s t A d d is o n , T w in F a lls . 733
5070.
THE C O V E
139
WAS
1969 D O D G E
W A S ------ S 2 3 ^ - N O W
IN
$1945
1967 P L Y M O U T H
$2095 N O W
?p
9.p
1.(_tP
m
o
eu
etro
in
go
.tK
po
vin
nfw
yllLeP
fro
$2195“
J2495 N O W
$2095
1968 P L Y M O U T H
“ 5 P 0 ir r T O S v : " 5 T S 5 r ’h a rd to p , V^0
t ro n ^ r p n j i q n
iw e r b ro K e i,
CHARGER RT. o u to m o tic tro n jm n
»ion, p o w e r steering, tte re o , lo c to ry
a ir co n d itio n in g , v in yl co vered fop
S K I! G la s s p a r G 3, 60 h o r s e p o w e r ,
e le c t r ic . S c o tt. T r a ile r . $950 . 7338505. e v e n in g s .
W ATERM ELON .
CANTALO U PE,
f r u it s a n d v e g e ta o ie s E a r l's F r u if S ta n d
I ’ -} M IL E S S O U T H O F
O v & ria n d i/^oppmg C e n te r , B u r fe y
o r 250 O a k le y H ig h w a y
A n t iq u M
W AS
F O R S A L E . 14' F ib e r g la s s b o a t w it h
tr a ile r and 9 5 t^ rs e p o w e r M e rc u ry
m o t o r T*h’6 h e 7 3 i3 3 4 T , 'a T f e r “ 5 :0 0
p m
B O O KS. K N IC K K N A C K S , ic w e lr y ,
And g iv e a w a y s
1099 P in e w o o d
C < rcie , S a tu rd a y . ' to 5
4 9 6 A d d is o n W e s t
WAS
FO R S A LE
14' b o a t m o t ijr a n d
t r a i l e r 305 B o ra h A v e n u e , T w in
w a te r
Hove you been out to lunch
Ja!ely7.Try a large hom burgcr
oncJ o frosted gtass of beer.
.$1777
, LeMAhJS, h o rd to p , V-8 engine, 4
" t ^^M T crtroK itt^ltllo n , p o w e r tte e fm g .
a n d M e rc u ry m o to rs . B U D A N D
M A R K 'S
Y o u r E v ln r u d e a n d
M e r c u r y Deal i i r “ rt42 Blue Lakes
N o r t h , 733 1194.
130
G a r a g e S a le s
A R R IV A L S :
.
196 9 P O N T IA C
C H R Y S L E R b o a ts a n d m o to r s .
S t a r c r a f t b o a ts . C a m p e r. J r a l l e n
H a r l e y D a v id s o n
m o to c y c le s .
JE R O M E
IM P L E M E N T
«.
I M A R IN A .
I 1971 N E W
sia95 NOW
Qii-^jLo n d a io n m o . -
FURY III. 4 d o o r h a r d to p . V-8 en
g ine, o u to m o tic trc n im iv ito n . p ow e r
steering, p o w e r broW et, ♦octory o»rco n d itio n in g , v in y l covered to p
-W A S - .- ^ 7 2 g .i.N Q W -------- - J Z J a S
.
C U R T IS M A T H E S
23 in c h
hom e
e n t e r t a in m e n t
c e n te r, b e a u t if u l
w a in u r ^ t n n e t ■ 5>96 « • C a in ’s 733
71U
_____________
k lH
p o r t a b le
iT t^ re o . D U iit rn
FM
t u n e r , e * (e < ie n i c o n d itio n
----- M
M j na —
NOW
2 d o o r h a r d to p , V 8 engine, o u to
m otic tr o n tm u tio n . p o w e r ite e n n g
169
I B o a ts F o r S a le
125
V^8
-k L ^ k g l
j ^ w = . = ,= = ,5 2 3 9 0
...
S2375
S2-495 N O W
1968 FO R D M U S T A N G
1969 FO R D M U S T A N G
..-M O D E L u s e d g a ll < a r t s.
^ I w r t r l f . n r g m *,
andM a rk e te e r, fr o m - « » 3 t f f» » 5 r D I c k
L o w e , P ro a t J e r o m e C o v jn try
C lu b , 324-5081, J e r o m e .
D R U M S f o r s a le , v e r y r e a s o n a b le ,
733^45
- .................
\\ 12 13
W AS
159
S p o r t in g G o o d s
WAS
254 4th Avenue West
733-7365
1
,
H
toipi,on,pow
erevrgiin
a^
uitopm
ateicr
tra
orndim
teee,rin
ow
vinyltop,nice
S2090
C O R O t^A . 2 d o o r h o rd to p , 4 »peed
Iro n s m iitio n . lo c to ry o ir c o n d itio n
in g . ih o r p
R A D IA L A R M
saw ,
8"
b la d e
r e q u ir e d . W r it e p a r t i c u la r s to B o x
K -9 , CO T Im e s -N e w s .
bOX,
s a le .
=
1969 T O Y O T A
5
■ r,H L T fl.D ^ A AA P t I F I F B . f u l l
a n d m T c ro p h o n e s ta n d f o r
—
------------ r ...—.
JU N E
tiUiW
W A N T T O B U Y a n d m o v e 2 -ro o m
houM? o r g a r a g e . 543-4134 o r w r it e
" UI / t n A v e n g e N o rttrT --ftu h ^.-----------
N E W Y a m a h a p ia n o s : U s e d p ia n o s ;
V o * g u it a r s and a m p llt le r s . K L H
s te r e o r e c o r d p la y e r s . W a r n e r
M u s ic , 131 S h o ih o n e N o r th .
S Z 49 5 N O W
1969 C H EV R O LET
CASH FOR S C R A P M E T A L
C o p p e r, B r a s s . A fu m J n u m ,
R a d ia t o r s , B a tte r ie s . E tc
H . K O P P E L CO. .
15 2 2n d~A'v en u e~5b u JK
Musical lnitrum «ntt
.--
LEASING
NEWPORT, 4 d o o r h o rd to p , V-8
e n g in e , a u to m a tic I r o n t m i t t io n ,
p o w er jt e e r in g , p o w e r b ro k e t, o il
v in yl in te rio r, v in y l' co ve re d tCJp,
" ( o t W r y o if to fid itio n in g .
:A M E R 0 Z-28, h o fd to p . V-8 eng in e,
4 ip e e a tr o n im ijiio n , p o w e r ile e r
in g , M ic b e ljn T ire i, ih o r p
O L D C O IN S
B o u g h t a n d s o ld . B o x
803, T w in F a lls , Id a h o .
;
P R F M ir U M S T O r D f o r ro U n ff d in in g
t a b le s — r o ll to o d e s k s — B ra s s
C h in a c lo s e ts . — b a b y
H A Y E S F U R N IT U R E
sae
-W A S
141
W i L L B U Y d ir e c t o r A u c flo n y o u r
f u r n ltu r e - a p p lia n c e s - o d d s &. end s
S n a k e R iv e r A u c tio n 733 77S4.
SPOT CASH
F o r F u m h u re -A p p U a n c e s
T h in g s o f V a lu e
B A N N E R F U R N iT U R E
127 : ^ d A v e n u e W est
733 1421
1968 C H R Y S LE R
1970 C H EV R O LET
S A O E D I V E S H O P . N e w o p e rv ln g .
U .S . O lv e r s a n d S c u b a p n o . S iile s
a n d S e r v ic e . S36-2909.
C H IN A C U P B O A R D S .
v a r io u s s iz e s a n d m o o e ls . B a n n e r
F u r n it u r e . 733-1421.
—
4 d o o r le d a n , V -8 eng in e, o u to m a t
ic Ifo n s m ijjio n .^ p o w e f ite o rin g o n d
hfn kf!4, funn n n iL lo Q k i e x!fg ,gg 9< j,,.,_
S T O W A W A Y b e d f o r r e n t. »4.00 a
w e e it. B a n n e r F u r n it u r e , p h o n e
73 3 'te » » :------------------------------------------------
B E A U T IF U L
CHERRY
F re n c h .
-P r o v in c ia l c h in a c lo s e t. L ik e n e w .
'H e a s o o a b le '. 52B 5»h A v w u e E a M ,
T w in F a lls .
FOR S A L E
M e d iu m
p ia n o >33 8537*
—
305
Thit (itiU
'T u fly '
1 9 7 0 D O D G E C T -7 0 0 T ru c k
V -8 engine. 5 tp e e d tr o n tm it­
tio n . 3 tp e e d o u ii liii r y B ro w nie
tro n tm ittio n . 2 ? lo o t co m b in a tio n
bed w ith 4 p k ^ le ro m ,h y d ro u lic
h a itt. 10 hundred ru b b e r, lu ll w o ro n ty . only 4 500 m ilet, th it rig to ld
- J » e w lo r $ U , 5 0 0 .
1971 W -2 0 0 P o w e r W a g o n
4 tpeed tro n tm ittio n . 212 V -0 en­
gine^ 4 w h#«l d riv e w ith iock-out
h ubt. heovy d o ty Iro n t hitch w ith
>rugg^'d 2 .tp « e d w inch. Check th it
one o uti
. SAVETH0USAN P5 0 F $ $ $
1 9 6 9 D o d g e 3 / 4 T o n P ic k u p
2_ *
t ro n tm iu to n , b»g e n g in e
w ith
4 tp«ed
lo t i
o f e co n o m y .
REDUCED TO . . . .
REDUCED T O
$799
1 9 6 5 C H E V R O IE T 2 T o n T r u c k
V-8 engine, 2 ip e td re o r o x U .
REDUCEDTO. . . $ 1 9 9 5
. . .
tr o n tm ittio n .
$3999
V-8 engine^
Keowy d u ty th ro u g h o u t, o re a l fiW i
truck.
■ R E D U C E D T O .. . .
$2295
Tlmes-News, Twjn F a lls, Idaho
m«
ag
O rra
a nnga i^
o *. C ra b b
b at r -O
a;
Iram aty ih a r p . 7n-TC«2:
- i m MUSTAMC. i s i enflin*.
automatic, air. Ilka ncwTIVIc^to'
S U ^ E R FU n I I f M R ^ ^ a i a x I a
SW ^Oonv^lMa, low m Uaaga. 733
IM » C O R V E T T E C O U K ^ . *S0 w llfl
.U d h o n a . 44|>aad, w arao . powar
B.“S )7 .4 J »,t'r............
C M IIa lo ^ .
atfarjtra.
i*M
c i IiIe v e l l e
m a l ib u ,
automatic traiumlnlon. MuM lalt,
MM Granada Driwa, 7 »
F O R S A L E : W O Ford Bronco. U k a
n»W“ cimdl»loii7-Hiona-*AMrtauolw
t w in i t M i^ a r d .
1M ) F A L C O N <
t a s ^ » g K i r t i a I ton IrucK . « « S .
1 f « c h e v y Super SporT. » * , B&od
—
EXCELLENf-------—
TRANSPORTATION CARS
5
1963 O ID S O 'IN M M C * d o o r « d a n , V-S »gin<>.
^
= o 3 » o m m ic ^ « » » l» flo l» F 1 5 0 W W - H ^ ^ ^
h a l- b ^ n —
j f l f t l x i n J B K l B l j u n f o D ilo o k v g o o d . , . h ----------
n
7 19 63 FO R D G A L A X IE SOO 4 d o b r u d o n .- im a ll V-8
tn g in *, o u lo m o lk tron&misuon. pow er tleering.'body
--eowdtliowr m lT tof r<KceHent—con d ition rrum a n d looks g ood . ............................
; ^ ^ w a ^ i n u n t r B n n K ip y ii i f
^2395-
n m
=
1966 O LD S 442
1964 B U IC K SICYIA«K 4 door vedon. im oll V-B en­
gine, w ith outomotic-trontmhiiorTrreol-CTJte tiirle-fatua'
ar>d white< with tnotching interior, ru m rea l good
1964 RA M BIER C L A S S IC 4 d o o r le d a n , V-8 engine,
oulomotic tronsrniiiion. low mileo^Je* good work cor
or for bock ond forth to tchool. mutt le e thit one
.
88
1967 0 1D 5
Sed o n , o ir conditto'^ng. low
m ileoge, &a« thn one.
/
$1495
1^67
CYCIONE.GT
$895
1 9 6 7 1 M P A IA
— 2 d oor, o ir conditk>fu<>g, V-8
eitgirM, reo l cleon.
*483
M O T O R S
'iha tasiest Woca In Ihe World fo Buy A ta r
~701~Moin A»enue Eo«t
-733 7700-
$1295
1966 G T O . SKorp.
-
$1395
*388
w o go n .
engirte, (tortdord tronuniision with overdrive,
cellent ecortomycor. gcK>dtrorisporlation . . . .
T H E IS E N
y-8 BA€KE&-.«*’*«o~> RY
'
$ 1 2 9 5 ____
1 9 6 8 V O U C S V ^A G E N
, -_5h ofp.
1963 FO AO G A L A X IE 500 4 door s«don. real cute
tittle b e ig * cor with m olchlng beige interior, runt
real g ood , h o i been very well token core o K . . .
1966^kM«ASSADOR
19 6 8 m u s t a n g
=
st«*ring, rxcellMt tro«spor1atton cor...............
1 9 ^ 9 - jO L D S 8 8
A ir co o d itio m ftg i. r» o l d e o n .
o n , 2 d o o r, o i, cooditiom na.
engirt*, U w rp.
—
* r ,
A L L
ADC«
-^•doAr-ojr -cowMerwi
ypbiw»^V^--«iigiwB, oiWmotic^trontmriiidi^
1965 RA M BIER C IA S S IC 6 6 0 , t ( o lio n
1 ? 6 9 G A IA X IE 5 0 0
5 0 0 S«don, oir cor»di>iofi«wg,
V-6 — g t w . power
1969 ITD
^
S IT - U M .
-D A V rM U N R O E 'S X A rC IT Y
m
*188
- $ 4 4 9 5
Ul
1 9 6 5 IM P A I A S S
n 7 V .8 « n g U K i.
A
R
A
,
$895
1965 V O LK S W a G E M .
...................N ow 0 » ty . , .
' $699
N
T
E
E
1961
Im P a L A S e d a n
$169
1 9 5 4 C H E V R O IE T S e d a n
____ $1^9
I
— S P E C IA L —
$1395
O P EN 9 A M T O 7
P M , M o n d a y , Thru
S a tu rd a y . . .
1971 C H EV R O LET 1/2 Too. 350
V -8 e n g in e , tu rb o K^drdm otic
trOAsmiuMMn. ouxiliory ond heovy
dwty reor ip rin g i. rod io, hitch,
rmrrort.
19 7 T
i^ '“ “
-^ 4 3 - 5 3 3 5
>3139.
O P E L S
T 9 7 0 M a iC lif lY M O f^TFREY 7 door t>ordk>p. tha o«w i« of courM
like
b ro n d r»ew. beoutlfuf yvMow with browt* vMtyl top. oB vinyl b row n mterior. of
counte fuUy equipped with foctory oir condit«04UAg. p o w er tt««nM$). pow er
S P E C IA L S
1969 FORD
________
GALAXIE 500 . . * 2 3 9 5
1967
MUSTANG 9 . . * 1 4 9 5
2 Door Hord/op, Power it«ering,
ra d io , fa cto ry o ir co n d itio n in g ,
mony other (ir># feotuM t. . -
389 V-8 engine. 3 ipeed tronunitsion. mony other fine ie o tu re i. ..
CPUGAR.-. : . . * 2 4 9 5
1969Volkjwagen Fostboclc . . .
* T d o o ritO rd « o p , V-8 engine, outon>oti< trojHiTutuon. contole, power
iteeriftg, pow er broket, factory oir
conditioning.
1969 BUICK
to
ELECTRA225 . . ^ 3 6 9 5
4 door hordtop. full pow er, lo<tory
qir conditioning, vinyl roof, mony,
many fir>e feotur*t.
1967 CADILLAC
P.VIUE. . . . . * 2 8 9 5
4 doo^r'Hardtop. Vinyl roof;^ (o ^ o ry
air cor\ditiorung, fu ll pow er, cruite
control, mony other fine feoturet.
MUSTANG 2 + 2*1 9 9 5
^389-V-S-*<e(|ife*;-^3-tpeed-trammr$'
m ony
oth«r
>969
I S1KOK
BUG................* 1 5 9 5
REAL thorp, good tirei. e x ce p tio ^ liy clean.
1965 CHEVROLET. IMPALA.......... 0 9 5
4 Door Hardtop, Power tleering.
foctory ^
autom atic trommittion, g o o d tiret,
real thorp.
1969 CHEVROLET
3/4 Ton Pickup
MAKE
o ffer
196 8 FOftO MUSTAh4G, beoutifvl medium g o ld meloUtc, with bio dt vinyl lo p ,
i« u thon 3 0 .0 0 0 o ctvol m tUt, imoO V-8 e«kgi«t«, owtomotic
pow vr
tterrirtg. (tereo to p f lyitwm . excellent
< 1 D O O
whi««woU tiret . ^
..................................................................... T O O
I
1 9 6 7 F O R D C D 0 N T B T S H )A lT T ta t» o » rw o 9 o n ‘rihir^n«^'Vwner'fW w ^or'ffdae^ir^
ti fin h h *d in light blue with m otching blue oil vinyl interior, fully equipped
ioch>dif»g fo b o ry o*r conditioning. p «w ef tteering, pow er broket^ very low
m iU o g e . luggoge rock, ewerythirtg on th n 1967.
196 8 M ERC U K T M O N Ib K b V 4 doo# tod on. beoutWul tuhono whrte outti
ith. w it h b lu e f o b r ic i n f e r i o r , c o m p le t e ly e q u ip p e d with f o c t o r y o i r c o n d it io n ir t g .
p o w e r t f e e r in g . p o w ^ b r o k e t , e ftc e tte n t
tiret, very d eo n inside ond o u t .............................
S 1
. .
r .
Q O
^
1 9 7 0 AAERCURY M O t^ T EG O M X 4 d o o r ted on . etcelU^ t 3 tone p oint. oU fobric
interior, thit c o r it jutl Miie brond new. eq u ipped with foctory ojr cond itio ning,
ecpnom ifot JOj? V-8 e n o i y . ou»omot*c tron>m«*t<on,_________
m m
196 8 BU IC K E l ^ R A 7 3 5 U m ted . beoutiful 4 door k o rd io p , medium gold
metoHic w itk w l ^ vinyl
of c o y rw ful^ Ippd ^ ^ w itH ^ p ^ tr. j^eotl^powvr.
iig. hlvinJ imm
O95.
whitew ol) tiret, of courte 1 owrter.
ftew^xor trodertft_.
*2995
1 9 7 0 FO ItO L p 4 door ted on . blue m etoUk f»ni«h with wh«te vWt^ top. oU
fa b ric interior, of courte thit one it (utt like b ro n d rtew, onother one w ith focto ry
o ir conditioning. 3 9 0 b orrel V-B er^ m e. outom otic trontm tttion.
yi Q C
p o w er iteering , pow er b roket, very lo w mileo g e ................................
O A z O
ther fine cars a n d pickups to c h oo se from
1 96 8 FO R D C U S T O M 4 d oor ted on . beoutiful wh««e with motchir>g interior,
brortd rtew whitewo B tiret, tmoH
e«»g«ne. with outom otic trontm ittion.
p o w er tteeriftg.
fa cto ry oir
YOUREE MOTOR CO. ’
„ 6 4 4 ^ M o i n A v e n u e S o u l h ------------------------- -------- I w i n ^ a l l s - ^
o . Kelly iiook__ O
J a ck C ox
o
Dole Sorenton
7
V-8
'1 5 9 5
h T H**ThE0-€cnimsf
lS E
N iV ^ T i3 R S ~ :
P/oce In f/i« World To Buy A Corl
701 Moin Avfio^ Eoit
O L D S M O B IL E S -B U IC K S
196?plDSMOBIlE ToroiwuJo
All p ow er. fuOy eq u ipped , foctory
oir cortditionirtg. virtyl top, local
orM owrter, 2 3 ,0 0 0 octuol milet.
Retail......................S4295
Cleoronce Price . . *3 4 8 7
1968 OIDSMOBIIE
CUTLASS SUPRIMC—
1
2 d o o r h o rd to p . ro d io . h« a l« r.
outomotic. pow er tteerir>g, power
broket, viftyl top.
Retail Price . . . . . . S2295
Cleoronce Price . . *1765
1969 MERCURY MONTEREY
4 door tedon,~rod*o.'lieoter. outom o t ic . p o w e r t t e e r in g . p o w e r
bro k et, focto ry oir conditioning.
y»»Yl lop.
Retail Price . - ...........J2495
Clearance Price . . * 1983'
1968 BUICK WILDCAT
4 d oor hardtop., oU pow er. fuUy
eq u ipped , foctory- oir conditionirvg.
»»nyl lopT"
Retail Price . . .
Clearance Price
7 ? 3 -7 7 Q g .
MAY JUNE CAA^PAIGN IS STILL O N AT ACE HANSEN CHEVROLET
1969 OIDSMOBIIE 98
7 door I w d t o p . oil pow er, fully
eq u ip p ed , foctory oir conditioning.
Retail Price..............$3695
Clearance Price . . *2 9 6 3
1969 OLDSMOBILE Deho 88
Royole, 3 door hordtop. rod io. heotWCTSS^»»» tieerihg . powS FSiTT To c^
er
hit tteering wt*
tory oir conditioning.
-RiBtoiH*rtC<K-^ ; ■. . $3495^
Clearcince Price . . '2 8 8 0
1969 OIDSMOBIIE Delta 88
- 4 d o o r ted o n , -o lt power,--4vU^-eq u ip p ed , foctory oir conditioning,
low mileope.
Retail Prke..............$3495
Clearance Price . . *2 7 7 7
1968 OLDS DELMONT 88
Z d o o c - h o r d l o p ,m d i < v b e o l e r , f l u r t » - . .
m o tic , p u w e r t te e r iw g , p o w e r b r o k e t ,
t i k t t e e r in g w h e e l, f o c t o r y cnr coi»d itio TM n g .
Retail Price. . . . . . . $2495
CleorofKe Price
*1 9 9 4
2 d o o , tiw dtof). W»if sq uip fM d , ind u d ia o to r to rY o ir a in d ^ io itin a . a n d
A N D
p r ic e s
A T
. $2595
*2166
1966 CADILLAC
4 door S4don D«VUI«. oil pow«r.
foctory oir conditiorung, exceiient
condition.
Retail-Price; :
1968 OIDSMOBIIE
VISTA CRUISER
Station w og on. fully equipped, in' eluding fa cto ry oir conditioning,
lu g g og e rock, pow er toil gote.
Stotion w o g o n . fuUy equipped, irvnrivKJutgTon6ryn^€0A%fit
Retoil Price, . . t . $1995
Clearance Price . . *1500
-
‘2277
— 1966 OLDSTORONADCr^
Completely eq u ipped , the ortginol
front wheel drive.
- R « t o f |- ^ l« T -
Clearance Price
. : $2T^3~
. *1 6 6 0
Retail Price. . . . . . $1395
*970
Clearance Rrice
1966blDSMOBILE98 '
2.doo* hordtop, fuUy-equipped. com-.
pWtely looded. irtcluding foctory oir
iondrttontn^, low
Retail Price . . .
Clearance Price
. $1795
^1450
1965 FORD
COUNXItt^QUUlE___
2 d oor h ord top. oil power, fully
e q u ip p ed , foctory oir conditiorung.
Stotion wogon. 6 potten ger. outo­
m otic. power tteering, ra d io , heoter.
! 12195 Retail Price..............$1095
n T T s : -Clearance Pricfi^
*7Z0
1 9 6 7 O ID S M O B IIE
8
_____________ P E I T A S ______________
4 d o o r ted on . com pletely equipped
including focto ry oir conditiorung.
orte ow ner.
1964 BUICK SPORT WAGON
Retoil Price. . . . . . . J1095
Cleoronce Price
*840
- t9 6 4 M E R C U ftrM O N T E R e r 4 door tedon, rodio, heater, Cutomoti(, power tteering, power broket.
Retail Price . . . . . . $995
Cleoronce Price . . . *550
1964 CADILLAC
4 door hordtop, com pletely, lo ad ed ,
' oil power, fully equipped, foctory '
oir <or»ditioning.
Retail Price. . . . . . $1395
I P ric e -*960-
-C U a
.196Z.BUiaC LASABRE ,
Reloil Price. . .
Clearancs Price
;
Siotiofl w ogon. 9 potieng er. rodio.
heoter, autom atic, power tteering
and power broket
1966 DODGE
Station wqQon. 6 potten ger. autom otic, pow er iteeriivg. pow er broket.
Retoil Price............. S2595
Clearance Price . . *1990
1967 OLDSA;\6bIIE
VISTA CRUISER
. . . S2695
Clearance Price .
I 0 7 0
196 8 fO ftO G A L A X IE 5 0 0 4 door hordtop, th n beouty hot oU vinyf mterMr,
focto ry oir cor»d«tioning, pow er tleefirtg. pow er b roket, hot b een very well
kept, 1 ow ner, new cor t r o ^ in.
j -i ^ 0 C
m vtf tee »o o p p r e d o t e ...................................................................................
1 / ^ 0
lo ng w id e box. reor bum per, 700
X 15 tirei, W e it C o o tt m irrort.
many other fine feoturet.
lion, rvwiny other fine feo luret. ex ­
tremely clean cor.
man^
Real S h a rp , ra d io ,
features on this car,
„
1/9 5
40 HIGH QUALITY — LOW PRICED USED CARS
ALL SERVICED, SAFETY INSPECTED, READY J O GOL
75 NEW CARS lh>I^TOCK,TO CHOOSE FROM .
4
fJiotnfay ond ^vmttioy
Call 543i4951 of
THEISEN FINE CARS
JU N E
3S
1965 MERCURY PARKLANE
4 d o ^ tedon, oU p ow er, con^pteWly equipped, irtcluding fo^ ory oir
conditioning, breeze^woy window.
RetoU Price........... $2195
Clearance Price . . *1550
R*foil Price..............$1295
Clearance Price . . . *960
All p o w .r , m c M m g 6 - « o r po-».r
j
bucfc.,
loot, p o w .r w in d o w ., U l ll ..r i» g
m olit p o w .r »l«rirMJ. p o w .r bro ko i.
w K « !itrtO c io r> rlilrc o n d iiio n in g r^ ------------ T ^ i c "
------------- --- '
-1964.DODGE POLARA
Stotion w ogon, 6 potter>ger, radio,
heoltr. outomotic. power tteering,
■ po^ itrbroket.
Retail P ric»............. $895
Clearance Price . . . *490
1963 &UICK LoSABRE
3 door hordtop. ra d io , heofe/, autO'
motic, pow er tteering, pow er broket.
-5BW
rPrtc
-*560-
^1963-01DSM081LE-S84 door hordtop, in very g ood run*
ning co n d itio n , no rm olly w ould
tell lor
............. ...........$895
Clearance Price . . . 9 5 0
1963 CHEVROLET
__ Station w o g o n , ifM o cu to te (niide
ond out, very w ell q u ip p e d .------- . ..
Retail Price % .
Clearance Price
.
~ $895
•t't *450
36
Tlm es-N ew s; Twin F a lls, Idaho
Sunday, June 13, W )
SMls
mre
■\
-
~
■
V
■I »»
.; r
3
^'’•1
‘
■m=
li-
Ahd Here's* The
• '•'■■■'. *iy‘;
'
_____..........................................................................
•
.
.
l
;
T
________________________________________
YES . . . Theisen Motors sojd more new Mercurys and Comets in the
month of M ay than any May before. Built on integrity -r- years and
years' of doing business with the people of M agic Volley. Mercury is
Magic Valley's most loved automobile. You will be pleased with a Mercury.
^ h i» bM U lM ill~ 4u4dn'H ~ 4quipp<M riK «~ w dy'y^
want it to b«. If you wont Ht« extra interior tpodous~nasifiiidtfifielriariuggdg* TMm
of a full-six* luxury car at a lower cost, then th£'
Monterey is Mercury's boHer idea for you. It's built on
•the same 124-inch wheel base as the Marquis. This au­
tomobile is (uliy leoiM,-concealed windshield wipers,
distinctiveness and glamour. But that's only a start
for it also hai automatic transmission,, power steering,
V-S engine, nyfon pleoted upholstery,
yuard rails.
woodtone instruntent paitel, ^ w e r ventilation systefn',
white sidewall belted tires, wall to wall nylon caippt.
add
_______
—
_____
—
-
0 ^,s;z = .,-.......................................
.
.-_______ ______________________________
S f ^ : — ---
/ d o ^ e -^S“Q / c / e s f lm c o / f y -A 4 e f c t» iy D e c i|e r ^
^33^7700
S X 7 G S B T T N -N Y
W H A T M A K E S \ A THIMHC P E r U N I A
W O N T D O U S E V A W ltV l W A T E K .
W H E N Y A P U A V Y E R . O 'U l T A R
|;> y X ta ,lp ]iL X X e im .d L a ,li.l
■ T T ----- ! X - ! " ................ ...............................------------------ ---------- V------ --------------
I C O M P O S E D A M O R l& f M A U U O V E
s o M e / I T H O u < ^ r itv w o u ld &b
"T H IS NONSENSE H A S.G O T TO STOP, MR. GREE>LE . . .
iT 'S COFFEE-BREAK T IM E l"
G A lP T A IV r lEA & TT
-A
V IP
Ig
E?<P EC TEP
A T
^^cK EE
IK J P U ^ r R Ig g ; j /
^ u c r.;>
l» y l^ e s lie X n irn e ir
.f-./.
A$-CO/MMITTEE CHA/RM/^Nr COMGKE&;^A^AW
CORNBOf^E C(9Wr|?0L$’ AMEKlCAM T R A P B r ...
- B t A z e ^ i - H O W P O M e M A W -A C Q U IR E
POWER ?
5U CH ^
y R 3 IS C ?IE E agS M PB0g
t o y
-
'
t.
A
1
" ^ ^ B jr x n e n e ir
.
/
-
„/■ - I.
C «J R
H A S S O A A U C rt
TlAAe t o
A r T 6 N C > T » lC M lC :S ?■
M a t y ■ k if 'a l/ y b u i r s .
LANCELOT
b v CoScex* & P e n n
/ .
I 'R E A L W V
,
I,
^ E L A S H O N VOU^ -c
-I> O L I-...V O U 'R E ^
O U T A $ lT £ /
■ -i© w n W
•. r»>*
■ i«
A M
M
H V a M
P O L .L .Y ^ S
a a a !!!
W^JHki I B K I ^ a i
P O IN T ER S
Slip-On Apron
t ) t « c o n fro s t b ia i b in d in g t o
t r im th i* e o jy «lip-on a p ro n .
H o . 839S w ith p h o t o g u i d e
i? in jii e j . im o li (8-10). M e d m m (12 14), U r g e 116-18). •
t ) P A R P O L L Y - r - E n iy m c - fy p c d e t e r ­
g e n t s Ci?m t o m e t o s o f t e n s c o r c l i c d - o n
5
f o o d o n . p o t s , p a n s a n d c o s s c r o le d is h e s '
o lo t f a s t e r t h p n p lo in d c t c f ^ e n t s . P u t
o lit t le W A R M y g t c r (n o t fio t) .in th e
b o tto m o H > h e p o t o n d s p r in k le o n a a
c x c e s s o f th is d e t e r g e n t . A ls o : m a k e a
p a s te o f th e s o m e ty p e d e t e r g e n t a n d
o l i t t l e w a r m w a t e r , o n d u se i t t o S o f t e n
s c o r c h e d - o n g r a v v s p ille d in t h e o v e n ,
\ \
^^rduim, 2'i ygrdi.of 3Sinth.
8 3 95
CrXI!TDLl.Y—We eenverleJ a v6e<mf“
tTEAR VOt.LY-A'i^en T om nf vorTc t
b e d r o o m t o a d e n a n d m y h u s b a n d lt» s t a l l e d s h e lv e s in t h e e x i s t i n g s l i d i n g
d o o r c l o s e f. I t n w i s a " K i3 a f f H W ln t ^
f o r m y s e w in g m o c h i n e , a n d s e w in g
m a t e r i a l s a r e s t o r e d o n t h e n e w s h e lv e s .
B y s l i d i n g d o o r s o n d w a y , w e o ls o h a v e
d s tu d e n t a rc o w ith a ly p c w r it c r r e a d ily
o v o ila b le . — M R S . E. M . O .
o f t e n h a v e to h a n g m y ja c k e t o r s w e a te r
o n d n a i l , a s I d o n ' f a lw a y s h a v e a c o a f
6
"KaTfflir. Ta prgyw r srrgtehing ar mafc*
in g
p ut
a
h u m p in
th e
ru b b e r
b o ll
a
in c h e s
/y ^ R S . L
in
t o p - c e n t e r b a c k , Iabout
one
or
tw o
d i a m e t e r o y e r th e n o il.— •
C . R.
} rt\ \ 6 $ \ D E - 1 5 M y
?A .N P -> - g F g ;i C £ -
n F A R .I» r> ! 1 Y ^
oge
t o b e m a i l e d , o lw o y s p u t t h e n a m o
a n d a d d r e s s in s id e in e a s e t h e w r a p p i n g
s h o u l d b e c o m e —t o r n . A l s o , ,- p u t —c U o F —
g u m m e d ta p e o v e r t h e o u t s id e a d d r e s s
3 0 t h e l e t t e r i n g w i l l n o t s in e a r . — M A R T
— M ARGARET
W I L L Y o u M IK
_'
M .
O
EXTRA. P A 6T E
-T-O-XLUEAN
® im
h r NBA.
- ^ C J Q O Q t l Y ^ 'W h e . i - f o k m a ^ fl t o t T i
w ith non-floating soap, I JJU* •h e -b * f jiIZ !
c bowl, right side up, and it floats alonri
s o t h e r e 'in » o m o r « - t m it t t r t i
e o a p .- r ^ J U D Y
-5 yrs.
d e a r P O L L Y — M y second t a t y i i n o v
n n w h o le m ilk , a n d o f t e n s p jt s u p . T h is
u s u a l l y h a p p e n s w h e n w e a r c d l l 'C l S a r i
o n d re a d y to g o o u t o r w h e n c o m p o n y
■s c o m in g i n . I t ' s n o t a lw a y s p o s s ib le t o
c h a n g e b o b y f r o m h e a d t o to<?, s o I j u s t
r i i b s o m e b a k in g s o d a o n th e m e s s a n d
p r e s t o — o s w e e t s m e l l . T h i s h a s a ls o
h o v » - o - b it o n , m y - o w r t-’
I-
A Darling Outfit
Top d pretty dre»J vith <t
corer-oll cope, then finish off
this outfit with a cute bonnet.
No. 8104 with PHOTO-GUIDE
it in Sixes 1-5 years. Sue 3,
yqrdt of 3S-inch; bonn>t,
l i ;ofd; cope, l U j-ords.
Jumpsuit
the iumptuif; or o midi jumper, A p«rfe«r pattern to add
•
* |u m p su |t^
'
.8 1 2 8 w ith P H O T O 32 bu >»; H
■ fro m t u r n i n g
^ a rd s o l 4^*>ncb.
_______
b ro w n , o r r ip e n in g , lo r a
I f t g>
1
c lo t jie s .
a ls o c a r y / b a k m ^ ^ d ' l n l h e ^
- t f io p e r b o o - tt H m Y g - r c tn f r - ^ o r i
U t it o O -, ____ _________________ ______. _____
i f t r g h } ]y . a . y > u n d t h e b u n c h o f b o n o n o s .
l
“
po n n a.
l ^ g £ E r s r r g _ A .s m h ii ro~eT ra c t m T
' iw # r * s w ir r B r f # w n r M t t v f '
c~/a f*
ttie»»?.'
tO Y$l o o iH ro J lrc lo tlrfa fln d y ;— N lK K i
( P o t t y 's n o te — T h e h o w t m v 3 i h a v e h ig h
s id e s . A c o n t a in e r t h a t ic e c r e o ir i o r
o t h e r s u c h th in g s c o m e in w o r k s 'g r e a t ,
f r y t h is w it h c h ild ^ t n w h o ' t e n d ' l u l e t
s o a p s t a y in th e w a t e r a n d w a s te a w a y .)
As 5 A ( L C B
'" a
A
Q ir ic lc c r a s s - s t it c h m o k e t f a s t v o r k o F
t h i s l o v e l y ro s e p i l l o w . P a t t e r n N o . 2 9 6 5
h a s h o t- ir o n tr o n s fe r ( o r
< l* tig n s - »
2
I
T H A T M VN A .
HEAPIM& )N /
-
V ^ O N P B I? I F I
-<
^
C O U IP 6 0 AB^AKt7
AMP (5ETA PEE)!:
“ gtow^'-
O U T O XTR W A X ’
J O H -N N ir W ON lDaERr
ibsr. F a . u l G S - r i n s l e
b y D iclK
,3 U N E n " 3-; - 1 ^ y ^
George C. Scott
G o e f e ‘^ T b e - B e s t
O iH a m b iir g ^ r s '
A m y Vanderbilt:
M y 10 Favorite
Spots in E u ro pe
r|-'
A n Ea^y W ay
T o G et to Sleep
W ithout JPills
F O K OR . E D W m Lr C R O S B Y ,
Executive Preiident,
1 P O R
B
A
R
B
A
R
A
W
A
L T E R
from Dpigoning. (jehvdration. whorlc nr
other complications. Treatment of the
condition may involve.the removal of the
infectedf area or drainage of an-obscess.
Antiobiotic therapy is also iisid in the
treatment: --r
S
o f T V ’s “ Today Show "
A sto ciatio n
D o
W h y d o t have tit pay
p o r J ^ d f jy o u 'lljn e v e r
yo U -vcce p t
th e
fa c t
th a t,
h o st
as
o f
re ~
th e
“ T o d a y S h o u j" b e c a u s e y o it * r e a w o rn -
_____ m u ch f o r a hospital
room , aa fo r a fin o hoUil roo m ?—
a n ?. H o w
M rs.
- jT - f r t a n g i- M a m ic C i t y r N ^
yo u
fe e l ab o u t
D u n n ,
th £ » f* ^ ^
F O R E R IV IE B A N K S ,
Chicago Cubs first btaemm
W ho w at th e toughest
p itc h e r a n d team that
y o u had to h it agi^ffsl
in y o u r m a fo r league
' c a r e e r ? ——C l i f f o r d C,
dMi h e dyat d , ConnJ-
B lo o m in g t o n ,
------------------
In d .
• Comparing hotels and hospitals is like
comparing apples and oranges, and neith-'
er the hotel nor the, hospital likes the
comparison. Your hotel rate covers the
room. Your hospital rate covers the
much-more im-portant than this, a host of professional
services—nursing. X-ray, laboratory, phy-
do
, E d w a rd
~
I know that I will never be the'host of the “Today Show." That
occasionally bothers me, but I can accept the situation and work with
it. I know that,'! was hired for the.show because I am a woman. The
woman who preceded me on the show did almost entirely female
things. I am very
n
mhn rgtpfJta—
admires women,' and, of course, Hugh Gowns is wonderful. I have
had the opjxjrtunity to interview aU sorts of people, from Prince
—«l<
must h«i ihrrr if you nr^d itirtn, A ho«-pital-also has th r^ times as many em­
ployes per bed as a hotel Incidentally,
the hospital bed itself can cost $572 —
far more than the; cost of a hotel bed.
I h a ve h e a rd that you
d iU r u U the m liita ry,
b u t ha ve recom m ended
-that th e re be an R O T C
p ro g ra m on e v e ry camr?r /.my. p u t, in clu d in g toom*
en*» coUegot. H o w d o yo u equate
these seem ingly o p p o site fe e lin g s?—
Henry S . Ja m e s, L a n sin g , M ich.
It is imperatiTo that-vre leam-more
about military men since they have so
much money ^nd power in their hands.
It is a great mistake to drive military men
from college campuses. Let them do
•whatever it i« they do -where it can be,
seen.
m uT
iK a l
t h i s “ ^ im U ld ~
b rin g c o ld e r w ea ther fa r th e r south
r . -Du yuU h a vB r v tu r an h ia i~
■will te ll w hether th is is f a d o r fd lK ^
■I
-Mm:h-<rf-the-con{usien about cha^^tpe-inclimate arises from s lack of distinction
between~Tong-term warming and recent.
short-term cooling.'*
FO R RO N A LD Z lE C L E R ,
^
Presidential Prets
Secretary
O n tohat sch ed u le does
the P re sid e n t re ce ive a
p a y c h e ck — teeekly,
" / S sem i-iceekly, tehat'?-'M is t - M ie h e llp 'M e C a r th v
-th»re-«h<mld t>e four or fivf. Oscars, fnr—
~ F a K rC H A R L E S C. ED W A R D S,
terrific performances in a year. Why do
[, Director^ fe d e ra l fo o d and
we insist on picking the best of everything?
W h a t a re th e harm ful
effecU o f m onosodium
F O R D R . M A R IE H iN R IC H S ,
glutam ate o n the huAmerican Medical Association
m an body}/' U oes it deW hat causes p e rito n i­
stra y b ra in c e lls , and w hy Is it not
tis? Is there a c u re ?
banned in the U n ited Sta tes as it is
— M rs. B e rn ic e A n d e r­
in R u ssia ?— E d w a rd lA n , Fred o n ia ,
son, D evils L a k e , N J } .
N .Y .
R td a ,
• Peritonitis may be either acute or
istration released a report on the safety
of MSG indicating that since its use was
chronic. It is an inflammation of the
The President is poid monthly.
not found to benefil infants it should
membrane that lines the abdominal cav­
not be added to foods speciBcally deity and covers such organs as the stomaigned for them. No evidence was found
F O R S A M M Y D A V IS
flch. inleatines. etc. It is caused by a
A s a perform eiTdo~yoa---- imnb«r-of~pDBsiblo~COTiditioiis; to c Ittis -- "of hazard from the reasonable use ol ’
c o n sid e r . your s e lf 'a n
tfTe^reteawi-ofinfective-organismi. usnal_MSG in foods for older children and
e n te rta in e r firs t o r a_____ ly soma type of bacteria from the in- ^adults, except for those-who are-individ---^u LesfCTtiinil tracC Inta th<F«WBa lB»rc «Vity:--- unli/ 8cnailive_lQ lhcuul>9t*n<;e,“ :I_l waa
te r,.C h ica g o , i l l . ____________ This may come about as a result of rup.--- rocommended that use of MSG be perture of the appendix or a history of
mitted in processed foods (with labeling
those
peptic ulcer, colitis, typhoid^ever, etc. It
clearly
• Tm black (int and an entertainer aeewho want to avoid
and the sale of
^•ometjine* iUso occiir»^tiiSn^an~^perotkk-I-don’t read=»~»CTipr^thont-thliik.
i n g iu h J iE '» m y b m t K e r n V t h n
g fb
[ ’ and
~atIonr~Ap~pr6x
uJ s suffering with peritonitis die, usually
honTe~u^'n^J noF be curfaTIe^
ing to think about it.
N .J.
-F O R -S A N D
C . l / a jp g ii; L U l ^ f t , t L u
jQ u w * .e e 6 sy iU » d « 4 « itli-JiC » lL JK itU a « lltt
polar expert of the 0. S7Nav3 Oceano­
graphic Office, and this is his comment:
“TTTiere Js no'clear evidence that the'volume of sea ice in the Northern Hemis­
phere is either increasing or decreasing.
tional League today is that of the New
York Mets, and young Searer is especial­
ly ' tough. That young man has really
learned to pitcb-in the last three years.
object-to-tfaat. I -wculd only~objeCT if~that~waS all F did. As 1 say,
you can’t have everything.
gin ia W o o lf,” h o w do
y o u fe e l abHut the
p rise ? — D. M . Ja ck so n ,
G reen B a y , W is.
Z IIZ Z jlB h a C ic a c c lH ja a h e iJ L a ie J lU U c a t r t h ar i n - — ^ ::^ * :JC iig = O s< !a r^ M -a w a T d cd - 1 b "n n r."b iit-it
the past decade the ice pack iMy hare
never ititercsted me. It changes people’s
been thickening. One indicator ' is that_____attitude' tgwards yau_and_it_has—been.
temperature trends at some key stations
turned into
commercial thing. I was
~luivg~i>eeu slightly down ward in the-past----embarras.w l >hen my waime went up on
20 years. Another is that, in the past 10
the marquees, proclaiming “Sandy Den­
——jvearg^. there has been an increase in ice
nis, Oscar-winner, Best Supporting Acoff east Greenland and in Canada and
tres-s.” ThM”dMSrt“h7ive~aiiylhing To da
Alaska. But these indictors are too scanty
with anything. I think there’s something
---to~proTe-a-trendi-^di"i” the very long
■wroiig with the~awards.-They- aren’t al- view—over lens of thousands of years—
ways given to those who deserve themwe ars still in a major warming period.
If we have to have the awards, I think
>v«nt to »<>! m I t m o u * p « r» on m q u t t t l o n r Y o u c ^ n t h r o u g h t h is c o l u m n , m nd rr ^ ' "
m nawm r I r o m i K £
u n p o « t cM rd .
_____ to A»l< T h e m Vourme/f. F a m ily W t k l y . 6 4 1 L a jiln c t o n A v « ,. N « w Yo>-k, N .Y . 1 0 0 3 2 : D o n 't to ra ^ l
F a m ify ^ i^ e J d y -
• r im
N M S p a p w Um m sstnm
.
LEONMD S. OAVIDOW, Chairman I MOfitON FRANK, PrMMant mna AibUslMr
W. PAGE THOMPSON. V.P. and Adnrtltint Dir.
liORT f^RSKY, £dHor-in-qt\t9*
Arfvrt(ilnj(-MarXDooild M. HuffDrd; Markatina
OIrmclor: Sid Layarslgr.Nto^.Yotk $«la« Mar.;OaraU REYNOLDS DODSON,
S. Wroa; Rtglonml Salaa M»r_- R oM J. ChrMlan; JOHN E. DAVIDSeW. Art Director
W aile ffixa v^ ^rrS R u M e gL S ttU li^aU ca eiiS aJe s:
MJ(I.. Jm r tanf, jr.; uatroJt Salaa Mar.: lOciianl T. Wom«n*s Editor; ROSALYN ABRCVAVA
Food Editor: MELANIE DC PROTT
Flynn; Southam Adv. Ugr.: Sla«an i. Ahmuty
A»ftoc/«t« Edit^ru: MsJ LBndon, Mil
raUlthmr Hmlmtkmt: WobaifO. Cain____
i»b i i j(, ThaodowrOUa. T—n r t
.
L m Clfi&, V .P .9 m nd C o -O (f# c to rs; R e b ^
J. Opp«n»MlmM', Wmit Coast
H . W « r r k it t« T h o m a * H . O 'N e il, M « n « « « r a
Art
H9tmn HanUlton. Marlanmi VUxny
ProducHon: M«lboum* Zlpprfch* Director;
N*wftp«p«r S«rvJc«s: Promotion, Rob«ct
Frmncls Fot^y, MmrtMgmr: M«rtln
ViMficr; M *r£ntfn^im e~cm nrY ttsr------C d t t ^ l * A d « r./j^ n j ^
^
9UmraindnK,
-------------------------H -r. t o o a
You «r» Invifd to mM
it
i/f
or cemm*nt« abovt any mmUrlsI in Fsmlly Waafc/y.
FmmJJy Womkty, 641 Laxinjrton.Avanua. Maw Yof*. N.Y. 10022.
W r if ta S ^ t£ » X d H o f. ‘
■
............. ---------------
-----------
t
------- \
.
'
L { '" . ' * ■
■ ■ ■■
' ,
—
;"7
. .'
----- ■ : ---- -— L. .'... '.■ ■
'
^ •••
' ' ' ,..y
.
A.
—
■ ■: ’
V-
.
,- ■
■
..... ' -
— - r - - -------
i
Marlboro Cookout Offer
m a riu u iU ' v u i i i i i i j .
" A C o o lco irt A p r o n . H u gg ed
R iu lif iy a
Ib e g ia iu iS J if fa m o u s
le m ra n
\ BranrilniJ Iron. Si» 'oii I’un ((‘I! vmir sirjiks ;inari
(iranrJ >m rare, iiiedjiini. iir ki‘)I ili»iif| Vriisiiri'N
l.r.i iiiciics from lensili-'filfi’l >li-mIn •
•«(iiiii-iiirnc(l liiiiiiiif. i l iiw iiiiii’ >ii ii)i m
iiaii!' wIiiTi' M's hiiiiili.
Ib U lo: M«ilbon> CooluMt OAw. P.O. Boi tSCfi. WnttMMy. N m Vock IIS90.
'
Enclowd a n 2 ind p in tls Irom a pack or bo« o( Maritoro.
n u s t m im t j )Maflbwo Cooluwl O um iH »t S3 SO aad>.
MAME_
ADOR£SS_
CITY_
Kings; 20 ra g ."ta f1.3 mg. nicoiitw 1 0 0 'r 2 2 m o " ia r " 1 Sm a.nicMi m w .D M CiM f in t FTCRlitiwl N « : 7a -
mmm
\irrlll i i i n i
lllll
J tate.
I2IP code:
M A j t 1 0 D A Y N O - R I S K C O u P 'O n
I
I
I
P A L M
C O M P A N Y ,
i
OUat '
~ F a m it y ^ W e e K iy " l} v M e .ii, io n
D * p c . 5 2 4 1 , 4 9 0 0 N .W . l S B t h S t , M t e m i , F l o r i d a 3 3 0 5 4
' P le a u c s e n d m e t h e ite m s c h e c k e d b e lo n g I u n d e n U n d i f I a i n n o t
c o m p jc td y
1 r n ^ y r e lu r n w i t h i n 1 0 d a y s f o r a p r o m p t a n d
c h e c k o r m . o . f o r $-
is
I
Send No MoneyCharqe Your Order
nraavorni
i o f 6 G o l d I c e T e a S p o o n s (# 6 7 5 0 ) O' $ 4 .9 8
( A d d 5 5 ^ ^ s l a g c p e r s c l) _______ _
NAM E-
ADDRESS-
-^ A T E - Z IP -S A ^ V E -$ ia o ^ O rd cr^ 2 A la -fo r-o n ly _ S 9 ^ d a n d -w e !IL p a > i-lh c _
C IT Y -
Q
SPECIAL
p o s ta g e . E x t r a set m a k e s a w o n d e r f u l gift.
NEW LOW PRICE
•A O n c - t in ic SU
_ - &
r
k
‘ d t : " ja s^ u x -s s l j s .
It
E u ro p e ,
a p p ro a ch
ro u n d
p a y in g
t r ip
on
jsa.
/■•■I
V
lit t le
as
$210
je t o r e v e n
o f th e m
le s s o n
w ill g o a n d
It h a s ta k e n m e y e a rs o f E u ro p e a n
p la c e .
I
a lit t le
b it a b o u t th<i
n eve r ra cc
fro m
I e n jo y - (e t t lin g
Vi»8
c a u ^ ''‘^ ' ‘ ^ n t l y c t e a r 'o u T 'i n v ^
c a r r y s t o d jT u n t il n e x t s u m m e r .
S t i r n i l y o u r t a l l d 'r in k .s w i t h th e s e s t r i k i n g l y
g r a c e f u l g o l d c le c t r o - p l a t e d ic e le a s p o o n s . T h e
, s p a r k l i n R - s t a r p a t t e r n o f t h e s e s li m b e a u t i e s is
^ f i n t _ & c u l p t u r c 4 - i n l i f e - t i m e s t a in le s s - s t e e l - e iK l—
t h e n e le c t r o - p la t e d w i t h g e n u i n e 2 4 K t . g o l d . T h e
f i n a l - r e s u lt is a s p o o n o f e x q u i s i t e b e a u t y t h a t
y o u ’l l u s e w i t h p r i d e a n d a s e t o f th e s e m a k e s t h e
p e r f e c t g if t . N o o n e w h o h a s e v e r se en th e s e h a s
f a i l e d t o f a l l i n lo v e w i t h t h e m .
O F F E R
W IL L N O T B E R E P E A T E D
I H I S S E A S a i S i --------------------
A s w e s u d — t h i s is a l - ( i m e s l o c k c le a r a n c e s a le .
O f f e r w ill n o t b e r e p e a te d th is y e a r a n d s u p p lie s
a r e liin it e d . T o a v o id d is a p p o in tm e n t, m a il co u^ p o n h e l o w - l o d a y l j ________
_________ , __________________!
to
fin d
it is g o o d to a v o id
lu x ­
lis h .
a lw a y s
H o t e l,
Y o u th H o ste l
h a n d s o m e o ld s a i l ­
fjie ~ “ K o y a T T a i a c e
it
fo r
th e
b ase
o f th e
M a tte r­
K in g ’s
a d v e n tu re s o m e tr a v e le r
Ja p a n e se
of
L a te r
w a it e r s .
The
c o m m u n ic a t io n s ?
in
th e a f t e r n o o n ,
Eng- ‘
1 sta rt
“ w a l k i n g d o w n t h e m o u n t a i n a g a in "
fro m
i n g v c .s s e l b u i l t i n 1 8 0 8 . It Is a n c h o r e d
m is t a k e
th e
S c h w a r s e e . o n e o f t h e to p
c o f f e e a n d s a n d w i c h e s . A n d s u r p r is e !
la n g u a g e
t
c a r r i a g e s , o f h ik e r s
ti!l i u y e ~ f a t x s ~ t h g - M a t t e l l i o r n ; ->j n i l —
f ir s t
do
of
and
down
In S t o c k h o lm , f o r e x a m p lc T T m a y
S c h w a r s e e to Z e r m a t t , p a .s s in g
S « 1 s s T :lim b c r s “ o ir t h c ~ t n il|-w h D -B iv c — m e a c h e e r f u l “ G r u e z i ” ( G o d ’ s b le s s ­
in g )
and
a b so rb
s lo p p i n g
th e
q u ie t
o c c a s io n a lly
b e a u ty ,
th e
to
w ild
f lo w e r s a n d t h e v i e w f a r b e lo w .
M a y b e o n e d a y I w ill h a v e the
c h a n c e lo v is i t “a ll'o f-th e -to p _ sp a s _ Q f____
^ h e w o r l d , ta IT c ~ lh e b a i h s , d u n k
w a te rs
and
in d u l g e
h e a lt h
b in g e . I d id
m y s e l f in
a
th e
b ig
d o i t r e c e n t l y in
d t f f e r c n t ” c t t i c 5,
w o t l l d n e v e r s t a y - a n y w h c r e c h « r " A T id
tw o
e v e n i f y o u c a n ’ t s p e n d t h e n ig h t . i L
h a v e b e c o m e f a v o r it e s o f m in e . T h e
b o th
i s w o r t h w h i l e j u s t t o s lo p f o r l u n c h .
f ir s t w a s B a d e n B a d e n i n
The
s h ip
in
b e rs
of
H o ste l
is
f ille d
th e
w it h
voung
m em -
In t e r n a t io n a l
A .s s o c i a t i o n ,
of
: n o n m e m b e rs c a rn s ta y
Y o u th
c o u rse ,
but
f o r a s l i l l l e T is "
^ $ 2 :6 0 " p e r — T t ig h f .— O n e - d r a w b a c k ;
ilie s .
th e
b e a u t if u l
ro u n d e d
B la c k
by
you
have
i m a g in e
o ld
c ity
been
th e
o f
th e re ,
you
g re a t c h a rm
B «rR « o
of
i n - M f> r» i
th e
F o re s t).
Oos
of
w h ic h
G e rm a n y ,
v a lle y ,
su r-
S c h w a r lz w a ld
( tn e
The
sp a
w as
s ta rte d
- f o r - t h c - R t 5 n w m - s o ld i < w s - a n d _ a i_ C f ljd lL
a s 2 6 0 A .IX - w a s - J c n o w n th ro u g h o u t
'.ililK it u
u n t il
-th e
o f 6 Sp ^ n » ^ O n iv
B r ig u e . a b e a u ­
s t a t i o n s , t h e r e is a s m a l l h o t e l w h o s e
Y o u ’ll
canno t
C o m p le te S et
fro m
lio m a n
D e s p itc
th e
r u in s .in
th e - a r e a .
s u r r o u n d in g
sno w y
m o u n t a i n s o f t h e S c h w a r t z w a l d . th e
-te m rn h a c .m i l d
w in te rs nnH
is n e v e r ^
F o u n d e d in 1 0 7 0 , it h a s m o r e w o o d e n
h o t i n t h e s u m m e r . A t t h e b e a u t if u l
b u il d i n g s
a n d fa s h io n a b le
th a n
any
o th e r
c it y
in
B re n n e r P a rk
H o te l
E u r o p e . T h e s e a r e w h a t g iv e t h e c i t y
y o u w ill fin d w e a lt h y A m e r ic a n s w h o
w hen
ta k e
~T'f ir p f ‘=T iT = r in T r r t h c i r ^ l i o r s c .s ;.r ir ith e re
co n rs c ;
is
w a ,^
a
b ir t h d a y
C T le b r a t e d
in
in
one
G r i e g ’s
" “ T h i r ^ n g o f N o i ^ a y " — a n d , i n f a c t ,* '
G r i e g ’s h o m e i s q u i t e
n e a r th e c it y .
A n y A m e r i c a n w T io w i s h e s t o t e a r
b a th s
in
th e
t n r ia a t -
a s B a d e n JJa d m _th E L Jim o s t.b e a u lifu l
in Ihe W'orld’^ .
A n o th e r
fe re n t
h e a lt h
fro m
c e n te r,
Baden
q u it e
Baden,
is
d if­
th e
h im s e lf a w a y f r o m th e d e lic io u s N o r ­
fa m o u s F o r e s t M e re - n e a r^ S o u th a m p -
w e g ia n
to n
w jj[l
fo o d
fin d
it
fo r
at
a
th e
to u c h
H o te l
of
hom e
N o rg e
in
in
B c r ^ t e n , w h o s e g r i l l s p e c i a l i z e s in s u c h
250
c lu d in g
fth r ir
hn tr h fr
w hen
I
w as
is
la s t
as T -b o n e
ste a k s
ti_T*-Tnn— rtr__w a s . th e re ).
It
a ls o
has
se v e n re s ta u ra n ts a n d tw o b a rs .
Z e rm a tt i s a l i t t l e t o w n t h a t f a c e s
u p to th e M a t t e r h o r n in S w it z e r la n d .
S o u th e rn
E n g la n d .
F o re st
M e r e is a l u x u r i o u s e s t a t e w i t h a b o u t
A m e r ic a n
d e lig h t s
_
n a rro w -
th e re in th e s u n y o u c a n h a v e te a o r
a c o u n t r y a n d i t s p e o p le .
/• / /
/ /
to w n
go
d ays, but an
\\ k :
v\
is a
p o s s ib le . N o r
t o u r is t s
/
m o d e rn
p la c e
y a c h t ) . V i s i t s a r e . l i m i t e d to o n l y f iv e
/
a
t if u l r id e 5 ,3 0 0 fe e t u p in t o th e A lp s .
a b s o r ^ jin g a s m u c h o f t h e c u l t u r e a s
o p p b s T fe
II
g au g e r a ilw a y
h o rn . A t
a b o a r d a s h ip . A
\
by
Z e rm a tt
1 7 c i t i e s i n E u r o p e it?,
th re e w e e k s .
* m a n , th e w o r ld 's o n ly
\\
it
S h e h a d v is it e d
b u t I l i k e to s t a y a b o a r d t h e a f C h a p -
\\
a g a in .
s ic a l b e lls .
u r y sp o ts i f y o u r e a lly w a n t to k n o w
r\
and
o v e rh e a rd o n e t o u r m e m b e r in a N ic e
d i n e s o m e t im e s a t t h e G r a n d
A ,
a g a in
a n d s k i e r s , a n d o f g o a t s s p o r t in g m u ­
c la s s . O ft e n
' K
back
It
to
.J
me
w e l l f ja v e s t a y e d i n B r o k e n A r r o w . I
C o n t in e n t .
¥
c a lls
Y o u c a n ’t d r iv e y o u r c a r, th e re . Y o u
c o m e ,s o f a s t t h a t t h e y m i g h t j u s t a s
t r a v e l to' k n o w
IC E T E A
SPOON S
as
a
c h a rte rs . S o m e
k C lca ru n c c S.]U'
A
T h i s year, a n e stim ate d th re e m il­
lio n A m e r ic a n s —w ill-^ lc s c c n d .~ u p c m -----
a cre s
a
of
b e a u t if u l g r o u n d s ,
la k e
and
a
in ­
c o m b in a t io n
n u r s i n g . h o m c - h |p t e l- r c t r c a t - s p a w h e r e
y o u - c a n re ^ t u p
pounds
G u e sts
b e fo re
a re
and
ta k e o ff a
f ly in g
back
e n c o u ra g e d
le a .s t o n e T T O c k ,
but
in
to
spend
som e
fe w
hom e.
at
casea
J .
A
-
Spots Tn Europe
B y
' sh o rrsta y s o f th re e o r fo u r days m ay
b e a rra n g e d .
F o re s t M e r e is v e ry s lric t . Y o u a re
c x p e c te d to r e f r a in fro m a lc o h o l, to
lim it s m o k in g a n d not t u rn u p w ith
a n y c h ild r e n u n d e r 14 y e a r s o f age.
Y o u m a y a ls o n o t take y o u r dog.
B u t. fo rt u n a t e ly , it is n e a r B rig h to n ,
E n g la n d 's fam ou -s se a sid e re so rt, a n d
the a re a is a, v e rit a b le w a r r e n o f h istn ric a l la n d m a r k s a n d fa s c in a t in g
a n tiq u e s h o p s .
P e rh a p s b e c a u s e I a m p a rt Iris h ,
I lo v e a ll o f Ir e la n d . W h ile it is h a rd
to p ic k a n y o n e sp o t o v e r a n o th e r, 1
w o u ld su g g e st y o u sec the C l if f s o f
M o h e r in C o u n t y C la r e , p e rh a p s be­
c a u se s u c h s c e n ic d ra m a in Ir e la n d
rn lh e r iin iis iin l. T h e 7 0 0 - f o o l c liffs
a re o fte n s h r o u d e d in m is t,a n d t h o u ­
sa n d s o f se a b ir d s nest in the sid e s
o f the ro c k s .
W h e n e v e r I a m (Jriv in g in a c o u n ­
try, I a lw a y s lik e to g o s o m e w h e re
o ff the b e a te n p a th . R ig h t n e a r the
C lif f s o f M o h e r . 1 h ad m y h u s b a n d
tu rn o f l o n to a ro u g h ro a d th a t le d
to an o^d s to n e h o u se d a tin g b a c k to
th e 1 6 th c e n t u r y . W e w e re so c u r io u s
ab o u t it th a t w e a sk e d a n e ig h b o r if
th e re w e re a n y w a y to see th e in s id e
o f the h o u s e (w h ic h , in c id e n t a lly ,
------------- h a d -a-s t o n e - ro o f V H a -a s s u F o d -u s -t h a t
th e tw o o ld g e n tle m e n w h o liv e d
th e re w o u ld b e q u ite h a p p y to h a v e
- v iiit o i'a.
- ^ e - w e n t - a r o u n d - t o th e f r n n l nf.
the h o u se w h ic h o v e r lo o k e d the seir.
a n d i l tu rn e d , o u t to, be th e h o u se
o f m y h u s b a n d ’s m a te rn a l a n ce sto rs,
the D u g g a n s (th e m se lv e s in t e r m a rn e d w ith th e f a m ily o f the g ic a '
p a trio t, D a n ie l O ’C o n n e ll)It is f u n to t r a c k d o w n a n c e sto rs
e n o u p h w itfa -th a
H c ir n i
D u b lin C a s t le o ff D a m e S treet. Y o u
c a n a lsb get a^Tfi'ap' O f lie la i
f a n iily n a m e s o n i^ to sh o w y o u , if
y o u h a v c ^ b it o f I r is h in y o u .
Q u ic k - t r ip p c r s to E u r o p e Have
p r o b a b ly n e v e r h e a r d o f A r n h e m , a l­
th o u g h A m e r ic a n s sta rtin g th e ir to u r
o f E u r o p e b y c a r v e r y o fte n d o g o
th ro u g h A r n h e m to the R h in e d e lla .
B u t A r n h e m is v e ry w o rth a s to p , if
o n ly f o r th e m u s e u m th e re . I t h a s
p n c o f th e la rg e s t c o lle c t io n s o f im p re s s io n is ts in “T h e w o r l d ^ M a n e t .
M o n e t,
P ic a s s o ,
Van
G o g h — a ll
b e a u t if u lly h u n g in a w e l l - l i g h t ^
rn p d c rn g a lle r y in the mid.st p f a
lo v e ly w o o d e d a re a c a lle d D e H o jie
A m y
f a m o u s e t iq u e t t e e x p e r t , c o lu m n is t a n d w o r l d
a d v is e s th e A m e r ic a n
t r a v e le r
t o u r is t , “ I f y o u , w a n t t o k n o w
- a - r . n u n t r y .a n r l i t s p e n p l f i . d n n ’ t r a c e , d o n ’ t a l w a v s
f ir s t c la s s a n d d o n ’t s t ic k
ttf t h e l u x u r y
go
s p o ts ’’
V a n d e r b ilt
V e lv w e . Y o u c a n re n t a b u n g a lo w in
the A r n h e m a re a , sta rtin g at a b o u t
J 3 5 p e r w e e k , c o m p le te ly f u r n is h e d
w ith b a th ro o m s. It is a lso a g re a t'a re a
f o r c a m p e rs.
M o n t S t M i c h e l is o n e o f the
w o n d e rs o f th e w o r ld . It is on- the
be tw ee n
m a n d y , a n d b o th a re a s o f F r a n c e
c la im it. A h is t o r ic a l a n d a rc h it e c ­
tu ra l m a rv e l, it is b a se d u p o n a B e n e d ic t in e A b b e y b u ilt b y R ic h a r d 1,
D u k e o f N o r m a n d y , 1 0 0 4 y e a rs ago.
Y o u w ill n e e d to b e in g o o d p h y s ic a l
sh a p e to c lim b the 90Q. steps, to the
A b b e y o n the top. I suggest that y o u
go o n a w e e k d a y d u r in g the s p r in g
o r fa ll, a n d that y o u not fo rg e t to
v isit the g re at re sta u ra n t, L e M e r c
P o u l a r l B e s u re to m a k e y o u r
lu n c h e o n re s e rv a tio n f o r its f a m o u s
o m e le ts b e fo re y o u sta rt y o u r c lim b .
I f y o u c a n s c h e d u le y o u r t r ip to
I t a ly fo r J u ly o r A u g u st, try to get
to S ie n a , a s h o rt t r ip fro m F lo r e n c e
TaT>6 Tn 4 5 m ile s ) f o r the T a m o u s
P a l i a d c l lr C n n t ra d e . T h is is -th e -rc .-e n a ctm e n t o f the m e d ie v d l h o rs e
ra c e s a n d fla g -to ss in g e x h ib itio n s ,
a n d it takes p la c e th e re the first w e e k
in J u ly a n d in m id -A u g u s t , B u t at
a n y tim e ^ i c n a i s a - f a s e i n it i iig - c i t y r
w ith sle e p g o b b le d streets a n d little
sh o p s s e llin g th e fa m o u s - p d n fo rte , a
la rg e s p ic e y m e d ie v a l c a k e w e ll
w o rth t a k in g h o m e . Y o u c a n get to
[b rc n c a . -b u t - ii ’m io h t w a iit to
in c lu d e th e fa m o u s C a s tle B ro g lio , .
o p e n - to th e p iib lic - b y - it s o w n e rs ,th o Ric£LSoli fa m ily , v in t n e r s o f the fa m ­
o u s B r o g lio w ines,.
y t f ia try r f f liT
is th e A lv o r ] P r a ia in P o rtu g a l’s 'A l ­
g a rv e . I t h a s b e e n c o m p a r e d b y w o r ld
B e rg e n N o r y f e ^ ia n N a t io n a l T r a v c T ifl^ t- j^
D e p t . A . 50i5 F //7 /i A v e ., N e w Y o r k , N . Y .
T frfffie m
10017
N .Y . 10017
js l
■A . l O W e s l J 7 t h S t ., N e w Y o r k , N . Y ^ J 0 Q J 7 ,
^ w e n ska
T o u r is t e
F o r e n ie n g e n ,
N a l i M a J T o u r is t - O f ­
M o n t S t. M ic h e l F r e n c h G o v e r n m e n t T o u r -
a ( C h a p iT ia n A m e r i c a n Y o u t h H o s t e l, D e p t .
or
T fU Jte rJa n th
fic e , b e p T T k V 6 0 j ~ T i j r i t ~ A v e . . N e w lT b fk ~ ^
O f f ic e , D e p t . C ,
Y o rk , N .Y .
Sack
10020
610
F if t H
A v c .,
N ew
^
S ie ita I t a l ia n G o v e r n m e n t T r a v e l O ffic e ,
J 0 3 8 0 , S t o c k h o lm 7 , S w e d e n
D e p t . M , 6 2 6 F i f t h A v e ., N e w Y u r k , N . Y .
B a d e n B a d e n S t e p h e n G o e r l A s s o n a r e ‘s , 4 !i
10020
E a s t 4 3 r d S t .. N..........
. Y . 1........
0017
C lif f s o f M o h e r T r is h In ie fH S lio H S r - A t f t iH T r , --------- r o r c s t M e r e B i l l y H a m iflO n — i P r o m o lio n f iD e p t. R . 5 6 4 F if t h
A v e .. N e w
L t d ..
Y o rk . N .Y .
1 1 3 - 1 1 4 F le e t S t r e e t , L o n d o n , E . C . 4 ,
10017
E n g la n d
A lg a rv e H e y w a r d A s s o c ia t e s . D e p t . ' E ' , 2 4 5
Zerm <|tt Sw i.^s N a t io n a l T o u r is t O f f ic e . 6 0 8
F i l t h A v e .. N e w Y o r k . N . Y . 1 0 0 1 7 ------------
E a s t '6 3 r d S t .. N e w Y o r k , N .T . 1 0 0 2 !
V .
H o n o lu lu . T h e A l v o r P ra ia h a s se v e n
m il^ a .n f h r a r h r t , an rl (Tip .largp h filftl
h a s p riv a te b a lc o n ie s o v e r lo o k in g the
"SC3 T' A " h a n d s o m c -d o n b le r o o m 'i s ^ 4 0 “
" c s e i H i l o r ^ $ t 8 : 9 0 ^ a d a y, i n d u d i n g C o n t in e n t a l b r e a k fa s t . I n the b a se ­
m e n t is a ' F in n i s h saUita a n d m a s ­
s e u rs w h o w o r k y o u o v e r f o r a n h o u r.
I f y o u d e c id e n o t to g o in t o th e s u rf ,
th e re is a la rg e O ly m p ic - s t y lc h e a t e d .
s w im m in g p o o l. B u i c v e n T r i^ O c f d S e f r
w h e n th e w a t e r is q u ite c o ld , th e s u r f
- s t ill e n t ic in g .' T r « m <in d o iu ,- d r a m a tic . in d ig e n o u s r o c k s o n the b e a c h
c re a te c a v e s a n d p a ss -th ro u g h s th a t
a re fu n to e x p lo re , a n d so m e a re
illu m in a t e d d r a m a t ic a l l y a t n ig h t . ♦
t o w a r d t h e d o o r w a y . T h e r e w a s G e o r g ie l e s s e l m a k in g h is
e n t r a n c e , h a l f jt iu n n in g , h a l f w a l k i n g .
I
in
t h o u g h t , ^ ‘W o u l d n ’ t t h a t b e
a
cro w d
so o n er
had
n o t ic e d
Je sse l
A-Reader-s^emembrance
H e le n
M .
s o u g h t a fte r in
such
th e
th o u g h t
th ro u g h
passed
a
t h a t th e o b je c t o f t h e ir a f f e c t io n
(a n d
I
b e lie v e
h e
r e a liz e d
it ,
be
n o t ic e d
m a n n e r!”
m y
B u t,
m in d
no
th a n
I
w a s n o t G e o r g ie
to o ,
a b o u t
th e
sam e
in t o th e a rm s o f t h e ir c r ip )p le d " s o H ie r - f a t h e r w h d , b u r d e n e d
J lie D a y J M et
G eorgie Jessel
B y
s o m e t h in g ; r J o
and
a b u l g i n g d u f F c l J 2a g . ^ w a s , j u s t a J e w L p a c e s J i e h i i i d J M r ^
w it h
J e s s e l.
T h e c e le b r it y ’s f a c ia l e x p r e s s io n c h a n g e d e v e r s o s lig h t ly .
B u t
it
it w a s
w as
a
c le a r ly
lo o k
t h e h o m e -c o m in g
B u c k s
n o t r e g is t e r in g
o f p r id e .
d is a p p o in t m e n t .
Jessel w as p ro u d
to
be
I
t h in k
w it n e s s in g
0/ o n e o f U n c l e S a m ’s b o y s . . . s a n s t ic k e r -
t a p e , t o b e s u r e , b u t a h o m e - c o m in g s a t u r a t e d w it h W e lo v e
O n e
th e
e a g e r,
.J ,
d ay
a
fe w
3 0 t ir S t r e e t
yo u n g
y e a rs
S t a t io n
c h ild r e n
p a r e n t ly - a w a it in g
th e
back,
m
and
M y
he
t h e ir
o n
a
N e a rb y
m o th e r.
T h e y
in
an d
k is s e s
w e re
tw o
W as
t r u ly a
w e re
ap­
b e n ch
s h o u t in
u n is o n , “ H e r e h e c o m e s !
f o llo w e d
t in y
b o y
and
g ir l in
w h o se
eyes
t h e ir d a d
I
se a te d , I
c e le b r it y .
Je sse l p assed
th e b e n c h
s e e n t h e lit t le d r a m a . T h e n
f a m ily
co m es?”
eyes
A s
o f a
w h e re
w as
a ro se
a r r iv a L o L s o m e o n e - b y _ t r a iiu
S u d d e n ly I h e a r d t h e m
H e re
I. w a s s it t in g
l^ liila d e lp h ia .
t h e ir s ,
a cro ss
th e
w a it in g
ro o m
“ U n c le S a m
w a n t s y o u .’
and
been
le a v e
th e
r a ilr o a d
a n o t h e r c e le b r it y
to g e th e r w e w a tc h e d th e h a p p y
s t a t io n , u n a w a r e
in
th a t
t h e ir m id s t t h a t d a y .
th e re
had
♦
‘F o u r iic o r e
an d seven
r i b s a g o ."
The Great
AmedeaiL
Barbeene::.
made greater.
“A ;
1 . g iv e s s a u c y , s iz z lin g t a s t e
to
s te a k ,
r i b s .- h a m b u r g e r s ^
c h ic k e n — e v e r y t h in g
o n
th e
y o u
g r ill. B a c k y a r d
c u e rs TTave
b e e n
- 18 6 2.
p u F
b a rb e -
b a s t in g
w it h *
T h a t ’s
th e
in c L o L t r a d it io n „ th a t_ m a d e _
th e
'C T r e a F ^ m 'e n c a h
B a rb e -
c u e w h a t it is t o d a y .
THE 8B£AT AHEBICJlH
BABBECOE SADGE
5 oz. b o t tle o f A ? l.® S a u c e
1!^ c u p s k e t c h u p
(5 oz. c a n fro z e n o o n ce n tra te < l
o ra n g e ju ic e
M ix A .I., k e t c h u p a n d o ra n g e
juice. Put in pan and simmer 5
minutes. Makes 2 ^ cups. Brush
evenly over food before grilling.
Baste frequently while cooking.
Great on chicken, ribs, pork,
steak, hambui^era, franks.
J
FAM Hy W EEK LY-
P rep are N o w . . .
F reeze a n d S e rv e L ate r -
CO O KBO O K
r.
____ ’
•
_____
V V ^ H ^ ir A c c e n t ^ ]^ ^
B y
G iv e y o u r s e lf a h e a d s t a r t o n f u t u r e m e a l p la n n in g . W it h
b e a u t if u l C a lif o r n ia
p le n t if u l s u p p ly ,
in c lu d e d h e re .
s e v e ra l e a sy -to -m a k e b e rry
r e c ip e s
a re
s t r a w b e r r ie s
M e la n ie D e P r o ft
in
MOUSSE DEUCIEUSE
T o p p « () w ith S tra w b e n y ^ S a u c a
1. Combine gelatin, 94 cup of the sugar,
and the salt in top of a double boiler.
2. Beat egg volka and rttillc together until
well blended: add to gelatin mixture.
Cook and stir over boiling water until
gelatin is dis^olvfd ahout -it^in.--- —
3. Remove from heat; stir in b r a n ^
and extract. CluU until custard mounds
when dropped from a spoiSH.’
4. Beat egg whites until frothy; add re­
maining V* cup of sugar, a small
amount at a time, beating <»nstently
until.stifiLp«aks_Jiro_fMSiid,^ Fold
whipped cream, blending thoroughly,
then fold into the ctiistard. Turn into a
2-qt. fancy mold (two 1-qt. molds, or
10 to 12 individual molds). Cover with
b e a v y -d n ly a h im iim m f o il and freeu?
5. Before serving, allow sufB(;ient time
(1 or more hrs. if neceasary) for molds
to soften slightly in the refrigerator. Un­
mold onlO-a_chilled-Secriiig plate. Serve
wltli Suawbeiiy Sauce:--- — ... t o to 12 KTvlngi
2 tablMpoon* butter Of marsarlMVi cup lemon luica
(tad
Mlbrifis,'10 (b 15 dnipi
1. Blend cornstarch and sugar thor­
oughly, in. a_ saucepan.. Add water and
strawbeny p u r ^ graduallyT-stirring-un-~
iingrr-stirringco^tantly until mixture is thick. 2. Remove from heat. Blend in the iv tter or margarine until melted, then the
lemon juice. Mix in food coloring, ^
drop at a time, until of desired color.
Chill thoroughly. Jtist before serving,^
stir uuca- until-smooth.
A bout 3 cups sauc^^
Whbl* o r purted. luKiou* CaMomia Bbrawberrlw liav«
A pMdMr of Hot Buttsred Strawbany Synip. ButtarmBK Wafflaa. Strawbany Spraad.
StrawtMny Taa Punch, Ea»y Strawbany Pla, and Motissa Dalleiauaa topped wttfi Strawbany :9a|ic«.
-(CtmtrniMd onpmgt-ajr^- -
Faptilv W teklu. Ju n t IS . 1971
PrfiparR N ow ...F reeze and
I C o n titiu tfd /gpTn jy ig o-Zj -
■
- W J R E & - O F - S IR A W B E R R IE S
P iir c c
fre s h
s J r a w b c r r ie s ,
u s in g , a n
e lc c t r ic
b le n d e r o r a s ie v e . ( T w o p i n t s o f b e r r ie s w i l l
m a te
about
cups
2 'A i
p u r i6 .)
T u rn
in t o
f r e e z e r c o n t a in e r s , ' / i - o r 1 - c u p a m o u n t s f o r
c o n v e n ie n c e .
C o ver
and
fre e z e .
S e t c o n t a in p r o u t a t r o o m
p u r e e is t h a w e d , a U o u t I V i
Nev^r^ e g o Instant
challe n g e
to a ta s te -o ff.
h a s
V e r y
o U
a
e w
n e w
t h ic k .
“ V
e r y ”
t a s t e .
V e r y
t a s t y
F v v o n a i ^ r T t r t e t
a d d r e s s .
W
e
ll
N
s e n d
u s
S e g o
e r y ”
EASY STRAWBERRY PIE
ptcg. ( 3 o z .) c r e a m c h e e s e , so fte n e d
1 W g s p o p n m llk
1 b ake d 9-In. p a s t ry s lie ll, th aw ed
2 ptsw fre sh strawtjerrles
c u p a p rico t p r e s e r v e s
1 ta b le sp o o n w a te r
'
.................
1. B e a t c r e a m c h c c s e i n a b o w l w i t h m i l k
u n t il s m o o th . S p r e a d e v e n ly o v e r b o tto m o f .
In s t a n t
s w
D ie t
F o o d
e e t e n e d .
F la v o r s .
B u t
sh ell.
2 . F o r c e n r e s e r v e s t h r o u g h ' a s ie v e a n d b le n d
V e r y
d o n 't
in
r ic h .
ju s t
a
f r e e
s a m
p le .
T h e n
c o m
w a te r.
Spoon
e v e n ly
over
s t r a w B e f r ie ^
f S t ' i l l p ie u n t il r e a d v t o s e r v e .
O n e 9 - i n . p ie
t a k e
P A STR Y S H E L L
p r o v e - r t r - S e n d - u s - y o u r ^ n a f n e - a n d -
y o u
h rs.
pa stry sh ell. A r ra n g e s tra w b e rrib s uprigTri“tn
a t u r a lly
‘ ‘V
r lia w .
'l
I
N
To
t e m p e r a t u r e u n t il
p a r e
S i f t \ '/s
'A
te asp o o n
it
s a lt
in t o
a
b o w l.
Cut
in
cup
Vi
v e e e t a b le s h o r t e n i n g u n t i l p e a - s iz e d p a r t i c l e s
t o
S le n d e r ,
o r
a n y
o t h e r
d ie t
f o o d
y o u ’r e
a rc
u s in g .
fo rm e d .
S p r in k le
3
t a b le s p o o n s
c o ld
w a t e r o v e r m i x t u r e w h U e t o s s in g w i t h a f o r k ;
s h a p e T n t o a b a l l . O n a l i g h t l y f lo u r e d p a s t r y
la r g e r t h a n a n i n v e r t e d 9 - i n . p i c p la t e . G e n t ­
ly
f it p a s t r y i n t o
yo nd
edge.
P r ic k
b o tto m
p la t e a n d
F o ld
p a stry
and
s id e s
t r im
Vi
under
in .
and
t h o r o u g h ly
be­
f lu t e .
w it h
a
f o r k . B a k e at 4 2 5 .° F . 1 0 t o _ l5 . r a in - . o r j i . n l j L
O n e 9 - ln T p a s t r y s h e ll
To
fre e z e :
F re e ze
w it h o u t
w r a p p in g ,
th e n
w rn p ci-ritrH y in hi-irpjnalitty a l u j n l n u n i f o i l . an d store in fre e z e r.
T o s e rv p : ,T h a w
, ,/ /.
1%
at ro o m
te m p e ra tu re a b o u t
h 'rs'.. o r h e a t in a 3 7 5 ° F . o v e n a b o u t 10
m fn .
S T » » W B € R R Y -T W T O N e « :
cup sugar
2 cujiS P u rie o f S lraw teV rte s, thawed
V i cup le n i^ (ulce
food coloring
1. P u t te a b a g s i n t o a la r g e p r e - h e a t c d b o w l .
P o u r in b o ilin g w a t e r . - C o v e r ; a l l o w t o s t e e p
You b e
F oT
yo u r fre e
-•
s a m p le o f n e w : " V e r y "
5 m in . D is c a r d
u n t il
p u r6 e .
Seoo
In s t a n t D ie t F o o d .
f ill o u t t h is c o u p o n a n d s e n d It t o u ? .
■
le m o n
th e n
ju ic e ,
b le n d
and
in
fo o d
s tra w b e rry
c o lo r in g
2.
C h ill
t h o r o u g h ly . - P u t
in t o
a
s t r a w b e r r y te a .
p it c h e r
and
S tra w b e rry
r> o ur
A bout 2 ^
in
j
I
-S ta te
Ic c
c h ilT e d
q ls . p u n c h
A d d re s s .
C ify ,
(a
d r o p a t a t im e u n t i l o f < Tesii:ed c a t o r ) Cubes
N am e -
t e a b a g s . S t i r s u g a r i n t o te a
d is s o l v e d ,
- Z ip .
Sond to Sooo Very" Flavors. P O Box 848. Hinsdalo. Ill 60521. . I ^ E T T
O llor expires Ju ly 31, 1971 O lfor void whore taxed, prohibilod, or
I a— I
fOstricted Zip co d e necessary to re ce iv e otter Limit one por.family
Fxtm iiy^ W e e k l y ^ U T i^ lS , 1971
S e rv e Later
S TR A W B ER R Y IC E C U B E S
P o u r w a t e r in to a n ic c cu b e tra y to a d e p th o f V4 in. P u t a
f r e s h s t r a w b e r r y in t o e a ch co m p a rtm e n t o f tra y . S et in fre e z e r
a b o u t i ’A h rs. F i l l tra y w ith w a te r a n d fre e z e u n til c u b e s a re
s o lid . F o r e a sie r re m o v a l o f cu b es, a llo w tra y to sta nd at ro o m
t e m p c ra t u re -fo r- a -few m i rfi i tc<, J h en r e lc a .u^ r ii hf:?;. U s e i m m e-d ia te ly o r sto re in a p la stic bag in fre e z e r.
BUTTERMILK WAFFLES
■3 c u p s sH ted aU -p urpp s« flo u r
3 ta b le s p o o n s s u g a r
3 /i te a sp o o n b a k in g so d a
t e a s p o o n s sa tt
----3-agg-whltas----- --------- ---— ----3 e tig y o lk s
c u p s b u tte rm ilk
3 /i C u p b u tte r o r m a rg arin e , m elted a n d co o le d
---- 1
Vfinllla extract
1 . S ift the flo u r, su g a r, b a itin g p o w d e r, b a k in g so d a, a n d sa lt
to g e th e r in to a la rg e m ix in g be>wH '
— 2 —R ca t-e p g -w h k e -t-im til-stifI—n o t^ rirv . peak.s a re fo rm e d . B eat
_______egg y o lk s w ith b u tte rm ilk , b u tte r o r m a rg a rin e , a n d e x t ra c t;
b le n d tfio ro u g h ly .
3 . S t ir m ilk m ix tu re in to d ry in g re d ie n ts o n ly u n til m o iste n e d .
F o ld in beaten e g g w h ites.
4 . F o r e a c h w affle, p o u r batter (a b o u t ^ c u p ) in to c e n te r o f
lo w e r h a lf o f h e a te d w affle ir o n (u s u a lly a v a ila b le in tlfic h o u se w a re s se ctio n o f a d e p a rtm e n t sto re o r f r o m a S c a n d in a v ia n
sp e c ia lty sh o p ) u n til batter s p re a d s to 1 in . f r o m edge. L o w e r
c o v e r a n d b a k e waffle, as m a n u fa c t u re r d ire cts. K e e p w a file s
w a r m u n til a ll a re baked .
A b o u t e ig h t 7 - in . w a f f le s
S p re a d .
T o j r e e z e y y a ffle s ; c o o l co m p le te ly . T h e n sta c k w ith a p ie c e o f
w a x e d p a p e r o r p la s t ic w ra p b e tw e e n e a c h w afH e. W r a p the
sta c k in a lu m in u m f o il u sin g d r u g s t o re f o ld a n d s c a lin g e n d s
Le m o n B rT O ze F
n f pnrlcafc. Free^cT
1
A b r » » x » tu Hl u lW ! N B ~b <lfclH fl.
C re a m y , c r u n c h y a n d c o o l.
H a r e 's t h e e a s y w a y :
----i---------------- ------------ — ----------------------T o se rv e , rem o.y* fro m f r t e z c r th e n u m b e r o f w a ffle s d t s ire d , p la c e o n b a k in g sheets a n d re h e a t in 4 S 0 ° F . -o ven u n t il
c r is p , 4 to 5 m in . O r reh eat in a to a ster.
HOT BU TTERED STRAW BERRY SYRUP
1V 4 c u p s PurAe o f S tra w tw rrie s, th a w e d
•V4 c u p w a te r
cu p sugar
r e w g r a in s sa lt ------------------------------------------------------------—
CUD b u tte r o r m argaH ne
1 V 4 ta b le s p o o n s le m o n ju k *
wntf^r C iig a r. a n d sa lt to b o ilin g in
a la rg e sa u ce p a n . R e d u c e h ea t a n d ' .<im m er 5 'ml-n. ■
Z .'R c m o v e fro m heat. B le n d in b u tte r o r m a rg a rin e a n d le m o n
ju ic e . M ix in re d fo o d c o lo rin g , i f d e sire d .
A b o u t 2 V i cup s sy ru p
„ STRAW BERRY SP R E A D
1 pt. fre s h stra w b e rrie s
1 c o n t a in e r <9 o z .) fro z e n w h ip p e d d e s $ « rt to p p in g ^ th aw ed
1 . S lic e s tra w b e rrie s in to a b o w l a n d c r u s h th em slig h tly . F o l d
in w h ip p e d to p p in g ; c o v e r w it h
fo B a n d
-------2 . Set o u t at ro o m te m p e ra tu re w e ll in a d v a n c e o f s ctV iH g T
A b o u t 3 c u p s s p re a d
- F a m ily
Ju n e J J . J f f f
T
I
I
I
I
I
3 . Ifa m lx lh g boWl
u n t il fo a m y ; g ra jd u a lly a d d s u g » .
B e a t im 't if s tifl a n d gloaey. & t
a s id e .
t cup K e U o g g ^ ^ C o m F la k e
4 . B e a t e g g yoUca i n m ix in g bo w l
C ru m b a
u h t a t h ic k a n d le m o n colOTod.
c u p r e g u l a r m a r g a r i n e or^
S t i r i n S w e e te n e d C o n d e n s e d
'M i D E a i ^ g ^ t l n n u x t u m r g e n t ly
b i it t 'e r , m e lt e d
fo ld i n Bgg w h it e m ix t u r e . ^ r e a d .
c u p J ie a L e in o ii*
e v e n ly i n C o r n F l a k e C ru m b #
R ie o iu t it u t e d L e m p n J u ic e
c
r u s t : s p rin k le to p w i t h re se rv e d
1 l / i ie a t p o o n a u n f i a v o r e d
c ro m b e . R e f r i ^ r a t ^ 2 h o u is o r
ge
e il aa itxi n
g
n
u n t il firm . C u t in t o w e d g e s.
r ~ ....... ........ y to h > ::« n B iT v ln w ~ ~ r— —
3 i a b l e s i to o tia s u g a r -
—i e o n B o r d e n E a _ '
S w e e te n e d C o n d e n a e d M ilk
(N o t e v a v o ra te d m ilk )
1 . C o m b in e C o m F la k e C rt m ib e
a n d m a rg a r in e i n 9 -iq c h p i 6 p a n .
R e s e rv e 2 ta b le e p o o iis l o r t o p ­
p in g : p re ss r e m a in d e r f ir a i ly a n d
e v e n ly in p a n to f o r m c ru s t. C h il L
a ' I n s m a l l s a u c e p a n c o m b in e
^ e a L e m o n L e m o n J u ic e - a n d
g e la tin . P la c e o v e r lo w h e a t a n d
s t ir u n t il g e la t in i s d is s o lv e d ; oooL
I
I
J
I
*
A s t o ld b y G e o r g e C . S c o t t to H e le n D o rs e y
G e o r g e C. S co tt: “ Fm th e W o r ld ’s G rea test
IX
I
have
anyone
th e
I
m o st
know .
m undane
I
lik e
ta ste s
s im p le
S o m e a c t o r s a r e y o iir m e t s , b u t I'm
I ' com e
fro m
s im p le
p e o p le ,
of
n o t.
c o u n try
p e o p le r e a l l y ,
M y
m o st
to
a b o u t e x o t ic
fo o d s .
a n y s o p h is t i c a t io n
W hen
y u t i^ if
p i» > f
of
th e
fro m
on
fe a r
of
g a in in g
•cfg h r . » n t I c n Ti‘r i . 'tm L 'L' ltH»~tt i a i M f ih l y
s p ic e d f o o d c a n be t e r r i b l y g o o d .f o r y o u ,
anyw ay.
I
I'm
d o n 't
a ll
m e a ts.
P e o p le
a re
In m h o<T
te e m .
m eal
I
e x a m p le .
n o t a la m b o r g o a t c a t e r . I ' v e n e v e r
e a le H s H e e p , I c a n 't s t a n d
it .
For
lo v e
a lw a y s
th e fla v o r o f
.t r y i n g
to
p ass
nn*, h ut I
an
B r it is h
A ra b
fo o d ,
c o u n try ,
even
d e a th .
house
is
i t ’s
S o u th e rn
fo o d -i f o r
g ra v y . A n d
I'm
th a t
c o o k in g !
I go aw ay
th e
I
tw o
i t ’s 'd e a t h
w hy.
I
cook
h a m b u rg e rs
jin jio n e
e ls e .
I
cake s.
th e m .
to o ,
and
I
a ll
co o k
I
put
f o r ” 'n ie !
g re a te st
d o n ’t k n o w
M h in g s t o
I
h e r d u m p lin g s and
w o r ld 's
do
I eat
w eeks,
put
h a m b u rg e r
1 ju s t
know
b e tte r
so rts
of
th a n
w e ird
m a r v e lo u s
odd
t h in g s
pan­
in tu
B .- li k c - s h a v p d - o r a n g e - o r - j e m o f t - F H i d -
I h a t s w T f y T v e "n e v e r e n jo y e d a
in
our
1 get fa t. W h en
1 0 p o u n d s W it h
cook.
lik e
in
to
t o c i x i k , but
h t J i l lC . 1 10 S e ~W » iig h t. W h e n
C a n ’t
fo r
lo v e s
c o o k in g
and
T h a t 's w h y
C h r is t in e 's
to
e v e r y t h in g
C o lle e n
d o n e b y p u r n a n a , C h r i s t i n e . S h e 's fron\
4 0 , y o u d o n 't e a t a s w e ll a s y o u s h o u ld .
a lf o r d
b o il
w if e
A la b a m a ,
I c a n 't s p e a k w it h
Scott: "When I’m home fortwo we«ki, I put on 10 pounds.'
m anage
fo o d s .
.S o m e h o w
th o u g h
th e y
Sn3”T[i^’rc superb. I fancy! But it's
hamburgers I do best.
H e re a r e s o m e o f m y r c c ip e s :
GEORGE s c o r r s
HAMBURGERS
"WEIRD”
BU RG ERS
2 lbs. top loan ground sirlo in (o r chuck)
1 la rg e iron sk ille t
S a lt ,
fre sh ly ground pepper
b e e f a d d : 2 tsps. A n g o s t u r a b ille rs , 2
tsps. salt, d a sh fre s h ly g r o u n d p e p p e r
3 n il
L'U p IC c w u ie i. M IX l iv e ll; fo rm
patties. B ro il o r p a n fry . S e rv e o n
O 'e b re a d ( o r d a r k p u m p e r n ic k e l) g a rn is h e d w ith m u sta rd p icK le s.
I . F o r n n n e a t - in t a r - ia r g e - t h ic k r iJ a t t ie s ------------ B u rR fre T ra lla h b : T ^ o rm T : TbsT grouri^^
( iH lo w T iS p b U rH !~ p e r“p e r s o n t ^ P J a c c
b c e f - i n ( 0 ” 8 —t h in ^ l a r g o —p a ttic s— C om ^
sk ille t o i h ig h h e a t; s p re a d sk ille t
b in e 'A c u p c h o p p e d p e p p e ro n i,'
e v e n ly w it h th in la y e r o f s a lt; get s k il­
c irp s h re d d e d C h e d d a r ch e e se w ith 'A
let v e r y hot.
cup
p re p a re d y e llo w
m u s ta rd ; m ix
2. P lu n k in b u rg e rs ; c o o k o v e r h ig h
w e ll. S p re a d m ix tu re o n f o u r patties.
heat t»ntil b r o w n e d ; tu rn , r o o k - n n vp .r. —T o p — e^irh w ith— a n n th e r p a tty . Prffs-;
verse sid e . F o r w e ll-d o n e b u rg e rs,' c o v ­
h a lv e s to g eth e r to seal. B r o il o r p a n
e r w ith s m a ll b o w l w h ile »neat is c o o k ­
fry . Sphead p a ttie s w ith p re p a re d y s jing. rS ra in ( i f n e c e s s a ry ) o n a b so rb e n t
lo w m u sta rd a n d top w ith th in -slic e d
paptrr— S e a so n — w ith — p e p p e r — to taste.
re d o n io n rm g s. It d e sire d , a d d green
•Serve o n sp lit, to asted E n g lis h mufTms,
p e p p e r rin g s, s lic e d ra d is h a n d th in
split o n io n
r o lls
o r g a rlic -b u tte re d
slic e s tom ato. S e rv e o n h a m b u rg e r
Toasted F r e n c h roils.
--- ro lls.
TO P P E R S f O R c h e e s e b u r g e r s
C r u m b le R o q u e fo r t ch e e s e ( o r u se
h u n k s o f A m e r ic a n o r a g e d sh a rp
. C h e d d a r ) p n to p o f c o o k e d b u rg e rs;
ru n u n d e r b r o ile r. T o p w ith y o u r c h o ic e
o f m u s ta rd ( f r o m m ild to h o t ) , c o o k e d
h.iL'on hil.s. th in rin g s o f S pan i.sh .sweel
o n io n
a n d / o r to m a to
s lic e s .
W ILD VARIA TIO N S
B iir c e r s A n g o s t u r a : T o 2 lb s. g ro u n d
B u rn e rs O r ie n t a l: T o 2 lt» . g ro u n d
beef, a dd 2 ‘/ i tb sps. so y sa u ce ( o r
W o r c e s t e r s h ir e 's a u c e ), I tb sp. c h o p p e d
s c a llio n .(o i' o n io n ) , a f e w d ro p s o f
p re sse d g a rlic , fre s h ly g r o u n d p e p p e r to
taste. M ix w e ll, c o v e r tig h tly , an d re -frig t t fa t e -s e v c ru l l im ira. T o rm in t o - p at'ties; b r o il o r p an fry . S e rv e lo p p e d o f f
w ith a g in g e r-fla v o re d c h u tn e y o r g ood
q u a lit y b o (tle d s p a re rib sa u ce .
'VbuHUhe
wm W w^wM m r
HomsethMun
SPCTTPreadHtyrSpread aoftenod
cream cheese generously on buttered
sltcesrof'pumpernickel-breadr Place .
slices of SPAM over cream cheese,
4herrtop-wtth-spoonfuls-of-sweet---fickle relish. Foreasier ei
sandwich into three parts.
sandwiches kids love. Goes great
with sliced tomatoes, pickles, celery,
almost anyintng. Gtvea yocrrrew'BnaGk
or sandwich ideas^every day—
and at every dayjjficest
SP A M ! • Ih «
ira d a m a rk fo r « b lan d ol
________________________ ■c h o p o a r t - p o r t L a h o u ld T i n a a t with- h a m ------
m aat a d d ad . p a c k a d o n ly t t f H ortnaj,
Scottfs Ham bursiars A n g o stu ra.'Says S c o tt, " I iu it know
I cook ham burgers better than anyone e ls e ."
Is Y o u r F a
f fi[e
^ A m eiican Fa
It might be. There’s still time for you to enter the contest that l^ d s
through £T"SttiTe contest to the national finals of the All-American
Family Pagednt at Lehigh Acres, Fla., Aug. 5 to Aug. 14. The finals
will be telecast on Friday, Aug. 13, 1971.
use blank paper to make your own entry form. Here s what to put on
your entry, taken from the ofTicial contcst form:
^
■
1. Give husband’s name, age and education.
^
2. Give wife’s name, age and education. J
3. Home address (include pl^one number).
4. List children, ,with agc-of each.’
5. Give occupation of husband and wife.
6. Answer these questions yes or no:
a. D o you save regularly?
___ byou
ipQiirnnrf!? ........ -................................
-c. D o you invest in stocks, bonds?
d. D o you own U.S. Savings Bonds?
7. What arc your major coricfffiTrtor^lrc~family^TDdayrand bow'does^^
your family deal with them? (Answer in about eight oj 10 handwritten
or typewritten lines— more if needed.)
8. wKy Hfi'ynii think yniir-family-^fmld-be-selected as your state’s ■
All-American Family? (Answer in 10 or 12 handwritten or typewrit­
ten lines— more if needed.)
9. Each membetjof-yoiuJamiiy^ should sign the entry at thc„bQttQnu_
Cut out these instructions and paper-clip them to your completed
10. M a i l t o : All-American Family Search Committee, Dept. FW, 9 2 7 Lin­
coln Mall, Miami Beach, Ra. 3 3 1 3 9 . ( I n f o r m a t io n w i l l b e k e p t c o n f i­
d e n t ia l ; )
"
-
Space does not permit Family Weekly to print all the rules of the All-Ameri­
can Family search, but here are the most Important ones: husband and/or
wife must be U.S. citizens who have lived in their state for at least one
year p r ^ to entry date; only familim with one or more unmarried children,.,
natural or adopted, are eligible; photos Wiust be recent and fulMength; en4ry forms must be postmarked befuiB June
JUNIOR REASURE^
CHEST
T----- D f f t p p S a r
stream.
See him taking time to dream.
P lu s O n«
'M(nuK-One~-
T o a fiv e -le tte r w o r d fo r
the_ a n im a l ^ -sp cd e s th a t o il
p<SOple b e lo n g to, a d d a last
le tte r a n d get a w o r d that
a p p ly to p ^ p l e w h o a rc " k in d
a n d h e lp f u l to o th e r p e o p le
Avbo - g re in tro u M e;----------------------
F r o m a fiv e le t te r w o r d f o r
—t h c - ^ w a lt ic t w c e n th e s e c t io n
o f s e a ls in the a s s e m b ly ro o m ,
ta k e a w i y th e firs t le t te r a n d
get a s m a ll is la iid .
(S e e A n s w e r B o x )
R td d lgj j g - T jt i r —
W h a t T T li io n e y in the h a n d ?
(S e e A n s w e r B o x )
F a }n ily Weekly, Ju n e 13,1971
(S e e A n s w e r .B o x )
ANSWEIt-BOX' _
-3 |s i- 9 i s r v : a u o s n i i j i y
-3 A «q o j X p n v H . ^ i i ) o u l O tpptH
'a u E u in q -u e iu n H :» u {> w n |^
s n B T i.
V A RIET Y *
—An asso rtm ent of
som ettilng f o r everyo ne:
Kello g fl's S u g a r Frosted
Fla k e s , Rice K risp ie s,
Kellog g's Corn F la k e s ,
Product 19, Su g ar Pop s,
Sp ecial K, Kello g g's
R a isin &ran,
and Cocoa K ris p ie s .
10 Ind ividual se rv in g s.
•wo*»
/
m
CO ^H
» IN i» s u G A R
BIRAN
II
MPS
RICE—
ituam
tK K tsm si
of B a ttle C re e K
STO R E COUPON
■ U . G N O C U : W< »UI r » d M m I h u cc
fMsn o m r 3 ^ .f & f .h a n i j l t n c . i ^ H .U r r n t
Ih t s o ( f * r h a « * t>*«n c o m p l M w iin b y
y o u a n d lh « c o n tu m a r . F o r p a y m « n t m « 4
coupon* t o : O C P T . K . ^ f> . O T B O X 1 1 7 2 .
C L IN T O N . IO W A S 2 7 3 2 . C o u p o n
b *
h O A o r a d O A ly i l s u t > m ( t t * d b y i r « U » * r
o f o u r m a rc r v s n d tM o r • c lM r t n c h o u M
•p p « trv w j b y u « * n d -« e « n g fo r. a n d • !
t t M r i» k o f . * u c t i • r « U 4 * r . I n w o ic A S p r o v
U t« p u r c lM O * o f M if f t c t o n t M o c k t o c o v « r
c o u p o n * p r « M n t* d f o r r * d « m p t io n m u « (
b « » l> o w n M o o n
A n y » * l« s t a x
m u s t b a p a n b y t h a c o n s u r r t a r . O n ly o n a
c o u p o n r w la m p t io n p a r p a c k s c ^ O t ia r
ro o d o n ly in tN a U n ite d t t t a t M a n d v o « d
i m e f v p ^ d F i i p d ; ttanxmma. t v x a d . o r r » r -
J<^ogg’js cereal nssnrtmffnts
at your grocer’s
Nm
e o « n p 4 4 a d w f t K . C a s h v a 4 tM ; 1 / 2 0 o l W .
W C tl O O Q S A U U O O M I*AM Y
K a O o flji C o m p « n y
s
I oe o o a o
—
J-
Without Pills
B y
K a te
H o llid a y
Y u u e x p m r ie u c e a r e n e w a l , a -h e p e ,
a n u n d im m a b le lf la s E
t h is is
The room was in an
apartment house in Seoul,
KbreaT^d it was mine dur­
ing the months when, as a
repotter. I covered the pris­
oner exchange of 1953.
had a door made of paper,
and it held an army cot
with a couple of blankets.
a scarred desk, n wardrobe
fashioned from a ' huge
packing box and a ~scmn01 iw d rug. 'Iliere was a
small radio someone had
scrounged for me, whkh
played softly, and there was
the greenish light of early
dawn. . . .
And I am asleep.
I can return to that period
-of—my—lifCr-to ■Ihnt _roomand its lack of luxury, and
the next thing I know it is
morning.
It works for me. I believe
' it will work for you.
The_seoist is no simplc_
thar it^ seems almost naive
in
to
w h ic h
a
t im e
you
and
w e re
d o o r to
o n ce w e re
Cosmetic researchers have constantly borne
in mind this basic understanding of the human
skin in their efforts to find ways and means.to
improve and cherish its most precious quali­
ties. With Oil of .Olay, a unique blend of troplast it is possible to assist nature by comple-
-mcuutng.ttig.flaffi.gf.tli? ffl<;in:s.fl2JMafcaiLaBfL
moisture and help to bring long-term youfh and
beauty to the complexion of women living in
all the differing climates of.the globe.
When the beautifying moist oil is lavished
on your skin nightly before you sleep, and worn
every day beneath your make-up, your com-plexton will begin to benefit immediately. Being
remarkably compatible with the natural fluids
of the skin, the moist Oil of Olay readily merges
wilh nature's existing reserves anSTielps'maintain the vital measures of moisture responsible
for the dew-fresh appearance of a lovely com­
plexion. Youthful' freshness and radiance can
become wonderfully constant on the skin.
In America this unique moist Oil is available
from dru'^ists as Oil orOlay. a remarkabte
b lend, gf-precious^elemcnls .that can being .your
skin a soft, smooth bloom of beauty.
p la c e
u t t e r ly
Beauty Skin-Care Specialists Recommend
h a p p y , a n d s le e p w il l c o m e .
It may be a day you
-spCHl in childhood or a
spot, you visited as a young
adult or a ship on Which
you sailed or the first weeks
of your marriage or, like
me. a battered room -in ~a~
war-torn city. It may be
!o
ta k e a d v a n ta g e o j th e b e a u u jy in g p ro p e r-
t ie s o f t h is m o is t o i l a n d to g iv e y o u r c o m p le x io n
sm o o th n e ss,
c le a r n e s s
a lw a y s sm o o th o n a f ilm
and
y o u th fu l
lo v e lin e s s ,
o f O i l o f O la y o v e r th e
f a c e a n d n e c k b e fo re a p p ly in g m a k e - u p . B e s id e s
u iiJ
a n d
can
h e u u tify in g , th e O la y o il w i l l a s '
point— for me, at least—
in all these tim<:s.and.places;__
I was free of responsibility.
In Seoul, I was given surcea^ from the problems of
raising two small children
alone, and I knew (hey were
well-cared-for at home.
That day with my brother
-te-nalizo—
what life was really like.
-OB-.<ha( ■«hipi-it-wafc-Ufi .tn. ,
the crew (o bring us through
the storm, not to 'me. And
that element is important,
I think.'
Thers ar« what might be
called "tricks” to making
my method work. You don’t
just jump into bed. turn
off (he light, grind down
on your teeth and say to
yourself. "Now 1 am going
to remember a moment
when I was happy.”
First you should darken
the room and get com' fdrtablr." T h e i r ^ ”back—to-your owii-unique,mompnt.
of joy. Start with a detail,
perhaps, and let the whole
scene flow across your consciousness. If the day's
cares intrude, if thflit bill, or
that busines/' appomtment
looms, press it firmly away.
Tell yourself. JikV Scarlett, ,
_thal you’ll think about it.
s u r e t l i a l y o u r m a k r - u p - h a s a p e i j e a la s t t m ^ j^ t o w .
enough
t im e s
only requisitt is that it
-filled^ you. With-jcontcnlmcdn!
A r e a s w h e r e a g e - s i g n s f ir s t b e g in to s h o w n e e d
Every day vour comtnexi
^ n d - t h t t t r i t - b r in ^ » - v o u - p le a >
in t o s l^ p .
How does it work?
It is well-known among
sciieolists that one of the
underlying causes of iiisom-
U
can grow a little
= ^ > v c lio r,-4 a * /iih ljc c a i'id _ ll)r -_ w iili-ii;jc n ia r.k a b .lc :—
' surife' I&~remembt r ~ l '
Relive the moment in de— the— colors;— aounds,smells. the sort of day iT
was, if it'was rainijngfSf
(he wind was strong, if you
were alone or wilh other
peace. Relive it Fee/ it
again.
We all have had such
moment^ different for each
of us. And thus, by choos"ing'O ur own "secret”-place
and time, we can feel again
our iov.,_rclim—and rtcapa-
b e a g a in -
s le e p ’
ADV.
~ t b ~ s t a ie ~ ilT C ^ i> b a c f r 1 r r - y im r 'm in d
o f t h in g s a s t h e y
w h a t o p le
e 'fts
n s th e
e x tra
r ic h
c a r e a t T i i g h T : 'M a s s a g e '^ > it ~ x r f ^ - O la y -
m ra
a m rM e _
£ k_ ~ .a iid
iiij> --itJ1
_ a U________
, ........
. s h itx - .1 n ro —
.___
“ W n a - o r t r o p i c a l m o i s t o i l s w h i c h h a s ^ U u ^ i n ---------- t i x s u e s - ^ a i m m d ^ j y g m _ e y E J °
,
c h e r i.s h in g a b i l h v t o h e l p c a p t u r e a n d m a i n t a i n
~thc pi’ecitms-bloom of true-complexioa bcautyr
~ 'The fine, fair promise of skin beayty is inilialiy determined beneath the surface of normal
skin where the tiny oil and rnolsture reservoirs
liratr. balance by releasing just theTigFt natural noufislimerfrTo k « p I
ion soft, supple and gloriously alive.
nia is the fear of letting the past, one can escape
down one’s guard against the crises of the present;
danger. Insomniacs actually by consciously turning one’s
soek to-ciiamine ^nd hold—back— on thB day-ro^3ay
on to their problems^-c6iP= t ” oMems^JtJ»m^pnyiii8.-illsciously or not. But doc- n e S s and s o <>n, one will
tors declare that, -by de- ."lower his guard” and^
liberately reluming to some . therefore get to sleep,
happy, carefree moment in
That room' is’ not the
'f a m U y WeefcTyC-funt 1S.^J'971
s m o o t h a n d b e a u t i f y t h e s k i n . ______________________________
to
nut
r e a liz e
nf
100
th a t 9 9
t h e r t js
_
n o th in g y o n c a m j o a t th at
_ p ^ i c u l a r ; in s ta n t to s o lv e
y o u iL jiiD h f iin s r is o lS S H ^ t ll
“ (W n g is t ^ g n o r c - t b e n C iu ia r :^
- T c c a i n r m b r e p le a s a n t tiiiie .
------ I» ^ lh i» ~ ^ s c a p i» r o 7 —
wrong with thiit? It’s not as
if you were fantasizing. ICs
a g e n e r o u s q u o t a o f 7 1 1 ic . b e a u t i f y i n g m o i s t . o U ~
not as if you were utterly
\v f 9 r i * f divorccd from reality. You
"ai^e^nlyrecalhng^thatuniicK
a n d la s t in g a p p lic a t io n o f y o u r lip s t i c k .
really existed. A'nd you
feel that you may know it
again, despite (ho upheaval
only plac^ and time I can pickcd lilacs in Chicago of the present day. It is
go back to. and you may and sold them on Sheridan this sense of renewal, this
find you want to remember Road, delirious wilh thcir--hope,-this undimmable flash-more than one episode in perfume. Or a night on a of things as they once were
yuuL-lifer J: rcanr faK r i f n U y — ^ t u i m . t u v ^ d = r t ' t o r w c g t a n t>e—again—iwhieh sink into oblivion by re- freighter in the Pacific, opens the door to sleep.
ciilling a day in my early with the wind crying from
I( works Ipr me,- as I
childhood, for ins(ance, the foggy darkness.
have said. Try it and sec if
when my brother and I
TTjere is one underlying it works for you. «
T o k e e p y o u r lip s s o f t a n d p r e t t y , g iv e th e m
Q
U IZ /B y ~ T ^ d
2 Great BiQns for-Collectors ^Investors—
C a r r in g t o n -
ilo w M a e h r
D o Y ou l ^ o w
A bout Your C>wTi
Anxieties?^
T ru e or F a lse :
A
a b o u t
a
g r ip in g
a n n o y h im
to
m an
is
w o m an
m o re
w h en
m V a lu cr!
Rare Circulated and 1 9 6 4 Silver Mint Conditloii Sets
in h ib it e d
h er
h a b it s
t h a n a w o m a n is in a ir in g h e r c o m -
'p l a i n t s t o ~ a ~ m a ii
a n sw e r n u m b e r 7 )
T h is m a y b e th e A g e o f A q u a riu s , b u t it’s a lso th e A g e o f
A n x ie t y . I f y o u t h in k y o u ’re m o re n e rv o u s, u p tig h t, tense, amd
jit t e ry th a n th e re st o f th e p o p u la t io n , sit b a c k . . . r e la x . . I
a n d ta k e th is litt le t r u e -fa ls e q u iz .
1 . A s w e r c a c F l n i a a i e age, w e h a v e a, t e n d e n c y to b e m o re
re la x e d a n d le s s a n x io u s a n d tense a b o u t e v e ry d a y situ a tio n s.
— 2 . T h e p e r fe c t io n is t w h o h a s e v e ry t h in g p e a t, o r d e r ly a n d ,
a lw a y s ju s t rig h t is le ss s u s c e p t ib le to te n sio n th a n th o se o f us“
w h o a re c o n s t a n t ly t r y in g to " c a t c h u p ."
3 . A c o n s ta n t s tru g g le w it h o u r a g g re ssiv e im p u ls e s is p e r ­
h a p s th e m o st c p m m o n c a u K o f te n sio n a n d a n x ie ty .
4 . A l l o f u s s u ffe r m o m e n t s o f a n x ie ty b e c a u s e o f o u r d e e p _ ro o te d d e s ire a n d n e e d to b e d e p e n d e n t o n so m eo n e.
5 . S o m e n e rv o u s p e o p le re a c t to a tense s itu a tio n b y b e c o m ­
-----------i n g s In g g is h T m d -d is in tc re s te d ;--------------------------------------6 . T h e first s t irr in g s o f o u r a g g re ssiv e im p u ls e s b e ^ w h e n
■ w e e n t e r s c h o o l- a n d c o m e in t o c o n t a c t - w it h - o t h e r c h ild re n . ■
T . A m a n is m o r e in h ib it e d a b o u t g r ip in g to a w o m a n w h e n
h e r h a b its a n n o y h im th a n a w o m a n is in a ir in g h e r c o m p la in ts
to -a -m a n .------------
ANSWERS
1 . F a l s e , C r o s s in g o v e x th e th re s h o ld in t o m id d le age is a n
e n t ir e ly n ew e x p e rie n c e w h ic h , in itse lf, c a n cre a te a n x ie ty .
P o c t o r s-agFoo-t h a t so n nw p e r so n s-adHiK«-to^-<haoge.and-new~ot s s - ,
m u c h better th a n o th e rs, b u t n o n e w ith o u t a n x ie ty .
- —
2 . F a l s e . T h e p e r fe c t io n is t is u s u a lly so c o n s c io u s o f ^ p c r f t c — tip n " th a t h e c r e a t e s h is o w n ten sio n w h e n e y o f i J h i B ^ is n ’t ]« K t rig h t. P s y c h ia t ric <ests p r o v e that i h ^ - W h c T ^ r e a lw a y s try in g
_h u tL n o t_ su cc e cd in g to " c flt c h :X ic !lle a r n to liv e w ith o u r im p e r?T-witfavthe T <S nit-that th ey ’ re l ess te n se r
:-Q ur a g g r ^ i v e im p ulses
w h e n w e w a n t to th ro w so m e th in g at th e b o ss o r t rip th e little
b ra t nejct d o o i^ is _the_ m o st c o m m o n ^
te n sio n a n d
a n x ie ty in o u r e v e r y d a y liv e s . _
4 . T r it e . A s c h ild r e n , w e u s u a lly e sta b lish a p a tte rn o f b e in g
d e p e n d e n t o n so m e o n e , w h ic h c o n t in u e s to a le s se r d e g re e as
-w e -g ro w - o ld e r;-'C o rt v e r s e ly , p s y c h o lo g ists h a v t tested m a n y
ndulLs w h o a c t u a lly e x p e rie n c e te n sio n i f th e y d o n ’t h a v e
s o m e o n e to d e p e n d o n th e m .
5 . T r u e . P s y c h ia t ris t s a re f a m ilia r w ith th e d e fe n s e -m e c h a n is m
th a t a llo w s a p e r s o n to "a n e sth e tiz e ” h im s e lf b y b e c o m in g
s lu g g is h a n d d is in t e re s t e d w h e n fa c e d w it h a tense situ a tio n .
6 . F a l s e . A g g r e s s iv e im p u ls e s re a lly b e g in in the w o m b , a cr n r d ln g - t d -m a n y - p e d ia t r ic ia n s , a n d c a n 'T rm e rg fr fu H -fe lo w n ~ iivin f a n c y . H o w o ft e n h a v e y o u seen a n u rs in g b a b y b e c o m e e n ra g e d b e c a u se h e w a s n ’ t b e in g fe d fa st e n o u g h ?
-7 . T r u e ..
h a y e a te n d e n c y to be m o r e a n x io u s a n d tense
in a c o n f r o n t a t io n w it h a w o m a n b e c a u se ^ e m a le is m o re
in h ib it e d a b o u t " s o u n d in g o ff” to th e litt le w o m a n th a n sh e
is in a ^ n g h e r g r i ^ to h im . A s k a n y m a r r ia g e c o u n s e lo r. ♦
Obsolete set (A). When was the last
^^r-tiraftyoihsawan-lndian Head-pefmy,
Buffalo nickel. Mercury dime,“tiberty quarter and Liberty half-dollar?
H e r £ i r n i D i3 & 3 ^ e T r :a r e ^ a it " o f -
>5
r n » C O t t E C M K S it M D I H V n T O K S
Both of th'ese^ets-^ill”be~sure to
increase itrvalup^nd are wonderful
^btrthday=and=
'Set^(B)-ts-3minctrctJlated::rtiirrtrset---- different-and-valuabler-Mounted-in^
silver coinsl-lncludes penny, nicl^el,
dime, guartar and tha miiqh
_Coin Set (a) obsoTete $5.98, Coin
5 S -
^ _________ ^--- m a il 10 DAY NO-RISKXOUPON TODAY! ^ --------------- 1
I
P A L M
C O . , Dept. 5 3 7 2 , 45 00 n !W. 135th Street, M ia m i, F lo rliU 33 0 5 4
- I ----- P te a se se n d m e th e items^ c h e c k e d -b e » o w r-f u n d e rsta n d if I am not c o m p le t e ly *
I
. • < r '__ • 1 ____ _
___ _
/\
r\
ir « # i t l l
satisfied,
I may return
any within 110
days 4for
a full and complete refund. E n clo sed
■
is c h e c k o r m .o. fo r $ --------------------'
I
_____C o in S e ts (a) O b so lete (# 0 1 0 3 1 8 ) ® $ 5 .9 8 p lu s 50C postage.
I
_j_____________ CoiaSets (bUJncirculated ( # D X < 1 3 1 9 ) @ M . 9 Q plus bO ( posUge._______J
I
I
Nyn
Ad c^rsssC ity_
'
□
I
I
F a m i l y W * e k li/ , J u n e I S , 1 S 7 1 .
after Kennedy silver half-dollar;
□
-S ts te -
-Zlp-
Send C .G .D . I enclose. $1 goodwill deposit for each s e t ordered and w ill pay
postman balance plus a ll postal charges.
^
SA V E $ 1 .0 0 . O rd e r both sets fo r only $ 1 0 .9 6 and we’ll pay the' i ^ t a ^ .
'
j.
I-
1
H e lp s T h o u sa n d s
q u if sm o k in g # d r in k in g
. » c u r e m e n t a l illne«»
. . . o v e rco m e fe a rs,
~
a n x ie t ie s
g iv e s m a n y
a n e w " le a s e o n life " !
F A S H I O N /B y R o s a ly n A b r e v a y a
lers
Su]
Sporting
L ook s
H Y P N O S I S : Theory,
Practice, and Application
by R ap hap I H . khpdot
Y
e s , h e re a r e ^ d r a m a tic " in s id e
s t o r ie s " o n h y p n o s is , t o ld b y
o n e o f A m e r ic a 's le a d in g h y p n o ­
t is t s ; H e r e , g r a p h ic a lly e x p la in e d
in l a y l a n g u a g e , a r e t h e t e c h n i q u e s
f o r in d u c in g h y p n o s is a n d f o r in ­
t r o d u c in g h y p n o t ic a n d p o s t- h y p - ,
n o t ic s u g g e s t io n .
Y o u ’ ll r e a d s c o r e s o f in t r ig u i n g ,
tr u e c a s e h is to r ie s . R e a d h o w
R a c h m a n in o f f c r e a te d h is b e a u t i(u l S e c o n d C o n c e rto — u n d e r h y p -
T h is v o lu m e is s o a u t h o n t a t iv e
a n d e x c it in g t h a t T h e B u lle t in o f
th e S o c ie ty to r C lin ic a l a n d E x p e r i­
m e n t a l H y p n o s i s s a id , " I t Is u n ­
q u e s tio n a b ly o n e o f t h e b e s t e x ­
p o s it io n s o f t e c h n iq u e . " T h e N e w
Y o r k S t a t e J o u r n a l o f M e d ic in e
s a id , " . . . t h i s v o lu m e c a n b e r e c ­
o m m e n d e d a s a n in t e r e s t in g , p r a c ­
t ic a l m a n u a l. "
N o w y o u m a y o w n th is v ita lly
im p o r t a n t , h a n d s o m e ly c lo t h
n o s i s f H e r 6 ' t o o is t h e s c i e n t i f i c
e x p l a n a t i o n o f w T ia t a c t u a i t y h a p
Lw h en s u b j e c t s a r e p u t u n d e r
.
^
*
. i
o n ly $ 1 3 5 p p d ., t o c la im y o u r c o p y
o n o u r N o - R i s k M o n e y B a c k G ju a r
homa~ fo u iin e ti, i t o r t y o u r o w n ih p p .'F R E E C o lo r
B ro c h u re th o w a y o u - H o w t o - J « o r n p r o f e t t lo n o l
lowKer
unO‘"fkio Bf &tiU|y"Ot>i r0 1lofr
>, FB'EE, 3 'm o n lh » tu ^ tc r ip V lo n to "F lo W e r T a ilc " .
ifie ~ p 'o l> !T < d n o n ‘ fo r h o m e f lo w e r 'c J e ilg n e r jI FTo ro I
A r H C e n te r {H o m e S tu d y D iv .). D e p t, 4 8 f . 16 2 8 E.
M c D o w e ll R d .. P h o e n ix , A r iz . 8 5 0 0 6 .
C ity-slick ensem ble In thrM
parts of pure cotton: knit JerSBy"top" with niatchlfTg-^horts^
and hiitfnn-dnMin-^ldil— Erom_
C ooir nw nantic ankl«-l«ngth
d re ss se ts a sum m er moo^J In
» ric k ra c k 'p a tte m e d Ja c q u a rd
all-cottm w knit^fttfnL.'Knltiqua. ..r
bag: E>6fan;'5hoes; Socialites.
S a n t' Angelo for ^ l l y
Gee,
An a r tis tlc - a n c ia a v o r,- th is
mutli-colored je an s and body-shlrt- doo,-<jMlgne<Mi»'^®-cot—
a re fro m
Jo y ce .
E N G I N E - B R IT E
C l e a n s O r e a s y , D ir t y
E n g in e s o n T r a c t o r s ,
P o w e r M o w e r s , A u lo s !
S P R A Y IT ON . . .
T u rn * g r e j s e Into s o a p y sub s t«fte « t h a t w a s h e s aw ay!
_ f iU N K ^ > B O A A T O f t lC S , IN C .
U 2 9 W. M t H . CJUcac*. I l k M t s a
m
o
UFARIIUR flini:
8 5 % O FF
D E A L E R 'S w
P R IC E S T v
• BUY Omi^CT • » DAYS FREE TRIAL
Body Aid* &d.9S up. Tiny All in-lhe t* r;'
B«hind-tha-Ear;Ey« Glass Aids. Low as $10
monthly. N6 interest. One ol largest sel
ections Vaiy low Battery Prices. No sales­
man will call. Wrtte.SfUOYD Co.p *
-Ow»t.|i w , s M . atii a . gp d it o t A - m ^ iw
r i« e i.c o
^131
^ B o x l o a r .. HOUSTON. t t » . 77018
^ "B R C K A C H E^
A c h in g M u s c le s
Y o u lo n g t o c a s e t h o s « p a in s .
« v e n t e m p o r a r il y u n t il th e c a u s a
I s c le a r e d u p . F o r p a ll ia t iv e , o r
4 « m B S ^ « c x ^ a ijr r e ll4 i- ir y D o W it f s
P ills . F a m o u s l o r o v e r GO y e a .'s
O e W it t 's P i l l s c b / i l a | n a n a n a lg e s lc
t o r « d u c « p a in a n d a v e r y m i l d
d i u r e t i c t o h e lp e l i m i n a t e r e t a i n e d
f lu id s t h u s f lu s h in s o u t I r r ita t in g
p a in c a u s in g - b la d d e r w a s t e s .
.. Y e s, V ir g in ia , so m e w o m e n w ill b e w e a r­
in g sh o rts on Ih d city .streets th is s u m m e r (see
th is w e e k ’s c o v e r). B u t we h o p e th ose w h o
d o w ill be o f th e s lim , y o u n g is h v a rie ty . A s an
c ri> t 2 ~ w i:a rin g T rf”5h o rts c lt y s id c c a n
Ictok m o re so p h istic:<ted if th e y 're p a rt o f an
e n se m b le c o v c r e d b y a b u tto n -d o w n sk irt.
E ls e w h e re o n the su m m e r sce n e , c x p c c t to
see sp ort.sw car o f e v e ry d e s c rip tio n — f o r e v ­
C o v e r: C o tto n - c h ln tz b a ttte { a c k a t
--------------- « n d - c t * W * < 4 - * t e o r t - p * n t » b y
S ta r> H e r m a n f o r S . S .H .
C ro c h e t c a p ^ y G te n te x
D e W t t r s FNIIs o f t e n s u c c e e d
w h e r e o t h e r s i f a i i . I f p a in p e r s is t s
a lw a y s
y o u r d o c to r. In s is t o n '
-DeWitt’s Pills-
-U ~
J C a m ily
e ry o n e fro m the a c t iv e -m in d e d to the p la c id
o b s e rv e r. T h e look.s ra n g e fro m the a f o r c m e n iio n e d sh o rt pa n ts to je a n -c u t s la c k s to
in f o r m a l a n k le -g ra z in g p a t io dre sses,
.^ h o s c -p ic t u T c d ^ h ere, w ith p o rta n t e c o lo g y m o v e m e n t, a r c a ll fa s h io n e d
•o f c o m fo rta b lc -to -w e a r p u r e c o tto n f a b ric s .
T h e s u m m e r c lo th c s m e ssa g e is d e a r ; d re s s ­
in g is g e ttin g to be m o re c a s u a l, m o re , fu n .
P h o t a g / A p h & : J a n a A r n o ld
Decorates Over 3
in Hammered Metal
Jl^lRtemarkiabie-New-Act^X>ffer for
This lovely plaque will bring springtime
to the decor of any room and only when
“bfiHlaBt-earrafy-yetlow-reses-poised-Jo- y n i i < ; p p it in your home, will you fully
Imagine the beauty of gloripus fine en­
ameled hot pink, gentle baby blue an,d
dantly leafy cool green stems. This sym­
SUPPLY IS LIMtTED-OFFER WILL
phony of multi-colored roses ascends
NOT BE REPEATED THIS SEASON!
from a snow-white shell basket that is
tipped in a kiss of rich gold. Truly a col- Frankly, we expect supplies to go fast
ortul spectacle dramati2
away as gifts. To avoid disappointment,
of finely cTalR^ hamrhered'Welair
We emphasize these are not tiny mini­ we urge you that you order at once. Or­
atures, but ^ a u trful^ museum quality ders will be filled on a fir^ come, first
hammered decorator vwirplaques that "served fcas1s-ar»d -oWernw
dominate over 3 full feet of waif space. peated this season,
G R E E N L A N D ^ S T U D IO S
~
-
53 95 Greentand Building. Miami, H o iid a 3 3 0 5 4
Please rush me th6 Rose Wall Decorations checked below. If I amTiotj ■
-tielight^rl may return Ite^y-within-tO-days^-fw^a-Gompleta-wfuod^^l
Encrosed
icrost is check or rn.6. for JL
I
__^RoseWall Decorations (# 11
(4/V3.98 I You May Charge
(Add 75c postage)
Your Order
□ Send C.G.O. I enclose $1. goodwill deposit
and will pay postman $2.98 balance pl.us all
D IN E R S CLUB
postal charges.
BAH KA M EAiCAR D
A d tfre scC it y .
Stata
Z ip .
' Q Savd HT50.-Enclo*e~ooJy->7.9&ior_2Jlose^
WainJ^ofatioffS' andrwe'ltTMy-^ postage.
Extra plaque makes a wonderful gift.
o lU A S T E R C H A R G E
A c c t . N fc.
_____
IN T E R B A N K N O ^
G ood T h rv .
IDNGESrBARRELJliMP
ON SKATES
-took place in Libec+y, N ew Y o k K
. '. J a n u a iy 9 ,
when a sl^ < sr
\J e a p e d ov/er .i7 bal■^els
( 2 8 ^<gel 8 in ch es). _________ ■
can -b e ■found in a
C o p e n h a g e n , D e n m a rk
s a l o n . l i i e 2 4 +t-ess,
8 -ADGrt long h a ir p ie ce
is used in w eddings.
MOSTTATfOOEDHAN
-A -e a n a dia n ta Ito o a t-jis4^Sailor J o e * had a +otal o f 4 , 8 3 i
O N lV B E L A iR M lA S lT
J u S tjfh e rig h t ■
i :-------to u c h
nhen+T^lT''^
m
m
W N6 EST
______ ; sold In p ackag es ,
BELa ir
'^ ^ o f - f i v / e b a c ^ in K 7 3 0 .
>
B ^ a c h c i^ & r & H e
-w as H
(F ilte r L a n g s
long,^
FiRsrpREMrcifr
ESJEROFFEREO
M^lI>€STRALB6^ eV€R
deck o f cards, i« ?3 2 .
S 0 e o al tte a tm e n t s o f e i ^
f # > e ^ ba<=coS -for a S ^ o o ^ g r,.^
■ \ e h f ia le i2 h / 8 e f a ir < £ i
\ is ^ 0 \ ie r j0 0 Q _ b e Q {
r I I. T m. «« L o iM a s
', v 7
P d r-fre & c
r - ^
tvtAsT.K-sSx^^Uss:
^:=pl
^ ^ W h a tin
“ L a te b a b ie s d o m o r e { o r jfa n iity h a p pTness th a n ^ i r l y b a b ie s ,” P r in c e s s
L u c ia n a P ig n a t e lli to ld u s th e d a y h e r
— ^ ^ T h e -B e a u t if u l-P e b p le i-B e a u t y -B o o t ™
w a s p i i W i s h ^ . _ " F o r In s ta n c e , S o p h ia
L o r e n a n d I a re the s a m e a g e , 36 . B y
th e -tim e S o p h ia h a d h e r b a b y , I h a d
a te e n -a g e d a u g h te r. I f y o u h a v e a n
e a rly b a b y i n a n e a r ly m a r r ia g e th a t
d o e sn ’t w o r k o u t, a s I d id , th a t w ill be
> k >w m a n y p a r a c h u t e ju m p s ish o u ld a
m a n . jinake ;jn o n e d a y ? A t 4 1 7 A s
n ia n y os the y e a rs h e h a s liv e d , b e _ ^-Jifcves Sgt. -M a jo C - J Q a v e , ^ C liir k ^ w liQ _
u se s p a ra c h u t e ju m p s t h e - w a y . o th e r
^ peo ple u se c a n d le s o n a b ir t h d a y ca k e .
In s t r u c t o r in p a ra c h u te s k ills a t F o r t
B ra g g , N . C . , C l a r k h a s m a d e m o re
th a n 1,5 0 0 - ju m p s s in c e 1 9 5 6 . H is
h rg hest n u m b e r in o n e d a y w a s 4 1 —
o n h is 4 1 s t b irt h d a y , o f M u r s e . T h a t
“ b irt h d a y p a rty ” la ste d 8 h o u rs , f u ll
o f u p s a n d d o w n s.
D a V e S : T h is is N a t io n a l i*‘la g w e e k .
b y p r o c la m a tio n o f th e P r e s id e n t o f ,
the U n it e d States. M o n d a y is F la g
D a y (a d a p t io n o f f la g b y C o n t in e n t a l
C o n g re s s in f 7 7 T 5 7 l T l i l s o b c g iiis~ lK B
'
U^S; :O p e n G61f=^eH am ^icm ^^
M e r io n ’s E a s t C o u r s e , A r d r t io r e , P a .
A N N IV E R S A R IE S : T h u r s d a y is the
19 6 th a n n iv e rs a r y o f th e B a ttle o f
B u n k e r H ill.-
MIRACLE CART OF THE FUTURE
J u s t s t o p It a n d g o t o n ..
PRINCESS LUCIANA
D id e a r ly c h ild b ir t h
h u r t h e r . Io o k » 7
the s t o r y o f; y o u r y o iit h . A n d it w ill
sh o w . . H a v in g a, c h il d la te r, w h e n y o u
a re s e c u r e in your^ l if e v a lu e s , a n d in
a m a rr ia g e th a t is t r ie d a n d ^ t r u e —
m o th e r, fa th e r a n d b a b y w i l l be h a p ­
p ie r. A n d th at h a p p in e s s is so m e th in g
that m a k e s a n o ld e r w o m a n b e a u t if u l."
H o w ’s t h is f o r a w a y to g e t a ro u n d
s h o p p in g c e n te rs a n d a ir p o r t s w ith o u t
a ll th a t w a lk in g ? A n e w sy ste m to
- m p B iir it h o r n w in p; m a s s -tra n s p o rt a tio n
p ro b le m s w a s d e s ig n e d a t M lU IU l>uil
S tate U n iv e r s it y , E a s t L a n s in g . T h e
i L I M ( L in e a r In d u c t io n M o t o r ) m 6 d-<
u le tra n s it sy ste m w o u ld in c o r p o r a t e
a n u m b e r o f v e h ic le s j u c h as th e o n e
p ic tu re d . S o m e o f the v e h ic le s w o u ld
n ih k i n g
a n d t o w n ) , a n d so m e s lo w -m o v in g
( f o r g e ttin g a ro u n d e n c lo s e d la rg e
a r e a s ) . T h e * w h e e l o n th e .v e h ic le .p ic ­
tu re d , d e s ig n e d b y stu d e n t. B o b B u l ­
lo c k , ru n s a ll the w a y a ro u n d , i n d f lt s in t o a h o llo w tra c k . T o sto p th e v e ­
h ic le , In o r d e r to get o n o r o f t r y o u
T w o o fficis w o r k c r s h a d a c Q u p I e ^ f
d r in k s a t a m id to w n b a r j f t e r t h e ir
s ijn p ly grab, it w ith y o iir . h a n d . " A
sy sW m c o u ld b e w o r k e d o u t e v e n t u a l­
ly to s e rv e a n e n tire d o w n to w n a re a ,"
- aayii D u llocte? P u t « « ' U n i th » n n lif I T M
v e h ic le s e x is t in the c la s s ro o m .
B IR f H D A Y S : B u r l Iv e s is 6 2 M o n d a y .
T u e s d a y , M j® rk v a n D o r e n is 7 7 .
W e d m s d a y , E i i c h S e g a l- is 3 4 - l o h n
H e r s e y is 5 7 , a n d D e a n M a r l in is 5 4 '
o t i T h u r s d a y . F r id a y , . E . G . M a r s h a ll
is 6 1 , a n d P a u l M c C a r t n e y is 2 9 . 'O n
Saturday.
.Wwdw.f ■».
~75, a n d G u y L o m b a r d o is 6 9 .
A v id g o lf e r s h a v e b e e n k n o w n to b r a g
that th e y c o u ld p la y a ll n ig h t— a n d in
Ic e la n d , th e y c a n ( a lm o s t ) . Ic e la n d is
~~golfn
les o p e n u n t ilrr
-t h e s u n g o e s d o w n , w h ic h f ro m m id lu n e to m id -A u g u s t d o e sn 't h a p p e n
u n til a b o u t tw o a^m. T h e n c o m e a fe w
h o u rs o f d u s k (n o t d a r k ) b e fo re s u n ­
rise. O n th e lo n g e st d a y , l u n e 2 1 , th e
su n sets s o lo w o v e r the h o riz o n th a t
' I t ' s l i g h r a l l T i i g h r ------------------------------------
S ig n i n
BIRTHDAY PEOPLE
BMrt-lve»HMMt-Ericb-S«gal-
a p h o t o s t u d io : y o u r p o r -
J f a t ir - iix z y o u '< u t e ^ S J } 0 ; a s y o u w o u ld
■---- 'the' day;.................... .......... ..... |......... ... — iike~to--ber~ti-^-00;-i[a yttuOne oltewl tlie othcTTi-lhirf-rooml,____ art,-SIS-00- — Eudora Thomas Sabo
bul1iu rricn<riefused7Tiaying that he’d
tw tie r get o n h o m e a n a ^ p l a i n to h is
- f r ie n x j.k n o w ? I ’m not hom e
---------- — D o r a t h r a - K x n t -
H O S P IT A t T W S W r
T l i g h o g p l t u r b e t l- 1b u a i 'r u w a u d ^
lu m p y .'
m e 'jiim p y .
.
T h e r e a e e m to b « r e l a y s , t h e r e
• c e n iB t o b e b o w l i n g ,
y
A n d t h e M M n id o f a d o z e s g a r b a g e
c a n s r o llin g .
I t u r a o n Bay a id e , I l i e o n m y ^ lw c k ’
and h t
!»ml«
c la c k e t y -c la e k .
I w o n d e r U lt ’ » t h e b o w lin g p in s .
B n t I* m s o e x h a u s t e d t h a t
M o r p h e a s ir £ n s .
.A t ^ a s t I s l u m b e r — o r d o u n t i l
T h e y w a k e m e u p f o r a s le e p in g
p U l,
— G eorgia S ta rh u e k G a lb ra ith
TALBERTS
- i M P -flU T T Q M&r
L IF E
M u s t Be W o r t h
L iv in g
T h e w o r s t t h in g a b o u t t r a i le r s a n d
e f f ic ie n c y a p a r t m e n t s i s t h a t t h e r e ’s n o :i.
p la c e to p u t a n y t h in g e x c e p t w h e r e i t
b e lo n g s .
— L u c ille J . G o o d y e a r
---------------- -----POT-CUCIC
- J C h y i i it t h a t t h ft
i ir t « n 3 ~ t h e r e t o » U r tike t r e a t ,
B n t ~ t f ; t le a v e ~ i t” f o il a ' m i n n t e r - —
- I a lw a y * b u m n r h a t ’n r o o k i n g I n i t ?
B e a c h p a r t y : S a n d ila s t
A ^ re fu g ee c o u p le a rr iv e d ' in th e
U n it e d StateA m any^^ >ears^ go w t h o n e
d re a m — to b e c o m e c itiz e n s. T h r o u g h
a ll the re d ta p e a n d the y e a rs o f stu d y ,
“ Ih e y .w e rc T ra t ic iT t-a n d iio p e ft tl:
T h e n o n e -day, th e husCiand n u h e d
-in t o - t h e - k it c h e n w it h - t t e lo n g -a w a ite d
go o d -n e w s.
i^Anna, Anna,' i-shoulerf.
W e a re A m e r ic a n s !"
■‘F in e , ” re p lie d th e w if e c a lm ly ,
ty in g h e r a p r o n a r o u n d h in i. " N o w
y o u d o th e d ish e s.”
— V . D . PaXat
_aaLl
‘ 'A n y tM d y
b o o M T I"
a m n id
If y o u c a n
u s e u p to
■pttyg-yotT
ca n
use
cash
fo r e v e ry
o v e r
c e iv e
th a t
fo r
w ill
a n d
k in d
a n y
h o s p ita l a n d
h e lp
b e n e f it s
y o u
m e d ic a l b ills .
r e p la c e
p a y c h e c k s
- lD s ir - tH :c a r o E r W c t ^ e ~ ia n t ~ g p .
re ­
C a sh
y o u
A
about M u tu a l o f O m aha's n e w *‘W id e-^ a n g e” p a y ch e ck
p ro tectio n p la n that pays y o u ta x -free cash in a d d itio n to
y o u r hospital-m edical benefits. C o v e rs y o u both IN arid
is e x t r a
o f b ill. T h is
a b o ve
m a y
r e g u la r :
------ g i v e - y o u r m o r e - f o r ^ o m ^ m o n e y f ^
" s r c a d ^ r a jp y r < ? f T iic o m £ r t h a T * ! r a t f y o iir s T o
use as y o u
A s
y o u
0 0
s e e f it.
the breadwinner,
i] u 'a lif y
a
m o n t h jr
c h e c k
w h e n
w o rk .
T h e se
to
c a n
u c ilitie s ,
fo r a n y
u .s c
fo r
as y o u
a n y
e v e ry
w a y
d a y
p u rp o s e y o u
to
r e p la c e
s ic k
b c n c f ir s
s t r in g s , t o s p e n d
yo u
$ 1 0 0 .0 0
h e lp
y o u 'r e
l. '- r . iN - .
y o u s e le c t t h e a m o u n t
fo r (fro m
o r
y o u r
p a y ­
a nd
c a n ’ t,
h u rt
a re
y o u rs
w it h o u t
p le a s e . . . e x t r a c a s h
y o u
w is h — f o r
liv in g
r e n t,
e xpe nse s, o r
G e t t in g w e l l a t h o m e M f U tiju x - m o n e y w o r r i e s
o r
c a u .s e d
b y
w a r o r
m ilit a r y
ic s ;c h ild b ir th , p re g n a n c y
r e s u ltin g f r o m
A c t
d is a b ilitie s
th a t s ta rt
a re
p a y a b le
b e fo re
age
6 5
o r
lii- llU S p it a l b tin e f lls
f o r d is a b ilitie s
t h a t .s ta rt a f t e r
/(I
S I. ( ( M l. ( M l
h u rt
a n d
to
c a n ’t
sp e n d
iiio iiih
a s y o u
(a s
m u c h
p le a s e — w h e n
as
$ 2 5 0 .0 0
y o u
a re
a
s ic k
w o rk !
2 .
C o v e rs y o u
now.
s e r v ic e :
n a r c ^ t-
3 .
C o v e r s a c c id e n ts o c c u r r in g
p o lic y
o r c o m p lic a tio n s
p re g n a n c y .
S end
fo r
th e
fre e
fa c ts ,
a n d
y o u
M o n t h l y ^ y p a y c h c t k g - b e n e f l t s - a r ^ p a y a b l e - - - w i l l a l s<^ e c ^ : i v e i n f « i 4 W a T f o t F a b m H ^ H c ^ f u l f
fo r
ii|>
b o th .V /i a n d o i / r o f th e
h o s p i t a l ! ^ -------------------------------- ------
a g e 6 5 o r r e t i r e m e n t . D o c s n o l c o v e r : lo s s e s
ch oo se.
lE c tir c in c n t— m o n th ly
M ill
w e e k )— ta x -fre e
$ 1 ,1 0 0 ;-
r a n g e , o f f in e
a n ce
p la n s
n ee ds n o w
to
m e e t y o u r lif e
a v a t ia b le
O m a h a ’s a flilia t e . U n it e d
fro m
d a ic T T T ie r e
a re
n o
a n d
4 .
C o v e r s m e n t a l d i.s o r d e r s t h e
5 .
C o v e rs
y o u
as
a
a fte r th e
p e r io d s !
s a m e a s a n y o t h e r s ic k n e s s !
p a .s s e n g e r o n
r i v a t e - p l a n e ! --------------------—
s ic k n e s s c o n t r a c t e d
w a it in g
a n y
k in d
o f
-------------------------- — — " - t —
a ir c r a f t — e v e n
—
a
^--------------- --------------------
in s u r -
M u tu a l o
C o m p e n s a tio n
o f O m a h a .
o r
E m p lo y e r ’s
L ia b ility !
-iVsr". liJcI'Ohly you caff caiicel this I
policy. Even your premium ciuilt be changed unle-ss.changed---Life Insurance
fo (
-----------------------T l_ _
_____________^
^ .
-----------------------------------------------------------------1 n e t j o m p a n g m a r p a g s
a ll^ p o lic ie s
c Ia .3 .f,c a t.o n
A fflir a te T
------n f f t m a h a r
---------- ------------------ --------------------
f j
V
-------
1
— '
i.u it l
in
o f^ h is
fo n n
Tssued
to
^ f s o n s ^ f lf ie
y o u r .s ta te . h - i- i t i
! r ^ m f t r r - f l,^ r r t r r it
t h is
sam e
“
\
r o i/ p f lii
. L
Related documents
Download