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Bo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher grades. 1 thliik seniors more serious UiQn'aT«^f.pco^ " -arc the‘biggest violajors, - pie think. ' - : * ’Q: Can you give'nie a,guess 0S-2u3 l - i Q h b 'R t a . ^ ; o .I l i 3 t c r i o a l - S ‘o c , ^ ‘'^--.-- JulJ,Q D ttv is'D r.--- Boliso,-Itia'ho. • 83706 Comp. T Editor’s Note:. How extensive . Is Ihc' use nj^irljuana and n ig Juveniles ’ l-untU; a - In Twin t ails? Un-until a-lew ' inonihs ago most adults would^ - hftve'guftSSW .ifiUW w««»'6nl>» , . i^latctf'lncldents. Mor« rccetitly ‘ (herb have bcen"lndlcatlons that - ‘.ihcrc Is a real, .arid' growing, • . problem. here. • In an effort to, . --------- i^jj_;jugt_^hot„or,e^tho— ........ ,. _.ie ••Tlmes-News Is pub- , ILshlng a.'serles of Interviews. with -students and adults closely' . pcnnectcd . with Ihc'^pr arc'beliig'I^cpt ccinfldcntlat. following Interview was'with a l^ycar- 9 ld girl, fr sophomore At - pie . Twin Falls Hlgh’ School.' . , Q: Y6u say ser; . tensive? -By^fUCD-DODDS- Time^News istaff Welter . T5:;YoiThcc, a student out at Twin Falls -High School? •A: Yes. ........................ .......................... -Q^-Are-you-awaro-of-any-drug facts,. the ••Tlmes-News Is pub- , problem nt the high school? ... i.wouia .■ ;ay quite*tfxniii- sive. -Not all or the kids< take drugs- but a- majority of them do. ' . i ■ Q: More than half the student* -body?— -V - ’ Q: Can you give' ■as to the percentage? , A. No.I couldn't: 1 don’t JiaVe who sell it.. J - thc'lilgh school? - ,Q: 1^‘l's sas. wonted to , "'A: No, 1 don't think- so. - 1 get some marljuana^ight now,; * think it is mostly marlfuana (hat could you. . * I have .observed. ' ' , ' A: I' think so. Q. What.kind'of drugs are wtt talking about? A-4 would say most prevalent ■Q: How’about'glue' sniffing? A. Not In-my cliss by Itself..,! A; Yes. . ' . know the uSe is greater in other. Q:. What kind of problem? . classes. The higher -the class '"cit-i-know-a-lot-of-tho . tho-morc th0 -u60 < Mot t- o t- i h c- gcfhold“ In th( school.Is marijuana. -— Q:-How-do“iho-Klds“i of U? , ' . A :-I really don’t have any idea,, there- are.-some wHo get ■it fmm othor tnwny ntiH ' , ,Q: {-low about the pain pills, diet pills and sleeping pills ei-' ther by prescription or fro^. the parents’ medicine cabinet? a ': By asking one of the slu- ' -dents to get it fo^ me. '.Q ; How long do you- think •It would take tQ get it? r- ......... -------------------- ^A:~Norlotig;rl7w6uld-imaglne— A^—Therc-^are-a-l'ot-of.-girU- lf he had some he , could give .• who take like diefpills. They it to me the same day. - can be quite .habiVforrfting.. ' Q:. You Spoke of marijuana. - -' Q: . Why’ do they lake-, them, .'start out.fo lose weight but they' .•get in the habit of taking them •and they- like the-feeling the pillf give thdin. • •; . o r Do you observe a large • l"School taking these kind of pills? • : A: Not a- large number in proportion to tljfi, size of the- ^ school itself, but there arc Sev- —«ral.- Q: As a .student, at the.high School,-.how'-V/ould you classify, of.marijuana’and other FamUy Comics Magic Valley’s Horne Newspaper Feature Sc^ioh TWENTV' CENTS' Idaho Power Will Auction "f™-'" Wliite Cloud T^nd Al6ng - tBy C. J.-SMITH rim?s*News Manaj More than a thousand acres of land along the north side -of the Snake.. River between Buhl and Hagerman, Is being put on the auction block by Ida- ho_I r..CQ^ ~T^neludcd~~;n~thc- -prapcrtv to _be_sold_arc—Box_Canyon-and Blind' Canyon, ‘Bickel Springs . and Briggs Springs. . J Two other parcels of properly Idaho Power own.<5, at Niagara and Crystal Springs, are' ^eing -acquired by the State Parks De- partment .and will not be put • up for bids. T. R. Heikes, superintentjcnt JipJ Boise on -or before Wednesday, . He sa4d that Idaho Power de- cided to' sell, the property be- cau.se it has ’“ijo plans for jts use, and feels It .could be of more value to the area in other hanc^ Ttfglnnd was acQured bvlda' o~P m v e r - ...................... _______ t-lhe-carly-l_____ . rtho-intent on-of^ufldfng—small hydro-electric plants, At that time' it was thought the owner had right to water rising on hi-s property. -Subsequently It was .determin- ed'that this was -not the-case and that the state owned the water- and had -the authority to grant water rights. there wece some strong objec- ,tion8-(rom—area—intcrcsis^pai: ticularly in .respqct to the ef- fect the development would have on recreational fishing. Later Idaho Power filed for water rights on some of the flow in-4 he a r e a ^ u t lost out 'When it' Was orocred to ^^obert—Salterr^ssistaht^^ rector of the Idaho .Fish and Game-Department, s^id Friday the department is not planning to bid on any of the land, .since there is-no procedure set up whereby it can acquire land ' this way. • Although'Idaho Power, Co. of- ficials had spoken with Fish.am of power lor Idaho PoWGf, SUld ^—Idalit)—rower started—to-r<ie- -tjajne— iX)partm«n(—~pcr-£oi sealed bids will be received at velop the properties in the late about possible disposition of the ----- the Idaho-Power-Coi office-in 193Qs-or-I940s,'-but held-off-when See-I»OWER,-Eagc-5,.Column-5 Middle i'ork kiver Plan To Preserve W^ld State Area Valid lean Smelting and Refining Co, nail molybdenum mining claims on .7 IrunTiis National Forest ChalU- - __________ . .. - ;he White Cloud Peaks area In Idaho are definitely valid, ac* cording to an official annougce- ment by Regional Forester Floyd Iverson of the Intermoun- tain ■Region in Ogden, rlltah. -• - ' lias DCen • m a a e anii—reported by Forest Service mining eng- neers G. R. Plumb and V. T. Dow after an on-the-ground ex- amination of these ASARCO claims In the Little Boulder Creek drainage near Castle Peak. . •The Forest Service mining engineers made’ their Initial ex- - ...... - A S . w e o ’s . in August, M r., Iverson- said, “An-on*the-ground-cxamination, coupled with an analysis of de- tailed drilling records and core samples furnished by ASARCO, spociflcatly conUrmed previous unofficial reports that -a multi- million body of- molybdenuni ore Is present within "&t least II. and possibly, more, of tfie-20- By O. A. (GUS) KELKER «■.Ximc»rNencS'>EdItor A compre'henslve "river plan” . tor tJw-MiddJe.Fork.of.tJjp..'— on' River ha.s been com: ■'by the United Slofes Forest Ser- vice. The plan has been completed. Jn accordance with the provi‘ fiions .of thb Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of Oct.. 2. I9C8. That act, bada'd by Senators Church and Jordan, designated the Mid* die-Fork of the Salmon—from ils origin to its mouth—as one ■of the eight initial components ol the legislation, . • Completion of the planning package, setting forth the boun- dariea of. the., rlvcr area, Uic river clasHlflcation and the plan- .nqd production and development measure.s, was announced by Alex .Smith, .assistant .regional forester, division of .information and education, with heudquar- tera at Ogden. Mr. Smith told tho Times-News that the plan has ic£i;-forwafded to thft-Pws* of Sonnie and the Speaker of tho Hou.se of Repre- sentaiives. It will become cffec- tive in 90 days. Tho forest official said that three public meetings' were held last June to discuss future man- agement of the 'Middle Fork. These meetings were attended by'Iandowhers, state and federal agency .representatives, ‘mem- bers . of private organizations and other people. At that lime several'cxprcssed*^concem'about the capacity of the Middle Fork, as a wild and scenic river, to withstand anticipated Increasing use and still maintain Its re- markable characteHstlcs. Other points were also raised. “Atter consideration of all pQintH’ raised In discussion at ihc .meeilngs_and after_an on- the-grnund evaluation lihd sliidy of tho river area, wo have Iden-' lified the management oWec- tlves that peed..to > o met to ijfottfcf xhfr’ Wfddlet Fork vojuos and ol-sn the values of the adia- cent lands for. the benetit i 'ment of yeseht and futi generations. These objectives are reflected In the River Plan," Mr. Smith said.- He said that "we will continue to maintain close working con- tact" with Individuals, organiza- tions and agencies concerned. Ho said theu would, also work closely with involved landowners "to determine how their future lands can complement the out- standing Wild RlvoT values. The significant Items In \he River Plan arc being conveyed by per- sonal contact with interoHtod and Involved people to tho ex- tent feasible, along with press announcements. Mr. Smith said, Hint llie Mid- rile Fork Is to bo administered by the Forest Service in a man- See MIDDLE. P n ^ S. CoL I exploration Is continuing, the full extent of the ore body has not yet been fullji determined, ■h^lt-o^MC-liIL^lnlm«l hnvp^ hcer Staked! Data’'c61lected-,-A53cx ploration work accomplished, so additional quantity -of ore Hfrefy-invoiyecf.”—' -- . Mr. Jverson pointed out that additional mineral examinations will be- necessary, as explora' tlon work continues, to check on the validity of other ASARCO •claim’s In the a r e a ., . As has been previously report- ed. Forest Service tramway ex- pert Charles Diwyer-from Den- ver was In the-yWhito . Cloud - Ttl^=TOrtiCulaP ly in evaluate tho feaslhillty of a tramway system {and hrniuHv to consider the posslhlllly of al- ternative methods) to provide acce.ls to the claims.- Mr. Iverson reports that Mr. Dwyer ha.i just returned from a threc-wQok trip td -Europe where he, met, with. European tramway experfs as (he United Stales renresentatlve nt the See WHITE, Poge C, Col. 2 ^■iiiiiii ui^i'ft-awatdttLthfl drum for tho efforta In-coilcctlDy United Fund Surpasses $12,000 Mark United Fund 1970 pledges went ov6r the $12,000 mark asj:am - . palgn workers reported nt the first of three meetings scheduled ' - before the drive ends, At this point In the I960 cam- paign. J5,032 hodJwen ct)llected. .- Unofdcial auditing after the re- port' meeting showed this gear’s mark to be morp, than twice that of last year. During the three • week long drive, more than 100 workers will contact local rcsWent.t (In tho hope of meeting the JM.OOO'goal. Tlie funds will be used for.' the nine, participating agencies operating budgets for 1070. Guest speaker at the- noon rc- ' port meeting at the Y building wa.<i Rev. Harold N. NVe, pastor ........... - ................ ........ NVe, past of tho Plrsl United Melhodlst. Church; Ho stressed to workers the Importancd of encouraging contributors to increase the amount of ihelr contrjbtitlons, It Is hoped all workers wilt ^ • have made all ginlacts by next' Friday’s, report meeting. After' _ Oct. 10 a_bnck-up team will'lako over to call on'co’rit'acts ‘who*' > have not yet mndo pledges, George Staudaher, chairman of the educational division .of. tho drive, reported contributions' from that branch 'already are up 29 per cent over last-year’« : “TptaTT - Other phas(;.a of'.the campaign also are going well, section chiefs reported, and most cate- gories are running ahead of last ycpr’s_ total to this date. The workers Involved In the 'campaign are.contacting about 000 residents and businesses -during the driver’- ': -------------------- The next rtsport meeting will, be at noon Friday at tho Y. Earl McCullough Is One Of A Very Select Group p.m. Ho has rosided In Tvvin Falli Earl F., McCullough is n mem* her of a ‘ very selcct company of men, In Idaho there are only a (|i>/cn llkv him. Hu' h a veteran of Ihu Spanl.sh-American War. -''N ol only li he a veteran, hut ho isal-io department cnminand- like tho Aniorlran l-cglon Is to the vetorana of World War I _andll._'. To Mr. McCulIougl honor, of course, hut h<»aacept» irw ilu a 'reajffn. TI'O Tcasbn? • , ’’fni tho only .one tJint will take II,',' hn ,Huys. “ None of the other imys are able or Interest- ed." ■* But roganllcss of who h com- maiulcr, there wi|i hn a state convention nt Nampa next?yoar, prohahiv .|n tho Kuminer. |t should 1)0 a rip-rnnrlnR affair. "If ail ROCH well there Will bo Ihroo of ii» ll>vr&," ho, snJd. cane to walk. ' "I'fP kind of lame In' (he one leg," he’said. But ho jives alone at 907. MornhiRsldo Drive and his hobhy Is heading. "Can't got'around to fish 1 read," ho said. And tho books In tho front r»on)».lndlcato that Interested in wiiat's going on In this old world," he said. Ho tlHST CtlisS b u ffe li Fj'n F-. McCvllmgli i^oan Ibg hat jiial ilipi him eoUrod durint Iho Spanlsh-Amerlcan war. The.ttgialps are red, because he was «n artilleryman. Only « dOMn of (ha yototaoa o( ibnc war lU ll allvo wlUilo l<|labow Sturgeon,. DO, formerly uf 1>vln . .Falls; l.i now In ft Pocat'uiio rest . homo, and Harry M. Skirk, 00, " reside,! in .lornnje. j:— At one-time there were' 800 Lvaterana_ln_{he^flt«lQi_Tnda: '--ln~tha n{it|()n, thnru are n,53 The i)Ost estimates Indicate t)ji, the "roll call” will' Im down to less then 000 by the end of 1071,. n u t. M r..' Mcduilouuh lust iradiisK't lei' sialfsttcs '^orry lilip. To tho .query "wnat «fo you want to do, live fort)ver?'* ho ,answered;, "Stirel Wlty n«?" .\ And that's Just the way bo vlco when ho was 21. That was l7nclc-pn*<>ctr-M,—iOOl- n t ••Port* land, ’Orel Ho w as'a member of tho I2(1th -Company, Coast Artillery, Ho nevisr got" to'run-up the hill arid down again wlth'TojIdy Roosevelt, Apparently tho rea- son.wusthul.ho.lunied out tb he A very h«»I ifislhictftr and because of tliat fact ha was kept in tho states. ' ”IIo’ wa.s a first "cli)'si' RimMr," and. his company.ntnnlwred 109 men, tiireo officers,'ono hospttal itiHunuiuantl, ft .#etor, ,|t-iook^ in tlK'......................... man drew’ his rations every 10 (liiyri _ mostly dried stuff like prunes, apples and apricot's; Meat was fresh and there was lots of corned beef, hash -and beef stew. "Wo called it slum ■guliion,’’ he said; "and it was good when .tlm-ctu,ik>-wcro. |{OQd..~ H ...thB ■*<!m)ks-were-no-good*-lt-Was-mur» : I dor.' . Wo--were luck'y. .W O iad The men slept In framo hulid- Ing-s on ^ofs and coal atctfgs gen- :usKiiryTrout7^ ir* out-at S asleep before taps.M ie r<icalled, t'fio the bugle woke mo up again." 1 .................. Men got.pass£»<^n go to town Once a week. Lots tjf them .got drunk .^nd had-tn get'back the best way they' could. MoH of (hem, (hough, vlnlted lodges and I’ .hurnhes__ flmL-foilawcd—ULC- roguiiir"otd“a,rmyTrotitlno,~r—- ~Th'(ire"WHmr^t'miBi>onntion "T^e horses and mules were uS’e d to haul frcloht nnd rn- ‘tlflns," Air. McCiIllough t|{ild. I'Wo walked whcrayfer wc for 10 years. Prior, to hit re- tirement ho was a railioad worker nnd also engaged In 'hy draullc elevator . c<tnstructlon, Jusi before retirement he opera- ted Q chlckcr^ ranch ^vcst of town. Ho iKicame active In the United Spanish W ar organiia- llun_ln IDIO nnd hasJhcId al~ locRl- jtnd-stnte.-offlces,—— ,- ~^{rthnt‘n~thP~llfc~of~Earl-P McC»iioinmr-And~he’s lookini dav wnmlnrs had ■'A( n , Cilt'i\bi(y7 ............ mouth of the Coiiimhia. ha In- structed on lind fired the old nuizzlo loading cannon. Tho In- strument flrt;(i a 10-inch round cast iron hall and c^juld- pul lL.wJ(lv somo degree of accur- a c y fo“r ^ iH r u t' sTx inilOS’, '^'If tho wind was blowing ti>en wo had a little trouble hitting whnt wo were shootlnR at," Mr. McCuliougij said. ' Later ho was transferred to R.'W orfen:-ft|(irtVlrrw«^^ where ho complewf tho lufanco of his three year enlistment. Hi was out on Oct. 20, lOW. *<> Out art^iery lift was intoi

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Page 1: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Bo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Usem yself .bui I knowl It Is a. l o t . in higher grades. 1 thliik seniors m ore serious U iQ n 'aT « ^ f.p co ^ " -arc th e ‘biggest violajors,

- pie think. ' - : * ’ Q: Can you g iv e 'n ie a ,g u e s s

0 S - 2 u 3 l - i Q h b 'R t a . ^ ; o . I l i 3 t c r i o a l - S ‘o c , ^ ‘'^--.-- J u l J , Q D t t v i s 'D r . - - -

B o l i s o , - I t i a ' h o . • • 8 3 7 0 6 C o m p . T

E dito r’s N ote:. How extensive . ■ Is Ihc ' u se nj^irljuana and

n ig Juveniles ’ l-untU; a -In Twin t ails? U n-un til a -lew

' inonihs ago m ost adu lts would^- hftve'guftSSW .ifiUW w ««» '6 n l> »

, . i^ la tc tf 'ln c ld en ts . Mor« rccetitly ‘ (herb have bcen"lndlcatlons th a t

- ‘.ihcrc Is a real, .arid' growing, • . p ro b lem . here . • In an effort to, .

• --------- i^ jj_ ;ju g t_ ^ h o t„ o r ,e ^ th o —........ , . _.ie •• T lm es-N ew s Is pub- ,ILshlng a .'s e r le s of Interviews. w ith -students an d adults c losely'

. pcnnectcd . with Ih c '^ p r

arc 'be liig 'I^cp t ccinfldcntlat. following In terview w as 'w ith a l^ y c a r-9 ld girl, fr sophomore At - pie .Twin F a lls Hlgh’ School.' . , Q: Y 6u say ser; • ■ . tensive?

-By^fUCD-DODDS-T im e^N ew s istaff W elter .

T5:;Y oiThcc, a student out a t Tw in F alls -High School?

•A: Yes......................... .......................... -Q ^-A re-you-aw aro-of-any-drug

■ f a c ts , . the •• T lm es-N ew s Is pub- , problem n t the high school?

. . . i .w o u ia .■;ay quite*tfxniii- sive. -Not a ll o r the kids< take drugs- b u t a - m ajority of them do. ' ■ . ■ i ■

Q : M ore than half the student* -body?— -V -

’ Q: Can you give'■as to the percentage?, A. N o .I couldn't: 1 don’t JiaVe

who sell it.. J ’ - th c 'lilg h school? -,Q: 1^‘l 's sas. wonted to , " 'A : No, 1 don 't think- so. - 1

■ g e t some m a rlju a n a ^ ig h t now,; * th ink it is m ostly m arlfuana (hat could you. . * • I have .observed. ' ' , '

A: I' think so.

Q. W hat.k ind 'of drugs a re wtt ta lking about?

A -4 would say m ost prevalen t

■Q: H ow ’ab o u t'g lue ' sniffing?

A. N ot In-my c liss by Itself..,! A ; Yes. . ' . know the uSe is g reater in o th e r.Q:. W hat kind of problem? . c lasses. The higher -the class ■ '" c i t - i - know - a - lo t-o f- tho . tho - mo rc th0 - u60 < Mot t- o t- i hc-

g c fh o ld “In th ( school.Is m arijuana.

- — Q :-H ow -do“ iho-Klds“i o f U? , ' .

A : - I really don’t have any idea,, there- are.-som e wHo get

■it fm m othor tnw ny ntiH '

, ,Q : {-low about the pain pills, d ie t pills and sleeping pills e i- ' th e r by prescription or fro ^ . the p a ren ts ’ m edicine cabinet?

a ': By asking one of the slu- '-den ts to get it fo^ me.' . Q ; How long do you- think

• It would take tQ get it? r - ......... --------------------— ^A:~Norlotig;rl7w6uld-imaglne— A^—T herc-^are-a -l'o t-o f.-g irU -

lf he had some he , could give .• w ho tak e like d ie fp i l ls . They it to m e the sam e day . - can be quite .habiVforrfting.. '

Q :. Y ou Spoke of m arijuana . - - ' Q: . Why’ do they lake-, them,

. 's ta r t out.fo lose weight but they ' .•get in the habit of taking them •and they- like th e -fee lin g the p i l l f give thdin. • •; .

o r Do you observe a la rg e •

l"School taking these kind of pills? • : A: Not a- large num ber in

proportion to tljfi, size of the- ^ school itself, b u t there a rc Sev-

— « r a l . -Q: As a .student, a t th e .h ig h

School,-.how'-V/ould you classify, o f.m a riju a n a ’and o ther •

F a m U y C o m i c s ‘

Magic Valley’s Horne Newspaper F e a t u r e S c ^ i o h

T W E N T V ' C E N T S '

Idaho Power Will Auction "f™-'"Wliite Cloud

T^nd A l6n g- tB y C . J.-SM ITH

rim?s*News Manaj

■ More than a thousand acres of land along the no rth side

-o f the Snake.. R iver between Buhl and H agerm an, Is being put on the auction block by Ida-ho_I r..CQ^~T^neludcd~~;n~thc- -prapcrt v to

_ b e _ s o ld _ a rc —B o x _ C anyon-and Blind' Canyon, ‘Bickel Springs

. and Briggs Springs. . JTwo other parcels of properly

Idaho Pow er own.<5, a t N iagara a n d Crystal Springs, a re ' ^e ing

-acq u ired by the State P a rk s D e­p artm en t .and will not be put

• up fo r bids.T . R. Heikes, superintentjcnt

J ip J

Boise on -or before Wednesday,

. He sa4d th a t Idaho P ow er de­cided to ' sell, the property be- cau.se it has ’“ijo plans for jts use, and feels It .could be of more value to the a rea in other h a n c ^

T tfg lnnd w as acQured b v ld a ' o~Pm ver - ......................_______ t-lhe-carly-l_____ .

rtho-intent o n -o f^ u fld fn g —small hydro-electric p lan ts, At that tim e' it was thought the owner had righ t to w a te r rising on hi-s property.-Subsequently It w as .determ in­

e d 'th a t this w as -not the-case and tha t the s ta te owned the water- and had -the au thority to g ran t w ater rights.

there wece som e strong objec- ,tion8-(rom —area—in tc rc s is^ p a i: ticularly in .respqct to the ef­fect the developm ent would have on recreational fishing.

L ater Idaho P ow er filed for w ate r righ ts on som e of the flow in-4 he a r e a ^ u t lost out

'When i t ' Was orocred to

^ ^ o b e r t —S a l t e r r ^ s s i s t a h t ^ ^ rector of the Idaho .F ish and G am e-D epartm ent, s^id Friday the departm ent is not planning to bid on a n y of the land, .since there is -n o procedure set up whereby it can acqu ire land ' this way.

• A lthough'Idaho Power, Co. of­ficials had spoken with Fish.am

of power lor Idaho PoWGf, SUld — Idalit)—ro w er s ta rted —to-r<ie- -tjajne— iX)partm«n(—~pcr-£oi sealed bids will be received a t velop the properties in the late about possible disposition of the

----- th e Idaho-Pow er-C oi o ffice -in 193Qs-or-I940s,'-but held-off-when See-I»OW ER,-Eagc-5,.Colum n-5

Middle i'ork kiver PlanTo Preserve W ld State

Area Validlean Smelting and Refining Co,

n a il molybdenum m ining claim s on .7 IrunTiis National ForestChalU- - __________ . .. -

;he White Cloud Peaks a rea In Idaho a re definitely valid, ac* cording to an official annougce- m e n t by Regional Forester Floyd Iverson of the Intermoun- ta in ■Region in Ogden, rlltah.

— - • • - — ■' lias DCen • m aae anii—reported by Forest Service mining eng- neers G. R. P lum b and V. T. Dow a fte r an on-the-ground ex­am ination of these ASARCO claim s In th e Little Boulder Creek dra inage n ea r Castle Peak . . ■ •

•T he F o res t Service mining engineers m ade’ the ir Initial ex--...... - A S .w e o ’s .in August, M r., Iverson- said, “ An-on*the-ground-cxamination, coupled with a n analysis of de­tailed d rilling records and core sam ples furnished by ASARCO,spociflcatly conUrmed previous unofficial reports th a t -a multi- million body of- molybdenuni ore Is presen t w ithin "&t least I I . and possibly, m ore , o f tfie-20-

B y O. A. (GUS) K ELK ER «■.Ximc»rNencS'>EdItor

A compre'henslve " r iv e r p lan”. to r tJw-MiddJe.Fork.of.tJjp..'— on' R iver ha.s been com:

■'by the United Slofes F o re s t Ser­vice.

T h e p lan h as been com pleted. Jn accordance with th e provi‘ fiions .of thb Wild and Scenic R ivers Act of Oct.. 2. I9C8. T hat a c t, b a d a 'd by Senators Church and Jo rdan , designated the Mid* d ie -F o rk of the Salm on—from i ls origin to its mouth—a s one

■ of the eight initial com ponents o l the legislation, .• Completion of the planning

package, setting forth th e boun- d a r ie a of. the., r lvcr a re a , Uic r iv e r clasHlflcation and th e plan-

.n q d production and developm ent measure.s, was announced by A lex .Sm ith, .ass is tan t .regional fo reste r, division of .inform ation a n d education, w ith heudquar- te ra a t Ogden. M r. Sm ith told

tho Times-News th a t th e plan has ic£ i;-fo rw afded to thft-Pws*

o f Sonnie and the Speaker of tho Hou.se o f Repre- sen taiives. It will becom e cffec- tive in 90 days.

Tho fo rest official sa id that th ree public m eetings' w ere held la s t June to discuss fu tu re m an­agem ent of th e 'M iddle Fork. T hese m eetings w ere attended by'Iandow hers, s ta te and federal agency .rep re sen ta tiv e s , ‘mem­bers . of p riva te organizations and o th e r p eople. A t th a t lime several'cxprcssed*^concem 'about the capacity of th e M iddle Fork, a s a wild and scenic river, to w ithstand an tic ipa ted Increasing use and s till m ain ta in Its re ­m arkable charac teH stlcs . Other points w ere also ra ised .

“ A tter consideration of all pQintH’ raised In discussion a t ihc .m eeilngs_and a f te r_ a n on- the-grnund evaluation lihd sliidy of tho river a rea , wo have Iden-' lified the m anagem en t oWec-

tlves th a t p eed ..to > o m e t to ijfottfcf xhfr’ Wfddlet F o rk vojuos and ol-sn the values of the adia- cen t lands fo r. th e benetit i

'm ent of y e s e h t and futi generations. T hese objectives a re reflected In the R iver P lan ," M r. Sm ith said.-

He said th a t "w e will continue to m ain tain close w orking con­ta c t" w ith Individuals, organiza­tions and agencies concerned. Ho said th eu would, also work closely w ith involved landowners " to determ ine how the ir future

lands can com plem ent the out­standing Wild RlvoT values. The significant Item s In \h e R iver P lan a rc being conveyed by per­sonal con tac t w ith interoHtod and Involved people to tho ex­ten t feasible, along with press announcem ents.

M r. Sm ith said, Hint llie Mid- rile F o rk Is to bo adm inistered by the F o rest Service in a man-

See M IDDLE. P n ^ S. CoL I

exploration Is continuing, the full ex ten t of the o re body has not ye t been fullji determ ined, ■h^lt-o^MC-liIL^lnlm«l hnvp^ hcerStaked! D ata ’'c61lected-,-A53cxploration w ork accom plished, so

additional q u an tity -of ore Hfrefy-invoiyecf.” —' -- .

M r. Jverson pointed out that additional m ineral exam inations will be- necessary , as explora' tlon w ork continues, to check on the valid ity of o ther ASARCO •claim’s In the a r e a . , .■ As has been previously report­ed. F o rest Service tram w ay ex­pe rt C harles Diwyer-from Den­v e r w as In the-yWhito . Cloud

- Ttl^=TOrtiCulaP ly in evaluate tho feaslhillty of a tram w ay system {and hrniuHv to consider the posslhlllly of a l­ternative m ethods) to provide acce.ls to the claims.-

Mr. Iverson reports that Mr. Dwyer ha.i ju st returned from a threc-wQok trip td -Europe w here he , m e t, with. European tram w ay experfs as (he United S tales renresen tatlve nt the

See W HITE, Poge C, Col. 2

^■iiiiiii ui^i'ft-a w atd ttL th fl d ru m for tho efforta In-coilcctlD y

United Fund Surpasses $12,000 MarkUnited Fund 1970 pledges went

ov6r the $12,000 m ark a s j :a m - . palgn workers reported nt the f irs t o f three meetings scheduled '

- before the drive ends,A t this point In the I960 cam-

paign. J5,032 hodJw en ct)llected. .- Unofdcial auditing a fte r the re ­port' m eeting showed this g e a r ’s m ark to be morp, than twice th a t of last year. During the th ree • week long drive, more than 100 w orkers will contact local rcsWent.t (In tho hope of m eeting the JM.OOO'goal.

Tlie funds will be used fo r . ' the nine, participating agencies

operating budgets for 1070. G uest sp eak e r a t the- noon rc-

' port m eeting a t the Y building wa.<i Rev. H arold N. NVe, pastor........... - ........................ NVe, pastof tho P lrs l U nited M elhodlst. Church; Ho stre ssed to w orkers the Im portancd of encouraging contributors to increase the am ount of ih e lr contrjbtitlons,

I t Is hoped all w orkers wilt ^ • have m ade a ll g in lac ts by next'

F r id ay ’s, repo rt m eeting. A fte r ' _ Oct. 10 a_bnck-up team will'lako

over to ca ll o n 'c o ’rit'acts ‘ who*'> have not ye t mndo pledges,

G eorge S taudaher, chairm an

of the educational division .o f. tho drive, reported con tribu tions' from th a t b ranch 'a lread y a r e up 29 p e r cen t ov e r la s t-y e a r ’« :

“ TptaTT- O ther phas(;.a of'.the cam paign

also a re going w ell, section chiefs reported, a n d m ost cate­gories a re running ahead o f la s t ycp r’s_ total to this date .

T he w orkers Involved In the 'c a m p a ig n a re .c o n ta c tin g about

000 residents and businesses-during the d r iv e r ’- ' : --------------------

T he next rtsport m eeting will, be a t noon F riday a t tho Y.

Earl McCullough Is One Of A Very Select Groupp.m . Ho has rosided In Tvvin F a lli

E arl F., McCullough is n mem* her of a ‘ v ery selcct company of men, In Idaho there a re only a (|i>/cn llkv him . Hu'h a veteran of Ihu Spanl.sh-American War.

- ''N o l only li he a veteran , hut ho isal-io departm ent cnminand-

like tho A niorlran l-cglon Is to the vetorana of World W ar I

_and ll._'.To M r. McCulIougl

honor, o f course, hut h<»aacept» i rw ilu a 'reajffn . TI'O Tcasbn? •, ’’fn i tho only .one tJint will

take II,',' hn ,Huys. “ None of the other imys a re able o r Interest­ed ." ■*

But rogan llcss of who h com- maiulcr, there wi|i hn a sta te convention nt N am pa next?yoar, prohahiv .|n tho Kuminer. |t should 1)0 a rip-rnnrlnR affair.

" If ail ROCH well there Will bo Ihroo of ii» ll>vr&," ho, snJd.

cane to walk.' " I 'fP kind of lame In' (he one leg ," he’said. But ho jives alone at 907. MornhiRsldo Drive and his hobhy Is heading.

"C a n 't go t'a ro u n d to fish 1 re a d ," ho said. And tho books In tho front r»on)».lndlcato that

In terested in wiiat's going on In th is old world," he said. Ho

tlH S T C tl is S b u f f e l i F j 'n F-. M cC vllm gli i^ o a n Ibg ha t jiial i l ip i him eo U ro d d u rin t Iho Spanlsh-Am erlcan w a r . The.ttgialps a re re d , because he w as « n a r tille rym an . Only « dOMn of (ha yo to taoa o( ibnc w ar lU ll allvo wlUilo l<|labow

Sturgeon,. DO, form erly uf 1>vln . .Falls; l.i now In ft Pocat'uiio rest . homo, and H arry M. Skirk, 00, " reside,! in .lornnje.

j:— At o n e - tim e there w ere' 800 L vaterana_ln_{he^flt« lQ i_T nda: '--ln~ tha n{it|()n, thnru are n,53

The i)Ost es tim ates Indicate t)ji, the " ro ll c a ll” w ill' Im down to less then 000 by the end of 1071,.

n u t . M r.. ' Mcduilouuh lust irad iisK 't le i ' s ia lfsttcs '^ o rry lilip.

To tho .query "w n a t «fo you want to do, live fort)ver?'* ho

,answ ered;, "S tire l Wlty n « ? ".\ And th a t 's Just the w ay bo

vlco when ho was 21. That was l7nclc-pn*<>ctr-M,—iOOl- n t ••Port* land, ’Orel Ho w a s 'a m em ber of tho I2(1th -Com pany, Coast Artillery,

Ho nevisr got" to 'r u n -u p the hill arid down again wlth'TojIdy Roosevelt, Apparently tho rea ­s o n .w u s th u l .h o .lu n ie d out tb he A very h«»I ifislhictftr and because of tliat fact ha was kept in tho sta tes. '”IIo’ wa.s a first "cli)'si' R im M r,"

and. his com pany.ntnnlw red 109 men, tiireo officers,'ono hospttal

itiHunuiuantl, ft . # e t o r , , |t - io o k ^ in tlK'.........................

man drew’ his ra tions every 10 (liiyri _ m ostly dried stuff like prunes, apples and apricot's; M eat was fresh and th ere w as lots of corned beef, hash -and beef stew.

"Wo called it slum ■guliion,’’ he said; "and it was good when

.tlm -ctu,ik>-wcro. |{OQd..~ H ...thB ■* <!m)ks-were-no-good*-lt-Was-mur»: I dor.' . Wo--were luck'y. .W O ia d

The men slep t In fram o hulid- Ing-s on ^ofs and coal atctfgs gen-

:usKiiryTrout7^ ir*

o u t-a t S

asleep before tap s.M ie r<icalled, t'fio the bugle woke m o up aga in ." 1 ..................

Men got.pass£»<^n go to town Once a week. Lots tjf them .got drunk .^nd h ad -tn g e t 'b a c k the b e s t w ay they' could. MoH of (hem, (hough, vlnlted lodges andI’.hurnhes__flm L -fo ilaw cd— ULC-roguiiir"otd“ a,rmyTrotitlno,~r—- ~ T h '(ire"W H m r^ t'm iB i> onntion

"T ^e horses and mules were uS’ed to haul frcloht nnd rn- ‘tlflns," Air. McCiIllough t|{ild. I'W o w a l k e d whcrayfer wc

for 10 years. P rior, to h it re ­tirem ent ho w as a ra ilio ad worker nnd also engaged In 'h y draullc e levator . c<tnstructlon, Ju s i before re tirem en t he opera­ted Q chlckcr^ ran ch ^vcst of town. Ho iKicame ac tiv e In the United Spanish W ar o rgan iia - llun_ln IDIO nnd h asJh c Id a l ~ locRl- j tnd -stn te .-o fflces,—— , -

~ ^ { r th n t ‘n~thP~llfc~of~E a r l - P M cC »iioinm r-A nd~he’s lookini

dav wnmlnrs had■'A( n , Cilt'i\bi(y7 ............mouth of the Coiiimhia. ha In­structed on lind fired the old nuizzlo loading cannon. Tho In­strum ent flrt;(i a 10-inch round cast iron hall and c^juld- pul lL.wJ(lv somo degree of accur­acy fo“r ^ iH rut' sTx inilOS’,

' 'If tho wind was blowing ti>en wo had a little trouble hitting w hnt wo were shootlnR a t," Mr. McCuliougij said. '

L ater ho was transferred to R . 'W o rfe n :-f t |( ir tV lrrw « ^ ^ w here ho com plew f tho lufanco of his th ree year enlistm ent. Hi w as out on Oct. 20, lOW. *<>

Out a rt^ ie ry lif t was intoi

Page 2: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

-T A

2 ilme«*Ne>y»^ Tvyth F a lls , IdaHo .

Daily Weather Rieppri “ TaxfincreaseTr‘'WASHINGTON (U PI)

. Sen .’ R ussell :

— F r o r h - n m e » ^ *4ew . a 4 ’H o u f= := W e a th » y -B u r « a u - W ir ^

Temperatures

NationalA tlanta-aismarctc--':-

Cleveland • D enver ' • Dos Moines

Hi Lo Pep.85. 64

• 6 2 -4 4 ......71 64 • 68 57 -

. 55 32 1.30 S5 61

-.71 55

day and -62Hew425-i»

Sunny, and a Uttle w arm er to* ly and Monday. High 52 to

. >; - hiw425-to-85, e tc e p t-Cam as P ra irie high* 47 to S7, low 15 to 25. Light winds. Precipitation probabilities T ncarteroT 'A "; few ino iy 'H u rrie s a re - e j e c t e d In

:_ F o rt._ W o rth ;_______ :9 0 .7 2 _

■ Jacksonville • K ansas City

-v-’t - t a s Vegas ^ '____ Los_AnBclcs -

M em phis M iam i ' •, M p!s-St.-W ul_O m aha Philadelphia

4 P o rtland , O re;^ , S alt U k e City

San Dfego •S an Fcanclsco .

• Seattle Spokai*

8 2 . 74 .157 89 70 71- 53 73 58

~ 8 7 “ 62 91 75 77 -65

61 '

89 69'^8Z' 59

v63 ,4 5 56 .34 71 56

- 72 65 59 43 58 36

laaho.Boise

------- B u rley . . —_ Gooding

Grangevitle Idaho Falls

•. Lewiston M aladM ountain Home P oca te llp i

z : : ^ s i n i n B n d ^ i d ^ = =

53 29 .(52 2861 42 .(54 3157 3353 25.

= = 5 4 i^ 2 9 -^

DAY Meet Is Slated

— GnrMonday^:— 3hece_w U l_be__A _D isaW ed

Am erican. V eterans m e e t i n g M onday • a t the DAV H all, A. W. /P a t> P a tte rson , com m ander

" o r a r a e f rer ^ ^ f e p t e r N o.' S; " a F aounccd today. . : .

Following the reg u la r business session th ere w ill be a d istrict m eeting . E u g e n e . Cunningham,

-Forecast-W ARM EF^'

■JS-'the mountains, otherw ise Jt will be U \t through Monday. Key

■Good trip - S 7 ^ rTome, 59^29; Twin F alls, S^29; B urley, 55-28; R upert. 56-27j FalrflcIdr^-l^ahd'JHalteyfSr

7W eather-Syiiopsis'’Thfe’!coM a ir m ass ' over the

Imcrm ountain Region is begin­ning to m oderate and a definite warm ing trend-is expected dur- ing-lhc -first-half. of-the-cOmiijg week.' The.cloudiness s liil persisting n e a r 'th e , Ea.stcrii Idaho border

-flhould—glowly-rdissipater-rrfFheh skies'w ill=be-gcneral!y-fair over all th e agricu ltural valleys through Sunday and M onday and likely .th rough the f irs t half of the cpming week.

The seed h a rv est-an d haying should be able to resum e and Aiake' good progress from ' Mon­day thrdufifh W ednesday. Potato 4igging-and bee t digging should

also make good'progress.;The w eather m aps Indicate

th a t a blocking high prc.tsure system will dom inate tjie Int«^r- moiintaln 'Regjon,' "while. Pacific storm system s track around us fa r to Ihe north, then doivn the

1 SWcs have been mostly sunn: today except for lingering clouds in the Southeast Idaho highlands and In th e Upper Snake River vt^llcySA^Scattered snow flurries have been* visible .over the mountains, but no precipitation has been r.eported from th e val- ley-statlons-^ince 5 p.m . Friday,

Magic VallevJHojpitalsMagic Yalley

• ^ AdmlttiSt. Benedict's. Jerom e

Admitted- M rs. Randell Lehm an .an d

Mrs. G ertrude Farlinger. both Buhl; M rs. O m er Diehl, Wen* dell; Carles Giles. Richfield, and

-Jam es-BayaingeprJeromer--------D i s m i s s

M rs. Ray Pursley . Shelly C hapm an and-Lawrence Christy, all Je rom e; Charly Crawford. Eten.

B irthsA daughter w as bom to M r.

and M rs. Om er Diehl, Wendell, and a son , w as born to . M r. and M rs. Randell Lehman, Buhl.

Memorialftted

Wilson H arvey -P leasan t, Mrs, G a m c r’Lewis, Ju lia P e rry , G il berC Romo J r .. M rs. G e r a l d Steward and M rs. Steven Kitley,

aua"G enr<5rillrbo tlr-B uh!}-and M rs. W illiam S angster, K im ber­ly.

D ism issed—M arg a re t Day. G i l l ................. .J ^ A. Molyncaux, Zclda Hood, T heo Gillies, M rs. D ean Ben­ne tt. L arra ine B raley, M rs. G eorge-M ichael, L inda Scruggs, O scar Tilson.~ E dw ard R< '

Minidoka Memorial

few-’y ears because of pro- jecti •.led tox reforms.

Long predicted in 1i te le* ' J i s t o , tite rv iew E v m s-No-'- vak R eport —.-Metromedia— th a r th b .re v e n u e loss to the R o v irn m en t' from tax r e - '

-form-lc'stslation-now-lM!f<becom m ittee would

about $2 .b illio n 'a .y ea r.. ..:.-‘;N o w ,-> th a tl^ lto —m eans—

th a t we m ay have to p a ss .” another 'ta x in c re h ic ' biU some' tim e durlng_^he n e x t sev e ra r yea rs ilnldss we a re able to economize in gov- irnT hent," he said;

Senate Gonfirmatioii 0£ Judg e HaynsworthRemains, In Doubt With 29 O pposirig Him

By ROY MCGHEE WASHINGTON tU P l) - " Sen-

Clem ent F . Haynsworth J r . ' for the Suprem e Court rem ained in doubt .Satui-dijy, with, a survey

• ' *• - ......... nunRatiinfi

idgf-U - e- survey was conducted

him. 29 ^opposing . ,nnd undecided. . . . '

Haynsworth. chief judgethe .4 th UiS.Appeals.' n e c i . . . . votes if a ll senators a re present

-ang — vBtti1S " V lc o : : r t P residen t Spjrd -T. Agnew' who -presides over the Senate, could break* a tie in his favor.'

A U P i poll.showed that, o f his ^jidm ittcd_opponcn ts._2L xy£re D em ocrats and . eight w ere R cpublicansrO f'thQ -31-favoring

Haynsworth! n -w ere Republi­cans and 14 wbrd O em ticrais, mo.stly from .-the South

with th e understanding senators w ould'.not be Identified,

The -w«ekend White House a t said•K^y . Bh cny n e ., F I? ., .

P residen t Nixon r-e r j '“ ' ®’d'c o n v in c e d of th e s o u n d n e s s of

th e iu d E o 's ■ backg round" ' .e v e n a f-t e .______studying infQrma.tion,brought up in the press and before the Senate Jud iciary ^ d m m iu c e foiiow ing-thinrom tir atiohr •

■ P re ss ’Secretary Ronald Zie­g ler said Nixoh knew', every­thing significonl -about- Hayhs- .WQrth’.s business. doalings_a^t_the tim e he was n o m in a ted .i_ , ,.

— **The-*Presldenr-dId~noi^e'i(irn

Magic Valley ObituariesFuneral Services

I-^W hitake 'rr^M ondflv 'noon, E lba l i ) S W ard Chapel.. M rs. . 'Irm a Showers, 2 p.m-

Monday, W hile M ortuary chap­el.

Eyerett MainJE R O M E — F uneral s e ^ ic e s

Ann Simmons and Charles Simmons, both Rupert.

— dssedB eatrice L eFevre, O ra A nrel

off, Ann Simmons, C harles Sim­mons and M rs. W illiam Wilkin­son, all Rupert.

p resen t.In -o th e r '.D A V new s, I f w a s

rep o rted com[M nsatloa h as be<n given 11 ve te ran s a » ,o ! June o t th is y e a r ; th e re w ere three

- f iT Inans _nnd s i r w ere adm ittedt o ^ h e V e ty ans H osnlta l_foc

• trea tm en t. Four i r e on total_____ disab ility and 15 a re . eligible for— :— social—secu rity i^ A n y — vpterarw

■ w ith a 10 p e r cen t disability o r m ore is eligible fo r .property tdx exem ption. It w as reported.

E a r l Newnham J r ., v ice com­m an d e r. urged all ve te ran s to

- •' jo ia a local veterans organiza­tion now and sa id there -are m ore than 4,000 ve te rans in Twin F alls.. C ounty and more

-------- thmrT3;000:fn-ldah67 , . '

Centyry ClubT hese donors have given

1100.00 o r more to the 1970 Tw in l»B lls-U nited Fund D rive;

-S cars Roebuck/Com pany■ 'M r . & M rs. F . J . F rah m ......

Pepsi-Cola Doming Company M r. ’& M rs, Tom Lucas K oto 's Cnfe •J . C. Penney Company ’J . C. Penney Com pany em-

-------------- ployooK------- . . . . . .I....... 1:Idaho Frozen Foods

• Afllett Con.Hlrucllon C o m - ' pany

A rc tic Circle^

M r. & M rs. G ordon‘'G ray B uttreys .Super Store . Mountiiln Bell em ployees 1st Fedornl Savings' &

Lonns cniployres M r. & M rs, John Feldhusen Shirley & Wyntt ,W estorn Bcvernge, Inc. -.’. •&c K 6 S i 'n v a m in i» tm ! 6 0 1 » ^

Life Style SymposiumSerMoHdif"

The 'fa ir^ C T iR ^ r-ic iH tn B T S and d iscussions sponsored by the Magic Valley Council o f C hurch ' C3 will begin a t 8 p .m ..M ondor In Room 118, Shields A 'cadei^l. ^ulldlng on the College of South­ern Idaho cam pus.

Rev, John Langfeldt, Bounti' ful, U tah, conference and group leader, will lend this sesiiio|> on life sty les. Sucfi‘ questions a: authority , pluralistic society and Its tensions and the rebellion of today will be discussed. •

Rev. L angfeldf Is pasto r of a federated church In Bountiful Ho Is a devotee of Biblical nr- chaeology and m ountain clim b­ing. H e received his AB d e -----from thclU nlvcrjIty o( W«sl ton and his divinity d eg ree from Berkeley. He Is ed ito r of his church ' sta te paper and chnlr* man of (he E cum enical Commis­sion fo r Utah.

O ther sessions will bo held on- adult-youih ^com m unication, polltfcnl polnrizatlnn nn«l will close With workshops on cbmmu- nlcation.- •Dn—.inmcs—T nylo rr*p resid rn t of the Collenc of .Soiiihern Idnhd,

7Tlb])ortson ' ■ eurahce

SVDSCRtPTlON HATES •n iR TIMES-NEWS Twin F a lls , Idaho

(D allv & Sunday) ... '7 R.3S

In Advance (D allv & Sunday)'

' 1 M onth 7 . . .V n , 5 ,6 M onths .............. 13.0

co t m aintained.

TIM ES-NEW SSUBSCRIBERS

' f o r M i v l c e o n t P a p e c , O e l l y « r y . ^

Cali yourrcarrier. M m - m j .

~ B tf c T r t '6 '( » :m rd a l ly 'f i r~ b a fo ra 1 0 a .m . o n S u n d a y s

Short, R obert Ju d d , D avid Nel­son, M rs. T hurm an H ess and

. HaTtwIg: F ile r: IVfel. v in C ook ,-G ene Grill. Harold D eal, M rs. R ay Loos and Mrs. Edwin Dalos, a ll Buhl; Michele C arraw ay, R upert; WUliam B a rk le jfc ^ a n se n ^ -K a th kins, Je rom e; M rs. M arcus

B radley K lttridge, M rs.B aker and daughter, and F rank

b e he ld a t 2 p.m . M onday In the Je ro m e LDS Church w ith Rev. H arold Livingston, F ir s t C hristian C hurch, officiating. -

M r. M ain, 43, d ied caH y F ri­day m orning a s the resu lt of an autom obile accident.

He ^ v a s born M ay 1, 1926. in Salem . Ore., and m oved tc Idaho in 1928. He w as graduated from A rlm o’High School In 1943

the-U ;S .—N a v y - in - th e -P a c if ic during WWII. On Sept. 11,. 1947 he m arr ied P a tr ic ia . M eeks i n Je rom e. T hey have lived in J e ­rom e since th a t tim e. F o r m any y.;ars he w as active In w estern m usic circles, in Southern Idaho ahd h a d recorded for-M VI Rec­o rd Co. H e w as a m em ber of h e J e ro m e E lks Lodge, th e Je f- erson School PTA and w as a

iM.io, tfb tu ii ic . m i s . m u ic u sSpencer, Gooding; M rs. Charles Lundy, Salm on, and M rs. Connie Butlor and M rs; W endell Wilcox,both K iBiborly....................... ' r

B irths :M T ir^ c r 'e born to M r. and Irs. Steven Kitley and M r. and

M rs. Gernld S teward. a lrT w in

ittle league m anager. He had p la y e d _ a n d _ su n g _ w lth _ H o lly . Houfburg’s o rchestra and was currently, w ith the M.C.’s band.F n r <!fimp ynHre hr, gai.n gi.ilor.lessons in Jerom e and he served In m any local fund drives as an ■ en te rta iner. He was sales

widow Is one daughter. Penne M ain, Jerom e, and a son, Eddie M ain, Jerom e, and two half- bro thers, Loren Egan and Alva

both Arimo.Inal ri te s will be ln„ Ji

Hove F uneral Chapel.

Fallff, and aaugnters w ere ., to M r.-on tfM rs. G erald Jordan, P aul,' and ' M r, and M rs. Bart Silver. Jerom e.

Cassia MemorialAdmitted

M rs. Jud ith Ann W alker, Mrs. Ronald Osterhout nnd M rs. o i^ il Trternii, an B u r le jT s lie r l Kay Tennell nnd T rum an I.afferty, both Rupert; L au ra Hyde, Mrs. Ja c k Rbse and Connie Rose, all Sandy, Utoh.

I DKmIs.sed M rs, RobcTft Rc.scndez a n d

dffiighter. Burlt'y; Allrert Cottle, Maltn; Raym ond Reifor, Paul; M rs. -Kenneth, Diican. Heyburn. and M rs. Michael .Spencer and daughter, Yost, Utnh,

BlrllusA daughter w as horn to Mrs

Judith /\nn W nlkcr, Biirlcj^

Gboclincr MemorialDismissed

Iln rry ShiiiK.% Mrs. A. J,AvrifiiirrTvir.s; • 'v rd o rT P i’iYwir.Mr.-), ,/oe l.egultiecho, nil Gooil-

*- ■ i E, MonKon. Elto-

StanseirBoyDies From Crash Htu’ts

Satd ay a t-M iJg ic-V alley M emorial H ospita l-aftc i—beinfplnjnred-in^ a n a u to m ^ lle accident Sunday, M rs. ' P risc illa Robinson was killed in the tw o-car c rash .near Curry. --------- - -----—

H e w as born Jan . 8, 1958 and w as -a sixth grade studeht a t B ickel School. Young Stansell w as 'cap ta in o f the school patrol, a membdi- of Boy -Scout T roop No. 44, and a m em ber of Bethel T em ple Church.—SuwivingrrinrrfiddiHoitdOrrhLf p a ren ts , and M rs. Davjd Stansell, a r e two brothers, B ren t S tansell, an(^ Kelly Stan­sell, both Twin Falls; a sister, Deanne Staxsell, Twin Falls; a g rand fa ther, 0 . C. Stansell, Tw in F alls, and a grandm other. M rs. Helen F inley, Twin F alls.

F u n era l services will be held a t 1 p .m . Tuesday a t Bethel - • -GhuFclv- • ~ ' '

Franl^:J.:;Rice___ -. __74r22 tT Atlgim

SfTT”Twin" Fails, d ied ’ at~M agii

day noon of ,a long He- w as born ‘

anythlnfe adS tlona l . of m a jo r significance . Jn Judge Hayns- worth’s background," Z iegler said of the siibseljubnt presidon- tial, review. , t ^

Sen. George M cGovern, D- S.D., sa id he expected to vo te against H aynsw orth ..A .sludy of ht5T ^ cord— revealed— l!the pattern of- a m an,.w ho'.y-livlng in the ifith cen tu iy a t a tim e the cuuiitiy Is deeply In-vohrerf- in • unresolved 20th cen tu ry

ftllse n '.

Seen. . .M rs. WUnda M iller, Rupert,'

m end ing , her nufse Qnl(orh\ w ith ^adhesive tap e .M rs.Jan ice.H uizinga of Burjey* visit- ^ g Twin Falls, business Office ■. . . Mrs. W bjlejhiJohn G ardner___,read ing )»ok to h e r son . . .Sam .H a r t’check ing 'ou t lib rary book ,. . . M att V ice a t Holiday Inn . .. , Jim Mildon .working a t Police Station . ' . . . D an. Stone bending fender . . ' . Je ff W arner carry ing fim pty-^^aT T W p-bof^T ties . - . - ; -Harold J j n c a s t e r In

Birch Bayh, I> Ind ., a leading H aynsworth opponent, a t ' a news conference a t the M idwest Dem’ocratic-C onference ,in- Mil­waukee.- Wis.- Bayh saidi Senate cdnfirm ation Is-V vcty-m uch-u p

•Senate D em ocratic ' .L e a d tr M ike" M ansfield,-^w ho-4ald he was keeping an open m ind, told hew.smen the • Senate, m ustJudge__ H aynsw orth |s,, perfor-.mance.-.as a _ ju d g e ,_ as .w e ll as HJs outside business connec- tions,

itting out Ji!. c a r . . . i Wendy' ' Dodds causing turm oil . .-. Wcs Gardncr._-babyslttin£. and,.-woni A -. dering how to chongc a |r iy diop- e r . . And overheard. ‘U-Won-T dor how niuch th a t kid is mak-,'- ihg w ash h ig 'th o ^ ' w i n d o w s ? M aybe I could get a Job."

Hearing J orTwo Au'litte Requests Set

Ta'ised,--;M ansficld-said—IT hosc wlll 'h ave to be answ ered .”

30. 1895, Hunnlngburg, Ind. H e m ar­

ried Sarah E. E ldredge on Ju ly 7,,1947, a t Ety,--Wev. He lived in' Eugene,: O re., as a boy-and com e- to -Idaht? - in 1942 f r o m ■Seattlc-:~Htr“ was“ a“ vo tc ra ir"o f W orld W ar I, and was a mem- •ber of the M ethodist Church. He w as a re tired livestock deal­er. :•

Tanlcerslev officiating. Last will W in Sunset M emorial

M ortuary from 1 p.m. Sunday until II a>m. Tuesday.

Roy FrostBURLE'V—Roy F rast! 76. Bur­

ley. died F riday a t Cassia Coun- t v H t em oria l~H ospital-of-a-long Illness.

H e w as born Dec. 6, 1892 a t G arfield , U tah, and cam e to Ida­ho with hls-paren ls wijen h e was

child. T hey lived In Oakley

Mrs. Jessie Lark■ Kir^BERLY - M rs. J e s s i e Lnrk, 86, Route 2, K imberly, died F riday flt; Mnglc VnUey M emorial Hospffel, Twin F alls, or a brief Hindis.

Born June 17, 1883, .she cam e to - th e -F ilg [. u ica—ln~lDlfl~ft‘nm Iowa, la te r moving lo Castle- ford, then to Curry <Tind to the K imberly-Hansen a rea in 1947. She had resided here since.

In February , 1900, she was m arried to Willlam« Lark, who died In lO-IS.

Survivors' include two fic/ns, E verett Lark, Kimberly, and

-H o w a r d L a rk ,' Sucraii^n to . Colif.; one daughter, M rs. bord* thy Ouesnell, Gooding, and two grandchildren.

Funeral services will be con­ducted a t 2:30 p.m. M onday at Reynolds I-'iineral llonie Chapel by Rev. Harold Nye, Flnol rites will he held in Sunset M em orial P ark . < - .u .

will em cce the politlcnl po lariza­tion sem inar on Nov. 5. and Dr. F red Kolouch, p.Hychlatrl.iL with the m edical depnrlm ont of the U niversity of Utah, will con­duct .Jiie closing w orkshop on •N orrlfl;----- -------------------- -----------

(he series will he per family.th e - ewst

will h e* JI p e r individual per session. College'nnd high

Uldr ncllvlty ,tickets.., . - .....«'M«rp Informallon on the series nf <liscusfllnns mhy ho ohtiilntrd fron) M rs. T. Mr-h6b«rl8on.-733*

. Twin Falls News In Brief

. Ladles: o f E lks will m ee t a t 6 p.m . Tuesday In the E lks Boli- rot>m. ' ____

•Th6 poiluck supper, nnd I tX W ltltiY .lh C ."

J ra n g e on Wednonday liaa postponed until Oct. 19.

Th«re will b« troinlnR forl^ow Blue Bird lead en M o n d a y.................................At th e Camp F ire G irls office. New leoders m ay choose whnl day thfiv w an t to a ttend . There also wMl b e tra in ing fo r ' new C am p FIro leaders Oct. 13-IQ a t 0i30 a .m . ,a t Ihe .Camp I'Ire office. ’ '

will m eet a t the home of Sharon llo fto b au m Moncjsy a t B p .m .

Busy Night Seen For City DadsJlTMnF®!1IJ3„........... Co-Op.Supply until or

A rh \v iI^ . l iH 3 ; ' ire« t It J>e fl busy night Mnn- 37 t I 1 i< nnrtlV in t

—«h«f—l wIjS—1 -o Ilfi^ lly H e -wT y ^ i ^ c wlB y=nt= !i Council mooting witli rnutlno business scheduled l)Ut w ith 18 ;item s -lts tc d "o n " th P T fg p ;irti - T hercBuiioIl-w lH -dlsctis!r~the airpo rt runw av cxtunslon hidw, opened foccntly , ftniJ cfdcluily 'aWnril the 'L O (n (}ie low bidder, whlclj Is I^ n e P ine.Equipm ent Co. of KImhcrly,

A report of iin audit fo r the fiscol y ea r ending l«fttj3ficcm her ^ ll l be prcsontffir

A second reading of an or<H' nnnco vacating an nl|ey. hehin<l T roy Notluniil la u n d ry will he renili * ,

Thu council wllL consider rc zoning on Slnishoni S treet East

m it-ihe-locntloft-of-a-C pl. Sunders K entucky fried

bids ta r llabllltV' Insurance fnr the period Iwglnning th is 'D e ­cem ber will l>e mode.

'Hie council will discuss (ho p rellm lnnrycngtncerlnfrT ispecls of llie Jo in t clty-lndiistrlal .wastety-lnIrentm ont project.

TJiore will be a report on (ho erm lnation of an nitroemeni vUh the IV ln -F a lls -C a n a l'C o p the- Johnston ,and U n g

-.-W .'W . Frnnlr. wfll Ijo 'appolht' od-Twln-l'nils Housing Aillhfirlty to fill’ the unexplred term oi WllUom O ninge, who hos'inoved

^froin Ui« city,

Charles Burbank

officiatii ites w ill be in S u n se t. . . ■arfe.-Friends-may call-at White

Surviving, besides his widow, a re a sister; M rs. . B eatrice George. Portland, and ;M rs. C. N. (JoAnne) Joi Tustin , Calif.'-G raveside services will . be conducted .at 4 p.m . M onday in 'he TT.-.'ln Fiipg rAtT»»tf>rv hv R e ^ DF. 'H aro ld~Nye and~under the direction of White

Mrs. DietzR U PE R T - M rs. D orothea

Dietz, 72, died F rid ay evening a t the Minidoka M em orial Hos- p ita l of. a lingering illness.— —C-_I " ’II ■■

F ro s t re tu rned to the a re a w here he has since lived.

.Cloiiiiiierce

T.F. MeetingThe advis 'o ry 'council of . the

departm ent of com m erce and developm ent will hold a day­long session in Twin F a lls Mon-

,day. -Called by chairm an Alex

Creek, Idaho F alls, the 14-mem.

lilie ' w as bom Sept. 27. ■ J: . in Zeeland, N.D., and w as m ar- ricd_Jn_1921. to _ C h a rle^ Dle^tz in Zeeland, t h e couple cam e to R upert In 1937. and he died

longed to the T rin ity Lutheran Church.

Survivors Include fou r sons, enny Dlefz, P au l; C hris Dietz,

Rupert; Jo h n 'D ie tz , Rospvilie, Callf.._andll_qcob Dietz, serym g with the U.S. Navy in Moffett Field, Calif.; one brother,^W iI; llam R utschkc, Zeelatjd, hTD.; ■one sis te r, Mrs.- filizobeth Dle'tzl Oregon, and ^ grandchildren. .

Funera l .services a r e pending ^= ^^^ ^ t-th s-W »lk -M ortuary .

and on M arch 4, 1D19 he m ar­ried M arv Bortz in Burley. She d ied In 1944.

H e w as ,a ipem ber of the LDS C hurch.

Survivors Include two daupK te rs , M rs. M arv Sm ith ,'B urlev , «nd M rs. Lillie Cutler; St. G eorge; U tah, nnd n ine grand­children and ll> g reaP ^an d ch ll- d ren .

F u n era l services will be held a t 3 p.m , M onday in the Jo.seph P ayne M emorial Chapel In B ur­ley w ith Bishop F,.Ci P a sk r tt of the Burley I.DS-Church officlnf ing. F inal rites w iin>e herdTh the Declo Cenietery.

.F riends m ay call a t the Payne ^ ^ r tu n r y ,from-4 tp 8 p.m . Sun- ‘d ay ah a M onday prio r to sef-

“"^da^Bohffl”BURLEY — E da Bohm, 79,

a re tired nurse, d ied F riday a t

future pro jects and program s, The group will c o n s id e r 's ta te

planning, trav e l and econom ic development.

H erb D errick, Boise, new ly ppointed director of th e s ta te lannlng division, w ill ou tline a

detailed program in conjunc- 1 tvith those now in e ffec t un-

m ent executive secre ta ry . _C oncludlng_the, session will_be

tour qf the Kellwood plant, le r construction.

—Sun-Valley-Airlines an d ^ ra n s ,:) ' — Magic Airlines have been g ran t­ed re'-hearlngs-pn their requests to provide a ir 's e rv ic e between Twin F alls and Hailey.

T he hearings Will be held a t '9 a.m . O ct.'27 a t the-H oliday Inn in Twin F alls. ' « '

T he requests for ano ther h ea r-.. in ^w ere -fjled T -w ith -th e—Id a h o - Public ' Utilities Commission.

Lee Pontiac, In c .,-d o es busl* ness-as Trans Magic and wants to provide air--com m on ca rr ie r service from BurleiL lo Hailey and from Twin F a lls to Hailey,flights going both w |^fr.------

Sun Valley Alrliite^ w an ts toprovide service from Twin. F alls to Hailey, also a two-way trip . -

Officials of the airlines indi-

'twefin TW ifTFSlls' and' “Hailey^ • w ill .stop its minM lne service when' je t service is s ta rted in th e -a re a som etim e In D ec e m -.- . . . be r. t , •

Because of th is, the a irline officials asked th e PU C to r e - ' consider alternate service to thd North M agic'V alley re so rt'sp o t.

PUC, In 1 ■'The 1— ... —.......... ...s, * ww, ... reaching a deci-d e r Al Mmton, uo ise , Uupurt- iilmi, s jld good-cause-was-shown—

fo r the re-hearing and petitions from both airlines would be con­tinued Into one and h ea rd a t one time.

F~atalFall -WEST. HOLLYWOOD (U P I )~

The daughter o f television per- .ionality— AtX— L inkletter—rw a * - :- kllled Saturday in a fall from . a plush-apartm ent-build ing . —

The body of D iane L lnkletter.21', was Identified by residents of. the Soreham Tow ers. '

Sheriff’s- deputies sa id Miss _fnH eSeFfeIF7rTO =«ie==elgbth—

............. / lo o r .b f the building. She wassisters. H nnnah-Bohm and. M rs. j ) n>POHnccd de^A on a rr iv a l a t ,.. Lanna Rapp. Doth u u rley . County-USC M edlcaTC eivter

Funerpl se rv le ts a re lan d in g

Payne

h e r home In Burley of a short illness. '

She was boi'n M arch 16, 1890 a t Chicago and attended schools ln . .Ste>vard5Cn,, 111., and B ear Creek School, V era, 111., a n d lived m ost of her life In Illinois

w here she h as since She w as a ' m em ber of th e

L utheraniC hurchi-~-Survivors~ini____M artin Bohm. Shoshone; t w o

uneral sc l .vd ll be ainnounced by the ,-ne'M ortuary, '

tion Into circum stances bf 'i v ic tim 's death.

Josh E. EllerKIM BERLY - Josh E,' E llor,

8.^ K im berly, died Snturdnv 'n«JiUli(U:ivinJEalb_Cllnii al of a •

•nUin.-UIIIIlt;--. R. Builjuii^i. Twin -Falls county ; deputy

sheriff nnd form er Buhl chief of polled, died Saturday morning nt MUfilc Valley M emorial llos- piliil ufl<*r»brlef^ lllni'HH. ,

Born Nov. 13, 19M, at N ebras­ka City, NPbr,.Ao cam e lo Buhl

tiip■tinrvc{r'7or he Pacific;

■II fill' Eckirrt .......Company and Mitchell Hunt Font Salos,W n 10.53 he johied

nitfin

llo.spltal of a Nhnrt lllni'iis.Ho wo* born .Jan. 9, HJWT

nt .Sm ith County, Knn, He rfuir-

2, 1017, «r(M)mnT''Kn'n. * ) !m oved to K im berly.in 1030 from K ansas. Ho was a retircd rnncli- e r and attended the KImhcrly N azurene Church.

Surviving,' bejidcs his widow,

Mfi rln n r r.«lll,r-*"«>-Donn}drfi<r

■BtiW Tiollco 'forcc'nirpntrnlm . and la te r served a s chief for flvo.VUars. In Januarv lOOH, ho hocamt) deputy sheriff, a ponl* tIon Iks, held until tim e of death.

Ho ^^as m arried to Corn Dun- Ran In NAinpn on .Tune H, 1D38, She dind ’ In Ju ly 2.%, 1033, Ho Itttcc-w us-m arrled- to*Ollo I.oft. hoUNO lt> Elko, Nev„ Nov. 13, •1053. •

Ho-wan.fl m em her of the Buhl I.odKU No. ri.1, AF and AM and tlie Idaho Pcacu Officers Ahmo- ciiujo'n. . , •

In addition In his widow, he Js 4ur.uiucd.byJWQ aQna,.Ml(‘lli'ol n . B urbank, llnm oslead AFB,

.......... one daughter. ................Anno Burbank, Buhl: two half Nlstcrfl. M rs. John (B etty) Me. Rill, 'l\v ln Falls, nnd M rs. Cleo (M ary) Wilson, Newport, Wash,, and -one'half bro ther. J a c k BH^ hank. Las Vegas. . ’ - > .

Fiinornl services will bn<con. ducted A t'.2 p.m, Tuesday at t h 0 Buhl United Methmllst Chur«h bv Rov. Glenn W altm an. Masonic Rites will he ‘conducle<l

,bv Buhl I.odge 03, AF and AM, IiTicnds m ay call nt Albertson. Plckard--C tfflpcl*:«ntil—fi ' I'i.i il ,' Monday nnd tuitll'ftoon Tuosday, Concluding rites will Ih Buhl Cem etery,

irio r<te rs , . Mrs. Oortlon (Jaun lta) •Schapp, lx)veland, Colo., a n d - M n r —.ln v “ (|Vc!rmr)—Johnsonr 'INyln F a lls ; tvto brothers. Will E lle r nnd Melvin Ellor, both K ansas; Ihreo sifters, M rs. Ru­by Conrad, H utchinson, Kan.; Mrs, A^la Kohlenberg, San Dle- go, Calif., and Mrs. Maude .S iu lU i.-A lm inar K a n ,, . and 27 grnndchildrefi and 10 g r e a t - grandchildren. ' V ,

]*un«rnl services will be con- duciexl’ a t 2 p.m . Tuesday In White M ortuary Chapel by Rev. C harles Miller, Kimberly Niizn- rene Church, Flufll rites will be in Sunset M emorial Pork.

-Leonaid4}a1l—IIANSEN - [.eonnfd E . Ball,

r>El. d ied Wednesday m orning at n hospital In Tacoino, Wnsh,, a fte r suffering a h eart a ttack at his home Ihe previous F riday.

Mr. Ball was horn May 23, io n , n e a r jla n so n arid wasgracl. liated .from llonsen High .School, lie Is n retired Tiveomn firem an,

— He la-survived b j t^ is widow) one son, 'Donald Ball, •Tacnmn; one daugh ter, Mrs, J e r ry (liar- rie t) Sranek. HQJhclUi-Wutth.,

: •nino-’ firnhdtttlldron, nnd itJirco brothcrrt, C a r l Hall, OrfrnUa. N ev,, and Vergil Ball and Vi 0 0 0 Dali. bo thyU nien ,

M O N D AY NIGHT

Might Owl Sale!ALL SUM MER JEWELRY, $2:00 - S4.00 N0W$1TS2-

.Paatela,..aata.ip1na,.;bracolets._fiorrlnB9..v/lth.nocklocoa..to_match_or_wo«r_a o p ^ ra to ly . ^ •

NOW 75ctvlakoa hair "S hinp &

YARDLEY'S LONDONDERRY LINE. REG. S I.B OShampoo, C rom o Rlnao,% ^hioer or aettinR foam. Donco w^lth Joy.f*, ,

W H ITM AN 'S M ILK C H O C O U TE . REG.------- W U h -fa la ln a—A - t c a a L i o r ^ f l u r a w o a t to o th .

69c NOW 35c

^Z IN G Y REFRESHER COLOGNE. REG. S3.00 . . . , . NOW J1 .7 5___- F o r , q p la a h ln g o n . C o ty 'a Lily o f T h a V a llq y .,B lg 8 'o u n ca boktla , '

, GUEST SOAP. REG., $2.00 & $1 .0 0 . . NOW $1.00 & 50c10 bar pnckBRa Roaa Fragranca. Rag. $ 2 .00 .5 bar pacKaga. Lilac,. U ly of Th a Valley and carnation. Reg. J.OO.

- -T E C H N IQ U K H A M P O O 'e L O S E O U E r R E G r $ 2 ^ 5 -7 r r N O W -$ t O O "_____ Jn-hn lr„ .cQ lo r» ..

1—CD

-eOMPAG POWDER-puff:. REG;-25c & ~15c vNOW 2-FOR-1-Velour or fo a i^ .'T w o in 'paQkage..' -

ASS'T. UNBReM bLE COMBS. REG. 29c & 39c,.. NOW 14c. . 1 ; . . . . . . . . . . . - . . . -.NOW 11 .■ J.......................................... NOW fl.1 7BUBBLE BATH O I L 7

M ary S h e rm a n >. Aaa't fraRrancaa,

■ N O W . 50 cL IP S T IC K S -B ig ra s s o r lm e n i. Reg. $1.25 . . .aaa't. kinds a« color* — . —

MANAGERS M E D jC M CHEST SPECIAL . . . . . . . :SAVE ^ 2 .4 9

• $ 1 .4 9 cou g r iyVu|), $ 1 .4 9 cold 'c a p m i« ir

-$ 1 .S B o in tm a n i a n d $ 1 :9 0 .Th a rm o m a ltr.

T o t a l-V o lu a $ 6 .4 6 . . . r . . . .

S P E C I A LPRIC^

J . 3 7 M a i n A y « . W . - r - D o w n t o w n -T yyln F a l l a

j .

Page 3: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

PresWfeiit Nixibn’s Relations With .^Mexico (5roW Worse itli-GpeTatipn luterc^By TERRANCE W. McGARRY Q»pl” m ethods.. . - U nder E jsenhow or/rK C ttT ic^ •B y TERRANCE• MEXICO CITY. (U P l)—Rich- a rd -M ; Nixon', w h o . got off on the w rong fo6 t in his relations w ith neighboring Mexico, ' has soured the Mcxican governm ent furthcr»by chockftig' off bprcler tra ffic to hunt for m arijuana.

In l e s s 'th a n two weeks of 'Operation In te rc e p t," . Mexi-

can-'Amcrlcan relations have dropped to their lowest point In yeirrs:------- ^ ^ ---------------------------• M exiuon— o ffid d a —fH'e— hur4-}i am i an g ry . They b itlcrly ..recall " the good old ' days, with Lyndon B.-J ohnson^nnd -John-'F Kennedy.’’

McxTcan otficiais._ po ijil_ n u t th a t, Mcxico has in cd to cooperate w ith - the .LfpUpd States for a decad'q in

LTijuawtt-andnarcotic ' tl-affic. i------

-.uOuF- own efforts, which have been • sizable in money and m anpow er, in' destroying mari- luana fields, a re taken for tHt jon e fit of the - U niied .'S iates,v s a id one official. ".Without^ahd rich A m erican m arke t as a lure- for—the—scaw fira^w c-w ouH ZK ot have much 6 r r T » ‘Oftiem-Of-nur' .own. The use of- drugs is nol th a t w idespread am ong Mexi­can. young people. " '■

"W e do .this a s a friendly gesture; and 'w H at do we get in re tu rn ? Operation Bad • Neigh­bo r. th a t’s -what.” •..Mcxico.' agrees thfit m arijiia-

d_narcQtics.. traffic should

_ it the operation h as deeper m ean ings' to the M exican governm ent,, which go beyond “I’arliuano'. ~

The Mexican attiftde- is tfiat tbe -operation is a deliberate pressure-, play • agaihst .th e Mexican governm ent, and indi• ca tes the Nixon adm inistration regards good ■ ’ re lations _ \Vith IJ^exico as expendable.

-M exico-is-convinccd—despite

W iiliam -P . ftogers to Mexican Foreisn S ecretary Antonio Car-

Ttllo'-Fiort's—that-tfie :d im -6 f^ h e operation is .not p rim arily to catch sm ugglers a t the border.

" I t is quite transpare jiti’'~said one officfal.. " th a t the repl goal of this ill-conceived 'm aneuver is -to-hurt the’ ecoriom ies-of-pur io rd e r ..c it ie s and d is ru p t .b u r norm al ,com n\erce an d move­m ent on the border. . .

"T his is being done In the hopes, th a t it will 'fo rce the■Mexican g'oyernnieiit .tp__takc

’.mpn'.surcii ..hcce-Ja ■ •

and Johnson, a trad ition .had begun to grow. I t c a lled for-fl ;iew 'U . S. president' to /m e e t wMh Ws- Mexican counter*-'-* early , giving the neigjjl precedence pv er o th e r chiefs of s ta te . - • ,

Despite some h ints - from M exico .'P resident G ustavo Dias O rdaz didn’t m eet Njxon until this month—nine m onths Into his . aflministra’tion. ati.a a fte r

•Sulriday, b c to b e r 5 , 1969; ,Tlm es-N 6 w $ ,'T w ln F^lls^Jdc>Ko^..3.,

Putelic'MeetOiohDPA^et^ W e d r i i e s d a j E i i z i .

sta te . And tha t' w as .only fOr .a. ^w , hours, a mos'tly cerem onial c n '^ r i( e r '-a t" a ^ y e f lo la to -d a m B lte on the Rio G rahde.

While the suspicion grew In jjovernm eqt <iircles th a t “ the honeymoon Iflls' e n d ed ," M exi­can officials, in all bu t the m ost

iprivatCT .conversations, - -dented they fe lt any change in re la tions' • wUh UnitedS tates. ■

•-•‘b p e r a t I o n - ' ‘ In te rcep t” c h a n g e d that. A lthough .still unwilling— to —go—o n —r/co rd , M cxIcaiT................

Im provem ent

G A ^ j ; G R EEN B EK G . 27, a s ta If^ a tlo m « y .with the ■ ju s ticg Dop'artment*«rtlvll7Tight5 divtalop I s Bhowgrat-a^QewB- confcrencc th is w eelCat which h e sa id he Was ask ed lo .re s ig n after h e 'lo ld A ssistant A ttorney-G eneral J e r r ls Leonard ho could not defend governm ent-requested delays In school de­

seg reg a tio n In the co w ls . M r. Leonard charged la te r that “ a lot of people a fe running off a t the m outh about.tho'NlxoA

-adm ln ls tra jto n * s-c lv ll,jIg h U -p o ltc Ics .-(U P Ijtc lcp h o jp )_____i _

openly resen tfu l. ( rand b itt tr rom arkt^N ew spap^ra:.are-£iIlcd- '‘Opcratioh In te rcep f* - back M exicao^oftic la l-pu t

ak of cartoons picturing, custom s

unprccudonled c o rd la in r .u n d w “L 'n p . 'f t c r involved,

nScnntinjF duvMi t u ' n o im

Johnson. M exico w as pleased with th e stress Johnson p u t on rem edying M exican com plaints, h is ' frequent m eetings w ith M exican presidents (seven In all), his vigorous backing for a

.and the p ressure of .strangled traffig , will_most probably force

levels in time.But it cracked .'the friend.ship

b u ilt . 'Up betw een the two neighbors over th e . course of decades.

■“ We w ere ju st getting used to thinking o f 'm u tu a l problems as •ours.’ N p w .lt looks like we’re Hack to thfe days <jf 'u s and th em .’ " --------- ^

■A public Inform ation meeting on the Idaho • D epartm ent of. , Public A ssistance w ill be .s[X)n- sored a t 7:30 p .m . .Wednesday by the Tw in F alls County Coun- • oil ‘o f Pub lic A ssistance.• Don F ran k , local DRA .direc- tor^—sa id - th e -t}ublic-is invited to th«*' m eeting a t the Id ih o : powei* aud ito rlm . . .

___ ________ _______imis<innrrfor'DPA, will speak a t the-m cct-- '. ,Ing. Staff_Tnembers^fr(tfn the lo- ' • •CaT'bPA“ flfflce 'W ho'^lll b c -B a r- r— ticipating a re Linda Olsen,-eligl* bility for m o n e y p aym ents;_ ' J e r ry Quick, f in arid al and ni'ed-. V-^ le a f .assistance p rogram s; K e n t ' H enderson, child p_ro^tlvo«ser-'-vJcesi—E rro a -& « )iw h u e r-c h lld ------ -c a re licensing an^UdBirtive-stti->— - dies and .p lacem ents, and M rs^ P ea rl Shultz, se rv ices to fam ­ilies w ith ch ildren.

This is th e jf lrs t such m eeting .J ic Id _ in _ Iw iiL ^ a lls _ s in c e _ lh o ___ icountyJcoun cB w as appointed by <jQv._ U0 n ~ S sro u eb 0 a-iiv»- Nnv , _=-1_^_.. M em b ers -o f - ,the g commlCL___:tftfl nro John R prV^r.M rs. Royal Slotten, John W olfe . .and G eorge B ennett and H eber lo u g h m llle r, represen ting • tho county com m ission. Mr* r r a n k s e rv e s -a s a e tre ta ry .

Change Asked In Proposed Constitution

______BOISE* (U P I) — A proposed

hew s ta te c o r is t l t u t i o n cuts down on the role of counties as po litical subdivisions and should bo changed, the chairm an of .the com m ission th a t wrote it

. ,,sa id today.F’o rm er Suprem e Court Ju s­

tice K avm ond Givens,. Boise, legislative com m ittee^o ld

, JTthe-propo: .. . stitu tion th a t he docs not w ant to " le s se n -th e sta tu s of coun; tie s a s political subdivisions.”

— Undp.r, thp , rKvL<iR[l f^onstitu- tlon, counties and cities'*'ar«

. m entioned a s political subdl- . v isions of th e slate, but m uch

of th e language about the ir pow ers and duties Is stripped out.

Aa“ proi50sed” lrt"th8‘Tre\7^on: stitution, th e legislature would

• -h a v e '- t n e — power- to- meri coun ties w ithout a vote, o f (I people.

H erbert B erm an, a consultant to th e Constitutionhl Revision ; iJb m m lss t8 K '= t5 ia= W ^ ln m I{ = tee th a t perhaps In the future

------- th e leg is io tu rom ay-w an t-to -c re .-a to m etropolitan units of coun­ties and cities.

M eantim e, Jam es, Lynch. Boi­se ,-c h a lrn ja n of the S tate Bar

, _Cornmit{ee_qn Judicial Reform , ob jected to a proposed 10-year te rm ' fo r Suprem o Court. ji

, '. t ic e s .’ ___ A -Jnstlce. Lwich said, should

be Independent of the executive b ranch of governm ent.

Lynch also said tha t the d ra ft o f tho proposed rcv'ision.contnlns conflfcts, e ith e r w ith w h a t has been accom plished. In fac t o r by legislation and constitutional

He said im cndm ent recently approved

:-------by-tcfpll. la ry m easures for juBtlces an d Judges w hich a re not In­cluded In (he proposed revision and should bo placed thfire, •

R ussell Randall, I^w lston, chalrm afi tof the commis.sion’s Subcom m ittee on the Judiciary,

' agreed there should b s some m odifications made.

Thurs<lny, the com m ittee re- Jec tw r a prOp«»trd ‘‘Rhnrt-ballnt for e lectca s tn te offlclals,-

tho-olcctoratfi-scU .forth .U la; ________Brandt Has Become Symbol Of W. Berlin Determination

A <t • hir A m e i q ^ a n s ’ > |n

Blamed For T)FagffliigW^

ay U nited m s s in ternational When fo rm er Soviet P rem ier

N ikita S. Khrushchov once gave (ho W estern Allies six months to - a « t-o u t.-o f ..- l lc r l in ,-M a y u t Willy O randt rebuked him with an Indom ltahlb spirit th a t won him (ha undying ailegianco of ' Ic jlln e rs . , ^

SAIGON (U P I) — South 'Viet- nam eso Foreign M inister Tron —Vanii^ni_flaid-ErMoy_iiDW3li tlon l)y A m ericans n riiom o was '•prolonRlnK (his unhappy w ar," Ho - Bold -.P rcsldenl ..NlxDH_lina assured him that the United S tates w ill' see i t thmiigh to a

. Batisfactory concluHlnn, •InlervlewecT on th a weekly

Vletnnmeso Iqn^jngoJA fovlslon n rngram , "Tlio reo p le W ant to ICnnw,’*' I jim was nnked about his (niks wKh NlKon a t United Nations Insti m onth,

- ’^ProJildent.... Nixon— repentedan d ' requested tho nreHldont>of the Republic of V ielnam to believt). In (ho detorm inatlon nnd ' patlentio (of (ho \Unlted

•S tates) In the p re sen t-tlm er^ ' L<Un said.-* ff Smit»rviettmme#trniipiO'»

tn a t deflcrlbed os '‘V ery compll* cHted” U.S. ptihllc opinion on (ho w ar, I,.nm said he wan told (hnt nboiit (10 p e r co n ( ,n f the

.A m orlcan-peopie. supim rts Nlx- • cm’s V ietnam pollqics and tlint

21-35 por cen t 'com prls6 (ho -n n d w ar opimsldon, Ife snld m any Americans- hava opipfon, p ro o r^con .,...

W est Dcrlin’a determ ination to s ta y o u t of Com m unist hands on th a t d ay 11 year* HBO, W ithout w aidng for w ord from W ashlnglflh, L o n d o n -o r -p o r ls ; D randt rejected the Soviet d«m an4^m n)«dlAt*ly.

"W e a re nqt going (o be cooked ov er a alovr fire,**

B randt answ ered. “ You mudc yourself one.” ■

Berlin, always .h Socialist stronghold, whs one of the lustclilca.iQa«rn_,N«zl..!n...O»«.<l«y'> of World War l lD lc ta lo r Adolf liilte r, B randt’s anti-Nazi back- iround m ode him popular

Nazi underground, and iico to Norway in lOM ot,tho.nK o of 20 and la te r to Sweden when the Nazis seized Norway,- 'A f te r (ho -w ar-h e-re tu rn ed to G erm any, resum ed his Germ an 4U tluw sh<p-and-rea;ntiirud..G er.

JimndL:lQliLlhft..5QyiCL_________• 'B rn n d t m illed the oily around him as tho la te M ayor E rnest R eu te r d id during tho 1O4B-11M0Berlin Blo'ck’o a ? ^ ' ------ ‘•-

To B erliners, B randt Is a •nonpartlhon hem ,-'as ho proved when he got-01 ,ft per cen t o f the vote .Jn W est JieeUa'a ■ JM3 m ayoral olecllon. Ha ca rr ied nil 12 boroughs, Incmdlng (he fashionable suburbs long consi­dered consorvatlvo.

If - h is ‘ lllogUlmat* b irth - was hole]-' ag a in st him ' b y some d e trac to rs , his supporters point­ed o u t th a t B randt rose high and faced (he issue squarely,—Ho-#iever-m art<f-n--eeere^lh#t

tho nam eho w as born with H erbert- " ‘ “ ‘track, G drm ony, Deo, IB, 1013. He* ohonged h is nam e to conceal- his Identity from the Nnzla bu t • the nam e Willy B ran d t ulMck,.

B erliners (oil the s to ry of day (ha( Communlsc Enst G erm an Maytfr PrUrdrich’ KhiBi taun ted B randt about h>s birtl..

w as h o rn, a bA stard,"

r nM hft-nntI-

m an politics as, a ' Social I^ m o c ra t, the party he - had lolnod a t (|i", o f He v o iected niuyor 9 [ V ‘West ncTIIrTfnlO.’iT. ■

Brandt Is m arried form er- Ruth Hnnseni

to :tlin.................... , Norwe*

Ijian, They have two sons and h dau g h te r,. '

Yearbook ChosenIPAIIO STATR UNIVP.R.SITY,

Pocatello - The Valley High School yearbook w as . selected the -best sm all pchool yearbook during the annual fitll wnrkshnn of the Idaho State High Schorl

Burger Resigns. R O C H E S T E R , Minn. (U P IJ .— Chief Ju stice War-; rcn Burger luis resigned as n m em ber of the M ayo Clin­ic board of trustees, it was

• announced F riday.Atherton Dean, chairm an

of tho board, said Burger, a ■■*iVailv(ror'MinaOfiotar‘wtmo'"

tha t he .had to ‘’reexam ine and reeC-aluato'’ his actlvi- tlelf and "indeed my e n tire ,

_jnm la.nLliriU a,orilcU !>:W nrk_.' ■ -p rln rtH ix

for the future,"B urger fiald' th e ' ‘largo

com m itm ent’' for tjie m eet- lni!5 of th(Lbj?ard_ls no lonb. c r possible In h is new posi­tion,

TTOTm~!inta tiP 'nci.e |ited-iltp-reslgniltiong re t."

"w ith grcirt re-

Lawsuit AtKetchum Is Under Study

KETCHUM ~ A law suit In­volving (ho Rcntly-To-Pour Con- crc(o Co. iigainHt a KotChum building lnupvo(or has n been taken under advisem ent a fte r a

Pro«ii AiuoclBtlon, " • ilwcKluj trio l, „ , ‘ , heId-nv~Ju<*Ro-Ch«rlo«-J>oogRln-to.o.J

Gliaiia Is Africa’s First-State To Return Civilian Rule .By PHIL NEWSOM

U PI Foreign News A nalyst-In 1057 G hana becnmo black

A fr ic a 's . first -independent' stato. T his week it becam o black Africa’s first sta to to re turn to civilian rule via free clecticyi* if (e r - th rc e -y e a r» -o f-m ll l (a T ^ {overnment.

Tho new p rem ier is 55-year- old Tefl Busiu, a soft-ajK)kcit Mclhodlal lay preiicho£ who

B.n Ph i) from Oxford. - - I lls progre.ss p a rty won 101 ol tho 140 seats In (ho ■’'Ghiumiun assem bly in Inst month'i reg im e o f-G h n n a ‘f l- f lr r f l-p idont, Kwame N krum ah.

than S800 million 'and it had turned G hana’s foreign trade from a dcficIt to a surp lus ofabout $08 m illion. ------—It hnd kept Its p ro m ise '(o restore ■‘dem ocracy and as Itturjied. the govefnm ent ov er to

'v ll.......................................................I f .. ,

remalnod in jail.

civilian rule it could say that iiotV'fiirKic-Miurcttr-pfrsirnei'

Among G h an a 's a sse ts is Its encrgetlc ^nd Intelligent populUT (Ion of n little pw ro than seven

debt, th e new governm ent faces problem s of Inflation, unem­p lo y m en t, and the question of w hat ( o d o wKh (he uneconomic s ta te en te rp rises established by NkruiT»ah.

It m ust encourage foreign Investm ent.■'TlV d'X lirc'rirnon 'CriuhcirB O U L . to persuade foreign companies to take over somo of tho loilni s ta te en te rp rises but wUI lim ited fiuccesft. j h e Firestone T iro ' and Rubber, Co., op.cratcs a '(U e fwetfny and lublir

p lantations.I t m u st step* u p the produo*

tlon of cocoa, Its princlpa)prodwc(,. Which hftB-been.lofllng_____ground to o(her. coun(rles.

It m u st som ehow try to satisfy n m iddle tie r In Its populotlon w hich liked nel(her (he ■c6 U'n(ry’r e a r l l e r 'n i n f l i i o n -------w ith th e C om m unls(s n o r Its l a te r dependence on (he W est,

And K m ust Hnd a aofutfon to , . a problem exem plified by tho 9 IVII w a r In N ig e r ia .'w h fch ' Is

J t ln a Irihal differences.^

—ThB -TvnrkBhnpinvnirl / on the Idaho

Spaperw< schools

S(a(e Unl- (he citso under advisem ent I'rl-

irwomen from U Idaho high • i((ended.

E D rrO R .D IE STUCSON. Ariz. (U PI) - Re­

tired Cleveland sports ed itor nnd colum nist Gordon Russoll Cotitk bledictc died here T h u rsd ay night a t tlw ago of 70.

erec tcd s ta tues of him self and left his country ' nearly a billion <^ollttr««^at7}i^)bt.„ now .n^jtUlo:^ Iti- cxllo .In...n«lBhl,X)rlng' Gulnon.

At a (Ime when m any African leaders consider dem ocracy old fash ioned ,~ B usla- |nadB . it .J i ja pla(form ,

"All peoples can achieve and practlco dem ocracy, • If they itnve enough faith nnd colivlc- (Ion In Its valudfl," ho once wroto.

He had served a s the leader of N krum uh’s opposition,, In parliam ent nnd then had fled In iOOO to c a rry on his fight In exile.

In (he jAugunI elections, his • ■ • JComlu ’~A,_Cibcdi

nee mlnlNt<

WltnesBflr during-tw o-days r - '11)0 con<;ro(e firm pur^shas'ed

property w est of Ketcfium when thnt p roperty w as zoned Indus- (rln(, Unwover, ^Ince th a t tim e (ho property has been zoned re s ­idential. . - . ’

I.eonard M cCoy Is (ha Ininector. nomcfl In (he su it an dcfcndUnt, , '

mall, one-tfmo finance *iul—#l^r' ‘ ■■tnB h f'^ iT -o n ij» --30-M i»(« .— ---------

As . the new government replaces the’ m llltary-rulcd Nn- tlonnl I.lheradon Council, it fnces moniiiTitjntnr lasks,',

In tho three y ears it had held power, the council h»d done a good Job,

, I t had rrnegoda ted paym ents on (he, N krum ah debts of more

m X te m tt- i

Page 4: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

R O B E R T A L L E N I A N D J O H N G O L D S M I I H

' 1 M agic-V ailey^t Borne NewspaperB la^s Itt IM BiuIding Trades

* ^ ^ ^ n d a y , O c to b e r 5 ; r9 6 9 ; , PHONf 7 3 3 ^ 9 3 1 .

AI westeI ^ • ftoMAS' HOWARD - -WllEV. 00005. Pobll»hef • Aiililont to th i'N bllih tf • Editor, Adv«rtli1ftfl;Monoflw.

CH^E CARPENTER • CfME THOMPSON’ ‘ PAUL STANDIEY' , . rOl J. SMITHa r ^ t b ' ’ Comomlng RocriJAorwtfw fr tu Room ManoQt .Monoolna Editof

- That SST Gamble

• WASHINGTbW V X h e ' L a ^ r ; b cp a rtm cn l's cam M lgn to eni** plby more* sk illed Negroes on federally•- financed conslruction ' p ro jects h a j provoked on cm -' b^rrassing In tra • governm ent w rangle. '

Congress m ay be asked to sqt goals fo r m ino rity h iring j o take a hand. In the m eantim e, tha t their w ork fo rce accu ra te ly however, the controversy could • reflects the availab ility of m l- ' w ind, up In the.Jederal courts. nority w orkm en in a given a re s .

A t Isfae Is the so-called "P h il- I t Is aim ed a t pushing m bte qdeiphia P lan” under w hlch fcd-— black-workm en Into the building , ^ r a i co n tra c to rs 'a re 're q u ire d to trades. . ^

I s i t w orfli $1.2 b illion to bo a b le chj . o f , ,'g e ttin g - h i s :: in y e s tm e h tch a n ce . „ ____„ .. . . .•paiils In- 4>atIR lu th e fu rm ~ot . r o y a l t lB y 3 o 6 =~

th r e e h o u r ^ — a b o u r - h t t in h e tim e . ing , t h e . , m anufQ C turer, .e sU m a te s ~ t io w - r e q m r e d ? - T h i s -is->5he-of- th e - t h e : g o v e im n e n f w ould re c e iv e full

auestlons b e in g a sk e d ’iii th e jw a k e ,o f - re l in h u rs e m e n t w hen It- se lls . i t s le -N lxon o d m ln is tra u o n 's cleclsioii— S O O U r-pl^e..Sp,far.;,there 0X.e o rd e r^

t ' - t a g o . a h e a d w ith .th e .A m e ric a n ver-; ' fro m 28 a ir l in e s W rJ 2 2 of th e s iiper- slon of th e su p erso n ic tra n sp o r t. . ' c r a f t r— H

B ut. a s ' s o often h appen^ , co s t - E v en i f a ll goes w ell, the: Boeing := ^= ^ay^ire~the?^Rf5F-o_f ' t !iB~gt?5tacltfa S 9T w ill-b ^ th e^ th ird -en trsL ^liv i^ H et

■ e n c o u n te re d : b y th e T ju g e p lan e’s in te rn a tio n a l SST field . T h e Rus-b a c k e rs In th e com in g d e b a te in ' * ’ ’ ' ........C ongress. Sen. C lifford C ase o f N ew

. J e r s e y a lre a d y h a s in d ica te d hejw ill a s k th a t a b an b e p la c e d on flying

_the.SST n v g r thft rn n tip e h ta t-U n lte d ^— S ta te s , e x c e p t on m ili ta ry m issio n s.

Tho plan' h a l f e e ? ruled lllc- , the us» p t tcj5>al I^Bds on prQ - . gal by C om plro llc f G eneral E l- ccls w hlch Ignore tlie-com ptrol. m cr a ' S l a t e o n grounds th a t le r general s ruling ofl the PhU-—it Is, In essence, n quota sy s :^_ade ljlilil_E l»ni — r- ■;--------- ,tern . which, am ount^_ to raq|_,J

- >c nn tn ipu leh t motlcc th iit the ■murder chargd aga inst the e ig h t G reen B erets e ither bo drojJped

"or IH e lr tr ia l be shifted to a civilian cb u rt in..the U.S. ' ' '

/ T h is Ira te dem and was m ade by one of th e 'm o s t . Influential i , lead ers of the House - Rep.L. M endel River?< D-S.C., chafr-

n f thc 'pow erfu l House'A rm- ' 'c e s Ci - -

d iscrim ination In reverse . Such plans, he says, V lo la te :th e - ir '- civil, r igh ts law.

S taa ts’ G enera! Accounting Of-, lice rides herd o n ' the .spending o h funds app rop ria ted by Con­gress. His ruling suggests', therefore , th a t fe d e ra l^ financ­ed con tracto rs cannot bo requir* e d ' lo cstoblish the goals- Im-

slan s h a v e anno iinced th e ir vers io n , ab o u t w h ich li tt le is 'k n o w n , w a s fldWo-fgfeter th a n sound fo r the f i r s t tim e - la s t D e c e m b e r- Thp f p i n - t ^ ? re n c )f^ tish L ..C o n c o rd e „ could—^ 0 fly ing co m m e rc ia lly in a y e a r . ~

_j-m ile-w ide sw a th __b o o m s fo l lo w in g -c ra f t w h ich fly ' - fa s te r th a n the ' speed of sound from

, d is ru p tin g Jife on e a r th m o re th a n is ab so lu te ly n e c e s sa ry . T h e sena-

--to r-'has, m u ch suppor't on th e ques- - t io h 'b f -n o is e —T h is-co u ld -b eco m e-th e -

SST poin^_td re c e iv e w id e s t a tten -^ 1 tion~in Congres;

signe'd to cruisfe a? I.-ISO m iles {in -hour, co m p a re d to 1,800 fo r th e Boeing v e rs io n . T h e A m eric an p lan e a lso w ill h a v e tw ice th e c a p a c ity of th e C o n c o r d e . •

Ojice its-su cce ssfu l-to st-fllg h ts-a re b e h in d -it , th e Boeing p la n e should- ou tsell -Us com petition . If th e a g e of

. : s - fo r - th e ^ o s tr$ 5 0 0 -M ill l5 ir- a r^ h 'e " S S T ^ « C K e T T » T rffS -it5 -e x p o n e n i . r»'~Tpndy_hhsLtieen. a llo c a te d u n d e E -p re r_ e x p e c tr:th e -U :S :z c o u ld -h a v e :-o n e -o f —v io u s -a d m in ls tra tio ifs rr lh e - re m fe in — its - h o t te s t - e x p o r t - p r o d u c ts - in - th e .

ing $700 m illion ,1s e a rm a rk e d fo r - p lane . ' .g e ttin g th e p la n e o p era tio n a l. I f i t B ut a ll th a t is tw o. y e a rs aw ay , su cc eed s, th e ta x p a y e r s ta n d s a a t th e e a rlie s t.

Ocean Dump- ^ D u ^ i n g - i n d u s t r i a l w a s te s off th e —ed g e—of— th e —co n tin en ta l—s-h -e .lX

tr ip to d e p th s of 1,800 fe e t ju s t off th e co n tin en ta l sh e lf o f N ew J e r s e y

tljrb u g h m ile s of p ip e lin e a t. f i r s t g la n c e se e m s- to b e n o t o n ly ran im -

—p ^ c tic a ts u g g e s tio n ,^ b u t_ p o s s ib ly a d a n g e ro u s one fro m th e poten tial., c onsequences to th e oce an . ' '

l iu t Wlien considere'd~^d^alilst"tht: a d v a n c in g s ta te of po llu tio n in the n a tio n a n d th e la c k of m o re than '

- t e m p o r a r y “ b re a k th ro u g h s— in -a t ­te m p ts to co n tro l it, th e id e a of us*

“w a s a n unexp6C rea“ d Isc o v ery -p f-T r bo n an za in m a r in e J i f e a n d d is a ­g re e m e n t-a m o n g th e rh se lv es a b o u t th e -e f fe c ts of -d um ping—Jn d u s tr ia t w a s te s . . '£

T h re e sc ie n tis ts a sso c ia te d _wlth' th e t - ra n k lln ' In s tm ite .sa id tlie . llev ed th e d u m p in g p lan ls-p ro sjsec ts w e re“ h e rg H t^ e d Dy th e ir find ings. T h e - o th e r - tw o m e m b e rs of te a m ; fro m a U . S . B u re a u of S p o r ^

•Py^th c -Pti • However, A ttorney G eneral John N. M itchell has Issued a • 20-page opinion w hich upholds the legality of the'plan '. A s o n g - . Inally developed, it applies to large federally- assisted con-' scnictlon pro jects in th e Phila-dclphia .ar e a . - , ----- -— SicreiaV y 'o f^tfl^ fif G eo rg e-P ;’ Shultz expects to ' ad ap t the plan - to prevailing circum stances In o ther a rea s as soon a s possl- ble. His position, now 'supported •

cd Services Cprffhiittce,' tRat h an 'd lc s -a irm llita ry lo g is lB tiq n . •In-n few :d ay s.'R iv e rs will act. a s noo r_ leadcr when the House... - considers thP ?20 bilHon m ilitary p ro cu rem en t authorization blU— ov e r w hich the Senate wrangled- fo r ten w eeks. • . •

R lv c rs jlo ld _down-hIs_-.ultima-;::; tu rn on th e ' G reen -B ere ts -ln-«-

-b a f^ lm u ck le talk-w llh Resor— " T h e A rm y’s handling, of this

a ffa ir Is Infam ous,”- said Rivers.'I t Is a d isgrace to th e-A rm y

th e plan- does not .s e t quo tas In ge ije ra l. T he .A rm y seem s to_.but sim ply requ ires "good faith"-* haVe gone 6 u t..o t.ifs .. .w a y toa ttem p ts to m eet h iring g o a ls ., b lunder and bungle. Thls-stu^Id-

rfiHng arm Itv a n f Incom prehensible Inanltvof Congress. MitchcU’s ju s tic e D epartm ent Is the law office of the governm ent’s exe(yitive branch . T he -controversy Is, therefore , one of legislative vs. executive' a ll over again.

h as to stop.- ‘.'I am w arn ing you bluntly a n d , explic itly th a t unless the A rm y 'd ro p s - th e case' o r 's h if ts .

' th e - t r la l to a civilian court In the U.S., - th e A rm y will g riev- .

C ontraetor-groups' oppose-thar - o u s l i ^ r ^ ^ I t r - T O l ^ t a ^ n o t ^ jp la n . U s t w e e k th e c o n v en tio h ‘f t ,o r th e A F L -C IO C o n s tm c t lo p .. 5 ' « , a h d y o i ^ n o w d a m n w e ll f n jt- H i i iH in f - T ra it...; T v p n r l - I C an m a t e g o o d j n e v e r y w o rd

l U s S S S l n l t e l y k n o w n w h a t - R eso r -repH ed-feut he can ' h ava.., no doubts a s to R ivers’ 'a b ility to b ack u p h is deniVnd.

T h e South Carolinian, a 30- y e a r House veteM n, is not only

.... i c h a irm an of the A rm ed Services

of departm en t President- C.- I. H aggerty t h a t the building trades unions a re 100 p e r cent opposed to ‘quota system s, what-^ e v e r they a r e called.

Skilled jobs, a s plum bers,

th e like, a r e . a t the h ea r t of , the controversy'. The unions rep-

re sen tin g ' such* w orkers - have- — long-been criticized on grounds

th a t they ■discriminate against m inority groups, often through llly-whlte ■■ - -

am ong House m em bers In gen- c r a l and a ' m uch respected lead­e r of th e po ten t Southern,bloc.

'Both*' the ' Defensfe- D epartm ent, a n d the W hite House go to g re a t p a in s not to antagonize him.

for* w a s te s a t le a s t d e se rv e s to b e exp lo red ! T h a t is w h a t fiv e sc ien ­t is ts h a v e done, u s in g th e r e s e a rc h s u b m a rin e B en F ra n k lin . < i

W h a t th e sc ien tis ts c a m e b a c k — w ith -fro m a tw o - d a y e x p lo ra to ry

■greunda— F lshe rle s ~ M a r ln g "CaBbr a to ry;

R eso r w as-ech o ed by -an o th e r - -— - .......... - ■ ■ , in fluentia l Southerner — Rep.—

ed constructlon_trades_have.jni-__ P a u l—R ogers ,—I> -F la .^ H e -d e ---------nority em ployes am ounting to • nounced th e Armj»‘s handllhg' o f about o n e -p e r cent, while m i- th e G reen B ere t case aS another norities com prise about 30 p e r g la rin g instance of ‘’m ilitary in-cent, of thft w ork force in the rnmp«K»nr«» "________________•"

If re a 's construcuon industry. * ^ e whole so rry situation,” ’’The plan m aji well be tested R ogers told his .colleagues, "h as

In the courts w hen a 'c o n tra c to r c r e a te d ,a n a fr of_buck-pass|ng' declines to - abide by th e goal w ith in th e m ilita ry . The Amerl*

“ PfOeedttPfr - * . . . . . . . . . . .

p re ssed doub ts ab o u t th e idea , say* ing it cod ld ca u se serio u s h a r m to m a rin e life . . -

Obviously, m o re ex te n siv e s tu d y i s -n e e d e d befo re a n y cdficlusions c a n b e re ach e d .

A N DR EW TULLY

Too Late To Have Any Clout

rEv& lvinchG owboa-Ing analysis" of th e situation ■ ' W ashington "w as m ade in

WASHINGON — Ltl k Q so policy decision of aw ful slgnlfl-m any of tho crusades .against cance. ^ ............ „ .............

..W w ar (hflt turn<»ri niif to ht» In re trnspgp.t, T.yndon Jdhnson close and COnatant-COnaultaUOO unpopular. Sen. J . W illiam Ful- today m ust feel a little like John with the governm ent of Viet-

" bN ght’r d i a c ifla a rO Hgl-^^O-U-Lh— K cnncdyzd id ia f te rz tfag=aborttCTrr3ianriizJtistrat>r=But=thett-

con trac to r in th e Philadelphia ' a re a has Indicated th a t he m ay ac t to force a cou rt test.

With the Justice D epartm ent supporting the legality of the plan , som e m em bers of - th e H ouse end Senate a re urging th a t C ongress a c t to support the GAO, Q.ije proposal h a s a lready been d ra fted w hich would b a r

t a r y ’s Ineptness In the Pueblo a n d la te r th e flying Pueblo af- * fa ir s and now .sees e igh t Am eri­ca n serv icem en literally cap tu r­ed and b adgered b y .'o u r own fo rce s . Com bined w ith the P u ­eblo and th e flylhg Pueblo cas^ .es, w e h a v a now witnessed In­com petence of leadership on land , se a and in the air.*'

— -O v er -the y e a rs c a ttle m e n h a v e Ing the_«nd of th e b ra n d in g Iron;jftcciistom ed th em se lv es , i f ^ a b it

. re lu c ta n tly , to a g r e a t m an y c h a n g es in th e ir t ra d e . Cowboys s till r id e ho rses , b u t often a s no t it is~fo 'r fec re a tio n “ InsTeYd” b f “ w brk. V eh ic les now do m uch of th e ra n g e w ork , supp lem en ted freq u en tly b y a irc ra f t .

----- O no -o f-th o -few a sp e c ts o f-ran c h -'Ing w hich h a sn ’t c h a n g ed g re a tly s in ce fro n tie r d a y s is th e m ethod

. o f m a rk in g ' c a ttle so th e ir ' ow ner­sh ip ca n bo re ad ily es tab lish ed . Now som o D a lla s en g in e ers a ro i^rcdlct*

Th its 3lace th e y w ould su b s titu te a la s e r b e a m . N o t th e k ind u sed in la b o ra to rie s a n d in d u s try , b u t one w hich ca n g e n e ra te h e a t u p to 5.000 .......... —

'deB rees'C entlgrQ dG ^hnd‘p u fa b ra n d " ^ h * 'N i* o n '® d i

Vletnam_dld_not_ask th e_ U n It^d _ _ C u v ^Jn v n sio n ..In .th a t.o n e ,..th o — could onlj4-report.thaU hlse.con*_S tates to send comba’t troops CIA w ent even fu rth e r b y tak ing aultatlon* .‘’wore such a i to b«to th a t countnr In M arch. 10G5, com m and of a m ilita ry expedl- regarded b y o u r governm ent a i _ ______ ________________Is too la te to have a n y clout, tion. constituting a request fr&m th® A D T D I j r H W A L D

N everthe le^ , F u l b r i g h t h a s ’ T h e re -Is no doubt th e South governm ent of V ietnam ." pcrform ed.'a’jc rv lc e by fo rc lh g ' V lelnam cse reg im e g e n e ra l ly , ‘T g ih a t, th e only possible

.................... f.— w Q B -ln - fa v o t-o f - th e -d ls p a tc h — p l ^ ^ - y o u r - f a th « r ’» -m u*u«oh a h ide In a frac tio n of a second. T h e la s e r iro n is. now w a itin g fo r field te s ts .. .W ell, th a t le a v e s th e S te tson , L ev is an d boo ts. T h e y h a v e n ’t b ee n re p la c e d y e t. B ut one c a n im ag in e w hnt a m od fa sh io n h o u se could — an d p ro b a b ly w ill ■—^do w ith th a t costum e.

t e r a four-months’ w ait — to ad m it th a t the rccords .show no evidence of such a Saigon re­q uest In writing. The- Incideftt should bo usbful to the Senate In reacting to any future a ttem p t b y a President to send A m eri­can troops adventuring In far-, off climes.

Fulbright has called the lack of a wrlltcn' Saigon r c q u .c s 't

MR. SPECTATOR

About The PolicemenE v e r w onder w h a t po licem en do?

W ell, M r, S p ec ta to r found ou t w hnt th e y do In Tw in F a lls . Ho knew th a t C h ie f - R r - a n k - B u rn o lt • m ak es- - u m o n th ly re p o rt of ju s t w hn t goes dow n In the c lepnrtm ent y e t, In tho p re s s of ne\vs, tlio re su lts of the r e p o r t seldom g e t m u ch p u b l i c i t y ^

So w hy no t do’ a c o lu n in 'o r r ^ ie pb llce d e p a rtm e n t nctlvUles?''SQ M r.

“ ST

tho r ig h t of w ay , five s to p s lcn vio­lations, fou r <lrunk d riv in g , n ine Im- prripe r tu rn s an d one im p ro p e r lanec h a n R o ........ ...... .. ..........

E q u ip m en t v io la tio n s fo r S ep tem ­b e r to la lcd 40 w ith people not hav- ing a d riv in g licensQ h ea d in g th e liiit a t 20. F o u rte e n w ritte n w a rn in g s w e re g iven . .Tliero wtt^ o n o .c a se of defec tive lig h ts an d fou r of defec-

. !t : tu iu [' Titt l ’a iid - !ie r tr:Tir u ' .so m L ...............- ......................th e findings. Those a r e a few of tlio U nder the c r im in a l code a c tiv it ie s , th in g s tho m em b ers of the local no j thnro w nro 21 ‘nconlq f irrc s tcd for. lice d ep u rtin o n t — co llec tive ty an d being d n in k , <12 c h a rg ed w ith ju- 08 J^i|(lWjduQl8 did d u ring the yw ille deH nouency. th re e w llli-issu*

.. '^W hat-li.............shocking is flomelhlng Fulbrigh t apparen tly doesn’t know. I t is th a t tho dccl.iIon to send A m eri­can com bat troop.i to South Vlet- nnm m ore than four y e a rs ngo w as an example of tno v irtua l d icta tion of A m erican forclRn pQ llcjt.by two. m em b era -o f-th o U.S. intelligence com m unity r - th e cen tral Inteliigonce Agency and the Defense Intelllgpnco Ag­ency.

- - -T his -was- not..common. knowl-. edge a t tho tim e, hut U had been ferreted out hy u few re-

. p o rte rs on the scene. Including th is one, In essence. It hollod down to the fac t tha t CIA.-and DIA h a d convlntibd r re s ld n n t ' Johnson - r .o v c r tho oh lecllon’

of U .S/ fighting m en. But l» Jan u a ry , 1905, the CIA and E>IA w ere agencies In n hu rry . T im e w as of tho c-ssence, they told Johnson; Wn<;hinRton could not afford to w ait for the horsing nround prellm innry to n form al reque.st ny Saigon to r m ore help.

A.S It tu rned olit tho record .shows thn t Saigon never did get around to tha t form al reque.it

..................... ........... .m u su ch o .-B ut Ift* InAhe firs t thlfee m onths of 1965,

there w as ju s t a llttl6 too m uch eagerness on the p a r t o f tho very powerful A m erican Intelli- gence community, to influcni:o a terrib ly Im portan t foreign pol­icy decision. The events of those th ree m onths — the conniving and m anipulating — presen t one

By Assoaatlon. ; WASHINGTON — 'The G reen B eret C ase has everyone In Wa.shlngton baffled. W hat doci? the Arm y have to gain by court- m artia ling six m en for m urder a fte r nine of w ar? To

T h e general tu rned back to m e. ’’You have to understand th a t, a lthough w e’re a t w ar, wo m u st a t a ll tim es rem ain civil­ized. O therw ise, we could be> com e Just like they a re .”

-T h o —S ta te—Dopishould get off Its la rded 1

reply— and-stlck -Its-ito Fulbright tried to g e t aroiinS ou.s activities of ou r various and th is by saying th a t “ a continu- num erous spy shops.

PAUL H A R V EY

Faces Of Ho Ghi

tr j( to find the hnsw e» I visited T he phono ran g again. " I a. general a t tho Pentagon . "'don't know whv I have to bo

’Gewairv/hy-A-re-yOtrtrylrtg— l-m h-cfcaT vlirthat^^nhT gon^rG reen Berets fo r m u rd e r?" ■ 'sa id Into tho phone. “ Don’t the

flam e throw ers work? Well, then w hy don’t they Just throw dyna­m ite in to tho tunnels and closo

Ho-Chl-Mlnh U doad-and-som o- fltrungo tea rs a ro ^ tlll w ateringhl.s grave. ____

You’v o . .b e e n -hea rin g a’nd'p riiro e im y mi Kiit o tiror ' irar -

Vilsers exccpt S ec re ta ry 'o f Sinto “ " ■ ........... l lm c —

m o n th of Seplem ljor; In g n o -a c c o im t checK S , o n o c a r r y in g

fo r the U..S, to take « com bat- hand in the w nrr— -4 jn tiM hftn ,-w a had, only ‘’ntl-

cu l opllaphfl for<a despot who d led 'w lth n lot o f o th e r people 's

.'-'witty—Unclo- ‘-‘lover -ofch ild ren ,'' ‘^gehtlo philosopher" and even ‘'an o th er George Washington.*'- I la r r l in n .Sallihi>ry.ln.lha New,

York T im es '^w ro te , " I n - ' t h e wjiole of >Vlotnam In 1069 Ho

■Ijc G reen Berets fo r m urder? '“ I can’t com m en t'b e fo re tho

tr ia l, J u s t a m inute p lease ." Ha pushed tho in tercom button, “ H arry , d id th o so B<52s h it'the ir , ta rg e ts la s t night? . . , :-0 h , they, h it a village by m istake. That,’s loo bad. Tell them to be m ore carefu l . . . Well, back to i»Our question. The Arm y has ce rta in rules and regulations th a tU ll .l ts m em bers m ust abide b y . . : - . , ' ------------7 ' . ....... - .......... - -

A coloncl cam e In. “ G eneral, tho nervft.ga-s th a t w e’re moving

• o u t 'O f Okinawa . . .Did you w an t any of It sen t to Viet* n am ?"

'n ic RBneral replied, “ No, hut--------------- A n ­

them -fo rever? ,-A nd- lo o k . 'le t 's g e t those ricc paddles m ined . . . I c a n 't he lp tha t. They c a n grow rice som ewhere e lse f \ . Wo c a n ’t take tha t chance '. . . Tills Is w a r ." He hung up.

“ I f j l had .m y way, I ’d bom b the' hellliiutL.of. liano l and Ilal-'I - phong," ho said to mo. “ W here w ero w c? Oh. yes, the -Grcen B'urcts . . . Well, they a re sus- {K cted 'of having killed a double ’ nnent, O ur Job la to find out if they d id n r not, If the>( did,

"IcRTiST would"'hav^^^*^11 im nuy^ III w c IICCU----- t tv t—i r r ^ i i i r n v m iT ;—m iu iu—h a r 'a ^ f u tu r o da te . . - r l x t to taka a very d im . view ot i ' ' . . . ------ . 1 ,,.

T h ey an sw ere d a to ta l of4,1.313, concelled w eapons an d s ix cu rfew“•ca iis7 -T h i8 rin -itso ifrw o u id -k o o n -T r^ .n iiin tn iiB ::--------r---------------------------—

lot of people busy . T h a t m e a n s th ey T h ere w e re 171 doRS im pounded a n sw ere d an a v e ra g e of nonrly <14 d u ring th e period an d th e re w ero cu lls a d a y d u rin g th e period; And also 14 w a rn in g s glveni an lm aU o w n -. th is , folks, a in 't to lephniie cn llsi I t ’s c rs and 1,4 c ita tio n s Irfaued.

—Eoing-out-<5ftHs^— tho-klnd-w lion -you------T otal a r re s ts , foe th e m o n th , c a m ego (o SCO som eone. to 747.

A nd then , d u rin g tho m on th , a to- So fhcro you h n v e It — th a t 's w h a t . t a l o f 97 Ind iv iduals w e ro “ gueHts” tho policem en do — ;p lu s a lo t o f

Jn one of tho “ luclous”' ce lls m nin- o th e r th ings alo n g th e Invesllgn tlvo taln>?d .for such p u rposes , line w hich a re n o t re ad y , fo r Inclu-

Aftd ju s t 1 to k ee n th ln g s m ovlng alon In thlH_ci)liunn, a s y e t , __^ h o o ff ic ers m v cstlg u tc d a to ta l o f —

121 tra f f ic «cc ld o n ta w ith in th e c i ty ------- ----- - H R L P N E E D E Dlim its 'd u r in g S ep to m b er, h ad re* V irg in ia F a r m e r h a s a p ro b lem . poMa o f 15 sto lon b icy c le s an d re - Rim needs e ight u n ifo rm s , for G irl

—<toV0rad-U-0t-U>0re>-Th<fl'^^-W 0E0-f0Ur___S c o u t.^ n n d a i m t h n m Ir] t |ipau to m o b iles ■ *• ^ - • -

~ 4 iio m .,w w

' Ic wiiH tills bimii-lcagiio Stnlln 'who. In 1054, introduced oudh ii

.............. -¥k»(

referendum honestly and fair­ly;."..

n r r°nwl)|n!!l ^ o h ” f . r ' f iRhHnp^t"i” ' clvlllnns flcd to , IpnorCn .the lo jM ld e tl^p u lo tio n

If thu A rm y com m and feels thnt «• crlme« has been- com m ltted r-

i»en" In a w ar rone, •then It

ato len ’an d th re o w o rst V^ay.4WovWr< > d .~ In .^ s» -y o u -------S h ^ -^ n llw Hd- th e re iw ere np tra f f ic ' sh e llilnks It ^a r e In te re s te d - th e re >Were np tra f f ic sh e tlilnks It would t e ^ W h i l l / n*cu^

fatallllOB b tit th e re w e re tw o accl* If eig h t liooplo «om ow here In th is d e n ts . Involv ing p e d e s tr ia n s an d tow n h ad th a t n u m b e r of u n ifo rm s.tlipro ,w ero jQ ur_occlU entiiJnY O lving_-nQ t..bo lnff..u8cd .unym ore.._____u lcy c le a . So thofio.of- you who Jm vo 'n n d

P eop lo w ho ju s t fo rg e t .to pu t thnit G irl Sqouts In th e p a s t . Just look throiiglt those c lo se ts , d ra g o u t tho .ifnlforms, an d 'g ive V irg in ia F a r m e r R ,cn li;--T ho IJn c o ln School g a ls rbh lly need them an d If n o t re ce iv e d

gonnrally stuck to the ir advisory role. However, In Janunrv , lOOfi, Iho CIA and DIA "ad v ised ’*

__Johnson that tho w ar would belost I)nle«s U.S. com hut troop-i v^ro_^commlttc(l, Vicjory could

n ) o w in , tho ijgcncrofl 'said, by Bending only " a , fow" fightingm en to VIotnom.............

Tlie "few’' consisted of two M arino hnllallotis, whlv^i landed M arch 8-0. A« It tu rned out,

-..thcy .w ^rft m orcly tlio vnnstiprd nf a massive Am erican forco which ovontuallv grow to m ore than half a million m en, an In­telligence kept inslsllng that “ a fow m ore’* would tu rn tho trick .

G overnm eni-recordsi .bY-SdUi

inuB t-nrinB ’ ' eliurRDR— nKn^nsJhosQ responalblo," ‘

• T he cap ta in returned. “ ‘•Hora a ro tho body cotints,

Ar«>tan/ nf. t n La

Ho fitopped the exodus by* neallpg tlio hor«ler. In d irect violation of tho G enova nccords.

'Hten, in North V ietnam , ho dlHposs«!HHCd nil landow ners —

. inclndlnK-.peasQnta _ jvltli „ Only ono or two lieotares rtf rice Jnnd — hy ordering, an cstlm utcd 1S0 ,» OOn of tiHiin shot, ■

Even G eneral .V o Nguyen Gliip, who had Jji^aten th o F rench iit Dion Biun Phu, pro- touted tha t l lo 's -torrur- had “ Hono loo fa r .’’

iJven a Com m unist • publica* (Ion reported N ovem ber fi, 103(1, th a t lio had “ poopln nrrented, Jn|lcd, cruelly to rtu red ; peojilo

. C^ngVe.ssman E dw ard Koch ,of r^anhnttati noted tha t tn m a n y VletnamcBO Ho w a s

• ‘ Cteorga W ashington, Abraham Lincoln' and John F , Konn«dy.’’

Rep. .K och nnld .^t'W o jnuat.. recognlzi) th a t ho wan above all n patriot Jn hU own country.'*

H ia t, to mo, >dpncrlbea the . fascinating , Inconsistency of a certain se t o f A m ericans who

, dorido A m orlcan pa trio ts an ?‘F lag.w avars,‘’ yet- soun d .'o ff w ith nuch resp ec t for the ‘'pot- rlotlnm " of a •Castro, a ‘Mao Tno-tung o r n Ho Chi Mlnh.

So m uch recen t p ra lsa fo r H o ‘ h as cited nationalism and pat-

-Tlotlsm -an-<om m ew lahl», ■

fsPpyiifT “ Ilm m nn. T hey lost 1,245 this

- thcylll have to burp the.^ „orry, I c an 't d iscussitP.lKoj!(iwiiuLQflk.XdQa’l^ h 1 n -« n j^ fu n h o T v 1 h tfv rirefugcoB anv m ore than you (hesft body counts over' to the

rnoR and tha general up.

•'What'B tha t? Well, If Saigon feels the village hos V iet Cong,

-then they ’ll have to burp the

like refugcoB any m ore tha.. do . . . R ight. Got iback to m e when you get a body count . . .“ Ho hung up.

" I ' undorstond w hat you 're Haying, G eneral, bu t haven’t thero - b*on.- a loi-of-th«H «-flo-- called ellfninntlons • of double •gen^s tn the p a s t? " I asked.

" P ro b a b l j i so, and I 'm not p rejudging th is one, But If a . c rim ^ has been com m itted

.......... - 'I 'h n t 'im o rb a d rW ltm h ts -'k in d of a loss ra tio , Hanoi will havo ha(^ It by summiSr.'* . .

“ G eneral, back to tho G reen B e re ts .

body ( ................................Jo in t Chiefs, And don’t w orry abou t tho G reen D orets.v 'niey'll s e t a fa ir tr ia l."

“ I know tha t. G eneral, hut w hen It com es to a crim e, w here

-does-tho A rm y draw the line?” “ T h a t’s a good ouoiitlon,'' tho

general nlad. “ But I 'm not a t liberty to answ er 'It,!'

moneC’ in tlio 'm e te rs . ac co u n ted fo r th o 275 t ic k e ts h a tfded o u t a n d - th e re w e ro 16 o th e r ,p e o p le c i te d fo r .pn rk -Ihg ' v io la tio n s o th e r th a n th o se ' In* - .............................................. ..............Y Q lv M m « { ers . ..... •. w ay llioy ju a t w o n 't pot th em :

MovTng t ra f f ic v io la tio n s to ta led V lrghilu ca n ■bo■"(^yl^(Y^cl'6d,'■nt“733i~ l H lif ,w£lch 22 ,\vero i a l l u / e to y ie ld , 34M. . -

. JtoRors to I'ulbriRhi; quote Gen William C, W estmore* land , U.S. 'coihm ander In South Vietnam , as saying it wan his" lu 'ls m fn r ’ J J i Rj...UiS.',,fnrQca.

- ahinild be deployed In Vietnan, ’Tt was n(»t W o8;mnrnlnnd’B judg­m ent. it wn,H the .ludgm ent nf

■ the C(A and the DfAVrln. this case , an In so manj< o thers, A hiorkan . ItUolll^onco agenclen ro l only, provided Informritlon and anolyslrt, but acljvely cam*

“ pftln'ncd 'Ifi 'porsn iido^t htj -Pri^i*- dfinl to m ake « •peclflo foreign

flncHled; innocent ciiiidren of puroniB w ro n g ly 'c la ss ified as landlordB w ere n t a r v . e d to d ea th ,’’ ' •

___A flurvqy-of.avallablQ rccorda.tndlcat<lH th a t Ho Chi Mlnh, In N o rth 'an d Smith V ietnnm , h a s Hince nccom pllshed the asNns- ninatlnn of a t l e a s t '90,000 qivIN inns and the nl)diictlnn of Home (in,000 who havn not l>een hoard ' fron t sinco, • '

An(l it Ih this .m an whom^you ‘ havn- henni posthum ously - do-

scribed by aonia A inerlcuns as

................... - o u a lL .. . .......... .cniol C om m unist d lctattfr a(v ' pear to suspcct o r openly de* nlgratn tho .nationa lism and

.patrloilam .of..South-Vl«tnihiC9D.

.loaders — and A m ericans w h onut-AmorlCft' first.-..........................

H istory sayn th a t patrio tism , per se, Is frequently m isdirect­ed.

But If to som e th is quality Is com m endable even In a Ho Chi Mlnh, - ih’ n* su re ly , th ey •should

* th em fte lv o9-|)rao lfo* -w nat-tliey - •pploud.

--ttro ............, ......should answ er fo r It."

A cap ta in cam e In."H ere a re those defoliation re-

SIr.'j“ Lei m e have a tb o k , .G o ^ ,

We rea lly desti-ftyed a ’ Jot of foliage. A fter the w ar m oy havB to s ta r t planting som e, c rops fo r the peasants.^ P u t nt the m om ent, they 'll have to g e t tho lr footl som ew here ohu . Any-

’ thing on tho hody counts y e t? '' — i«No;-./itr. - W a^ro-•ilU -w aliln i- fo r th em ."

^ pUduonI 'lo' Sactlon iQ-IOQ. Idaho Cod*, Thiinday li liircby dcilgnnltd at ili l 'd a y .e f lli* wttli on I’A'hlclti UgnI nolle*! will !>• pubtliWd. ' i''

Ithtd dalV nnd Sunday, •xccpt • jiiy, at lao 6«cor>(i Strtil'Wait, , Palli, Idrilio, 00301, by Maglfl

{1« N*wipop«c»; Inf.Fmetad ni lacoml c taii mnll mnllar v\\ n. 191.n.,oi II.* poll oKic* In

'win Potli, Idolm, 0330), undir 1lv« •.o<.Atofeh-fl,-jn79.............................

Page 5: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

■ r . ^ r

Middle Fotk K ver Plan- To Preserve \^ildfState

Continued F rom Page I '

r c r th a t,' 'p ro tec ts and enhances — :4he-^8liie»-‘-which-ceu9ed—i t - t ^ i

' be Included in the sy.stcm .'*To . accom plish this, ho said the riv-

• e r will be m anaged lo:—M aintain the ' natural and

(rec-ftowing condition of the riv­e r . '•

—P ro tec t w ater-quality. ". —P ro tcc t scenic, rccrealionol,

“~ “gFOlBgrer ri!,U una wildlire;-.his'“ —toric, urchaeologic. and other

s im ilar, values.

ly need to be implem ented. In* cluded-would be; 1 . , '

—Limits. OB', size and .number b l ' boat -parties.- . . . ■

-A ss ig n m e n t of cam p spots. —Use of a p erm it system for

e n try Intd the area.T he D agger C reek a rea—from a g ce r C reek to approxima^tely

bne-hair iplle below Dagger F a lls^ w iir be"i~"S cenic R iver” a rea ra th e r than & "Wild

—Provide recreatjon opportu­n ities In Karmony \vith the wild

, and scenic nature of the .river.- Under the river plant there

w T lIT ^ithout doubti ~B5: -^oijie 1 l . lc h a n e e s ' in 'u s e And u tiiizqtiQn

different than those now 'perm il- ted or w hich w ere perm itted-in

■ the past. , •

A pproxim ately 32.000 acres arfe w ithin the boundary of the

^ — M a in ta in e sse n tia l p r im it iv e Wild a n d '_ S c c D ic _ R lv £ r_ A f e a .3 of the shorelines.- ^ The riv e r is bom a t the cnnflu*

, L arge rubber rafts a re used by •m o st floaters..M ost spend from

, • five; to seven days on the river. D uring .1968 a' total o f 1,600 .peo-

offi6!al.<> expect this to double by 1975. No boat m otors of any kind a re perm itted. .

Some tra il machloe users ride from the-headw aters of the Wild and ■ Scenic ' River* dow nstream to the'nrSaho P rim itive A T e T boutidary. W ith 'classification of th e a rea as a Wild and Scenic

'^R iy e r, tra il machine use Is per- m lue'd~pnlv-on-the-rria1n-roads fn the D agger F ails a rea . '- E ight landing fields withlrr'thc

> . Wild R iver a rea provide access to v isito rs who wish to be flown In or to fly the ir p rivate planes, u n d e r th e new setup, any land-

. .... Jjag field foundao be non-essen------ tla l-o rnm deslrab le -fo r^ inpo ting

adm inistra tive or v is ito r 'n eed s------ m ay—eventually —need tO - be_ - phased out. Access for bfg gairte

h arvest; fire control and other needs w ill-be carefully analyzed . . . . . . . .

ence. of M arsh and Bear.V alley Creeks. 20 miles northwest of Stanley, and flows 104 mll'ea.-to jo in the M ain Salm on River. '

-F o r '- its lo w e r-80 miles the Middle 'F d r k flov/s through'th<* Idaho P ^ i t i v e A re a . I'ms-one a n d -o n e - q u a r te r - million -acrea re a w as estab lished jiti 1931._ . . . ------------T m r-P rtm iiivc-A reff rev iew ed a s to its suitability o r non-sultabiiity .fo r preservation a s 'W ilderness In accordance vyith th e Act of 1964. T hat por-

tKe Idaho P rim itive Ar«a is sub­je c t to the provisions' of both th e V^ild and Scenic R iver Act and the 'law and regulations gov- e'rning prim itive a rea s . In case of confirct; the m oje restrictiveprpvisions will apply.

_ b e f d r c .a Limplomei

S rlta Hernandez

. \ ‘ ^ S u n d a y /O c to b o r 5 , ; . 8

Waha Power WiU Snaike^verConHnued F ro tp P a g e 1 , • •

properly several y e a r s ' ago, there has been no recen t, con­ta c t "bCTWeen them about the parcels, .p rior tti the 'an n o ijn ce ; m e n t 'o f . l^e pending?, sale . , •

T he Box. Canyon/ an d Blind Canyon property is abou t eight m ile s 'so u th of H agerm an and ll-m ile s north of DnWr-Box Can-t yon itself has been a favorite

ho Pow er*«nd b^ing used un: der a lettei; agreem ent by the

a re a .for years, top of the rimrocK

land on ; used only

possibilities because of. the view ,

a b o u t a h a lf-m ile 'o fT iv e i* f ro n t-ir .e - 'With the land lev.eling-Qff

Spanish-AmericanEmiss.aries

from tlie. b reaks of the .-.rimi and noted tha t about 30 a c re s of such land aK^ av a ilab le for construcllon of a fish ‘fa rm -sUcor sites. .................. ............ ^

Access to th is p a r t o f the p roperty is - o v e r »the.- B anbury

Two wom en'from J,atin A m cr- c ie ^ of h e r congregationr'«nd fca, em issaries of the Spanish- de leg a te . t o 't h e Liga UruguayA m erican ' Causeway program designed to help c rea te under-T ta n d in g a n a d e v e lo p ir ie n o s n ip a m o n g th e A m e ric a n peop le , w ill b e in T w in F a l l s O c t -1 4 .

Id a h o I s o n e o f t h e fiv e W est- irn s ta te s to - h a v e a v is i ta t io n r to m S r a 'd e B e n z o , M o n te v id e o . U ru g u a y ., a n d S r ita _ G a r z a ..H e r -

a n d e z , M ex ico C ity .T w o sp e c ia l e v e n t? a r e - p l a n ­

n e d .- lu n c h e o n - a t - th e R o g e rso n

deM ujeres Evangcjicas a t the presen t tim e .'M arried to a busi-

TJf-tWD

In announcihg completion of th e p lan ; M r. Sm ith said ^hat

ed. the p lan states.The p lan also sta tes th a t as

. rcc rea tlon dem ands increase, u ser requirem ents will eventual-

th e riv e r a rea—the RJulliple Use M anagem ent G uide ind the Rec­reation M anagem ent P lan. '

The docum ents, he said, are ava ilab le for review by Interest­e d persons a t the offices of the Forest-Superviso 'rs of the Boise, Chailis, P ay e tte :an d Salmpn.Na- tjonal F o re s ts and a t the. region- a lo f f lc e - ln -O g d e n :- -_--A-copy-of- th e -R iv e r-P lo n -ls a lso availab le a t the office oi th e T im es-N ew s editor. It in- ..cludes-m aps-of-tho-aroa

■nes5iiill'n"aHatn6-T...... ... . .children, she-^divides her tim e between co m m unity and home

onsibillties. She h as--trav - -in .m any South A m erican

countries and In the United S tales.

M iss H ernandez has ^evoted

Boy 'Scouts*' §nako R iver A rea Council a.<»Roach.

Snaket l ^ i t e ■for Cam'p

- The prospectus p u t out by the power com pany notes th a t per­m anent access by- this route would" oe subject to the ap­proval of the scout council board of d irec to rs-and would have to be constructed so it would not interfere w ith p resen t o r p ro j­ected use of the a rea by the council. . .•'.W ater com ing-out of th is a rea....... . .... . melji.T w o filings have been allowed — 200 cubic feet per second fpr

tries; and th e -f ln a r licensing of this w ater will depend upon the allowance, development- and fin­ally. the p a ten tin g of these desert entries.

The K aste r filing \y{is for wnt* r to -be piped across th e 'r iv e r

to. be used for a com m ercial trou t farm . M r. K aste r presently Is In the process of developing the site and construction of the pippline is pending, _

The Bickel. Springs ..jite is about four m iles south of Hager- raan and is reached by a road through the U.S. Ffsh Hatchery.

arid 300 cfs for R ichard Kaster.The Mountain View filing was

i o r anticipated dev eb p m en t of a 'l a r g e ■ block o f ’federal land applied for through d ese rt «n-

Springs property ow nea oy i d f

.... T!nttre"ilfQ ^b^he-w ork-of the church a fte r being convert­ed, to -E ro tcstan tlsm .as-a .y o u n g g irl. She w o rk e d 'a s a youth a s a '-teache t. in a m ission. In M o n te rrey -^n d . la te r sp en t six

Sem inary In T orreon, Conh: In 1965 she joined the sta ff o f the M exican Bible Society,', holding workshops througbout the M exi­co City a re a and in h e r p resen t position continues to be Associ­a ted with the BiWfr Society.

There is^nhniit frtiniiiiri>Ter .f ro n tag e .

f„ m ilc^ot .jj

.There a re five large sorinns H h e site, w hich feed a

acr4 lagoon. . .T he appraisee’s, report cites

the ' ‘hlghc.st and 5 e s f ‘ use fo r ' the . p roperty” - as being for - a com m ercial tPeut farm site. I t notes the '^prlngs provide' an abundant flow of. w ater a n d ' ' there a re adequate^ .adaptab le . land.s for co n cre te fishraces.

" ^ e B riggs s p r in g s and Creek property is at>out'12 miles south of W endell andv se v e n -m ile s northwest 'o f Buhl and consists of a b lock -o f land overlooking the Snake R iver th a t -has an excellent v an tage point fqr pos* -itible-f^wro .hom e<;lt8B.-L-a mU>o— the parcel n e a re r the river was iudRcd a possible s ite tor a.com- m ercial fish h a tch e ry . - . ■ v ,

Grand OpeningSOUTHPORT, E n g l a n d

- ( V P i y ~ " l now- d e c la r e - th l s - - w atetfnli op en l" M a y o ^ - -^ a lte r -P re B c o tt - s a ld ^ 6 ^ ^

thrcw ^the. <witch ac tiv a tm g '• the town's • $36,000 "ca ta rac r .

M inutes la ter, the town waiC: ankle-decp in foam .

P rankste rs h ad l )u t 50 pounds of d e te rgen t into t h e ' w aterpumps.

2 l) .m . in . t h e s a m e ro b m v arfd a fOLum in th e e v e n in g a t C o l­le g e o f S o u th e rn Id ah o .

^ e e v e n in g fo ru m , to b e .h e ld in th e a c a d e m ic - a u d i to r iu m ; •ro o m s 17 -18 -in 'D ie 'Sh lfil< j6 .A ca* d e m ic ‘ b u iK j ln g i r . - w in i^ 'o ^ d * d r e s s e d ~ b y — T o m —T )uncan7— a jr ic n ib c r . b f ' th e .C S I • fAcultsL^vith. b o th -tBe .w om en g u e s ts p a r t i c i-

■pating ’i n " th e “ f o y im T ' a s 'W ell • a s In th e a f te r n o o n - p r o g r a m .

T h e S p a n lsh -A m e ric a n C a u se -

____ copy of the Wild Rivferslaw . I t is available for study b y Individuals b r-g ro u p s as a public serv ice of theniewspaper.’

I l ! ^ ! e a - D i ^ a i g - P r o b l < e m s; Continued F tw i P ag e 1 -d rugs a t tha t school?' A; No. not serious. T liere Is

lot o f it going-on but i think i t is a lot worse in the com m u­nity .

Q : W h a t do j;ou jn e a n ?A: I do n 't Ihink we have near­

ly a s m uch of it here a s they d o In R upert, P oca te llo ,. Boise o r so fo r th . ', Q: V hy?

------ A:_i:aioi»:i_Ko«w_fprthink b ecau 9e..pf_the |ai

a re th e ones th a t a re taking

t for "sure . 1 ■' : r 7 ^ ’

lecauselege a t Pocatello and . k ids have-used it longer In Ru-

- p e n 'a n d some o th B rlo w n r-n car here . I think w here there Is

. a la rg e college students from a ll ov e r the United S tates tend to bring these drugs In. I guess oui* problem Is serious h e re but It Is not o u t^ hand.

O T T io you'-lfi!nlc” it can gel ou t of hand?

A: Possibly.Q: Whot do ypu m ean?A; J m ean getting so serious

nearly everyone Is taking a drug and so tha t the students can 't cnncentrnte on the ir work and so th a t they are hooked on the drugs. T hat would be out of hand. I would say the kind .of

-------- s tu d e n t - th a t - t a k e s —th e s p - d n ig rhas to have a fooling of Insocurl- ty . I t 's not In the poor families. It Is In the moro well-to-do fniti- Hies th a t I notice this. Mnyho thov .a rc not getting nil thn at- tontion o r ' love they w ant -a t home. Students In a ''ce rta in d ie

0 : How large a group? - - •s r r can 't^ ^ a y Ih n m n n

Church Women United, known as the 4-L program of "L isten ; Look, Learn and Love.” I t Is ■ a~project th rough" which all A m ericans, north and south, will .explore _ways of Q jrisU an understanding^ Qnd deeper j n j volvonient 'with"'pconlc*‘o t other nations on the continent and the world.

The Causeway program is do- .slgned^Qlhelp-Spanlsh jspcaklnf

i t is a large am ount. Probably m ore th an 100 students, maybe less. . ,

Q: T o wfiat ex ten t does drug abuse o r d rug use reach down­w ard into th e Tw in F alls school system ?

A : I know som e of the kids in the. jun ior high schools a rc gettln^d riig s-lik e-d le t-p iib -an d - m arijuanaT I d o n 't ' know ab'ou( the elem entary-schools. = V ;-uo-you-W ci-if-yau-W 4ht«d to pu rchase a quarttity of mari- juana--a t- th e -h ig h -sch o o L tha t you could do ao?

A:. I would say on the campus, probably not In the b^Jlldlng.

Q: A re you personally aw are ■■■ -drugs-o

people to develop a be tte r life and g rea te r understanding.

Mrs._ Jam es Sharkey, Twin F alls, Is chairm an for the Idaho program , w ith M rs. Jo h n 'H ay es chairm an fo r Twin F alls. Both a re m em bers of the B oard of M anagers of ^ u r p h Women U nited in Idaho. .

Mrs .-d c Benzo w as b o rn ^ f aX u tho ran -fa in lly -andn iM Jlw a 'been'toctivo in th e church. tc pri^lHpnt flf t ^ Womenfs-So

Iw ays I. She

_ M O N D A Y ^ Q N i a t T i r P . M J O J O P . M .

XftRPET B f t R ^ l i;1 roll blue/green 'shtfg 1 roll "gold shqg ;----------- Regular $8.95 .

i roll H iL o w Textured N y lo n ~ r i w n r n ? ^ n g f s R n

Regular $7.95 •q . y d .

BROWN-1 4 3 -M a l n -A v o r E r - -T w l F F a l I r =

M O N D AY NIGHT

ju an a? r A: Y es.Q: How m any?A: 1 know one who Is selling.

,Q : Arc the police aw are of th is activ ity? .

A: W ith this person?S i : Yes, and wit|i the high

scliTOLin^ffheral. *A: I th ink they a re aw are

of It. I ................................

_ - " s .T think It-U larger than they suspected It was.

Q; H o\v about school officials, are they aw are?

A: They have to be but there hnsri^t-boen-any-m entlon of .lt In school, though.

;----------S w o o tb rla r r ip e c ta j-v a lo e s fo r — " ‘•i

m o o N l Fg h t s a l e i

.A L L o f o ur N E W FALL

• Dresses and

— •“ S p o r t s w e a r

JjOti b—discountduring this e ve n t only!

C h o o ip from J r . r o t jte i, Ju n lo r i

a n d M lssat slzoi . . . D r e i » e i ' ^ DIoutea

• S k lrti. «

* P an t S u lti

P a n t i * SM 'flalart

• Knit T o p i • J ack o fi

1 3 q M aln A v . N o rth - - J w i n FoHi

V R im r T H fiw w iir★ FREE REFRESHMENTS : _

★ FREE GIFTS

★ C O M E lN ^ BE OUR GUEST

Brow/se a ro u n d - see w h a t W e

h q v e t q ^ f f e r yb u thisFall

in e ve ry d e ^ r t m e n t . ^

2 0 4 M a in A v o . N . , ’ jilioh® 7 3 ^ 7 1 1 ,1 , ■ V T w i i r r a i i t

O n S a l e ! M o i i d a y . O c t o b e r 6

FABRICSHOP

FALLSEWINfiS tIt c h ln B u p a s to rm is t h e w a y it w ill b o t o r y o u .w h e n y o u b r o w s e t h r o u e h o u r - c o m p le te g ro u p o f fa b H c s -f o r fa ll. C o m '* , e e e th e b e s t a t b u y -w ls « p rlQ e sI

= l(tO P M A N 5 -T R IG G i^iJ|yE«.pjiEss_(:onQhL«L-DACRON-j«w_:i printi and tolldi. Tha greattfir*iporlt>W«af fabfic. 45 Inch#! wld«.-

R e s u la rly $ 1 .9 8 y a rd . N O W

FABULOUS ORtON CHALLISE x c ltln R p r in t s . N o -Iro n . 4 5 In c h e s w id e .

_K iB iiliidy.t8,4? yorJ , NQW

-ON SAIE MONDAYr7-TO 10 P;M. ONLY

-y o u r choice! ~

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FABRIC%

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y

Page 6: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

A T w in jg l K J d g h a

P h a i p p i n e

TrQops Will W i t i t d r a M ^

MANILA (U P l) — President F e rd inand E .. M arcos Saturday announced p lans ' for . the-‘ Erfl- dua l w ithdraw al of the Philip- pines* 1,500-man non-combat

'■' lo rco from South V ietnam . He ■gave no firm date but said the m en ;would p ro b ab ly ’ comc hom e a fte r next m onth’s elections. * j

-------P hiiippine- ereei— PH ItC A G , w as sen t to

-V ietnam In Septem ber, lSG6,.to he lp build roads, grow rlco and otherw ise-Im prove the-standard of Ifvlng in the country^dc throuch civic action' program s;

-PHII,CAG is an acronym for I»hlllppine Civic 'A ction GfoUp' •• M arcos, • hbldlng— hts - f i r a t feenecal newV'.cOniercnce o r ihe

|a r Saturday, was asked about sta tus of the fprcQ In the

tffcceptlA m erican tropp Vals ffom th e w ar lone.

•T he ?HILCAG • w ill be wifhrfratvn .■a5_ s o o n a s th e y

. fu n d s are' e J ^ u s te d ,” M said.

_iIBipb&bIy aficr. ~ lhe> elections.” ' The e lections, in w hich M arcos fs

• running fo r a new te rm , will be -h e ld on Nov. 11. .. The orig inal budget (o r the

. .force. » .7 million, w as Intended ‘ to h is t for one y ear. Since l066,

- - •■■the, P h illPririe C ongrfess-has refused to approve new appro-

. p riathm s and funds finally ran— ro u r ^ n - M a r d i r 1068.--

Despite th e .J a c k of congres- ~ ~ " s lo n a r " support,— th e — ;force

• rem ained In Vietnam, financed b y savings of th e PhlUppme

■ D efense • D epartm ent. • But It w as reduced in Size from 2,000 m e n .fo 1.500'm en . ■:

Israel HcfflsBack BigEgyptian Raid

—9y-U n lled ^P r« r-Ih te rh a» !o n a l- turday icIedJii

Israe l sa id la te .S a ti

State GOP Unit RIeets In Burley

BURLEY — The State GOP C entral Com m ittee nxDt here Saturday to adopt some pro­gram s and listen to Gov. Don Samuelson spealc.

The G overnor-outlined his ac-., com plishm ents for the past.tw o y ea rs , during a noon luncheon a t the Pondcrosa Inn..O ther spe­c ia l'g u es ts w e re -P e ie Cenarru-

M »crcurv of sta te ; and Dob

iVien FoiindT w o'm en feared drowncd .when

98-foot> boat capsii&d In the Gulf 0 / McXico at midnight

‘Thursday . w e re / found alive Saturda'-,, m iraculously saved by a pocket of air-Trr^hc galley.

W.C. Well.s. 5.5, tile’ crewman T the m otor -vcs.sei .Lady

Verna, said th ire w as nothing to do but think in ..the 15-by-20-

vlth th e - 'aV pocket • geitlng um allcr, s o , he finally '

'decided not ■ T B ^ o rry , 1esl -ho drive himself p razy;- .

rcAMERA REPAIR.:, ljt4t OUAUIY

WOrOCKAl’HlC »IMI» i»UlC( • SijMsteAn. I. — Twlnr«lh. IMw

,nnnc au .- . — T O E WKECEAIGE OF-CvMelrfr'A lrlloei fH gh t-fro m :R aw « n a ,_ , flcld.herB jpte_FrIday. F iv e p e rso n i died and tw o w ere Injured-A^ked-how soon thIs-would-Bfey ■ ■>n-tho-fctasli^<wIrteIepiiatt>J£^

Whiter

Coatinoed from. Pago 1 .‘T h ird In ternational Congress ifor T ranspo rt by Ropeway.," ; —P artic ipan t6-o f-fh s -^ Congress inspected and dlscusscd a num- per o f_ .ou ts tand ing_ m ateria ls and 'personncL tram w ay insta lla­tions - i i n , .Switzetlan_d,_ .U5lYi F rance, and A ustria. M r. Dwyer obtained inform ation a t the Con­gress which w ill be significant in his conclusion as to tram w ay feasibility \n the W hite Clouds. Hl5'"r‘e ^ “ o r h i r ‘flridings con“ cerning the ASARCO operations is- beiog- developed,

J ly a U n lte d .P re ss -In tc m a tlo n a l At'*least~five persons w e r e

killed in a D enver p la n e c rash

o t th e season s truck the Rocky

___ biggest amphibiousra id across ' the Suer Canal since the 1957 M fdeast W ar. •

'At an unusual Sabbath B rl in n g ' a sen io r ~Tsraeir“ Staff

troops held the ir fire to tu rn th e raid Into a . t r a p and shot down a n , e s tim ated 15 fleeing E gyptian soldiers.

He said two Israe li soldiers d ied in fighting along th e canal.

■ An officer w as killed In the fighting th a t followed a ttem pted ra id and ft soldier w as lulled b y ahelUnx .opposite

^ I9 m a ilia r“ .-------■The Jsraell office r said two

___TilerrtgaTors . . .p a r t o f a n SO-man fo rce that tried to' cross to Israeli positions In nine rubber rafts.

In Cairo, a n E gyptian -mlllta-

_.E .ollow ing_reccipt._oLthis - re ­port, which is expccied soon, final evaluation w ill be m ade by the ChalJIs N ational F o rest

Regional Office personnel, c e r tib g th e ASARCO applica­t io n , 'm a d e in M arch 1969, for a perm it to construct an. access ro a d '^ ro n r - tb e —E ast—Fork—of- the-Salm on R iver across Nation- al rForest ' lan'da to its c laim sin the W hite Cloud Peaks area,

A c io rf in g to M r.-Iverson , it is an tic ipated th a t a decision on the com pany’s ■ application rb 'T perm lssion-tirballd-th is 'road

by la te 1969.

1 7 spokCsmah said the arnphl- —birm.9- fo r c 6 -< ro s« e d -th o -c a n a l

F rid ay 'and fought a ' ‘'fierce b a ttle " w ith Israeli.,troops for m ore th a n 'th re e hours.

The spokesm an said - .the E gyptians destroyed th ree - I s ­rae li arm ored troop carrie rs

“ together'w ith their occupant.s" a n d ...........................

The nttem pted landing oppo- Bite Dcversoir 'on . the north shore of G r « t .B i t te r ' Lake trtfiRcred an a rtille ry and tank duel. • •

The Israeli officer snld Egyptinn forces on the west bank 'o f the canal opened, a m nsslve artillery b a rrag e about

_S_r,m u_Trldivy_ftlong.jiia5:niH c . stro tch of 'th e canal from

D eversolr (o* ElQ nntnra cover for the landing force.

Two hours la te r ‘ Isrnell defenders In ,stronfipoInts de*

• -tectcd-- - the-- f in t - -E g y p tian s coining up tito bench,

•Talks Continue-------^WASl 11 NC.TON—(U |31) --------A

fnur-dnv-okl nmHstiion' ‘prev^nUiu pulilicutidn , WnslUniiltin Dtilly News again

Saiurdiiv whll« contract negoti-— a m ■

union and fliu cupliai'it - d u i ly -

Robfton, attoVhey general.The Republicans adopted a

candidate recruitm ent' program which will fill all GOP vacancies on the ballots from county levels On up. ’Tliey noted tha t "in the past' they have loi^ 'S.'eats in"couiUlcs-aS-WoU-:«S’ in"State, e io c tio n s - to 'Q p p o Q jc n t^ c u u se the}, d idn’t have candidates.

A com m ittee w as chosen to select a site for the location of its ^une 13 meeting. ..Gwenn Barnett—was—nam ed-chairm anr; and M rs. Naqmi Spacem an, FalrHcld and one m em ber from iiach-of-lthV -othcivsij^^reB ions

-• ------------• - T-therco'm tnit-:

FivePeoplelG UedlnDe Plane^rasli As,First-Snowstorm Of Seaso n Hits Rocldes

— In-D enverrup -fo -seven 'inches of snow had fallen- ea rly today. A t 'lcast-on^~TaH ality was re-'

The heayy rsnow '-accum ula­tions, up to a foot deep, -also blocked- Going-to-the-Sun High­w ay in G lacier National P ark , In— the— high— country— w here Sum m er vapationers frolicked a few w eeks ago.- — In - \v h a t- th e -U r-S r -W e a th e r- B ureau -ca lled - the- first- m ajor sto rm of the fall season , an airliner crashed. F rid ay .night a t L o \ ^ A ir Fo rce B ase near D enver. T h l M etro S lrlines com m utcr plane overshot instrum ent approach to Staple­ton. In ternational A irport. Two o ther persons w ere repo rted .in -

Once Hurts^ Twice-Is---- n

p o rfcT In a "ca r c rash -on Den­'s snov^, w et s tree ts , w here ib lllty -w a s-p p o j^ d u e -to - th e

snowfall.Heavy snow w arnings w ere in

effect for the Colorado Moun­tains' and in sou theastern Wyoming.—T rave le rs’ w arnings w ere posted for the m ountainous regions in northern and cen tral -New— ^Mexico— for— ^windblown snow. Freeze- w arn ingS -w creJn effect' through c.nrly today in th e Rocky M ountain region. Ida-

nnd F raser. Colo.. each had eight Inches of snow by la te , Friday.

pronounced .cold f r o n t extended across the .cen tra l p a r t-o f the nation, m arked by scairOTt-d-showers or thunder­

's, as well a s tem pera- ,tu re-changes~"a5 m iirh -a ,s—40.

Sweden Cluef Hits U.S. War Involvemenpiier-designate Olof Saturday his governm ent will continue to crlticizo U.S. involvement In Vietnam, whlch- h a s led to s tra ined relations between Stockholm and W ash-rnglbhT-------------------------------- -----

In ' his firs t m ajo r policy peech the newly elected

.hairm nn pf the ruling Spcial D em ocratic p a rty , said Sw.^c]eh desires "good rclnffons on all level.? w ith g rea t'p o w ers

Palm e, who will fake o v tr the irem iersblp from retiring \ c n n Tagc E rlnnder, 6R, a t

cabinet m eeting Oct. l-l, wa.s picked W ednesday us E rlan-

■der’K succe.sMor.-.The 42-ycar-old p a rty theorist

did not go int0 detail on U..S.- Rwedish relations nr the fact tha t President NIxOn Ims

am bassador

Bad LuckFifteen-year-old ' Michelle d e

U llo t of Route 3, Twin Falls, had a tough tim e of It last w eek. ' ,• Police records show she^w as In an accident Saturday. Th9 .c a r was driv ing struck - Wouth-Dn~B~b1c y c lc r th c n - ra n

itu tlw rv ar o f B-p g rKga- c a r .-~ The youth. Lory H all. I I . 2S7

Adam s St., w as not serioifSy hurt. Police said M iss d e Tillot rim into ,the re a r o f the car III.a ttem pting to avoid hitting ,tlie b ^ o n the bl'

appointed 1 Stockholm,

.Soviet foreign’ policy Is con trary to Sweden's policy of neutrality .

“ Such c ritic ism m ust bo due to ' n mlsiinderKtandini; of the contents.of-our. policy,M-ho.said. , ’"Wo filinll contlniio to rorveat simple hut Im nortant tru th s ,” Palm e huld. ''T lm t the longing of neoplcs for freedom cannot bc.bcfllcn liy violence. T ha t.th e aim of dem ocracy can never ho rea rh rd - hy m rnn^- of opprrs*

righ t, to dccldo over tlieir own desilny ."

'II1IH Vrtis n rlen r reference toi r n ' u,.s,' rftio ih iiif v|<

CLEARANCEO n M ono IP ’s

(Some Storeo)Values to $5.98

SPECiAL

S A L E . . ; . .

¥ UHEIEN'5 ffiCDRD SHOP

----------- -- ' tWfn’y a l l i '" "

bike, lu rsday -whilo go- rce' SlalTon J o g ^

Instm g (0 thp r

,st2 te,.;W rms fo r th e fir.stV..L<U|III3 lUI IIIVw as involved in

n n o th e r '^ n s h . . . ,' ■Recorda'show. th e c a r she di'ivinf!'.-'and a c a r d riven by Claudia H a rp e r ,-17. 37(5 M adison S t„- collided a t Second Street North and Tliird Avenue Nortli, There w ere no injuries.

-Josephi'M o.------ ------ ;-----------------The upper M idwest and north-

c'rn_New England F riday were o n -th e 'ch illy sldej=In-WyonTlhg, the m ercury skidded-to 9 above

-Eero-Friday;— ^ --------In the West, snow blocked

Logan P a ss in G lacier National P a rk and forced the closing of passes between Old Faithful and West Thumb, and .Canyon Vil- lago and Tpwers F alls in Yel­lowstone National P ark .

degrees.Meanwhile, the rem nants of

tropical''S torm Jenny produced rain or shower activ ity in nbrthoasre'rri"'FlOfida. Tl50“hIglT-'

■rrriDhlgtif E D T -no more than 25 miles an hour.

Tem peratures a t 3 a.m . EOT today_ranged from 25 a t Ely, N sv ,., to the CorpusChrlstl N a v a l ^ r S i ^ n 'Texas,., ___ .< Tem peratures* F^ldJyr-*oared In l^ n h c BOs and the 1 » ^ SOs a s fa r north a.i M is s o u r i ,? ^ Southern Illinois. A n afW rM or high o rro i-w a s .Kcord& 'd-^t'St,

Police officers broke u p j i . fist fight a t a Ty/in F alls bar la te Friday.

-----R e c o rd f l-sh o w -c a rs -w e re -urged to re,spond quickly to

. quell the fight.The final en try on the rec-

■ ords reads; ‘‘A couple of lovers m ade a m istake and decldcd to fight.” ,

There w ere no "ch a rg es filed.

3 In Jerome^ S<$eMngTwo" Council Jobs-

P e a d P U o ts ^ I d e g t i f i e d - A f t ^ e r X r a s l i

MOUNTAIN H O M E A I R FO RCE-BA SEr ldaho (U PI) — Two Air Force pilots died In a n -a irc ra f t accident la te T hurt- daji night. The victim s of the crash w ere M ajor W alter Biol- ley, a native of Los Angeles, Calif., and 1st Lt. Jam es E. Coleman, Columbus, Ga.

-T he-aircraft.-anJlE 4C -JrO O Tlalssa

JERO M E — T hree men a re seek ing-the two Jro m e council posts to 0 2 lined in ihc•1 municipal election here.

As of S aturday there w as only one candidate for m ayor and M rs. Mabel Beveridge, city cfcrk. '^ r d no flh 'er'pettflO rtSw ere out.

Filing for the councilmen posts were W alter Bentzlnger, co^)wner. 5 nd _ n ian ascr- of the John pc(^c.Im plem t:n t .Co.; Jer- ICT^’elson;-production m anngei

the.Ida-G em ,-C ream ery here, and Elwln T inker, incumbent who Is seeking re-election.

ITie term s of M r. T inker ond Ed Baer are expiring. Neither M r. B aer - n o r— M ayor— E a rl U rtcnaw ult-ls- tlon.

— Mondny---l8-th e-fin aL _ d ay _ fo t filing petitions of candidacy.

Youth Arrested“ ■A'lC-ycnrKjld boy-Is being-held In the Twin F alls County jail afte r.be ing a rre sted on a charge of .selling m arijuana;

The boy w as a rre sted In a Joint crackdow n by sheriff's of­ficers and police dotectivcs.

Records show jie w as arrested F riday . F u rth e r Juvenile action Is pending.

MOOLIGHT SALE!MONDAY .... y pirn, to 10 p.nl; “

ASSO RTED SALE

- ^ I N K R - O U T J I O O I L I E A R l-B v -W e a t iie r -W ir ik y -

squadron stationed here, c ra sh ­ed about eight m iles west of| ■Qrasm crer“Waho—a t—about— 10 p.m. ThOTsday. T he cause of the crosh has no t y e t been d e te r­mined.-Col. Jo seph - Schreiber, com ­

m ander of the 67th Tactical Re­connaissance Wing said a board of -qua lified~ sen lo r’ Air "F o rc e

tigate the accident.

G IR L ’S - Size Infant fo 14 .

B O Y* S ! _Size, InfaniJLT. .7—lusl-Received’-Siiipment r

NEW FALL SELECTION ,• Jumpers. • Sweaters •_ Skirts

♦ Bell-bottoms • Vests . ,R o g e rio n Hotel C o m e r

' R I T C H X S S

MONDiiy 6 T 0 10P.M.Moonlight Specials

* 3 . 3 9ALL $4.98LP ALBUMSALL $b,9B----------------L P ^ L B U M S ^

7:0 0 P.M. 10:00 P.M . M O N D A Y , O C T . 6th35 MenTFdmcui Biand..

long Sloove '

SPORT SHIRTS $ 2 5 7lt*g.

6.00 and «.S0 O n ly ...............

)5 pain Men'i Fomout Orand

W E S S SLACKSR*a.lo 34.93 Now enl)T , .

001 ona’ urtcron/w

V 2 ,

SPORT SHIRTS

. * - 2 ”R«g, e.SO

'and 9.00 Now only

DRESS SHIRTSRag. $5 to $ 7 . o n ly 1.57

Rog. 8 .5 0 . . . o n ly 2.57

7 Mnn'i Famout Ornnri

ZIPPER JACKETSUnlined — Worer and Wind

Rar>ellenl, .

: 5 3 5 7 .Now o n ly ....................

SPORT SHIRTSR.8. S.OO and 6.00 H - 16 - IS • ao.N n w .................. M

— 10-M enTFoiW ourBfflnd-

SWEATERSRig.j 13.00 to 32.99

NOW t / y o N ir .................... / Jm n

Men * Fomout (And

NECKTIES

Rob. 3.soand 3.00 Now only

S I S ?

Colored Tee Shirts’

9 7 ‘siiti a • ISRod. f.30 Now Only * •

T w o B ig R a c k s F o r . W o m e n AtHcJ S l g G i r l s

FAMOUS BRANDS SPORTSWEAR: . . TOPS, SKIRTS, PANTS-WEfeULAR

$4.00 TO $35.00 % O ff!

COLOR TJLA SIEREO-Uaod F ondor 12-slflno

FLA T-TO P , GUITARWim'pl(ltup-nn<f-------------- ^ 2 4 9 ^ ^ ' Iwuh nlc\iuF

. Usod Epipliono T oxan . .

FLAT-TOP .GUITAR* 1 6 9 i 9 5 -

FR EE-IN STA ttA TIO N O F'A lL 'CSR ^STER tO TAPrPlJYEftS SOLD DURIK6 MOONLIGHT MADNESS

-P H O N E -7 3 4 -2 0 5 4 '

9 1 FA M O U S [3RAND B O Y S ' SPORT a n d DRESS SHIRTS

-R « e ^ » 0 O H ^ B O - « n d - B ;0 0 — " c t n ■N o w o n l y ........................................

■ ■ ' 5 1 P A IR S O F Q O Y S 'NYlON-ORLOhL -S m E T ^ H -S e e K ^------

"TTobTsO o A 'T f - O n l y ......................................... ... E n c h C

youfjo MfN'S niKl MtN-S

_ JE A M _ 1 Y P E ;S U C K S -:-

t4o HA. V NOW ONLY . .

$ 3 5 7

' FAMOUS 'RRAND

■BOYS' lEANS5(««i 5 10 10 ■ ,

Rob. 4.00 and 9.00

$ | 8 7

V3 iiotft KrAMOUS BRANOrof

BOYS' JEANSMniily nylon .lolnloicod; (llii

DtoVen tlioi, Rog, 1 \ a l R«0.i3.SO to S.OO

NOW

. ; A ls o sh o p all d A p a rtm e n te a t R o p e r'e f o r R re a t snvlTlBtt d u r in g R o p e r'sGREAT 57TH ANNIVERSARY SALE '_SAVI_QM-MtN’iJ U IIi,-S B O a T -C O A «rM A C «S r3 rO R r“ J m «T S r T W f A T « i ; ' i l l o l j ; SKI JACKITS/"

TURIH-NBCK SHIRTS, SOCKS, HATJ, DOYS' SPORT SHlRTS, ,SKI JACKITS, SOCKS, i«ANS, WOMIH'* AND OltL'S PLAID AND .CKICK WOpL SPORTSWSAR. A U -W IA IH IR COA7I AND SOCKS.

' U iB y d u r ROPER'S O p tio n C h o rg o or Y e g r Dank Cards

t w In f a l l s

• '.r V.......... ■

Page 7: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

-Hailey Realtors Told Of , Need. For Zoning Ordinance

i HAILEY — “ It was all right back there in the 18M's when K ^ Ic y and Ketchum Were min­ing cam ps to have the black­sm ith t shop' in the center of

,' \ .to w n ,” John t>cIjong. president• "o r 'th e Sawtooth • board ^of Real­

to rs told a m eeting of the group• F rid a y a t the Hiawatha Dining

. he pointed .oiit, "This is no lonh er a mining ccimmuniiy -and otn- - • rP«;ort arens. which - • - —

■ today_^ have found tha t residen- • ' tial: and i^idustrial.,sections ,'of

a c ity a re mode cbmfortobie ■ w hen sepa ra ted ." ' .

Mr. DeLong nam ed Ben Jew- . ell, K e;chum : Jack Davies,-Hai­

ley, , and M rs. Clifton Myers, r=z-:rBeHeYue.-=toz=,moet —w ith-rtha

!ng c o m m ittte regardi „ _ . . posed county industrial, park.

. They will repo rt a t the next B oard of-R ealtors m eeting Nov, 12..—Several-sites-for-^n-Industija]

pecial m eeting of the . Jity Council a t which

an offer was acccpted, from an anonym ous donor i of 20 acres of land for a city park.. The c ity a lso Is interested in B ureau of I-and M anagement land along Big-W ood R iver Just upstream from the Bald M ountain ski tow to be used as a pa rk for trav e l­e rs . ^

Arlo Nelson, professional plan­ner, Boise, has offered to donate serv ices in p ' ’M r-H oefin ,r

a re a w ere mentioned. - M r s - E d - ■

---------- the bgagd ia 3pon»o^iBg•a-dinne^to b e ' h e ld -O c t.-2 3 - a t which B e rt M itthell, Boise, community developm ent ^specialist with the Sm all Business Administration, will speak . T he public Is Invitfd

. and the. fiUce for the dinner will be announced later.

M ichael H ogan reported on.at-

Pompidirti^'HitS Deiatli_Sentiprices■— By JOHN F . SIMS • PARIS (UPl)rVAll' th*e death

(Sells in French - prisons are em pty and official repo rts say President ' G eorges Pom pidou believes they should s tay , that way. ’ . . • •

Pompidou, using h is pow er as the su p rem e 'ju stice in F ra n te . has commuted the death scntenc<is on four m en who w ere awaiting execution on Ihc guillotine when he w as f le e te d in June O f / i < i a l s < ^ e the president say Pom ijidou is

It w as poinied- out th a t a K etchum City O rdinance prohlb^its th e '-p lac ing -'o f m ore than one rea l esta te firm ’s "F o rSale" sign on property a t the sa^n® tim el and . th a t th e 's a w ­tooth B oard of R ealto rs terri' to ry -ru n s a s f a m o r th C lay

>n;~ftn~the~Salmon-Riv crr.—

scarcity of housing in the Ketch- Uhi a re a , saying, "W e have pefl» pie literally living o u t on the s tree ts—people who com e, here

wnrk and cannot find a place

-^p o ro th y P o v ey ^ B ia in e -co u n ty•tax^11ectorT-wa»-a_guest_andjdistributed 1969 tax levy sheets to the te ^ lto rs fo r th e ir conveni­ence ' when m aking land sales.

N am ed- to _the nomiirating commiLtee w ere—M r.- Davies, Miss Bedington and M rs. Myers.

Officers will be elected a t the Nov. 12 meeting.

Ex-Buhl Man Gets^tipend- To Do Research For D eaf...BUHL — Robert Zagala, son

■ of M r. and M rs. F rank Zagala. B uhl,' is one of eight recipients of a n $8,500 internship from the •‘Language f o r t h e D e a f

—T-hroPHlrPaffent Education" pro- g ram , sponsored by Ihe'U nited S tates Office of Education (Title

— lH -E S E A )-an d -th e-G r-S .-M o tt Foundation and carricd out in cooperation w ith Michigan State .Universitji.

Z agata taugh t a t the Idaho State School for the Deaf in

- Gooding from 1966-69.T h e program s e e k s ‘ to ac-

sea rch m - the qreas of child ^ growth^ and development, garen t

educatfon, child psychology and ^ h e developm ent of language. It aIso'‘ encourages independent ex- p e illiniiita tloii u iid iei,eflRli.

E ach of the eight interns arc assigned two o r three families to w ork w ith. He will make two hom e v isitations per week with each fam ily. The .fam ilies, a re distribu ted over a five-county a rea w ithin a 50-iplle radius ol F lin t, Mich.

A pproaches to home training

^ a l E f Traffic Courts

Fin ed by Jerom e County P ro­b a te Judge Russell Shaud w ere

—^Van-S(ophon-Adam6on,-38r7Sal L ake C/ty. for apeeding,' anc Ja m e s E . Largo, 52, Hazeltop. S15 for driving on the wronf Bide of the road.

F ined by Jerom e Justice - the P eace Jrving Altman w ere G eorge Reed, Hazellon, J150, for d runk driving; VirRll Olson, SH,

are individualized, depending on he level of thB 'child 's develop­

ment,- degree of hearing loss, ncldence of m ultiple handicaps, fam ily problem s. ' ”ties, and other factors. Fam ilies

with -children: u p - to - tw o -y e a rs and .eigh t months of age a re a d m l t te d - to - th e -p ro g ra m ,-a l ­though training can continue to a tim e tha t the ch ildren a re eligible fo r nursery school pro­gram s. •

In terns a re under the '^upervl- sion of D r. Elonen and hold individual and group sem inars

Lsultation wUh h e r weekly.During the course"of the y e a r ■ ey m ay accum ulate 39 cred its

id m ay applv these c red its to ­w ard a specialist o r doctoral

ip p o se d .'to c a p i ta l p u n ish m e n t a n d . 'Will ; u s i h is p o w e rs to c o m m u te m o s t if n o t a l l d e a th se n te n c e s p a s s e d du ring* h is se v cn -y o a r te r m ; _ '

Th‘e. officials em p h asize -th a t Pompidou . w ill not take any step.s for the form al abolition of capital punishm ent So th a t the executioner’s b lade can still act as a de te rren t to “ pro fessldnar' crim inals.

The four men who were awaiting execution in July rcp^frgented three v erjj d ifferent

types>of . k iller.'Andre VegnaduzzI, 25, ba t­

tered. and knifed his m other and his fa th er to ^ a t h while In

'm ehtally d is tu rb ed , condition ovet- m oney p ro b lem s.-

A lexandre V iscardi w anted to shoot a m istress who had left him. H e 'd id not find his form er m istress a t h e r m other’s home, but shdt t^ e m other and two olher w om en w ith ' her. The m other la te r.'d ied .

Noel M arucci, 27, and Serge Q arany, .33, killed . a bank

irtp lo y e - : and « "pollcernaK during a h'old-u]>^at Bordeaux. Ea ch accused the ..other of firing the fatal shots/

All. four .were glveii life sentences under > Pom pidou's clem ency-• ordera.—.-This--mcaijs they will be considered for paro le 'e v p ry 'f iv e y e a rs until they - a r t . ju d g c d _ lre a d y ' -fo^t re lease. ,

Sunday. O ^ b e r J . 1^69 Tlmes^Newi^ Tw>ln Falis* Idaho: 7 -

DOCTORS GATHERSAN FRANCISCO , (UPI), ~

M ore than 15,000 doctors willl begin .gathering in San F rancis-' c o '^ u n d a y for the 55th A nnuat Clinical Corigress of the .^meri* can College o f Surgeons. '

PiEK A S P K IA L IS T FQ R.YOU R HEARING'A s~ trp a rfo f’ our'complete hearing’-atd-serviroJ -wj#- offer.a free oydiometric toSt and heoMng evaluation in our' office or your home* Como in or coll todoy an d firia out w hat~ C om fprt Sound" 1?/ TELEX.con do'for yo u ..

TELEX HEARING AID-SERVICE339 Main Wait, Twin rolli, ldah« - [ fhen« 73S-0M1

G O N T I N U E S ! !

program . Zagata w ill be work- ;ng>tewaFd-fin-r«du<^l|OMl~ ciallst o r doctoral degree, received his BS degree ipee^h pathology and audlology from IdahpVState U niversity in 1965 an d -h is MS in education of the deaf from O regon'College of Education In 1966.>

Z agata and hfs wffe, G erl, a re residing In Swartz Crfeek ju st outside of Fllftt. M rs. Z agata Js_jw ltb—th«—FJin t—eohim uTTityschools a s a speech therap ist.” "

M rs. ZagiJta also tau g h t a t the Idaho S ta te . School for the D eaf In the prim 'arji departm en t from 1967-G9. ^ lle n n ^ M rc h tg a r t ' she,w ill take gradua te courses.

and Ja c k Lygto, J19, for speed­in g ; 'G n rv Robinson, $30, basic rule vlofntlon, and KatherineM iller, $13. stop sign violation, all iSvIn. F alls. Also fined b y JwdRO A ltm an wns Denjamin W aldo, St. Anthony^ J15, failure

. to yield.

-W E -B U Y t— SELL and

TRADEGUNS

RED’ST r a d i n g P o * t

W lth -W o r k in g -T r a d ® -

AIL P H ILC O ® REFR IG ER ATO H S A N D FREEZERS

S PE CIALLY PR ICED F O R T H IS O C C A S IO N l

I PMIL<?B IB B

FINESTQUALITY

A T T H E L O W E S T

■ POSSIBLE PRICE

S T O P I N

A N D C O M P A R E

BIG SCREEN CO LO R

AS LOW AS95

w/iM o d o l S 5 2 3 9 Q Y

A l t P H I I .C 0 'S T E R E 0 7 B “ * w

A N D C O L O R T V 'S R E D U C E D

> GInnt Sfn Ov«n * Plug In Soffoe* Unit*

All. FURNITURE and APPLIANCES

X 1 2 -

a r e a r u g slha buliMn look" Prastically Reduced

___ f o r th is sp ec ia l e v e n t

10-PC. LIVING ROOM GROUP• • S O F A • C H A IR • 2 T A B L E S

. (Walnut finish)' • C O F F E E T A b u G '(W alnut flnlshj• 3 D E C O R A T O R -P IL L O W S • - -2 tA M P S

ONLY. . . ^ 2 0 9_9 1 xJj210val braided R ug-

Soverol Colors to Chooao From

Reg. J39.95 . . . . ' . . . - . . . . .* 2 9 ’ ®

95

SHOP

W i l s o n - B a t e s

.^xingjQuLAonual J^nislversofy.Sa le t

fwiN FALLS JEROME204 West M a iii

‘ 3 2 4 -2 7 0 2

C O ^ V E N Ip N T IN -STO R E FIN AN CIN IG

702'M aln A ye . N . 7 3 3 -6 1 4 6

Page 8: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

T lm e i- tla w i^ T w in Kajl^, Id a h o - S u n d a y , O ^ o b e r i , 1-969

Ehi-inldng Water IivLake Erie'Is Causiwg Sickness, Deatlv

w ater departm en t,” Poland -

By STEPHEN MORROW CLEVELAND (U PI) — Drink-^

ing w atcM Bken from contamin->. nled Lake E ric is c a u s i n g sickness a n d , pcfhaps "even d ea th among Clevelanders, a 'cncra l p ractitioner said I-'ti-' w . ■ _ . ■ ' • :

Fugitive

said, "They a re dol a .gopd

,K=n ,™ m >... ~ . . v . - ^ )■iThe rea l problein is not theiE rle , he said. ■ ■ •

b r . John P oland m ade the charge a n ' a rllc lc in a nationat 'm edical journal—Me* dical. World News).

He sthd an cp ld em ic . liv^ yeii-s ago th a t caused 50 d e a th r and a g rea t d e a l of vomiting and d ia rrhea in C leveland ,'w as probably a- "^ ra* T y p h o id ” cnu-sfid • bv bac te ria in - t h e w ater. ":The epidem ic, ' Dr, Poland satQ, has broken out in much m ilder and briefer form

E M M E 'iy (U P I)-W illian \ Lawrence M atthews, 35, w anted by the Sncramenio bureau of the, FBI, w as,ap- prohended " in ' E m m ett Thursday* after a woman who said he frightened her

— O fficc r-J im -W atso n - saKl- thc-w om an-deacribed-a-fl-d-

htf -was w anted by

FB I agents Jn Boise said 'M atthews 'w as w anted '

to avoid prosecutfon

deadlkp’ weapon.M atthews wasrtlirnod over

to“ a 'U rS . 'M a rs h a I" a n d “ tn- dicatcd h'e would waive trad itio a ' ifornia.

T.or,]i Ness

ailtCDr. Frank Eills, city health

d irector, said the complaint, w as "unfounded,” a n d -^ w a ’ based on ' "unscientifioii—metH ods. j

E llis said tests of (he. w a te r ;-lhe-li!lrH tlon-p lan tiv-and_aL

various -p o in ts -in - tl ie -d is tr ib u - t io n - s»i^tem~9 liow--no-bac te ria , □ n d ^ h e“ w a ltr fs trcatc^Jrwith- chlorine to kill bacteria .

J i l t Dr. Polaim . in a- b p iImerviewi said the te s ts used by the c ity reveal the presfcnce only of ty o m ajor s tra in s of bac te ria (A erobacter aerogenus

"salm onella*', and "sh igella"— two " d is e a s e ' cauMiig' bac te ria— in Cleveland w ater, • in a ‘tfist. using cen trlfucal force, micros­copic a;ialysis, and cuftur« breeding;

These bacteria a re usually In the w ate r in only a m ild form. D r.- Polq^id said. But -aft<r

DRESSESsff

136 M a in N ertH T w in F a llf '

Submarine^ IsRetii’ed

LOCH NESS, Scotland (U PI) =-.Dan-.TajUQr-retitcd-his_yefloW- subm arine- F riday from the

a re am ong new officers of the U niversity B usiness W omen’s Sorority elected recen tly a t Idaho S tale U niversity: P ictu red , from left, front row , a re N orm a Boss, Tw in F a lls , h istorian ;

-SusaarJan :H U l,~ A slitn iu :ipub lle ije ifltlon3 :dIreelDc;=IiH:t-Ann

and back row, from left, C indy-Pen^e, Pocatello , trea su re r ; N ancy T ripp , Glenns F e rry , vice president, and M rs. Joleno

Moristi^r and said he would try, t ry again in about th ree yci w ith a be tte r equipped sub.

T iy lo r, 29, of A tlanta, Ga.,

Twin Falls Woman Heads ISU

IDAHO STATE U NIVERSITY. Pocatello — N orm a Boss, Twin F a lls , w as recen tly e lected pres-

. iden t of the U niversity Business ' W omen’s Sororitji a t Idaho State UiiIvBriilty:— ~

•O ther new officers of th e unit, founded In April, 1^9 , include

—Joycc-V lttetoe,-M Q rtau4hi-presi- d en t; Cathie B irrell, Twin Falls, sec re ta ry , and N ancy Tripp, G lenns F e rry , vice president.

’ • The ISU group is now a rran g ­ing fo r n a tio n a l affiliation. II is th e f irs t w om en’s ])usiness

—organ ita tlon -on ' cam p u s.'—

Oct. 15 and 22. T h e f ir s t m eeting will fea tu re a lu m n ae business wom6n and w ill dea l w ith job Interview s. T he second will be - queation- a nd an swe r ocai with faculty m em bers . Purpose of th e c a ree r cam paign is to a c q u a in t- th c -w o m e n -w ith .-var*. ioiis aspects of th e business world and p rocedures for Inter­views., ■

“ We will- b e liav lng guest sp eak er^ a lm o st ev e ry week to keep the m em bers Informed on tho"b'usIness World environm ent

h e ld by. th e g roup ' du ring the Miss Boss said.

More (Ml .SANTA BARBARA'(UPV)

"ed .ashO fe ..lrom _thc Santa B a rb a ra Channel w here leakage from an ocean floor- well o f -the Union Oil Co.' coated beaches eight months

“IfBOrThe recu rrence of the pol­

lution . occu rred re c cntiv. W hile It w as now here as se­vere a s the inundation of oil last~ Jan u a ry , it left a film along sections of sand_ and rock over a 25 • m ile stre tch and fouled the hulls-

- o f p leasu re boats in th c hpr-

Snowmobile R ^ s t r - a t i o M — ^

c c m p la ln e d th a n n o n s tc r^ h u n t '' ing buffs had expected him to accomplIsh~hiS” m lssion-quickiy " lik e a m agician.’’ He ra te s his ta sk as a ‘‘miillon-to-one'’ shot in th e m urky w aters of the lake.

Is A MustBOISE -— Explaining the new

law which requires the registrn . • * ' ibrltr ' ■ ' '

F arley , m o to r vehicle division d irector, sold anji person who' engages in th e ’Teta li“ sa les~ o r ren ta ls of snowmobiles Is con- ^ d e re d to be a dealer.

He pointed out the annual fee for certificates of num ber Issued to dealers Is SIO fo r th e first certificate and $3 for each nddl^ tiona l'c e rtif ic a te , w h eth er f o r -deinonstra tlon - u r re n ta l p poses. '■

packing up the pa rts of h is 20- foot subm arine, the Viperfish, and would deliver it to customs officials -'at. Greenock, n e a r Glasgow, next week. He plans to sail for home Oct. "

■*‘They . -expetted —j u s t -pop down .and get 'N essle,' when they. have 'been tid ing un- successfu ily -fo r eight y ears ,” Taylor said. . .

‘‘I never m ade any g r e a t c laim s. I did not learn tha t visl-, b ility in the Loch was only about 12 inches until I arrived- here. T hen I knew th a t finding Nessle w as a million-to-ohe chance."—T a y io r-sa id -h e -r ia n !T to -bu : a new subm acine in A tlanta,

Large Selection - Over 50Q pairs

WOMEN’S SHOESDRESS - SPORT - C A ? U A L - S C H O O L

3 H O U R S ^ N L YREGULAR TO $22.00

IJK R Q E S E L E C IT O N

MEN’S SHOES— — L-DreBB,-Sport-& 'Gaauol—

B y Pedwin & Briarcllff

Y O U R . H C H O IC E ............................................... 9.99

- SHOES^BY^FtORSHEIM— -BASS N U N N -B U S H & ROBLEE

Regular to $30,00NO'

$30,00 ’ ........................................................ . . 18.99SPORT S HIKIHG IIOOIS

B y Rod W ing & Italian rriakos

A N IM A L VESTSFoke fur huilT Into eul# iletveltti Fokt pony^calf, chMtoh,' Size* 5, M, L

R e g 7 " $ 1 2 ^ -r^ $ 4 :9 9

BLOUSESReal nicf ielectloh bP’bojTe whItt ihlfir-and-nov*lty-print». W1 famou* brandi. All »lie».

Jutt o ildlculooi odd».ond.«nd»-dionup ihorti, tic. Sp»e)aeoldr vaiuei.

M r. Thomson Sportswear Reg. to $18 . . . $ 4.99

Goat Dresses-' Only o few In broken tizei and oddi'and «ndi from varloui

Fashion Pdnts - Reg. to $18 . . . $ 4 .99------- -rernfle-itncki-ln-iolldt end novtll/ paiurni-^sitalohucndjjif.ed leg«, oil

Fashion Hosiery Reg. $1.75 . . . $1.25Famou» brond ol elean-up ptiMi. Moil all •iMi.'Anorlminf of colon, ond »tyU». All (oil

N ovelty Hosiery ' ______ Reg, to $3.00 . . 29cOdd» ond «nd»-of ^ver )li« fcne* heit In epotiu* and novelty ttxluiei; Anoflmenl'of colon.;' •

't Fashion Jew elry - Va Price Oddi and «ndi of "In leaiort" pint, necklac«i/ lopti, «or ring*. m*dollloni, «lc. Big Savingtl

Sport Sets , Reg. $22 .. . . $ 9 .9 9Four only, <^lld'colorful print tvnie (opt with black trimmed ilock, SIm i 5 to U .

-R E D U C E D C O A TS — — — — ---------2 on ly . Rag. $ 6 5 ........................... ....................................... N O W $ 2 9 . 0 0

1 on ly , Reg. $ 1 1 0 ........................................................................ N O W $ 2 9 . 0 0

1 only , Rag. $ 1 0 0 ........... .................7 . . ............................................ N O W $ 2 9 . 0 0

. . 3 on ly , Rag, $ 3 ? ................................................................................................ N O W |$ 9 .0 0

SPECIAL C O A TS Reg. $65 . . . N O W $39All wool Iweadt, cliecVt, pMitlt in lani lettlllc wonif)n’> coqIi, nil tliai.

Classified Dress Sdie!

I O nly o n o 'of a kindl Check th e s ire , color, price a n d rush In fo r y o u r* .»

-A T 7 P F JA 7 B lz o * S "= "F lo ro l ( J r l n t ...................R & K , a lz e 1 0 — G r e o n /W h l to ..................

- H B N R Y -L E B .-a iia - lO - .-----L if lh t-b lu o -.- .- .- .H E N R Y L E E . a lze 1 0 — All w /h l to ............JE A N LA N Q , s lz a 1 0 — LIrIU R reeo . . . B U T T B ’K f^lT . a lzo XO — L ig h t llloc .', , H O . H O , s l ; e 11 — P r in t o ff a h o u ld e r . .L O Q A N , aizo 111 — 2 p ie c e l l l o q ...............JE A N LA N Q , a lz e 1 2 — LiRht flre e n . . . W A Y N E F U L tE R , aljro 1 2 — LiRht p in k .H E N R Y L E E , a izo 1 2 — G o l d ..................... ..D A N IE L L E , s iz e 12 — 2 p ie c e o rc h id , . H E N R Y L E E , a lze 1 ^ ~ LlRht b lu e ' , . . R & 1^, a lz e 1 4 —« G re e n /w h ltn . . . r < . .

9 0 .0 9 ,

9 1 2 .9 9 9 1 4 .9 0

•9 1 4 ^9 9 9 4 ,0 9 K 1 4 .0 0 '9 1 4 .0 09 1 2 .0 0 ‘9 1 2 .0 0

. 9 0 ,0 0912,00 9 0 ,0 0 912.00

- - - - - - - - - i A D I E S ^ - S H N C M - e R T i - I N e H —

HUNTING & SPORT BOOTS. ..... ........ .......now juat In time for.tha hunting B o a s o n ...................... .. .

Regular$18.95 . . . . . ,

6** boots for all typos of wear. Cushion orVIbrom solo. Full leather lined.

Regular $24.95- N O W ' T - T T " ' . . ; . . .................. 16.99

* 1 0 .9 9SPECIAL PURCHASE

KIS wiNQ HUNTING BOOTS

NYLONS.S H E E R R LA iN S T IT C H O R S E A M L E S S S T R E T C H

Now PAIRllj'Reg. ■ ■ 5' Pair

$2.00

Y our Bank Cards A re W elcom e

, Germ an epaad Ince ' Sizes to i a ^ Widths B to EE

Regular $29^95 'Said P r ic e ..........

. . . . R « g , 9 3 4

. . . . R o g . 9^B , ‘. . . - R * B - 9 3 4 t . . . . R e g , 9 3 4 . . . . R e g . 9 3 8

. . . . -R eB . 9 4 0 R o g , 9 2 4

. . . .R a g , 9 3 0. . . . R a g , 9 3 3 . . . . R a g . 9B S . . . . R ag , 9 3 4 . . . . R a g , 9 2 8 . . . . R a g , 9 3 4 . ; . . ^ a g . 9 2 B . . . . R aft.. 9 3 4

23.99

- < '.1

D O W N TO W N

H E N R Y L E E , a lz e 1 6 — G old . . ... ....................■; J E A N .l^ N O . 'B l io 1 0 , - ^ q r e o n p r i n t ............

JE A N LA N Q , a lze 1 6 — G ri(y /brovvn p r in t .JE A N L A N Q . a lze 1 8 — G reAn p r i n t ............K O R R E L , aizo. ?OV^i — N flv y /w h lto . . . . . .

' Sale Starts ■ 9:30 A.M. -

CLOSEO at 5:30 REOPEN

AT 7P.rt'; .

. R a g .l9 3 4 . R « g . 9 3 4 . ^ e g . 9 3 2 . R a g , 9 3 2 . R a g . 9 2 8

9.J12.00 9 1 2 .0 0 , 9 1 2 . 0 0 ' 9 1 2 .0 0 9 0 .0 0

‘^ D O W N T O W N - T W I f < i r F A U L ^ -

Page 9: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

shop all day aKd until 10:00 p.m. Monday night a^ Sedrs for dufstqnd- T l t t ing boysr Clip and bring the coupom a tihe bp.tf djti of^thls p q g e to■ “Sears” for FANTASTIC SAVINGS M O N D AY ONLYl

XTRA-RANGE

SHOTGUNSears Perrriahenf Auto

Anti-Freeze and Coolant

SAVE IIV eRLAYAW AY N O W FOR CHRISTMAS

N « w A M P o rtg b U w ith th* "R o u n d S o u n d "

It's the latest r o u n d d e s ig n , transistor ra|dIo ‘w it h b u ilt -in c o i« m e tic ■ c om p a rtm e nt. H a i b r ig h tly co lo re d v in y l trim a n d h a n d y ear*

- p h o n e .____ ______ - - ..........' _______ -

P U N T NOW FOR BEAUTY IN THE SPRING Daffodil or Tulip Bulbs

Assorted JC q Iocs.„

CtIP THESE VAtUABtE COUPONS! U s e Like Cash on the following Ite m s

S h o p a t S e a t s Siayo- Sttlisfw ctiott G u a ra n lc o d o r M o n e y ^ c k

BKAU,*OOM QK A2I6 <Xk

I Open T u b s , and 8^t. 9:30 a.m.t o 6 p.hir

S h o p M o n . r W o d ., 'T h X J t * f t . , F r I . , ‘

............................

P L E N TY O F FREE . S T G R E S I D ^ ' ,

P A R K IN a :......

4 0 3 M A I N A V j S ; W E S T

- T W ^

Page 10: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Ktuniih Is Candidate Foi* Burley Qty.Council.

....... B U R L E Y .— : C harles Kr'ummh a s 'W e d h fs 'p e titio n w ith (he

; BurleV City Clerk as a . city councilm an- c a n d i d a t e . M r.K rum m is the sccond' person to. f i l e , a . petition to r the Nov. 4 ,-c ity flection and the -first to file ■ lo r 4 councilm an post. G qrls Ro­b e rtso n vfas the firs t to Ille for.

• th e m ayor position.M r. Krum m served a s presi*

d e n t o f the rgcent City Manager.

Chairm an of the Northside Citl*- . zens .COtttoltteo organization.,

■‘•Having had U y e a rs of busi­n ess experience I feel the num-

----- ber'-one p riority In operating any.' business ■ is spending Irv accor? dance td the income of th a t bus­iness,''w hether It be p riva te or

.operated-on-taxpaycrs!-m oncy,!'— ‘-* ta ted -M f.-K ru m m .-^ -r-^ --------

■I also believe a ^councilman

■ 1 0 T 1m ^ ^ N 8W>; tw in,Falls, WoKo . , Sunddy, OctohBr 5“ 1 W 7

•hould take on the rcspoQsibdlty- o f voicing and voting ■hlsTionest convictions ind ep en d en tly on a n y issues coming before the

' touncil. There Is no .substitute fo r honest, ab o v e -b o a rd deal* In tts . '. especially -w ith — pUbllc

— ^fundsiw-M^^Krumm^ald^H g y

m oved ‘to Hansen w hen h e was

CHARLES KRUMM

3 yea rs old. He attended schools- ■ in Hansen and Tw ld F a lls .-H e

-a tte n d e d :ihe -fo rm er^G ood ingCollege and also attended Uni-

__Ycrslty of-Colorade,.Boulder, Jo r

__ In 1931 h e 'm arricd P ea rl M ustand th e couple has two- sons. £ ^ le K r u m m . Buhl, Dean K rum rh. Twin F a lls , and one

“ d a lilh le f , 'M rs. Sam O veracre,

^ e ^ c o u p le f < ^ ? a ^ n Magfc V alley until 1945 wlwm' he en ter- ^ the grocery business a t Han- «en. They have bwned and oper-

ated ‘g rocery sto res In Hager- m an. ftfurtauch and BurJey. Jn -Warch.' 1969. U sold th e Pik^N-

h a d owned a n d operated for-nine■years:-----------— ---------------------- -

P resen tly ' he is employed by M. H. King Co. in Burley and the couple, resides a t 618 Albion Ave.7 B u rley .-H e - is - a n -a c t iy e b e m b e r of the .F irs t B apust Church.

REDEM PTIONS UP WASHINGTON (U PJ) —Sav*

InKs^bond redem ptions exceed­ed sales by SlOl million last month, th e lOlh stra ig h t month m ore m oney w as tak<m out -of the bond p rog ram th an 'v /as put ir^ the T reasu ry D epartm ent s ^ d today^________________

LE G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T S ■“ s t a t e m e n t o f o w n e rsh ip . MANA0E31ENT ,AND CIBCULATION

» . iV«)0.nnr oljMVrn D ^ f .-Twla F*lU CouBtf. ld»lio 85301.

' I Location of bMauarter* or B*n*r tSS Snd 6trt«t W«t, Tyrln F»1U. I d .^

a. N»mM Mii u ld rw n ot Ptiblblier. cdlto.. - rubltoW Al W«U>»Tjn, Twin F.J1.. J»ho.Editor O. A. (Gu»> K«lk#r. Twin-Fall*. Idaho U>na«lD« Edltor. O. J. Snith. Twin Fall*. Idaho.S :X v a l l ‘. r N r-,pap.^: J« ., an IdahVeolS.Titlor,. Twin r.lU .'Idiio. onlr

' ttoekboldCT ot which tatHammond yubltohrr.. Jne.. at ■tMkholdan of which wBo s«n

anaral hualntaa oflle<!a of-tla publUbcn

, Indiana.; eorpotuUon. H»">m»na- Jnai.n..-

•hlp la tha^ companr • John E. T

. Addraai • Munitcr, Indiana

Oceanildr. California - • Ptxatrilo. Idaho

Lo« AnK«l«*. Calif. . Twin Fall*, Idaho

___ irnoweFar.Andrva-E. Howard William E. Howard David B. Ifoward

T . E. D««ton,Ann Daaton.Carol D. nnlayao*. D fnnU i. Wlrht,- GUn S/Mar.hall,M. T. DeaWn. , _ f . Know. • —= —Ins. I p«T c«fit or IB.

10. Extent and natura of- 'Av*rac« No. CapIcs ..------- Xaeb Itau# Diirlny

rr««dlnr 12 Monlha

Waiblntinn rocatHln. Idaho

Galn«vlll». FloHila ToeaUllo, Idaho PnrateUo.'Idaho Tcxatello. Idalvs

wuritr holdrra ownlna or ' ' ' of bondi, mort«aBaa or c

6ln>U luua KfartitTo Plllnir Data

«O.BOO

r . flnatiwmntail.

leirsQUAmm-BiLooiuiiQFon

ASSORTED FABRICS

2Yards 1«00Hopsacklngs, o a n a b u rg , a n d linens. Easy C a ro.

■ Reg. 77c Yard

— ^ N B t E A e H E f t - M U S t l N :39 Inch W id th

4 Yards 1*00TAFFETA REMNANTS

45 !nph width ■

f t47« Yard 67cvvli52 to 10 Y d , L o n g th il

PRINTED FLANNEL• 36 to 4S IncH WIdth

4 Y a r d s ^ 1 ^ 0 0 - - R « S .■■7'47c:-

O P E N 7 P .| 4 ,T O ,1 0 P .M .M O H D A Y

THESE ilEMS ON SALE ALL DAY MONDAY OCTOBER 6-lAOIES FLATS . ; M f r a p o lr o r P T f t f t '> ^'^ '> ''“ 5 Q Q - . jsm i-S ' FOUR-WAY COATS, V «r.o llla 4 - In -o n . S 1 ^ 9 9

Dl,icot\tiriuecl'PaHern»\. . 1 . . . i p w i P D l pair f o r « J | « U U N«,w*hlpm «nt, M any Famous Arttili .................... 7 7 L , design. Rog. $17.00.,SizBi 7 -1 4 . ..... .......................... I I

. LADIES^ SUPPERS ■ ,A i i o r f d s l i ^ a n d c a la rt, R »g . $4

' C O > H SCISSORS, Assorted styles fo r m a n y , $ 0 4 7 . $ ^ 4 7 ’' C IR IS ' N Y L O N P E T TI-P A N T S , '

. oawr r : : . . . » < * — -iiz a s .4 -i4 ........... .........................

W D f E S ' P A ^ T Y H O S E -4 ^ h o d « * - ln K ii«tP-M >M T-T-r. jSt M E N ’S BRIEFS- A N D T SHIRTS

Sixes S - M - L - X l , .............................: . 1 . . 3 polr* for 52i6LAblES* SU P P O R T H O S E

<4 shodas, « h « T ^ c r g . » . $1.99-^ENVS-STBFTrH SOrK*?-.

Fils sjzos 10-T3) R tg . '$ l ,5 0 77c

W O M E N ' Padded or

— . X : M E N ’S -LEA TH ER O L O V E S , Fur or A e ry lU lined in M 7 7 "rS t O T T O N BR AS S ! 1 b lack or b ro w n , sizes ^ M -L -X L , Reg. $ 4 .9 8 . . for W * # # ■ j o r u n p a d d e d styles, g js ’ t. sites .. . 1 . 0 0 ^ . _ — — — ------------------ --— :---------------- : ------------------ :— ;;—

M E N 'S C A S U A L P A N T S ^ Assortad Falf.-L Y C R A G IRDLES / ' ' •' C O Q Q * K a d »f , s iio » ,3 0 -4 2 ^ J le g . $ 6 .9 8 . ; ...............................

P o p g jo r sty lin g In *Ix»* S -M -L -X L . ... ........................... ’ -----------------------------------7"------------------ ;------------------------------------------------------------------------

LADIES CAR C O A T S , A ss o rted Styles . • S O A O O a n d colors. V a lu e s to $ 3 3 .0 0 f o r . . . . . . . . . . _____ Z U

M E N 'S W O O L S H IR T, S p o rl styles In b o ld p la id s . Re g.''$ 7.9 9 fo r . , r r r r * . $5.88.

GIRLS’ .C A R D IG A N S W E A TE R , .6 colors, , S299sizes 7 -14 , Reg. $4.0Q ‘................ .., ---------^ i - T l

G IR LS' P A N TIE S . N y lo n .P a n tie s In ' ..... 37cprints or solids. R e g .-i5 9 c 'i. ...............................

J N D O O R -O U T D O O R .R U G R U N N E R ' .$2.88Reslits a ll . A ssorted colprs, 2 ^ x / 0 ” . . .

R O O M R U G {In d o o r-O u td o o r) ^..............n rA ssorted colors, 8 ” 6 'x l 1 ' 6 " ............................

-W O M E N '5 -W O O L -S U C K S r W o o J -a n d -W o o l ' Blends In 3 styles. R eg. $ 1 1 .0 0 --------- ----

IIT T L E B O Y S ’ D U N G A R E E S ,'C o lto n D e n im ,' ^ 9 ^

R O O M SIZED R U G S (In d o o r-O u td o o r) ' D u ro -llte skid free b a c k in g , 11 '6 ” x l 4 ’6 ” . . .

W O M E N ' styles a n d

>'S R A IN / S H IN E C O A T S , Assorted ■ $ 1 > 4 8 8 id c o lo rs .-R e g .$ 2 3 .0 0 .7 ......... .................. .. 1*1

M E N 'S B A N L O N K N I T SH IR TS, Short S le e ve d; ^ Q Q m a n y colors, Reg. $ 7 .? 8 ..................................................... ^ * 7 7

-S T A IN L E S S STEEL G IF T W A R E , Choose from 6 pieces’fine stainless steel. Reg. $5 to $ 7 . . . . . a 9 9

B O Y S ' SLACKS, Assorted Styles — o nri fnlnrs Rep, $ 4 ,9 B . ■ . i ■ . .

W O M E N 'S SCARFSS qu are o n d o b lo n g ............................................................. 99c

A N N IV E R S A R Y B L A N K E T , M a c h in e W a s h a b le S 1 A 9 95 colors. Reg. Six*, $ 1 4 .9 8 , N o w ..................................... - l U _ _ ....... .................. W O M E N ’S G LO V E S -99c.BEDSPREADS, Printed No-Iron, ' 9 7 0 0 M EN'S SLACKS, F o m o u fn a m .,'^ " “ i i Several styles. Reg. $ 1 0 ,9 8 , fo r ..................................... ^ / « 7 7 1 0 0 % w o rs ted w o o l. R e g . $ 1 8 .0 0 . ' ........................“. . . 1 0 . O ^ f o w n Lo m a L in d a . . . . . . f ...............I. Reg.

A S S O R TE D F A B R IC , G ra n d Prolrle * - • C l 0 0 GIRLS’ F O U R -W A Y C O A T S , Versatile 4 -In -o n e Prints a n d p la in s , p e f y a r d ............................................. d e sig n . Reg. $ 1 5 .0 0 . S ite s 3 -6 x ..................................

$ 1 1 9 9 THR EE-PIECE B A T H SET .. I I Assorted Colors. Reg. $ 5 .9 8 .

KWiW.w.BRKir/A::-.'/}

GN=SALEP.M. STARTING AT . . .

B f l O O N i l G ILADIES* HEELS, L a rg * g ro u p Personalllles In $ 0 0 7 ' L A D IE S '-H A L F SLIPS, F a m e u t nam es, . ^ I ' Q O ossorted stylet a n d i l ie s . Reg. to $ 1 7 ............... 7 « 7 1 Assorted sizes a n d c o l o r s ....................... ......................... I • '# / I

M E N 'S FELT H A T S , S m o ll g ro u p ossorted s ly le s rV a l. to $ 1 7 . 9 5 . . .

A n i H A M IL T O N B E A C H ELEC TR IC KN IFE ’ $ 0 0 0 . . . . . . O . U U j 6 o n ly , Reg. $ 1 2 .5 0 .......................... ............................... 0 . 7 7

T A N K E R JA C K E T SSizes S -M -L -X L . R e g . $ 8 .9 5 . *5.99 ELECTRIC DRILLS ‘ * 5 9 9

SLUM BER B A G , C o m b in a tio n q u ilt cbverlet a n d Q Q sleeping b a g , m a n y b r ig h t colors. Reg, $ 1 3 .0 0 . . v « 7 7

j.C p R p U (f O Y F A B R IC ,iA s io rte d "ro !o ri _ ; ' : ' . 7 Q ^ a n d w a le s , Reg, to $ 1 . 9 8 ................ . . . . . . . y a r d / 7 L

FLOUR SACKSB leached C o lt o n ..................................... .. . 4,0, 99c C L U T C H B A G S , Sm a ll g ro u p

o sio rte d Colors. V a lu e s to $ 4 .0 0 .............. . .... 99cF A B R IC S ----------- . ■Assorted g ro up s o n d c o lo r s .............. Y a r d 25c L A C E , O v e r 2 0 types to

choose. V a lue s lo $ 1 . 0 0 ........... ................... . . . . . . y a r d 5CG IR LS'.D R ES S ES , A ss o rted sizes S I Q Q a n d s ly lo i, Reg, $ 4 .0 0 a n d $ 6 .0 0 ............................ .. 1 . 7 7

l a d i e s ; S LE E V lL e S S '^H E LLS , B o u c U ', solids a n d S I Q / stripes In o n .asso rtrD e n l o f styles. R e g ; $4-• — 1 « 0 0

LA D IE S ' K N IT 1 solids a n d no’v «

khort sleeves, In o rlo n In $ 1 Q AS , r S . $ 5 .................................. ... I.TO

LA D IES ' K N IT T O P S , Lontf sle ty* ,ln solids, 0 0■tripes, b ig A s t 't . Reg. $5 o n d $ 6 .............................. .. Z . 0 0

G IR LS' P A N T S “ StrtTch n y t o n r R «g r$ 4 -^ -. JJL99

G IR LS' K N IT T O P S $ 1 i i ■ Ny,lon In qss 't. colors. R*g. $3 ..... ............. ................... I i* t* f

. M E N 'S A L L -W E A T H E R C O A T S , Z ip lin e d , 7 5 % $ 1 0 8 8 cotton, 2 5 % p o lye ste r. S -M -L -X L . Reg. $ 2 2 . . ,1 J

B O Y S ' SPO R T S H IR Tsi Lo ng sleeked, a is 't . styles $<| Q A a n d color*'‘in c lu d in g stripes, p.tal(f>., y a | ^ f « J . 9 8 . . • ■ • U U ,

T S , D e n im Ja m a lcos , ' ' S T A A i ,B e O . $ 4 . 0 0 ........... ......................... 1 . 4 4

LADIES’ S H O R TS , D e n im Ja m a lcos , ' A ssorted Siio t,

M E N 'S SLIPPERS, A ss o rted Colors a n d Sizes, $<f A Q Va lue s to $5100. D e p a r tm e n t!. . . . . . . . . I * 7 7

W (i l lK C O A T S , b .n i m , .......... S 7 . 0 0Sices 38 a n d 4 0 o n l y .............................................................v » 7 7

S TAIN LES S . F L A TW A R E ■ $ 0 Q Q 5 0 piece service fo r 8 ........................................................ '** 7 « 0 0

LAD IES' CAR C O A T S V e ry lim ited q u q n tlty . Reg. $ 1 3 ,0 0 .*6.99LADIES’ HEELSA ssorted styles a n d s i t e s . , .

$O00i a pair $450 . . . . . . 2 polr fori 0

GNzSALE:STARTING AT P.M.

MOOWGhTMhH A N D TO W E L S , Lorge assortm ent Te rry ' i Q ^ To w e ls . M a n y Colors. V a lue s to 6 9 c . . . . ... ................ 4 7 C

LA D IE S ' N Y L O N H O S E , Exquisite Hosiery In ■ ^ r sligh tly Irregulars,- F a m o us b ran ds , If perfect $ 1 .7 5 A w v

B IK IN l 'P A N TIE S , S m a ll g ro u p assorted 4 p a ir $ 1 0 0 c o lo n . V alues to $ 1 . 5 0 ................................ U for I

C O T T O N T H E R M A L B LA N K ETS 3 colors, tllg h ily Irrf0 u l° ' *1.99

^DlES’- S W E A TERS , -C a rd lf lo n s -o n d -I Ig h t -w e Ia h t > rS < ^ 'q iio r to d ilze s a n d colors. Ren. $ 5 .0 0 ..................... .. j - •

M E N 's i e N i r s H m T i r C r i '^ i ' t ^ -....—— $ i ^ ~1 0 0 % ,A crylic, V a lu e s 'to $ 5 .0 q .................................... |,77

GIR LS' JU M P E R SETS, 'Sixes 7 -1 4 , Reg. $ 7 .0 0 .................................... ......................4 ,1

LA D IE S ' G R U B SHIRTS (Sweatshirts), Assorted ' A A > solid colors, short si., z ip back, Reg, $ 4 ,0 0 . i 77C

I IT T L E B O Y S ’ JA C K E TS , H o o d ed slyles “ ~ ' $ 1 Q Q ' In assorted colors, s lie s 4*<7, Reg. $ 4 .0 0 ............... L l M l

B O Y S ' N Y L O N JA C K E TS , Q u ilte d , >fery .! $ 0 0 0 llrrilted varie ty , |teg. $ 1 8 .0 0 ,-v . . i . , 0 « 0 O .

LA D IE S ' G R A B T A B L E , D?essei, , . 1 /Sportsw eor, etc. A l l l is s tha n ...................... / 2 I f l C C

M E N ’SPotterni,

■ V ,W IN T H R O P S H O E S , Discontinued ' " 9 l 0 9 7

I , Rag. lo $ 2 2 .0 0 . 1 ............................. i . f » r I Z

THE IDAHO DEPARTMENT STORE,• -I.

FMLS, IDAHO T

Page 11: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Agriculti&al.Worj^rs May • Come Under GemXaw .

By^ICHARD CHARNOCK

\ K&9 : • . Tlrpes-Nayt^; Twln-F all^ id6^P ' '

• BOISE (U P I) — A legistaiive study com m htee voted 5-3 to ­day to .p u t a ll B g ricu itu rarem * pl,oymcnc under w o r k m e n T a

-com pensation coverage- In. a proposed new W orkm en’! Com­pensation ' Code. . '

Rep. Jo h n P ino , D-Pocatello,' m ade tfio successful motion

w h ich 'o ffe rs no exem ptions for fa rm and ra n c h ,, w o tkerr -A fte r the vo te w as ...........

• R ep. W alter L ittle , R-New Ply- moulh, .p red ic ted the- s t a n d would run .into-*‘a lot. of oppo­sition-’ in hearings lat? ,r-’ on and in th e leg is la tu re i ts c I J _ ,

C o m m itte e m e m b e r s a t f i r s t d is c u s se d th e - p o s s ib i lity o f

-e m p t in g ;o p c ra to ra .w f fo hftva. ly .one o r

— B ut-W ll. ----------- -----------m em ber of t h e , in d u stria l Acci-

, den t Boards told the com m ittee this could lead to a lo t of liti-

. gation and conflicts.■I Rep. H arold Snow, R-Moscow,

- • suggested th a t perhaps operat- _ -_ o rs_ w ith on iy .-.a .few em ployes

--------a r e - t h e —ones-.-who—need—theworkmen’s com pensation cover­age the m ost. L ittle .said tha t about 95 p e r cen t o f .th e large

now..E arlier, th e com m ittee agreed

to inc!ude-in its projw ied new codc-d b road and sweeping new definrtion of " In ju ry .”

- Com m ittee ‘ m em bers u n a n l niously voted to-include In their d raft a . definition th a t , would m ake all job-connected in juries com pensable under Idaho law.

Such qction by the com m it­tee was recom m ended earlie r bv Bon Oppenheim , retired

_cho irm an_oL .the_Indu8 trIal. Ac cident B oard and now a con­sultant to the TAB. He said the

pehh?im sSid, ‘T h a t j the p rop­e r te s t a n d .'th a t’s w hat th6 model law. is ’ intended to do.”,

Rcpk: Harold Snow, R-Mosc6‘W; asked- whether. thC; proposed new d efin itio n 'a lso 'm ig h t lead to litigation Ju s tu s the one,lim ­iting com {^nsdtion' ^to~ln]uries has. ‘

'Not ju i t a s much b u t there*! going to be som e." Obpcnheim said. “ As long as the're a re Jaw-

ilghls.VQ:ep. Russell Fogg, R-Jd&ho

Falls, said he felt the new def­inition, m ight be gooc{ b u t said t h a f " I f l t ’s “going ' to .be .thisi broad we’re going to h a v e j o obtain m ore money to pay th is.” He suggested' it even, m ight-lead to -so m e -so rt-o f-so - -;lal--secu^ity - p ro g ra m _ a t_ th c

Sen. F isher Ellsw orth, R-Ida- ho F alls, agreed. •

“ Any chanM s we m ake here :hat result m additional costs a r^ ju s t going to Have to be passed on to the public,” E lls­worth said. -'-C onsidera tion-o f-thedefin ition w as the firs t n ia jo r jxjlicy de­ris ion to come before the com ­m ittee when it resum ed its de-

e n n c ffsa l w a y s F IR S T Q IM L IT V : ■ i r - -~

i TERRIFIC

m er Supreme Court Justice E, B. Smith, hired b y the com m it­tee to-study-the-m odei law and m ake recom m endations, went through the. proposed- new code section by section. vS m ith told the com m ittee he was " ra th e r fearful th a t indus­try itself, will figure -it’s (thi; proposed new definition of in- jp ry ) too broad a definition.”

The model code defines in- u r^ as "Any harm ful change n th e hum an organism arising 3Ut o f and in the course of em-

philosophy changing.

In a model code being studied b 'l the com m ittee is " th e -m o st sweeping change proposed by the Model Code.”

• " Idaho law Is lim ited to In­juries caused b v accident and a list of occupational d iseases,” O pnenheim -said . '

He said the O riginal.concept nf w orkm en 's com pensation was

a .worker for iniuries lained in on o n -Jo b accident.

--------- r B u f h e - s a ld - th is - c o n c e p t - h a dled to considerab le litigation—

■■ ,a...T^j,ven-fhnii"!h-thp-niTrnn<'f^- law |s to avoid litigation.

" I f in iuries a rise out of the w ork ,-w hatever the reason, they

• ought to be' com pensated ,” O p­penheim told th e com m ittee .

He said the " idea you can .o n ly reco v e r when there ’s an ■accident Is an tioua ted .’’

As an exam ple he citcd the hvpothctical case of ,a w orker extyjsed to continuous Iohc noise on the Job. H e said if th a t work e r -b c c o m e ^ d e a f - f lg -a - re -

— .— — compemmtlon—ns—o n e - ^ h o - i s deafened by a blow to h is e a r while oh th e Job.

. " I f it’s w ork connectcd,” Op-

the "office of m ayor ___ . _Nyblad and Chprles Dunn have filed fo r 'th e offices of c ity coun- ciimen.

M r. Heagle is a fo rm er s la te sena to r and hds been in business here all his life. M r. Nyblad cam e to Hailey about tw o years ago and Is co-owner o f tl}e Wood R iver Journal. M r. p a n n is a long-time re s id e n t 'o f the a rea and is a rea l esta te broker. ' -J n -K e te h u m sav e ril petltiona h av c-been -take irtm H ! h as-filed for offlce-yet,Jt_W B& reported,

T he deadline for filing Is the close of of(iqe hours Monday.

= W H A T = » R t Y 6 u : D 0 I N K r O i « 0 1 t R 0 \ f t t f ' l l Q H T 7 .

I'm, s.oing t«' thr^Mayfnlf Shea Dirl't. Chuck lint riduc«S 'many « l hit naw (all iliott lo dimott V, Piic*l

SUPER

F A M O U S -M A K E

Fom#o» nom«» fight on th* facaii Min't ond ilylt* . . . . (saltndarJ, ilimt, dayoneJ-dot*, i»lf-wlndlng oulo- maiki, ip^it’ond d rtii itylai In ih* group! Many of m - kind, gift bostd.

M e n 's BeautifuiCARDIGAN SWEATERS•Virgin O rio n ® . q c ry n c ,..m a c h in e . w a i h -^

BU¥?Cozy.

ElectricBLANKETS' p o lye sfe r/ ra yo n / cotton b lo n d . N y lo n

b in d in g . U L listed .

T w in siz* » $ 1 1 '• iH flli— eonlrol

F u ll t iz a $ 1 1■ingl* control ................ I I ’

Terrific Value_ _

SPECIAL BUY!' B ^H tryllir

FASHION SWEATERS

M E N 'SF A S H IO N

3.Wlish Imports

Buck|e-h-8trap, wing tip and cleml-boot atyles

-JSl2oa .7_-12.-._.u ;

Tw« handtomo tly i ii 1» eh ootti Pluih cr«tv and . V* n*ck pullOv«(t of toll, lux* uritov* Odon® acrVllc. ,Ju t( flghl for cool ichool.doyi^.

“ coiufil -wBar -loo l-S ilo tt- 'ffom ' g bdglit atioitm ont of •Ight rail iltodsi, Including novy, bflck, groan, Ivy and brown. At th li priM why not pl«k up t«v*rall Siiei 6-18.

I 'M G O I N G T O O .

Y *i,.tv*n hit •n iir t ttock 'n u r 'io n d n li o i t ‘50 *«’'ofll

W o m e n ’s

A crylic

._L[l|:&,HURRy.-W£,WAWUO. BEATi2_ T H E C R O W D .

T h e y op«n■' a t '

7 p : m . M

in w m to , ahd“^aat6l^

BUY 7 "SEVERAL

Attention Quitters!C E L A C L O U D ,

:C O L O i? B U L 7 - ' SCAHER RUGS26x46

H34xS6-$3.33

4 5 ^

jLuxurJous_S A TIN

R l l L O WCASES

100% COTTON

WORK

: s p e c i a l ..“b i ]-’o d n :21^3

0 0 x 9 0 size,

TERRIFICV ALU E

CARPET RUNNERSM ORE S A V IN G S

M e r c « r l z « d thr|iadB la2as;s> d . R poo i.................. ...............................M a d lt o n Oi^apa . O O

— c to M o u tr 50kM*7-, . . . a l l 0 an B 4 - Ta flo n < » c o a ta d Iron

a tS'-aulsBPiNd'dAQ-"^"' W O M AN 'S BHOES

Haeli,-ffat«/«'andola, Broken aliaa .,WOMBM'8 PASHlON.BH0ea____Sllp-on snd.tla atylaa . . . ......................aiRUa* s T R r r c H s h o r t s d^ax .................................................................W OM KN’S SH O R TS , .■Aaiortad'atyiai-ant! cdloni v .‘ . i w v Woman'aFASHION HOSE , . ............ ..............Woman'a Cabla Knit KNeBHItftHS . . . . . . . .

; . ,19c $14.88 $16.99

$8 .88 '

; . $ 1 .8 8......66e

$ 1 .2 2 S $ 1 . 0 0

« $ 1 . 0 0

S a v i T y o u r c a rp e tin g f ro m a x c e a t w e a r . V a rie ty o f col* o ra a n d w a a y a a . '

27x72 . $3.33 27x144 $6.66

FOREMOS#4 Lb. Sleeping Bag

17,98For t U lln»tt eomlod anH’ wormfh, fi*nvy'toUon cnnvni tovtf with n iw dqcron^t ''00" polytittr llll.lnff. Worm, warm, warm. Hunliri don't 'mlt* ihH. or»*.

S a ve y o u r n o w 'HaTrdoi'

Y o u r , he a d illd e s o a iH y over b e a u tiful laM n , gro a t

b u y In w b lto & pink.

■ — Ta rf lf lc .y o ly f l..

o n thosa lo n irw e a r ln g

ru g g e d yvorl^ lo c k t.

•, Llm lfod.cjvqntltio*.

M ORE S A VIN G Su i r l 'a 'C U U O T T E S L H B P W E A R 6 a n d S x ................

_ ,b S )b a T9 H IR T8 -........... ..

bSmmer shorts ; . . . . . . . . . . .V 4d S b a

S W E A T SHIRTS .................................... 2M«n‘a ' A Ctsrqnx BH iR Ts . ..T O T B BAOS . ' 'I S " ...................................... ..C L U TC H , BAQS WHh Shouldw Strap . . . . . . . ' .

L I K f r ^ l T v T r C M A R G E I T ^ T ^ P E N N E t t

$2.44^ i $ i : 2 2 : ; {$ 1 . 0 0

$2.88

$10.00 ..."$5.88

- , 1 ^ . 5 0

---------- ,i;rrT;-.'rrti--j=7rWlJ=«:

Page 12: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

V •

F a ll^ v td aK ^ ': V ■ • ’

Suil'Valley Man’,

.Corky H / ^ ^ ^ r . / S u n Valley^, w csterp. ski •instructor apd win­te r sports . au tho rity .' has been appointed b y ‘Air West to head a • new. w in ier -spo rts to u r de- velohm entrprogrom . •• R ichard NeaU .general sales m anager. Said M r.-F ow lp r\w ill rep resen t the atrilne a t ski shows and ',assist in .the prom o­tion of group tours.

■ Air West plans to o pera te spe­c ia l weqkend ski serv ice .this fall, including . Saturday Vsk' Jc t.s" frum .SLMttlo- nuii -stop -tL Twin. Fali.s and from, LbS An- iclcs to S alt Lake City and Twin

ills. The ftigWs . will accom- ■modato sk iers fining to Sun 'V al­le y an d .Utah ski resorlsT~M rF ow ler will .be active in work­in g ,w ith reso rts and sk i clubs

• In both a re a s . . • - - 'H o 'h a s bcen"a"skf- instructor a t-Sun Vo41ey-and'in ,the Seattle

• -arca .and in ‘1967 w as a techhica coacli. a t-th ff Crystal M ountain sum m er ’Tracing- c a m p near M ount Rainier'.. He also has. ap ­peared in 's e v e ra l instructiona and commerci'al films on skiing

WILLIAM V. JAMISON JR . :.* .:.-,-rO rm «rIy an7aB enfw kh State F a rm Insurance Co. a t Suhdyslde, W ash., TiaS been nam ed d is tric t m anager for

.the-com pan les the Magic -Valley ip is tr lc t . He will head- quar^o'r ih-Twlir-Falls.-Hc-Will- rcsldc a t 552 Monte Vista Ave. ^ d inner w elcom ing ' him to the local a re a w as held a t the Holiday Inn by ag en ts from throughout the d istric t.

G e t a.ioeid o fth is , .

C OLONIAt CON CR ETE-TH E MIRACLE M IX' T h o t-m ak e i y q u ry a rd w o rk v a n iih l

'Properlyiplaced end firiished if will -stoy Smooth and Strong . . . Ages.Long We Want to 3oo st —I t 's th e M ost . fo r oH y our C oncrete Needs.;„ _j

• F O U N D A T IO N S • 'P A T IO S ' i : D R IV E W A Y S , • W A L LS •. F LO O R S • S i O E W A L K S : ^

b u r ' s e a f o t a p p ro v a l » 5 -th ^ Sm iling J-aces-of. u u r S a iis f iu d 'C u sfo n ftY srW e 'r D ed ica te^ of S erv(band P lease You. '

■ B tjy f ro m .’y o u f l!b lo rrie -0 .w n e cL E irm _ , iEHONE:Z33^S500:

. Plant Located Addlsbri Avenue-West — Next to the Hospital

___________ _____ ] 12, Boni& O sborne rem inds Henry Wills, , p ast prest*• denV 'ahd Iw ard m em b er'o f the D ilettantes of M agic Valley, The dates have been selected

• • • • production otU he o rcan l^ tlo n . This y e a r th e group w ill

CIRCLE T H E DATES i f Oct. I I and

_______ „ i is y e j r th e group w ill__persons In tc rcsted 'In t i^ ’ o u ts .fo r

fnr try for tlie annual m usical production _ofvthe_or] be presientlag “ M am e’» whlch..^^iU require a large ca st. / . d rarnatlc pa rts o r those w illing to a ss is t w ith back s tag e work . a r e - a s k ^ to be a t th e

; O’L eary Auditorium a t 8 p .m . on Oyt. 11 o r 2 p j a . oa Oct. 12. . • ^ .

Argentina Hot Dog Is Thick, Juicy Steak

Open 12 NOON Wondnq(l-ls.O n ^n aaah from 7 1» 10 p.ni.

By STEWART KELLERMAN-BU EN O S-----A m E S -M U R l)-^

called by num ber Instead of T h e ~ n ewu5t-m ie--ls-67 :

—A r g e n t in a is - h o t- d o g - ig a th i c k , ~ J u lc y - s tc a k 7

Probably • m ore ' than the Gaucho and the tango, the

. steak is a natfonal 4nstItutlon In th is South A m erican country of 23 million people.

A rgentines proudly claim -y o u ’ve never r e a l l y tasted a

steak until you try one of their m outh-watering, often two-inch-

—th id c ^ c l ic a d e s . : : -N o t— niany v isito rs 'w ou ld 'qu ibb le about it.

It 's ha rd to find a s tree t In Buenos A irb w ithout a place to

'■ buy a good"steak.“They 're sojd• in .b ars , c a fe te r ia s ,' corner —ea te r ie s .. J Ju n c h e o n e tte s .- sidi

w alk -stan d s, you nam e It.On Sundays, when you drive

c u t to th e suburbs, you can sc« tow ers of smoke rising from

• the woodlands along th e ' La P la ta river. A forest .fire?

lovers grilling country over outdoor oarbecues.

• On the Costa N era Norte,- a scen ic highway running along the R iver P la ta , there are^.^o

. m any— steak— houses— thej^re

TafnTI>r-orthreE-cnough-beef-to cook fo r lunch 'o v e r grills provided by th e m unicipality.

P r ic e . Is the f irs t th ing thpt catches the attention' of a visitor. A steak costs little m ore than a h o t , dog, in the U nited States. In m o st-rc stau - ran ts , you can buy one "for 170 pesos (about 45 cen ts), and, if

ly you’d ^p re fer-a -^ teak -sandw ich ;:

Page 13: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

: V

/ : ' S u rid o y , O c to b e r 5 , 1 969 T lm B S jN e w s; T w l n .T ^ I s , Id o h o , 1 3 /

Man Arraigned Fdr yiolatiqn’GfIDAHO FA L L 5 ''(tJP l) ’- C;T.|L_'nit.- com plaint filed ag a in st

Thom as. 40. Idaho F alls, wasiTTiomas x h a rg c d him with hav- arra igned before U.S. Commis* lng m ade a fals« and fictitious

statm ent in connection wilh ihe purch»5C :of. a J l t t a r m , from IjcM sed firearm s dealer.

T h e ' com plaint ,1ilso alleged

sioner William W. Block Wed. ncsday following his* a rre s t for violallon! <f th e Federal Gun Control Aril. '

Thom as had "certified he Vfas a perabn p to b ib llc d - f ro m '

:h » a n g a r “ *• ' 'purchi e ra l law...

1 flre a rm Trn de r fed»;.r

7 0 R FAST SELLING RESULTS, U SE TIMES-KEWS *"ANT ADS

M O N D A Y O N LY - 7 P.MnrO IQ P.N\.

CLASS O FFICERS FOR^Oift P rn cd ca l N ursing p rogram a t M acle Valley. M em orial Hospllol a rc , from' left; Sam Austin, prdsldent; M arve l Childs,, vice..

iresldent; ..F lorence 'W asko. voca tiona l student council .rep resen tative: May. '- irch e llo , secretary -trcasu rcr; and Estella-A ston , c lass h istorian. •

~Newspap;er Boys;^Don’tSee^Theriiselyes\i4:s

By U nited P re ss InternationalHo com es zooming along the

sidewalk, his b ike laden down w ith folded new spapers and w iih ' a flick of th e w rist he heaves one and it a rcs over the law n and ' whacks against the; front door—and once In a while into the_ shrubs or up on the roof—but only once m -u while.

It could be Bangor, Me., o r San Diego; T am pa, F la ., o r Seattle; He is the American newsboy w ho_ belongs to - a f ra te rn ity of thousands of

• trad ition of A m erican life.—On—In tcw ationaL -liew sp iD eri

e junior

my~ v e ry , best in. deliverlrigioften.* Most of th e tlmir. even new spapers will, bring rew ards! when I collect, I never have ih Ih e 'fu lu rc .. My riiiteta iich t Tne that nolhinP w i l l 'C h r i s t m a s , it s a p re tty good

Ihmg. I get some nice holidaytau g h t m e that nothing will take^^lhe place o f-h a rd work. M y experience as a c a r r le r ^ l l l

cUIien and help bring success In m y life.”

T he scholarships and other Incentives offered by newspa- pers*«U. over the country m ake t h e ~ J o b '' appealing to man; youngsters, including Philadel

boy Day, Oct. 11. these juni • businessm en .are being honored

w ith a . varie ty of . activities .and - a w a rd s .

T heir fans Include . F B I D irector J . E dgar H iover who term s th e ir • ]obs “ a public

Rhodes of Ohio, who praised the ir "en td rp rlse and responsN bility.!’ --

- According to J im McCurdy, 13, of M alden, M ass., a ninth g rade student. • th e p rim ary value of being a newsboy is

. “ earn ing m oney.”J im , who has four bro thers

and two sisters, has been a-------newsboy fo r -a -y e a r -a n d .« hnlf;

He ad d s: ." I t I n c h e s you the value of

m oney. I put m ost of w hat I ea rn in the bank."

With a grin he says he Lsn't-------saving " fo r anything in pjirllciF

lar, Just saving.". T h a t th ere a re rew ards

— beyond—m o n e y -ls -a p p a rc n t in w hat 'D uane Marshall, of (I'tlO A lb an y . P lace) Richardson, Tex., w rote in compeiing for

, . this y e a r’s F.C. Voorhles------ M em flrlarscholnrB hlp '-nw nrded

-by— the D allas—TlmesJIei'flld,._ b y _ thD uane

" I becam e a newsboy for a

t i ld ^ u u h e :^ a ]n to g ..h im s c if the m eantim e, my new spaper for future leadership. He learns

’ • ■ a weeklyroute rtieans I have allow ance without having to b o ther m y p arents for i t. 'S o m e O f'm y earnings go into a bank

reco rds on m y custom ers on paym ents, how much they owe m e, and things like th a t."

When’ Scott-TScottyrPia^^^

asked why he ' becam e newsboy for the 'S iin Rafael

■ ■ Journal, he re-Independent p ile d :.

"T h e -th in g Is, th a t th is job m eans m ore experience for the nex t Job. • I get to m eet the 3ifb»cr-too-—J - g e ^ o o d - p a y , .'airly good, 1 ^ u e ss som etim es, there’s a beel becaudfl the .paper d id n 't gel th e re on tim e—b ut j i o t , ve ry

Jps.:U-" I 'v c t^ sa v e d . abou t S lO ^-

som ething like t h a t - i n two years .": ^ J h ^ boys don’t see them' selW s a s anything special, bui FB I D irector J ? 'E d g a r Hoover does. H q-lo ld U PI: .

'^'Amerrca owes a tremen'dousd eb t.. .:Q L _ g ia li iu ilc _ _ lQ _

newsboy perform a public service of the h ighest magni-

for future leadership, responsibility, to be on tim e, to organize his route efficiently , to c o llecr-subscrip tions, to m eet hisT custom ers. H e. m u s t , be polite, dependable, honest and atten tive."

News Of T

JER O M E COUNTY ' Ju stice C ourt .

D aniel Stone. $10, fau lty equip* m ent; J e r ry T lllett, 415, failure to'*display slow m oving vehicle sign; Lyle H arm an, $5, failure

.to_rcfiistM :_K arenJ)ej)ew ,_?10 , expired O M rator’s license, all J’e rom e; D ale -C h lW ers— F ile r, .$5, no Inspectlonr'D avld Domin* quez, Gooding. JIO, no .opero to r's

Educatidn-Plah-WASHINGTON (U P I) -

l H E ^ e ^ ary^_Robe^ lj.: .Finch pledged th e adm inis- tra tion ,F riday*to helping de-- velop ■•'career educa tion" in .tiie nation 's 1 .0 0 0 com ­m unity college's. He said th is would b e .p a rtlcu la rly s ig n ifi- can t for Negroes.

i-m nFm&gm r cn tr ^ c o u t - .^ C J lc B -“ ‘ m eeling in .the^A m erlcan L c^o h Hall.

•Four. Webelos ' advanced ' to Boy Scout m em bership a re J im S tee l.q m ith rJe ff 'W A ster. Rich- a rd Este.s and RIchard-MeUon.-

'We must, b e ' concerned with c a r e e r^ d u c a i io n forthe young and coptinuJng ed-. ucation for those p resen tly em ployed.” . F i n c h said; "T here Is no' o th e r w ay tob reak the cycle of underem * ployrnent."

“ F or Black A m ericans,nHiHinitv—col-

-ie8 e~ W 5 3 -th e po ten tia l for .becorhing the mo.ji promi^*

_ing single_avcnuc*j}f higher, education,” he said.

license. .P roba te C ourt

R obert P . H iggins. 22, Good­ing, forfeited a $10 bond on an

-TransfersFILER — M ark Ander^ion, a

transfer/from ^ Nowf 'H am pshire,,

M E N ’S & W O M E N 'S ”

LACE BOOTS ^" ‘ ""•SHumdnic . '■ j,.li“/V\undri.. ■

„ l ; * j O u j i h a m . , : ' .

9 5 ?

Reg. 3 2 .5 0 to 6 5.00O n ly ^2^00 pair to sell

. HUNT IS HELD HACEHMAN— -The-.Beehlve

c lass was the w inner of the scavenger hunt held by the Hag- erm an w ard M L \ this week.

2 4 9 M a i n A v e . E . T w i n F a l l *

charge.

E. ChamberTain; J . O . Henson to G lee R. Stan.

A m ilitary sep a ra tio n waS filed by the U nited S ta tes Navy to D anny E a rl D irk .

M arriage licenses w e re Issued to Lloyd Zane GUI and . D arla Ra^ B a t^ a y ^

n o th -D ,- -Longm ore and- Lyjrin Thompson; K ent J . B arlow and Judith A nnette F red erlck a .

Duane, wh<v attends Richardson H ig h S c h o o l'In a suburb of D allas, had only 10 com plaints of m issed pqpers in IB m onths of delivering the T im es-H erald; he h ad 100 per cen t collection.n,

' And so ld lu3 subscriptions. He w ro te In p a rt:

"A lthough m y Tlm es-Herald rou te has given- me m any

f iri7.es and exciting trip.s. J have ound .something m ore Volunble,

T ha t is the privilege of m aking new friends and gettinj? to m eet djffcren t people. When. I m eet hnd m oke friends, I have le«m ed Ihnt It pays off, w ith the . rew ard being som ething money cannot buy . . .■~"T hnvo“ also"rccclvcd ’ m any o th e r benefits, front m y exjior- lence a s a carrie r.working, on .m y_rouie, I hn^ learneo aimple* bnokke^pin niethodR, salesniques ahd have earned money for m y education. .

"J have learned tiiot doing

m ma n d a ^ '

■MESHCVRTAIN TOO! For opfln>flrt tnloymont wtofferimoihturtain ’

..bfthlnd.vour.Glaufyrs.. . •croon. ,

Q tm tv r t 'i elm deortQuiffttM Y«>» pfg i,' i ^ o n . . . . HVi turnm hw t.■nd iiravtni dowivdrafii.T htn, n h tn y»u to tnloy t)pin flr«, 9p tn itw | I h i ilM n •nd tiQM th t rnnf) twrulA for ifitrH prom ilon . Dnvt niMl) cur<

.10 th* iMm wliin th« | l m doori GloMd.

CA LL U S COLLBCT 7 8 8 -5 4 7 7

P R IC E m t' ■ ' f i l l

•P«rn praiNtion. Mini 10 th* iklM doori gImmL

I

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ROCKET CELLOPHAHE TAPEy,"*800". f«g. 2 7 i ............................. . r . ............................ ..

6 INCH POn ED HOUSE PLAHTS

FACTORY SAMPLE JEWELRYnn , N«cl.lacM,:iarriAf», ntf. 3 /$ 1 .0 0 ................................

00

3 M A b rA Q U A R lU M -& K IT - - ^Indudt* tank, htattr, pump, fllltr, nlUctar. V*lu«

-7:00.10 8:bO P.M.-SPECIALS!-BOYS' F l iN N E l S H IR T S -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ^ “sii* a t* «>, r*f. 11.17 ............................................................. ......... ............ ............

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2 L B . BAG OF CANDYOrenga ip lu drtpi, gwcn dr«pi, .R*|, «J< ■ b o f .........................................................................................

MAGNUS CHORD ORGAN9 f lull III* h n i, 13 (btnl buH«ni, 31" » 11" M 19" lafaU intdil, |3 9 ,9 5 ....................................................

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8:00 TO 9:00 P.M. SPECIALS!BOYS' OR GIRLS'LIN ED CORDl)ROY SLACKS - ■ 'RuggM C«lt«n tordur*r, *«"r S t* ! , - fH . .............................. ........................

SC AnER RUG . . . . ^ -Rug pi!*, 100% n f » , r«g. T.99 ................... .* ...................... ................................................................ .....................

TENNISSHOES . ^Lfdl«i','thlldr«n'i iliM , valM i I* 3.79 ...................... ............................................................................... .........................

FLOWERS '

9 7 c

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WOOLWORfflSllOl>EN:*^^

Page 14: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

1 4 T im e s -N e w s , T w in Falls, Id o h o . S u n d a y , O d o b e r 5 , 1 9 6 9

Use Of Initiative DeViice In -|Innocent-Elea Constitution Is Questioned

^ . , . B y LINDY W GHT'

B O ISE (U Piy - le g is la to rs__ q\iestioncd Incliislon-ol-an-initi«

a tlv e device -in the proposed *’ n cw . 's tatc constllu tionw friday ,

j ; one .voicing /e a rs the people of th e s ta te m ight use a n in itia tive urrwlseW. ,

R en . Clyde Keithly, R-Nahi] ’a sk e d .th e constltultona), revisl com m ission "How, m any things

- 4ha t .would be proposed -:-^-^m endm eflts-«houl< lnit-be-ln

Constltutiori?”• E upene Bush, a com m ission

■ m em b er from Idaho FaUs,-.sug- gested tha t initlatii^e njeasures could b e lim ited to non-revenue

- - - item s....................... ...... — i - ------ r_ 'JI -don 't think th e ^people

¥fioutd be.

Why -shouldn’t you p ay the peo-

ge fo r initiatm g Icg lslallon?” i,vc{is,'Jsked.' ■ . •

~ R c p i P a lf ic ia ^ c D e r m o t t , 1> Pocatello , Qskcd th a t the consti­tutional revision 'commission in­clude th o , '‘environm ental bill of righ ts’*, in ^hc proposed revision —possibly in the pream ble.

T he eav ironm ental passage w u ld . guaran tee the riRht of deccnt surroundings," Including

-fvrt-i. r r^ O T T taxes

e vo tlM 'yes’ o r 'iv ju n ieg^ rthey /re voting K jIjQ ^pcfid ihg i’ u : 'iihg-.’i J u s h

_ ____ _ , see how yoti can• d m ll^ h .® '" - in to th e . a rea of

- * rtv e n c » -u n le ss i t 'i through " rep resen ta tive .”

Sen. R obert Rowett, R-Moun- ta ln Hom e, how ever, argued th a t th e proposed rev ised consti­tu tion ‘*ls th e people’s docum ent • n d they, should bft ab le to am end It.”

Sen. A rthur M urphy, D-Mul-

!nJtfative m easu re m igh t help • “ sell th is package” to the peO'

pie.V- . ' .F o rm e r suprem e co u rt Justice

tongue-ltvcheek, th a t if^H ___m ission w anted to be "progres- .slY£!LJt_suggest_the_Jogislature

th e co st o f ga thering signa--------- tu re s o n Initiative petitions. -

“ You . p ay your l(|glslators.

Is Entered In District Court

Joel- E .-M ichallk ,-20,-«ccuscd Ol—illc£ til.possc£slan '^ iin d -sa ic of LSD, enteced innoccnt pleas in a Fifth D istrict C ourt nppearr ance F riday.

M n M ichalik is d ea f a n d , it w as for' this reason tha t his a ttorney. Golden Bennett,, asked tha t he be re leased from joil on h is own rccognizano^'un t^l

w ith those' of free speech and o ther g uaran tees.‘ E a rlie r , Given!!, c h a irm an of the revision com m ission, .safd the proposed docum ent should be c h a n g e d so f t w u ld n o t " le s­sen the sta tu s of counties a s poUtlcal subdivisions.”. _The rS Y iK ijH in sm * ,ll2 n jl\c k W n s-co u n ties-an d -c lties as-p o ­litical subdivisions of .th e s ta te b u t n\uch of the language about their-pow ers and duties Is strT ^ p ed out. ; -T—

U nder th e proposal, th e legis­la tu re ' would be ab le to m erge counties.w ithout a vo le of the people.

H erbert .B ennan , a 'cbnsultan t to th e commission, said It could b e possible tha t in th e future tim iJw ifnm m s— -------------------

Judge Theron W ard Instead reduced the bond from $3,000

Ronald J . 'Laws. w&s also- ar' ralgned on a ch arg e of proba ' tion violation. He* requested an atto rney .be app o in ted -an d the oas®-—w as^con tinued—to— next week-.'- - , .

“Watching” .K EY BISCAYN'e. F la -

(U P l) * - A Whtte House .spokesm an s a id ' 'S aturday Pr.csident Nixon was*=^vei5 ^ carefu lly" w atching the cur-,

- re n t-b o itlc f ie ld - lu lH n —Vi« * 7 .nam, b u t declined - t o . con;, firm o r deny reports- (he U nited States hnd estab lish - '

' cd new .sccrc t contacts With Wanoi.

News S ec re tftry Ronald Z iegler told reporlers’ Nixon m et during the day with H enrv A. Kissincer, national

MemecQming—|-Ger; A t l < i t n b e r t y > T o 2 (

I^Featured

' tha t it 'cou ld .be assu m ed jh e t\vo m en discussed V ietnanT

• “ very. Uioroughly." b u t he' wouid-gb no -fu rther.—

Spccifjcally, Ihe hetvs sec- - re tary w as.asked-w hat signi- ' ficance- Nixoni a ttached ' to the lull, the m ost pronounc-

- e ^ h & - la s t - tW O - y e a r s .—iif=

rnaM BERCY^^^sr-Tio'm pcomlng activities F riday here stacted with a .p a ra d e down MaifCSfrcet and ended with th e Bulldog-Pi­ra te football gam e n t the home flew. ■ ,

Outcome of the gam e will be found.on today’s sports p ag esr

■The Ahemc of.the. homecoming

—B E R tlN s A - v is i ld r - to Ea'st Germiiily m ight • ix p ec t its inhabitonts.to .be.lO oklng.tdw ard the b irthday Of • theG erm an --p em o cra tic Republic T u esd ay '.a s a '. d a y more for reg re t than celebration. But this ■ doesn’t seem to be the case.

;irl it;

and • senior.'; got f i r s t j l a c e in thp- float division.

Ja n e t. M urphy was chosen hom ecom ing queen ..H er a ttend­an ts w ere -L aha Em erson, freshm an; • Decna Kinsey,-' _ sophomorer and Debbie Rich­a rd s , a senior. _

T here w as a_chili supper a t the -g'rade^school'^7roH'*4:30 • » 8 p .m . .

Seven Minidoka State Youtlis Receive Eagle Scout Rank At Court Of Honor

c re a te

R U PERT - A- Gold P ali aw ard and seven E ag les w ere■preseniaa------- --------

fin, Rupert Second; Kevin B ut-slstan t; T roop 48, Heyburn Sec------ » ------- ----------------------------------------

ropocounties and cities.

Ja m e s Lynch, Boise, objected

L y n c h , c h a ir m a n o f th e s ta te b a r—c o m m iU < e -o n ju d ic ia l - r e ­fo rm , s a id a ju s t ic e 'S h o u ld b e in d e p e n d e n t o f th e - e x e c u tiv e ' b r a n c h o f g o v e rn m e n t.

Three TV Networks Loclj;ed =JnAnnual°Ratingg=Baft

'510 m illion. , - A . second th rea t is th e tax

NEW YORK (U P I> ~ 'n ie ' G olia ths o f Am erican television

—th re e com m ercial net- TCform bill now before thew orks—h ave com pleted the launch ing of th e n ew ' season a n d a r e locked In the ir annual battle* fo r th e ratings oh which th e ir v a s t revenues depend.

--i_the-turn.oLllttle.l~ O n Sunday"nlght^T Ife

pub lic televlsislon netw ork, o r N E T a s th e Initials itself, from

------- I ts official nam e of N ational____ E du ca tio n -Television,.opens its

I neither th e finance n o r th e m anpow er to .Jw n In the r a tin g s fra y no r, In-fact. is It In com petltibn w ith .th e g iants. It w as founded a s a nonprofit, noncom m ercial organization to prov ide educational and cultur­a l p ro g ram s to Independent sta tions.

And th is ,jp erh ap s, -Is ju st w ell fo r NBC,- CBS am i ABC. fo r a g a in - th is y e a r- little David h a s a few powerful Drogrnn^<i tn i ts slingshot. O n e -o f them Is “ The F o rsy th e Sage," a B ritish p roduction of the Jo h n Gals-:

------ :w orth“ -«pIc, In 20 one-hour.c h a p te rs . B ritish c ritics lauded I t aa one of the few m aste rp ieces of the medium

— - J i nd-J t . h cad ed -t he-^atlngs-there , j_ i^ i> a _ l» th _ J ts _ J ir s u a n d * second

runs.B ut "desp ite the m ost am bi­

tious. au tum n schedule In its h is to ry and Its first season of tran sm ittin g to its 1G5 stations on Its own lines (It could only e ffo rd to m all the tapes of its shows until th i s ' y ea r) the se rious problem of finance clouds th e future o f ‘ public b roadcasting . -The FoVd Foun* datlon has b e e n ’ the m ajor sourc® of lts-$8 million a year budget from the Iwginnlng.

"B u t now ." said a spokcs- „ jn a n , " I t la tiy lng to phase out

a n d wo are a t n critical jtm cturo. Congress passed the

. . . Public Broadcasting A ct-la to In mOT.anri the House authorized 520 m inion to holp In prngrnm-

. m lng a n d facllliles, But P res. Ident Nixon has asked for only

Senate F inance . C om m ittee which prohibits • foundations from engaging in any ac tiv ity In ten d ed : to Influence public o p in io n ^ n d p rac tica lly any- thinp on television construed.

" I f passed this would p u t us ou t o f business," said th e N ET spokesm an.-N ET- -Stations, reco iva-^ tw o

hours_of_netw ork-program m ing a night, five n igh ts 'a w eek 'from

ly through T hursday . At

Boy Scout Court o f Honor held a t the Minidoka S take LDS Tab-

•nacle in R upert, te rm -fo r Receiving, tno coveted E agle

rank w ere F ran k Cheney, son of Mr. and M rs. H arlow Cheney, Heyburn Second W ard: G ary Hansen, son; of M r.' a n d ''M rs . John -'H ansen ; Dona'ld Taylor, son of Mr. and M rs. R ex Tay­lor, and B rent Low der, son of M r. and M rs. R obert Lowder, a ll Acequlc Second; D avid Ni­chols, son of M r. and M rs. Wil­liam. Nichols, B rian B eard , son of M r. and M rs. HaroM B ean L an d -D en n lrN er, son or M r. and M rs;—ta m a i—Nef;—a ll—R u p ertFifth-W .ard,--_________— ——

The gold palm aw ard w as pre­sented to Donald F ish e r,, son of M r. and M rs. Con F ish er, Ru-pcrtTVffTfl’ScourTroop-80.---------

In addition, 43 o th e r ran k ad­vancem ents w ere m ad e in th e 11 participating troops, and 228 m erit badges w ere -aw arded -to

, . .- _ . .jr s o n , as-Acoquia Second; sistah t; T roop 153,-Acequia Sec-

......................... ond; R ay Smith, scoutm aster;Troop Alj E m erson, Ned Moon, scoutm aster, K ent Cole, assis. tan t; T roop 52, R^upert Second. Allen Condie, sc o u tm a s te n 'a n d T roop-49 ,-R upert-F ifth r-‘!Harold B eard; scoutm aster,“ a n d 'R a lp hGriffin, assistan t.

O thers a r e T roop 150, Paul Second, V irgil Netlson,' scout­m aste r; T roop 152. R y p e r t Fourth. Joe Robinson, scoutm as­ter, and T roop 50, P au l W ard.

Reddekopp,G ary Andrew. P au l W ard; and G regory Kerbs. K irk O ttley, Lonnie Hardy, Shawn Kay, Ri­chard M organ. Leslie B anner a n d . Jeffrey W eber, Heyburn Sccohdr

J e f f Feltwellv R upert WardT Russell Bair,/^Heyburn Second; Etouglas Hansen and Roy Young, -Acequla Second; Dennis H einer. E m erson : Bill F letcher, Dean Nef, and Brad Smith, R upert F ifth : and Dennis L indsay, Ru­p e r t Fourth, rece ived .S ta r rank.

Appear ToJBe Looking Forwar^d I' Birthday Qf D emocfatic RejpuBUc -

On the po^trrs, a p retty gi . f suitably 'unassailaole liuril sm iles stmtily and says, as ■we r6,vwinninely i - -'I -o m -30.-^recen t • days a , full-length feature film about a woman who falls hopelessly in love—■ w ith h e r-S o c ia lis t fa therland— has been released. -The '.20th b irthday , for the -communica­tions m edia. Is producing cooy broadly com parable in quantity a n d ,, quality to . th a t being

in — thi»-TiSQvlPtU n io n ' In anticipation of the lOO th-anniversary-next-A pril-ol th e b irth of Lenin,

But-.awhile-the,-East G erm ani 'share " th e" p ro p e n s ity ^ b f- th e ir E aste rn Bloc b re th ren to draw 'lmT>05lng-M4phs of cIHnBing output (Industry . Is producing a b o u t four tim es a s m uch-as Jn

),' to tjnderline the very___dsom e in creases in tradeturnover (an eightfold Increase

Im portance of the consum er sector in the national economy (tw o households “ o u t - of every th ree a r e now said to have a television set, and so fourth) there Is a lso an unexpected M yness even in this context.

Mn r o . than one-sbcth of the Soviet Union’s to ta l foreign trad e tu rnover Is cu rren tly with th is p a r t of G erm any, while the Soviet share of GDR trad e is .well over 40 p e r cen t. In the post-w ar yea rs It w as as much ^ h e .h e lp th a t w as forthcoming

In the form of Soviet rajy m ateria ls - and ' advice • a s the inbuilt— G erm an—capacity— for self-help -and ha rd ^YorK that w ere crucial io the staging of such an 'pndeniable economic recovery.

A t the w ar’s end, ih e l ^ s t G erm ao, planners fo u n d /'th a t m ore itian '.two-thirds- o f .their machine building ■ enterprise,s had been>com pletely or partly

w as’ -separated ' from v ita l raw piate 'rials ' supplles_in.the^.W est.

Progress has .not beerj easy.A docum en t'p ilb lisbed by the p a r ty - fo r - t t ie -b ir th d a y c c lc b ra - - : '- tlonS -concedes th a t there has • been " a hard struggle against internal 6nd • ex te rna l resis- , lancc" ‘ (though , t te ' Internat resistance is not ' e laborated upon)- "O ur developm ent, it adds, "w as anything ' b u t ;a peaceful stroll a long -a well-laid

Finally; fhere. is, the------reiteration that “ the Soviet'. Union has gran ted u s unselfish and com prehensive ald*ll^- — ^ . -

mDON'T BE OLD FASHIONEDG E T IN T H E SW|NQFO R T H A T N E W A S P H A L T P A V IN G

G IV E B E Y M E R S A m G

T H E Y W IL L Q U O T E Y O U A BID T H A T \S F A IR 8* Q U IT E LO W .S Q D O IT R IG H T NO W B E F O R E W E H A V E SNOW !

— G a l l ^ B I S H ^ B E Y M E R ^

Now! For.,Estimate7 3 3 -1 & 9 8 d r 733-i2228

elude Steven StrauBHaur, i^aui W ard: L arry Nelson, A cequia: D onald Allen, John Aston, T Hansen, Dell R ay-Low der, Wilson and R ichard Y oung, Ace- q u |a-Second!-W ayne-Scott-E m -- erson; Lyle Nef,. R upert F ifth '

Karen Allen Honored By Burley Chil)

Karen Allen, a sen ior n t Hurley IliKh .School,

— r y n sT hnnD tcd= as=orri:::^ f-th<L .sp m n n m c s r

- during a noon luncheon Wedhes- d ay a t B n ’nn’i Cnfo. ••

MI.1S Allrn. the (laughlor of■...M r. and Mr.n. Fred A lkn , nt-

' ..... landed G irls' Simn nml wime lec ted -n lte rnn tn to Clrl.s'“ NIT-

......... tlon :-W hlle--at“nrMV .Stiltft X :Bcrvcd on snnRlrndcr for the proup, AcllvitlPR in high school

,, include .lervlng on the nxcciitlvo . counrll and Ijclng cheerleader

• fo r th ree years. .She also played In the band nnd In ii mcnm er

. . o f .Stcperolto*. Miss Allen- Is ft aem inory, officer nnd Is busy w llh o ther church nctltlvles.

She plun* to, attend. Utnli State U nlvom lty pftii'flradunllon ,

llo rm an i:, Bcdke, guest-------«r>A«herrt«!d-th«-clnb-;mcmbers-

tof his diiilcs nnd nxnerlences aa Public Pefendflr.for imlh Ca#- sin nnd Minidoka rountles.

M rs. wnvno Konrad, prnnl- dnnl,*nskod tha t nil cominltir6 chiilrincn have their commlllee rep o ris rrp d y for tho first mcoi-

■ October^

o ther tim es they tra n sm it local p rogram s. The stations fa ll 'in to th ree categories o r com m unity stations supported b y . public moneji, statjpns connectcd to

1 .sr.tjonl.s an d- ..... ......... operated b y s ta teu n iv e rsitie s^ • '

•Balancingy the shortcom ings s o m e w h a ^ l5_—t,h e “ increasing s trp r tp th /^ f prrerr>"^'"i"fTi : siich a s th e lineup for th e fall— d r a m a ^ a l le ts , jozz, opera , doc­um en taries and a prog rom of sho rtf film e s s a y s 'o n life In ......- ^ a by-,-conservatlve Wil­liam £ / Buqkley.

N E T Playhouse,' th e - only w ecW jknotw ork-dr^m arand-w lo- n e r . tw E m m y and "Pealjod' A w ard^ goes Into its fourti.

J1 specialiring In Amer* :an re a o n a l theq ter. T ho first [foductlAn, Glory H allelujah,Ml oriolnato in tho San F ran -

c ls tw ^ U io n , KQED, O ct. 30.Anotlier d ram a series, titled

"On Being B lack,’* consists of 10 one-liour plays by, fo r and ohout blacks on the general them e of w hat lt’,s like being black in white America.

S inger Peggy I^ e will s ta r In a docum entary showing how she perpares h e r night club act. "T he A dvocates" Is .w h a t tho nctvyork ca ll " a live experim en t in partic ipation dem ocracy.'* V lcw cra.w lil be cncouraRod- to tnki; pa rt In studio deba tes by telephoning In the ir com m ents. . .T i e flr.Ht opera- w ill-bQ _Ilie AmcriciJn preniloro of Leos Jnn- acek’a "From -tho-IlouH B -of the D ead ," based on D ostoievsky 's d larjt o f life In a prison cam p.

W ardT-and-Neil-TerryrPflul-Siond.

Receiving second c lass ad ­vancem ents w ere Bobby Cita l, Burke N eibaur and Chav__T erry , Paul Second; Ron Fen- nell-and S teven -Jensen r-R upert F o u rth L B n d Boyd Bingham , Kent Nct. Hugh Beazer. and Stev yen_a&).t)d..Rupcrt.Fifth______ y '

Steven-Tracy and B ren t Grrf-

.VIrH.,'Frod Sherrod reporled on (ho acliedule for tho Oct.

i’>. 18 and 10 Sornntlmlnt Slnto nioflllng 'Which will bo hosted • • ' ' -------- • ' I CliTb,. b y tho Burley .SoroptlmlBl a t tho^4’ondi;rotia Inn.

' b e a noon lunchcon Oct. $ a t firm an '* - Cofe,

Page 15: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Times-News Public ForumForum Rules'b 'hun letters, m ust

d w ith io p lc sbo

c ra l m icrest and m ust bo a reasonable length.' . • . - •■Jho.editors of the Tlmes-

Nows rc sc n -c - tt ie r lg W -to ' ' refuse pubUcatloa if, .In theSr opinion, the subject m a t te r , is o f '& libelous nature , is not in gpod taste o r Is repetl-

' llous and has previously

'the foruni,_ .A ll l e t t ^ -m ust b « r - t h e — slRrtature and address of the '

> r l t e r r Th6 " liam e ' o f the " ^ t e r w ill app ea r when pub* llshed unless th ere is a per* sonal rcqu'ost tha t it be with*, held and th e reason for such a request s ta ted . This re-

-queitirlll^tljenbe-eonsldered-____b j'-th e -.ed lto rs -an d J t . wlU—

either be granted o r the let- teV w tir be re tu rn ed .to the writer.

Jerome Writer Asks People To Keep ElectoralX^oUege

Fulbriglit To Hold EfearingsOn Withdrawal Resoltltib'ii

Editor, Times-Ncws: icm crgcd from tho ConstitutionalI t woCild seem that our "u se . convention he w as asked: ------

lcss-anachrcm U m -’,-the,-E lector-' -‘‘D r. Franklin , w hai havc you a t College, needs something s a id given us?” ■ ' • , in'i^s favor, w hat with the House “A republic,”, he rpqiicd, ‘‘but

....................................... ’ you keep it^'* ' "appl-oving Its abolition by a vote cof 339. to 70, and now being considered by the Senate. .

'in I P e rh a p s the g reatest misun- **' . |dC rjta ildirig ol Ihe Electoral L'61-

JegC-has-conVe-from - a- general m isunder;itanding of. the kind of governm ent our fonnding-fothers w ere tr jyng to give us. Most people . today think- they .were trying to give us an ord inary rcprescniaiiv.e dem ochicy. E ven thc 'tex tboplc writers (including .bQQki_on_American-eovernment) •say,ther^e i s n o .difference be* ,lweeh a 7represcntative dem o­cracy and the American repub­lic. O ur founding fathers cer-

:ta in ly . thou2 ht_thcrc- was a . dlf- i^ercnce. When. D r. Franklin

Tlie eviddncc within the Con* stiiution itself, that the fram ers were afraid of an ejcccss o f

, . . . . tn m y r_______Senate-Is-^cho'Sch, on a rea , not population: F ederal judges are appoin ted ; not elected; original­ly th e Senate v^as ele.c'ted ' by the S tate Legislature, nb l'bv IhQ people; Constitutional a m“en^d- m cnts_are .H ipproved . by three fourths of the -States, not’, by

fourths- ■ ■

Editor Tim 1 am w riting th i s . le t te r t^

protest th e proposcd>^QDncxa(ion of p roperty ad jaceh t''to .th e city ol Twin F a lls by the 'Twm Falls

— ejty^Gouncilr7lt-5eeW'3“lHat-thjs ' n s ”{he ohly recourse wei^^sidents

of this a re a .havi}, a s it is ,my understanding we can be annex­ed to the c itv w ithout .having any voice In the.m attcjr. Living ou tsid e the city, and .hav ing no voice in. th e governm ent of the

tion in th is m atter.However.- if the c ity council

would poll the people living inr -ihese^QreaSr-they-w ould-find-a

;■ 99 p e r cen t opposition to the proposed annexation. These peo-

— ple-purchased-their-properly^so that they would not be In the

...-city- o f 'T w in -F a lls r-T h ey have gone to co nsidcrab ltrexpcnstrtir

" the developm ent of w ells'for w a­te r and in the developm ent of their p roperty so a t they could have a horse o r 'a cow o r two.

— W e-h av « n it-a sk e d -th e -e ity -o f- Twln F a lls for anything, and

— don’t feel th a t they hav e -an y ­thing to o ffer us a f te r onnexa. tion. We . have- lived here and spent o u r pay checks with the merchants who a re presently on the C ity Council. This evidently isn't enough. I t seemg tha t the City CoujTKjil is searching W*h ana low for m ore revenue to help finance' th e purchase of m ore-park -areas-such -as-D Ier* ke's Lake, when the city streets

- could stand som e Im provem ent. It seem s to n ;e as I drive down

- fow i-.in_Iw In ..Fnllg ..thn t.som e of the s tree ts could stand some

other large a re a w here some__ stree ts ..a ro -lg o ln g . to have to

be m aintained.On F alls Avenue W est, which

ha?i bbcn alm ost Im passable for the p ast two y ears since the

__ citM -put-w atce. '

Itiore carefu l e n g in e e r in g in fu­tu re pro jects. Also there, is the m a tte r o f p o lic e p ro te c tio n . At Ih e p resbnt ^ime, the sheriff’s offi<p is ju st as- c lo se to us a s : th e rp o lic e " S ta t io n .- ,__ ____

I feel th a t-If we arc annexed to the city of Twin F alls, the least th a t they could do for us would bo to furnish us w ith a police precinct station closer than the one*"downtown. P resen t­ly this police station is located over—two—m iles—from—us._O f course th e .c i ty holds out to us th e -m a tte r of . sewage disposal. F o r th e benefit of those people who~livt;~in ou r ' a rea~ and~who think th a t they will get- a deep sew er w hen the c ity a nnexes '"■3, le t m e se t you straight.

I f you w a it for the c itv to _jstalI-sewcfsr4'’0u-will-waiMQr^ ever. Thov will iastall them if jjou w ill form an im provement d istrlc t-and pay for them.

This of course you will never

too m an y of us who a re opposed to this and .-w ould .jio tlagu:c_ ttt It. T he p rim ary reason for this is th a t th e cost would be prohib­itive a s there would have ' to be a pum ping station; installed as the sew er trunk line w est of ou r p roperty Is some six feet higher^ th an o u r property.

I t seem s to m e that the City Council should take a good long hnrdrlo(jk-ot:the proposed annex­ation beforo they annex any m ore a re a s . If they a r e only looking a t th e revenue th a t will accn io from the annexation, le t me a.ssure th eni that it isn ' gbing to b75~air})ure irrofitrTHi people living In these a rea s a re going to dem and som ething for their m oney, and a fte r annexa- tlon, If It com es, there Is .going to be a lot o f pressure fo r s tree t Im provem ent and other things . .1- - __ __________ __ **

finaliy_ thejpresident_w as.not-lo be elected by. a poJ)ularit^i con­te s t am ong the people, but by the s ta te s , voting on the sam e b a s is -a s their represen tation in Congress." ' -a •“ Before" we abandon tfT/s’ time- honored sy s teh ii-ie t.tij^ .reco g - n iz fr-so m e^ f- its -m erits r^ lt-h aa never -failed ta .g iv e us»»-;presi- den t by inauguration day. Some

though i t has prorfuced some ‘‘O iinority" presidents, we can h a rd ly say . th a t i t has fa iled to produce presidents of satis­fac to ry ability , (U ncolh; for in­s tan ce) no r can it be assum ed th a t a p resident th s t is elected w lth=1ess-than-"a—m ajority 'df the peoples’ votes is w orse than one thg t might^ bo elected with less than - 'B ^m ajo rity . of t h e s ta te s ’ votes. „(J?emember tha t under a d irec t election system, the Los Angeles m etropolitan a re a could out vote Idaho, Ne- vada , and Wyoming all put to-

• ’ B y .M IK E FEINSIl-BER WASHINGTON (U P l) —Sen.

-Jr,W jlllam -F61brighrannouhccd Saturday th a t as a m atter oI duty he will conduct public— and ..probably, . televised—hpa^- i n ^ on a resolution l h a t would require wilhdravTnl of nil U.S. troops from V ietnam by the end of J970. * . - .

P resident Nixon ha.s a lready labeled “ defeatist” the m easure

b y ' Sen'. Charles ■

gether.)The p resen t system gives-

m ore voting advantage to the fxmallcr—« ta to sr-su ch -a s -Id ah o . U ndem ocratic? G ranted. Re- m em ^er_w e d idn’t s ta r t out to have ail ortlinary 9em ocracy. But w hat Idaho citizen traveling througli the-slum -districts of our g re a t c ities would care to argue th a t o u r founding fathers w ere not' w ise In g iv ing-m ore voting s treng th to our ru ra l area's than th e ir num bers alone, would com- TnaTid: T~

U s t , b u t certa in ly not least, the—E lec to ra l—College- sj» tem tends to preserve o u r two party system of politics. Since a third p a r ty has little chance of getting a m ajo rity in the E lectoral Col- lege ,.sp lin te r.parties have a ten­dency to be Incorporated Into the two m a jo r parties. Under th is system w e don’t have the w inner of a p lu ra lity espousing po H cies-con tra ry -.;to -those~ h c w as e lec ted on, in o rd e r to form a coalition governm ent, such as la s t Sunday 's election In G ep

im any.L e t us hang onto b u r Electoral

fF}rmiege~sy?sicm.' T h6[‘e~ls~no~rea- son J o believe a change would g ive u s b e tte r Governm ent.

, RICHARD R. l e e ( J erom e)

-Weekly-Market-

GOodell, R-N.Y., that force to ta l'w ith d raw a l,b y DoC.

w ould

Relations Committee^ the fqr; um of lengthy televised hoar- in g s-o n -v ie in am -p o ltc iw 'w tilch brought d iscom fort' to ■ the Johnson adm iriisirelion, would hold five '■ days of hearings s ta rting Oct. I t . He said Secretary o f S tate William. P, Rogers and /iSecrotary • ol Defense Melvin R. Lnird %Vere invited to testify Oct. 3(1 and 31.

I B oth.'Rogers and*I,a ird werp lexpected tq 'ag ree to ,, .speak

Futbciglll • seid-- his' Foreign

B r a i i i i ly o w i

Both w ere certa in lo argue iha t -G oodeli'.s-biii- w ould-pull the nip frorn under the TJ.S. negotiating position in P a ris Ir; as.suring the Communists the

Ited-^^ates—w ould-n^'ithdraw m atte r %vhat they -did.

Bedic;aiioir To Reforms

BONN ^ U P D -F o re ig n Afinis- te r AWilly ^ p ra n d t h a A j rom lsed tttat th e ^ S o c la l’ “ -D em ocratic I^vern in jjn t-he form s la te r this m onth .Will be d ed ica ted , t

iftstfo-wtof-mr-wmrcea-in -h i p a r ly sa id Saturday. :

B randt ■'Is to b e ' "elected chancellor by his 224 Social D em ocratic and m ost if n o t.a ll of the:' 30 • F re e D em ocratic deputleis- in the parliam en t _ole.ctedi'iSunday and cohyen^g

O n e /F re e . D em ocrat absen ted h ir ts e lf " ' and "three "o th e rs abstained : when the party caucus voted late. F riday C hairm an W alter Scheel’s p ro ­posal to en te r a partnersh ip w ith the Social D em ocrats.

- o f

proposals frorn"scnatbrs dealing with Vietnam will be discussed during the-hearings.

“ If .the Senate is 'to be a full and active .* partn e r in . th e m aking of foreign policy, it has a du ty to help th e P resident in findintf. a -wav out o f : . tho

.^ m o ra s s ,’’ Fulbright said. "T hat will be the purpose of the coming hCari

Few in the Senate expect Goodeli’is', resolution ev<;n to com e up for debate; but it, has become, the': vchicle 'fo r rcdpen- ing Senate a ttacks on the w ar.

Sen. .jo h n Sparkm an, D-Ala.^ t-bg-^.second-fanking - -D em ocra t " - —FulB fight's committee,

one vote m ore than 249 •he needs to ballot.

D uring a F riday caucus of his ow n. party , sources within it

■said, B randt outlmed his policy agreem en t w ith the F ree Dejnocra^sy th M _ d ec la red i- -

" rw a tT r to ' be a ^ T i 'n c e l lo r^ r dom estic reform,- The sta tem en t of Intent

m eshed - w ith his election prom isescam paign

m odem G err_ jrm a n y ” if he. and his Social D em ocratic -party re ­ce iv ed .en o u g h _ v o te sto ..fo rm a governm ent. .

B randt’s election will , force C hancellor K urt ’C^eorg Kiesin- ger’s Christian .Cfemocrets out of -.office foV the firsts tim e since the republic w as form ed 20 y ea rs ago.

1 p iopO.'ia l.

-M erger?T-

- Sunday, October’S, 1969- Timei-hfews^ Tw in Fclfi, Idqho 1 5

Maritiime Unions 4 ’lireaten .. LOS ANGELES ■ (U Pl) A m erican A irlines and West- c rh Airlines reportedly have held extensive ta lk s about-

llow ever, the airlines arc ;still far from agreem ent and ■for -the m om ent no .further talks a re scheduled, the Los Ahgel'cs T im es repq rted to- day. . • .

The stum bling block to a quick agreem ent, according lo the report, is Las Vegas financier K irk K erkorlan,'

A T U N T IC CIT^Y, N .J.' (U P l) would —Maritim'e Union- leaders have th reatened , a -w o rk rs to p p ag e -a t a ll U.S. ports wjihin tho next two weeks, in an effort to pry loose thCj m erchant maVlne

wtro ictjuuLLl a j a per wvja im ere.n in ••Western through a .ten d e r , o ffe r .e a r llc iU n - th c _ year.- Officials 8 t W estern, head­quartered ht‘re. declined to

— com m ent-on; the .report.— '— I t was indicated . tha^

—AmeF4caWnd*Wosmrn-h.iw> - - ta lk e d ten tatively 1n t e r m s -

of A m erican’s offering to ex-, change one share of its stock for cach shiyc.^.pf. W estern, according to the

.Time.s.- -A m erican s . stock traded n t $32.75 a share F ri­day and W estern a t 525.75.

spoke out .a g a in s t try ing „ m ak e detailed w ar and peace policy In the Senate, "

Wheeler MakesNew-Assessment Of VimnarnWaF

SAIGON (U P I)-G c n . E a r l G W heeler, chairm an of' the .U-S. J oint. Chiefs of Staff, arrivedSaturday for a new asse.ssment o f the V ietnam W ar and said the cu rren t battle-lu ll w as only tem porary . H e predicted th a t C om m unist-forcy-w ould-launi ‘a w inter cam paign.- . Speaking a t a plancslde nevn? conference - a t - T a n - S o n - Nhut A irporti. W heeler said the purpose of his four-day mission w as to determ ine the possibility o f w ithdrawing more A m erican troops bej-ond the 60,000 who w ill have left the w ar zone by D ec; 15.

Leasing Corp. ^sorbs B o i s e - E i r m ^ ^

Industrial Leasing Corpora­tion. Poriland-based .industrial equipment leasing firm , has ab- .<;orbcd all accounts and -person­nel of N orthwest Leasing Co, Inc., Boise, i t w as disclosed ii Portland today b y Ben Freed?

Work Stoppage At U; S. Ports

iro g u m Presiden t Nixon prbm- sed to subm it lo Congress

during his election campaign.M embers of the a FL-CI*

M aritime Committee, composed 'of presidents of the- m hritlm e unions, issued' a statem ent

-say ing-.they“boycott” .of all ships in U.S. poi’ts.tQ back up 'tK eir demands fof— a“ fcyilali:ttttic>h' ' o f the declining, U.S. -.merchant m a­rine.’ - ■ - • • • ■ * '

Tliomfls W- - fclcason,— pras.- ident- of- the_ International Longshorem ens A~ssoci^ion and

ICC. je je c tc d a .suggestion that 'he . .boyco tt would be a ’strike.” but explained tha t the

boycott v^'uld consist of the

vacation for--*-^«w.'\veci ■ J o s e p h 't i i r rm i , .president of the N ational M aritim e Union •jmo—chTHrman-Drniiir-CDmmli

go t a their m e m b ^ during, the next two weeks To s e ? k -m e ir - a p p ro v a l - fof - t h e — boycott.

P residen t Nixon’s cam paign p rom ises for a n adequate U.S. flag m e rch an t m arine rem ain a ' political prpm lse,’' the Commit* tec sta tem en t said.

M aritim e Unions for yea rs j. hav e been com plaining about- tho decline of - the- A m erican m e rc h a n t , . marlni^ '~ from ' th e .

world it atta ined during World W aiL ii. O nlyi:5.pcr:cent-0f foreign trdde is nOw carried 1ft . sAmerlcan ^flag^sb lps^and ~ tnost~ of the A rhericaa m erchant fleet - Is-m ore .-than 'S O 'yearro id -a t-ta-" tim e when the Soviet Union is c5qandlng 'ILs• m ostly ' m odcro m erchah t 'fle'cTT'’ -

M E E T SCHEDULED IDAHO FALLS .(U P I)-M o r«

of the nation 's leading-

lee, said the union presidents

than 100 ccom puter .installation m an ag e rs ........g a th e r fn Idaho Falls M onday .

m and T uesday fo r t|ie seml-in*it nual-A-ECTDmputar4nfoiro?Hon----------• m eeting. , c . . .

- “ We’ve beeiiTlnterested in thff Idaho te rr ito ry for' som e tim e,"

felt that, bccaiise Northw est is vigorous E ro w ing firm with

a good industrial reputation, it would be w isest to expand in this w ay ."- N o rth '^ rh 'a sT w en -p ro d u c In g approxim ately J2So,000 a year in ren tals receivable, and with the increased equipm ent avail* iblo—to—I-d-a-h-o—bus:

tnrough tne la rg e r Oregon cor^ poration, an Increase to $500,000 is pro jected the f ir s t y e a r ., ,. George A. Lvda will rerhan in Boise as the ’Idaho represent­ative and through his office ILC will cover a ll of ■'the s ta te , w ith the exception of th e northern panhandle w hich is cbvered by ILC’s Spokane office._______

......... A d d i to n . A v » n u « E a f l___ ______T w in Falls P h o n a 7a3«40(X>

P A U L D . R E Y N O L D S . • JA M E S C . R E Y N O L D S

^^M E M B E R IF D A a n d N P D A ' •

streetj, .some w ork is badly need- e<l. Of course the fire hvdrants, which w ere installed when the pipe w as put and-y/hich were placed In the wrong ploces out on the highw ay righ t of way, will all have to be moved back first. If (his is a sam ple of .the

. engineering used by tlTe 'c lty , I P m lg h t-b e possible • lo save son ie*m oney- by Insisting on

If th e c ity Council woijild use be tte r judRm ent ,in the-spending of the revenue It presently gels It w ouldn 't have to bo looking for m oro taxes from anolbor area.

I for one say to the City Coun­cil, “ Leave us alone until we ask you lo he annexed.’’

JAM ES R. CLARK (Twin Falls)

Review

Difficulties In Israeli And Ai-ab Conflict Are OutlinedE<Illor. Tlmes-News:

Shortly a fte r iho- Jiino; 10(17.Arub-I.srnelL W ar. the Times-

--N ew s ran nn interview wilh Dr.Riigael E l Mallakh, whose cnin-nient tha t blood would Vet flow

! Iiihd~ni miiK and I" In 't l io ' 1 i"honcys riiliriiled by a forum w riter,

‘lakh ,nrc(llc i|on has cdin'tt lo puss and.-David f^es.Tlie El Mallakh

I Char(NWM*“'‘''‘iV deplprc!! U. S. policy there.

Stiic tjhts Praised In liitter FronjT

I- f;v ' II^hait|beraAidc=^|^j‘'EflHor, ilmes-NCws:• \T>io [Unrest nml rliits In Iho cnlleges throughout niir <!bun- try m any tlme.s m akes uh wond­er al>oiit Uie yoiinil people al- tending l lu innlllullon!i of higher

• learning. '■ ‘ A wook- ago m y wife Ami 1

■pent four duyn on the cnmpu.s of tho U niw rnlly of Idaho. To

jt ty _ ih e ,lc n a tJ t_ y fn s j» most te* -wnrfling-^xped5iuyi_un?Lil

newed our faRli in young

I I 10 siudcnta w ere ladles and gentlem en. Tho frieiidlinesH and cnurleny shown us will long Ik •emombered.

He sta ted : “ 11 is virtually |m -

fo.sslbte-to obtain in -ou r coun- ry. ihroiijih .the com m unications meilia, 11 fnciuul, iiccurn le-and

halnnccd piclurc, r llh e r of lin reccnt h lslory or of curren t de-vtinpirtonts.----- ---------------------

c itin g the “ Evasive P eace" by Dr. John II. Davis, nn Amcr- Icim who heuded UNRWA (or muny yours, the. UN orgntil7.a- tlon <l('sl({ne(t to caro for Arabs rnado refuRoefl by iK^acl in ID-IK, Nos sny.s Dnvis,-unuhlo lo llnd an A nu 'rirnn publinhrr, publish* ed through .lohn M urray, -Al- bom aric .Struct. London, butcannot find a Hinkle dlHiributor In Iho Utiitod .Stales. D a v i sblam ca__\\-urid_jJlonlJm _rn!biT;h«n-ft'nimml*y-h*»ww>n-A-rn-l nnd J ew , HrcryiW); the 'sidfdrraiffrinTriORH ziOTisrj)re!i: sure, In the iTinitlon nnd sub- Acouent expansion of Inniel, fliiiung: '

*’Tljo Rupporters of Israel, by' upholding .h e r .ilchplte h e r wrongful aclH ugnlnM tho Pules* tino A rabs hnve. In eireci, con­tribu ted m ore to conflict than to peaco and In an doing have largely fo rfe ited 'th e ir potenllal

i r a h ln _ 4 i ip la y ^ .a t »ho W e e k ^ b y Jimtho -A ll Idaho ____ ... .......

Wlllloma of 'flooding , president of iho Student Dody; Scott MC-qiiire, Jofom e, preiiidffnt of Iho

• ‘ lo iu b • .......................jU y .J

-1*. iC ll........ninl ciihim ltteo, and Ihe other

, me. priflt<idont l)ody a t Idnho Slate Uni-

• ‘.,» n d J lm M o tl .............ichulrm on tho cenicn-

•■•■•I. niiti iiin viiiii:!young m en • atid womeii, > was w oat oulntandlng. •’ I 'erhnpn tnoro publlclly nhotdd be given to iho atudeniK who Ijeliovfl In the ir school, iheir country dnd the nrinclplos (or whiol* U-fltand8i—‘^ r — —

BAY RO.STRON (Tw la F«Us)

, . " g r a i n FU TU RE -' nich U w CIOM ClW CIOM WHEAT .

-&»< ««^ i . t , i.iiji J .nu ,

j - j i■nee .Ui ,«)(■ ...............

& Si «n«o 1.1JK Mi t.iji', t.tju 1

ix ijT id !■ I f ;:Si

Aai J,J« iMii^SoYUnAN ojV

lUll feel liko In Big himscin- Tell you what, though. ,If you. absolutely inisist ' on a fryrc expensive car, wo id In your way. .

tOiL,cr*,1nCT6airtH'iinn“-‘-7.lon JAurllh w rllors Alfred LHIvpthul, Mofiho. Menuhin, Rabbin Potii* chowsicl And P«rgcr and olhefii, along w ith llrlln ln’B S |r Anthony Nutting, hnve had (Hibllcatlon aiKl«<1roulfttlon dl(lici\)llc8. Nut- ling. iH o.'b la m c r ZloniBm. stal*

Tim:‘* ''T l|o 'o n o pfii]il6riiri-onTy p45oplo In the wl^nle Bn-c«lled clvlllr.ed world »who hail never pcrseculeit tho Jew s w ere Iho A rabs,"

A m ericans Khould iindersland

Dividends ToldA regulBf fourth qunrter div­

idend 01,9 .73 cents per thiirc and a ycafcilc l cnpllnis gains dls* tribution of 44 cents per share . hBVo .been . approved b y ihn b o a rd of d irec to ri o f Investors M utual, Inc. .

T)io ciipltut goins distribution la-tha-fi..................................

, i-Bci: .,' ,A big siibstantiaF 18-foot»long

prestige car with a new 350-cubic-inch V 8 engine, pow cr.tlisc orakcs, A stro V cnllla lion , wheel covers, deep twlsl cflrpcting, posh appo in tm cn ls.

■,A rem arkably room y car, wilh a ride so sm ooth and silent

_________ t j c r a h p a d a ifd o oOrder stereo."Order tinted t d i g o n i n g . ----- _irder tinted glass, power windows,6*way power scat, our new Headlight Delay system ' ' Your Chevrolet dealer will huppily help.Sec Ixim real soon. - ' 7 ' idJUMUbk/Putting you first; keeps us first. ' bnSmovW

.Stales citizens Jusllcflfl .............nnd F rank fu rte r, Col, llniiso nnd

olherfl, In drAftIng Urktalnn )017 D alfour U eclaratron as well ns c u r r fn t Zloi>)Bt'H>ftt)enc« on U,?>. policy. UnloBB V 'e-dB i-fu rther (nvolw m aht will bring global conflict of Buch mognltudn that

pany’fl hlHlory. T he paymentB w'ero ■ miulii'' .Sepl."nn“ rosTtni ' lioldprs of recbrd S e p t. '20,

T ho <llvldend am<»unls lo »bou( $23,000,000 nnd the cnpllai ki ' diHtrlhiitku) atuuun ti io J1|7,:OftO, Tiitnl djvldenil r '

iiu BXCtOKlVtl'Trf'^ho ‘cL • to m es lo 40 Ctillrf . . . ,

com pared (n 41,5 cents -per ah are Iri -i06A,-' ■

I„ T. Dolphin, locnl ropreflcn- (a live for liivesiors Muluul, Kaid thoro uro 300,037,000 share* out

cnm piucd to 271,100,

n u lo J l J 7 ,m - il (or tho yoar, T iT iinii-Bninsr iU '|5ur qharo.

000 ■ yeiir ago.

IX)AN AI*PROVIiD , WASMlN(lTON-.(UPI) 7- Ap-. p rovaj o f Iho Inlerior- Depurl* ■ m ent of a SOO.OO0 (Small Recia-

---------- 1----------- ---- - ■ t " — ----- - ' ■ , - U j - l . l \ -NiU— - W I ' ............................ , ' ,

nioiieloracaivyou

V ietnam -WilL-fleem-at-nMhlng.- TERESSA HENDRY

, y (Jarome)

iciii <11 n vtfii.vuv laiiiiiii

?nation P ro jec t* 'A ct loap lo St. Aim —IrrlgaUnii—Co.,— M alad, w as rem rted )<rlday by Aep.

•R-idalM).-

-1' ' ■

Page 16: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

-1 6 T lm e s * N e w j, T w i n Fd lls, Id a h o . S u n d a y ; O c to b e r 5 ; 1 9 6 9 .• '■

Skyliiie Hits 1®ree S c o 3 ^ s M

T(y Drop Twin Falls 27-21IDAHO A l l s - The Skyline

G rizzlies took control of the ;g a m e in the th ird q u a rte r to

• ' rack . UP throe touchdowns.' th e n , w ithstood a last-mi'nnto -M-Wlnr b a rrag e by the T\vin FpUs Bru-

----- • i ' ’S " to -p o se - if -2 7 '2 1 —SouthernId ah o j Conference w in F rid ay

------- 'm g h t r . i r f f la r k e d t l ie - f i r s t t lm e '—;----- :the-two*schoois”hBd-met:-------- --

Twiii' Fall? scored, f irs t w ith Jacjc .R obertson going. 30 yard s a t f er-tftk lng-a-sqr^cn-pass-ffo iff

- "K c i\ B lake. But Skyline replied •'im fnediately after, the payoff

from quarterback G oddard, toss­ed it :bacl< to -G oddard and he unloadcd-th trbo trib-to rE llsw brth who took it on the 20 and scorcdr Ldte in the half Twin F a l ls s to ^ TJcd SRyllhe^Dh a TourtK" and twb* a t :the four - w hen Rocky R cece - intercepted and • alm ost broke-lt-W d^c

Twin Falls^two. Goddard sneak ­ed in. Ju.st before the period : cndedrJacksoh’stiirtcd-orrtt'lirtt- :end, sweep, stopped dead in his tracks:_ns _TwIn_Falls_appearcd to close it off; th e n ' rcvefsed to the righ t’and sailed 47 yards' to scorc,

Twjn Falls d id nothing offen­sively In the third q u a r te r while.

( j l e n n s F e r r y E d g e s

Twin— ra ils —fln a l ls T -s ta m a moving, with obout five m inutes l efT in the gam e w hen Blake

■ passed the Bruins some 60 yard s to the eight yard line. John T ur­ner scored from there w ith 1:06 left. Twin Falls tried an onsides kick, jv h /ch SJcyJind recovered, b'iil on the f ir s t 'p la y the Grlz-

.Tijnes-Ncwg Sports . E ditor— -CAREX — t i i e speedy Carey

Pan thers 'p o s te d an expcciedly lopsided <li-0 victory over Rich*

, « i

Tff?: T tM e S ~ M £ W S

Rush And MecHam Point Carey

Miriico Scores In

Highlaivd 14;-13

— By^LARRV- HOVE Y

the n inn ng of Dennis I ^ h and the pass ng of Milo M ccham to take a big s te p tdwafd* the Snake R iver eight-mon confer­ence title.

The Pan thers, holding a decid­ed edge in speed and quickness,

.jolted the Tfger.v w ith a touch- down in the first five~'~niavsr

fou rth -o n d -o n c* n t the-lO -yard line seconds latci: to se t the teno r;o f-thc7 Kanre.'

Rush, a junior, sprinted 5S yards oi| a slant p lay on the •yGcoiid'^iay~-'tgT?antTg^bait=Dn tno~fT7e and / Daria Crowley wcnt-in from the two. Rush.adp- cd tlfe iwo-poinlcr.

Richfield rebounded .w ilh - drive tha t ended in the fourth and one m isfire a t the 10 , and frofn then on the C arey defense was in command.

Still'in the first qunrter.-C arou

w a rd-pass-and-latoraU ihot-pick­e d -57. y a rd s , and f c t up a six- y a rd toudhdown run by ."Mech-

E d T h atch er opened the sec­ond _ p cT jo 4 _ ^_ iJ lte rcep tin g ; n, .RIiihfield_pu.ss a t ti\idfleld-and the P an thers qiiicKly cashed in on the "break. M ccham hit Zane Brigg.s w ith a 30-yard spring and then w ent lo Robb P eck for th e final 23 yards and touch­down. J u s t before halftim e, the M echam - B riggs combination clickcd :again f o r .31 yards and R usr ..............................

added the ex tra point F riday night to haiil the Miaico Spar­ta n s - p a s l- th o -H ig h la n d - R am s 1 4 jl3 W tho ir-first Southern .Ida­ho 'Conforonqe victory.

Powell’s - touchdown - hjo cam c a fte r the S partans had’ fallen behind ebrly and w eren’t ablc.:jQz£ai£hcup^iilihQM gMhcy: dom inated the second half com­pletely. J h e Spartans u sed the running ' of B arry R ogers to m aintain ball control, calling on the senior halfback 36’tim es and he responded, with 10 yard s to climb squarely into the..confer- ence rushing race.

-N«itheF-J ^ a d . .t ro u b lo .^

te r—.with-a - .. -g r in ^ g _ 1 7 -p la y m arch-that-& nded-lw itiiiJlogers. . vaulting in. from the one. A dam s converted .- •.■'Highland put together another., seven-play, m arch in thfe second Q uarte r-w ith -B u rkc_a^aln_ get- . ting the final yard but this timo the ex tra ppint k ick m issed. ' '

Minico completely • dominated the ihird iquarter, putting the , ball into p la^ 22 tfm es against only four for Highland—b ut the Ram s always m anaged to av e rt . the score, holding th e 'S p a rta n slngid&^tha-fouri.-Vard linB four------times.:_______________ '" ^

Tlic . Spartans s ta rted t h c i r _ ^ winning m arch 'w ith ju st over five m inutes le f t . 'R o g e rs got a crucial first, down with a 15- . ynrd ,:scom per to the H ighland 45 and th en 'g o t a five-yard gam on a fourth and th ree to Tteep it alive a t the H ighland 28. Pow- c li-then= :h it= J{cctQ n^w ith - the ... , touchdown pass.. 'H ighland cam e b ack in the closing m inutes to gain the Spartan 30-yard line bu t. w ith less than a /n jnu te left, the Spartans recovered, a fum ble and ran out the clock........ ...... ,

. L E N N.S FERRY'-;^ Glenns F e rry Bilots, the ir de­

fensive unit coming up w ith a: g re a t goa l line stand, th ru st into

--»~-5ve m iddle of the Big S ix Con- ‘ • ference- title chasc-by dum ping

____th e rW o o d -R iv e r-W o lv er in e s-8 -< )F rid a \j night. '• T he.team s traded first q u a rte r

touchdowns with the P ilots, who also ' a re co-leading the .Little Six league, takihg the edge oii

-------------------'ii- . -I

Sob s liriim 's quarte rb ack l<eej>- "!r fot th e two-pointer.

But defense won it a s Wood ^ iy e r:R ic l^d up a fum ble and re tu rned it to .the G lenns J^erry tw o-yard-line; Thp; Pilots ~n rose lo U to p -W o o d -R iv e i^ o u rtim e a f recovering a fumble:On-the ono- inch line the la s t tim e.

Wood ‘ R I V e r recovered rumble .early In the gam e a t Ihe P ilo t 13-yard line and punch- ed it-dow n-to the tw o-yard line. E k n er w en t off tackle fo r the touchdown-

^■TUps BearersCORVALLIS. O re ,- (UBI)

F ifth-ranked Southern . Caliic n la spotted O regonj' S tete-^j . e a r l y . touchdowa ^ a n d th^n

* ■ ' 'k iS s > r ia y _ b e h in d______________________ p a s s e s __by

sophom ore .q u arte rb ack J im m y ■— J o t te s -v a h d '- th e ■ running of

ha Ifback '' ' Clarerice Davis - overw hefm the B eavers 31*7. - • D avls,-Southern C al's succes­so r to O .J . Simpson, scorned one touchdowj;i. a nd racked up 181 y a rd s in 29 carries In the T ro jans* ' firs t gam e ever a rtific ia l tu rf. .

Jones h a d ' touchdown passes _ p f_ i2_yards,_ to_T ^ rT y-D ekraa l.

27 y a rd s to Sam D ickerson and 18 y a rd s to G ary O rcutt. A 21 j i i r d field goal by Ron Ayala w ith fou r seconds left in the f irs t h a lf rounded gut- the

T hB=victoryr*^H nf—In—a*~row fo r the T rojans, avenged an h is to ric 3-0 upset Oregon State handed the then top-rankcfl T ro jan s in th e mud here two y e a rs ago . T he sun w as o u t all a fte rnoon Sat' ’ ' _____________

O regon' S tate s ta rted out like w ould duplicate the 196:

effort.T he B eavers’ D enny D raper

reco v ered a fum ble on the opening kickoff on the Southern Cal 33. "An 18-yard p a ss , from S teve E ndlco tt to J im Scheele a nd a !2-yard run by Billy M ain »ot u p B ryce H uddleston’n

.. y a rd touchdown plunge JuRt-l:43.

I t ..took Southern Cnllforhia unHl th e second period to . gel on the scoreboard. A short y)im gave the T rojans the hnll.on the B eaver 33, am! Jones hi D ekrnal w ith his f irs t touch’ down pass.

Mountain - HonKTTalces 50-22 Win

F IL E R —Moiinlflli) Home cUck- e<l off 22 points in the firs t q u a r te r F riday night then trnd ' cd touchdowns wilh the Fi/oi WIldcBta' to taka a n e a su ,f i0 ^ 2

-•-docision.- .

rlmtn(ific,_un(rtji«.Tlj{cr3 w r o never slop|x;d ttio rest of th e night. Minutes Inter-qnarlor* hock M allard hit llofcfr w ith a

: .W -yard TD p asi and ra n -o v e r the two-point conversion,

Tlia next timo' the T1rct.s th e ir hands on the ball South cnp;w d a soven-play drive wlih • throe-ynrd toiichdown riin, South tl>cn ran in tlin two-point’

J B 1 (~ - -------- - “ - -, . down o n - a 4fl-yiird pHMi n)ny

• r Hntlley fo-Dllhlclri,-W right rail In the points after.• M allard hit DrlKScrs la te In

th e socond qu arlo r fo r an 11. y a rd score, w ith Ahe point-afior

--------- flttcm ptJfllllnH n-- . .......—Hadloy Jofted a 42.ynrdor to

Randy. Shank in thn thiw! {iiinr- » - lo r , then lill Tirii' Clmndler for

. (Iio Iwo-ixilnlB.’n ire b quick touchdow ns'caino

------ 'n ,..rW j‘l*n ro . o rder, bcglnniimw ith M alla rd ’a ' two-yarrf 'I’D

• P«"B Ip 'Ihom psoh. ThompHon . dived In for two_ points. Shank

then re tu rn ed tha kickoff HO ' .yarria fo r FJIer’a lust touchdown.

MflunlAin Itnm a clicked a{{nln Im m ediateJv'W hen Tayloroil nn_elgiif-yar(? 'fun,........ .............

M alla rd capped the jicorlng• fo r the’ .’I'lgtirs w ith a foiir-yurd

p lunjto In tlio final period .

.- fur' thu

- . . . . ___ Terry"OChsner intercepted and re tu rn ­ed it 55 y ards .:S ky line t h e n s tayed on the ground to ■'wear out the clock,

i H ' ..... ,BlacltfootTips-Jerome"Tigers 20-0

JERO M E - The B lucktoot Broncos pulled a v ^ y -from tigh t 8-0'first hnlf FriHnyZnigh

‘then s to p p ^ Richfield on took a punt and w ent to a for-

Dennis-Led Wendell Drops Gooding 46-8

play for six points; He added tl\e tw o-poin ter'to m a k e -it 28^0 a t halftim e. ‘ ,

The P an thers ' got another scoring chance in.tiie th ird peri­od when Skip Peterson blocked a. pcm t'at the Richfield 30. C arey

iDved to the..t\t’0 -yard line but tichfidld held. But on the first

>lay, •RTchficraTmnblod-ttTtrball-

firs t possession. H jgtiiand ..{oo^

Declo Rallies Past Hansen

...GOODING-The. W endell- Tro­jans, behind the running of Kirk Dennis, exploded for 22 points in the second qua rte r and rolled over the Gooding Senators 46-S F riday night,

oo in t-after failed ' vith, a . p u n i s h i n g g a m epoin_i B iier la leo. to push -across two Ttouchdowns“ ^ t took G l e n n T - F e i ^ o m y aiTd hand th-e” slubTw n Jero m e

Brown _ b ro k e j^ o f fu a d d e _ a n d

efensc-cnt9r«d- two^p

Bji then Wendell w as otit of sight.-Wendell grabbed the opening

kickoff and moved 56 yard s in 14 plays w ith Dennis going in from the one. He also got the

intO' the p icture by keeping the Senators w ithout a firs t.d o w n until late-in-thft-gecond-quartex,

rom ped 55 yards for th e tying sfx ponltSTSbrum then a dded the tw o-pointer. The Pilots threaten-, ed tw ice a f te r tha t, getting in ­side th e 15 tw lce-w ithout scor-

Both sides were plagued -byp e n a l t ie s - a n d a to ta l’o f i r p i i n t s w ere-forced a s -Je ro m e -p la y e d perhaps its best defensive gam e of the year against a pow erful Bronco squad noted for its

t r e n g - t h through* the a ir . Strangely^;e n o u-g-h—Blackfoot stayed for-the niost p a rF c n tht>

KimberlyG v e r w l i e l m g ''

Hagerman-;KIM BERLY - The defensive

scored 24 points in th e first q u a r te r F riday ,n lg h t-a n d - tr ig - ■g'ered the K im berly Bulldogs to a 72-6 decision over tho Hager- m aii P irn tes.

K im berly scored on the flr.st two passes H agerm an tried.

Oaldey Raps Rocldand

, stayed for-tljgrduW . ______' The Broncos’ .‘took. r--oy.e*r. 'o n "HlQCKLAND — Adam y-hit-for th e ir own 37-yartpiihla^Bfter'-a f o u r ‘touchdown passes F ridayJe ro m e kick early in_th~g_flrst q u a rte r and scored in eight playsr a ' face-m ask-penaltM p u t- ting the ball on the five to se t up Blain Weff's two - yard, plunge a t 7:33. of the period. David ‘Hawkes, whose punishing gi;ound work h u rt th e T igers m ost of tho night, j a n in the two-point conversion for th e only points of the '^ rp st half.

Offensively it w as a differen t sto ry for tho Tigers a s th e ir deepest penetration cam e righ t

;a fte r the Bronco .score—th a t be-

a fte rn6on ,,.tw o_go ing_ to ._K im M artindale and a pa ir going to G ary - -McLaws, - a s - the_.Oakley H ornets ran p ast the Rockland Bulldogs 45-26. '

Rockland scored firs t, taking a fum bled pilchout and scoring as G reg M cLain w ent 12 yards. Adam s hit McLaws la te r in the .period-on-a-23-yard-sttike.- 'and W ashburn 's kick pushed Oakley ahead 7-6. _

E arly In tho second quarte r ...................... jp

J j ^ t ^ o n o —and^rg{u rned -H t — yard s and Steve E m erson stole th e second and rom ped 30 yards. H arm aning got one ex tra point. K im berly w ent fiO yard s in two ploys the first tim o it had the ball from scrim m age, Rod R u­dolph—hit-D ave-M olynctJX -T or 45 yard s and them Em erson for 15 and the score. Seconds la te r Mike Erickson, who wound up w ith 295 yards rush ing , rom p- "'1 CO yards on a punt re turn .

In th e second period, Moly- neux intercepted an o th er pass and K im berly ground to the four before sending Erickson In. Scci onds la te r E rickson shook loose for G5 yards on a p itch out,

•E rickson scored on a 5.5-yard fla re pass and run piny nnd E m erson w ent 2>< y a rd s on a rev erse in the th ird q u arte r. D uring tha t per|o<l, H agerm an scored wlien J e ff T upper broke ov er tackio nnd sp rin ted 43 y a rd s to score.

K im berly added 14 m ore Irt tho la s t period. A nother fftire paM -lo-K rlohaon resu lted In ft 45-yartl piny and M olvneux w ent2|L.yar‘J.l..wn,ilifi_-middl(Lfln_a qunrlerbftck T<eeper, w hich ac* iiialJy wn.4 a broken play, I?mor- Ron anti H iirm aning got the e x tra points.

Kern Leads Oiiio State 1 i Past-HusMes

. s i> A r r i .F . , ( » B j= l le x J i i i r n , . Ohio .StiilcS d<M;v('rylhlng qiiar- tu rhuck, sta rted thlnB .1 with A fl-l-yiird 'touchdown run and fullback J im Oils bulled for thr<xi. .Hlinrt scores, to pace tho No, I ra ted llunkeye.i to a 41-14 rnnip Salurdiiy iiver Wnshlng*'•'M. ,

Kern also scored on 'a six- yard run In tho third period and »|M»r1ied -lhty-niickPVP!r'tinfir*hir li tt tho nam e In th e fourth

a im rtrr-- to nppian'io—from iNi|)>IxiInt<fd coiw d of nH.HOO.Otis hoomVir for touclidowna

of ,one, throo nnd ono yardn wJilln bnckup q u arte rback Ron

■ ■ iwalcl_addod-Ohlo-fitftle-a

Irig only to the Blackfoot 31-vard line! • '

Adam s h it M artindale for 34 yards. McLaws kicked the point

Broncos a t bay over the re s t of the .'hnlf, intercepting two passes. Rod LIlyn an d . C hris G ardner Intercepted fo r B lack ­foot. >—Xh(LJlrcncoa-gQt-ft-blg-bcoalc- righ t after intermission when Jerom e back tried to field „ sky-hjgh punt near h is own 20« y a rd ’ line atm ^fum bled. C raig RichaVdson r e c o W d fo r'B lack ­foot, who capitalized Im m ediate­ly when Hnwkes sw ept left end for -14,yards and a 14-0 lend. H aw kqj try for a-two-poiht con- version was stopped. ,- I Late in the third period, Doug

Stoddard’s booming kick which pinned tho Tigers down a t th e ir own one-foot lino se t up Black­foot a t Jerom e's 29 a fte r the Tigers couldn't move the ball.

A personal foul call on Je ro m e nnd the running of Rich K atse- anes put Blackfoot a t tho one- y a rd line, whero Siodtlnril ran In ti snenk to Ico tho contest a t 10:37 of the Inst qun rtc r.

covering for C arey in the end zone for six point.';.

T he final C arey touchdown cam e on a 15-yard scoring strike from M ccham to Peck and Rush capped it by kicking the. point-’ a fter.__________

of scoring for the q u arte r.At the opening of the second

periodr-hm veverr~W endell-w ent 60 -y a rd s- in - th re e - plays, half ofJt_com inglon_D ennis '_ touch- down run. After tak ing a Good­ing , punt th e ' T ro jans w en t 40 yards in five c a rrie s w ith Den­nis hitting from th e nine and Ralph King getting th e two points. Minutes, la te r Ron Buhler scorcd_frq^m_the i^ne ^ d added the running conversion to~csYab^ Hsh the-;30-0‘ 'inrermiSSioir'lcad;

M u r i t M i g l L

M artindale-«p ,aln ,-tlii6 -tim e-for-IS -yardSr-J’ha-co n v c isIo a -k lck was blocked.

Oakley put the gam e out of reach in the third period when F airchild scored from 10 yards out, w ith W ashburn kicking tho conversion;—then*^Dan:-Gorrlngfr capped a drive with, a seven- yard scam per. "

'Behind ‘ 33-6 ■ a t th is point. Rockland w ent to th e ‘'a j r and Steve May h it M c U in for 48 y ards ond a score la te In the period.' Rockland recovered- ft Hornet fumble In the final peri­od and M a^ capitalized with a

“ TTTe' SSconfl hTHf w as . .I n 'a co k t Tain s to rm .'.^ en d e jl got-tho .bn ly-points-in-th 'e-third period when Buhlejr - c npped ' a syc-play, 45-yard .m arch b y g et- tin,g the last four yard s .

Gooding'broke the shutout Uid - t h e first points Wendell has allowed this year—a fte r Jeffer­ies broke loose on a quick and traveled to the tw o-yard line. W endoll-th rew -the-Senators-for seven yard s in losses over the next th ree plays before Krahn hit" Cole Cook with a nine-yard touchdown pass,

The Trojans offset th a t mln- L-A dam s_hlt iitcs_lat«r-w hon-Tom -H oagland

SButFOuT" Gastleford

CASt Le f ORD — The Mur- t ^ g h j ^ Devils, posting a _6-0 lead a t halftim e,' came" out In ■a“ sp read 'a in J~ passing thu' s c co n d 'h n ir-’'*"^—

B U R L E Y -D eclo ro a red back from a 16-point deficit F r id a y to overhaul the H ansen Huskies 34-22 as G aylen O sterhout scored three clutch touchdowns in. thefour-th-per-iod:-* — ---------------------

H an sen 'to o k the kickoff and m arched down the field to score in ten plays, E reestono capping

:thc=TlrivB -w ith-a-10-yard-pass; £r££Stone_ran_in_the_tw o.poin l conversion. A fter seeing Declo fum bled a t the goal line, Hansen m issed a golden opportun ity to score again, b u t then recovered another H ornet fum ble on the nex t series and scored from the e ig h t' with F reestone running. T he .two-point conversion by the H ansen signal ca lle r m ade it

E*ast-SEoilione-

s w e e p p ast the Castleford-Wolves.:

blockcd -a 'OoodinR~punt~nt~thc 4Q.s.yauLJln(L_ftnd_Jlill_Iinton scooped It up ond ran In for

F lin -got M urtaugh going with & six-yard run on a sweep. Cas- tleford cam e back to the Devil tw o-yard line but fumbled that chance away a n d couldn’t th rea ten again. . '

F lynn d id & little Improvising fo r th e second M urtaugh score, sta rtin g a sweep one wav, then reversm g His field and sprinting 70 y a rd s to score. Bowman got the th ird M urtaugh tally on a fou r-yard plunge and S tanger h it N ebeker with a -lO-yard bomb and six-m ore points.

— D efensivc-B tiard-H cib-dld-the ■thing-every-dtrfcnslvc—llnenTOTr thinks of doing. As C astleford’s quarte rback sfarIea~to h’o'ha off.'

Following an excahnge puhts in ' the second quarte r. O rlo-K idd ta li ie d 'D c c lo 's first touchdown of. the day . f ro m the eig h t,, w ith the po in t-after a t­tem pt failing.. O sterhout h it Dar- rington w ithra 40-yard T D bomb la te r In . the period,, and Kidd ran over the tw o-pointer for a 16-14 edge to Hansen a t the half.

A fter O sterhout sw ept end for 20-and” 10--yard“ touchdown'TUns' in the la s t period giv ing the H ornets a 28-16 lead, Hansen narrow ed it to 28-22 w ith .another TD 'p a s s by F reestone in the fourtir qua rte r, b u t O sterhout .................. r-con tcsr-w itlr-n - |2 :

y a rd -ro r

Valley Edges

Indians 14-6SHOSHONE ~ L a rry Rlch-

m an’s five - jw rd touchdqwn pass to Bob Bloxham.. m idway through the f irs t q u a rte r and

sion run provided th e clinching points, F riday n igh t a s the VaU ley Vikings tip p e r Shoshone J4-6.

The Indians scored the ir only , touchdown in the second q u a rte r oh a,”2T-yard scoring pass- from - Pagoaga to 'S o lo a g a .T h e run a ttem pt to tic the sco re failed.

While Shoshone didn’t th reaten the second half. Valley Iced the contest w ith 10 m inutes le ft In the-final-period-w hen-D on-C iine- scored from th'e tw o a f te r a RIchman to Ritchie sw ing pass h a d . se t it up w ith » 35-yard gain. , •

Valley pushed I ts _ j« c o td - lo _ fln -w jth 'th e v ictory, w hile Sho­shone—is—now —2*3,—

Olhor Six polntfi.Ohio Stnto looked sluggish fii'

tho opening nHlniitoii, b u t "Korn nwiiknnod t h o t n w ith hin oloctrlfyliig ioitchdnwn run m|d* w ay 'llim ugh the opening q u a rte r. The Buckoyos led 21-7 a t Intcrrnlsxion,

WoHhlngton got on •• the flcorebnard- when q u arte rback fiono WI|IH sneaked ovflr from llin ono ‘to c llm nx a M-ynr<l drive in Ihfl ivcond period,

Ohio ' Sintfl iurnc(l on the |x»wor-ln-4lio-HeonnH-hnlf-n«Otis ftcorwl oj) a o n o -y a rd . pluiigo Ixiforn Korn cnrrieil o v e r from Ihu nlx« . - "

Page 17: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Piihiie Throws For Three Touchdowns As Bengals

IViissouriRips Michigan In , 40-17 Rout

Overpower Omaha By 46-7POCATELLO '(U P I) - Idaho

• State U niversity , th e ’ numbeV o n e 'te lim in . th b B ig Sky Con­ference, defeated thC'T Univer-

' sity of .N ebraska a t Om aha, 46;

* Bowl a t Pocatello .ISO’s, passing quarterback

eveV, saw quarterback Rocco Gonnclla compleu* 23 passes out of 60 attem pts for 381 yards.

ISU scored In the first th ree m inutes when ISU's Dunn haji-

. |O m aha ISUF irs t .Downs '21 - - gai:. «B ushing y a rd a g e . 102' 2Sl piays which R eturn y a rd ag e recovered -P asse s— * •-— :23-e0-2rl8-42.2. -

'-39 6-41F6 0

ley. • who wont' Into thD -end zone. The e x t r a point w a s pic­ked -u p _ by— Bengal —kicking spcciafistvLouJe-.Hursf. •

T hree minljtes la te r the Ben­g a ls scored again on a series of............................legan when ISU

Om aha fumble.

P u n ts F u m b le s lo s t Y a r d s p e n a l iz e d . 62 '90

Je rry D unne com pleted 15 pas­ses out of 37 attem pts for a

' - lo ta l o f 178 yard s . O m aha,, how-

" “P e B u r S i m e -

Edges Past li-State 17-14

“ ^ i m N r a f f f i N r w R r - ( u p i ) -Second-ranked P en n Stale -used sophom ore Lydell M itchell’s 58-

: yard touchdown gallop in the second q u a r te r a s a spring­board to • w hip flrqd-up, but m istake-plagued K ansas S tate

— -H -1 4 -S a tu rd a y ; s tre tc h in g - th e >Jittany U o n s ' w inning-streak to 14 gam es.

The Lions, p lay ing fo r the U ^ e e k

~Duhneis H a rr tr 'In the 'end '

zone and H urst picked up the ex tra ’point.

The Bengals continued through (he second q u a rte r when Dunne h it J lacci^ ' again on an 18-yard p ass b u t the a ttem pted kickw as unsuccessful.— .......................

Midway, through the second quai

a 2G-yard pass to. E;d.JBell.._The Bengals- failed- an -a tb m p te d p ass into the end zone.

The Om aha team mode the scoreboard late In the s€cond q u arte r when q u v te rb a c k Gon- n ella hit tight end Stan Standi- fe r w ith, a 77-yard touchdown pns3.--Omnha-’5 ^ c o n v o rs io n ^ a s

second s tra ig h t —nll-A m erica-halfb

withoutdatg.

C harlie P ittm an ,, are^ now 30 this season and have not lost—i tic -included—In 22 stra ig h t Eames.

A r-ecord K -State crowd of 35,000 w atched th e . 19th-rankcd W ildcats blow five scoring

. opportunities before Mitchell, a 5-10, 190-pound speedster, broke

- D f f - ^ ta c k le - « n - « - s c i ! --------------

Colorado Humiliates-^- Indiana 30-7

BQULDRR Colo. f U P H -t i l e . Bob Anderson

sw itched from q u a rte rb a c l^ to ta ilback Saturday and scored th ree touchdowns in Colorado’s! 30-7 rou t of b ig ten Indiana,

Paul Arendt, who , stepped Into ' A nderson’s old position, scored .,»he o ther touchdown him self from a half-yard out

T)ir-tacKie--on—tt—3C issors-p iay ■wUh ~e:39 - left in - thft - f Im - lra lf :

Chuck B ru k h art, - Lion q u a r­te rb ack ,--w en t to the a ir to break oj>en th e gam e in the th ird q u a rte r , d riv ing the Lions

____60_yards in n ine p lays for a tda f te r lM Ik ^ R eltx’s~33.jw rd-field goal gave P en n State a 10-0 edge.

-Raiders Andr Miami Battle

—T o20-20T ie. . WIAMI (U P I) -M la m I 'ro o k ie

—“f K «rl“K rem s«r^kIck6d-*-39^yaM field go a l w ith 8:41 rem aining

turday n l ^ t to fuU the{ D olphins Into a 20-20 tie w ith

— ^-the-OakJand-R«idersr;-----------------1 Som e 35,614 O ranga Bowl ' Ions th a t included P residen t ! N ixon /taw th e Dolphins salvAfic : a tie a t th e ir homo opener and ! stavo off a 17-point second half i scoring a ssa u lt by the R aiders, ] who defea ted M iam i two weeks I ago 20-17 wl£h a htst-m lnute I field goal.I O akland pulled ahead of the j,D olphins ^vith 12;<13 rem aining I In the final period .when ageless I G eorge B landa kickcd a 37-ynrd I field goal.J B landa se t a n Am erican ! Football -League reco rd nga jnst ‘ M iam i by ' scoring In 40 i consecutive gam es. Ho kicked a

, I f irs t q u a r te r 24-yord field goal ! (o ea rn th a t rccord .and nUo I m ad e two conversions.1 . O akland q iiartcrback D aryl ' l.am onlcn th rew touchdown

••{ passes o f 13'flnd .sovetrynri ‘ W hrren Wells and Trod Bilet:

\ nikoff for O akland 's other ' Acorea.; M i a m i qunrterhnck Bnh

CrlesB tosseO. n nfne-ynrd ! touchdown pass to Karl Noonan I In tho firs t q u a rto r and running : back J im K lick b u rs t Into th e 1 end zone from fou r yn rd i out In I the th ird q u a rte r to account for > M iam i’s two touchdowns.

iTo 56-17 Win I'Over-'Navy-

! A U ffriN , . T ex. (U P l) - I F n iirlh 'ranked used an1 nw esqm e grnimil 'n llnck paced ' J>y two touchdowns ouch from , ’I'ed Koy nnd Eddlo J’hlllipH,

Sa tu rday nlglit lo (lyorpnwcr - ._ Jw p lesi_N nvy-6« .l7 -fo r-U fl-J2 th

Atrnlghl w in and 13arroll -R oyal'jl 100th v ic to ry a s tho

Longhorn coach.• Phllllp.i, 0 sophom ore qunr* t e rb a c k , '‘.icored on kccporn of

-*45-«iiri*neven-yan1s-Tind''KnyrA'’ nonlor hnirhnck, got Ills on runs of one and th ree yords as T exas gronnd-^out a whopping 823 yords on t'no ground. ’

J im nortelnen rni) 43 yard s for n 'flcriro' on T exas' first ■offensive piny, then Koy added 'h is two ttcuroR and iltarting q uortprbnck Jnm os S treet ran In from tho six before Royal tu fn ed the g am e over to

. ..rpiWiV«8 m itlw ay ttiro u g h -th tj second q iiurtor. ' - ‘

Tho 5(1, polnlfl w as th e 'm o s t .'ever, given- up-hy-a-N avyflq im d. and vynn thC' hlgRost i>nln( o ^ u t fo r a 'T o x a i te am atncd

the etid^zone w ith a w ide sweep. Second string qua rte rb ack Dan H alt then to ssed -a 3S-yard pass t o E d Bell an d -lfu rs t kicked for the ex tra point.

T he final score in itJ ie gam e cam e w hen ' h a lt threw ,, a 5S ya rd pass to H arris and H u b t

' pipkiyl lip th e ,p0llll-

Oregon Edges W SUOn Last Minute’Starnl’

successful.T h e th ird q u a rte r wient score­

less a s both team s put up slroiTg defensive efforts.

E a rly ln_ the final quarte r -------------- - IX '.........................

- A -N r 'A R B b R r M r a i r ^ o p iFRon M cBride, highlighted a ’24- polnt M issouri second qui^rter w ith' a pair o f short touchdown rui^s Saturday which carried the ninth-ranked T igers to a, 40- 17 " u p se f ' win over U niversity o f Michlgdn. • '

The T igers held a , 24-3 halftim c ' lead o v e r , the 11th- ranked-W olverinesV -favored by

Olstor Hendreh, iS unday, O c to b e r 1 9 6 ^ .p rn e s -N o v rt ', T w in fljIU ', ,ldahb'. 1 7 •

Arkaftsias Downs TCU By 24-6 ;

Air Game Paces First Idaho Win

fo r, th is intersectional batti but a pair o f one-yard plunges ^)ver-:— righ t— tackle— fullback Garv/e— .C ra w ^ J n ' the third q u a rte r put his team back ip the gam e 24-17. .'H ow ever, jun ior Mike Bennett

broke through to block a M ark-W em er_punL -i_and__ Missourirecovered o n -the-, Michigan 12, enabling Henry Brown to kick his second field goal of the day from 24 y a rd s out. Brown’s first field goal, a 26-yardcr. tied the gam e 3-3 and triggered the second q u a rte r explosion.

Ju n io r ta ilback Joe Moore rnm pM R2 y a rd s on a third-and-

■ 'd raw .o lav w ith 8:09 left in

M OBILE. Ala. (U P l)-Q u a tc rb ack Steve ' Olson thrc th ree touchdown passes. J e r ry H endren and scored fourth h im self a s Id a h O 'f lc w to a . -rioplstnn nw»r SnuthernM ississippi F rid ay night.

A com eback bid by Southern M ississippi d ied w hfin.a-pass by qua rte rb ack D anny P a lm er was in tercep ted by an-Icfeho defen­d e r In th e .e n d zijoe w lth.,l:36 le f t to play .

Olson: a Junior. fit6m Lewlsyon,

)-put-iViissDuri .0P U L L M A N .__W ash ._ (U £I)-r

The cen te r of the jOregon line

i I “ S .ro „/ ';^ ;d lB e riv e n u tishy of the end zone on a two- point conversion a tte m p t w ith only 23 seconds le ft S aturday to preserve a 25-24 P ac ific 8C bhferehce-wrn. --------------------• -

T h e one-point m argin ,cam e on a n ex tra point k ick by Ken Woody , a f te r Oregon’s firs t touchdown late in th e first cjuarter. I t w as th e only extra point m ade in th e g am e by

•eilhe '

Keeps Title

Oregon controlled tK^' first half of play , leading 10-6 a t Interm ission. In th e second half it w as ju s t th& -reverse as W ashington S tate, scored three m m e s = to = ^ O re g o n i* — « a g lc tinned si

-O reg o n —Is—n o w - 2-1-- o n —the seajton and WSU 1-2.

Sophomore slo tback— Bobby M oore tallied twice fo r the Ducks on runs of eight and two yard s. J a c k W igmore, WSU’s sophomore q uarterback , d i ­

ced thc-finaM w o-touc^dow n-B oal-and-three-extrfr^ in ts-,. The gam e w as played in light snow on a m oist field with a four-quarter iinowball fightgoing on In th e -s ta n d s . ..............

Anderson gained 161 yard s in 29 -carries,Ltfl .reach a ,4,09S-yard ca ree r m ark and bccom e the fourth leading ga iner in big

■ ' ■ annals. - • --------[ana, staved off ^ w hat

Colorado coach Eddie Crowder s a id ' before“ lhC“ g a m e -w a s a m uch Im proved defense, scored only once on a 17-yard strike from H arry Gonso to flan k er J a de B utcher, who dived in ta

drives of the g L ____ ___from one and four y a rd s out in the la s t period to, pull the Coug,ars to. w ithin one point of the Ducks.

a n end zone m ud puddle to hold on to the touchdovm.

w as th e ~ f i f s t—tim®— in Colorado U niversity h istory th a t -the Buffaloes have bea ten A _ B ig _ T eaJeam .______

N.M.JJefeatsl

lowaState Trounces Ulini 48-20

CHAMPAIGN, speedy Iowa St«. . , ............. ; a te d e fe n s e a n dth e passing of O bert T isdale tiu llea -llllno^s'-new -m uttip lB -o^ T iim -arflrrfm eflg th-;fense S a tu rday in a 48-20 rom p.

■nie Cyclones Btruck fo r four touchdowns In th e second qu a r­te r ah d ih ft-d e fen so -se tu p -th ree of therh. T isdale’s pinpoint p a ss­ing took good advan tage of each

Kansas, Ends Losing Streak■ -ALBUQUERQUE. N. M, (U P I) — Tho U niversity of New Mexico, playing Inspired foot- b& U,.sliatlcred.a 21-gam c.loslng s treak .Saturday w ith a 16-7 v ictory over stunned University of Kansas.

Tho win w as .tlie f irs t fo r the Lobos since a 24-3 victory over Idaho Stnto f r n h e firs t gom e o f the 10G7 senson. Tho ,14.354 fans went wild w ith tho victory.

The I-obos took charge .ea rly i n tho gam e nnd never le t up. UNM scored, two touchdowns atw l-n field - goal - In -the -first half ond K ansas w as unable to get on the «coro l>oar<l until Wlllla Amlson caught a J im Ht-

G orm an broke open the scoring Into In tho second q u a rte r with a four-yard plunge.

Ilnlfbnck D avid B ookert, n 0- 1, lOtKpounder from Hobbs, N.M . broke around righ t end / o r . 24 yard s nnd tho second Lnbo nwOifl ln*~~tl

TVTItniiaB mtcT7 -.Toe Han'shorne

lie Lobos.field gutil for Ihe _____K ansas, except for Its scoring

drive, looked lifckluster , nnd wiis unpblb to hold tho fired*up Lobos,

Oklahoma State Nips Texas Tech

.TriM.WATnU, Okla. ( U P I ) - ,OiUuhunia— filnie 's -—hlgtMHdlng Cowboys cam o Alive in tfifl Aecon(f,half. S a tu rd u y -ld .c o rra l T exas Tech 17-10, and pull off tholr second coiisecutlvo upset v iclory of the young season.

— Tech-contro llB rt-th irtlrB rtin lf; with Miles LunRohennIng peno- trn llng 'ilto O.SU line n t tno one-

Kurd line for n sco re In tholr rs l possession. J e r r y Don

.Siuutcrs kloked h 34-ynrd field

} afternoon was Isodden for the Cowlxiy fons,

, R IP VMI S2-0MORdANTOWN, : W .. V a.

(U P I)—Led . by (he nation '* second a n d ' th ird lending rushors, ‘J im Rraxton nnd Do > aroshom ^,'iinboaien''W e>ti'V lrnV nin iHilll up u 2D 0|hnlftim o lead and walloped w ln l^ t VirAlaia MiUUry 3M SAlurday/

On Ruling•NAPLES. M taly (U P I)-W orld

m id d le w e ig h t champion Nino Benvenutl re ta ined his title S a t u r d a y - n i g h r i i m ro u g h h b u se braw l Ahen F ra se r Scott of ; Seattle, W ash., w as d isq u a lif ie d in the seventh round for repea ted il le g a l u s e of his head

Scott w as w arned and cau- il tim es by referee i r ~ o r - l ta l jT ^ ' -Tony Gi------ -- -

being sent' to his corner within one m inute of the seventh round. -

I t w as the second consecutive successful defense of the m iddleweight title by Benvenutl in Italy aga in st Americans w ithin-'JOTTiorithsr-Hc-scored-a

L i t TLE ROCK,' -A rk rti jp i) '— Bill M ontgom ery

co.nnected with split end 'C huck Dlcus.on touchdown passes of 73 and-23 -,yards Saturday to giveth lrd-ranked_A rkansas-_a__?4-6S o u th ii^ t Conference win oy e r Texas; Christian. . .

Montgomery, Injured In ..the

la st - q u a rte r / h it on, 10 ,of 31 p a sse s .fo r 170’y a rd s ; 'H e s tu n * , ned Bin.-inspired tC U team which hadi lost 0 - 0 'l a s t .weejc; - before . to No. - 1 Ohio S ta te r w ith -h l» -73 .yard -to ss-ta .D icu*-:^ w ith 11:58 rem aining n n ' llie firs t half to s t a r t the Razor- back s rolling.

T he victory w as th e_ llrs t of the y e a r fo r 'th e high- scoring V andals who. a re averag ing a lm o s t . 32., points /p e r - g a ip e .; £ o th HcndretL a n d Olson,- .wlio h o ld - a l l - ’ ----------- ■'the passlng-reccivin'g records in"~ the Big - Sky Conference, a re ranked In the .tofL liyS -in lnatlonatsta tistlcs.—_

; td lh a .o pened rhe scarin g w hen safe ty Bob Ju d a in te r­cepted a -P ailm er pass and ra n i t back to th e ' Sou thern '33.' T ow plays la te r Olson h lt,H cndren .in

-eild

Flr»tRuahint yirdil* rnitmi yardaM ^clum

--T h c ^ V a n d a ls : w idened th e ir m argin.- in 'the second q u a rte r

‘len 'th ey recovered a fuml - Southern ta ilb ack ,

. . ju l to n and quickly drove 2fl y a rd s w ith Olson sneaking the >all over from- the tw o .. A

second Ju d a interception se t up a-26-yard-iie ld-goal-by-C astn ior

Idaho, th re w touchdown passes o f 49, fo u r and tw o yards, all to H endren. His 33 completions in a gam e-w as-an -Idaho record-fts- ^^ere H endren 's 17 receptions.

Olson scored from th'e two- 'a rd line and G uatem alan ;icker R icerdp Castll[o added a

2&-yard field goal to ,round blit th e V andals’ scoring. .

-Soufherri* M ississippi., suffer­ing its ' second loss In a fow a f te r ' w inning the season Opener, c am e back .from a 31-7 halftime“TJencir"dn“ toiich"down passes o f 49 yards and . six y a rd s ' b j l Pa lm er.

North CarolinaItaps VaiSerbilt. C H A PEL HILL, N.O. (U P I) -

Sophom ore quarte rback Johnny Swofford th rew three touch­down passes and tailback Don M cCauley crossed the goal line

................ *twlce—to ~ le a d —North"^ Carolinafound_deci&lo q -la s t-D e c c m - ■wst-VaaderbiltT:38-22-Saturd<:_______r?. .11 _ - — Z «.1 r — . ----- :—-------- —

III, f u p n - A

b e r over Don F u llm er ol W « f Jo rd an , U tah.

I t was, n ev e r 'tn u ch of a fight bccause the ’ two m en never m ix e d .it u p .. B ut B?nvenuti did score several tim es with sharp left jab s -a n d -b lo o d ic d Scott’s nose in th e fifth Tound, B envenua Just barely m ade the w eigh t,, reg istering 159 pounds 15.9 ounces. Tho freckle-faced, rdd-haired S c o tt-w e lg h ed -in -a t 158 pounds.

Scott c a m e 'ou t rushing Saturday night, — as he had w arned he w o u ld -b u t he could

■ p e n e tra te , Benvenutl's

Illinois <juarterback G ary Lange th rew fo r th ree second ha ir touchdowns, one a s t h e f ina l gun w en t off. B ut the IllU nl’s cause w as already , long lost.

T h e Cyclones* second q u arte r eruption s la tte d w hen Tony W ashington re tu rned a n in ter­ception 10 yard s to tho Illlnl 32. With fo u r th .a n d th ree on th e . 10,. T isdale .p1tched_o«|;_to P a lm e r, who c irc led rig h t end fo r tho touchdown.

A fte r a n Illlnl pun t, the Cy­clones took th e dbU on the ir ow n 49 and n ine plays la te r T is­d a le h it end O tto Stone with a 10 y a rd pass on th e goaM lne.

M om ents la te r. Cyclone I jir ry Holton recovered an tlllnl fu h ie on tho Illinois 32 nnd, the next play, T isdale h it ^al<m er for six |W ln ts .............

'riien Iowa S ta te safety Tom E llio tt picked off a pass by Bob Bess and tro tted QS .y a ra s for the fourth Cyclone touchdown ol lJ>e quarte r.

Wl»en F red Jones recovered n fum ble on the Illinois 18, sub- fitltulo quarte rb ack M ike Fon- Innlni passed eigh t yard s to Ray Cotemnn for th e InsC Cyclone

NWtli Arizona

Swofford complete< passes of 12 yards to end Tony B lanchard . 29 yards to McCau­ley a n d 41 yard s to wingback Lewis Jo lley, giving the Tair Heels th e ir f i r s t ' win of the se a so n ._

V anderb ilt w as::stopped 'by~a rugged N orth Carolina defense un til th e ' closing m inute of the firs t h a lf when third, string q u a rte rb a c k -D e n n y -P a in te r ,

T here w ere no knockdowns b u t both m en 'fe ll to the canvas In the seventh round when each Tnlssed: an -overhand-Jab .-T here w as no- c o u n t.'

B i g ^ y o i m n g ^

Second Half Beats Rams

LARAMIE, Wyo. (U P I> - Srtphomore /u llback Jeff Howe ripped off a 47-yard touchdown run early In the second half S aturday to b reak a 3-3 scoring deadlock a n d Wyoming w ent on to trounce Colorado S tate 39-3 In the W estern Athletic Confer-

.enco, .T he stubborn Rnms, who hna

lim ited W yoming to only a field goal In th e fir.st hnlf, collopsed In tho second. Wyoming scored Ihree .touchdow ns, two field g o a ls 'an d n safety In the final

goiiis of 21 yards nnd one of 27 nnd four ex tra points • for Wyoming to move fnio the WAC scoring lead .

W yoming w as leading 10-3 going Into the fourth quarte r when the Rnm s folded.

Tho Cowlmys scored on n 24- va rd Interception by Je rry no rrv . n nlne-ynrd gnllop nflor

: S = & l e = ^ ^Gormnn, a five-ynrd run by

Tops MSU 35-0FLAGSTArn', A rlr. (U PI) —

Th,o_N orthern A rizona UnIve^ ally - LumlMriacHs, behind (he pinpoint, passing of quarterback Ik)bby S tew art, defeated Mon­ta n a S ta te U niversity .1.V0 be­fore a hom ecom ing crowd of 7,0fW Saturday,

5tew nrJ com plelc\l 13 of 20 p a i ia i . . f o r ' 2 3 5 -y n rd s-an d 'th ree touchdowns.

Two o f S tew art's scoring ae ria ls , on« for-'17."yi»rdii and th e o ther fo r in wefo cnught by en d Chnrlle Drown, who J je d .lliQJichoaLpaaflLJ'ecoptlon.rccord fo r one g a m e 'w ith 10 .

safety by Phil Karpuk, who blocked a punt nnil fell on It.

STOP!In’ a* Register

For Free DrawingI l f Troo S loak D inner ^or 2

2n d — 5 G a llon G a t

V S n 'S 76 SERVICEaorWolrTAy*. W.

HUNTERS SPECIALO n A H T r a v e l Q u e ® n P i c k u p C a m p o r p , H ' a n d I 9 V& ' s o t f - c o n t a l n s d . 1 0 ^ ^ * e q u i p p e d t o y b u r l i k i n g . e q u i p p e d t o y o u r Ilk* I n g . „

A N ^ S ^ O D G E -S p r in g s , H a g a r m a n , IdaK o ' :

f irs t , half.jvhe_n M oulton, scam ­pered 48 yard s on a hah^otf. “

Olson found H endren for tw o touchdown passes in the th ird < |u a rte r-fo -p u t'th e g am e-o u t-o f reach . •

Iri the fourth q u arte r. P a lm er countered with a 49 y a rd pass play to end Billy M ikel for" a TD aiid a s ix 'y a rd sco ririg lo ss to end Win Foshee’. w ith 3:S3 le ft in- the gam e.

UGLA-Mauls— Northwestern In Shutout

R O M A N TIC H E A tfN G O ILA n E x c l u s i v e a t . , ^

JOE CLEMENTS O IL CO. 7 3 3-854 6 '

EVANSTON, III. ( U P i ) - M ic k e y Cureton, reeling- o f touchdoW 4i_runi of 61 and .75 yards,- Saturday led an explo­sive UCLA com bination - of scoring backs to a 36-0 victory ov er Northwestern.

Tho favored B ruins tu rned a [Xi Tash— of— fumbles— artd p u s s ' ng in terceptions into’ thT ee-iconng i

ifyouDuyoiisandoraases solely on prics.^.you'ii never, iiuy LubriDiaia Luhricanis

converted cen te r playing in h is firs t g am e, com pleted a 4&-yard touchdown aeria l to Commo- dores ta ilb ack Doug Matthews.

interceptions into’ thTee-at d rives and only once allow ec N orthw estern t o seriously th rea ten Its ^oai line. I t -w as 'the'- B r u ln s '^ u r th consecutive victory of the season and the th ird s tra igh t loss for 4helr BigT en-opponen t_____ __________

D ennis D um m it, UCLA's v e r­satile quarterback , th rew a 58- y a rd touchdown piiss to G eorge •Farm er.-and -tw o-o tho r -backs— B ill Bolden and G reg Jones— ra n the ball ac ro ss th e W ildcat' goal line in short scoring , action.

Our point Is that it Is not the price, but the performBoce -thit .means-true-«conomy^Perfornianc«-i(4he-reuoR^bKjnorainda»>—

==~nleJTareiinlng'L-QBRiPi.A 1 n I'ubricantr-for-all-thrfriubricatio^— rcquiremenij. Ludbiplatb oils and grcaies cost * little morcw—

:rv liitle-bccause o f an exclusive formula that uses a superior 111-' ......................snli-friction insredient..........Case hisioriej show that when you sWilch to LuatffUTB lubrl.

esnls you eliminate parts rcplBeementi and down-time, that

- - ......... ....... . . . _____________ ____ _____ ________ ingte added.up. .they more than iuslify the few eenti more SMOt>

for Lubriplatb products. “ ' ’ ,

JO E CLEM ENTS O IL C O .•Sells The W o rld 's G re a te s t O il & G re a s#

L U B R I P L A T E

Just wait tilt he gets a couple years of droutii.”

E asy fo r them to stiy, s ilting in th e ir nlr-condittened ofTlcej. B u t qu itting farm ing w as o u t o f the

, qucslloii fo r Jay . l t ’« nil he’d ever (lone, all he w an ted to d o , A n d je t’s fnco it, ex-farm ers seldom get choice jobi

scraped together uU h it savings,

The Land Bank ]s local.Slncc L n n d Bank’s objective is t o h e lp fu rm e n by providing needed c re d it a t low est p ossible cost, J o y know # tiiey’il iie lp .lilm w ea th e r th e toug ii years.. T liey 'ro o n hi* Bide.,

A n d in t lie ao o d y cara. J a y In-

Horro wifrom thp L and B ank , a nd b ough t n seclion lying less tiian tw o m llb i from his farm ;

It sure made the neighbors talk.

' a b o u t him . S our grnpes, ])e flg-* itred i O ne even hiVd th e ga lM o ffski “ W hat iinppens w hen wo g e t - -- a couplo y ears o f drouUi', ilnyT*; - J a y h a d th m n s w e r rH e f lg u re d - -

th e re 'd h t aom o b a d W eather* a n d somo’yiarB w hen th e m ark e t

’ w n sd o w n .T h a l’BwbyhefinDnccda t th e L an d B a n k . ,

Page 18: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

----------1 8 , ''nm esjN’ews,7T w 1n palls;'ldah®“ ' -S u n c ia y rO c to lja r5 r1 ^ 9 ~

Orioles Mp Twins In 12 InningsM e tsi® |r ® i^ es^ ^ ^

RAINS CAUSE FLOOD. .T A IP E I . Form osa ( U P I ) -

" rains .spaw ned by

ty p h o o n F lo s s ie c a u s e d m a Jo p ;th e flOQd w at.crs T tin n !n g * 5 . f lood ing Ih ro u g h o u l .tJHls t n p i t a l m u c ^ s 10 fe e t < Jeep-ln sq m o o r N a t ig n a ll s t C h in a l S a lb rd a y .'io ro S s . , '.

“■^TTJiist'TambtlriBVT he firs t hunting story of

th o ' y e a r rca th cs our ears; Seem s like C h arles’ 'F a rm e r ,

. — Jiead basketball c o a c h .a f Twin . '■ .F u llsU ig rschoo lrw ns- 'up -nonh

'seeking elk Sept: ' 20-21 during th e snow storm.

." I t w as So m iserab le and wet th a t I had .lost a ll enthusiasm

. io r , hunting,” Coach F a rm e r re­ports. But Mrs., F a rm e r w as un> daunted and suggested ificy take a .w a lk ,' ju s t to s tre tc h ' their

— ^ e g s ”lf7n b tn ln g 'e lse rR e ln c tan tly■------- FaiJiicI dgiuuJ.------ ——----- ------

L _ th rew his rifle weV his . sh”ouWer and lhe 'couple s ta rted

out. About \00 \iards from , the • pickup there w as a b rush pile and Coach F a rm e r thought the

■ b ranches m ade a n interesting , p a tte rn , alm ost like a n elk’s

head. "Look th e re ,” whp .said-------- p o im in g r '‘'* iriesK 5-U ke-'an ' elk

in tha t brushpile — by (jove, would you believe) i t is a n clk.'l

And about th a t tim e the. big bu ll stood up. Coach F a rm e r un llm bered the rifle and worked th e tx>lt, trying to shove a car*

- - tr id g e hom e a s tho .elk am bled H e w orked th e bolt hard,

th e cartrid g e buckled and he wound up with a shell b en t a l­m ost double.-F iv e m inutes la te r , he had

w as long gone.

B altim ore‘a 4-3 v ictory w as a iwo-'oia 'bunt single by.........................._ . P.1U1B la ir-w ith -tw o o u t- in - th e -12th inn ing-ihat scored-M ark- Belan-

•ger^ rom -th ird-T fi^O rio les-now liavc Q rgam e-edge-In the best- of-five playoffs for a b e rth In the World Series. , •.

filair.- d ra fted -from the-M ew York M ets’ organization seven years-'ago. w as in a slum p when he cam e to th e j) la tc . He w as 0- for-4 w ith a w alk in, the .gam e and-had-tbceoJutsJii-his_last_42

But h e . dum ped along the th ird base line loHed lo a ' sVOp-10 ^cct-frcm thc plane a s both losing pitcher

Ron P erran d sk i 'an d ■ catcher John R oseboro dashed for It but couldn’i m ake a play.

■•There’s no w ay to b ea t a perfcc't bu n t." losing m anager B illy Mai^tjpi. said , and that suniriHed up th e p lay that scorcd BelanRCr, \vho had sing led off Harmon: K illehrcw 's

on . a sacrifice and to third' on an .infield out.

B la ir adm itted he h ad butter- ‘cam e 'lb 'U ie plate.

■■ he said,

Borah Wins T.F.Gioss Country Meet

• This has nothing to do with spo rts except the m en Involved used to be coaches. 'D ii'ry Arm' strong , ex-TFHS Jioopster. A ll A m erican honorable m ention a t M ississippi Southern, head coach

—at-Salm on-t>nd-now-a -P H I> -as»- soclated professor a t un iversity

—o fH d a h o r-a n d -P a t-B e ite r ,—ex*

T E R Q M E — 'I'he ii<irah Uoiisr )1acing th ree men- in the_ top

-0, won the Tw in F alls cross country invitational over th e Je ­rom e .Country Club course F r i­day afternoon whjhTTwin Falls won the jayvce division.

Rnrnh woiinri up w ith 52.DOintS with Twin F a lls second a t 67. -They-were followed by, Hichland a t 118, Je ro m e 127 7 ^o u n ta in Home 147, B utte 149, Skyline 167, Pocatello 169^ Wood R iver 183, F ile r 233 aiid Gooding 260.

Brent .Cleaves w as the indivi­dual w inner, covering the course

. tra c k coach a t Boise High and now a m em ber of the Boise S tate faculty, once h ad luxuri­a n t ha ir. Now they h ad only a minor fringe, b u t they help n a tu re by keeping th a t closely cropped , Anri it ttapDeris tha t

. th ey believe th a t if natu re wafits ■ you bald, be bald. The m ethods

h u m a n - - u s e - to - b e a t - t h e -rap d raw th e ir ' scorn.

So they have decided t o a td t e . a book, but h aven ’t —whether—t a

'itr4 trti> r^cn n y Windsor of Twin FaH s~w JiS-secondr:toltow ed“ bjj W -ad d o u p s , — B utte; Kelley, B orah^H ess, Je ro m e ;-Jack Cop* per, .w w in F a lls ; Thompson. Bortin; M aeslas. B utte; Eng­land. Twin F alls, and Scribner.

In the jayvee division. Twin Fa lls was f irs t a t 22 while Borah had 34. Highlnnd 39. Wood River 165. Gooding S tate 103|-Mountaih Home 19-1 and Pocaiellp 249. D a rro ll-G ro v e s -o f—Twin- Falls w as individual w inner a t 12:45, followed by team m ate G ary

. when"B oy,' w as I nervogs,' _______“ I been .sia^neryous in-.n long H m e.T decided to take one sw ing a n d lhen--1ay . down * T>unc*‘------------------- :---------- :—

M innesota pickcd up only 'four h its; • th ree off s ta r te r Mike C uellar, ov er th e f irs t eight Innings. TWo of them w ere by Tony Oliva.-, w ho , bobbled the b^ill and scored on Bob Allison'.s sacrifice fly for the Twins’ first run.— O liva-then -taggcd -C uella r-fo r 5titv?o:run- fioraecrlirthcrseYeHtK a f te r H arnfbn K illebrew walked to p u t the Twins ahead 3-2 befo re - PoweW tied "U ‘ 1n- n h t nin th w ith the Orioles' th ird solo hom er off. Twins’_ ,s ta r te r J im P e r ry .

Both team s h a d g o od^hances to b re a k th e tie from th a t point. T he OrJoles h a d runners on first-and.-sccond-wlOi'nontT'OLil in the ninth andrw ith-one out-in the 11th b u t failed both time's to. score . The 'T w ins had the bases loaded w ith one out in the top o f th e 12th w hen Dick Hal! jo lie v e d —M arce lin o ..Io p ez_ an d re tire d Leo C ardenas and

ATLANTA (U P !)—J , C.' M ar­tin 's bases-loaded pinclihlt sin­gle higliliglited a fiv e -ru n eruption ■ in the eighth inning' S aturdav a s the rags-lo-riches New • Y oi.. • M ots- beat" the A tlan ta Brave's -9-5 in the opening gam e of iliO National League’s championship series..■■ T h e . E;a&tein Divisiuii cluiiiiJ M ets w ent into -the' eighth tra iling 5-4, with. A tlanta knuckleballer Phil Nickro hnv^ Ing retired ,lO .of the prcyip ba tte rs ., It d idn’t - ta k e .-them long to 'catch Up—with the help of twoB raves’ erro rs .______■ 'IJiird 'ba.sem nn .W ayne. G ar­re tt led o f f with a soft double d'own the tiiird bfise line th a t bare ly eluded Ciete Bouer!s glove and tied it up when Cleon. Jones followed w itlua single to cen ter. - _ *.

Jones, m oving to socond A rt Sham sky’.s th ird hit of the

p lnch -h ltter“Johtt:R oseboro.B elanger led off the 12th w ith ^ ro u n d e r toward th ird tha t

sk idded on th e . infield and bounced off K illebrew’s glove. K illebrew , playing th ird so the Twins— could—also— get— Rich R eese into the lineup a t first,

■had a touch chance on th e plav a n d i t w as ruled a hit.

A ndy E tchebarren t h e n -------■ficed -Belanger.- t a . second ^ n d B uford erounded out to short--'■ 'I Leo Cr"-*------ --

: ..thirds

__,___ .Thc. nnm e .of It will- be -"1 .ness — and o ther form s of beau ty .’’

•Since.both a re ex trem ely witty and Intelligent m en, this could be one of the g rea t thigh slap- p ers . D r. Armstrpng'-s cu rren t

—------assignm ent-l5-a"C hB pter-called••Cop out,s” while B eitor is work- o n . ''a a v ic ^ (> the neo-b'ald^"

T he Unlvcr.sity of Idaho be- lleves th a t this y e a r ’s frosh crop could bo tho b est In the school’F hlstorji. A thletic dep a rtm en t of­fic ia ls believe they have "tw ice a s m any athletes” on the cur»

•' r e n t frosh club a s - th e y d id a y e a r ago and tho V andal top 22 has nino. o r 10 sophom ores

----------th1.i- fa l|.- ■ W hoth er-irw lll-b cn tth e crop of Tim T-avens, Ray M cDonald. .Tpo McCollum. Je rry ' Ahlln, A1 Busby, e tc ,, rem ains

- to be seen.. However, you can be an. eye

w itness to their f irs t oiitlng as the Vandal frosh m eet tlie lr ISU counterparts a t B ruin Stadium Oct, in In the opener for l)nth chihs. This will ho tho Uilrd onnua) Shrine gam e.

. Kudos .to Dilvo Killon on the fino Itlnho open tourney nn<l specifically tho p rogram they cnmnllcd for the ovciil. Ho tonchPtI all the bases w ith it,

l l ie ro w ere, we hear, nome disgnintled Pocatolloans liist

....... '• -.S tttunlny night even thhiigh I.StJ

_________? ^ rm T .lf l- fa l tJy -cn n il, rr.p raflcn tn tlo n tnrn<«<‘H'lmi plunn at

B lair w as then un with F r ank Robinson on deck-so Perranos- ki, w h o -cam e o n -in ~ th e -n in th a f te r~ P o w e ll hom ered and Broolcs Robinson singled, had no choice b u t to pitch to him.Mlnsctoti Balllmor*

• b r h b l a b rh bTover ef ■* D 0 o Buford Jf 6 0 0 Carrw lb 6 0 10 Qlnlr ct S 0 C Killebrew 3b 2 16 0 FRohin.»n r t 3 I I OUva r( 5 2 13 Powtll lb. S I 2.Alllion.if___ 3.0 O.MlRphin<n.3t._6 (HUhln«ndcr U 1 0 1 O'llendrlcki a 3 0 0 neew Ih < D a 0 Mellon ph TOOCardtnor»i—5'OOOWfltrp-' -----iO-OOMitten'ald e 4 0 0 0 Snl[r\nn ph 10 0nosel>oro e 1 0 <1 0 Lopct p 0 0 0I'crry p 3 0 « 0 Hill p 0 0 0---------ijk B 1 0 0 0 Johntoo 7b ‘BOO

Dclanser u S 1 1---------------- ChjtHarr-----S-J-#

May ph ’ " "

Camas County Drops BlueD jS ils Z 3 8 lO Z L _• D IE T R IC H -R ick G lcsler aii^ M ark Leo each accounted for two touchdowns F rid ay a f t e r - noon' a s tho Cam as County M ushers dropped' D ietrich 3fl-0 in a Snake R iver 8-Man Confer- cn.cc gam e.

G leslcr s ta r ted th e scoring In tho first period by running 25 yard s for a touchdown. Bauch- e r-ra n H n -the ti^p-point convcr- flton. L ater In tlio period the Mushers racked up two more po^it.s w ith a safety.

Bailchcr caugh t a 50 -"y n ra strike from Giosler in the sec- npd «iiiarter, w ith Ashm cad con­verting for two points. M inutes la te r A shm ead scored from 15 yardfl-out,— - --------

M ark l,eo’.i two scorc,^ came In U»o th ird q u arte r, when ho cauglit u .10-yard TD pass, with Ashiliead cnnverling, then pick­ed up a fumble and ran .10 yards for another score. G lesler tack- cU n ^ th c final convorrilnn.

'i h t M ushers won their third fitraiftht conference snm e, wlille D ietrich bowed for the f o u r t h htral|;h t t in n \

. ............. the a irp o rt........:h p - tn n m -|in irm (m frr iw 'crn\virRrroled |t wllh applause, Then n n e . o f . the p luvers sliick out Ms hand and said "O kav, fans, W herit'i ihn m oncv,” Hut It onlv go t to n fpw and., It was har<1- ly ,roinoml»orod as th^ parties waxed long Into the night.

J'Jf^tlQ-quarlorhack'-fifevr OV «on, tho sam e one the Vanilat crowd booed In tlio f irs t ' half la s t Salurdn\| and Ihe sanio one who | i fourth In NCAA m a |o r rollegu passing this w eek.'fiprnt the hi'rt two I'rltliiv’H In |raclinn < uo to n hn<! h a rk : *'l'he tra r- ti^'n', hoprfiiliv, relieves the pres- niirn enftiigh so lie can play .Saturdiiya, * ^

ScoresG lillh SrhnnI

Twill I'nil. « li>(''<' H, illuMnnil II ,

•II"'*" S’ . H«innn U

K i S ' i S C ^

Cal Gets Twotale-Scores— To Top Rice

DF.RKEI.UY, Calif. ( U P l ) - .Slevo C urtis pftsned II) "yards for thu wIiHiliig toiiclulown 63 Bncnatls' from iho 'e iu l 'n iul Calirornia added an iniiurahco scorn 21 necondH latur Saturday for n .11-21, victory, over Rico.

Curl Is recently gra^lualed from tliird string to first »lrl)ig (jiiarlerliack. tlirew the wlnnini T P puss lo J im CnIUIns to wlm up a 41-yard drive and the Ciolden nca'rri padded Iheir lead wheri llnohacker Paul M arty r Interceptrd a i)aKs and ran It Imck 24 yarilfi for another score 20 secontls from tho .fln a t gun.

'h iic li fumbled tho nnll Away four tim es, w ith -th ree of Ihe fund)les resulting In touch­downs. HIcA sco rrd w hat appeare jl- t o ' bo tlio winning score m idw ay tlim ugh the thIrO niTiod whi'n quarte rback Stalile Vincent sw ept left end two yard* for u 21-17 load. - i

I'ollowlng n flu rry of fu'mhlos tlw Owls hailed .n inn ing -bacfc Hob Diirhy ono foot from i l » goiil line on fourth down witli alioiit lliree tniiuilns . left and Kirn seem ingly hart tho 'gnmo lockcd up

il r a v c s — catcher D id ier th rew to the wrong base, .scored the go rahead-run when Orlando Cepeda threw- into the d irt a t home_, a fte r making putou t a t first;. A n intentional w alk" loaded th e bases and Mets m artager Gil Hodges, going for .broi<e, pu lled l—2 5 -^ m e —winner—T om Seave r and gainbled .on .M artin

M artin -laced a h it to cent’c r, scoring tw o.runs.vand when the ba ll g o t aw ay from Tony Gonzalez, ano ther run s c o re d ^ giving tho M ets four unearned runs in th c ir .b ig inning. ,

I t-w a s -a seesaw contest-until the top of the eighth. The; M ets scored tw o. runs in the se.cond. The B raves scorcd a run in th e second and w ent ahead 32 with a p a ir in the third.—The—M ot's—m ovcd~ back—In' front 4-3 in the fourth when Bud H arrelson h it a two-out trip le w uh two team m ates aboard . Gonzalez ■ tied, it uj) fo r the B raves w ith a hom e run in th e fifth.

The B raves took the lead fo r

Bulil Grabs 15-13Over Emmett.uscd-up-six-minultis_wlth_a..lona m arch in the closing rriinutcs F riday n ight to clinch a 15-13 decision aver tho big E m m ett Huskies.

—Rlchert p __Ojd ph“ rn o-orlcd froth the ir eight to the Em-

I n e r t ' lO.—cam e-oftor—a —Iiu sls i th re a t but saw to it that the v isito rs had tim e for no more.

E m m ett scored jn the firs t.................. . ............... ...... ......... .period after, a one-yard punt by

naitimor*; 1. LOD'Minn«»oi« 5. D»iiimote Buhl gave -the. Husklc's' posses­sion a t the Indian 10. Woodall scorcd from the one and Mike TTowardTtlckeil-lKc point-after.

Buhl (Struck twice Into In the sccond period. Ben.Allen scored from the ono with 2:55 left and MnhloTV H am m trqu ist h it John M ulrhead for the two-point con­version and an 8-7 lend. E m m ett fun^bk'd on the first play a fte r the klckoff and thu Jndlans quickly m oved 38 yards to tho two. The touchdown cam e on a pas.i from Allen to M uirhcad and Tim Hudson converted.

'A p a ir of Interference, calls helpetl E m m ett to the Indians five-yard line In the tliird qunr- te r and D ale Jones scored, B ut Diihl stopped the two-point run off tackle and rode that differ­ence to victory.

l,npM 1-3 1iiAii w : j 0

I'prry pllrtifd In T hilleri I Wl'-Up«i, T J ;» ,

Irish Go To Air. ToppleMSU By 42-28. SOUTH BEND, Ind. .(U P 1 )~ Jo e Thclsm ann, who h as failed to sp a rk o s an ai^rial npeclnlist up to now, passed for 2iM yards and throo Inuchdownn Saturday in a 42-28 Notre Damn v ictory over ruRKcd Miclilj'an State,

'n ic iam unn had. two prim e receivers, hitting sophoiiuire split end Tom Gatewood 10 tim es fo r IM yards and one touchdown niiil ^onnectlnft to fullback Bill Harr. Kcvea tim es for 70 yards nnii one _touclv

F o r tho gam e, T lielsm ann h it

had tw> pasKos intercepted.H arz wounil up ns tho g a m e 's

lilg li Hcorer as Iw lcit'he i)lllilgoft over . from tho ono lor toucluJowns to tolal 18 jxjints, ' In Iho Kccond period, Don

H Ighsm lth <lrove over froiji the five to give tho Spiirtans a 14-14 tio, hu t-thuruaflotv-N otre Dumu sim ply wldf'iied the gap de.'iplte o .15-vard-toiielMlown pns^t from 1UI1 'I 'r lp lo tt 'to fiArdon Uowdelland a fm ir-yard scoring d aslf fiujiNoj, o f hisby E r ic Alien,

Auburn.ClQl)li(;Ea

Kentucky 44-3A U nU RN , Ala. (m > l)-S onho .

m ore quarte rhaok I’a t Sulllv r- pafljsed for four loiichdowns ai « ■...yutvrun -A ubura . dufensu lim ited K entucky to n field Kt^ai Snlur<lay ns the 'Ilgers cloh- hered tho Wildcats for « 41-3 S outheastern Conference win,

Sullivan Jilt iinothcr nopho- m ore, T e rry neaHliiy, with t^vo of Iho scoring touchdowns nnd tossed to ’Connlo Freriorlck nnd MIkn M urrlof, for two o ther flCoros.

HimiiIng bncU MIckoy Zofko raft Ihe ball-for llfi vartlN and a loucliflotvn Junior fullhaok Mack CriAvford scored pn one- M»rd p lu n se , .

Purdue Halts Stanford By 36-35

i.Ar-AYr.riE, ( U P l ) -

flVfl" tniic'hdl^wn ‘ pa'f^eHV'IhTf'laiit only 3',OS M \, but hl«

conversion pass to Cireg I’ennor which pulled Purdue to a 30-35 ■CltfM inngcr-vlctory-tTver-fjtnn- ford Saturday,

’i’he v ictory w as the third In as niany gamiLs f»r the eighth* r a n k e d Boil

m l: ; . ......InK'-fltreak.The 'Ind ians hud Ihelr heroes,

too, ' Including Jlin I'hinkett, who ' hurled four touchdown

ids throw s wuro intercepted an<l th n 'f l iu it theft, pickeil off by <Iefender Mike Renle with 2:40 left, spelled curtains for .Stan

Page 19: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Sundoy, October 5, .1969 ‘ Ti.m8s*Nows, TwJh Fails, Idaho . | 9

a r e i< |a lic > O p e n I ^ a dDefendingChamp Asizona State Uses Big ThirdMoves To WithinOne Shot (if Lead

F orm er cham pion Tommy lam afeu r, and pros E riiic Schnel-

Quarter To Smash BXII By 23-7

W illiams o f Brigham Cily and —Jon W auss of Salt Lake City

moved into a tie a t i4Z“ f o F ^ e lead a t .the com pletion of the

•sccond round of th e 1969 Idahoopen golf tou rn am en t.' __

-----^W iHiam s-w as-the-only-profes-• sional t6 m a tch p a r as he added

a 69 to h is opening 73 while Mauss had 72 to go w ith his

— 7 o : o f - f i i d a y ^ . . ________ _Defending cham pion Bill

Downs, .now play ing o u t of Og- « den, had a 70 Saturfjay to stay

one stroke o ff th e pace while •* Boise- a m a teu r G ran t E rickson,

the fijs t-day lead e r a t 69, was tied w ith p ro fessiona ls 'A rno ld Haneke of Boise and .D ^ve Gib­son of Billings a t 144.- -

Dick Sheppard, another-B oise

Utah Claims 24^6 Verdictj:; O W U T E P

E L PASO, T tx . (U P l) — A keeper pray by , quarterback

— R a y -G ro th - th a t-w e n t-8 0 -y a rd s aiia an 89-yard intercep ted pass retirrn S aturday night gave

___ U ta h -a -2 4 -6 —W ostcrn -A th le tic— Conference-win ov e r the Univer­

sity of T ex a s -a t E l Faso;Groth w en t 80 yard s through

the righ t side of the U T E P line thn-ftrct-^jm n-h^-gnt- hnll_jn the sccond - h a lf .~ ~ A ^ o r t tim e I 'a tC rT n efen slv e b a c k . Norm Thompson in tercep ted . a Bill C raigo pass and retu rned It yard s for a .touchdown.

Clint H arden ’’fiit tigh t end Dale N osw orthy w ith . a 11-yard

— p a s a - fo r - U ta h 'a - f l r a t - s c o p e - a n d M a rv B a te m a n k ic k e d a 39- y a r d f ie ld g o a l f o r t h e la s t e c o re .

— ;-U T E P--1tfD k.- th e lead- In the second q u a r te r on a.88*yard d rive in w hich Cralgd h it three stra ig h t passes to se t the ball on th e 16. Gene ChiWs w ent over from th e re on a draw

** I ^ r d e n .cam e off the bench tc bring U tah back on a 72-yard m arch clim axed b y the pass to

J^osw orthy.

Houston Rips ~MafoonsTiT

74-0 RoiilpHOUSTON (U P l) — Sopho­

m ore (luarterback G ary , Mul« " llns th rew touchdown passes of

51, 42 and 12 yards, to spilt e ^ Elm o W right In tho .scccMB qua rle r S aturday night to lend the U niversity of Houston to a 71-0 v ic to ry over Mi.ssiH.slppl State.

It w as th e w orst defeat In the Duildoga' 70-year history.

Fullback Ted Hclskcli .scorcd two louchdowni on runs of one

■ a n d 25 y a r d s - a n d - r u n n in g b a c kJim Strong scored unnther on a nine-yard .run before the HouHton second team look over In the th ird q u a rte r with the score 45-0.

Robert Newhotise, the No. 2 fullback, a lso scorcd twlc« on runs of 71 and one yard and led nil ru»horH w ith 24S yards on 23 cnrdle.s. Tho ntjjer touchdowns wefo hy sccnnd-team running

, buck WilUe Knhoi-ts on -n 21- ^ a » l run »nd No^

snenk. '

-SxracnaS-RoniEaPast WisconsinSvr,d e ft

MADISON. Wl«„ ( U P l ) - •acuso riddled WlHtionnIni fensu nfnioiit a t ^ I I nni

iitymlod tho UndKorH' offcnso to hand Wlnconfiln its Iflth consc' Cfitlvo ]o»s 43-7 SiUurdJiy.

I t wnn thn 23rd wInlCNS Rnme In Buccc'sHion for Wlnc^niiln, w hich hUN n n ly 'a tic w ith Iowa In 1007 to flBflo the drnughl.

” O rangem en acorcd_!w,lce

In T h o fo u rlh ,'T n d o n co ^ n tho th ird . I t won .Ih e ir socond

, victory In th roe siortn.

Tennessee-Routs-Memphis'^tate

■\MEMPIIIS. Tcnn., (U P D - Qvmn«rbtt?k Rohby Scott rttn fniL'ono tiJuchdowji and jWHwd

■ fO r'iw ft o th o rii'S u tu rd«y nlHht tO -paie-T enhessB o-ln ■-BcorlnR barrag e th a t buried out-clasriod

. croi*.s<q(o rival Memphis Slola

Scolt onpned th e Vol ficorlng with nn. 82-v,trd bomb to fleet w lngback CoHlor. McClnIn Iohi than flv« m lnulos Into the «»m e. _ _____

. T E M PE . Ariz. <UPI) - A r i ­zona. S tate University scored th ree touchdowns’ within a fonr- m fhute period m ld w ay .Jn .,th e th ird q u arte r ' to b re a k ' open a

W estern A thletic Conference coixtest and defeated Brigham Young 23-7 Saturday, nighl. .,H ie .S u a .D ey iU ,Jco d in g 3-0 a t

halftlm e, took th e ' sedond halfuiiu. lii

te r J r . , Ogden, and John Peter- son of Sun V aliev.' w ere tied

Twin F ails senior J im Pack­a rd w as the on ly 'o ther m em ber of the 12S-man field to reach

ir and-that-pulled 'hini-to-w llh- th ree shots o(-«thc am ateur

leader Erickson.- A1 Jones of Weiser, and Tee. Branca of Salt U ke_C ity^ared-147_w ith.P-ack-a r d . _____________________ .(------

A t. 148 w ere Phil M cRoberts, Twin F alls am ateu r.' and pro­fessional Keith Stanwood of On­ta rio ,’ while Dave B errett o f Blackfoot, am ateu r Curt Thom­sen of T\vin F alls, Lynn West- cott of Caldwell and D. Robinson w ere jam m ed a t 149. -T h a ,a u e -L a k 0 5 Country club's p a r o f,Q , helM d Friday_by_wind and both days w ith specially ;rown ' “ ttger” grass, - hasn 't leen b ea ten .'P e te rso n turned in , two-und^r 33 on the backside

to win lap m oney for Saturday. P ack ard Had a one-undcr 34

SanJDiego- Knocks Off

com ing back to lashion his evenp a r-ro u n d ,—:---------- ..

Tho field .-was sliced to the low 60 a t 161 for tho final round Sunday. It appeared th a t play- - - - w ith -sco re s from about 153 up. would p lay In th e .morning, sta rtin g a t“ 9 a.m ., w ith tf i lower scores -going off In the afternoon.

(monimi) i.m.—Tooljen and J»ck«m

9:07—Okrciirom snd Pcaie t:l^Maloti(, Ctoiby, ind Smllh «:«-R»dcIi/r. »nd V«rd«a

9:30—Purvei, Bender, and Raven

_S A N -D IE G O -(U P I)-F u llb ack B ra J /-H ^ b e r f r—ran—for—three- touchdow W the last breaking a fourth qua rte r .tle, to give the San- Diego Chargers a 21-14 revenge victory. Saturday night th a t knocked the C incinnatiB engals out of the A m erican ___Football League W estern D lvl- jaunt. slOD—le a d .—_________ ‘

H ubbert, recovered., from e ig h t-y ard s over right tack le .in e ig h t yardsbv e r right tackle in th e f i r s f '- ^ a r t e r , two ove'r c en te r in the second and one over cen ter in the fourth to s e t a -C h a rg e r touchdown record .

HW -finn| p in-l^amp—nfler__ho-scam pered 24 yards around rig h t’ end to ' the one with the sco re tied 14-14 with 9:55 left in the gam e.

T he .loss knocked previously undefeated Cincinnati into se ­cond__place__behind__Oakland,

J:U—Ceriello. Bullerfleld. and JeUrlet — S:SJ—QirenittCT.—Jerrnaimnin’atcFlI

10:00—Roiholt. BaVer. and Schnciter JO:OT—Rcnthiw. Spicki, and tlarrlion JS;lS-^Stroup,- Kllkn. and Reed J«:n-Ander»on. Milan, and Urwttiai. 10:30—Thomien. Sower, and Ilonsberger 10:3^1)011,' Kramer, and Carter

(afternoon).1:00—NIehen, Rohinton, and Kinicy - tl:07—Sunwo^.-.Thomten, and.BurEs 1:!S—McRobm*, Berrett. and- Weicon l:J3-Sheppard. Packard, and Dr.nfa 1:3I^Sctinelter. Felerion. and Jonei l:l^-Mau■s, Erlckion, and Clbun -I;4^WJlllam>, Dou-ni. and Ifaneke

-F ir it - Allereatar'-COTgrMintan ' J. ,,-p;

which w as tied 20-20 by M iam i. T he Bengals' rookie quarter- ack • Sensation. . Greg Cook.

m is ^ d - th e gam e-w ith an a rm in jury . His replacem ent, Sam W yche, sta rted out like Cincin­n a ti w as going to repea t its-34- 20_ u p s c ry in -o f . two-weeks agooy er t he Charg e rs .,

..’yche needed only 1:41 of the firs t qua rte r to bounce into a 7-0 lead a s he handed off to J e s s Phillips Ipr 49 yard s to San D iego’s 26. He then passed for 10 yard s and gave the ball to Speedj; Thomas on a reverse for the rem aining 16 yards.

EootballScQres^

Montana’sGround GameBeats 20-M

OGDEN (U P l) co u p le j its crunching ground

im e^wUh early W eber. S tatem tstn-. .................. , _____

20 - 17 setback in the BigSky Conference opener for both schooln here S aturday night. -

The undefeated Grizzlies builtup a 17 - 3 first half m argin and then, hung o n 'to grab the c rucial victory before 11,043 fans in W ildcat Stadium.'

A poten t running gam.e led by Les Kent, Arnle B lancas andCiiscy Reilly and n pair of field goals by Dan-W orrcll proved too much lo r th e W cbcr club to handle.

F or M ontano, the clincher cam e In (he cln.sins seconds of tho th ird period when Worrell kicked a 30-ynrd field goal to lx)ost th a Grizzlies' lead to 20- 10. _____ -

LSU Shatters Lucldess Baylor 63-8 ,._B A T O N -R O U G E .Jji..{U l? lH

lioinurii_Aiidy_lIumlllon-iccr« ------------------ ~ a h d ful

urday nlniit, powering ISih rank­e d Louisiana S late to a 63*8 win

■ JiuapwrtiircirMlUtj lllUm on, ftillhack A 11 • n Siioruy nnd holfback J im W est, coupled vWth seven ex tra points by kIcklnR - iipetloilst“ M ark loimpkl>i-And-a-sa(oty/.round(Kl out tho T lgcr scoring.

B aylor's lo n e touchdown cftme on n 15-yard pass from quar- toriiaok SI Southall to flanker Je rry Smllh with- 7:21 left In tho sccond q u arte r. Southall con­nected 40 Sm llh again on a pass for the two jM)lnt conversion.

.. Coli y o u r loca l .

WARBERG'SM O V IN G & 'STCftAQB

a g a n r 7 3 3 -7 3 7 1

kickoff a n d ,''w ith the help of roughing the passer and pass in terference penalities -. against B r lg h a m -n ’ourtg, m arched 73 y a rd s With Art- Malone .scoring on an 'll'-ya i'd run. •. _

T he Sun Devil defense held~ ,-------S ' — ^ > B righam .Y.ouns on the firs t scr-

M A Y i f v o l c JL \ m \ ^ of downs after the kickoff a n d —Lenny—B a n d le - to o k —the

• Ipunt on his own 13 and-sprin t-

downi cam e in the final period when the Cougars w en t'"80 jvirds in s ix ..p la y s . Second string quarte rback M arc Lyons

................. on a qunr-

BamaRallies To Overhaul Mississippi

icrback sneak -after the touch-

cd -87 -7ards 'fo r"A rizona-S ta te 's t h r e ^ c c o n d “ louchdOWiT‘tfr"a m inute

and a half.- Two m inutes later, a f te r the^ C ougars again were forced to 'p u n t, p a v e Buchanan took the b an around righ t end

the firs t p lay from scrim- 40-yard scoring

B righam Y oung's only touch­

down was, set up b y 'a G5-yard pa-ss from Lyons to Ed Nlqhnls. i NicholFv^was—cau g h t—from —btuf. Hind a t 'th e Sun Devils' four by Seth Miller.

The only score in- a nip- and-tuck firs t half w as E d G al­lardo’s 37-yard Held goal.' _ G a Ila rd o ^ -b o o t.m id w ay Jn .th e second q u a rte r cam e a f te r the Sun_X)evlls_had_ d n ivcn_ to_ thd B righam Young 23-yard line fol­lowing a -recovered fum ble by sophomore, M ike Clupper.

two one-yard runs b y Johnny Musso and a 17*yard dash by Bubba Sawyer. Mike Dean kicked three crucial extra po in ts., • ■ . - •

‘Archie Manning, M ississippi's

hand in all the Reber scoring, running for one, tw o and IJ-

BIRMINGHAA^, Ala. ( U P l ) - mQ uarterback Scott H u n te r - hitflanker George R anager. w ith a 15-vard.: touchdown—pass— with 3;42 left to give A labam a a 33 .32 v ictory over M ississippi in a nationally tele-vised th rille r ■Saturday, n igh't. •

Hunter also scored on a one- ya rd run and his passes se t up

for the other ng kicked two ;d h is th ird for

T D sr~ P c rry ~ K PATS but miss the difference.' The I7th-ranked Tjde, on the sh o rt'en d of a 32-27 score'wi_th 7:15 left to play, began

SalvageThe annual Richfield Ca­

nal tro u t salvage operation will be conducted b y the -Idaho F ish and G am e De^ '

ncsdtiy, announces Doe Hil>> be rt. • , •

Thp canal .was expected ^ to ho sh i^ down Sunday, The

- f is h 'ta k e n froip the canal a r c rep lan ted in o th e r near­by natural w a t e r s . ______ ____ :

combined . air.!*and-. groundju r d m arch I t h the wlrid In i ts ’ face.

Huskers Bury Gophers 42-14

MINNEAP0LIS*’(UP1) -:-Half- b ack Je ff K inney -ran - for two touchdowns and passed for a thhrd Saturday to lead N ebraska 1 to a 42-14 v ictory over Minne-! so ta .

Spo tting a~ 7 ^ first quarter! leadi Ihe Cornhiiskers scored tw lc e _ in th e second period.I twi.Q.e_Jn_the-^third"'and again; n L _ th e _ fo u rth _ to ra ise_ tn c ir! reco rd to 2-1.

Miami Oakland 39 (lie) >San Dleio 21, ClndnnaU 14

CoMn*I'-an

Fordham IJ. St.^Johni 9■ r r i^ l o ^ f i^ c S u r o b i r i Delaware » /M a ti. }lKent .<>ia« P . Buffalo •

—ValB-«rCol»al«-ll ----------Penn Stale 17, Kaniai Stale 14 Te«»» A.M.'IO. Army IJ I’enn 31, nrown .2 . . . noilon Collega’Jl, Tulan* H no.1on U. IJ, Harvard 10 Kulieri II. Contell T Maine S5, RhDd« F.iTand T

■SJirlr>»fleld 3 i, Alhrl«ht I ____ Mldwett

.SyraeuM 43. Wdconili

Purdue » . Standard i ,Nel.ra.ka h . MlnneeMa 14 Iowa Slate 41. llllnoli IS Iowa 71. Arliona IS UCLA J1. Norlhwe*!*™ •

SnulhIdahrt SI. MIolMlppI Snuibern II I’lorlda 21, I’larlda Slate (Aul)um M, Kentucky J Northern ,tlIlnoli I*, Marihatl IT Oklahoma Stale 17, Teiaa Tech It North Carolina 31. Vanderblll 21cenrila -4L, Sou’h Carolina

!•

li Slala 1<Tfliai H. Navjr IT

,Tenneiie« « , Memphli SmiylVnd’j‘»/Wak# rsre il 14 New Mialeo M .^ a n m T

-nolet-filate n-Cal-Poly —1dalK> Stale ««, Omaha J . . Cniorado :0, Indiana 1

' Ohin .Slata 41. WathlniloA t4 Oregon » , W,Sll J*

Noftlirrn Arlinna W, Montana Stai Utah 34, UTi:i‘

FARMiCAlEMDAR.

■ «>'• llmai.Naw* fntinSfllat 'dapartm ini (or torT^pl•l• odverllilng ' (Qv*rno» ot yntir lorm »nlt,- hood hiU^^n*wipo»>af

In MiJOie Volleyl ntlvnncs lull- acial low rai«.

o a . 5■ ANTIOUI AUCItpN JIROMI AUCTION CINTM '

A<lv*r1li«m«t)li O dabar i artrf a .Auttianaari Horatd Kioai

, o 'e r . 11PK Icri CAfl.-IUIUY

,AtfY«dliim*n!i ^11 1,0 AuU ltnaarit W«rt, ll ta n , Wfill

*nd W#i»#f»mllh_____ __

o c t ; n •TWIN PAltS COUNTY ' MlfCllLANIOUS lA ll

Advtrlliam tnh Oil, 9 and 10 Aucli»natni W .itl I lian , Wi>ll

' mod M ttu iun llli . . .

TOWN & COUNTRY TREE

SERVICEROGER ROBINSON,

OWNER.15 YEAR S EXPERIENCE

_ _1N_M A G IC_V A LLEY F U L LY INSURED FREE ES TIM A TES

ANYW H EREP h o n . 7 3 3 - 6 0 8 8

B 0 X - 2 i rTWIN FALLS, IDAHO

1969 ;jrOLKSW A6EN D EM O N STR A TbR S'

69 Yellow Karman Gia 69 Red Sedan

69 BlueFasiback 69 W hite Sedan ‘

. w ilh a lr< condilion ing

A i l o f W o rth w h ile S a vin gs w ith B alance o f N «v / C a r W o ro n fy

@ Y o uree W o torJCo .Inc.351 Main Avenue East P h o n i7 3 3 -2 9 5 4

□ u m b p ^ G d c rfre y ’s

IS T O T A L E L E G TR IC

•WT" ;.'P 3«u>n»

"JUM BO" G OD FR EY. CALDW ELL. ID AH O

“A l I l t l ^ t o s G f to tna Stars, above the dust and noise,.. - high enough to view the Boise and O w yh e e mountains, the

— U v i 0 f l : i C 8 r B a t J n - l _ J = ^ o d t r 8 y '8 . * S k V ? * ^ o ™ ~ ‘- r T i n c l u d l n g —

flameless alectric heat a ift air conditioning. ■ ,

His iivingrportl ceiling is,34 foot above ground-levpi. His hom e is .a Caldw ell-built K it mobile hom e, 65 x 12 feet dbubia e‘5<pandD w ith giasscid-in porch and a 40 x 8 0 -fo ot outside docl<, generously landscaped w ith flowers and fall"

■ siirulSbery. ATdovb th a f is a topside sun dock and a 4Q -f6ot

ligfifed arrow, a:iandmari< on highw ay 3 0 east of Caidwali.

. " M y oloctrio heat is clean and c o m fo rtjb le ,'' said M t ^ Go dfre y. " I t 's quiot and dopondable. I've been very s a tis -'flB d ." ' , ‘

, ; - r f s TIMB TO STEP UP t O TOTAt. ELECTRIC LIVINQ, CALt.-^ • '

Idaho POweriGofTlipaiiv

Page 20: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

- 2 0 Tifi'cs-News, T ^ In Fajis/IdoHtf Sonddy, Ocf^ber-5)-1969• - . ' ■“

T ^lev iM o ri Schedules X

, ^ • S u n t f a y , O c t T O e r 5 , 1 9 6 9

2SL-; 7Bi 's—AFL T op lba ll sccs. lhe Now Y ork Je ts c lash .with the Boston Patrio ts. , . , ’

2 p.m ., 2SL, ’/B, playoffs w ith th e New Y ork M ets tak ing on the w cslcm division chan\pions. ’ . . ' ■________

---------------------------

6:00 4 -rF arm Report_2ai^=SdcnccJj Acd:,..

-culture 6:30 5—Sunriso'Sertncstcr 7:00'3—Tom a n d -Je rry

..-.2SL—Bible Answers -- - ll-:-Tom and Je rry .4—F aitli for-T oday

_______ 5—Tom an^d^erry7B—ARrici^Uuro' U.S.y^__

7 :3 0 -S—Baim'ah i 2SL—S a c re d -H e a rt. _ ;

4—Dudley Do-Rifiht — ^ D u d le y DorRig^iit •

.. . 5—B atm an •^ 11—F a ith - lo r .Today

7B—A'RricuUuro USA • 7:45..2SL—F rom th e Cathedral

. J8;«^.2Sl>=CathQdral.of ' Tomorrow

_3--C athedral-ot-Tom orm w .V ' 4—G eorec ofvthe Jungle

- f J I -C a th e d ra l of To- ' ' m orrow ,., , v 5 —LampVUnto M y.'Feet

“ 7B = TTOarat-

'eo tge_ol.the Jungle. 8:30,4—F antastic Four

. .8—F a n ta s tic Four5—This is the A nsw er'

8:.45 2B—Arocrica'S’ Hymrts 9:00 2SL—This Is th e Answer

2B—O ral Roberts • 3—C am era T hree

8----- Builwinkle5—D ay^of,D iscovery *_,4— uU w inkle ;__________^

_ 7B—BuUwinklc_______. . . ' r; n —Herald, of T ruth

9:30 7B—Noirc“ D ar»e“ Footbal:. 2SL--N otrc 'D am e.Footbal

----- — 3—NotTT-DamG-Football—-------- i-6—PilraiTShort— — :—

2B—F ace th e I^ation ■. 4—Discovery ’09

11—Discovery 'C9 ■8—Viewpoint

9:35 3—Tabcrnacie Choir.5—Tabernacle Choir

10:00 2 B -T a b e rnacle Choir, . 3—LDS ConfeVericc

ailh for Tndfty—Gollege-Football—--------

5—LDS Conterencc • 7B—King Kong

8—College Football 10:30 2B—Dudley Do-Right

11—Face The Nation 11:00 2 S L -A F L Football

7B—A FL Football .8—AFL Football1 1 -N F L Football ‘2B—G eorge of the Jungle3—N FL Football .4—Directions5—Eleventh Hour

11:30 3—T his Is The Life.4—Issues and Answers5 -B Y U Footban

noon 4—Insurance Film . .-.I^NPt-Foorbnll------------5—Movie. '" B y (he Light

_______ D£_Uie_Silvcry—Sloon^^-----12:30 4 -T B A

1:00.-I—Oral R oberts ' 1:30 4-H iR h School Bowl

2 :00 .2S ^-B a5eball ' 5—LDS Conferenca

— 1 1 -N F L Football

jA m erican” -3 ‘3(ji2B—A m a te U n M u r

‘3r-Am ateur','Hour ... ....-.5—A m ateu r Hodr '

11—A m ateur Hour - 4:00 2B -C B S Nqws S i ^ a l

5—BYU Footbal! ' .• 'l - C o l I c g i ’Talcn t <(' ■ 4:30 4 ^ ra d I e y - B u n c i r '' ‘^

’ 5—M r. Magoo . 7 6 U- F i l m Spccial .5 s OCL'2SL^ii nday-NCHs.

2B—Land of G ian tj4—Land of Giants 3—Bugs Bunny, R oad Run­ner5—U s s le ' V 11—L assie . . _

, . 7B—Wild Kingdom— 8—Wild-KInadom---------

5:30 2 S l^ W o rld of Disney . TB—World of Disney

8—W orld o f Disney 7SL—R etrospect

To RuiiiL’ With”tD ve------I l - R o b m 222

6:00 2B—Ed Sullivan-S-^Ed-SuniTfftt—

• 5—£ d Sullivan 1 1 -E d Sullivan4—FBI7SL ^B lack Journal

6:30 2SL—Bill Cosby . 7B—Bill Cosby

8 -B il l Cosby 7:00 2SL—Bonanza

2B—Leslie Uggams-.—Lesiie-U ggam s-----

S ^L eslie Uggams-------- 7B—Bonanza-------- ‘—

- 8—Bonanza ,---------H ~ B onanzir— ---------^ — 4—Movie,— Those Magnifi­

cen t Men in T heir Flying M achines" '5—Leslie Ui 7 S l^ F ir in g

8:00 2SL-^Movie, “ The Secret Invasion”7B—Movie. “Now You See

You Dbri’t,"8 - F B I

..!ia—M ission: xrnpossible . J1 —M ission; Im ^ssib Jc

3—M ission: Impossible. • 9:00 2B—Hawaii F ive-0

3—Hawaii FiVe-0 8—M ovie, "'ITiose Magnil cen t Men In T heir Flying M achines”11 -B IIl Cosby .S—Gunsmoko

9:45 4 -M o v ie , 'T h e Boy Who Caught A Crook” l l - N c w s .

10:00 2B—News 8—News 3 -N o w s

I 5—News7SL—N ET Plnvhou.«

— -1 l=:nTovle7-*The-Ja2~ Singer”

10;M-7B—MovIeie'Those-M nsnl-ficcnt Men in T heir Fly] M achines" •

10:30 7B—U tah Football5—M ovie, “ Caslle of E v il”

. *3—Big-.FIsh-Show........H :00 ^ M oyle. “ Subrharipft

'3 - N F L Football 7B—B aseball— .‘TT 8—Baseball 4-M ovIo , *'Tho Vanishing

.± r r r c o m m in r a '! = ___ __11:30 2 S L -J0 0 Pyno 11:45 4 -M o v io , ' ‘Shftnghal '

S to ry"12:00 8—Issues and Answers

''Monday, October 6 , 1969P-";' * 2SL, 7B, 8 — Movie, "C ounterpoin t.” Is a 1368 World

J c u l h r y n J l a S " ^ ‘’"rllon H eston, M axim ilian Schcll #hd

n n,Vn„ 2B — Tom Joncs opens h is new fica.<ion-with Sanim y , Dayls J r . and Jo Anno W orley of Laugh-ln.

•5:30' 2.‘:L -N cws ............2B—Nows3—News

News, I I—My Three Sons

4—1 r.()V(> Lucy 7U-N0WH .

--------- 8 -G hoK I -« nd - M rs. MIII r5:4R 7.S1^0nce Upon a Day C:(IO 2SI.-N i;ws

- -S-N nvs.................-I—Truth o r Consefjuences

■ • .n - N i - w s7H-I.mif!h-In 211—Truth o r Con* H0f|uvnce«K -T h at Girl

5 It .Out------ IT

IcTrt lRiirlnRi= ^ rn n rA crTTsr

le y R w H -----0:30 2S I.-M y W«rl<1 nlid

Wolcotno to It 2n-l.u< ;lllu Ilnll

n -I.u c illo Hull J i-I.uclllo Dull

4—Music ScenoJ T i r W r P l W n d l ? ' CInni 7:ffl) 2.SIr—Mnvio, "Cotitiler-

. point”711—Movie, "Couijlfir- • ptilnt”

' R^Movic', "Counleriw lnt’’ 2 ll-M iiy i.erry Rl-I) (i-Mt«vlM!rry. in -D

, M -M avl>rrry RFI), ffil.--W liiifn News

7ilf^ 44-Nrw I'fopio , 7i3)l ;JI}-rI.><.H!< IXiy..

3—Uoiin Day ' f ' - | jm illy Affnir n - l)o tlN Day •

Triill-l-^-Uivo, Ainoi'Iciin Stylo

. ,2U-Ciir(il .Uiirnctt .■l r(.‘nnil Hurii(;H f;—Mnvlo, ” 'J'ho Chalk" *

(iiirdi'n” ..7.Sly^W«rld P rrsii ,

- II—Carol U uhiett OiOO 2Sl.r-l.m itth-lii

, K—LiiUKh.ln I I—I.jiu{ilvln

2IJ~T om ‘ J o n c a ----- • •CimiHinolto- *

. ■, 4—Survlvorn i, ■ ■ '’i .7.SI/-NF.T Jdurnnl

Oils 2.^1/—tjiiifOi'In . ' ‘■- , H—I.iui|:h-lii ' . .

10:00 2R-Nt'Wa ^. . . 3-Nuw« , : ..I

5—News 7n —News7SIv—Figuring I t Out l l - N c w s 4—P e rry Mason

10:IS 7.SI/—Community A lert'_____ 2 S L-N C W S

7 0 —News R—Now.s

10130 2 n —Motl Sqiinrt '2.SI,—Johnny Carson 3—M rrv Griffin B—Jt)hiiiiy Car.son'11—Movie, ''Tlio D esert

Fox”B—M erv Griffin _ 1 .. 7B—Johnny Carson .......

lovlttrA'A-.NtiyobA ffair” ............ , ^

12:00 5:-B ilrkc’fl Law. lZ :ia 2S I^M ovio , "Tho Bo-iJ

Calil'oriua"GourfRules On Case

.SACr<AMIIN‘m (U P l) — A ntato oourt I'rUlny roj«u;lrd the rccjunxt of San l-'rani-hm achools for iin or<l(T rostriilnlnK Max R afferty frm n firing icacliorB who UNO lildrlilKo Clcnvor' "Soul on lc o " .|n x:WB.

Tlio 3rd illHlrlct court of np- peal.nald It notod on (ho

In (langor In any ciifie.,R afforty, Ihu «lato «iipcrlnfen*

den t of mihlic innlnictlon, apark ' 0(1 the (llHpnIo ^«i(lj,.H loiter,hfi

(0 on Aug, 15, 1(0 c a lk t IkmiIc, TiIoiik with U ro

Joni'N*' iw o nlayw ''Tho Dutch- in” aiKl * 'nu) Slave," obscono profani!.Iio cou rt naid Rafferty n l ed ” thiit Indiv.hhial teiichora j{ht tx) plaoinK Ihoir crcdun-

tlalN In Jeopardy by perm itting I' IhioUh’ UNO fn claHHrooniH.”

ilOPH DOWN WASniNGTON ~ U. S.

priHluetlon j,i fonHtObt «t million jKnindH, fmir per holjnY loNt yea r and Ifl jxir hOlow lOliT, atirordlng to ,Cro^> Ru^KJrllni('.|iuunl. ' , '

^ R K S - A - t O T' 'W rite on.-anything

MOUTHWASH & GARGLEFA M IL Y SIZE /

“P R O C TO R 2 -S L IC B 7

TOASTER

SINUTABSREGULAR

. $ 2 . 5 0REGULAR $1.00

EACH

A Q ...........H'l-.SS'l’-

..................B O R G ,: .............

BATHROOM SCALES

Gillette Techmatic

T B H o ir:WITH ib BLADES .

Reg. $1.79 Special

9 9 ‘

NOTEBOOK

. BEAUTY

HAIR SPRAY

T I A M I I T D N B E A C F T

Capri Shampoo or Creme Rinse

SET OF A RMING WARE

raESfONE^Anti-Freeze

A d JH Io n o I .Cant . . . . i . . . . Each

l Y S O LI P W K T ^

REGULAR.

Double“Bed“=“SirigleXo7Ttrol

Blanket2 Year G ubrantee

COM PARE

A T $16.95

T a n r R E i i r■ For D ry Skin C are

VALU E

n99

F L A S H L IG H T

BATTERIES

VIGRAlt-Myilaminis & M in e ra ls . ..

f A $2.98 Value

Penny-Wise DingsLYJ,*W OOD S H O P P IN G C E N T E R

O PEN EVERV N IG H T

G old Strike Stamps, Too! '7

Page 21: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

••I.'

JL'

■ w ere provided by ferries built along 5nnke R iver and other w estern riv e rs . H ere th e -o ld .S h o sh o n e 'F a lls F e rry moves ac ro ss 'the rtv e r about 200 yard s above tb e fa lls. I t w as the

Sndte Riv(ei- ' . F e r r i e S ; ' / ■ . Made IKstbry

~ T n rB 0 Iv m irB A lR D * J0 N E 9 :— H TImcs-Nbws F ea tu re E d lfo r ,. .. .-

• River', cfdssliigs" presdntcd __som e m ajo r—problem s to the

.ea rly pioneers abd ' se ttle rs o(. w estern regions and Id aho /jv ith . \ • the wide and treacherous Snake

Enterprising businessm en of I the day •often provided the anr ■ •■I swer, however, as they slopped I

.along the old OrCROnJliaiJ and I other early routes to 'tu i ld and I operate Jerries. These f ir r ie s | played an jm p o rta n l'p a r t- in t h e early ^developm ent _ofj m a iLy__

— aro as-an a ofien Feft ^hcirijnark on history by*' p assin s their-

-n a m e s--o n -to -c o m m tfn itie s - th a t^- followed. •

Magic Valley, bccause It'Ms•Iravcrsod by the mighty Snake .

■ and tlie .o ld Oregon T rail had a Targe share of early day, ferry ‘

: crosstnfiff.' LocaJ rccords o/'-fhe ■1__ ^I\vin_EaUs__Historkal_-Society—

show some 18 ferries operated between Minidoka and M ountain Home in the’lote 1800’s and ea r­ly llKlb’s.: Horse drawn vehicles o f t e n traveled m any miles out of their .. way to cro.ss the river but be­cause o( the m orc'dU Iicult mode, . of transportation ferries, w ere lo­cated a t closer in tervals then. '_

na jo r l I n k : i b e l w t K ! i O i o r t h i a n d i - B O U l l i Z s l d e i a c \ l v I ( i e s : b e f o r o - b r ibridges w ere erected . Photos furnished by-T w in Falls H is- consideraTjly g rea te r.torical iSoclety.

Su n d ay , O ctober 5 , 1 9 6 9 , T tm es-N ow s, Tw in lc(aho Af*!,' • ' i .' •'X

:■ . - -- ''- 'tr ' .

cost.Informatiori from th e Idaho

Historical Society's 20th biennial report of 1915-46 shows the firs ts ferry across the Snake R iverwas__th e_ M ark e t L ake—F errybuilt in 1861 near the presenttownsite of Roberts. It provided EARLY. AUTOMOBILE ADVERTISING photo by the Into pioneer ptiotographcr B bbca iim «_

. im portan t..Im k f or ; ^t r nvct — -•--------— *— —■OSS the-Snake-R ivcr-betw cen_,^iQ „ j ..............

ho communitres a"s‘ well a s Sait'^kt^Clty.-U tm i. ■ ■;= --------

Anolhcr Im portant , and early crossing was the E agle Rock Ferry a t w hat Is now Idaho F alls and w as known* a s the town of Eagle Rock during early history, of the a rea . .Here emir gran ts 'o f 1863 w ere able to cro.w

_ the_civcc_iiL safcty_otuthe_lcrry_ operated by J . M. Taylor.

E arlv em igran t w agon trains • crossed the Snake R iver in the

locftl-arCa a t the- fam ed Three Island Crossmg near the present

Conlinued on P ace A-S

t ih c -bo ttom -o t-the photo savs C .-Spcnccr .a t tho wheel.”

' R IV E R S IP E FERRY.'KNOW N as’ the la rg est on the Snake, the building of a fe rry d iverted em lRrnnts to (i new a rea and r an In the v icinity of N yssa w est of Boise, and shipped m ore -T esu lted In a 'c hange In tho p a tte rn o t the s ta te ’s da ’

"~ llvgs tflck -tt»nn a n y .-O tn c r_ lc w y _ ln the s o u ll ie m m atiQ . u l t c n i . .

Now There’s A Steamboat On The SnakeBy M ARJORIE LIERMAN Tlmcfi-News C orrespondent

•*‘L bet thnt'.H the firs t stcnm* hont ride, you’ve ever 'had in Idnhn.'V snid o u r .“ihlp'.s mate,' and he was right. M cmhers. of m y fam ily and 1 had Just been trciited to a fun ride down the Snnko R iver on the stenm-pow-

-'ercd, -piiddlo-oporati'd houc- bc ' longing to Kd V ogd, iViihl.

Mr, Vogel Is tho siinns person ... \vhui-lngcnlnii^l.v th rcnh rs-g rn in

w ith s team engines, drives mule team s n t purudes, collecls an' tlque c a r s ’ nnd slngPcoiicho.s,

: V A))d-l)'aA^n:^lmpoclng^xollectlQa of antique itiacliiiK'rv a t his farm nnrthenst iif Diihl.

~ Ho nlso spent nn i-ntire w inter building nn aullioniic 11 I 11 c Ntorimlioiit which sleiim s down the rivor on .speclnl cxcursionH

afternoon, we wefo delighted to accept. ■ ■

Wo w ere to ld ' lo m eet our hosts n ea r S llgnr’s Thousand .Springs Resort. Wo drove down to the riv e r’s edge, and there It was — a m iniature Ktcnmboot, palm ed w hite w ith black trim , com plete w ith huge sm okestack, large wheel paddles, nnd nn Amerlenn flng-waving nliovo-all. I ts - tw o —opera to rs w ere busily shoveling in coal to get the .steam prcssuru-rU inu, and-M rs. WllUiuns w as cleunlng .off the

lid c(t

— — -^evfem}»ute3r^}.q-^tMm began rising and we wcrii niiiily to Ktart, As hoon as we got on Ixiard, our host pointed out n largo supply o f life ' nre.server JackeI.s hanging in a sling from the ceillnRiv-so we knew there

ha^l h e ld a . f m n n y a s 24 p a sse n ­g e rs . a t o n e tim e .

I’ll adm it a t ' first, » trifio. uneasy a t . the proximity of the huge steam boiler hissing aw ay iust n few . Inches from where We sat. It w as cAnnecied to a numl>er of pfpes nnd thro t­tles In the re a r so we w ere lit­erally surrounded by steam, and . I.. U inuRht.. ‘.'If -fiomollilnc should b rc iik l" Then I realized I-w as lx?ing foolish. Mere were two m en very -w ell-nr(|ualniotl with atenm engines- iihd mii- chincry, who know Just what they wero doing. So I decideii to leave cvcry lh ing . in their cap- nb lo 'hands'-nnd-eh joy 'thorrldcnt

AH thn intricate mechunl.-im making up the hon't's propuhiioti WHS «/ul would alway.s- he a m ystery t») a femlnini> i n j nd , nnt^ jj,Jpy .,j»nfl^ xlej/fil'l, to- a mnn‘3r'A!r*7jTy“httsnnnd‘TCmn rk* e«l la te r when wo w ere watching

“ Doy,. th a t-en g in e sure h t is .a nice p u r r !"

W hat fun to cruise down the , rlvo'r! People -living In houses along" tho riverside ran out to w ave a t us. Sovernl. come out w ith cam eras to take pictures.Our capthin .<)Idn't spare the whislle so no one could doubt wt* w ere coming.

It w as fnsclnntlnR - JookinR — down inti) Jhc! water, I w as sur- j)rised a t the amouiu of^vege*__ la lio n (in ’the botliiiii and sides '. ' l-'Ish of all sizes scurried tliroiigh the green w nler which tu rned crystnl c lear w henever it<-(-OMSi*<l ^nie - of.- !ll<‘ .sp,rlni3a..em.......plying- In lo-tno-rlvci:,---------------

TlicTpadilles chiirncd nwai^ J)e- low us, leiiiving a>lrall of fu’am ..Oiiir ciiuid iilnioHt Imagine one­self sailing down the M ississippion in rivi!r»)oat.''Would la d a r k - ' . ’.- . . .rye rt-g iu n h le r—w H h -ru U le s-f tt— -T»uif i; iN 0 TIiaC K ~SM 0KE rtK r iW !r5 inn te Hrvtfr'atCflmboat----- BlAHdii. b«i1d6 (ho im o K n tO E in v h llihis w rist, or .« southern belle cn iises along the Thousond Springs proa am ong s m a l l ^ o to r . of ilag e rm an Valley

■hnnu flnrf w ater sklors. H ere oasscngcr- Mrg. Mlko r e l i e f

SHADES O F MISSIS.SIPPI RIvorboal dayn are, g lim p n e d by area I 'e s ld o n is . « h d n ta r l lc d (ourlatn when'the H te am b o a l which j i d Vogol, Htihf, hiiii a d a p te d ,(o -< h« S n * k o R iy c r , ro u n d s a b e n d , o n > e flU e s .l)e s |d o t h s b a o k aW A H log iH issensera .

^ol'^ co llector's Itom i w as twIU for h is ow^-,.T I jo b o o t , 'o n e o l m a n y p f M r . .. , .................................................................................. . . ................. ...................e n jo y m e n t a n d l l j a t o f f r ie n d s a n d Iri to re a ied p e raon ii. A lth o u g h m u c h a m a t l e r h a s a c o H e ciI. .(b a a th s ;:«gular s te ^ b o A ts , tbo Snake’i r lv « i te a t U no k s i picturesquft. Snako J llv e r ■(oapiboat*

C A fTA IN AND O W N E R ot the m in(a(ura ateam boar th a t c ru lK fl 8 a «k o . l U m lBL>tl» . • lla se rm a n area, E d Vo8e> c/iecks (he paddle wheel (h a l o|M r»(e« lha unusual e riiK .- v >yhas a collecilort of steam enklpei o pe ra ib g ih re tM q g aacjtloes And o m '

Page 22: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

v 'A-2 Tlrrios.-Nawi, Tw iriTa ll? , IdbHo Si/nday, October 5 ,19 6 9 " - ..I

Identifiable from shape of horns. Billies often km each o ther In ligh ts, and som etim es younger anim als. Black horns a rc a s dangerous as stilettoes. W orkers m aking w inter gam e trend counts freq u en tly 'o b serv e m ountain Eo°t5 on w ind -sw ep t ridges a s high a s 10,000 feet. ' ' '

___ h e c a n b e P R O U b_otthe -se vj£ ea l shelvcs-of trophles-ln— w lth -m a ny-o the rs ^lri'the -a re rto -a s slst them In hbrsemaiisKIplit« hftwio A w n If K n Hidn’t w ln -ihe m — And y Anderson admires aqd 4TH-club_acllvJtles. A n d y, now suffering sclerosis, Is ac-.some of the fa m ily trophies won b y his daughters. Not only tivo as an announcer for junloh rid ing club events.have he dnd h b w lfe -w ork e d-w lth -U io lr-ow n -you n g stcrs.-b u t-------------- --------------- --------------------- ------------------------------------------------------ -------- , --------------------

Hardy Cliff Dwelling Mountain Goat Is Still Found On Original High Ranges

r s € £ S iv e s =

By JIM HUMBIRD .Id a h ^ F ish ^ am c-D ep a rtm ch t_ __Bush pilots som etim es observe Idaho 's h ard iest species -Of big

Added Meaning To-Life-Of Local ManAlthough he grew up In the

—City — Chicago to be exact — —LeRoy-iiA ndyii-A nderson-O Juld

easily p a s s 'a s a typical w estern rancher.. H is " ran ch ” consists o f a sm all a c reag e a t the com er of

. - f i l e r - . A v c n u e _ a n d _ G ra n d ^ wD rive N orth , but- i t is large enough fo r a few horses, dogs,

' goats, £^hlckens. c a ts and the

And}! h a s been heard to say th e re a re two things a t any

—h orse-show — liim se lf-and -thc o ther w hich m ust be removed

. from the b a rn s by plfchfork.This Is a p re tty tn ie statem ent

a s It Is ha rd to recall a horse- shnw In the nast — nr even. a posSe drill, gy m k h an a ' or

-o ther.,.r id ing

Rome and it has been that way ever since.Z3Ii£3ong<ist"t<!rm-ln-oncT3lacc w as th e th ree and one-half years he spen t as an advisor to the. A rm y R eserves in Twin F alls f ro m '1952 to l95Q. He and his fam ily then left for Alaska w -h -e-re—they—sp e n t-a n o th e r s tre tch ' in Fairbanks.

Since m ost of their . assign­m ents h a d -B e e n ouL.-of Ft. Lewis, W ash., and ti>ey hadlived in S eattle for a tijie ,~ h e : ^ th th e posse and before the

na of 2d |d rill w as m ore than underway, he ,was riding beside the possecaptain . ! ......................' W iiyhe-xaplaln' <told> -me> -thero w as only one lead position and I w a sn 't going to get It. He tnld m g tQ SPg w h a i_ l . could

n o t have a hap d in during the p a s t sev e ra l years.

I t there l3 something he likes b e tte r th an h o rscs ,-lt Is young-

, e te rs . • . ,le first a r rived In Twin,

. ... August o n K z ; he has “ b een ^w o rk ln g 'w lth ju n lo rrjd ln g

groups and 4-H clubs.Two y ea rs ago he developed

th e Incurcnbte and cripnllng dis­e a se of la te ra l sclerosis. As he Is no longer able to ride a horse, he has becom e well-known as a show announccr and has con­tinued to w ork on the ground In the a ren a , Riving young

. riders pointers on handling their m ounts. Ho firs t becam e In-

' tc rested in riding club activities because of h is own youngsters.

" I think If you give a child fl horse and tench him to npprc- c in to - th e .an im a l and- hanillo. it p roperly you w on 't hnvo to w orry about-doUnquoncy. If a youngster is cncouraged to show

.the hnrso and en te r compctilion ho will 1)0 too busy to get inlo m uch tm uhln and w ill Ic n rn -a lo t from th a t ho rse,” suyij Mr,

whom ho m arried 27 years ago in Missouri, have b e en .ac tiv e in -f iie -F ro n tie r—R idingjC .I u b. J u n io r ' R iding^ Club of Twin F alls, and local horse show com­m ittees. " • ; .

Andy has also worked with the Twin F a lls County Sheriff’s Posse for_jiuJium liet_of.-ycars. He becam e the ir announcer quite by accident. He was riding a horse tha t d id n 't like the tail position they had been given

had decided, a t the chl yqars-of-sciv ice_ tQ _put_ in_JflL re ti/em en t and m ake their hottie in ? ithcc D enver or the 01ym[{k? peninsula of Washington.’

W hen notice of his retirem ent as p rin ted In a m ilitary publl- itlon, R obert Gillespie of Twin

Falls spotted it. That sam e daync w as on. tne pnone asking Andy to accept a-Jo b In the Twin F a lls Reserve program as a c ivilian and the day after that the Andorsons wero packing fot* th e ir 'r 'e tu rii to Twin Falls, —i 'W a h ad—onjoyad—It—h o r , especially .hccaubv_of thciwon-. derful pedplo, hu t just hadn 't thought of it as n -hom e n fte r leaving th e scrvlce," ho recoil­ed.

On one occasion ho rccalls they w ere moving from o n e a ssignm ent to another and de­c ided .to, visit relatives in Iowq w ith a one day nr few hours' stop in Twin Falls. On arrival they ' hdgan looking up . old friends and ten dnv.'j in ie r left 10 com plcto their trip. The fam i­ly re tu rn ed here Feb. d, lOBl and have hince been satisfied Twin Fails citizens.

Andy a n d -h is wife, Jnckic,

tim of sclerosis, .M r. Anderson ;a';s he is getting involved with the Civil Air P a tro l. H ere he

T b 6 a Bl<*' to vvpfk- wi tli m ure- young people and will not face the strenuous dem ands of horse­back riding.

As for the fu ture, he says he has, no pain , and^^after all the liS rary is fu lf df bo 'oks'and when he can 't do anything flse , he can alw ays read ; At 52. he feels he has a lready had p re tty active a n d full life.

In working w ith youngst over the: years, M r. Anderson said he-and,hl& wife, have often /c lt.po rhaps.thoy_w cre ju st-free baby sitters.

do a s an announcer as the posse needed one b ad lv.-IhaLjtfaa-m y.t i r s t experience.' When 1 nounced m y first drill a t the N a m p a ’ Stam pede and looked o u t .a t the 10,000 people in the stands I thought it would be

■ la s t,” hd added.■ la t - t im o - J i e - h o s .

'But when you find n young- 'hn is in terested in horses billing to work hard and

y f lu J tn Q w .a lL h e jccd a .ls_sorasii

stei

B ecause ho has voUmt'cered h is services to no m any youn- ftlers Interested In horses he has

’becom e som ething of an dxpert, Not Infrequentlji Mr, Anderson

— w lU_accom fVtny_a_boy_j)r_»lrl . t o look nt a hnrso Unit Is for

xale nml <lo his bt‘Kl tf> advise - I h e - ^ u t h ns to w hclhcr o r not

. c lub m em bers look 17 of .the possible 31 nw nrds In tho horse division of the recent district.

!VCnt;' The couplc 's ow n-thildren, two

o f whom a re now grown, have don6 well for them In tlw way o f llvlnn tip to fanllly tradlllon.

"S e vfll'A rM lb lVUII iJf 1i ui>lik i - e nT'■'tiBncB bnrroom 'oftho-ATirtr,r«nii

house, m any o f them won by 1.1 • y e a r * old C arla Andcrsoiii youngest of the family.

. , A .mlrcd army.. mnjor, .Mr.A nderson enlisted In the arm y n t n young ago nftor iitlemllntr

'h igh school and two years' of ' Junior college in Maf|on City,

In 1S40 and served .through W orld W ar II rthd Iho Korean . -w ar- He la .fl .holdcr...Df_bolh tho silver and bronre s ta rs and jipeclnl va lo r aw ards.

D grlng 20 yea rs w i th 't h e u r m y , ho nnw a .Ia rs fl p o rt of the world and firs t saw Twli^ Fi^llfl As flotnethlng of an oanls.

A sslg n o d . ihoro In lOSa, ho droVo from Dolso to Twin Falls o n a hot A ugust oftornoon, won-' d e rin g w h a t he had gptten hla fam ily In to ' b \ | accepting an

■•-•iiBifBnmeTir;-m^lh« .aeV drr of Jdnho. A fte r crossing tho hot d e se r t nnd nrrlv lng In (ho lush

flsld ho. felt lie hod arrived

announcing jun ior, horse,'.shows and drills throughout the area. T he A nderson fam ily Ims nlso been active In the Wood R iver Riding Association, com prised of riding groups from seven differ­en t com m unities.

Andy Is' a g rea t believer In doing things. In A laska he was active In dog -racing, skiing, horse back riding, gold panning, and found tim e to take some off-duly clnsse.s a t the Univer- sUv in Fairbanks.

I^ow w orking Overtime to ac ­com plish n s much a s he can before the lncvitai)lc occurs nnd he becom es a wheel cha ir vie-

one to foster this int9 rest your feeling changes. When t h i s youngster begins com peting and winning trophies or just- turns out to bo a good kid, .you know I f w as worth yoiir tim e,'especl-

organized and overly busy_ so­ciety ." Andy says, _

'gJtTrii~amimrt-wihtgri»Lsw eD U xidges-atL altitudes f tin; ing front 7,000 to 10.000 feet One of a sm all group of cliff- dwclllng antelope, including the E uropean -cham ois , -the- moun* tairi goat is m isnam ed because of its chin w hiskers. The moun­ta in goat is characterized by its je t b lack 'stile tto horns, white coa t w ith lorfg, thickly-matte~dT iairr short-^lcgsi -u n d - ia i t

enerally high-shouldered ' pro-, lie. Such distinguishing features

m ake this A m erican, cham ois m ore coveted each yeai- by resi- dent-and-fOfelgn .trophy hunters,

All of Idaho’s m ountain goat hunting for .1069 is controlled through perm its issued ro w in­ners in public draw ings in Boise, Season dates run ' from Sept. £ through Dec. 7, som etim es con­tinuously in the sam e unit. In sum , there a rc 43-separate goat hunts in . |h e s ta le and a to ta l of 290 perm its.

T here w ere 1,103 a)jplIcatlons, bringing ovCrUII o d d s - to a b out 4:l_neflinst winning a goat per- m it. Applicants for som e hunts w here the te rra in Is not so rough and precipitous found, odd.s running m uch h 1 g h e ngalnfjt them, while others had little o r no corripetition In vir-

M ost mountain go a t'h ab lta t is located,, m ainly on .the__.steep p arts of m ountainous .terrain , w h e re - th e re -h a s -b e e n -le s s -en-

i a n _ f ln i ^re hosp’ii

-ran g o s-a t-lo w cr—a l t i l u d e s ^ o i daj;, the d istribution of “ Oream- nos am ericanus m issoulae" ap­pea rs to be s im ila r to the ir p ris­tine range',-whith only’ the more accessible bands of goats being reduced by clases with civiliza­tion. Although population esti­m ates a re not a^^jlable, there is no doubt th a t m ore than hi ' of Idaho’s m ountain goats '

Ibl?— drainages, w here snow flies, early and hunt­ing' is tougii. ...................

pe r cen t in controlled hunts. In te re st in goat hunting grad- illy increased , aiid additional

controlled -hunts-w cr€ establish* J IChe.

RolrtsTft the Salm on and Clearw ater

riv e r w atersheds. The rest are foiind m ainly in the Pioneer Range, the South Fork of the P aye tte and u p p e r Boise rivers,

'and Selkirk and Cabinet moun­tains of northern-. Idaho.-

H unters w ith skill and ^tamlna seem attractec^ to goat safaris-, probably because of the broken te rra in wi(h its cliffs, ledges, projecting pinnacles and talus alpine slopes, o f ,th e high' coun­try. The Salm on R iver canyon Is one of the deepest and m ost rugged In. N orth A m erica. In

■^om n~placcs-the-dlstanco-from - canyon rim . to floor, is more. than 6,000 feet and the steepness of the slopes tha t droo frQbi high peaks on the edge of the-gbrge cascades s tream s down narrow clefts in c a ta rac ts and w ater­falls, to the river below. Even

'Life History- and M anagement of the M ountain G oat in Idaho." It w as w ritten by S iew aft M. Brandborg, gam e biologist, who

1 ^ p ^ n ts . out that_ frequent jir ro rs

;-hiinler-has* nveragod, o\ statew ide, and

9-in-\ s-pAsi}r 50_per_ccnt i s ‘ h ig h a .s -7 ff

tim e, a crop of 23 kids should be born with the co m in g ' of spring.^ . .

.fr«8ponding=;decrease g enera l goat hunt areas^

w here perm its w ere not needed.A bout 15 yea rs ago the Fish id GamO) D epartm ent publish­

ed a '1 4 0 -p ag e ‘bulletin called.

■ D ea tti^ o tn c5 ~ to mnuniaTn~ goats in '• th e 'g u iM 'o n fd la r a c -“ c id en tsrd isease ,-p arasites ,-m al.— nulrition, s ta rva tion during hard w inters, em igration and preda* tors. They often a rc caugh l by

avalance — som etim es sev* iCral an im als a t the sam e awe* . som e m om ent — and swept to their—d o o m - a t - th e - bottom o f -

the e a r ly literature . For exam ­ple,' the ew e bighorn sheep was often called a goat. Thus, such records cahoot be accepted un- less-m ountain goats-and-bighonr shecD sh a re a common range.

"M ountain goats. In contrast to m ost of ou r big ganje,., ‘ mals, occupy essentially, sam e ran g es w here they w ere found w hen w hite m<>n-first ex­plored th e wM t. G enerally, they have no t bcoh forced to leave their chosen- hOW»'6s 'a S ' h- teSiilt of m a n 's activities, and It Is 6nl;( on a few of the m ore acces- ' Me ra n ges th a t they have been

iins7Studies on the productiveness

of m ountain goats '.have shown th a t an ‘annual Increase of 25 per cen t o r m ore can be ex­pected .In m ost .cases.. This m e a n s - th a t- fo r—evory-lOO-ahl* m als {^resent In-a herd of moun- tiilh gpjus durlng' tiie w i n f e

the slide rock.

T I M E S - N E W S

-Book Review^f^TfOnKUT'nRDCE” Twin F alls Librarian

H »ve you ever hnd a hob kit-, le r \ 'fo r n \)cl? Or raised u wolf cub to udtiH Ktiigd as ii liiiusi! -pel2.±’crlijips io ji Imve had t,i>forclblv feed y«uti|j owls or i:0|ic

blructlviwith the dcblructlve Mintice’ 'tif n pet'Tnven'i' In nny cvf'iit, you will probably enjoy ' '"Homo la ^

Woo<lli, muy llv . In 7 ^ 0 , 1 , J iu t-it-scc in a tn ho n v«;rv popu- louM dOHort. Thu s c o n u n ii i io t m ado any more nulet b y her

,wiu) —fo)ir young Aons ,wlui iiro pans- loimt«.coUcclor34)f_,.nnnkcfl.. la r ; nnt^ilas, nnd nuch — tastes that they -get from Ihclr father who In n m useum diruelor and hvr- j^ to lo g is t,

mUliIcr.honoyfnonn on n'snnkc-collpctlnp trip gcitlnK miiturliil for Vfood-

' doctoral cllttsurlallon, I 'h v lrflrrtt boy nnak(*fi, p '

fiiinlllilr with . f hQ.rllya fto r his first hirthdny. H h m(>- thor, who caino from h non- d esu rt <mvlronnient, had a goo<l m any ad justm cnls tn make, but

Tho ono tlino on r9 Uord lhat flho balked w as (ho time her hujihnnd nKjwd hor to hold open Hio-inoiilh 'or.n gr/iin-SiidfTWhlin ho (ihoved in Homo llvu fiitllt^- snakcB, Ho could no! utidorMiand her lack of cooporailvo spirit,’ Quito asldo from its ,di>»crlp-

tlon of a llvol>( fnnilly and lit uhuRuul pets, Ih o ' book Is u clullghi to read bccannu of tho nutbor'fl lovo of (ho desert and hor very real ability (n yvrlto about II., Sho /nd'nillfl tha tiiio-'ioirRTiot-'iiiaifti^irsTivo-irFInn, l)U( nhn <lo(‘Hu'i ]|^<i a ir idKlonlng, She nltiiKs (lint .....contlniiiil (lim( In unpleasitnl in A mellculotiff houHukee|)Pr, but

sh e. nh'dS-iiYuciriflztflinpcnsQic for these nhorlcom lngs. .Sho will convince any discerning reader of. tho charm s of desert life.- Tilts read er found hlmsell .studying the m aps of (ho Woodin raiK ih ,-iry inK .ta .ruaitc jL - in hli sllgtit knowk'dge of the,.TucKoi a rea . Can thcfu rcullv be lovely wiiodcd canyons with runnliif

lluachunci TTTPJ

been deep in(o (hes^ mountains Sho has tram ped through Ihn canyons, v^'iitched' the wildtlfci ■ t'hn-reeonlod 'hpr linim»Nslons. w ith Arcurncny a { charm . Sho Is a w orthy m em ber of a fam ily o t sclontlsts,

Tho num erous photographs, ( l ip. WinHiln-lToya-iTinli r m t ly wf ( I ip. WinHiln-lToya-iTint

llfKlr-TlPtirrnnrfln-ndded-dellHhU All readers will, hopo that the yea rs have loft untouched their froudoin In tho .desert, and that they ..can -stll]- ortjoy .(ho..(hlngK (ha( m ade theni read alxnit as

For “Ugly Maii”IDAHO STA TE UNIVERSITY,

Pocatello — Chiirlofl l iran . Twin Falls, Is onu of 13 mon coiiipot- Ing in Ihfl annual "tigly m an" rnn tcst a t Idiiho .S(i\iu Univer- sltV .’

'I'he fiig ly m an " will be an ­nounced:, S n lun lay n t (ho .'Spur barn danco. An un-gIaii^r<iiiN co)id conlhsl also

" ....... ■ l,.coiUcSlnnl.s!............. - ............. rsg^ilniid andnam es arc not announced undl Sudirday iilgh(.u d ird a y ..... ..

Choryl Cham bers, F iler, l i In chargo of inv ltatlont.

OR A NIGHT AFTER NIGHT AFIER_y.!jGaT-AEIEB-NIGI=iJ:i^

WITH A

QUEEN SiZT MATTREStFROM

YOUSAVE

fVERTOrWATTRESSFACTORIT 50%

J—326 2nd AVE; SOUTH

TWIN FALLS

to

- 1 ' - . ■'i-- •

Page 23: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

A i e ^ H i s t o i y ^

Snakie Riv^r iFerriesConirnucd F rom J»ago A-1

. to w n -o r Clcnrts F erry . ' , EspecTally in hinh w ater sea­

sons this \vas difficult, and dan,- •gfrrous and befprc long a ferry .w a s built j u s t ' , dowristrcQm

waRons »«>u1d cross- in jsa fe ty . . F irs t w as P ayne’s f ’erry , op­era ted In the vicinity of Salmon F alls near - H agerm an. Many others also opera ted in this vi-- d h ^ [Tcstaiplislied- crossing p rac tice in the

• - vicinity .'. O thers' included ' the Johnson F e rry crossing near the Owsley F e try w here ._the old

, Owsley b r id g e 'w a s la te r crecicd. Lewis F e rry w as be tte r known

- and operated for m any years nea r Thousand-. Springs. The Owsley F e rry .' ju s t aboyc Sal-

_mP.n_Fa|1s .wf\S-patt-Of-the_Qvcr;^ ‘ia n d .^ ^ g e R o u te ..

■ Oilier ferries operating In that g eneral a rea over ■ - - years 'in c lu d ed the

, ry. operated by the E rlob broth­e rs ju st below the Lewis F erry ;

- - i J r ig g s -F c r ry a n d -Systcr Rerry — b o th Jn -lb e -C lf ia r-L a k c -rc g lo n ;-

Drailsford F e rry in the same general vicinity and F ricke's F e rry th ree-quarters o f ' mile oust of King Hitl and -located on a . farm owned bv a Mr. F rickci and Glenns F e rry that pas.<wd it s n a r n e - 'o n - . lp ^ ^ ^ v ^

operated by a Gus Glenn and was' located a t the site o t the p resen t town.. .

— In the Twin F a lls a rea , fer­ries included the Shoshone Falls F e rry th a t o p e ra ted ’long before th e ’ townsite of Twin Falls was established. It cros.sed the Snake

- about 200 yards above Shoshone F a lls and some early d ay residents recall there were

• tw 'o'things.t’h a t viprried the pa.s- sCngers. One was the fear the cu rren t would pull it the 200

— ^ n u H d c rin f^ a lls rT h c -ti t l — that-horscsTTiight--bolt a n d , the

stage and passcngors get • a

Horses seem ed to get aTcOs- •. tom ed to the rivec crossing and

to the noise of the falls, but o n -o n e occasion a cable , did b reak and a possible catastro ­phe w as narrow ly averted.

• 'M rs ; John E . Hayes,- Twin ___ F alls, recalls there w ere other

the backw aters of M llnw Dam. As in the case of J ta r rh ’s For- !, M ontgom ery F e rry took iti im 6 from th e .ow ner and oper-

ato;r. A num ber o t dcscendanLs, o f the owner still reside in the

The P errin e F e rry crossed the river in the bottom oT Snakq R iver Canyon on^the I .B .'P e r - rine property .lieaV Blue Lakes. i t was not used by the general

ublic a s m uch ,a s .th e .Shnshnnar ______________________________Falls F e rry because of thu dif­ficulty in desccridiqg a p d .a s ­cending the steep canyon walls,

Many F e rry crossings werfc es­tablished in the. Owvhee County regibn. L ov crid g b -F erry , also, known .as. SHiff F e rry .w a s built in the c a f lv ’g o ld 'ru sh d a y s 'fo r traffic to Owyhee County^frbm Mountain Home. The crossingw a s . betw-een M ouptain Home' -and-'B runeau -just-'*abovo—the mouth of Rattlesnake river.- ■ Also In th is a re a , three miles

downstream., the -.Robinson F er­ry w as built and t^e Bj-uneau F erry .c ro ssed the Sjinke on Ihe site of the Wilson P rice Hunt

The Terry w as built a fter the p a r ty 'le f t M ilner w here, pert canoem an 'am ong the group lost his life in th e * 'Devirs Scut­tle Hole." .

The Grand View F e rry served those crossing the Snake be-

ties a t the presen t site of the town of Grand View. O thers in­cluded M unday’s F e rry , later knowii a s McQuot’s and W alter’s F erry , and located a t the site of the p resen t b r id g e -o n - th e M urphy to N am pa road. This crossing was the scene of a num ber -of tragedies o f the In­dian w ar era and w as also used by the minihg traffic durini; the gold rush days. B e rn a rd ’s F e rry crossed a t the mouth of Reyn- old’s „ e r e e k _ a s h o r t . distan^cc.

G iven's which_______-rings m Uwy-

-------probiem5=Iop=4hose-efe9‘river on th e Shoshone Ferry.

• One cold w in te r w hen .she was / re tu rn ing-from h e r Rock Creek

home to Shoshone for school fol- • 'lo w in g C hristm as vacation, the

stage a rriv ed a t the fe rry only to find thfi ice o n 't h e river w as too thick fo r crossing.

F ortunate ly th e re w as a hotel a t the falls a t th a t tim e and

• M rs. Hayes and another young student, the only stage passen-

____ cers th a t d ay , Waited In thehotel while th e Ice w as broken; E n route acro ss th e riv e r there w as ano ther w a it while more Ice w as cut.

_____ “ I rem em ber the hotel........p rla to r“ tord—us"tO 'TntJKc

•_the b ig fire in th e stove was ____kcpU up-w hile he.'helped break

th e Ice, but I don ’t rccall the . crossing was- especially , cold,"

she said,There Is still a d e a r ly marked

------ e n trn n c e - '- to - th e '- r iv e r ’s -e d g e__ w here the Shoshone F e rry oper­

a ted . E arly d ay ''re s id en ts say 'th e ferry opcrn ted from , the 187D*a .througH. aboutjlOlB, .when b ridges l)Cgnn tak ing shape along tho Snake.

In tho Burley a re a m ost prom ­inent ferry crossings included

«. S ta rrh ’s F erry about four miles west o f Burley n e a r the mouth

■ of Goose C reek nnd the Mont­gom ery Ji’c rry about halfw aybe- tween A m erican F a lls and Sho- Rhnno F alls, The S ta rrh ’s Ferry w as a m a jo r link between Al­bion, tho county seat and Mini­doka, the railfnad term inal for

. the a rea . M rs. Hayc.H said she recalls m any Albion’collegD siu- den ts troveled by staco front

■ M inidoka, then croH-sed Ind ferry c n -ro u te to Albion.

Msrated In IflOft......... irnvel betweenBoise City and the Owylioe coim- ly mines. T he site is-now under

site-'.hee.County.

M any h istoric ferries operated in-the-B0isc-and-0thc'c_YLCSt£.rn. Idaho a re a s ,, including the Riv­erside, c a lle d ' the la rgest ferry on the Snake. . . . ‘

It operated ju s t below .Nyssa on the road lending to V ale and Brogan, The fe rry is reported to have carried m ore livestock a c ro ss 'th e Snake R iver than —

irld a h o .-------------_____ er historic fe rry ' .

Olds F e rry about 12 m iles west of W eiser. A t a po in t w here the Snake tu rns north, the Wil­son P rice H u n t 'C b . 'm a d e ’eam p in 1812. In 18G2 a m an flamed A bernathy built- a trad ing post

■ J 'fc ” ” ■

'rills fe rry op<!ri nnd alfio served in

and the following y e a r Reuben Olds bought tho sto re and ac­quired a franchise from the T e r­rito ria l L egisla ture to operate

F a re w e ^ Bend of the Oregon T rail. B ecause of the. ferry» the river crossing becanf^ easier and turned the tide of em igra tion through W eiser Valley rath-

-or—r ~ . . - . I

use until 1920 w hen It w as mov­ed to Brownlee w here it was .still In' use In 19-15 by a sheep company.

R ates on th e fe rries varied but typ ical fees Included the Olds F erry ra le s of'S3 -for Icam 'ahd w ag o n -an d $ l - f o r - c a c h - e x t r a team : 75 cen ts for pack anim als loaded o r ROr cen ts If returning em p ty .-A -h o rse -and- rider -was charged 75 ccn ts. Everything else w as 25 cen ts a head w heth­er It w as a m an on foot, horse, cow o r sheep.

FDA Asks R e v i e wWASHINGTON (U PI) —The

Food and D rug Adm inistration has asked tho N ational Acade-

of Sclimcbs to review the- ly ............[defy used in d iet foods. It

ny « afcl; of a r tif ic ia l sw eeteners

.Hflld t h e rcv leW W flS 'nccessary Iwcuuso of recen t FDA studies showing ntbrenkdow nU n genetic structu re when the sw eeteners wore tested o iu th o embry.os of ra ts -an d -ch ick o h s .

ORCHARD“ " l N “ H A t5 E R M A N -

Y o u P ic k . . . 'Your Cbntalnor

B U S H E L

OCT. m SUNDAY ONIY SPECIALSa H H I I I I I SAVE AT OSCO I H I H I I I S g l l l l H I SAVE AT B U nR EY S l l l l i n | a i l H I I I I I SAVE AT OSCO H H H I I I i !

SRACHS 1-P O U N D

CH O C O LA TE B A G

^ANDY■ s U n d a y o n l y

J O N A T H A N

API»|ESI d a h o E ^ F a n c y

S U N D A Y

3 ^M IIK chod'. atara

V 79c Size . ; . .^ i i i i i i i i n i i i i n i n i i i l l i i i i i i i i i i n i i

F0|{ MAKING CANDY APPLES S 3 P E R B A G .iniiinniiniininiiijnniiiiiniR niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniinmi

g ! H I I I I I I I SAVE A T OSCO I l i l H I H J p i l U I I I I I SAVE AT OSCO I H 1 I I I U E £ | l i i n m i SAVE AT OSCO l l l l l l l l l l |

: SHELLS. 3 ' i :

M .002 0 x 2 5 x irl«K 2 B x lr“

OIL

20x20x1, 15x;20xl,10x'50kJ.. ^ g ; S ' \ - ' . . . .. ■ S P • S U N D A Y O N L Y , , ' _

iiiniiiiiifliiiiiiiHiiiriiiiliiHiiiiiiin!]! fiiiiliniiiigiiiiiiiiillliiiiiiioiiiiiiiiii iiioiiiiiiiliiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiii^^

■ .................... - ' ' ....... .......

Page 24: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

A-4. Tfmes-News, Tw in Falls, Idaho ^.Sunday, October S, 1969

\ e M V •

MAfeiC VALLEV^•chaeologists' D ig, Fpij’t:;' ■ ■ Pre-Christiail Artifacts

A .g roup '.o f R iC H FlfetD resl- ! den ts w en t through a frJelitcn-

Jng experience reccnily a t Fish C reek -R eservo ir. M r. and Mrs.

lak en the O lIlcT T lS-foot, 35- ' h o r^ p o w c r boat to the rescr-

yoi* to fish. After gelling th e• b o a t jn to th e 'w a te r and shoving

off, w . All?crt w as unable to s ta r t the m otor. Ever>-tliinB

order, b u t the m otor would nots ta r t . ■ ^ -------- > ■

.1 Tlie, t r io ' d ia~ riot" bccome ala rm ed until a -no rtheast wind

, cam e up arid th e -b o a t sta rted• to d rift out. Large waves sud­

denly appeared, also. Nq- othor boa te rs o r fisherm en w ere in

By th a t tim e th e w eather had langed -to rain and v is n l" ’

lessened -in the a re a . The found th e ir ' troubles w ere- not w e 'r, however, ^s t e r had a fla t tire . T he Ollieus 'd rove to CAREY to hav e ' the fla t fixed arid A lbert-rem ained •with .the boat._ A lbert, a m echanic ,’ soon.dis-

tried paddling, but m ade no headw ay back to shore.

Just- wheo it .flcc^mcd - their_____ • fran tic efforts w ere ini-vain.. a

boy, about 11 y ears of age ap ­peared and veiled to the group a sk inc jf they w anted to see his b ig fi'ih’. M r. OIlieu»yelled back thn t they did.

T he bov. nam e unkrown.- tn -g c t .- h is 'f is h - to show them

a rd when he re tu rn e d ,a matT ■followed him . H e-asked .if they w ere in trouble and learninc thefr-predicam ent, told Ollieu.to th row out a rope. Ollieii Ued tw o ropes together a h d 'th e t^vo

, could ,onlv be thro\yn within five o r six feet of the bank.

-T he-m an said he jvould have th e .b o s swim out to cet it. '!]],(? youth walked info the w ater to

-------“ h is-n ec lc -b u t* renched-the*rdpean d the. m an pulled the boat to

___ Sidon, the’ tem plesDaalbeck. c ru sa d e r ^.churches and -castles~ and- Islam ic mina­re ts , represen t a unique blend of cultures and peoples.

The oce of Byblos (from which th e - word . "B ib le” is derived) m easured In thousands of y pars.— .Tho— n a m c s -^ o f

lieu = M rs = o n ie u -h « d -d te c k e d —the- R am iiC5;~NebuchadneZ7arr~Mar

full of w ater instead of gaso­line.-H e had filled th e - tan k the

I day before and durfhg the night som eone had stolen the gasolineand rep laced it^with w ate r. M rs; Ollieu had checked th e tank be­fore leaving hom e a n d knew it^ a s full.

tank because the group had be­com e suspicious concerning tlje am ount of gasoline the boat ap ­p aren tly . had .u sed -when they had run It very little while fish­ing.. The men. w ith the assistance

of N orm an A lbrcthson,. Rlch- field;, took m easu re 's 'to , p rotect fTie m otor frorii dam age-by-w a­te r in the gas tank.

T h e ‘ m oral o f - th f s - s to ry is, the Ollieus say, to be sure your boa t m otor will s ta r t before leaving the shore, and be, yojjr gasoline h as riot been tc-- placed by w ater. ,* • '. M r. A lbert w as also cautious

stay ing With the boa t while

boat a t th e .d a m while he went

the m otor gone.

GERRY LOUGHRANEuropej

lists have

By G E l_____________=*:-BEIRUT <UPI) — Eun and A rab ai’chaeologlsts stfirted 4 w idespread , series of excavations to tap iho treasure trove of Lebanese h istory . .

In .a country whose snow- Inrfpn cedars o re mfentioned In the B^blc and. whose p ast goes back^ to the Phoenicians, the prizes a re considerable.• W ars and invasions- have criss-crossed the long h istory of this tiriy co un try . (150 miles

cus Aurelius and C oracalla have- ail le ft their im print.

; Among "d ig s” now being investigated is a cave contain­ing — prehistoric— flints;— the r e m a in s '-o f a pre-Christian vj»age and th e town w here thie propnpt E lias hid from the w rath of Queen Jezebel,•. A rchacologlsts-^u n 'd 'C T the direction of tlie Lebanese departm ent of antiquities are excavating an im pressive hip­podrome a t the southern port citv 'o f Tyre. One of th e biggest in t h e . world, the a re n a , is

-unusual In tha t it is b rick j not the more com m on stone.

/ M any details ‘ w hich have disappeared from s im ila r con­structions • around the M editer­ranean a re still in tac t a t Tyre, including th £ _ S n m a ,-a—central

W ork also is continuing on the ' la rg e ' Acro'polis .w here workers have fiow reached the Pliocniclan level dating back to the 4th and 6 th C enturies B.C. Hr'agments of statiics and pottery. A ssyrian inscription,s, scarabs and a dedicatory stoi ~ "MVtTTeWCTaBa m e digger search. ______

The . stone, p laced • by tl governor of Syria and Phoei cia to the E gyptian King Philopater (a t the tlrhc Tyre .was— pg Pt— of— the— Ptotemey Kingdom) suggo-sifi the search­ers are nearing an exciting new find-=-a - tem plc—pcrhaps or tow n.center.

T h iriy m iles north of Tyre; its "tw in ," P o r t Sidon. Is being eagerly com bed fo r traces of the past. At- the Temple o Eshm un,-the Phoenician god of health, atatuc» - 1n-^ iro n — anc marble have been found along with som e bearing Persian characteristics. T hese .clearly Indicate th e persistence of -Persian—influence—in - lh e - a r t s even a fte r T yre escaped Persia’s Sphere.

Among the m ore Important inscriptions deciphered w as one revealing nam es o f.fo u r of the kinqs of Phoenicia.

Excavations began - earlier this yea r a t Sarafand, a coasta town m idway betw een T yre and Sidon, biblical site of the ti Sarepta w h ere the :prop.«.. Elias, seeking re fu g e .f ro m 'a n outra>!ed Qiieen Jezebel, cured a .widow’s son. To- date, archaeologists have recovered Byzantine and R v n a n objectsfrnm thA rllw ^ ______ -from the city.

excavations a tuuai at. u iu .uu iii wiiuc aiu ......" r —-• Kcdar, .^ciw een the Adonis

Rlv»r -and /y b rc s . nor.h . otBeirut, have turned ub h ints and bones in a hillside cave d a ting ' from the Paleolithic period.

■ '■ jrm a M e a m jis .w o rk 1--------J - a l-L o i_ in the— iBekaa V alley n ea r the S' border investigating the m ains-of-a-pre-G hrlstion-village

vndeterm incd -o rig in ;-------

News 0 f-

I;OR EA S^-^ELUNG;RESULTS U SE 'TIM E^NEW S WANT ADS '

How to g e ir the best 0 ai, hearing aid dealer:,! “J u s fb o .p u re He’s a M atco

. dealer^ 0}x^ customorfl al«. ^ -ways g e t tho b ^ t of us. T h i

f i t t in g , th e b es t in service- •andnccessoriea for an y kihcll o fa id . ln o t^ ^ v 6 ;^ , th e b k t i ■we ca n possib ly give th em . M a y b e t h a f a w hy_w e^e k n o w n a 8 ,‘*The M o s t R e- fip c c t^ ^ ^ a m e i n H earing’^

Com e in a n d try to gc tth o b e s t o f xis. I t ’s easy. .

f j j iV lA IC G

HEA R IN G A ID

CENTER_ l3 5 .M a in .W e * V -T W lN -F A L l.S —

733-7330 1 3 4 E . 13th S t .,B U R L E Y :J ;^ ■

* 78-9312-

.■CALL^;

O R

D R O P — 'V

HOW MES_YOUI^GARDEN_gro_w7_W lth schm oos, says, young P aii! V ariie, IMS Osterloh /A v e ., .llie l()-year-oijLson-O lJrt£>-A nd-M rs>!!arold_V ancc-pIanted a . num ber, of Items in hts

own gard en th is y e a r and one ot his b u tte r n u t squash grew Into a schm oo with (ho help of a*blaek m ark lng-pencll arid a bow. The squash , supposed 'to bo yellow w as,w hite and In the shape of the com ic page Al Capp cartooned schm oo. «

Record

----- T H E -ttA M A S iO N -'m E -V em oh-H azen -n rnch -fasl-e le rs on Hlgh^yay 93. H ere a Twin F alls trav e le r

:M IN ID O kA =CO U N W = c le rk ’s Office

M arriage licenses w ere Issued tp Joe D ennis M abey, Burley, and K ay L anette Sm ith, Hazels ton; N orm an C harles Seibold, R upert, and H elen Olsen, R ed­ding. Calif.: A rth u r F redrick Dailey III and M uriel K ay Beck­with, both R upert; Hal Steven­son and Sheryl M arie 'Nelson,

I_ boih auE sa i;__ Robcci_W illlamI D ew hirst and. Jack ie Lee John­

son ,-b o th -R u p ert;' J e r ry E lm er B<!dde. Lovell, Wyo., and Susan Ann Zollinger, R upert; J,ay<- 'rdnce E v ah s“ a n d “ Sandra~R ose -Holmesr—b o t h - ....................... '

, . r coaxes a ewe with a b lade of g ra ss shepicked outside the. pnsture, M rs. H azcn-said they have th ree ew es in th is p a rticu la r pasture nod each has a Iam b, a ll born th is sum m er.

Wfte Money BoxBY FRANK SCHELL

By FRANK SCHELL F rom M rs. H. H,, Rupert Ida­

ho: My son sijnl m e a dollor - bill like this copy from G er

m ony. Ciiuld you please tell mi its value, o r nnylhing you might know about il?

Answer;. Tlio first of the jm all-slzed pap<;r m oney was is­sued In 1028, am i tho Scries 1928 w as a I-cgnl T{mHer Note (Red Seal) sim ilar to the Inter two- do llar hin. T h e ' Series J02B-A, which Is whiit -you have l)lctur- c<l, w as tho second note of our sm nll paper moiioy, luul wu& n .‘jilvtT Certlllcniu. This note, signed by W. 0 , Woods and An- d rfw Mftllnn, wns siivcd In large

■" . <lliriiill(ir‘s ,''h o 'lh i 're fo ro is not.........CKtromoly’vntunhlo', n ratn l new

coiiditlon noies like this one prnsciilly si-tt' for S(l.r>n,- Your

___.in ..ltiu .cen tc rand fimlt'd rornprs — ami would probably hrln(! yoii iilinm Jl.OO. rhi! ra rllics of (he 'smnll .sl/ed nt)tes arc the 1D28-C, 1I)2H-D and

_._15.2!LHi_lill_uL_whii;li_uraJ:vcry 7 fii'arct; nn«l ctimmiinil jirlccs ov-

,i\\t Sl,W.f)ll ma rk .................l-roin J ) , L.. T.. ■ I'wln - J a l la .

I<litno: 1 imvo a siiinll plia-o of pnpL'r which ,Hiiys United S totes, I 'ifty (rifl) Cents on It. ^ln(l^ f/m ik " -’"lin A l|au ii ni*n riu- biicK of Uiii nole li oiiilo cliiboraic and also snyi ''I''ifty C<‘ti(s” and ihrit It fs c'x-

' -'chiingoaltlt! for United ' .StnlKs N ntes. h th is a real plecu of nioiicy? 'n i r rn is n picture of

______ W iif.olinin.ilw ,Answer: It Is renl money.. It

Is ciilli-d "j-'racllolial C urronry" a nd w as Isstird during llie Civil W ar to rup larn thn smHlI coins

---------- WlllClLJltlU‘'ll''Jl]Jy W(‘iit out of. . :..« x l« le n i;o .u n M T n i1t ~ r : -------

I 'rac ilona l Ciirroncy ls,;i lilllo- '* — -----------inon^

cnllectlrin Hem. Ihesci note'fi w oro issued In denominations of

. 3, 0, 10, 19, 2!i and ho cunts, l l i o first Issues were calte<l Poatflgo Currency, fllnco they b o ro tlio facHlmillert of tho then

- c u r re n t po.ilnRe etnm ps (9 and - 1 0 -co n ts ) , Oddly enough, they

w orp rccolvHblo only for poitogo •Btnmps, altiiough they >voro

--------t rc c iy t ‘ 'chasq,B................... ........ ................c am o Into beipg w ith tho next JflBue, And'yvore not confined to

am ount of n early 30!) millions of dollars, in 187C, Congress au­thorized the rcdcmptlon.ot-th'esQ notes and the M int issu ed ' 9 3-cent piece to so redeein t}iem^ Govornmerit estim ates ploce the am ount of ou tstanding notes i t about 2 million dollars — which Is q u ite .a sizab le pile of these sm all dcnnm lnntlon .notes.-Y our p articu la r note can bo either a F rledberg 137-1 o r 1375. Each has an equal value,, to collect­ors, and would bring from face value to about $15.00, depending >ipoh condltlorj.

P ro m .T . L., Buh\, Idaho: I have a c o jw r_ coin, In worn condition, (Tn one side l.i m an 's hea<f, and the .words a round it a rc "lo seph Nap. D.Cr, H lsp,-^ix>- a n d - th u - d a to - ia io , On one side of tho head is an H, on tho o ther an M. On the back Is w hat .looks like some ca.stles and anlmalfi, and a b unoU -of-loaves.--C nn-you-tc ll m e iinvlhlng about It? Is U a ^iduaUlc-culVi?__________

Answer: You liavo an R Mar- avc'dl piece of Spain, IsHued un­der the riflun’ iif Joseph Na-

(Q ticsllons.on coins and .cur­rency Bhoiild . bo ,;ient to the M<Tn6 y- B<5xr'’-<J-o- Tho:',T im es- News, Twin f 'a lls , Idahb «.inoi',)

^ S te a m b o a tjr,Continued <From P ag e ^*1

In crinolines soon be coming up on dbck to join us?

Wo sac' on benches looking out the window -dn the low er deck

Jam es W endell Dunn, Quincy, Wash., and Lois M orle Tolm an; and Paul M ickelson and Cynthia Smith, both R upert.

Vernon P reu lt, R upert, and Kathleen' R pesct.-.Paui; Harold W h itt,-P au l, artd-iA nna D Goodman; and to D enn is-R ay Knopp, R upert, and W a n d a

clim bed upon the unper deck even b e y e r viewing. Each

bend of tho river brought some­thing new into sight. W h en 'it c am o 'tin m e to. tu rn nrountl_**f'd s ta r t-o n o u r ^etjirn 'voyage, all werfi s o r ry \lo k n iw it soonwos going to ' •

.................... g io d things must,end -lt-riid rO H i-lltttcT B htirstnrt: ed edging' over to the shore, the w h is tle -g av e a few finnl b lasts, and w e .w ere docked again a t tho rlv o r’s edge. Mr. Vnu«| began scooping the hnl coals out Inin tho w ntor and M rr W illiams took ' down tho Anrerican flag,■■ A's WO Ihnnlfed 'o iir li<isls' hm' left for homo, wi) a ll knew ride had l>een n m em orable l>«rleiic<.'..nvc. w o u ld . lung-. Ircps- uru. i 'o r n short tim e, wo hai

tived in A bygone cen tury . IIow orlunato Jhere a re still Imngl- nntlvo people who cnn recroato

tho pleasures of th e past, who can bring to life a n e ra long ?onc.„In Idaho n m an builds a rep­

lica of a r iv e r steam boat. In Collfornla a group of public- spirited people a r e attem pting to buy 'the’D elta K ing to restore it for a m useum . T h o Delta Queen, its s is te r steam boat, still' proudly sails tho Mi-sslssippi be- causQ-^enough neop le eared, and sho d idn 't fall Into disuse and ro t away.

And all over th e country more and m ore people a re bccnming interested in colirctinft.-flnUques, restoring o ld-prim itives, huntinR old'bottlos, b ring ing back to use­fulness old forgotten relics. -In­terest In_ these specially Is In- creasliii; ahning the youngor, generatrnh, learn ing the delight of ferreting -out tre iisures. P a r t­ly. of cour»c, liucuuse (hey Just w ant 4 0 collect som ething, but m ostly becttusA they a re acquir­ing A genulno appreciation of tho old and fine.

Moglo Valloy Distributor for

? E A L S iL K -A P P A R E UOi4nH-th»-S tof to-Voua— ------ :>■

A N D

M A S O N S H O E S ." F o r EVory Walk Of Life "

;,ZOA',,So. C b cuit.S t,-. ........... Twin Fall*Phono.733-8379

tijey ey foi

tu i th th i

- .............. , ___ _ . confIi--_ .......

prln<0 (I pIctureH onthem , denoling well-known per- ^onngoA of the tlmen. '

F rac tiona l - C urrency w as is* aued fo r fou rteen your», in , «n

Lighting. laToiit

41, D e s i g n , ■ , :1

,>JLyic Keith’s

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SolvQ all y.fiur lloht|nQ prohlsms -with o u r Hahllno coniultanis,

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106 9 A d d l io n A v a . E a it T a lophon* 7 3 3 -5 9 2 7

Fitfelitv National Bankj ■ Introduces

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how merchants benefit• Moro pofoVifto/ct/3/omor». You koop

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\ Is ready for

action!

how customers benefit• It costa thorn nothing to obt 0 oor&;

........ • T.ho cuBtpm prrocolvosonaBtatom onta .month from tho bank and maKoa Just ono payment for all charood purchaaoa.

......‘•'IM Ho cuatomor pays hlslnohthly otVtomontIn full wlthi;i 25 dny9 ,;thero Is no aorvlcs charoo, |( ho wlahos, howovori pnymonla con bo oxtendoU ovor sevorol month# for

r :

..... ...... .. • - - - 1-Mwiu Uliu VUIIUUIIWIIB, VUU-c n n -ca n re ritn itirofra o |llno~ 5 rd~ m o ro l^

When does it start? / \Wp Will coll on mofchants ooon, Tho mnoB mailing of MASTlin CIIAnQE cards to cuatomOra will bo In timo for Chrlalmaa ahonp r-w hleh 'm aana that IhouSands of potonlW , eufltomofa will bo roady to buy tho doy ihoy I rocolvo their carda, >

FALLS

TWIN FAILS MOTOR BRANCH FILER BRANCH HAZELTON BRANCH

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

Page 25: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

WITH ALL EYES STRAIGHT ahead ,.th e se youngsters a rc holding up t h e i r , ' •ccnily. The youngsters a re g lven 'ln sln icU ons an how lo bowl and can bowl hands with the fingers pressed together they a re to use in the bowling ba ll. free one n i|;h t a week for th ree w eeks. Then they can join a Chief HaKtown They w ere am ong the 250 children tak ing instructions from Chief Httlftown re- Ju n io r Bowling Club if th ;^ . wish...

THIS YdU N G ^O W LER counts alfftid- a s sh e trl ;lven-by-<5hiof'Halftown—The-Chlcf-travcls-100,000-miles-* - fun to thousands of youngste rs. . '■

lo w 'to th e letter-the-Instnifctlons-^

FirsfMe- Got Their Attention^.r

.C, '■ • ■’Womon’s 'T a g c T ia ito r — ------------

T w o ^ i u i i d r H a i i d ‘f i f ty k id s — a n d y o u c o u ld h a v e h e a r d u p in d r o p .

A ll e y e s w e r e on i» ta l l , h u s k y fu ll- b lo o d e d S e n e c a I n d ia n d e c k e d o u t in fu l l r c R a l ia .“ G la n c in R a ro i ih d T w n s n ' t s u r o j ^ t _ j

w h a t . , k i n d o f m u ^ rc tH is r r i a h 'h a d • J j i i r rh in k in g fro tn ' a lO -y e a r -o l^ 's v ie w p o in r , w ith a b ift c h a r a c t e r l ik e U in t lo o k in g clow n on m e — i ’d b e q u ie t ,

C H IE F TRYNOR ORA HALFTOW N.a wolMinown television personnlity , w as the cen ter of a ttrac tion In Twin F alls re­cen tly when ho presented educational assem blies a t the local ,iBohools,------------------:..... ..........................' • • ------- . • ........ * '

T H E BALL IS A tM O .^ .Ofl big i Mfl aicill <hfs w eek, ' i • , r

1 he, b u t (h is young bowler, olong with mpiiy others tried

i r rb m v lc r—n n -^ - n u th o rily on Indian lo re a n d nn ex - • p o r t on child psycholnpy. h a s been n p ro fessio n al e m e rtn in e r fo r 30 y e a rs .

- H e w n s in Tw in F alls t,iiis p a s t w eek — 'c n u T ic 5 5 n ) f* th t! " B n m s \t ic l r< 2 o T w im d — p re se rited educational a s se m b lie s n t the local R rade schools on In d ian loro n nd cu sto m s. Those school n ssem b - lle s at^c conducted as a p ub lic s e rv ic e b y th e Chler. who ti\lk,s to o v e r 100.000 school ch ild re n ea ch y e a r . HiS y lv id

■ p erso n al appeiu-anccs in full In d jan refi'alin for chnriU ible, e d u c a tlo ila l

, nnd c o m m erc ia l c a u ses a r c le g e n d a ry I ' in th e ir Im pac t and re su lts , and . h a s

• h a d e v e ry chfid In tow n ta lk in g ab o u t ' th e m th is w eek.

... in ad d itio n to the a s se m b lie s , C hief H a lftow n conducted a bow ling clin ic fo r lije g ra d e school y o u n g s te rs . Im ­a g in e try in g lo leadh 250 y o ung peo­p le to bow l all n t th e s a m o tim e . A? n ie n ilo n e d b e f o r e ,y o u co u ld I j a v o '

_ h e a i:{ L ^ p ih .tfro p ^ H e h a d th e ir a tte n - ~ lln f l '~ ^ T T ilS v a s - -m t> k in g -u i^ m o s t-« f - i t . . ., .

Ho told th e m w h ich fin g ers , to p lac e in the b a ll an d o ffe re d a p u n ish m e n t (in a . f i r m . .b u t ,so ft s o r t of w a y ) to th e .f ir s t h e 's a w h o ld in g .th e b a l l a n y d iffe ren t. ,H e th e n to ld th e m th e

—p roper- w a y to a p p ro a c h th e lin e a t id ------- .^ b e f o r e long th e w hole g roup , In a

sing sonpy rh y th m , w a s say in g , -J “ rig h t, l e f t , 'r ig h t , s lid e , po itit y o u r

• th u m b .’*:__ _ThOr-Chlcf-s-methods-of-charmtnf»— —_ch lld fen a r e u n conven tiona l, b u t th o •

r e ^ l s ' a r e ' a m a z in g r—M o s t-a d u l ts r -----------nnd th e C hief w ould a g re e , w ould th ink h is a sse m b lie s an d te a c h in g id ea s a r e r e a l 'c o r n y , b u t h e loves c lilld rcn n nd thi.s~is h is w a v of-**doing— -—his th in g ” nn d b rin g in g n f e w ^ t r M to th e ir faces.,

"C h ild re n h a v e n e v e r se e n a r e a l• live Ind ian ' lau g h o r fo r th a t m a t te r ,

ta lk ,” he, no ted . T h e y w a tc h th e cow ­boys n nd In d ia n show s on te lev is io n nnd a ll th e y e v e r h e a r tho ston tj-faced In d ian s a y Is ‘U g’ o r ‘H ow .’ So. when J s t ru t o u t on tho a ta g o .or in a bow ling a lle y a n d ta lk p la in E n g lish ' an d s ta r t to s in g s illy T V c o m m e r c ia l '. •, jing les, th e c h ild re n c ra c k up . I ’ lau g h an d th ey lau g h . M ost of m y «

• jo k es a r e c e n te re d a ro u n d T V .g im ­m icks b e c a u se kldS a r b n a tu ra l v ie - , lim s of th e v id eo tube . T h e y know th e D o u b lem in t G um d it ty be fo re

[___ they le a rn th c 'L o M !s .jP ra y e r a n d ,.^ o |» ........... X o n tln u cd

GIVING IN D U C T IO N S to ono of (ho j n o t only a iitiir bowter, be ii B0\BUtb0rliy

ilinR bowlorB Is C ilof llA riow n .. Chlel Halftown Is in^l^adia^ lore luu] «q,«utpor( on cblld p tychology.

'^•FO lN T YQUR TIIU M I)" w as (ho In it p a r i of Iho InRlrucllons given hy------------------------ hero IIJ9 y pungstr- -------- --

ik • d v U o ry .tu J t a' Chlel llalfiow n and hero tliq ypungntcrN prBciicc It. Chief H bIKow ilIn ' u mcm'«

I.A. ..... n -------- i-i. - j . i . — . . . . . . J , A m orlc«'« Foi^toioat Ju iJo r bowUog

Initruotoir'. I lls natom bllM (n thfi local M h b o lt Ihia p a s t week w m c ra le red .a ro u iu l 'lD d la a lo ro an d cu ilo m i. m .

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iv .

Idaho Art Association Gonvention Set In T.F.S everal Magic" V alley 'nb tab lcs

. - b o - partic ipatlng~ H s—work----- \sh o p 'd irec to rs and g u esi-a rtis ts during Ihc- forthcom ing . Idaho •'

' A rt. A ssoc ia tion 'conven tion set____fa r-X h u r!iday. F rid a y -n n d -S a tr—' i i r d a y a t the College of,Southern <

Idaho. ' . .The threc-day < v en t wiTi In* •,

•/’ elude phases of d rnrna. ballot, opera , and a r t films, and the scheduled., a r t , shows tKiyned, "N ow Generation'*' fo r ' ir t is is

•!\inder 30 yeifrs of age, and ."Our

• M ore t h a n '400 \peoRle from n d a h o .and ,.5 i« rroupd inB ''sia t

., a rc expectcff'tOr the annual COn- c .fdrence,

:__ ?:_,/VmonR-thc. workshop d irec to rs—from Magic Valley and D i and Drich B o w leg Snake R iver Pot:

-----n?r;^~ H ascrm ah. afid~~GiW altonv 'T w n 1-alls a r t ls i and" tcacher. M ary W alker and Rob­ert Harvey, along with Charlotte Jacj)bson. R oger V incent and EuRen a .Mildon. will prcscnt_se-

S u n d a y , O c to b e r 5 , 1 9 6 9 , T Im es-N ew s, T w in F alls, Id a h o A-

W elcom e W agon Glub HeCid'^ AnnouoGes AAorith Activities,

•Mrs: Kei-rfTu L eir.-p reside ; i cry W cd/iesday.m orning a t the of ..ho W dcom c ,w a s .„ Club'. ‘‘E -B S fJ -announces the O ctober program of events.

The regu la r monthly luncheon-w Ill-titrtc lc l-a t-W O -prm T -T ur-

G EORGE WALTON MARY W ALKER REV. ROBERT HARVEY DRICH BOWLER

------- -w iil-be-am onB th C 'W O 'rk s h o p - i l l re o to r s - a n d - g u e a l- o r t i s ts - fc r - lh e - Id n h o - -confercnce set (o r T hursdayi-F rlday-and-Saliirday-n t-thc-C ollegc of S outhSnin i in c ” ® range oi , - /Association convention scheduled’ln Tw in F a lls . M ore than 400 people Idaho. LaV ar Steel, h ead of the CSI A rt D epartm ent, Is presldcnt of the Idahooperas,

D an«r.? xvl» in te rp re t the op-’ ‘ e ra tic a ria while it is being sung

------- T a t h e r - t h a n - h a v i n g - d a n c o - a s - asepara te se t b a lle t w ithout vocal accom panim ent. ' ■

The Bowlers will conduct pot* terV workshops and M r. Walton

leduled-for-a-workahop-en*tid ed ‘‘F ound 'A rt. ________

O ther worKShop (iirectors m- clude Boh W and, Boise a r t cdu* cator^arid iirtls i; B o b -^ th r -B o r

“ ^6'"'j3aInlor‘‘ .................

J E ROME —-JThc regu lar busi' ness m eeting of“ lhe~NoTtJiKide jm u g i t^ n . i h W.1C tiPlftIn the social room < ,

IChur.ch

W illard, director- of a r t fo r the■ Lapwai schools, and R uth Meli-

char, Boise pain tef.'- '’Two one-m an shows will be

featured b y ' G eorge Brownlee and Ja n Boles. M r. Brownlee, in struc to r of prin t-m aking a t Colorado State U niversity , will have a show of prin ts, and Mr. Bciles, Caldwell, w ill have a one- m an show of photography.

;-------3 3 ia _ c o n f c r o n c e w ill fo n iu rgtwo m ajo r speakers, R oger Ko-

— toskepgue'st-artiatT-on'd-D uncan ' Ross, d ircc t0 r.-0 f-the Profession-

a l Traffiing P rog ram at^the Uni- •. v ers ity of W ashington 's School

of; I?njni»;“ w ho“ w lll“ g Ive~ thd■ keynpl'e.address.

: ActiviUes will ge t Under way - a t 8,j^.mT'Thursday an d conclude

' a t 1 pirn. Saturday . D r. Jam es L. Taylor, pr'csiderit-of the Col- lege of Southern Idaho, w ill give the w elcom e- add ress . La V ar S teel, head of the, C S I .a r t de-

— paTtMentrris ■pr« ia^f~or~ the ' Idaho A rt Association.

Mrs. J o h n G arrabrandt, hjvTin-pf-the-month chairtpah, presented K arleen D ellinger who played the hymn-of-the-month.

M rs. F ran T anner presented a program on the life of Leon­ard Berstein, A m erican compos; e r, conductor and pianist.

As a pa rt o f M rs. T anner’s paper, several selections were presented from th e "W est S id t Stor\*;“—w hich-w a s—w ritten—by. B etnstein=rM rs._N orm nn:=Redd w as soloist, accom panied by M rs.'A ndrew B ybec. Sue Jacob­so n 'a n d ~ C b c ry l F rese played a piano duet, and the Madrigal Singers sang, d irected by C ar­son Wong and accom panied by W ayne'C ordy.

The. president announced the Community Chorus; cgriajfctcff ^ y w r r w o»-g,--ls-f e ^ ff f^ h g :n ^ 1

F a c u ] ^ W i v e s .

H o s t C o f f e e

“ H o o r S o G t q l —

■ .The tV ln F a lls F acu lty Wives •held a get-acquainted m orning

- coffee hou r a t the hom e o f ~ —^ - a n d - M r s , E . h . K agiand.

. G uests w ere the w ives of new teachers on th e Twin F a lls Pub-

------- llc-SchO D lJ3istrlct_N Q .,^lU aaiUfy. Among the new facu lty wives presen t w ere M rs. D ouglas Skin^ ner, whose husband tenches son-

-lo r-h lg h English ;^ M rs, F rank ~ w hn<;<»-Jn»<ihhnf> (s th>*

new senior high co'iinsclor, and- ■ M rs. Scott ■Ii'ingc'y, whose hus-

l)0«d teaches' social studies at O’Leary Jun io r H igh Scliool.

M rs. John Law rence, • p resi­dent o f the group, w elcom ed the gucst.s. E a c h -m e m b e r gave a brief inrrodMcllonof hci'sclf. Cof­fee pot nam e tags, m ade by Mr.i, C harles F a rm er, w ere pre­sented to each m em ber, a t the

_donr,....... . . j_ . ....... ................Punch w as served by Mrs.

Law rence and M rs, G rorge Wal­ton. historian, presided a t Ihc coffee service,

Tlie club .scrapbook was on display for the now m em bers to becom e acquain ted w ith the

I group 's activities.• (^ -rh a lrm en for the evnnl

• . w ere M r.i.'Cnrl Snow, vice pros

from throughout Idaho and surrounding s ta te s arc . expected for- the an n u al A rt Association.

I ^ o r t i im d e G l i i l j ' G o n v ^

O ES Associate

Patron N a m e dBURLEY — E;iection and In- . . ___

stallatioti-oE-Kay MrFnrl.in 'd ns chairm an, gave associate-patnjir=W ghllghted- the evening for m em bers ^of E ver­green C hapter No. 4G, O rder of the E aste rn S ta r , ' during ■ the first; m eeting of the fall season.

Mrs. Roland Willis, worthy m atron, conducted th e m eeting.

G olden'G em s w ere honored in­cluding c ; Ci (Pop) Baker,

sals^.pn .5^ondaj^.Tel^a1ngs^l^4 p.m . An inleresled ynge?s.-ar6

[C d 'to -partic ipate . ')ther announcem ents included

the s ta te hoard m eeting to be ■ 'd a t 'th c " “H olIiaa5rThn- Ocr7held ................... .. ,16. and the o p e ra , program to

Style Revue,

toirch'eorrS'ef^—R U P E R T -P lan s >rc fin tllicd

for the forthcom ing 105!) Mini' doka M emorial Hospital Pink TSciies’ style revue and luncheon

cd for 1 :15 'p .m . Monday al Rupert E lks Lodge.

Theme fo r / th e cvenf is "F ly Me to the Moon.’’"wIfTnrrin"(!tie' Johnson provjding the back­ground music. The event Is cO' chnirmnned by Mrs. R. C. Phil. Hps—and—Mr*;—Dale—K ttnglerr N arra to r will 'lx! M rs . ' Roger Jones.' ........v ------------

Models from i P e n n e y ^ ., Idaho D epartm ent Store, Ropers and Jiinos, all of R upert, and the B. M ary Shop, frorp the Pon- derosii Inn will he featured, nni| ]ewelr\j for the m odels will he provided by H unnu's Jew elry, "upert.

Proceeds from tlio event _will go 'for more liospjial eqiiipinetur T icke ts 'lire H^allai)le from any of Ihc particlpaiiiig s io rrs n r from any Piiik Ludv. M r.s.,A. r . Dnlley nnd M rs. GaiJ Hvfnas a re in chargo of ticket,'sales.

Ident, nnd M rs. Wnllon, nsslsted by Mn‘<. Luvvrcnce, M rs. Riig- liuid nnd Mrs. l-'nrnier.

!« held a t - th e C SI-A uditorium OcC:-10-at-8-p.mr-The-NorthsideClub has beeji invited to a ttend ........... ........ ..........b 'cTw lfrPaltsiW oslc-ehib-laridii- Rcddick;-cuunsclor-fonhe~ihTce

"tncnts lTiclude~Mr5rHcnry PKar- Tis.,':social; M rs..L : V. Ruebel, m em ber a t la rg? ; Mr.s. Glenn

M rs. W ayne Thornock, Good- fngrwas^inmrdtrcea’ifrTnivfstn* to the Gooding Ju n io r M u s i c Club.

Officer and cha irm en appoint-

and -M rs. A.' A. Woodhead and Mi’ifrriJoTAirilnT^sistaiircoirn- selors. M rs. R ay 0 . Peterson, Wendell, Is parliaiDentarlan. -

M rs. Pplerson , M rs. LsRoy Craig and M rs. Hinkle Cox will serve on the bylaws committee. M rs.-H arold Holsinger, Weiidell, Mrs. E. C. Vawdry and M rs. Ronald P ipp itt will serve on the contact com m ittee.

[y ra n k .Rcdfield. T illy Hunlirtg- lon, Saran K m ney a n a~ £ d rth King. 'Ama B lankenship, grand chairm an of th e Golden Y ear m em bers, w as a~spectar"Euosrr M rs.-M yrtle W yatt w as soloist.

Each m em ber who has had a T5irlttaajf~iir“j0ly7—A ugust—and- S ep tem l^^w as presen ted a gift. A sjvjcian^ 'nnor w as given to Mr. and M rJ.-,Leonard Salmon in -honor ' 'off Uic couples 47th W edding A nniversary. ~Th(^50-7ear 'rled out in tablh decorations for the re freshm en t h ou r which fol­lowed the busine.ss mooting.

P rio r to the business session, a -co vcred -d ish -d tnncnvay-serv^ ed In the dining room.

.liininr I

M rs. Cox, ways and means report. Mrs

Dnle-Thuiimh; treasurer, rcpbrl-' ed 46 p resen t and the new club nOw has 38 paid members.

T he next -m eeting is a t the home of M rs. Rtiy Peterson, Wendell, w ith M rs. Helen Thom-

K im berly, presenting the program .

R efreshm ents w ere served af­te r the m eeting by Mrs. R. J. R cifhahard and M rs. H e n r y P harris.

biterary^G roop-“

Hears R eviewThe book “ D ibs," by V. :

Vern H arm er during the firs t m eeting of the fall season for the L ite ra ry A rt Guild a t the home o f - t he u n ifs new presi-dentrM rsrG corge-H aney;---------

The guilded thought was given

G a m p -C a pta i ns,— W eig& LLoser_sl_l

O fficers-Feted - A re A n n o u n ce d

Bv C o u n ty DUP

,onc,er5=hostfid-.aJuncheonr.i;cccnt-- ly for cap tain s and officers of e igh t cam ps a t the home of Ella C randall; county president. .

M rs. C randall urged all m em ­b ers to b ring 'o ther ejigible wom­en into the various cam ps. Each cap ta in expressed the goals she hopes to achieve for the ing year. ,

M arvel Flllmorp and LouI.se abns received books for the jr month ast serv ices n s county offlficrsr to se rn

tlay a t the Turf Club, w ith Mrs. George LaGrantie giving, the in­vocation.. M rs. D iana-Bow en of Sears-Rosbuck Co. will talk on interior decorating. M rs. Loren W heeler of the PepperT ree w|l) present casual modeling durjng llit luiii.ln;wii, Vritli lilElVibSI M rj. Larry Komlofske. "M rs. Dale i-cslie and M rs. G ary LeFebvre m odeling... Mf^. _Haxfild_Kcenor Is'p rogra'm ucnafrm an.

Baby silting for ' a sm all fee will be provided by the Welcdme -Wagon, m e m b e rs .a l.th e . Prcsby- terlair;Churph;=20ilratb.-.St;JJ.v=: . B r id g e 'a n d ‘pintJchle will be

played a t 8 p.m. Thursday at the Episcopal Church. Parking is a t the re a r of the buildlnc.^ Bridge' chairm an ’is M r/. 'D a le W esterman. 7.13-9379, antj pin­ochle chairm an is Mrs.- Phil Snyder. 733-4?19.

The knitting -and handiwork group will m eet a t the home of-M rsr-R obcrt-Sm ith .-W endell Street, a t 1 p.m . ,0 c t. 14,-F u r­ther infofm ationitioncerning this group can be obtained by calling M rs. John S traubhar, 733-3910, knitting chairm an.

The 'Hobby group will m eet a t 8 p.m . Oct. 13 in the Idaho .Power-Auditorium».»Projecls-lor, this month are fashion foam owls. C lorox. bottle w itch and a fall pine cone, a rragem en t. A list of m ateria ls can be obtained by calling Mrs.. G ary Hazen, h o b b y _ £ h ^ r ^ ^ '"

ncrs and run iers-up , M rsTw!”- ! ! I-eaEUS g i r t i n g eonClnucs cv- F lav e l and Mrs. B ert Brown: ” --------------

Kojnlof5^e, bowling chairm an..

A Halloween coup les 'party is scheduled, with complete plansto be announcca a t.th o HJHCKCOT— bv couple chairm en. Mrs. Jack M iller and-M rs. Leslie.

All new residents who have not been contacted by M rs. L,.,- E . Hinton,. Welcome Wagon hos­tess. should call her a f 733-5210.

v'vv—■ ■ _i_— ^TJ njnff ■ ■ ' ‘r M rs. Lelr,

RICHFIELD — '-Mrs. R o s jn s to n ,. a nd M rs. Clifford

-Davlcv wcr<« weight losingtest w inners for the Diet-Does- •TT’C lnbnK ls 'W7:ckT;Tlie^caiW, cpntcst had run for r e v e m onths w itl\ weight gainers elim inated,

M rs. Nelson Fredrickson p re­sen ted prize gifts to the tw o win-

LET'S G O ROLLER S K A T IN G

=SKATEtAND^FRI. . . S A T , , S A T , . S U N . .

6 p .m ..; i i l 10 :30 . 1 p .m . ’til 3 :30 , 8 p.m .-»1l .11:00 . . 2 p .m . M il'5 :00

MONDAY ft.ru THURSDAY by «»»#rvetl»n Only -

— 733:91_09____

A D M IS S IO N

A fte rnoo n 50c75c

To* ond Skatei-Included

OF'CH AM PlO N S

SKATELAND341 Main W »t

W omen are eligible to join the D UP if they have pioneer ances­try b a t .settled in U tah before “ le ra i^ o a d . M ay 10,1869.

Lessons and histories of pio­n eers a re read in each of the cam ps once each month. Mem- b e rs m eet In different hom es during the afternoon an d . one night m eeting is held e a c h m onth.

K ate B. C arter, fam ous w rirer and lec tu re r of pioneer history.

' Salt Lake City andheads the organizal . b o o k s-w ritten by M rs, C arte r a rc in the Twin Falls Public Libt^y,

A record weight loss, of 43 pounds and 15 pound gain was tabulated for the five week

__ ^ . i^ofi w as bestfor th€ rtTOntn^Tonhc’ a i r i

sty ling aw ard and M rs. Loyd' Lee received the weekly weight losing trea su re chest gift. Mrs. F rances F re istad is a new m em ­b er. '

T h e three-m onth p arty will be held M onday with a salad lunch­eon to be s e r v e d . M rs. Jay

b y M rs. John Coleman a au th o r 's sketch h y Mrs, W ard.

' H ostesses w ith M rs. H aney In- c lu d e d -M rsr-G lc n -L c g g e tt-a n d M rs. O lcen Seajnons.

V \

K a y s e rlooksm a r v e lo u s !"Anri io clQp^_>lils_glrmlg_

j pci|(itnti th a t w ill Ikiv'oI

1 w llh you owoiywltoK), ' - 1 tin -cnm rcrsrplpiivcj-ftfhT-

plK inkos Iti itiKitl tall- Ofcd Unoi.' S l/(n H2-/10.

Y o u r I . ,

B o nk C o rd i ‘

W alC om ad '• '

DEPARTMENT STORE' In Tho W N W O O D .. •' -

M O O IiilG H TSPECIALS

B L O U S E S ttttt; 7 r7TT$2.99

SPORtsWEAR . . .......$6.99

SCARFS. ........................... 99c

-DRESSES-J u n io r ’ & ' Pre-teen Sizes

BARGAIN TABLE . . . . .$1.00

s to r e o p en s 12:00 NOON

the .

L Y N W O Q D

J U N IO R

Page 27: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

■ S u n d a y , O cto b e r 5 ,.1 9 6 9 t lm e s -N e w s ,^ w I n Fqlls, Id a h o A t7

• KIMBERLY - An ahcrnoon ;corcmony on Sept. 13 united in. marriaRcy Leanna Fallis. daugh* te r of Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Falli.s. K imberly, and Jam es Alcaro,

■son of Mr. _and Mi's. Samuel' —A lcorO r-P arrill,-E a.

■ Rev; Delhert P . Remalcy of- , ficiald a t 'th o doublcTipR rites •

held i n 'j l io Kimberly United Methodist O iurch . Coral gladi­oli and yellow daisies adorned th? a ltar,

-------- - T ho-bd<iei e ivon -itt-m a rf ia tby her father, wore a floor- •Icnplii alencon J n c ^ o v o r ta ^ e ta _

— -•j!honth“ W lt1V W em p ire ' waist-lirte; io n U ' slcovos and :a--h lgh ''

■ rccklinc, The shoiildcr-length veil was fastened to a bandeau fashioned from net. sequins and

— ..pearls,-. . • , ~ / ~Sli«~Wore a slfinB of pearls

borrowed from her inolher. Her bouquet w as white chrvsanth'f- n ium s with yellow rosebuds,

... . . Mrs,'. Robert Denton played• thd traditional wcddinp music.

M rs. Garland Gibbs played yio- Jin nccohiD.iniment /o r Joyce Guycr, soloist.

■- Mrs. Stanley Fallis. sister-ln- 'l a w Ilf t h ^ b r id e ,'w a s matron

____of^honW ,T3e«t man w as Gary ltT Guern-— i y " '

CSV. Kaysvillc, Utah. Serving ns ^ t ■- ushers wore Stanley F a llis , ' _

— bro ther of the bride, Denver; *•• Ronald Rockwood. Des Moines',' " “v 'Io w a ; W illiam Tennant. Kan- '

- cohc, Hawair. and Anthonv------ - f - ' ■’ . .. g .

Candlelijjhters were Darren ____ C ilm '-.and-Charle.s-Tenter...

A reception was. hold a t the Bluo Lakes Country Club after tho cerem ony. T he coral and

• • je llow c o lo r . schem c was car­ried out in tho decorations at tho club.

M rs. Michael-.Touchetle. atid Sherry Silvers cu t tho cake which w as decorated w ith fresh, flowers on top. Coffee was poiir-i cd by Mrs; Bryan Coleman.:

------ Gnrol-Bastian-served-the-punehr

Resume M eets W ith SocidI

The Am erican B aptist Wom­en 's Society resum ed-m eetings in. S eptem ber w ith ' a 1 p.m. luncheon. .

c irclps have been 'Teor* tnlzed Ji'nd th e ' E sther Weibc

J r c le m em bers w ere hostesses, using red and pink roses as cen terp ieces fo r ' the tables. G reenery alternating with an “ -p ie extended f ro m 'e a c h sidi

tho e n d 'o f the tables.’ --M rs.—ElnorL ightfoot-presided

Holloway g iv ing ' the opening p rayer. It was- announced tho Book of Revelation is to be ,used for O ctober reading. The white cross qubla .w as- read _ an d - ac- ceptedT’ W ^ d C om m unityT iay of P ray e r ' w as ar\no«nccd for Oct. 7 d t the P arish Hall and the A ssociated Rally se t for Oct

The Christian C ausew ay meet- ig is scheduled fo r Oct. 14 with luncheon a t the Rogerson Ho­

tel Roundup Room.' M rs. Rob- e r ti\ Smith- was. in charge of the p rogram , reading the -purposes of the A m erican Baptist Women.

S h d -re a d -fro m -S t.; Jo h n -fo r h er de^Obtionai, using the v __ "T he Side of D espa ir," telling o f the hardships encounted by the colored people to be able to ex ist in the ghettos.

-SHIRLEY ELLSWORITH

Bboi< R eview Is G iv e n For A A e^t-At .Kim berly.KIM B ER LY — M rs. B I'

F rochlich review ed the • book, "G od.‘;Spcaks N avaho" during the . .genera l m eeting of the Christian!! W omen’s Fellowship a t tho C hristian church. The book ' will- bo -placed ia^ 'th e church lib rary .

M rs. CaJ K ysar gave the open- inp p rnver. R eports w ere clyon by M rs. Irvin Kevari, Mr" rV e?;

church, in Bol.^e..' ^M rs. F crrfs Freestone, se ry lte

chairtnan, showed patterns to m ake cloth's for the needy in Indonesia. Clothes .also y e r>ced- ed b^ the D epartm ent of Public A ssistance in Tfcin Falls.'

M rs , , Milton Ballard I n t r o ­duced M rs. Bernard M artyn. Twin F alls, who review ed' the -book,—iiTen-Fingcrs.<;foc-God. ■■

J X ir c le M embers of G ro u P _ 2 _ wefe-'ihostesscs: ^ .. . y -■ It. .•)!. if. .,

CLUB CONVENES SH O SH O N E-N orlh -Slioshone

H ome Im provem ent Club m et a t th e hom e.of M rs. W ard M ills . ' The ho'merriakers convention to be held la te r this month in Ida­ho F alls w as dlscusscd. ''

.Mrs. D uane Stigall received

non Ball, i l r ? , Dorn Nail, Mrs. Jack Young and M rs. Kysar w h o 'a tten d cd tho CWF re trea t aC tho Red Rock Christian

Thfl O ctober P ro g ra m will be on th e theme,x*'Como Live With Us." A f i lm s t r ip , will ibe - ra ted by M rs. Doug Gee.

th irhostes?r^ ift-and -T 5 therr^am e- prizes w ent to. M rs. Nephl Clark,- M rs. Halcie Jones, M rs. R. B. l^ l le y , and guest of the day M rs. Dale,;HoUibaugh. Dietrich-

rice b ag tLed w ith a 'yellow rib^ bon."

---------- S ncc la l: 'g u ests besides thebridegroom ’s parents, w ere his

-sister, . Deniso Alcaro; P itts­burgh. P a ., and his brother, T om -A lcaro, F arre ll, P a. Out- of-state guests nttondefLfgom- Orecon, . U tah, Colorado and California. ■ '

Tho couple took a wedding:------- ^trin-to-,Tackson-HoIOr-Wyo.,-and

Yellowstono— N ational - -P a rk . They-now reside in Logan, Utah,

* w here they are .students a t Utah S tate University.' Pre-nuptial showCi'S Wcrc-glT^

en for the bride. Carol Bastian and Phyllis Ann Ridgeway were

____ hoslesse5_fo£_a_Hlt£heji-showcr.A. pound shower' was given by M rs. Raym ond Burton and Mrs. W illard Te'ater.

M rs. J im H enry. M rs. Betty ,Pene and M rs. Harold Hove

In -*» rham pagna

w as best,, loser of the week and the recipient o f a special gift glvcn”her by M rsrR a lp h 'H a rfis during the Slim and T rim TOPS Club’meeting.

R'eports w et^ given on the plans for the Fun Night pro-

■ • 'hic-h- •13, beginning with a salad

dinner a t the T urf Club, for all Magic V alley a re a clubs..— ^W ays-tor-d isp lay—the—local club’.'; -banner. \y.ece_djscusscd. R eservations fo r , the dinner m ust be m ade by F riday , th o se w anting a reservation m ay call

Lodge D eputy

N a m e d A T B u It I"^BUHL — Mrs. M aurice Cur-

Tlngton -was clected Jodge deputy frtr the coming y ea r when Buhl RelKikiih lodge No, 29 met in regu lar session. A potluck din­ner preceded the meeting.

Mrs. C urrlngton was elected ns rcprescntatlvo No. 1 and Mrs, Ward M offett as representative No. 2 to attend the. Qrand Re-

• heknh Assembly of Idaho al . _ B Q ]se_in_O ctober_M ra.—lecny

M axton,' noble grand, was In chargo of the meeting.

Mrs. Hazel Conrad, M rs. D. W. Rowe and M rs. J , B. Boyd w ere honored in Iho birthday m arch.

M R. AND MRS. JA M ES ALCAROi- ____ ^^Shlg M orlta photO)

M rs ; Schutte Is Best.Loser-

.........j gheM rs. Joe M cColL.......... —.

chBrgc-T)f“the’ love''8 lft''serv icer using a s h e r topic, " P u t Love Into Deeds and Make it R ea l." M r^H o llo w ay rch a lrm an 'o rsp eT cial in te rest missionaries.' read a le tte r from Ecco Hunt, who served In th e Yokohama, Jap an field. M rs.,C arl.S now was_solo- ist, accom panied by M rs. BeT-' n ard M artyn. M rs. Lightfoot gave lh(S closing p rayer. “

•Elizabeth W alters C ircle m et tho hom e of M rs. Tom'

Hughes.-Hallffl C arlson 'gavft tho

At next w eek 's meeting, the m onthly, q tjartcriy and contest w inners w iirb e anriounc'e'd and honored w ith gifts;' Anyone elig­ible for a 10 pound loss gift.will al.W bo honored.

w ere displayed for m erhbers as il fund raising program . M rs. V. L; Wilson is in charge of the c a rd s ^. M rs. LCwi.t>Morris \w a s pro­

g ram chairm an ‘ and Kostess. She displayed articles which she m ade and decoratcd for Hal- 4oween-and-Cl>w;tm.is giying-

-MaglG-Valley-Favprites —W**k't R*ctp« Winner

MRS. VE-LMA ARMSTRONG

-I703'3rd'Av«. e„ Twin Fafli

— Apple B u tte r and W alnut— Cinnam on Rolls

cup w arm w a te r (not hbl, about 110 to IIS degrees)

-2— packages nc tivo .d ry yeast VA cups lukew arm milk

tea s |» o n s salt £ eggs '

cup soft shortening 7 to 7*4 cups flour

In InrRo Iwwl, dissolve yeast Jn w ater. M easuro flour. Add m ilk, .sugar, sa lt, egg, shorten­ing and half of flour to yeast. Mix w ith spoon until smcmth. Add remainlnK flour to handle e n jjly ^ iU ll^ ! ( lJ jB (n ly J lQ -» r .- cd l)onrd. K nead until smooth, about fivti m inutes.

Round up in greased bowl, bringing g reased side up. Cover w ith cloth. L e t riso in w arm p lac o ..u n tll , doublR. .about

AAiss E ilsw ortlT'

Is E n ga ge d T o Fred Choate

M r. and .M ts ._B ._E d£ar_E ll5 i w orth announce the engagem ent o f th e ir 'd a u g h te r , Shirley, to- F red Choate, son of Mr. and M rs. P ete-'C hoate , a ll T w i nF alls........... .. ■ ......................r ------• ,An August w edding is planned in Twin Falls.

Miss Ellsw orth Is n senior at Twin Falls H igh.,School. Mr.

Ilum' wns -hr be g radua ted frnm

cem ber. •

opening prajver and M rs. Hughes reportod—on—tha—whito—cross quota. M rs. M arian Carlson w'as in .ch a rg e -o f-th e -p ro g ram r-^ In - dian and C ivil,W rongs." A letter was read from Elizabeth Wal­ters. T he love gift devotional service w as given by M rs. Floyd I,illy ,_M rs. l.pwis F 'the qlosing p rayer.

M em bers of the E s th e r Weibe Circle convened with M rs. Ar- thur M irac]e .jv ith ,40 .hotise .calls reported. T h ree m em bers 'assigned—to—use o n e - o r _____verses a s the devotionarserv ice . Mrs. Holloway gave the prayCr. M rs. L ively reported m em bers

W o m e n 's C lu b

i-uncheon SetThe Magic V alley Christian

W om en's- e iu b " lu n c n e o n -is -sc t for 1 p.m . W ednesday a t the. T urf Club,- Tho special fea tu re is the lat- ;s t- in shoo-^ffshlOTis— rT7Tm~ Chuck’s Shoes a t t h e M ayfair

-S hop-and -C arla -B lastock ; plan- js t , will p resen t the m usic.

M rs.'K ejiho tlu .B ry in , ii idling hom em aker from S a lt L a k e

, -will be featu red speaker, -..incheon reserv a tio n s can be

obtained by calling Twin Falls,! ---------- ----------------------r i l6r, J21T

— Titu nisportsiblu fo ro T ie -q o i l rw Tnem ber-presented-the-

a nd“ onc-hair"hnur.'?r^If"kltchcn is cool, place dough on '.a rack o ver bowl of h o t w ater iind cov-

r co m ple te iyw ljh a towel.) Punch down and le t rise

again until alm ost double, about 30 minutes.-RoILdough-iQto-ob-. long piece. Spread w ith soften­ed b u t te r , and, spriitklc ,,wi(h su g ar and. clnnamtm.

C over all with apple butter and .sprinkle generou.sly with

go-, tp th e Christian C enter, inP h o e n i x ._____ ____________ ..

M r .^ 'G la d y s —Coyen w as in charge of the program . M rs. Coyen, head of the H appy Day Scliool, told, o f tho rew arding resu lis_<I?riV idJrom -hcr-cfforts a t the school. M rs. Helen Tay­lor, circ le leoder, gave tho clos-Ing’p rayer:------------- -----------------

The C harles Y-Ho C ircle m et a t the home of M rs. M artvn for

brunch In honor of M r.-and ............................... l a d ^ n dM rs. Qaylord Hasselhlad-

73i-4332 o r -Taa- 5180; Buhl. 543-1062, d r Jerom e, 324-525G. N ursery serv ice , is availab le o t the P resb y te rian Church.

fam ily who a re tak in g an as­signm ent a t th e regional asso- -elated office in Seattle . Each

cai:d...'.Mr.Sv.. M erl E d c n .g a v e .a rending. _l!Make Life Extraordi-n a ry ." ----------------------------- -- ' -

M em bers of- the Y-Ho Circle held the ir reg u la r m eeting, with A coffee hour a t the home of M rs.— C h arles—G rav es. - Mrs; G eorge H artley gave tho open­ing prajw r, w ith M rs. GravesI tfc h a rg o 'f tfc iie ' pfogrninT

H er subject w as "C om m unica­tions," M rs, H artley gave the history of the C harles Y-Ho family,'

Page 28: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

A -8 Ticnes-News, Tw in Falls, Idaho Sunday, October 5,* 1969.

G q y le Story,

G o o k Disclose

, W e d d in g D a te '.S g t . a n d . . M r s . - K c n n e l h W .

. S lo ry , W a sh in g to n , D . “C .. a n ­n o u n c e th e Q n g ag o m cn t o f Ih e ir i la u R h tc r . G a y le A nn, to C ap t. .I x e W il l ia m C ook, son e f - M r . a n d M r s . . H a r r y L . C ook, W es- tc rv i l lo , Ohio,-

------- M Lss S to ry _ i5 -th c g r a n d d a u c h - •t e r o f M r . a n d M ^s. C lyde N . •R o s a , T w in F a lls .

'M is s S to ry w a s - g ra d u a te d — f r« m —V ipenta-^A m ertcoT T -tH iB if

S c h o o l, y ic e n z n , I ta ly , a n d is - p r e s e n t ly a_ .>;enior a t Ju d so n

'C o l le g e , M 'aridri.: A la .------ C a p t^ C o o k —w a t-^ ra d u a to d —

f ro m W e s te rv ille H ig h School a n d r e c e iv e d h is d e g re e from - O h io S t a te U n iv e rs i ty . H e iss e r v in g w ith th e A ir F o r c e in __ ________________S e lm a , A l a r ! " ' a 't th e C r a ig A ir

■ ■ .w i l l - b o - J a n .- 1 0 C h a p e l , - " '

K ET C H U M -T he V/hUe Cross quote-Hp . l ^ ' filled this month, a Chrlstma.^ bazaar and cooked food sale-and the announcem ent t h a t . ^ b ags.have been complefr e d 'fo r servicem en w ere princ i­p a l, topics a t jh e _ re g u la r m eet­ing o'f the .Baptist M ission 'S o ­ciety a t the homo o f 'M rs . P r u ­dence Scofield.' M rs. Ear'l W right w as co-hoS*

D EA R ABBY: T r-e c e n 1 1 y | DEAR A BBV: My husband is le a rn ed th a t o u r 23-year-oid son, '49 and t am 46. He i<: a college now a scn ib i^ in -c o lie c e r is - th e c ra d u a te -a n d an-excellei...............- ...............rarw er-------- ------------------------------------aw ay fo r adoption la st y ear.'O ur Son did not confide in us. 1 found th is out quite by accident.

O ur son and this girl did not• w an t to ru sh ,in to m arriage, so

t b e y decided to give up ihe■ child, .bu t-n fiw ,th a t she h w re­

tu rn ed home they became 'en­gaged. (They a re noTawjire that

____ lJu io w .ab o u t the b aby .),l might■ add , she is a very sweet girl and■ 1 think, the world of her.

M v husband and I havew ays looked forw ard to our first g randch ild and I a m sick with c r ie f~ to ~ th in k 'th a t somewhere

—iR-thifr:rWorld-I-havc_iLjjirand; child , whom I will never know. I h aven ’t been ab le to bring my­self to tell m y husband yet. My qu estio n :.D o I have the right to keep th is from him ? I t is his

■‘"■■t r o u b l e d

D EA R TROUBLED: No pos- sU)le good con com e for your t e l l i n g your husband. ,TIie

'well. Be kind and silent. And d on 't dwell on it. The cancer of life 'Is reg re t.

----------D E AR-^ABBV-^ ^ T y -^ 'u i_ and I and ou r son (who is an

• only c h ild ) ' have h ad Sunday d inner o u t for m any years.

denly s ta rted som ething new. He r u s h e s th ru th is dinner, and

......w hcn-w o-oro-how here-ne^r-fin -Ished he asks h is fa th er for the keys to the c a r so ho can go sit

' in it and listen to the radio.-H is fa th e r doesn ’t like it any better

* than I do, b u t he gives him the ' ' keys and w c finish without him.

---------—I>Qvld-hnV<lone-tfil6^hoa-wc■ have h ad o thers eating with us.

too. I think it is rude, but my husband .says If the boy prefers to sit in the c a r and ii-Slen to the radio, it’s his privlleBc. hut I know m y husband Is hurt. I’d like your opinion.

.„ , HIS MOTHER

DEAR MOTHER: U IS rude, but your son Is trying to tell

- - you tha t, h .o .U .,boro i;llavo , you Tried draw ing David Into the cnnvcrsntlon? DirectlnR «\iies-

;_____ tinns to him ? Listening to him?Next l im e . 't ry It. llo m ay stay th ru dessert.

’iqer; w c have three,lovely ..... dren a n d have been m arried for 20 years, M y 'problem ? My hus­band doesn ’t like fo r m e to talk to him.

He a.sks m e not to '^alk to him a t m ealtim e b e c a u s e. he is ‘.‘busy” ea ting .-H e doe.Sn’t want m e to ta lk to him while he’s driving, becausc he’s “ busy” driving. And God forbid that_ I should talk t( f hin^ while he is K adm g o r w atching television!_H c_doesn lt_ ant_; I. .10 ta lk

when w e a re out in public with friends either. This is very liard on. m e a s I come from a large -fam ilv-and love to talk. 'I am not dum b. I read a lot and have a lot of in teresting things to say. When we a re out, he talks to o ther people, but he . says.' he HAS to ta lk 10. THEM — hedoesn 't liaye to -ta lk to ML.

O . 'h e d o e s call m e from work ev e ry d a v to find out w hat was in the m ail, and then I get to ta lk . He -says as long a s he

he doesn 't m ind m y t a 1 k i n g P lease p u t th is in your column as it is one of the thmgs my

'husband a lw ays reads, and it will be one w ay for m e to tell lim- w h a t-I i- th m k - Thank

buy h is fctorles. A , m an who is ,<wnstantly ta lk ing about his sex H fo .-ls-dong-w hat he- 'Talking about

E verybody h as a - problem. W hat’s yours? F or a personal rep ly w rite (o Abby. Dox-fi97Q0, Los A nneles, Qal. DOOM,' arid en- olos»-a-^lampCd,-fidU-addrcwd envelope. ' '

_ IV- f ' ,•■•' .

Ut^it Activities O u tlin e d For. B d p tis t-W o m e n ", v B 'g a u ty .T ip s A r^ ’ Presented -tess. M rs. Jess Beckley gavethe lovejgift dWOtwnal^crylccA*- M rs. -Hazel B arber ouilined the white cross quota. Red Cross w orkers 'w ill fill the bags m ade for serv lccm cn .in .southeast Asia.-. ' .

The bazaar and cooked - food sale will he- held Dec. 5 and 6 in the church annex. A ‘card w as sen t to M rs; Clyde Sowers-

b y -a t her new h o m eJn M arsh- [ield. Mo - a f tr - '

Mrs. Fred All&n gave the pro­gram , which w as an artic le on Christm as in the Japan Mis­sions. The Oct. 14 meeting- is a t the home of...M rs. Herm an McQuinn, Hailey. ■" ', ^ V.FOR FAST SELLING RESULTS USE TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS

.P E C L O — BijUuty tip^ were presented j p m em bers of the T hrifty '/rh r iv ^ rs Homemakers Club w hin thoy niet a t.the home of M rs. C harles ‘Kov/itz-fOr tlic S eptem ber meeting.. • M rs' Gen'c Bortz selected Mrs. Jam es R odgers -for. her ' model to dem onstra ie o^e of the new fa l l 'h a ir sty les. She also gave M rs., G eorge Schrenk a facial and showed the p ro p e r.w ay to

shape eyebrows on M rs. Nor-m an Sm yer. , ___

M rs. Dale Kiilf!. president, wa? -in charge of tJiQ business m eeting a t wnich' the group.vot- ed to have a rum m age sale a t the R upert Square the first part of October. ' •

Secref pal gifts w ere p'ro.^ent- ed to M rs. Don Whipple, Mrs. E verett Pardew , M rs. E arl B ar­rington, M rs. Jack Adams, Mrs.

Mile.s T racey . M rs. H arold HoK brook a n d M rs.:.Bortz.

. M ethods of dipping th o co la tes ' will be' dem onstrated, by Mrs. ■jay-K ldd—rvtrsr-H olbrrol^n 'ncJ^- J^lfs. D arringron when the group m eets Oc,t.'22 a t the Kidd home.

R efreshm ents were, served by the ihostess, ass is ted by Mrs.- Sm ycr.

' ^ ' USE TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS FO R FAST SELLING RESULTS

T H R O WR U G rS ^

D re s s u p a n d p r o te c t t h o s e flo o r p ro b le m a r e a s in y o u r h o m e w ith a t t r a c ­tiv e th ro v / ru g s . T h r e e s ty lo s to c h o o s e f ro m in o b lo n g , o c ta g o n o r ov a l. M a n y d e c o ra to r c o lo r s to c h o o s o - f ro m .. - ...... —

OUR O W N LOAAA LINDA^ THERMALglANKETS

H e re Is o u r f a m o u s b la n k e t in j u s t r ig h t w e ig h t fo r y e a r- a r o u n d u s e . A b le n d o f 5 0 %

'r a y o n a n d 5 0 % p o ly e s te r w ith ^ ^nyloji .b ind ing . 7 2 x 9 0 in ch s iz e ' iiT~5"beaLitiful d e c ­o r a to r c o lo rs .

Spring Maid ’ ■ N o -lro n '

PRINTED BEDSPREADlovel/ (Icral phnis on o blend of 5 0 '/ , koBof pdlyeyer and 50 V. cotton. ."MoonilowEr'’ .. . . m aiiei_of..fIow eii_hiohligL led_ a j If by Iho dear wlii.io ol th« moon, givo th ij deiign depth and (jcihnesj. •'Petiwinki " . . . a bed of goy fteih floweti In «un. b/ight colon to gteer Iho morninq. Choon from «iifier_<<g^oJn-.

Reg. 10.98 $7.99

SALEi a PIECE

You g e t a b tith m o t, con- lo u r rug a n d IT3 co v e r . . .

oil e m b o ssed a n d in lovely d e c o ra to r co lors . . . o f th is

e x c e p tiondl Fou n d e rs D oys'

W n M F N '.S

i& L O V E SFrom —a-.fam ous- m aker_»— smooth fitting nylon d r e s s gloves in s e v e r a . t fashion styl'esT Sizes 6 to 8 In white or

_Ar-tist-Pa.r.ty---------

H eld By G ro u pGl.ENNS 1‘ERRY — XI Alpha

Alplm C hapicr m em bers of Hcta Sijitnti l^hi m et iit “ Shirley’s VII' lai;i-" (M rs, Jim Wllliiims' Gar-

for an artitit party recent­ly . All, iachuliiiK guufitH, were jiillr<'»l In (hi.'ir i>wn Idea of what n lt ls ts w ear.

rfl»;h. Mr;i. K. UlarK aTd tvirs. Clmrli^s, Micliticl, O ther kuusIh

Mlnrliulcd fri)ni the Alpha Dflin ■ .'C hnp trr. Mr.'!. F red Grnffc. Mrn,

' Jo e WdtulM. M rs. Coorgi' WIIHh, — M ra..L uw rcn I’xccm nn i\nrt Mr/*,...Jerj'V . Jlvlitii;;...'.___ i_____ _____

------------“ V — ¥ -------------------- ' ------

Postponed'P A U L — ‘riu!, C restvlew W)erfl

. ..Exli!linl'>ii Ilnnii'ttialiiTH Cliih will tuii hold tilt! rcuiilar bslnoHN nii'<'liiii;''riuiniiltiV <lui‘ to wotucn

- ■wnrtcm/T-ln-Ttnrpotmo-iind-lii.'etJirtrvoHi.

lliftvuw r. the iionilniilluK cdni- nUlleo will 1)0 prupiirinK the nlale of riiiulldiile.i for ttew of- flrerK in Jiiv (>lprlert diirinn The, reg u la r Noveinl)cr hiiMtieNA

- -commTnop-iiTMiitx'r.'rri’if'itidJ' JanioH Moon*, Mr^, Donald

RehwHit find Mffl. llo llh Me- ■ CIcllan. 0 /flre rn ciifitonmrily

se rv o fo r n .year. .

A n llq u o s .S h o 'w a n d Sale

. C O L U M B I A N C LU B , B O I S E . I D A ^ O 7 f , )9 noon la 9 p,m.

*&ctob«r 9, 12 neon to 6 p,ni. OrAURS MOM

« NORTHWesnRN STATIS

Lost 10 lbs. in 10 day on

“ Grapefruit- Diet

—ItlH J (tulT ilid ly t(Mk„cotilr* liijvo li.mo' iKlliad (tom linnil lo IkiikI tn f'lrtoilet, plonll anil oKici’i tluuuulioui ihs U.S,

[Irrnuin lli)i ^lirt isdlly worl<l. Wo Imvo loUlpnoiiUltl tfl|)Q)tHlU OJ1 lit «urr.i»i, II you lolloyi' It B>rictiy, yo.) the.ild loib 10 pouixlt tr> 10 ilnyi, Nn wololil Ion In tlin Itnt lotir iluyi l)ut you I will «iif|il_nnl^ (iiiundi

liuntint IJevllfldthit dim Inti, you Hulf

yoiinoK wltli (otinatly ' ’’fotbld. rtcn" (oetti lijcli <» ilonLi, Itiin'. mnil wllti (ol, rniiit nr ftlnl (hirk- en, t|Kivlo«, imiy^nncilin, lolitloriw lm m lnj Irt Imttor^ tinmn fou,

mil Inin wnlglit, Tlin l.m rt hn- hlifl Ihll ."(iKick vjsiulil.l»«t'.',It lliilpln, I 111 (liini tint lotiii Irit, Ax'l IIki |iilrn III tli|t(tiat <lcl« (It o-<iilnlyil lllifl lil(/.

' ■<> Itiiil llin ta t liuinliKI p rcrnn . Ynii itiiK yoiinrlf on ill"- pnniilllril foo<l ' lu ln l |ti tlm ilini

J/ll>n, 'ID'I | l | | | lt'IO..iJJHlulilly. lul (livi nxeti'.IxM ly lliildi, A ciipy nl llilt itm lllnfi’ iiir<niilul ilint [nif 1)4 r>lil(il»B'l l>y innilinti $2 tn

C i i r u t Dint Plait

5 2 M W . Jo ffo rio n

L .A . C a lif. 900 1 6

MnnBy-brtci •OiKiKin'ei, l( nfmr liyliil) tlm cliDt yui> liuvo not tuti

. Iiunrtl III tlm (iltt tavnii iliiyi, ciiiotlim (t poiiriili .III . IliB nnal 7 <l(iyi, (iml. I '/ i iiouiicj* >v«iy two diiy i tlinift'iflDr, tliiiply latiiiii til* (tU| plan nmf, vnur V i will ba ('ofitnijad proiniilly 'iind mIiIi- out nriiKii'ianl. tnor out llilt .inei- inu* <it n («mlii<tar. Diirlils l^nw o rigtiln lliB^I/liii (itHiitKvB (liiiiti^ if'ye.A’ youili.

L IG H T W E IG H T .

—A A 0tD E D ~ LUGGAGE

T h is Is t h e la v is h lU RgoR e w i th t h e s lo e k lo o k o f t h e f u t u r e . . . t h a t m e e t s to* d a y 's |o t - n n o t r a v e l n e e d s .

. I f a d u rab lo . a n d llRhtwalBht- ----------- t h a w o u r .r o B i s ta n t e x to r* -

lo r f in is h w o n 't a c u f f o r w e a r . o f f . S l iR h t i r r a f lu la r i t io s w ill

n o t a i r a c t s o r v ic e o r n p p o a r* o n c o .V i/o m o n 's In n o v y n n d R ro o n , . . M e n 's in o liv e o r R roy .

j llriy o l T n iv el„ ,

- W om en 's beouty c p je , w eekend tolo or Vanlly._,W ot'non's overnito case ..............................................W om en 's w ofdrobo ......................................................W ornen 'j 7<t inch p»illmart,.«-T.<77\........................W oinon’j 26 Inch p u l l 'm o n ............. . . ......................M on's 21 inch com pan ion co io ..................M en 's 2«1 Iricli com p( nion .........................................M on’s 2 - t i j l |o r ...................................................................M on's 3*iui>er

. ,rfifto r^9 :9 5 e a .-$ 1 6 .. . . Reg. 29.95 S I7.99t . . Rog. 46,95 $26.99. . . . Reo, -16.9.5 $21.99. . . . Reg. 46 95 $26.99. . . . Reo. 29,95 $17.99. . . . Weg, 36,95- $21.99 •

RoO. -16,95 $ 2 6 . ^ ^ '1 d '; $ 2 9 .9 9

FANFAREPANTY HOSE

G re a t s a v in g s ! T h e s e are_ s lig h t Ir*re R u la rs -w h ic h ._ w iIlitio t .a ffe c t w e a r ___:o r a p p e a ra n c e . C h o o s e fro rp s h a d e * o f m cllo , b e lR e . 'm e d iu m b e ig e , cof* f e e b e a n a n d ta iJ p e in s iz e s P-M*MT* i

—a n d

K N IT ..

SALELQUB=EAM01ii2 Pant Suits

A neW se le c tio n o f o u r ,f a m o u s ' all w o o l s h a rk s k in Im p o r te d s u i ts . T h e y e r e th e s u i t s w ith 3 2 h a n d se w n d e to i la - 'in —th o - ^ O D f B lo n e l "C o m e c h o o ao a n d s o y o ^ f ^ m a .IorRO OS* s o r tm o n t o f s o lid s , rn u td d p lo id s-a n d I r id e sc o n ts in s e a s o n - s p a n n in g col* o ra , . . All In th o p o u p lo r tw o -b u t­to n , s id e v e n t s ty lin g , S lz o s 3 6 to A 6 In - s h o r ts r r e R u ln r s r t ln d 'lo n B a : ----------T

Gpmpare at $70.00

4 9 . 9 9

SHIRTSj

Th o savings aro big on mon'a full fashion- od-banlon knit-ehirtB.- Short aleovo moCk turtlb, and plackot col* lars. C h o o s e from tTiany handsome coK o ra. I n S • M • L a n d XL.

4 . 9 9

MEN'S SVyEATERS

W o b o u g h t th e e n tire s to c k o f o v e r 'r u n e 'f r o mo n e o f th o n o tio n s to p a w e a te r m a n u fo c tu ro rs . All fu ll f a s h io n e d . k > In­c lu d e d q r« 1 0 p % virgin

..JnmbBWQOl._, lO Q % _ v irg (nw ool b o u o le n n d fancy • h e t la n d a In lo n g s leev e pu ll-o v e rs , 2 p o c k e t cardU g a n s . .V -necks, m o ck tur* t lo n e c k s a n d c re w no ck s.

_ . r .„ Re8..$15 , -------t o $ 2 0 V a lu a s

^ 3 . 8 8

— :i'-i --------•»

THE IDAHO DEPARTMENT STORE

Page 29: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

■ •{

Sunday, O ctobenS, 1969 -lim ejrN ow s^Tw in Falls', Idaho A«9

Homem;afer5.Gouncil' M FaHs:L4i:What's Hqppeijm . . ' VSlace prcsldiitit, sold loday Ini'stale UnW cr.itv. will nlvc the W llson^asslsU nt j u t t leader o t ' shaped lliits . f o r ' sophlsU ca' _ T tx lu re i: w hether In te lt.'v e - J ^ l ^ S t t n e i M i H O r l a S h l O r i p a t t e m‘“ 'S la le VnW erilty, will give Vie W llson^asslstant a la te leader of

of ihe fam ily in developing a nnnQuncmg.thc.4)rogram-fQr-rcPr-keynole a d d re ss; Kenneth F a le r ' ' . . .from all Idaho Slate U niversity staff

; ventlon^’of the Idaho Extensionfrom all Idaho Slate U niversity staff

iieh ’a . physicai educo-, be a luncheon sp e a k e r .- ! UoivcFslty of Idaho.1 Y oungsirom. associate dl

Edith U ctts, associaic profcs- Atomic Enei . . . . m akers Council a t Idaho sor o f - 1—» - j . . - - u - ' . •— i.-7 al!s Oct. 21 a n j 22. ,tio n a t ..,w wm.,v.»

f n h n n r^ w sM ttlicr. She b f th e Ufliversit'^ of ld ah^"e>? L mce discuss the am W tious-an l tension s e rv ic e ,-^ is c ,-w ill dl:

j 0^ »"ost students on cuss extension “tel will be geared to the themei cam puses today. n - ' -•T he Fam ily - H eart of the R ichard Willey, dean of the Nation, M rs. Ralph Geffe. Boi-lcducatlon d cn /rfm ^n t - • •

v<.utiuilll\,s, IS UUVISUI,— ilnars will be conducted on

international relations, farhlly life .,cu ltural a rts . ' ’

. Ications. During the sem inar on r .ln ternatiot\al vclations' HaToW , Westt adm inistra tor of the Idaho

DAnn A _!#■., I

Shaped lines, for sophistic*-^ tlon. new '-colors fo r verve • — th a t’s , the tory In . m en 's fall lh a i's the story In meri’s fall crowns, contribu te to shapo^ while colors for d ress hats in­clude b rig h te r g rays, so il bWes'and bronze *

Textures; w hether In felt, ve- 1our o r long‘h a ir fabric's, trend to the velvety, silky and gleam ­ing; .

Combinations of tweed suede, and lea ther and suede

c o a ts will s e e you th ro u g h m a n y o c ­c a s io n s . S o m a n y e x c itin g s ty le s to c h o o s e f ro m ; t h e w a rm a c ry lic p ilet r im m o d w ool p l^ id , t h e d a n d y w ool tw e e d lo o k w )th -lea th e r~ b 'e lt-an d c o l­la r, th e e v e r p o p u la r w ool m e lto n ja c k e t w ith b e l t in b a c k , o r t h e n e a t look o f t h e ny lon sk i J a c k e t. L in ing# a r e 1 0 0 % a c e t a t e o r a c ry lic p ile .

-------- - S i z e s 8 '1 8 ,-

Reg. to $33

m m

Bulky Knit SWEATERS

Sw_6Mor v ^ e a th e r i s _ j u s t _ a ro u n d th e c o rn e r s o o u tf i t y o u rs e lf w ith th e b e s t o f th e n e w b u lk y k n it look. W o’ve g o t th e m a t _ ^ p r i c e _ y o u : d _

R e g~$7:99‘

_ J 5 « _

Rain or Shine COATS

T h e c la s s ic ra in o r s h in e c o a t s a r e h e ro '— ^ w lth -o ll-k in d a -o f-ac tto n -fo r-th o -fa sh io n -

ab lo a . T h e f a b r ic s a r e e a s y w o a rln g a n d s 6 v e rs a t i le , t h e l in e s a r f t - s u p p le - a n d th e _ Jo o k » - a r e y o u . S e le c t - f r o m

i- a » 8 o r te d - p la id s - o r c h e c k 8 .-S iz .e s ■ S 'to "

• Plaids _• Checks .

Reg. $23

- q p |8 8 -

The look of a su it in a one-picce dress for daytim e Occasions, f Especially sm a rt_ in llf lh te r.sh ad cs of.silk .' w ith-b lilckJju ttons.------- -----------------

P rice $1.00 — R-317 is availab le In sizes 12. 14. 16i 18. Size 14 takes 2% ya rd s of 44 inch fabric. S tandard body m easurem ents fo r size 14 a re : Bust 34, W aist 26. Hips 38.

Send O ne D ollar for pattern , plus C cents fo r postage, In cash ' or. check. No Stam ps. F o r Flr.st-Class m ailing, send 18 ccnU extra . A dd One D ollar if you wish NEW AUSTINE LA MAR ■ Ha i T E R in b u u K NO. 4 —• com plete selection of High Fashion designs, including ALL best-sellers. Send to AUSTINE LA MAR Fashion P a tte rn s , ' T lmes-News, Box 1G15, G.P .O ., New York.N.Y. lOOOl. P r in t youf..rull nam e, address. PATTERN NUMBER AND SIZE. ' . • .

t W O Yeung-W om en Teachers —

On-W ay-To M illiona ire Row—hated -the sy s tem ," M lss:d te rry “ *""“said. "C an you Im agine teaching finger-palntlng and not getting pa ta t on th e floor?'’

T ha t w as five yea rs ago when

lA lE ILADIES'

, DOUBLE-KNITW O O L SUITS

3-plece fashions of this season's knits aro the greatesti If knits aro your weakness, you will b e delighted with our hew fall col-

Joction of .double, knit vyppi suits. T h e y ’re sure to win compliments for you everyi' whore y o u ^ e a r them, a jacket, shell'and siim*lino skirt. Sizes 8 to 20.

Values to $60

^ 3 4 ^ a

LAVISH M IN K TRIMSH a v e ’ you a d d e d fu r to y ou r life la te ly ? J u i t a to u c h .o f fur c a n g iv e o u r g re a t c o a t sn o p e* In*

" s td n t d ram a! Luxurious n a tu ra l m ink co lla rs o d d a so n te o f w e a lth 1o o u r c lassica l sty lo d , me* Jiculously ta ilo ro d w ool coa t. P a m p e r you rself, co m e in a n d so lcct y ou r n e w to u ch o f m ink

. now l All lined w itli a c e ta te .

Reg.

$90 .

WOMEN'S WOOL COATS

B y PATRICIA McCORMACKBy. P /"N E W

shale not pe rm it d pa in t on the floor."

YORK (U P I)—"Thou rhlldren to drop

> N nnry C hrrry

put now fnsliion fla ir in to 'y o u r fall o n d w in te r w o fd ro b o w lfh .o n o of thesp b e a u tifu lly ta ilo re d w ool coa ls , th o s e all w ool co d ii o 're sfyTed In’ th e . n o w e tl sllhouottos’ a n d tex tu re s . . . In tho m ost oyo a p p o a lln 'a colors, Each o n e i t lined w ith a c e ta te fo r ex tra w arm th .

BABY ACCESSORIES SALE BY FOLDA ROLA

DELU;i(E

C M SEAT

• S w In R o r H o o k -O v o r b « r S o R ti^W h lP .Ifls I) hp a d PCP-. te c tlo h ''In t6 ,1 6 'V 6 ' 10 . hiR h ' b o c k se a t. P e d d o d a rm roll aw lnR S u p fo r on oy en* t r y . A r m foW co m p lo te ly rahnoVable fo r o ld e r c h ild . A u to m o tiv e t y p b nylon se o t.b ol^ fits Bcrdaa aho u l- d o r o r la p . 2 ” d e e p fonrri p a d d e d e e a t a n d b a c k fo r m a x im u m < ;om fo rt a n d p ro te c tio n . ,

,rt

■ Rag. - ' ...........

$ 1 . 2 . . . . . . 7.99

D ELUXE

H I6 HCHAIR

THIb b u c k e t B ea t F o ld a C h a ir -h o e - im p e ria l - fo a tu re a r - fc fk o —

b u c k e t a d a t atyilnR , w aah - a b le , u n b re a k a b le flberR lB aa

- t r o y , a e f e tv s e a t b e lt , a a f e w id e • a p re a d <«rb , l i g h t * w elR h t c h ro m e tu b u la r a to e l f ra m e , a n d a d ju a tn b ia fo o t ro a t. .C c^ m ee .ln w h ite , mel> l o w y e llow , w a ln u t , a n > d

Reg.

$20 ,

b a b y

$ T R O L k E RTriple ch ro m e p ip lo d slobi consfruc- flon . A p o t iUon w a t . S a fe ty belt. Brakjyr.r H eav y duTy w haal# . Trqy b o ik e t. 3 p o sitio n * ca n o p y . Lilo' iim o d e lu x e b o a rin g i.' Eaky fo w lpor c lean p la s tic fab rics . N o ^ a to o p fo ld in g . ■' . ,

$ 23.95 ’

THE IDAHO DEPARTMENT STQRE

a nd .J u d y Shackelford, two -young 'w orien well on~thc~way to_rnilU onnlrfl—ro w > -c tc d |t_ jo r th jlra u c c c sa ..

I t was the- ru le the education­al system cihployins (hem ex|lccled to be followed by the two beRlnnlng-wtcachei-B during

•* 'y e loved th e children but

G ra p h o lo g y

To p ic G iv e n

For H o m em ak ersDECLO — "G raphology’' wa«

the suhjact presen ted By Mr>i. Amy S ta rry to m em bers of tha Dom estic DuchosR’ Homem nkcrs Club w hen they m et a t ihe homo o f M r r G erald Mallory.

M rs rS ta r ry b r le f ly told of the la rt th a t graphoanaJyslff~playB

.n tiie buBlnein world and also the rasultA th a t the Federal.D u- Jfia.tt^LInY C U lantlQ oJiiiY cJiad in (heir Invesiigntlonfl. Eacli c lub m em ber wrote a f«w IIih’s and then Mra. S ta rry explnlnc.d aom e o f.th e lrch a rac te rl.itlc s nho could te ll frpm tholr handw rlt- jnff-

M rs. R ichard Moncur, p resi­dent. conducted tho business -m w llng—-and- U w aiu ,4 latldad thuro >vlli be a rum m age sale Sniurday ' a t (bo Durley luOmr Camp, /yii m em bers art) urged to bring u sed clothing' (o M rs. M aliory 'a homo before th a t date.

- d e l u :<:e- e g © n O ' M o d e l -

__ 1 VarloiisriuiunrtlLHlnK p ro jects dc, wcro discuBRffd and d u u i i ^ i t Jil

htJfinV inTraircans of candM«lur- roh tJ finV lin ra ircans of candM «lur* InR Ihe m onth of Oct«l)cr. Pro^ ceeds from som e of tho projnbis will bo used for pliiyground equipm ent a t ' D e c l o G rade School.

Tliero w ill bo a rcRiiinr coun' cll tiieeting on r^nmliiy a t tho Courthouae an d .each club.In tha

int^ Ii-u rg e d .to h ay a ita rop-

^ 1 5 ^ 9 9

rr."I 'h e -n e x frn iS e tin g : w ill bo ^a

..nlloweon pn riy a t the home o/ M rs. Uruco T u rn e r and mom' bora w ill attend In 'costum e.

P ro je c ts -N o te d '■X“ B «rble doli” fund raising

p ro ject a n d a cooked food aata w ill b o . held bcfare .ChrJitm aa U was announced durlnR a re- te n t’ m eeting « fO m lc rt)ri CImp* te r of Pfittt .SIfiiha Phi a t the horne of M rs. Cheryl llow ai^ .

A notM r fund raising project noted w aa (he caSNernI* cook- bookfl to be sold for )J,ao,

I 'ho itororlty convention will b s held, Uv CUayanno, Wyo.. ^hls ju a r .

.forc]gn_caE-J3ctwficr m ent th e y shared and t

icjr-tnm cd to non-p«an558lcar';p u rsu its - a n d — now -d r iv e - * --------Cadillac. . . .

Tho two disgruntled form er a r t teachers. av«rago age 26.have e,<«^bUsbcd thamficlves ■ a s ____I nvcn'turs ‘o f " toy r -g n a ~ « tn n * — ^ t h i n g s , including inflatablft- ' m annequins used to display clothing.

"W hen w e le ft teaching, w e had no m oney, only a few a r t

innllcs and a n -Idea- or, two.” , ..Jisfl Shackelford 'said . "W e didn’t oven have enough, talen t to m ake m oney palnllng po rtra its In Greenwich Vll* lace ."

^ he first toy Idea they sold to m ajo r m anufacturer Involved

pHls'tic UfiO' of tfsflue'paBer and— glue. Then they sold a doll with w ardrobe to a m all o rd e r - hon.io.

They m ado a deal with P a rk e r B ro thers and m arketed a n Inflatable pillow version of“ Instant-rfrfianlty,’-'- -..--------- --- . ;■■ Miss Cherry, g raduate of llnfstrn U niversity and a native •Nuw Yorker. Is p resident o f T iifm i-A ^ndnsT Frc.r'i^iro“ fiFm— : lhat Invented and fias rights totho Infiaiablo m UnnequIns.-Tho-------"blow-iipft'' cost a third of w hat .....plnniic-.und-pla»ler-versions do. -

Miss Shackelford, of Alton,III., and a R rnduate of .Southern IlllnolH U niversity, fs president of Cherty-Shnckolford Creations Inc.. the a r t end of’ the niirtnnrftlilp~1 hc“ ncw08 t"Iftm in tha t line; ’po tted flower' ’tha t ppens to reveal a ,,baby /do ll,, ,

■In'' addition io a limousine every y ear, the two

roflearch and development la­boratory—o dojen emplpyfli» and other m ark s of su cce i£ ...

B e a d M a k in g

Program G ivenA- p r o g r a m - o n ," B e a d .Mak•—, . -

IITR7’ »5^^¥va7faU a-paper^i^ tll«r-u i id - jh i l l a c ^ .w h s j J tw n tM J iy - ___^Clura Wnlton a t tho rcconi.mect*Ing of ihe,IVUry-DavU.Ar» C lub------ -a t tho h n m e . o t Mr#. D elbert Crafg, with Mr. and M ri. 1>0 Mulllnii as a ss ls tan ti. •

A- report w^a-glven on-the but>~-— - dOQ^ aketohlng.a«aa(9ar-h«ld-'la - - - Ju ly a t the Idaho Pow er Parle

................. - ............. j announced •the Judging In the jiwiirboolc • cover co n te it w ill uiift 'p l« c « ' ' next m eeting. ^ •

T h e ' hostess aerved refresh- ’ i , m enta, assisted b y M rs, B e rth u '. I ' Swlck. Tho Oct. aa m e « ln f l i - - w ith M rs. F ra n k Qtlggs,- Mra. OUle B a lU rd u

Page 30: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Trudy N bdda,Trqcy Recite .N up tia l V ow s. ALMO — The hom e ' of

—BiiU M is : AlvliV‘N cada., MaltaT w as the setting for the Sept.5 wedding of their dauRhter.T rudv, to Ke\'in W. T racy , son of M r. and M rs. W illiam ' H.T racy , Almo.

g double ring ccrcm onv jridejjroc

r/r-lO TImes-NswsVTwIn Foils. Idaho Sunday, October 5, 196?

! solemnized b y ihc brideRroom ’s ’ unde .-B ishop B e r t .F . T racy of

th e - Almo LDS Church . before • a backg^round .<;chlng of beauty

b askets of pink g la d io l i 'a n d d a rk e r pink chrysanthem um s

— a n d -g rc c n e ry .„ — -------------------T h ^ b r id e , e s c o r te d , b y h e r

f a th e r /w o r e a flo o r-le n g th gow n ' o f B rid a l O rig in a l la ce , fa sh io n ­

ed w ith a n a tu r a r w a is t l in e _ a n d ■ - fu l l - s k i r t - th a t - J iw c p t - 4 n t o _ a

lodice f ro n t .c h a p e ! t r a i n . T h e bi c u ff s a n d c o l la r -w e re e n h a n c e d w ith ry ff ie s . W h ite s te p h in o tis

' a n d s a t in le a v e s fo rn fe d a, b a n d f o r h e r th r e e - t ie r e d ,e lbow -Jength

'■■'veil o f ’ ny lo n illu sion ._ 'S h e _ c a r r i e d a c a s c a d in g bou

__ q u c t 'o f p in k f o s e ^ 'd ^ s h a t t e r edv K ite c a rn a U o n 5 ''a n B ^ te p h e n o tIs

; e n h a n c e d w ith w h ite s a t i n:8 t r e a m e r s .------- r,-'?' M ? ? . R o n n ie /S c h 'i 'in h ,- s is te r

• o f th e b r id e , ',w a s m a tr o n 'o f h o n o r . B r id e s m a id s w e r e "D ebra Z o llin g e r , c o u s ip ‘'*Q f''the b r id e -

• , g ro o m , a n d D ia n n e T r a c y a n d L a u re l T r a c y ^ . s i s t e r s o f - t h e

' b r ld e g ro o m -K e n n a -T T a c y ,- s is te r o f th e b r id e g ro o m , w a s flo w er g i r l a n d c a r r i e d a . b a s k e t of sh a t te re d p in k c a r n a t io n s a n d g r e e n e ty .

P a u l T r a c y , S a l t L a k e C ity , ‘ c o u s in o f th e b r id e g ro o n \ , s e rv e d

a s b e s t m a n . U sh e rs w e r e T e d d y T r a c y , b r o th e r o f th e b r i d e- g ro o m ; T lic h o la s -N c d d o ,-c o u s in o f th e b r id e , a n d R o n n i e S ch w in n , b ro th o r -in - la w o f th e

tion w as held a t th e R aft R iver High School G ym nasium . The w edding p a rty g reeted guests before a silver and w hite back­drop. flanked by beauty b a ^ e ts

■ • ■ - pink gladioli Thid mum s.

________tghio• w ith w hite lace over pink and

centered with a five-tiered wed­ding cake displayed on a m irror.

TTie m irro r w a s ' decorated

BeGl<y_ Butler,

K napp R ^ if e ”"

N u p tia l V o w s, BLISS — T he.B liss Commun­ity.. .Church w as 'th e .setting for the wedding of Becky Sue But­le r and-DaVid-Lce_ Knapp Aug. 17. -The. b ride is the daughter

The double ring cerem ony was ■erformed by the~Rcv:“ Harold

.Jvingston, Jero m e ,'.-b e fo re a j>ackground._of lighted candle.*; and arrangem ents of w hite and yellow gladioli.

m ade. H er veil of bridal illusion was field by a fabrie-bow . She carried a cascading bouquet nf daisies accented w ith a gold bow.

B arbara Butler, Bliss, w a s m aid ' of honor for her sisier. •Bi.................

w ith pink tulle, g reenery and chryS irthem unis. The a ll white w edding' cake, m ade and decor­a ted by the bridegroom ’s moth-

= c r f J e a tu re d ^ llv e r - te a v e s ^ iH c s of the valley and m iniature pink rosebuds topped with m iniature

__bride and bridegroom ,. _, The bottom lay er w as enhanc­ed w ith a sm all arrangem ent of-fresh pink rosebuds and white alyssum .

Qljartet tables w ith w hite lace cloths over pink V ere centered

■ with b randy sn ifters containing - thrpf ’ ' ’ ' ------ " --------- *■

M rs . T r a c y c u t a n d s e rv e d th e c a k e , a s s is te d b y M rs . A r l o

------------tlo y d -T m d -^ rs r -L -n r ry -T ra c y ra u n ts o f th e b r id e g ro o m , a n d M rs . D ew a cd H a ll a n d M r s . E d ­w in P a s k e t t , a u n ts o f th e b r id e .

G u e s ts w e r e ro g ls te rc d by K a r e n E d w a r d s , in c h a r g e of

---------------(h ^ g lft-ta b le -w e r«~ M rS i-R o n a ldW a lte r s a n d M r s . B e r t T r a c y .

'■ G if ts w r e c a r r i e d b y C r a i g T r a c y , A rlen e L loyd , S h e lley L lo y d , L ex T r a c y , D o u g la s Jo h n , R h o n d a .H a ll a n d K e n n e th H n ll.

G u e s ts a t te n d e d f ro m C a lifo r­n ia , U ta h , B o ise , B lac k fo o t, R o c k fo rt, Id a h o F a l ls , B u i '

- Y o s t, A lm o , E lb a a n d M altnT h e c o u p le to o k a w e d d in g

trl|j) to S un V a lley a n d R e d F ish

T h e n e w ly w e d s 'r e s id e a t 317 ShoM lone S f. N .. T w in F a l l s , w h e re th e y a r e a tle n d l r tg th e CollcEO o f S o u th e rn Id a h o . T h e b r lile g ro o m is e m p lo y e d a t D on

■ P ie p e r ’s S e rv ic e S ta tio n ,A p re -n u p tia l sh o w e r w

* g iv e n for th e b r id e b y M rs . G o r­don E dvvan is a n d k n r c n E « l-

------------ w a r d s - a l . t h c - G o r d o n . E d w n rd sh om o , fvliiltJi,

W orl<shop O n

' Cloth i rig Set.SHO.SIIONE - r l/)cnl women

nro Invlti'd lo rcglhicr for li fiollilni; WDpksliop to be condiict- oit l>y M rs. Jay I'owle.f, cxtcn-

Mr;i, r'‘owloH snid lho work- ifhop; 'to" 1)0 ln'td In Octolwr, Is s|xi(;iflcailv for tlioso who wi;.li to hriisli'iiri on lerlmlqiies mut for d-M lirnilers. Those who

^ n v e 'l i iu l~ im i( > n f ^ y .~ 5PWing,

lltn courhL'. will conHi»t oi Nix mcL'tlniJs of two hours «‘nr|;. If

— ^onoufclu\re^ln>‘’r{;slp(i; th6re will bn two iecl(mrp-T)f—tht_cl{!3 |i, »nd nftcrnoon and evonlnti, pm' nlblv 'in two ilineront'locathin?. In llio county, dopendinB on the num ber rejiislorlnRi Those Inltirestwl mny call the county cxt('ii!il()ii iit'.iMit'n office

'P ^

- ' j a J o w e r - C l u b ; ! —

P rb g ra m 'G lv e n '“ Dried ArrnnKemontfi" w n n

(ho topic of M rs. Glenn Nclnnn!n nronrnm , presented to the Ciiun- iryiiidu IHowor Club recently nt

- t h r • h6m o-of M ra—Mnx~Croth' e rs . ' )

UsinK dried wp6d and vnrious typcH of v ines,/flow ers an d l-’ly- iirlnuH, Him evplnincd ihn moih' 0 (Ih of KNjng/lno m ntcrlttls. .She domnnHtiirl<in h o w ihn wood could Im} used for hlHh o r low arrniigom onfa, doponding on tlio room IxlckKround. She Huld (hnt no nrrnnBom ent nhnuld have to hn titled, thnt^ it flhould ({Ive (ha v lew or (tn own meaflogo.

C liik p rlzo s wont to M rs. Wil­liam Knnting and M rs. Glenn N ohon. I l i e nex t m cotlnK jB a

.-nO'JioAtJunchDoa,

M R, AND M RS. DAVID L E E K.NAPP

Eagle, s ister o f ’the bridegroom , and M ary B utler, s is te r o f the bride.

Candlelighters w ere Ja n e But­le r and Jill B utler, s is te rs of the bride.-R o b e rt Knapps, Kent, W ash.,s e rv e d -a s —best_m an ^ -fo r—hisbro ther. Ushers w ere Dan But­ler and A rthu r B utler, Bliss, b ro thers of the bride.•T ec la G uerra , McCall, w as

soloist, accom panied by Yalorle Koester, Good’ ■

A garden r( h a t evening a t >ride’s grandm other, M rs. Ef- ie Butler, Spring Cove Ranch,

Bliss.

Carol Heady, cousii ■ ■ ■ S uiting ' fln/t snrving-

Jsfn ' of

cake w ere Ruth Van S 1 y k e, Rnymond, W ash., nnd M rs. Glenn Kunkel, Pocatello, aun t of tho bride. M rs. Harold Hendy and M rs. Florence Taylor^ aunt.s of tjw .bride, served the coffee and puhchT^ ' T";

T h a couple reside in Seattle, Wash.

M rs .-C ra in Is ■

G u ild HostessKIM BERLY — R eaders Guiltl

m et recently a t the hom e of Mrs. Tom Croin. M rs. Ja c k Ciai- born J r . assisted the hostess.

Juno H aggard t, p rogram chairm an. Introduced Mr.s. Ju lia Ryan, who ti>aclies nliysiciil edu­cation for the special ('(hication classes a t Robert Rtimrt Jun io r High .School, .Slie showed n film which depleted snmo of (he work dono-iij-tho io-clusaes______

Gupsis wcro M rs. Rvnn ntuiM.rs^„;l‘>o,.D^.DQtI._WunuLdKe..

-T h n Ofil. • 22“ s’(-s>iI(Tn 'w iil he a t th o , home of; M rn.-Clnlhorn,

E:tents_

Lu^n'cjg Lewis

Is M a rrie d To '

R ichgrddCirdine -.<1,

selmo, C filif ., 'd augh ter of Mr.. and M rs. W illiam B. Lewis, was m arried to R ichard O. Ja rd in e , Twin F alls, son of M rs. Rubv Jard ine, Twin F alls, and Carl Ja rd ine . Wells. Nev., in rites

Church. San^'Ra'fael, Calif.T ho ,bride“ w ore a floor-length.

gowp of peau de_.50ift..9.ccented with a le n c o n 'la c e and pearls. H er illusion .veil • fell from a crown em broidered w ith m atch- ing' luce and "pearls..............

Maid of honor was K athryn Stogner, D en v e rr-w ith A lbert Jacobs, Oakland, Caljf., a s best m an^-' -U sh e rs - - W fe "~

■Thompson;— O ak ia n d r~ 'John Ja rd ine , Twin Falls Jard ine, Twin Falls.Toloman, Chico, Calif.

A reception w as held_ n t the hqm e of the bride’s..M fC n ls . T |id , couple,.rook, a honeymoon trip to N ortliern California and wiil-residc-in-M ill'V alley,-C alif. - .

The Twentieth .C entury Club iunchcon is scliedulcd f o r '1 p.m. Tuesday a t the -YM - YWCA, Guest speaker will -be W*. A.

SHOSHONE—St. P e te r ’s Cath­olic Church A lta r Society will m eet a t 8 p.m . M onday a t the church rectory.

Magic C hapter.N o, 82, O rder o f 'E a s te rn .T ila rT 'w ill m e6t m regular-session a t 8 p .m . Mon­day a t .the M asonic T em ple . All

Prim rose Rebekah Lodge will m eet a t 8 p,m . T uesday a t the Odd Fellows H all. A ll visiting R ^ e k a h s a re w elcom e.

> (■ * > /■-Cantflh CQlL'iX-NQ,..]3_Rnd-L'a:

S; Rupert Canton ” 'lA P M 'H olds

M^thl^AAee^t

dies Auxiliary P a tr ia rc h s Mili­tan t will meet a t 8 p .m . M onday a t the Twin F ails Odd Fellows Temple. T here.w ill be a- reh ea r­sal. . •

X.Zenobia Club,No, 2, Daughter's

-of"-thc-Nile .- 'wil> 'inoet a t noon W ednesday for sew ing. M em bers are asked’ to bring sandw iches.

>(. if- ’Disabled A m ericap V eterans

and Auxiliary w ill^have a rggu- la r ” mectrriK a t 8 p'im. M onday a t the DAV H all. M em bers arc asked to bring refreshm en ts . A d istric t m eeting will be l^eld fol­lowing the reg u la r m eeting.

RICHFIELD — RichHeld LDS .Soci(iiy-w ilW >egin-regu-

la r weekiv sessions n t 1 0 'a.m . Tuesday. Mrs, Clive Canps will present the lesson, "Sniritual Living and T e s t im o n ie s .M r s . Lynn H iatt will give the v isit­in g 'je a c h c r s j jn s tr i^ ^

> .V >1‘ .Tho F riendship C ircic of the

Women of the Moose w il| m eet nt 8 p.m. M onday n t thc^hom e o f Ruhy Murphy, 10.17 l l th Ave.‘ E. M onibcrs aro asked to attend in Hniiowecn costum es.

¥• V ^

C ouple W e d sR IC in -IE l.D -N ow lyw eds, Mr.

and M ra,..John Lem m on, w ere m arried Sept. 20 a t E lk o ,'N ev . ,ludge Edw ard Lunsford per* formed tlie douhio r ing cerc; mony.

Tho hriile wnre a three-piece blue k n it 'en som hie ' wi t h beige ncressories.

-nclcrsunls-Ifood-M urkuLnU licIi; f)d(l. . Mr. L cnu iion . Qwna..uiid tuH'ralos ilio I.einmon H ardw are .Store at Uichfiel;!.

BURLEY — The Canton Ru­p ert No. 19 and Ladies Auxiliary P a tria rchs M ilitant held the ir recent-m ecting under th e 'd irec- tio n -o f-G ap t—H erbert Kennedy and M rs. B irdie Kennedy; presi­d en t,.a t . the R upert lOOF Hall.

M rs. Velma Fenton, vice pres­ident, form ed the lines and Mrs. E sther A rbogast gave the open-

— :nd-clnsinff"lhoughis.______ lla-C hatbum , Albtonivws elected delegate to th ^D e- partm en t Association m eeting which will be held Oct. 19 20 a t Boise. -

M rs. K ennedy reported-on-the stric t picnic held, July. 20 a t

the Twin F alls Picnic Grounds Snake R iver. Pocatello No, Rur>ert No. 19 and Colfox •* - - ' a t the

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD O. JA R D IN E (W allace photo)

No. 13 w ere represen ted a t tl ichic w hich w as hosted by Col' IX,No.’ 13.M rs. Fenton reported on th(

picn ic held Aug. 7 a t the Albion City P a rk hosted b y the Albfon women. '

'k,—R upcrtr—who teaches a t different f o r e i g n bases of the United S tates A rm ­ed Forces, told of her experi­ences and trave ls in Okinawa, Thailand and India. P resen tly she is stationed In the Philip­pines.

M iss H aw k w as a guest a t the picnic held In Albion. O ther guests n t the picnic w ere Russell Johnson, Fresno, Calif.; Mr. and "Mi.i. Ruy Clayton and"M rs. J. R. Hansen, a ll Burley, and M rs. GuFShHllngton, Rupert. ! T

It was announced M rs. F en ­ton nnd Col, LeRo\< Fenton v is­ited the Tj \P M and Canton, P o ­catello No. 11, Sept. 8.

Mrs.. E dith Clevengor reported

p ert No.- 19,- being-guests Sfcpt- 18 of ih e Evening S ta r Rebiknh l-ndgeTO uport. Chevalier D’ick A rbogast, assisted by Donna Ar- b'ngnst,' presented a m agic show. E ach guest wns presented n gift.

M em bers told of an unusual ■ interesting experience they

had during sum m er vacation;It was nnno^mced M rs. John

Wiso ls recovering from surgery ami M rs. M argaret Toone, Al- binn. is recovering from a frac- tur^,

S everal, mombfir.1 Of“R»iport Cnnton No, Ifl Joined o ther can­tons in uniform from throughotit the sta te in . forming nn Honor Guard Seot. 2fi nt the funeral of n rln . Gt-n. R, Gnrl Riili’oway of Colfax No. 1.1, Twin Falls; .

An invitation wns road from W(KKl~Rivf>r“ VftllJ'V~Nn“ 227to nllcnd fl.mcctlnB-OcL.a iit.whlchtlmC-Cnl..nnd M rs^R obort IJrv-

wlll show picturon theV'took while vlsiiing the ir snn In Peru;

WILLIAMS SHOES

^> N E -TA B U

D O W N T O W N T W IN F A L L S /

IM J K IIb ly iA InFactari/ A u tltG n ^ ^

__ W HILE^T-NE-Y-L-AST— :

^ 4 > L 0 I W ¥ - S A t E lPrice ad^possibl&-:;due-to-aFM>ver.stock condition at the factory. Either oak_(as pictured) or maple.

These two rhodels are included in Curtis-. Mathes Custom series the ultimate in-quality and fea y iv e s ^ ^

CMrtis Mathes..Mways first'Gorsoous tiondcrciftod c£>blnot . . . 50 Inches long . . , oak or maple with tam bour doors.

_★ Cj;jvi_!s finost|TV rnodiilo with automatic tuning, Y ou r C*M cabinet will never leave your , 'hom o for slTop ropuir; ire -years alie'iid-bf tho r n d u s t r y . " - ............. ' ' " — :------ ---------------

Instant color . , ; 295 squaro inches of [iicturo , . tho biggest*,,-*■ Throe speakers with tone control, ' '

C-fVl’s quality dotos bbck to 1899 , . , nothing fincar.C -M builds moro pf Its component parts than any other T V and stereo manufacturer.C -M hos the lowest cost of distribution . j ., factory to dealer in factory-owned vans'.

you can readily see why.It's Y O U R Best B uy . . . anyit; Com pare and Investigate C -M time of tho year.

This is rrone-tim o offer. D on't mlas this opportunity to buy AMfHRICA’S F IN E S T custom built Color T V and

SAVE A T LEAST $2 5 0 .0 0

2 D a llv a ry , Installation a n d 9 0 -d a y FREE J"

' S ~ ' S ERVrCB~anyw l)oro In M a ^ V f l l l f l y ' ~ m ~

i S f l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l k ' i

DEPER PAYMENTS

U N TIL ’ M ARCH 1970

204 M ain AVe. N . Phoner 733-7111

r , •

Page 31: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

BRIDGEBy Jacoby

PESSIM ISM PAYS , SlAM -DWro E N & -

Pessim ist South dccldcd’ th a t

O ptimism is a m ighty fine thing and a bridge p lay er should be' an optim ist most of the time, but occpsicnally a little pcssi*- m ism .w ill prove valuable.: North’s tw c .d iam onds was the

—-Jactjby-TTan3fer«;to-hca.rtsrWJt>rir hearts , aod a Very strong •trump; South jum ped to three

and N orth w ehl righ t to the slam . . -• .West opened the four of

. trum ps and South noted that he had. a prctt;; good play fo r 'th e

. Siam. Specifically, he .-could draw trum ps and try a diamond

...finesse . If th a t worked, h e would — bo-iiomo,—if-it-faH ed—hc-could-

d iscard one of dum m y’s clubs on the- th ird diam ond and try

, to break the club, su it 3-3. If ; that failed, also, he could still ; fall back on the sp ad e finesse.

- N O B I H - * 6 4 •V A K Q J 3 2♦ J 3 4>K S3

WEST EASTA K J 8 5 2 <^ 1 0 9 7 3 V 7 4 W 5

lA _________ 4 8 7 5 4...... .......... ♦QIOS-* -

SOUTflCD)♦ AQ ,V -J0 0 8 6♦ A K IO

- - + A 7 5 3 - • - - -B oth v u ln e ra b le

J^orth E ast South I N .T .

P u s 2 ♦ P a s s 3 V Pass C V P « s s P a s s

O pen ing le ad — V 4

w est's trum p lead indicated th a t he was afraid to lead aw ay from hpnors'in all side suits and that* finesses were all going to lose. T h cn \he worked out a p lay , to guardi a g a irf t alm ost every­thing.

H e drew. t'rumpS !and played” two rounds of cliibs. Thch lie played ace-king and 10 o f i j i a - ’ monds. West covered ITnTlOwjth the queen and South d iscarded the last club from dum m y.

W e st‘ was end-played righ t- then and there. He d idn 't huvc ' a club to lead; A spade le a d ' .would be right up lo d ec la re r’s ace-tmcen- and a d iam ond: lend^ Would^llow a ruff and discard .

The ploy olso would have worked aRalftst a 3-3 club break ;, since a club leod would set up South's fourth club. Of course,

- it_ , w ould .have, fa iled-m iscrably:; iT E ast held the diam ond queen but-pcssim ist^South-had-decided '

Porke and Beanes Buckingham Pala.ce S t y l e' TaHe ye fte s h e p f ye Hammus Alabammus.f'an incredibly tender soiynS.

fbcjnd only in i:^patche)ahd-blend ujithye f.lesheof ye Wilde 6 oare in its.most.. mildly romcinticKe Gt-5yfee ,'mhiidl‘i'''occuv~e-t:lT U Jik U b.i bdul lebh' yebyi^u.rb b a re M its y a h .

■ This m in g lin g o f t e n d e r n e s s e and t o U f i h n e s s e ' r e s d l t e t h in a d is h ■ S d s a v o r ^ y a n d s G d u c b i v e i i t > s u r p a s s e t . l T y © d r e a m e f e o f m o r t a l m a n , «■+ L u h e n , i o i n e d m i t h ^ e a n e g ! ! ' ' ' -------------

(=3o x M o r s a n ^ . M . D

* ■ ' S u n d ay , O clqbcr 15; 1 969

CROSS W O R D PUZZLE - -

5 G alwny 8 AluV a-ha» on'

, ------o f 586,412, sciunr? miles12 P recious stone13 Lifetim e

-E as tM Do bo rne -57 t:* w h a u n t—■- f)0 TorcloV cn fit N olc loscd CaSonotCnd.

(B ib ,l,63 T ea r astm ilcr64 D cpnrted 'GS SnoozeC6 G reek cod of - Jove •

DOW

_S Sack . 6 T im e p a s t

7 A leaven -8 P oker s tak e

'. 0 Pe ruse10 Com fort ' aiciufiisy.boats19 InSect?KRS 21 Sk in tu m o r23 C oarae file .•24 C hanges

30 T h e d ill 42 Fem ale d e e r 4*-Worm 46 E n g l i^ f o r w t .47 R iv er in

* M innesota 4T M a tu re . ■ ' •49 A rabian RuU50 C anvas shpltez - ■STRtppcd—&3 M easure o t '

b rftc l 54 N evada d t y S3 C oncludes

-58 E p o ch - ■ SflC iam p '

Page 32: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

A-12 tlm eS 'N ew s, Twin Foils, Idaho' SuncJoy, October 5; T969

b e r r S i I oRefrigeratQrs And Freezers Are Wqnt-AciabBes. Call 733-0931

T i m e s - N e w s ~

- F a m i l y

W a n t - A d s

. ' . ' G e t '

^ s a l t s -

_ H ^ l p W a n te d . 1 8

PE R SO N N E L S E R V IC E O F MAGIC VALLlEY

A‘H:SOt<h-

F a rm W ocU slf

rk W a n to d.bWiNii

- 2 3 M oney to»lb^ • 3 5 H o m e S i.fo r S a le

lr1c s - ( 6) I

W o rk W a n te d

^ her,

t

nted until V^ove.n. lte.ii. M ejvm Land-

• inco IB3a. 733-

LINO:

Nur.jcry7:i-.-!i'lw

»lo.k. . l-lo,yd Cam brel,

nruvi'u ur viicuni. l.o mifch III 75 p e r cc

' Uuslncss loant — nvnllnblcJor sOund vi

Ullv (200 (

— - O lh o r - ln » tro e t lo n _

OPENINGS FOR qUALIFIED: PE O PL E

STRlCl’LYCONFIDENTIAL

MECHANIC;ARMING OPERATION' _

B usiness Q p p o rtu n itio i 3 0 '

ASSOCIATE^ ^ ■'AUvygVi'menl. I>rcpi.rii. 'iilnlnii IIS lonft us rcqiilrccf

ThnusunflJ-nf lobs’ open/ liJtpor u s u a l l y unnecessary booklol on Jobs.-.salaries, monH. WrlH- TODAY,rW.

3»/i A C R E Sl^cntccl On A IHU Wllh A Sccnl

O U T S T A N D IN GOne of tlic ' Finest Homes In

^"^ 'S P A C IO U S B R IC K.I.Ood diuurc fccl on' Ihc urouni]th ’" b r 'mthe

Prlcf(l_ '.'Wiiy wiiy" bcu»v_ re)

hatfis. 4 fire _ fumlly room: OwntT tins lefi

~Btaic=5o-;icf»-mnKo'n-acni.‘ -

- U : H A M L E T T _ 1

R E A L T Y

viteTBox-O-'Sri

,0 1K9 w NEA. 1.C

- — 'O b v io u s ly , fu n d s f o r d o m e s iic p ro g ra m s , a f te r p ca ce in ■ V ie tn a n t , w o u ld be a y o jh b le o n ly a f te r we haye

c o m p le te ly re h a b il ita te d N o r th V ie tn a m ! ' ' :

J ? L B w i 3 i J 8 £ C i m L

- Harold- Sanderberg. D e c I o, fa ilu re to yield the righ t of way, SIO fine; F e rre ll,B e ll. Jerom e, d isobeying .a stop si;;n, $10 fine: R ichard C arrico . Twin Falls, speeding. $10 fine;;R ichard Car­rico. Twin F a lls , expired drivers-

—15conRCr-4S-{ij>6;-Co\leen-Dlllon, 621 B uchanan St.,.-.expired-in­spection sticker, 55 fine; Marion

—D avis. ■ R upert, speeding. S20 bond forfeited ; Donald Fred­rickson, H ansen, expired In­spection stick e r,-$5 fine; Jam es G oodrich, F ile r, no vehicle reg- istra tlon , $5 fine; Lynn Hawley,

Servicemen~ATFman Jam es L. Sinclair, son o f M rs. E tftol A. McClimans. Je rom e, h a s completed basic tra in ing a t Lackland A ir-Force Base,- T ex ., and has been as­signed to Lowry Air Force Base, Colo., for tra in ing . In Ihq mis- silo electron ics field.--

?-graduated-from -Tw lr F a lls H igh School and atieoded Idaho S ta te Vocational one Technical School.

152 W alnu t-S t;,-rd isnbev ing ' j sl5p“ siEn7‘"w Itb--ari:000:-w ofd ' them e; J e r ry Jones. Route .3 , Twin FdlLs. disobeying a stop sign, $5 fine; F rancie Lucas, speeding, $20 fine; Loren M al­one. F lie r, expired drivers ense, 55 fine. •

Don Moyle. Hcvburn, ,no lic- cnsc^susp_ciidcd._dcfen!jant pro- _ duced.licensc_in_court:_G ayland . M itchell, Pensacola , F la., speed­ing, $20 bond forfeited: -Bob

•Muzto,— Boise;— speeding,— $15 fine: Joyce M cLaws. Oakley, speeding. S25 bond forfeited: Irw in P e rry . Route- 3, Twin F alls;, expired drivers license.S5 fine; Allen Swafford. 263'^ F ile r Ave.. disobeying a stop sign ._S15_fine:_Jam es-S tcw art, 183S O sterloh S t,, cxpircd in­spection sticker. 55 fine; Wil- •liam Simmon, Glenns F erry , speeding. $15 fine: Helen Shaff, Route 3. Twin F alls, no safety’ ^lmo^-S5-fine^rEwe*^ ^

In B urley, R upert, Declo, , P au l. Norland

: 678-2552

H agcrm an ,-Je rom e

UJr.il — surul

.not_morcJnform'»'uunIi:oii71_

A m erican Oil C o m p a n y 'hns Immpdiate npcnlns for nurn-

N .M A KIi A DIl-l-liUUNCK- cino call 73.1.107P (Anyllin'.’)i_UuJImitsicrJ3?ajai5l-UiDmc)-_

H o m e s fo r S a l» 5 0 ? SHQPPING FOR A HOME 7

" r r .

303 Jackson .St.,'' expi,r.od 'sa fe ­ty Inspection slicker. S5 fin

In F ile r, Hollister, Kogerson Jackpo t, Nev.

= 3 2 6 5 5 3 5 5 : r ;

M in im um S pace 13 W ords “ Be—s u re - to -o rd e r—your—a d ^

on the economical ten-day ra te . When y ou r ad gets re ­su lts you m ay cancel It and only be charged for the days' it ra n . 'In ca se ^ f_ e r ro r the adver-_ tise r m ust m ake correction '

Hnsertion: The- Tlmes-News will assum e re ­sponsibility fo r the first d ay ’s incorrect insertion.All advertising Is subject to

----------------------------- ^ l l s h l ------

beni'fils fivuliuiile.. Cni: for fniorvii-w* iipliolrilm

n e e d Tm m e d i a t e i T!?^' 10 m e n

......~AVON~l<enr7'Tc^lail'7i:

iuIrL-Us ot iKillars

E X P E R IE N C E D PA RTS COUNTER M AN .

OM prefL-rrcd. Excellent oppor- tunlly. Contact Joe Allen. Glen Jenk ins Clicvrolui, .

-E X P E R IE N G E D -

H a rd w a rc S tore O pportunity ^

-Latest

FARM

Listings

-.EJiA -EO RiiCLO SU IUi____«-Bca—

“ ciuii«--'iTpimrintn5rTiromn-\vii»’0 ir

Uiimblcs ure cxpiindlnR H.clr Icliilio-opprnlions^itnd j^^ou^cnn bewvekly , delivery, complete pro-

.|lk»-^ui4hor—Intocnta— . ttic proRriim. vonr In.I wclcotrni also. For full

<-ia4lr-Twin l'utt«,-ldahO-

iCRES, full w ater right, nil itccl. Ttiree bedroom homo, i barn, for da iry . P riced

Let us show you ihese lodayt

_ J,Y N WOOD_ REA LTY ,.-Cio-OIuv-LHkv^'oi

UNUSUAL—DELIGHTFUL

We also have a few rentals.

We.slern' AppraLsal' .& Investincnt Co. -

4i4 Main Ave. .South 7.13.2.16.. ■AftL-r-lirs._Gco.. Gould_I33^3IH2_

. SM ALL H OM E ' ' '

K AY H ARRISON R EA L T Y

Office .....................7.1.V2322Netily M asel . .

NOTICE OF SOLICITATIONI-nundry / D ry Clennlns /, A)- ti-rniluii (ind Home PlcU-up und Delivery S e r v i c e : .Mountain

ful liindsi-jplnii, well, -douljlu . Kur

tonwnlci

ryOUISlTEI Spac

brick home

3 spacjous bedrooi room. 2 flreplures.

baths, full bii^einent, s

.. SIO fine;'^Carol W ieberc. 173 L ois" S t , , '• no Hc'ense, 55 fine.

J e r r y A rm strong. Blackfont. fa ilu re .to reg is te r vehicle. S15 -bond—'

ind pacUaRlni;, mllK :

IMMACUI-ATIi! 2 b e d r o o m brick,- Northeast. Lnvelv n.'W carp.-i and drapes, larnc i>l- hich.-d ijaraK.-. flreplar..,•covercd patio, Ju s t SIB.SOO. cjod

JUST U16TKD. Nice 3 bedroom

H om es fo r Sa le 5 0M A K E AN A P P O IN T M £ ^ IT ” Today to see one of these

:HOICE LISTINGS:

COLLliGE vTerrnee, 4 bcdronm bl-lcvel home, H i baths, fire- place, fiimllv room, double Ka- ; raitc. beautiful landscaping, R.-ul plush InuKpcnslvc livlnK buiu. *28,000. . o n ip N .

ertnlnly couldn't duplicate (t'fot

oiim, Kitchen built lns. sunken

North. Another

mmcd. S9500 full prlc

H)BE'R E A L T Y '

fnlto r 733.5457

irlHgs, K cultor 733;C8D4-

WANT the bes

C. LOONEY. REALTOR(208)733-4081

Edna Irish ..................... 7.13 088:Ueth Wickham .............. 733-547i“ "McniBFr-orMnltlpIc-LlstmB'^

WHITli your own ticket. Clean f:. Ily home for sale because Owi «olns to CollcKO..Corner lot. tre

_*lirub»—41o.0Q0—lia s y _ tc rm a .^733-7B79 Mountain Sta

UY O W N tK : Sale f

S17.000. IC I Madison.

N avy E nsign Harold L. Dcejls, son of M r. and Mr.s. J . Lyle Deeds, Richfield, hns graduntwl from Officcr Candlclnio ScUeol a t Newport, R.I.

Ho \va,s grndimied from the U niversity of-Idalm and entered the service In Sept. 1008.

ChnrlcR (Clwck) Sc.h\v«Tma», .■.on Mr. and Mr.s. C a r l

- Srhw crinan.....Twin -l- 'n lh ,- hnsboon lionn! on a lO-dav leave a fte r griidimtlUR Irnm a Navy trnlnliiR srhnnl nt l.iilichiirsi, N. J, ills ycst assliiitinnU Is

-••nT- nunntnnnm n— nn;^>r“ Cithnr whoro Ilf ■ will 1)0 {'iit5ii{’('(l Iii w eather work.

Dnvid Coats, F iler, was flnr-tl Sl« liy ProbiiU) Jmli-c C, M,W lhnn. Shnshtmi'. fur .........Also Ilni'tl bv .liidl!'' Wilson for fipcetilnn w ere CK/»rlrs Atkinsnn,

. K rtrluiin . $in. aiid Kalph Thoin- -i.V Sun V allfy. $12,

'rinc(1~ ' Pftllfp’uilRf C, J . .Shiipi' for Stic

i n i i h r -

... F ile r, no safety 'inspectio ,.. iSr> fine; C harles Armor, Twin F alls, fa ilu re to report an at :idenr. SIO fine: MlchaoLB cai lie F iphth Avf>. N i:nnP. -

515 fin r; Kenneth ,Cordlc Jr.'! .19S5 Osit'rltih St., reckless dri iiiKl’ SlOO'fine.ami five dnvs in iail suspeiulf'd: . Sible Fra7.i«T.

J< im herly ,.fa jlu rp .ln renow-safe- ly Inspection. 55 fine suspend-

■od; P nndvi-H nrrotti—Fll<>tv-ft(» mutl flaps; $5 flpe: 'Mlchael U - -cauir, Pat/l, speeding. 5-10 fine; Wllford M arsh , 031 M arlon St. expired’ sa fe ty insnectlon. 55 fine; Virgil P e rrv . Boi.se, .speed­ing. S2n bond forfeited, and Ray P eterson. 1070 Osterloh St., falltiro lo ptirclm se drivers llc-

ise. 510 fine.Paul Pn lndestc r. 182ft Dorian

Drivir. speeding, $20 fine; Dnn- nI{|-Rlr(', exp lrfd safelv insprc- linn, $5 fine; Jam es Rnblnsnn, 1-12 C arnev .St,, inndentialt 510 fine; Lest t Srhrelncr,' Han-

. .ipfedingl $10 fine; 'Wnde .Snapn, Route Q, .Twin F n lh , dis- «)l)r‘ylni! Hi ip nign, 55 fine; A bbic-.Urlguci, 1333 Alder Drvie, .sellin/: a t f w :«r without a safe.

Insnectlon $5 flin': G ari ,e. 771 Eastland n r lv ^ fall If) reg is te r veliiclo, $5 fine,

uiid_.Gar,V—G age, exp ired , tiufi:- ly in tp tr tio n . 55 fine. '

i-.»ij.'^n7rn>'rivcTr?nrr~rnirnni‘ii(':7 mlK"i .South of Hansen. lU tc buslneis for cuuple. m.QOO. t'

l2 l2 ._\:cra .Joa. :

MAGIC VALLEY ' REALTY

7.13-5S80

7l3.r,')74..‘ -7n3;7S7fl— 42.1--I137;

TWIN FALLS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE '

TOP 20 HOMESHere Is How It W o rk s ..

Each Thuoday MIS mambert caravan a ll naw hom es.lliled ciur- -lnti-|ln>-M<«>k.-onaa-iP»dal-iiniaMan_bu l^al« lnQ .eacri homa thajr^.

—IndiyicJtralTippfanal.' ■' ................. . • . ^

All homos, propflfly priced are ploced on our 'Top 50" list end pulillihed weok^lv to oil MLS memboii'. Would yoa like lo know whol homes orri or> our 'Top 30" List? Conloct V°ur (avorita Tw'i.n Fulit Mulllpuo^l,i>tlnQ Sorvlce Realtor for. full delallt.

PHONE ' 733-0931

tahllsiK') nnti-locally lia^ed cturer and dlslrll.uKir -«f

et|uli.mi-nt anh pi '

Valley Traffic Courts

P rr.hate Judge C. M, Wilson, .Slioshnnc, fiiH'ii Angel l.iuiciHca, .Shoshone. SI7 fnr ftpeetllnj!, Al.srfriiT-irbv^TiinnnviiM-TirformA^ JiiL’f' Wi:rfi ■latnii.'i l->lvmrd 1-Ills,

Lost a n d Fou n d 1

I 'a lL . Hui.nlnu MT.

lb, iluistein

LO.S1 : Male . IJciini. white.tlyri- cntoivd, I

n ^^shofthair,

r.rwllnlV''‘Vi'r3lmr,' '''coK area,

LOS'n"W l'ro haired'-UVlllon on ijall»

oat. 7MV4u;i!

■ C o rd o f Thank*WIi WISH to thank our

for Ihti rar<li flowc

!;^r=(;ro\i‘ .‘;u r « : : r .? n_____ Mr.. A_Mr»; t:hrli

P o rio n a li-S p o c la l N o tlc o i 9}jliNH)H CKiyins. you

: : : r i i ; : . " d '' r o o m “a^!m r hol'no'wltll

slat'nnce If'n eed l« I IHHU I70ti I'oplnr.

a rn U h X S 'i j i

•it'i;N tiia«-.si‘iui'.i.i.Air"bni»,’ "oriih

aniiiverxnry nperlal, d lseonnt,' M ri, l,yilii 7th Avn,. N,' I'liono :

10 p»r cent tia rdner, .11)1

r;i:i'Vi)iii.

H K I'UliSl-N rATlV l-. n charite of est -y 02 year old i

JIlRli voliimo locntlnn (or pnx ltn.i an<l te ivlcu-w nrlt, In Twl l-'alln on U.S, lilk-hway. Plion 73:i.riI72,

sf-:i<VICK' si'ATl(IN and l.odv V nrttlnK *M,()(iO per year, P rlc r snn.doi) ini'ltKli'K i-nnipK'tu tine c'liulpmcnt and invrnlni'y. C u ll' dene Koei)nl<'k 73:I 7J1)7. Tli.i ' Offlci’ of (.lain. 7i:i-07»n, .

wTlH .W iil. ..'vnrr niMht n i . l l . " HiDniK'- ImtchiTlnH.- Money m ake.. T ra d .i ociniilcl.-red, A.ie lU 'ally,

. roomi, 'basement. carf/Ct. lire-pinee............: ................ .525.000OUT o r TItn: o rdinary, new top (lunllty n.builroom homo.'MO.ooo

■ O l.l)i:il I tu r n icer 2W bedroom, north •ccllon, l-'lreplacc, jrj.UOO

1-- IM .D T M A N Ji i; A L T O K o - ............. ................ 7a3.|l)H»

I M I SAll M o m b eri o f MLS A re Realtoi

ln>

AND — ^ei■.l lul worker •

Mii»t hi' c

NIiAT

ira-TJimr...............dcBlrahie, 40 liia>i>

.u..wcLlt. Aoiily lU;"

fiTXNiirtll'ISXt'tJii; I'l « , ! .........................

) w r iT l~ ll)V ~ .> a ro i ,t;r t .. c .a .ira ti.:

1)II1'I .1;X, lirlck i la'dni'tim unKn .'lllu.l l.a tlu . HuriiKci. illl,HIX). A<\Itr'ahy, 7:i''-f'' l7,

NIAV UliA in'Y .Snloa, In Kelelimi on .Sun Val1>-V l<oi«l. l<h>mo 72a

nr 7HH.MM,........ - - w r

of Times.N'tws,

M E N — T R A I N N O W F O R n i G P A Y J O B a S A

C L A IM S A D J U S T E RA dla .ter . .....1 Invejll

eoinplottr Unit of pro <;iu homcit; Your nxiiuilvii In ter-atale lion Tuinv»BMnlWr», Swls* VlUn 15

• \Mlnpmeiif trompany, 733-OTlfl. i - t le n o —Hopkins- ■

doiihin rarpiirt, T o ln lj.rico »J0.an0,Down piiyifii'nt« *l,iiSo. f a l l .....

dayi, 7:i;i-»<U0 evenUm.

OWNllll: l.ll......... ........................I and faiplly tooin down. U Imtlm, (iillictnt llvlliK liioiil. tiidl, patlil awiihiji. fllorniio. Choice loeallnn.

N E V \ ^ H O M E !

.\1 irt:^ '-G rn \7T fiirn 'n \T Mrs, G, M. (Iriiy S ‘-iFirst, He Got- ..

II llii' A irjs . ' ■

i.wkiiiriii Al'r' iito KisnTheir A ttentio n

fTc'iiJnsiTf}— iroNiiJT ro for imwBil irnpfft X N-IO. e.() 'l lm m

> ,,D « Q ^ ^ a 1 o n r

■ 1).';. Air I 'o iro Cnnt, fit - liU lh iK .-iD ii.-o f. M r._.aiitJ_Mt

Moytl O. iailliiH.-l>ifirTni, Is (1 -d « tt\-T irn m .Son Nhtii Air llii.st',

Vieiniim. ■ ..................I lf is a hfliri)))|er plloi witli

.JliL ..,.nrd...A t;ro.paa. - lU '^ o u . !

D Iflrli'h llli;h ..^I'imol nml r r lv rd his d-itrcn IroinUnlverKllv of Mflho, \\luuc

tlirojigh ih(! Air l-'i • IIlH wife, Shirlcv. I te r o f M r, am i Mrs Ir t t , D letrleh,

- .im i 'c ,. the (Iniijili l)itf\iin A

........... iu :iJ j‘ro m 'rjn i'5 A -5AUC;>-rmio ifssertiil, - “WnriT-n>ik«M“ whM -he-r Inrly liked Ik.wIIiijs for chltdren lie (iitld, "1. think linwling ls~n fiintastli: iMini’ for chlldnrn. ItilcniaudH tllso lp lin u a tu l eoacotratlnn, nnd 'w lioro a rc .k id s |i lug to liiivit HO miitOi 'fim wlv |)ra(,'tk'lii{t i Ik’so two vlrlupn?

Whfii ihe ^hk-f''

Call JiiilV nt Mninlln-*

.......;nro’;:'W i:iitlnii sp r.

B ab y S ltto n -C h lld C aro 16C im .n lU tN '.l VJI.l.AOJ!. ChlUlT.

i'.Tt'Ml'., wIiTk hdiiTii Tnai r ralnloHSI Henil • iiddrrsi m r». •1)apl.MII-<ri'. ]'al<h •,ir nTtwnr— - iTl'll llrus'h nnoiU nii> n' aiiil

, »IO-»:n wvnli,

(iV'tr=’iti‘n1lH -nd varailoa, ■Apply' In ndu run IniJ.- y a i> V .

iiiMiitia and intill liidnvl lll'ilt A l'I'IH lvlvl) I'O ll V1-.M'ltANS

!> tm iM 'u n ifw n .i, im .t.

1,

Xegislation OK’flWASHINO'ITJN, (UI'I) -rTlie

IIou-io llnnklnft Commltieo j.-pj. d ay , iinniilrnnitHlv ii|nirovc(l In- glNlMlon iitillinrlr.lii|c minting of a .''i.i)vovlosi!'' hllvur,. tlDlliir bOHrlng tlio Ilkenesft of Dvvldlit

the K ennedy liiWf dtilliifH nnd let eiio Trchfttiry cell neiirly 1 nillKon r u r o sllvp r dollars,' ii hold*.

•ny tiiillcii - l lfa n s . ,

than init y fii^nt ‘ifiu!('

- h tin irttrtllr

uaum.lluQa«uil,.dlivi;tur-nuby..ili;i hlMK. Ninaiii-y — .p ra.k lnduruurit

h lix ln raatten — divided cIuiid v:t:i.-jiimi. 7:i3.in)lo.'

Jlo'.'lOiiil* Ciillit Cnro, itn lo llcniiiinl. Divided c in sio i miraery, piu.hlii .............. - 'nml hliiili

!<1 with Indl.. )f tlinn niDf

•Ihoro'H an a t i-e pipe, n con

................................... inoi!eiihliiH. IIhi'iirfliiw*' necklatre,' -a «|x»«n

nviHl from ' bone, anti, iif nirsi-, lht< Chlt-l'ii enormoiiN I'liddiTfiH of hrllllant fcalluirN. Ill hin own Inlmldihlu way,

Chluf Trvnor Ora lliilftDWii lui* te.rlaln!^ rh lldnm thi'OMghout the V jijhcd“ 3 |n n '? )i:;- .•■,•“ 7, "I'liny appi’rc la ln what I . dri

llir tliiMn,'' ho ciitiinmnK'd. ' 1 kiiaw they think iihoiit me, and iliui maketi m o feel rfiul Hood/'

Plnr?mn)V)L ..HU .lny” emi.,, h.

H o lp W o n lo d I 1 0•nTnr:'irn m wu~u>r iH’.uiiT^i:i i

Cull 7)110 10 Tiilio u.in. or i<v»

fjN'|{ tm iV U K .n n il liitH iruek t with dr v ir i . WW\ nxclianiin diHKlnH

i.4iJ3fi,- lUfl.niinn I" ' -

I lUiAN... CI.IIANimi ..Jillld^Ul

Fa rm W o rk W a rtlod 23

r tm rsw T v rn T N n -

............ ........... .no--------- --r f i i i '.n iT i ’ti M f'M m 'R

NA’IIDNAI, IKIMI!' RTiitiY i :i ) l lN c n ..

MANAGHMI.'.NT

lti-:i

GUNTOM tiWA'IlllNCl Atlvii Km>Iii>

...... . liin.BOK i ... ......... .illlllKUI. ,1

l-lll

aitln

rk," A p p l y ' f n ' •iriiHl'DM Pli

wxrm!'i>i wxri-irnwi, .ippifti;SUM nt f lp tlll^ 'i l‘aiiiUiHD ill..—..............

u jr^ ^ 'iK f ir - * n w m s r i t s r ’c'Hi J U DlR Hoy Bnyllmi, .......... - ”

a '-;i2ti-X Ii lir ;iau n.mr), 1 . .rAt4'tln'ji ■)'liy' ..in r-U ruw '. Inu with linrniw lied, Wl' HiiyWliuiii, ,lntoin»i :i-i4.nn2H,

Cllim)M'»wnllii'Iii^^ wlll'T coniiT'

fiiu7,

- W oiiii'ii - Mofnl (ipi-r.itli

. CniiDhIII with

Io1|owIm|''‘uv 1iir~TntininH--ii i-d hv III. Alt'­ no hairl

ll npmi riiiiiplniKkn,VA APi'U ()vi-;n

itlpn wtlid piK

1' 1oi-lilivti 'l'rnlnlU|i . DIvltloi

, l.a I»1 (

i- iiim rs lll 't) *-i). tvo.nl.flnois, sonio eurpol. O n.Ian lot, Jd.nOM or »l,nt>i) down. i« mimtli and ii'.W iniuiuai. 1HI>1

"-pnlnt, •hlliiit. tU,<i[lli, n» iili __ _ i j . , .r . j , . i i t jo , ,n . j^ l jM i(» i ._ _ lMMI^)IATIt poimi'piHKin. T liuiiriiit

opia, rAinlly roonii (livplai-ipeti-il, iliiii lit) uaraiie, iin1ii‘». ,liv tii.oon. rtrir firn ltv . 731.fill?.*

-lilH I'j'" llmltoom, full” Iiyji'et — «-Mnnrnp;- .sm m rtiown 'P.'fTmi'

l<ln.l Di'.ln, Mnlio, llJH.i,.,..........r rK c W m lir.Wiur'M'a'iliau lliii, l>liuii« 3J<-U0U, Joroiiio.

■Ai^n.y, 7;inlrii llittolil’sl

itrvra'-iieif

Ijnl-i'iln, 7,i'n"iin~ i n i n . i n r ; n r

U i'p t. A nil I'aelfli: Aye.•' T acam u . WuHl>|»i’U»\-QlHaa TimFTi :n r v r )T T if i^i,i.' ' . d

Inlilonl'a An'rdl'd.^I'l'," t,'np'llI 'a r H fino drsciipiivo hro.........wrlin Ainrrlrnit ticliooi . IloK 71)10,

per tnOHtIr

as little as $200.(1)0 d o w n

, "3 BED R O O M S^,! B A T H -F U L L _ : BA SEM EN L A N D -C A R P O R T '. . . .

.........f lA /tlI7l7 lN7 1 "iredi'o:,7M ."'flolj"M o.!

dalllon, i hnllia, liii'lt-liis, eniiiniKcl ' . iirnpRi. .‘unrouri. • BBn-nnrtfi," lunTTnr'

hTrN(ri('»iai«, iiTi-iio f i i ^ o oIII, muilleiil roiiilllloii. I'l

. J7,IIOII AiT lMiiUV,.WI,1.li-;IY i iy Cl'WNI'.Ki i'wn Im'iironiii. imij;

fliii niniiirn, frnrnd ynrtf, l/.bi ,h a quincy. 733-uio'/.

|I you C!Clfp-tA-QQQ_par-Yn/.iw<twr<-rtiw niiirrlwW-2 clUldron; your toltil pnyihont will bo JOS por niofith. Govornmoiit will pay $55,00 Intoroil subildy,I Ikivo Cl cotmnltniont Iroin llio Foclorcil Housino Ad- inlnlfclf,allon undorMho-235, progrcini to build 10 now' lioinua In Twin Foils, .. , <

Phone 733-2691 days : ;

or 7.33!846D.,eveniiniS! gi Sundays .;

ASK FOR "BOB . . . THE BUPER"

Page 33: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

■, ' ' ' ' - ■ Suni^Vj October 5 , '1 9 6 9 _ Tlmes-News, Twin Falls, Idaho. A-13 -

Lookiftq for Exira yalue,? Shop the Want Ads Every Pay for the Biggest Vqlues!H o m o i for Sale SO

- s S i s s . i _ » s . $ r

N cf^ n rto i cozy ■ A bedroom, full bascmcnC nnd dooc] lociitlx" E niy to handle. Only »l0,500.

. Fa rm s fo r Sole 5 2 -C a m p e V t

. Knotty pine pnnellnc In'.

2 0 0 A C R E SGood level' fiirm Innd. $<8’,500.'

i ACRES South f

............... - npt. tio....’ Turc. nicely InndJCnped. . . nt JOMXt.

Ilcti'i.......... ....... ..nctly Dameron

$ 5 $ $ S, 5 J ~ sWANTUU:'.G. ,1. — ’ v e % ionc7.

Price rcduccrt ft tl.OOO. Two bcii.______ rooms, llvln«-room , klichcn. uill.

niyTUitrenyrnaniirmiurrynainvs'------ fARency-Tai^-gJOlT-TIl-ST^O. 73:i.873<.

EKY roomy” home on ' Flllihore, bath nnd M. bascjnent rcercutlon-»°8.So.^CnllJ^nk^'oo& -733^^ Mountain Stale* Reolty.

J21;000... )n01IL Y I)rbducllvc <0 iicro fu rm .'Z h miles from Kimberly.

• ; F I N A L -

; ’ 6 9 M o d e l s .Save Like Mad On

■ K I T K A M P E R S

* i r s e lf c on ta in ed '

DRAST1CALLY-REDUCED~

— O u L-O f T o w n H o rn e t 51THREH Uedroomi, l»i

-kltchcn. lIvln'B room. _____• ORC.-Blrconditloncdr cnrpi ted. bui ■ mttlliy nnd I bedroom: loo'xl2n'

C0rn c t_ j0l. L o ti or tloroRe.- All e lectric home, one year old In

— Bcllevucr788-4HHr--------------- ------ -

T a y l o r

A g e n c y

Member nr Twin rn lli

••MLS" Servli inid Taylor. Broker, 423-5ie3

-BAKFiR’S .M O B I L EH O M E S

Form s for Sale 52

S P E C I A L !BOO ACRE »tock ranch near I e rm nn.-2'hom v»,.dnlry barn sood eorrnU. localcd on Hljlhwa^. Land In high

hay and pas .. ... . . .heart of cattle. J127.000. with Rood tcriT

iccded 1

DAIRY aN D s t o c k RANCH

— 320-ncrcs— SO— aVreT^frtvatedmore or less, balancc In pasture and jjrailiip. Two-bedro-m iiiod. frn nomu. carpci, nnd piinultd. ilu s d;ilry bam . good corrals 2iM U ns 45 head ol liLMriRhis. I30'‘ of w ater. LUtIc Woud R n v r runs thn>u;ih r-^nfh. otie mile ^ h ushonc. Idaho.Small down paym^•nl. easy iL-rni» a t 55i?a- Total price j;iH;000 ir Intcresled contact Thurman Jiiek- son f t f ranch -or., a t ICO Blue Lakes North.

JiSTA'ilE_SAl.liZIj7.000.prS:«--redue- .1-,,- ino.i— — '

■ - rd - io -h a y andrp«a tu re . J30.&M with good term s. '

'"F irs t-tlm e-lisM d- for ■IJOth-ofHfre'- • nbove ranchei. .

I V E R S O N R E A L T Y. • &4^354 •.Bob ...................................... flH-<n23

■ Christy ...............................*.n3<-44&S

B ^ U T I F U L HA G ERM A N V A LLEY

-34~acro»■••choice 'f e r ti le ' Innd.' l=rcr IrrlBBtlon w ater, l<le;il cattlo r.i!s"nR nrc.i- Many are buylnc small trn cn . Cond .1. b'Srtroom home wllh 1 n r r e chi ckcn~coopj-rented-on-m onth-— ]y basil.' Hard to beat for $35,* - ODO. JI0,000 or more will handle. Ask for GEORGE T . tSF.NSON

. PAUL B, I.AR.SEN, Realtor* BOISE, IDAHO

•nnkcs It n real barRa1n."You canH buy nvire j:or Tcs«,_J.ow;.Oown pay.

- n u 'n f with cxcL-lleiit term s. Call Iliirold Kclthly. 73,l--.'400. Thu Land

,-Ot»ci>-Of. ldabO-73a.Q7J6______ -

5 4Lots a n d A c ro o g e '

T O W N & C O U N T R Y 1 A C R E

Almost new three bedroom brick, w ith life time I h: rool. T rcm cndou*‘-NortlJcast-toca(Ion;“ * Medallion all electric, two Iovc> ly h.Tlhs, carpct ami drapery Ihrniii-hfiiii. |>rcmlum construc.

.......... ...... _-vniD on't m iss this

T W IN FALLS

^ M o b ile Hom es

^ V E■ N E W

■’ 6 9 M O D E L S

R e d u te d ’ SlOO to S1000_for -FINAL j69 Clearance '

-----«f‘.TRAYEL_TRAlLERS—

M OBILE HOMES

^ D O U B L E W ID E S

-S(t}M-,-Bervl5fl— P orts— Supplies-. 'H onest 'P r ic e s — F a ir DeaJlnRi 13 Y ears Serving Magic Valley

B U Y Y O U R H O M E A T

-SIMRSOH8 ’ S E C U R I T Y ;

'C A M P E R . . .On tloso out fo»

- ■■ $ 9 2 5 , '

1 2 ’x 6 0 ‘ F L E E T W O O Dcom pleicIy7itrnlshed

. j . $ 5 7 9 5 .............. ,

SIMPSON: M OBILE HOMES

M O B I L E H O M E S ■_Skylln© . Von Dyke_|- V ardo

Nomad . J e t . Aladdin O.S DISPLAY'Double WU11.-S

- T R A I L E R S A L E S .

i & R o o m - 7 6 - F a rm 'lr rtp l«m * n ts *

^ • r s s rFABM IIANu“ 2 » “ %jet" .U ryc s i

” 'Cenier'lioieL''5aS*»oVbona StneT South.

M o b ile Hom o Parking 7 9

S I M P S O N ’ SA D U L T T R A I L E R P A R K now finished and ready for

occupancy

- S f t t P S *

■ M O B I L E H O M E S

NUW LAUGli alwdy—

J t r a c i o r 's '• JOHN DHERE 4020 dl<

• TARMALL 706D• OLIVER UO.>B<ui- » CASI-: 430 dies ■

aliudy—lulsr—M>'—nn- ■t“p n rK in 6 n 7 n J lu e735-1830.________ ..

Businoss-Offlce Rentals 80OH UCli S '’ACli — new. N orth 'B lue

Lakes, 600 sguure feet fully c ar. . — pcHd, Bn;j~privnfe balh. ContucI

• CASE 950 12' wlndrower w /c o n d it lo n e r ..........................

• JOHN U EERR No. 12 2-rt)W n^choppc ~ -

....... srm all M• 2 row H allw ay ., d ircc t » p u d

harvcstorr i o - used JO H M .D ^ E B ^ ro lle r• Used 18 X 7 j b i m D EERE

model B.DD grain d rill (Ilka new) .'

• Used M *. W duals, cotnplele

c SO MAGNOLIA two bedrot. exci'lk-nt candltlca. V ety cIi'l... throue,iout. Carpel, atone windows plus sklrtlnff nnd • insulation for bottom . Call C-15-21115 unyiim c.

A p o rtm e n ts -F u rn ish e d 7 01 X;OM»llNATION LIVINL^KUOM'I

und K ltchencttt. U tili___lic'd. ^43. A dulti, Closo down-

boston, :;a5 3rd Avenue

^.Sh.AH:;N i . . th ree rooms, balh ' H«al. w ater and sanitation .rur

nishcd. A dults, m arried coupl<• d.No pets. »75. 733-512; .

ROOM ofnce trailer, pcrfect for contractnrr. Like new, Sl.loo. Sun Valley, 73C-3T” ' -----

Fa rm s for Rent

w ater. Write D arrll Uowen, Cton. Idaho. B-TO?. _______

130 A CKES-nenr IM-ln Falls. Good beet allstm ent.'Som e pasture. Box Q-3 CO Tlmes-News.

W a n te d to Rentr S oo-A eR lls: -Help" l~ m ance

BAKER’SM O B I L E VERY NICE cl,

H O M E S

PAKTJ-Y FURNISHED, llvlog-room, kltchcn. one budroom. baih.

-A d u l ts —n o -p e lir-A fte r -S fa o . 733-

LADY'S Single., light houseki rad ian t heat, enlranccs. softener. 543 2nd ’ Avenue Ua;

ind equipment. Write Box P S , •■o Times.Ne»»s.

SMALL I-URNISIIED 2 or J bed- hoine or trn llrr in Morning-

iistrlet. Phone 7J.1.0087. ■

Light Indust/lal E q u ip m e n t 89

GEMEquipment

5oulK_£ajitnnd Drlv#•‘Your John Deere D ealer">- TwK Falls ' Buhl

7 33 -/2 7 2 - 543 .4392

• H E S ^ N W IN D R O W E R S . Any New Modell Buy NOWi No in terest untiL Juno 1st. 1070.

-_ lC V A L i:E Y ;E O R b ' “

loading wagons. Ideal to r plckhig u p beet lo p i o r w lndrowed hay o r straw . Used very little, *2200 each, (.hlsholm Bros. F a rm Equip­m ent C0„387 North O verland. Ijo r- • tdflho. Phone 678-5564

________ ______ vT bT ciia. Young single persons n e e . cnll, nff children or pels. 733-

NliW 2 t 3 - .- .......... ,h a rveste rs a t Big SavlngL. . . . ^ fo r a ll FArmhand 350-25O-IS0 beet harvester* a t Twin Falls T ra tto r ft Im plum tnt, 2030 K im berly Rd,

GATEWAYTRAILER CENTER

M agic Vftllcy'«-LarBCst S

K e a l t y a n d In s . - * mobile homes

carpetcd llvlnRroom. UtiUlles fut nished. *75, A dults. Closu down­town. 233 3rd Avenue North.

----------------- m : : -------------------

U S E D I N D U S T R I A L t Q U I P M E N T ----------

fqrm-’trWpteihenfi

C O N STR U C TIO N E Q U IP T .A U CTIO N . O CT. 23.

W IN N E M U C C A .. N E V A D AJohn^Etchiirt. loc ,. RetirlsR ftom

Sale a t E tc h art Jlo t P lant su e , 10:30 a.m .. IHOHS.. Oct, ■«.

CEDARAPIDS 3.»W-LU. SO-n>H HOT PLANT.

• 8IEURA PORT. CONCRETC BATCH PLANT. 714-Y<li.

---------------- r cA -f e n -P fc-- —

143 HEAD HoUtelD S p r i n t ^ baif^ c rs , welciilng (roia tOOU to ' I3S0. Doundt. L o u of close-up haliers, fo r i> i* o r tfad e . Can Flaknc«.

Hughes. 33>-,»l|S. Jerom e. __: ____ ' ____ _

• CAT D8-I4A Crawler T factor. ,C A T . DUOOO G eo.-Seti DELCO

30-kw Con; GM Diesel P o w c r_

38 " Jaw. 22"x40" rolls, (ft) Con­veyors to 7l>-rt. length. V ibrat­ing Screeni; 2-ft. C rushlns

■TRUC;>rTRACTORS:.lt«8 Pwter. blit 3-axle; ISM ft 1961 Intl. 3 n*1e. DodRc 2-axla T ractor.

Ilxer Truck*. ' Dumps. W aliT Trucks. Cement H opper Troll'. Cement H opper Troll*

Pickups. lind-D um i»......._-A<«iiflrrei7rnr’r«-f <•»,-ITnlilpmenl.

O R \V E L DEPO.SIT SITES lo b« Offered for leaie.

For Illustrated catalog, contact HAX n0 U S E “ft“ S0NS. Aneiloaeer*

361 So R obciuon Blvd.• Beverly H ills/ C.-ilir. 90211

r < 2 » ) 653-5300OR SALE AS is wh«fo _ . — . Michigan Loader Model 17.’>A. One John D eere 440 Diesel loader. One G ardner — D enver cum pt^S!'~

CAl I)-6 — Hydraulic 3-wnu bU.-- Good condition. Must sell lmn>ed- lat«ly; TaKe mobile home o r iralh e r house as pnrt trade . See ^ ack a t B uker'»-M oblla-H cm e».— -—

H O L C T E U J : C A L V E S

O rder o o w 'fo r lum nrer aod (an ctcllvaxy. choice U oltlcln catvas)- bulls, o r b a ira r* .^ e * t« rn U«e> *toek CorporatloB, R uM rt, Ida* bo, 436-6901. o r O. J . i ia r r tt , MC-2242 .........

t REtHSTEHHD production tested Angus cows with calve* bjr side,7 .bred hvllert, 3 yeafllog bulls.1 16-month bull. Bellevue 7«S.3S04-

CA LV lISf-From Cntorado. agfl f r o ' t ' 4 woohs to 4 months olil. Holsia.n, . b e lfer,. and bulls. 43«-4<ai. R u . pe rt. -• .♦

LARGE *upplY ,uvalU blt. .top .d a iry - , cow*, and he lle t* r"and elota^t'-*—apclD R i>ti^ody.L 4m ltA r-.............SmithflelA.^ Utah. - ■

FKESH o r S p r in ie r cow* or heifer*. Q aa ran teva.— n u r r o r l r t4 * * tot '-Hu»h«*. Bum M3.5>XS w W-3>»ga. ■

SPRINGING Holstein BeUer* lo r Mte.^ Contact Bay Olsen, 829-3313,

FO R ^SA rE : 10 head V H«ht feeder ^xattlB ,- C a t» - T » l« r ------ --------------

S w in e 103EIGH T reg lite red Y orkshire b ird

s r l ts and sows. ArcblQ Malone, Je ro m e. 324-50S2.

Horses --------

up to .S .m oo ths. W ann-w itter M d t.ick room ' avaitnble. Ob edge of C lty ''llm n8. 333-11178.

iuiU IbT E K E iS und grade ficuses, • bougUi and (olt*.. Specialty raaeh geldmg*. Ren H ater. 733-6(W3.

CyRl>. 4 row poU to d igger. 2 Sun. m aster 4 row potato devlner*. I NO. 70 Curl po ta to harvestei I No. 1 Curl P o ta to harveste i, Don M cFarland. 825-8003. Eden.

1048 IN T E R N A T IO N A L 'truck. *480.... xraek-, *1.000. front, witb Farm -

H a y , G ra in a n d Feed 94...I'A KMEUSr Urcen ebon 3rd tu tting

alfa lfa with byU ge, io rsgo M ver. Also use bylaga forage sa v e r on corn sllagB to m ake It moie poNet- able and reduco shrinkage. Leo's Custom Farm ing. F lier. 326-4703.

DAIRV Pellet* »3S-tcn 'bulkV^ toa sacked. Globa Seed o sd Fe««, Twin Fall*.___________ __________

CUSl'OM STEAM grain rolllnb. mo- bile — molasKS. At Haskell. 423- 5880, K i m b e r l y . ___________^

12 ACRHS of pa itu ro for r«nt. In Twin Fall*. 754-9827. CaHia, Nev> ada.

CORN cribs, and com bins, to r *ale: 1,000 bushel c a p a c lty .- le c en U .a bushel. Globe Seed and Feed,

FOR SALE; THRUE-Quarter regls- ..............A rabian m a ^ ^ * 6 U broken,

STURDY 3 horse, horse tra ile r . 8150. Call 32e-413». ■

•H o rse 'tra ile r, stu rdy .TWO Ho i. . . . . . .saoe. 326.4358.________ .

GOOD HUNTING m are fo r «ala c trad e . 733-006.

RADBlTS...buclu..cl<}«s..Bnd M b e i ._Hutches, pens. T oU l price,- |I75 . 343-4568, Buhl................ .. •

T r a r r ^ E R A N C H

300 hrad . ,3-"bcdroom home, t

• L & N REAL ESTATE CO. 324-4800 . JEROME

1 6 0 A C R E S T O C K R A N C H

E xcellent wloterlnR a’rea. CG 'a c re s Irrigated, a ll'h n y and pas-

, 50 afiorcs cnnal w ater. 75” '

mra^K“=^7c:oiumbia'

» TRAVEL TRAILERS Traveler.c — R oadrunncr ONE AND Two I

___ kitchcn. _____•S;ira(io, barn, fenei-d ,____ ,,...

■veil, low ly lanilscaplnR, Call

Rround uvallable In • Twin ' Fnlls todiiy. This RO acres joins the Col. ICRu of Soullicrn Idaho for over H tnile. F o r appointm ent call Hnroli

LARHE ANIJ SMALLER 3 rooms 'i rR c closcl. Adult only. J

• Inn, 7.13-0244.

* TRAVEL TRAILERS ANDties furnU hfd, 731-.li

P e t e r s e n R e a l E s t a t e. Wendell. idahOi . 33n,;o7i JW-ACHKSr-with-IHO-shori

Nicu homi', laruu burn.cellar, corrals.-D andy stock ..........with Qutsldu grazing righ ts. Juo. -...11 ____i-.T.

TWO m u / ............... ...... ....

kltchcn, bullt-ln appllai

4,1)00. REAL ESTATE

GATEWAY- T R A I L E R C E N T E R

Vddlson W tst 733-2410

S e w t w o Ucdroom eomplctcly fu: nished npnrtm cnt. No rhild ren f pets pleniie. Call Tjn -B rr •

T \v a .. Ui;tli;c>uiiu._w‘!LV

■ 40 Acres. ______ ____ . . ,.ticulars write or call SCHMI . . AND M UFFLEY.-G oodlng. Idaho, 034-47HI.

--ildlnfis. Growing 'I, nlfaUn 'And having > or pasture. P riced a t )i

____JO. West a:nd Really . f<' West Mnln. Phone M3-4400.

On A V A IL :rriLE ' NO\V~r ~I^VENINGS BY APPOINTMENT

TliR I'.E roiim aniirlnu 'nt, H rat and w ater furnished. *40. 247 3rd Sti Hnst. 733-3870.

Business P roperty

Ken

liindPaitcrsnn . Iiroher._______________

:;cii ACRU.S choice row crop land in high Ataio of fertility . I.ois of w ater. Over KM acres rendv for •puila or bnuls. An. cxcuptlunal buy ni loss than 1400 per aero. Rocky Mountain Really, 733.1400, Evv.nInKS 733-4S14. 7.i3-00ttB. •______

Wf>. ACHU ,Stock ranch. 3 bedrnnm home, no w ater shares, less ihnn 2.1 miles from Twin Fnlls. Totnl p rice only 145,000. Stockm an's >in. nlly,- r>00 South I.liicnln. Jerom e, 324-4843, 324-4375. ft23,»374.

, 110 W est G, Jerom e. Uy

V o c a tio n Property 5 S

A L W A Y S B E T T E R B U Y S

^ - M A G I G - y - A - b l ^ E - Y -

M O B I L E H O M E SMobile home*

T rrv e l 'I 'ra lle r • M otor home* 3y, miles w est of W est 9 r>?lnli

733-6141 — Closed Saturday*

furnished^ lnclu(K-s;nll u tlllllci. S35,

2.III-:i)ROOM basem ent aparlm ent.u illlilrs paid. 10. p e r m onth, 733.

—lfiftn-trvenlnn»-nml-wcrKrntft:------^S^ROOM S, olt utilities furnlshc...

SCO to npprerlnle . SCO, 733.7304. 1711 K lm herly Roiid.

SWISS VILLA in the heart of ben._ tiful Sawiooih V alley, pffers cholco building lots, lf>w down paym ent, ronsnniililo te rm s. I 'o r Infonnutlon on m il o r our sn lrrtlnn of fine m oualaln cnblns, Cnll Swiss Vllln, 733-0710, n r Clone Hopkins 543-4043.

Real Estate W a n te d 6 2 -

second morir'<R'3s,

Rood corral's, fl iioflh. '/• '< Jarom o, .iJi-JIKn.

M ACUtcS.‘ J3.1,000, Hmnll down, linlnncn

- H<why- Mbun»aln-H«il»vr-7M.~~ evening*. 7.3.1.4fi14. 7.V3,nnS3- “ f n —nu-^oi^~^<’H ~T ntit-fSnn— ra il

I'P.l.DTMAN HEALTOR.S. 73J-1HM.

BUSINESS^ S E E H G E =

l^nK^s, or t r a i l i.oeoi ... N ot to exceed S3,000 -act. Write P . O. Uo> 1. I 'a l l i , Idaho.

Ca m p e rsb 'N i; 'V l.lIJli-IN unll -Cl

Ci»mln« nr Unuchero ..................slljiliilv ddmngiiii, .Sen nt .Stiirdy. —ituiit-concho*, ao3o'ximhflriy''nir --

Hi' IHAVI-I. IHAIITi'H , Mlcrps —CnrprtBd, drapes. - Cleon, Shu

in03 Klmes, 733,7770,

WILL BUY OR TRADE (or good

Pickup Campersor

Trailer Houses ,L E O R I C E M O T O R S

Griodlng, Idahn

A p o rtm e n ts -U n tu rn ls h e d 71.bedroom . apiirtmenc. ined, cnrp'ete

........ ...ilry facllllies,LYNWOOD MANOR

34.1 nuio Lakes North

JO P.BS■fuui, heat, i . i i tn , lurnlshed. 735.nn.’'3.

Avenue ftast, ^'Fhrce romns batli, h ra t. w n irr and sanitation

I windows, Cnll 7JJ- TWO l>«flroom. Ideal f n r 'T ld ia lv

, 6tl AUlSTOCUAT JO-, S«l{ . S i ' ; . r . u n r l i e Nor 37B1- iiHcr BiOO, - •

1000 I'I.liF.TWDOU 12 x nj.---------------------------- -------1----- P.ii**,!

Hou se S 'Furn lshe d

MAGIC VALLEY

n o u * a s * ru r in * i i i iu / >>;UTU sim V lI'tousu,'orr n io c t purk^

ing, mlddN-iigud puoplo, N " clill

.in A r one ll)6i Ilry.

m oil lir IIPlS. 7.1.1.40;iH. ONI'. ROOM huusu, .SUltafjT

. I 'a rll^ lurnlshed >e Hast

B elo w you w ill find m n n y Borvlccrt nvn lln blo from W a g lc V « llb y DusI* ncNMCfi. Look under thu tow n in y ou r aren , , . co n tu c t o n e o f th o se fir m i lo r th e fin est In aerv lco am i q u a lity producta.

T W I N F A L L S

Ho tise s-U n furn ls h e d 7 4NIIJU 3 bedroom .

loonlliin or Jen im i

CONDITIONINQ)M, Ifunihui I, F o r llio Hi

SEPTIC TANK SERVICE

------c«lt-Uli,-ilu(Uaiia...CuiUP>ilUE<_743^Il^ttt-Kouuir

VACUUM CtlANERIlines' and sepllo lank cleaning.

y i i a n s i r g i r * ’ " '" " -" " '"

eronces. Phone 733-H4S0, for op-polnjm rni,________ ,

ONK IIIUIIUIDM. 'l>i»ioiiir-iit, Oi

CHIROPRACTOR

1-1

: a ' P a K A m ! ; ; i ; ' f , a T |! S V I I S S ;

1‘hnna 73S.474I.

I'OK STOVU nnd n irnaca oil, pall Oem n iaie Oil. T3i-ni)n2. Out' fuel m akes w arm trlend*

SICK ROOM BQUimtNTllitspltal beds, wheel d ia ir* , com

miides. cn itnhc), ulo. Hunt o r inia

■; - a - . J J i ' J ' i , f f l i r W . K r t l J !

k irb y uoinnaai.Vacuum'*^ ■VV.U.I. /.13-eoH, Vnouum fiervica Confer, 1313 Bin A w nua Qa*i.

1)0 It VoniseK pa rts , ^wog i.lls. lump «ha<les. Ilg it nxluri's nl lh»L u n n 'n ...........................................

KlnHshiirv'i Phnrmni'v - " • ............ i3-rt»74 ■ ................

SMALi. ona bedrMim iiomu,K lin l)c rly ...IM ..Rofor-------4li).l, .■flBr.BHKl.il

PouiTRr rRocissiNoo w i j R T i n n m w C T T r n i i r i T T L . .

••“ ft?*! jp ^p e r lilrd. rniiliry Hup,

A n n a v e r iiie m e n t In ttio

nUSINESS DIRECTORY ~ # ? n d a n ow and o ld cllpnta

to ' y o u e v e r y d n y t It

■.■'lrp«oh“p 8 " ” 33^066. 'honiBa

(72,000 r f l f t i l e r R ) , ' um l

' 'P h o n e .73J-0«31 "

l.asw eU 'i. Ja r

117 Mnlii.tSttSt. 733-rfil7« n r 7.V1-P1I4 MIWINQ idUIW ENT THEB itHVICt

■i'owii «. Ccilinlry 'I'rrp Horvlca ‘ Many Yanr* Uxperlance''

TrUwrnlna. ’Vinn'5''u. it"»««vina Jivorgiven TrimnilnB

I 'ron IUIIiiiiiles-” l'illly" Insarad ;•, 733-»non. 7.13'floim. nnic 2H-'— *~

VALI,1CY„‘U ‘ U « .pintyjcil I 're a JCiiliT)Rios — iMsiired

llhx B2, T . 1*. — 733-3331

milk lank and pipallne tirv lc e ’ New '

BUSINESS-SERVICB. DIR ECTO R Y ADS AND W ANT ADS

P h o no .7 3 3 -00 9 1

^ 2 4 r H O U R -_ A nBW orlnB-flflrvlco.._Tbo- n d v o rt le er w U l-b e -iio tlf l« L

"to c a ll y o u . If Ihe Inloplinne o f n n y ndverllB er ir tliia , •-D IR K C T O f^Y .'is -not u n sw c r e d , d ia l 7 n - 2 3 8 ^ ' T e le ,

phono A nsw crln a S e r v ice in T w in F o lia , D a y or N ia h f, ■ ' .

R b o rrn -flo a rd A R eam 7 6

. A ir crmdltTinrrri'B,'^'Day, "w eak 'o t — nth. 13'i 4j)i Avenue Norm.

I. c a t s tor elderly n«nun In hom e, r.-all 733-281). Mr*,

» FORD MODEL 1821 trac to r

» JOHN D tE R E 450 craw ler loader, like new. *10.000.

» JOHN DEHRE backhoc only fo r truck or trac to r mount- ed. 81,500. •

I m e TD9 crawler trac to r with doier, J2.500.

I JOHN D EERE JD-300 trac to r loader backhoe, S8,30r. .

» JOHN DEERE 840 ■ (c rap e r, 4o,r.oo.

» Four JOHN D EERE 5010 scrapers. *10,000 to SIS,500. •

• MICHIGAN 125 A loader, *7.500.

• Fun,lino of new John D eere__ ll^ |inlrliii l-:i|lilflmclH---------------

195SM -Farm i........... . . . . .Hand, *1,000. 543.45CC,

- OEMC

o b e cliopped to r *Uage.

FOR SALE: 11 acres neld ____........... .. vw... '»iandln*-lo-be-ohopp«d-for-aU oag«.

lilt, trac to r mounted 326-5418.'t*uj\ dAJ lull, (llliu

hay. FaU pasture for ISO he ad Of

>ud. Sale, I I. 438-4311.

discounts. 7-ri e:

IM t^ -nw n-row (link typn t . ^ t li“ WlUt—lfncinr_m oum cd-i . . . Klmherly,

280 BALES th ird duttlng. C all”:

O th e r F a rm Products - ' 9 6

A n im a lA R T lF lC l / i .________ - _________

ra :v i„" .v ,r 'S o ‘ ffiSd'i'Vibeef available^ Duhl collect. 943- ei03; Je rom e, 324-2852; Shoshone, 8S6.7SR7: Burtay. e78.B253i Iloztl* ion 829-5302............... .......

111 Overland Ave. Burley. Idaho Phone 678-5585

Dob Uouston, Sales neprestntikllve ______Homo Phone-73J-I400 -

Cottle

r 324^028. Jerom e.

102

HORSES. , . rent. Dulls to loan, a ll klnd*> D arrell Lyon, 043-5834.

P o u ltry a n d R abbits 1 0 8

B a b y ChicksFO R S A L E . 25.

oach . 678-2470.

1 0 9puUett*.

Pets a n d Pet S u p p l i u 1 1 0

-P O O D L E -P A R L O R -PROFESSIONAL GR00'TO:G

Any B reed of Dog —T-.' - L -___ ___ I . .* --------L.1- . . . , 1____ ■

hunted, see .............10 m ile* Northwest w ay 30. S43-4740.

pup*, untrained, never a t MIroele H ot Sprtngi

jrthw est o( BubI, Hlgn*

— pupp le i. C beii M iller X cnneli. W u t i^ e d c a p C om ar, K imberly.

H UNTERS ARC Brittany* from tle ia cham pion bloodline. S veek* old. Only *50. (o r proven blood* line. 734-2138.

AKC SAMOYCUMl, fall(~ i r Poodlei, O ennan Sh< ‘ ta n y i, CalHo*. M ac'a 3317. W endell.

' copper, CaU 324-4027 «rt«r ' : ? W -

AF a rm Im plem ents 9 0 Fa rm Im p lem e nts ' 9 0 F a iin Im p le m e n U - 9 0

T R A C T O R S

D-17 AC

D-i5 AC

WD-45

WD

P o ta to E q u ip m e n t '

No. 45 Curl direct harveste r

No, 70 Curl hnrvcster

No. 10 Hallway harvcKlcr

2 row C iirrdliiR or .................

“■i ri)W Curl iHgncr'J-l' Curl i)ulk Iwil

13' Dnhliniin hud

IB’ lx)cl(w(Wd hed

M o i Y N E l J X

irncliir wllh londar nndM F «3 il 1) 15 At a:i0 'HC,

I J l ) 2-li>iiii>in iil'iw 1 I'u ril i.lDW ,M m e lYlllL Cigt l><i|a(o tinr

nu" Hiiwurd llolavnlor 'O ltv r r n.jimtfim .jtlim

VAlLKY F O Itn il IMPKMENT ■ .......... • - 733'Onir -• •

riRHSTONn STORKS . USItD TRACTOR TIUIIS

in.(l-38 and IG.n-.IB Cnii 733-r.Hll ,

SPECIAL •Wlndrt>wer' (;M4vXNil9 irnV He*, ■ton Wlndrower*. 12' i ■ i Ju s t S2.’l.03 each. 1 4 ', , , ^ust

iW hlld.Tliey L aill , |

V A L L E -Y H Q I U a _, & I M P L E M E f ^ T

w.... V --..-733-0017------- t ------I'QR KAI.Ri nnrinhanit Miidel 3»0,

3-rnw lIMcr loniler lank.iiiodol ba<<( hanf«*t*r.-1iY'»ary gmfl-condlilon. Ideal to use witli ” V I'onler or acn lp tr lysism . l'rU«jt3,flOO, holm liroiliers I'liriX Ei|Ulninent

,n , QvtAtaiid, i'liuna

CAM ERON SALES, in c

OFFERSFall Harvest Clearance-At Sacrifice Prices

TRliCKS-TRACTORS-FARM EQUIPMENT'W e have ten (1 0 ) Used Trucks ar)dJ3|ckups^<—

A LL M U ST M O VE T O A N E W -H O M E

SAMPLE '1.......I 9 6 0 C H E V R O L E T ’/ . - T O N P ICK U P — I I ' , g oo cl o n d i . o d y lo g o . . $ 4 9 5 .0 0

F O R D a-TON W IT H BEET BED — ■ 8 .J5 K 2 0 d u a ls , 3 i p d . 1....................... $ 3 9 5 .0 1 ) .

W E H A V E T W E N T Y -f 6 u R (2 4 ) US ED T R A C T O R S T O C O .

SAMPLE

g o o d ru b b e r, tnree*polnt h'lTcK,'FTigTtltiBi tondmgrtr

' paint. ; ........... ......................$2476.00IH C SUPER M T A w it h W id e front H D , 3 .| ip ln l h i t c h ......................................$1595.00

a complete one row IHC beat Hnrveiter. and dflllvr_jtt_

IH C B -4 1 4 -D T R A C T O R , T h li Is a lo w profile un it, Is In e xcellent •c on d lllo n . A real b u y .................................... ............ . $ ^ 4 ? 5 . 0 0

W e ' h a v e 1 0 0 p ie ce e (Je e d F a rm E q u ip m e n t, m e e t o f It le ra c o n d ltio n e d a n d r e a d y to ue e . .

................... ^ ........SAMPLE-IHC MODfLTlSiri? FTriEtyPRbpELteirCOMBlNE.^Si^U

one) re a d y lo g o , w ith p ic k -u p .d lla c h rn e n l . . . . . ; $3Z00.00 — T W O I H C A I O D E L 14 r C O M a i N E 5 ." p n » Is m e cha rtlcd lly g o o d , h o t t?een~‘

re c o n d lllo n o d , o ve r $ 9 0 0 .0 0 in repairs p u t in lo IK Ih e d in a r 'l l DB f ~le. We offer the- twa...... ;

one for sta n d b y repairs ...........................................................................................$ 7 9 5 > 0 0

A M M JE T S TA R 2 , A g o o d used tractor. > V a i $ 1 2 B 5 .0 0 N o w $795.00P ip w e , dlei< h a rro w e , balere , w ln d ro w e r* , a n d m a n y m a n y o th e r g o o d u M b l « m a ch ln e e a r* p ric e d to eell a n d c le a r o ut.

Flnot\ca ctiarRee'waived.weli ir\to 1970, to'rms avallablo. We walcomo to shop our groundt baforo you buy. .

. THE BU Y O f THE, W EEK1 O N L Y M O D E L t I 4 O N E R O W T A N K T Y P E BEET H A R V E S T E R » i

lopping unit, FUtd ready lo save y^u money/ S 3 4 9 S .0 0

.THE'-BARGAIN -CORNER--'— — . ■ ■

C A M E R O NRUPERT, IDAH'6 — ' P H O N E4?6-3XOi

Page 34: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

A-J4..'Timcs»I'Jews, Twin Falls, Idoho Sunday, Ocf6bor 5, 1969' ' --

IHere Is o Jjm-dtindy Idea . . . Sdl l^ie ltenis WH'h a Low Co$f Waiit Ad.- pe ll e n d Pet S u p p U o - H O

- AKC D R m 'A N Y Spnnlcls, G mnntli*.C tcor Lokc* Pow e- PH nl, W3.40M,

' Hulil. • • - '■ CHIIIUAUUA l>\jpplc» iinil piioillc

puppies. Also Jiurt scrvlce, RcrIs- Icrcti. neduced Pficc.

AKC UCRlstcrea ' minlnturo Dnclij-■ •• hunds. with puppy *linu. lix trn

•smnll. Kimberly.A I'UICOT toy female poodle. C

• wcvks. unrcRlstiTcd, AKC blBck ninlc tny pnoillc. T.ilKOlS,

,A K C UEGJSTHnUO I’oodlcs, »ma« . »Ued mlnftlurf*. ~n-4GI7, i

O N li black rcfllilercilTcocker puppy, <? w crk« old, »?-'•>. 733-104.'), •'

A noB A U L li wlillc irnie toy poodle, ' ", 'm nnlhn nl<l. t-'iO 7.13-nriOS.

O lh o r Livestockr ?. I'A'-Js. uuimcya. iiim-

pteic With puck*, boxca.iind ftvery- ttilnK rcndy to ro, 8ID-5D70.

LiVostock W a n te d

JDAHO JUDE &. TALLOW

PhODQ collect 7 2 3 .^ 5

A p p l. & H H E q u ip . : 1 2 0

FlRlshcO on- »U rMfles; i d file drawers, cost $139. wijl i rlflcc. Would pass for new c has fitted p1ntc Rlnsj ‘to pro — 733.73€<r adec 6

M u s lc d l- Instrum em s A 24K lM U A L L-P Ii^O .-conso leue model,

P reach Provincial, dork mnhnR,.

GUAKANTIiliD used ptnno '. ___bnnd instrum cnis, T crroi. Claude Urow n's M uilc -nnd 1-urnlturc. Co.

:UEST UA.H' Biillar. nnU l ender llnss am p, Cull. Pllcr, 32a>SICJ, n fte r 6;00._n_______ _

ijAt^D. iNSTKUMliNTS:. Rent beforeI________ ____I ____ I . . .

_____nm plificr. It)” . speaker both for *100. 733.30Cn.

R a dio o n d T V S ett 12523” ADMIRAL Color, TV., exccllct ’ condition. Must sell Rolnc Int- - ic r v if le r^ r! « j ,- 'b « n ~ o if e r . ATier

5:00, 733--jl36.

turquoise, oxeellent condition, dny wntYnnty. See a t M & Y litoC' tr ie Co.. 441. Main Avenue E nit, Twin Falls .733.821^,

wood SliopplnR Center.

- - - .................. -NHW. Coldspot refrlgerator-frceK r.

SIM, 733-540S.

m o v i n g ; OARAGE SALii: SlOve, like nt-sv. tools, mlscellnneous. Air. go rt Rood nnd Hlgliwuy 74. '733'

F u rn iture & H H G oo ds 122. G o o d T h in g s to Eat 133

CAiN’S USED & REPOSSESSED

------ ---------FU RN ITU RE‘S----------2_plece solid maple bedroom set.

--------xcposscssed ................... ...SMD.qS■ :2xl4* 6‘; lwo.tbne"beiRc nylon

c a rp e t by Mohawk, rcg. *185.................... . « 8_ 2 piece E arly Amcrlcnn llvinR-

room «ulie charcoal . brown tw eed, solid m a jle -trlr t. sold

- new for J429.95. Repo price..................... '•.TT-.-;;v;v.‘. . . . *150.057 piece dinette tur<iuoisc and Jlght walnut ........................ _ a 3 J 5 -

.id' llRht- ; . r - — ................................. *29.05

XfliB, s lio , Bco.utyrcst, ex tra firm.............................. »no-

OUR AIM'LES oro ripe enrly y e a r. . Jonathans and some clou.i a ro ready now. Wc nlso plen ty o f. Concord erapcs. Apple* a ra priced from *2.50 per bushel BrinR ihc fnmlly alonR for an Inc. pick them yourself and m oney. E van’s Apple O rcharda c ross tjie_Snnke__IUver_ntidtrines c a s t of Glenns Perry . 3S6

CA IN ’S2tK M ain Ave. North 733-7111

------------- ^SPOT-CASH-------------

. . u . a x u i . i u vviiui;--n^tiplfs^ O rr O fc h n td r l jnllciN orth

C r c e n ^ j la n t plant. Buhl, IdahoT%,____K II RninA LLEN ’S ORCHARD. 1757 Shoup

E as t. Delicious apples. Phone 733 -9492;-Open-O ciober-5itir " ' t—

Thins* of ValueB A N N E R F U R N IT U R E

127 2nd Avenue West 7:»^M7I_ _^.iu ^vcauo w est 733-U21 S l£G L C R -oH -hcater;'*!ni'. Uuo 'rtw rm

Spark. *25. Excellent rubber pad.

up- Dressers S24.50.. ut>. Breakfast set. J24 50 O ak offico desk. *7S. MuhoRany ??'* t o p desk. RcfrlRcralors. R o r rc s , Baby beds, trunks an- tlqucs, Hayes T uynijure —

MOVi sj . • u i Hoipoint refrlRurntor- . t r c c ie r comblnntlon. automatic w ashe r,. Doth yellow. Brown dav- eno ond chnlr.-D inette se t. Plano hlnRC d rp p je a f . Student 2 occor- dlan and_fU eplace k l 607 G rnnj

rnnSI*2 ovens. *70. MORhus chord or' --n .;* io . -Cnll 7;i:i.07nn.

stoul*. Porfccc condlllon. '

ances. Junk. We do uphoUrerlnaSe nntrlna. H aves Pum lture’ 733.40if

Jew elryWIT

rebuild her^old* rln8*into*n''‘thUiR M nlnT'^' ’■''NNEHS. Mfg..133

Magic Valley ■In ternational Inc.

CA'BS&'PICKUPS— inno'JNTRn, T n A v ia A n ,"V f l“ '<:

J»(17 INTIvUNATtONAI. 4x4 >l.ti.n I.IrkUM, V« n.HUK-. 4..p<a.d."loi;[lvvlilu liuil, now inihlt..........

ItHIJ'-fllLV Iini.K T Mnn wltli duni w ti,.cu. o.oylindor, 4a ,,'cll ./","1................................................ ...

limi I'Oiti) .j.ton pich.ip. VR. 4. t.l'«>--'l. Whin I.PII, (illi h. Jioil.1

• lliin INTIiUNATIONAl. i',.tnn nirk K""<i hrnvy.

m 2 I'OUt) l.|,„; wllt,",'lu„'Li and ‘''■I. vn, 4.»,„a-,i ,, iioM

TRUCKS

— ji iif 'U n -f t iir n ir .-s aii.r‘n Tiinhhiiin". irt-yiird licit, inmn m n•...............'•unSn.iM ..,. ,»it«us.

jiioa v o n i) (M,(m Tm.c-tj.................

. . lluii,1

.irh,.VH

n iniB -r 'l i'L v nh r r

2.*i»-*"i. I'niKi'Il'iri".",!'.'','.,.I tn i IN'l'UU. u iM u i . rtrivBlllltMp tUM'H. 4!1(> rjiulnir A.ai....1a,»I><-U*l, la.yiuil ilou,

J O n . l INTItUHA'MOIMI, I, . mo

JII.17 O M f 2.mn. VN, ri.|nnn.1 'J. ... jDOtfil, tiooil iluMlp hciily aiiii ikiIo .

............................... »iaii3IU1;< K W fnnili'iii nxln iileml iin r-

;jmi Ciiiiiiiilni MiKlnn. 4 X 4 , liiili*liills((iii, oNlin c<iiH| . . HUSO

_ ._ _ _ i\iilJ» o rlx « < l b o u l o r - l l 'o r - --

- M /S K IN fTTACKM ASTKR ,' , ,T R U C i : n iiD S

T n ic k L m io Wc-hI, i ’liu iio 7J3-42(m

tceotKHtlond, .. r __ __ color. TermsWllson-Batcs. 733-CI40,

G a ra g e Sale

skis.- imports, small appllaii-..., man's watch, clothing, new drap, cry •malerlBl,-mlsi-vttaneous. Srt- urday.' Oct. 4lh. 0 a.m, to 3 p.m., Sunday. Oct. 5th. noon to .8 p.m. 733-2244. - -

Dcllclous: Starting Sunday. Sep* tember 28. 4 miles cast of Buhl, on HlRhway 30. 4- north ond west. Art Akland Orchard, Phone

Phone 543-5010.

G o o d T h lrtg t to E a t ' -133-----OUCHAUI3 ls“opca’to publicpIcklnR; now. Mclnto.<h Jnnui]—

—rca~TSirj"tto1dT dcltei

MATHENliY .ORCHARD will Open Sundoy, October 5th. Delicious und Rome apples. You pick, UrlnR contniners. 1 mile Nnrth. 1^ East of Hunscn Orldjo on Tlppcrury

KliD.SPUoa. krnui cnbbage. pep­pers. tomatoes, louash. npples, Ilodenitab Orchard, Z-North,-4. West, West Plve Points.'Orchnr " ' "

JOHN l]t£l<rli: OrchiirU in Hnor man l» now open, Rrd .Dcltclous Apples. You pick In your contain-

kPI>LHS. JonaTnan and Delicious. Pc'iircc orehnrd. 4 miles .Eost, 4 miles North, mile Wcit olIT 1 (nK*;

e South orKimberly.NHSHtTT' Orchard, open Saturday. —Octobtn*-<tn,-ncllctour“ROme. youSeVr-HiRliwiy -74. to' Sclunldt a

nrkr-i ij -West Orchard Drive, Kcnyon Road, pink house.

RED and Uolden Dcllclous. pick. All prices. And Grapes. Moore Egg Farm. HnKvrman

WALNUT Wardrobe — 'cliiw feet

Jerome, 324-273C,THINO.S NOUODY elao: has-—

SALLY’S_AntliIUC»r «8-.W50,_.------ -tables, fockers, beds, dvsks. trunks, china cablnots. chandeliers, dishes,

RED Barn. China Ironware. .Qitj! ; ty knowhow; Rcflntsh-repalr furnl. ture. Hi miles Washington North.

FOR S----- -------------—-.......... .trie calculator, h.ind operated ac Ing machine. 2 electric adding n elctroiiatlc copying

RELOAD1NI3 TO^LS. camp ---- .pack saddles, dutch ovens, slccp- - Ins .bags, tents, knives, scopes,

gum. ammunition, stoves. I a n- run -acks. Red^-IradlnR

MUFFLERS installed While . . . —.waltnCompleto-inmUer-.'crvieivJn. eluding custom duals. . AbbOtt'-

Miscellaneous fo^ Solo 140'a-poiNT

r , 'liW your own sweaters from ... mous niimo sw«ntor liodlcs from -SKINNER SEWING -SHOPPE. Corner ofl-lliir and l-lllmore. Twin F»ll«. ■ShM used Blue Lustre ___twlslcry cti!»n«ri, • Keni elocivic nhnmpooer *1. l rynKCts.

CARPETS n fright' Miike them a beautiful sliiht with lllue Lustre, Rent electric shampoocr *1. Green-

WIO St.tM’ 7 day recluelnR ......Medically letted Jtuii-t4:fir.; ncA ■jr-STTWITtTr7inJ.‘«!5!l. IMiNNYWISli Drug. Lynwond^ShnppIng Cc

PFAFF .SEWING Machln<

STONE JARSr •sultcores.—tri ^tlrum '»cti,..gulUirj..Kedls.TrudJ,nB

X 12 LlNOLliUM rugs, ossortcd pattcrhs. *0.05 to *8.05. BANNER Furnllure. 733-1421..;:rORY rchiiilt Kirby SKa,95. Sec Western Auto and all vacuum lepalrs.

-foot-733-ai74. -—sto\'er-See nt Thomcn. — FURNISHED Cabin; on lo^ Ne gndd!e...WUly»-V-tin, flZ9-Otnr?nrce

3 Green velvet chairs.

M iscellaneous W a n te d 141-CASH FOR SCRAP-METAL

Copper. Brass, Aluminum, Radi, otors. Batteries. Etc.

H. KOPPEL CO.152 2nd Avenue South

Hooting' Equfpmont “144NEEDEDt-UscU-oU-hoator.^Trndo

.your old one In on a new Mono- >;ram' Qll heater at BLACKER'S •,DPiianctt-A-FurnltufgrTwin~Pnlls:

___ ____ ermiitlc for ___ - .....NER FURNITURE. Twin Falls, •733-1421

r Furniture. 733-1421.

Sporting G o o d s '

i^^''^or■ 1000 season.” Mem-, bcrshlps. *12.50 plus *2.50.- per, liuntlnR trip, or n flai.-rntc for, the season nf • *50.00, SUNNY IJROOK". SPORTS. CLUn.' BOX.'

i>errlne 7.13-COf.O.

A u tos fo r S a le . ■ A ulo. fd». S6io . ‘ J -200 -Auldi to r'S blo r -....200

SPECIAL — Amino — Reload *2.03 box new — *3,50. ,sropes jni.nn,! Hunts Hunting. Kimberly. 423-4106, |

Snbv/f Machines,. 160:OMli IN and siv our new ‘iil7Q Model Evtnrudo Skeofcy. .Sno-Mt>- bllcs, nt nun .Si MAUK'S.-your Kvinrude’ nnd Mercury, dealers, 1162 Blue Lakes North.-733

•Newly' overhauled 700 Mercury niiilnr. With running neutral. All controls mid liirgc-Rnn-tnnk—Pnc-- toVyUlt trnllv -l««l llko now I’hone 423-52SO.

B oats 'and Motor.s

JEROM K IM Pl.EM EN T and MARINA

MotorcycleslOCe HONDA 450 CC. H.OOO- mlle%.

*3S0. 1005 Suzuki. 80. as Is.,*25, S 825x14 tires. *20.. 850-2255. Sho- nhone.'105 HONDA .55 trail. 10tl7 Ilrldge, stone M-Mountain” Bath nrr: Ir rfxeellent condition nnd ready, tc -n hunting..............

MU.ST sell. *2950. or best offer. I Iniernatlnnnl 1800. 10 wheekT. w factory-tag-axle. 345 cnRlne. flat bod. 0 new tirvs. ready - work, -m^Ut^.Nc'V-Plymouihv ■

0H5 .SCOUT station wuRon 4 x 4 . low milenge, lock-out hubs, good, Hollister ..........

1058 • CMC 2 ton, with good 15’ beet bed. safety inspeetcil, Rendy to RO. tlOOfl.OO, phone 32C-.5020,

13112 PORD Plckup. _ -4SS0.'

UOUGt._1303_i4-loii—nlckup_Goodcondition-, overhauled motor. 733- -3108. 1031 nth Avenue Ea!' I33”GMC, U-ion plcKup, long, wide box, 5350,'

, SI30. 733-1034.

A u to s F o r Sale 2 0 0 A u to s fo r Sale 2 0 0 A utos Fo r-S a lfl------------^ O C _ A u t o * - f o r -S a l e

T T M T M t/A f r /Z if G ^ .

B e / y A G o o z > {

/ i^ r s ? / c £ z > {

BEST BUYa t

, /= : K O A r _B ill vimmm

W O R D -■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■

1961 F A L C O N ■ 1961 M E R C U R YSinlton wooon. 6-cvllndef. slond-■ Montclair 4,tioor, VO anoln#. ou-Q»d t»animlnlen, rodio, luogooe J lomoilc ttonimliilcn. power stoor*

(In. power Iwokoi, totllo, clean. ,

1963 F O R DFolcon 4-fIoor, 6,cylinder enolne, i

^ 9 5 *395 *3951966 F O R D ■ 1966 FO R D

Couniry lorfnn itnllon wooon Vf) ■ Cottom 500 2-donr. Vfl enijlno, Dnnlnn, nulomnllc Koniinltilon, ■ oiiloinotlc tioniinlitlon, now llial, pawof sleotlno. iuQOOon rock, ■ tionn.

*T495 jzLj1095 -

1964 D A T S U N

*695

1966 V O L K S W A G E N

*11951968 F O R D

foldnns lotino Clf, Vfl enolne/ ilcindord iKinnnljtlon, fodlo,' luil

*22i5" T 9 0 4 T O R D ” -1967 R A M B L E R

Cnt(i«le 500 <t-dnor, VII onQlne. ■ Roliol 4,i/ooi, Vfl eoijH'(uiioiD'ilic liiiiiimliilon, p o w a r j motlc iidtMinltilbn, potver iinnr-•inntitiii, power htdkni, olr con- ■ Inu, powaf hrnkai, <ilr cqikJIIIod-ditlonlnu, «horp, ■ |„jj_ „|ce,

1967 F O R D ■ , 1962 L IN C O L Nlliwndniljlrd V-door hdirltop, V/1 a •eniilne, nulomnllc Itontrninlon, ■ ' ‘''’o*' Vtl ■' nnuln'l- nnlomnflcpownr iloeiliiD, power lj(uke», low J li<ii'»"ilMion, power »lnnHnu, jxa .mllaiio''. I brtitai, powor windows,

‘149S1964 FO R D 1 9 .§ 7 - . F O R P

*2595_ i a e z j v i E R c u R ' ^

*995_ i a 6 a _ H Q B m ^ L

niddvp, rndln.Conmuilff itrilloo wnupiv. VII on, ■ J.ilonr hn«l|op. VII •ngltiD,

•Olni), ouloincillc iKitnmlnloii, jinw-,'.jin(i1lc linntmlnloti, power or ita(Hlno, loti of e«1toi, ■ lnu< powfft littiVel, liutkel ti

*995 *1495 ^ 9 9 5 ^ * 8 9 5 ^

......,1 9 6 4 .C H E V R O L E T -

TRUCKS-1 9 6 5 -FORD----------- ■ - 1964-INTBRNATIONAL— 5------------1964-PORD-

V.-ion, lonii' whnnllxiifl, 4.ipned. S Vi-In'), *•*, ^K'eetlxitn, 't>l'i 6 tyllndar, lillcl., iiullo, inli-■ ipexd, V/1 enolno, liubi, lilicli, ! Vi ■"'i', lonn wlisalhtite, 4.||i«8d. , '/..'on, ionii vylniBllmie, -l-ipand,foM. ,* _____ .-i___________ ---------------------------- —•-------------------------------------------------------

»r095 ^ 5 — I— ^ 1 0 9 5a a M a a a o x M K iiB B a a H

BILL WORKMAN FORD^ 5 0 3rd A ve. East 7 3 3 -1 0 1 9

O p e n 8 a.m . 'til 7 p.m . weekdays c l o s e d SU N D A YS

W / O A/VQDEL

TRADE-INS

. . • A t ■

THE PRICE FIGHTER'S:OCTOBER USED CAR

• SPECIALS •

USED-GARS1 9 6 5 - p d D G E - ^ ^

Poloto 4-door ledtan. Power-Jlee'r. in9_;power brokol auiomoire Ironjmijsion, V8 engcne.

1961 C H E V R O L E TBelAit 4-door jcdan. Automotie, nanjtnlijicn. VB'eriglne, clean'in-

. 1964 FO R DGqloxle 500 7-door hordfcp, V0 ongir>e, ouioinatic lionsmijjion,- •

W h e n T o u Harvest A Deal From The Price Fighter - Y o u

. Hai;west Savings!

*10001968 G T O

360 Vp engirnf.'-S-speed l;ontmi»- uckel with '

*2995

1968 CADILLACC a la is Coupo

Fully' poweract. air cendlllensd,

------- 1968 G T O —Powef-jlcottng,--l-tpeed-tfantmU-- tion. bucket seolt with coniole, foUy—wKeels;—extollenf—eondil

*4895

$ 2 9 9 5-IW B -C A D lL L A C r:• S edan DoViJlo

Full/ pewettd, olr <ondlllon«d|

1967 F O R D -

*1995BRAND-NEW

^1969 D O D G E-IM'pickup. I6ng wide bo«,

oeirdJiflnimiision fuliy-Jsquippe

PRICE F IG H TE R

*2795

BRAND-NEW'1 9 6 9 D O D G E

4-door tiotlenwaqon. Fully

. 1965 D O D G E l.Camper homo, nutotnatic'lranimlj- lion, brond now cybher. indjo.

loltl up io[). oil the oxira i excellonl condition.

*15401967 P O N T IA C

Cninllnci <|,dnar liurdtop. Fowar ilunrlng, power bidksi. ciutonuitlc Iruntiiilitfon, till 'itoorlng wheel, Ixund new Mlclmlln tirei. voty l(w iiilloiiae, plnnty ol now car war-

’ tnnly tllll lemolnlnn.

*19951963 F O R D ■

CnloKlB 60t» XI, Bucket lenli, big-iiiolot,-y<io<l-liiat,-vin]'l top.

^ 7 7 7 _ ^

1963 D O D G E' / t ’lori plikiip. >l-i|>nnil tiiiiMinli* Hon, Vd -miuiiiii, (|00d Mici, c«ii|.

*8951'deiS -PO NTIA‘G------

Wllfi Veiilutil lllni 0|.linii , )|. •leerlno, poyiier brtikoi, (uitor Ircintinloliih, wlillo wllli lilue tuflor, (ent /iniiii.

* 9 9 5 ^1 9 6 4 D A T S U N

rickup. 4-i|>ead iruniinliilon, vory low tnlloogn,

*777W t ALSO HAVE '

KIT. CAMPERSLoft a t d ra it lc a lly

redu ce d p rlcotl

BONANZAUSEDGARS

.B U R LE Y100» I , Mnin i l . '67J|.90fl?

1965 FORDM ustang

4*>pitd Iranimlitlon, buck*! ladlo ond h«at«f. - • _

PRJCE B G H TE R

' 1966 CADILLACS odan D&Villo

Full/ gewB'ed,— otr " cendltlonid, bvbullful lurquolii (inlih with molthlng Inlerlor.

PRICE F IG H TE R

*3495-1 9 6 6 -T H U N D ERBIRD

Co u p e

Lecall/ owned ond ix lra sharp.

PRICE fIG H T E R

*2495

415951965 DODGE

. S tation W a g d n

VB enolne, pow«r ileecing, radio,

PRICE FIG H TER

*13251963 FORDStation W a g o n

White. Vfl enolne, dut'omnlic Irani- mittlon, radio, healtr, good fub« b .f . . .

p r i c e FIG H TER

*$80-1 9 6 8 -P O N T IA C -

VS engine, aulornatic trnnimliilon, indle, h*nl«r, emelleni' rubber. Thit one It ihatp. Oon'i heiltnle.

PRICE FIG H TER

*2595-1 9 5 4 TC A b lL I:A C ^

SedanCom* and u*l II.

PRICE FIG H TER

*169- — ^19 6 6-G TO r

- , H o rd tq p C o u p it

*2195

1966 CHEVROLETIm p a la 4 - D o o r H a rd to p

'B engln*. pewer steering, new ubter, lodle, heater. ^

PRICE F IG H TE R

- 1 1 6 9 5 ^

1964 DODGE. .8 8 0 S tation W a g o n '

v s engine, power it**ilng, radio.

PRICE F IG H TE R

*10951965 RAMBLER

Thli on* It (lot* to perfect, VB •ngin*, automotie l>onimlillar>.

■PRICE F IG H TE R

‘1130—resrMSRcniiv

_ £ fiU 8 0 L .U a i4 )Q P -C o u p (u ,.

PRICE F IG H TE R . -

’3495— t 9 M - C 0 R V » r -

C o u p o M o n za

4-i^e*d l(nntmliilon. ^mk«| s*nt»,

PRICE F IG H TE R

*510• O N E O N L Y

1969 BONNEVILLE— --------------D e m o ---------------

PRICE F IG H T E R '

*1360

The Hortigj of Thb'PriCe Fighter '

6 0 1 M a i n a v e . e . T W IN F A L L S

Page 35: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Want Ads Deliver Resul'I's- But................................

S u n d a y , O clo b e r 5 , 1969 ‘ T lrh e s -N o w s , T w in Falls, Id a h o A> 1 5 ‘

Eyei^ Want Ad User Knows That!A u if l i-f n r_ S Q U 2 0 0 ' A u t c « far Sb U - . 2 0 0 . .T ru c k * :

JENKINS' QUALITY USED CAIS

October SpecmW1968 CHEVROLET . . . . . . $2595

1966 CHEVROLET^ . .\ , $1595Im pala 4-door hardtop. Radio, heater, air conditioning.

1966 CH EVY II . . . . . . $1295

1964 CHEVROLET . . . $1195InripalB 4-door hqrdtop. Radio, heater, auto- m at(c transmissiori, two^to choose from . - • '

1964 CfHEVROiET 77; "v rV- $ 9 9 r4-door.j'Radio, heater, 6-cyli'nder,, 1 '

---------- : - 6tandard-tr-ansmission.___ ______ ______ ________ __

~Ra7a'i5?r"V8“ en9ine, .guifl- matic liansmistlon, power ileehng’

, ond brakes, A Chryiier trods in.

'6 3 Pontiac ............; . . . $ 1 1 9 5Grand Pri». Aviomollc tran»mi»:on. power Heering and b;ol<ej, foctoty air conditioning, engin« completely teboilti_ — -— '

■68 0 ld im o b il ( i 4 4 2 .$2 's9 5Convetilble, ,4.ipoed tranjmlMlen.

1963 CHEVROLET V2-ton $11956 -cylinder engine, 4-speed transmission.

1963 CHEVROLET V2-ton $1295V8 engine; 4-speed ti'ansm ission . • -

i96itEORDJA-ton“ ^$M95^Rebuilt engine, 3-speed transmission, sharp.

1966 F=ORDV2-ton . . . . . . $1495

- 1 ^ 5 9 - € H E V R O L ^ r - T ^ ^ - ~ - r - $ 3 9 5 -. 4 ;do or. V 8 engine, autom atic transmission.'

Glen Jenkins CHEVROLET

P h o n e 7 3 i « 3 B 0 - ^ . •----------- _______ “T w iiv S a lls .

, A u fo t fo r S oUOWNK'R: laas Del Monto bh;

'6 8 . Chrysler 300*4-daor hardtop, lull power, factory

“ .ijlr. on* owner, 24,0001 milei.

'6 7 Chrysler N e w Yo rk e r4-door hardtof>, full power, foctory air, 22,0d0 6oual miles, factory

’63 Faison .............. ' . .$ 3 7 52-door, 6-^lir»der. iiar>dord Ironi- mlsiidh.

’6 9 Ch rysler 3 0 0•; 2-doof haidlop, lull pOwer,'hf/ory

.olr, factory worranly.

'6 5 Ck rysle r N e w p o rt4-door tedan, 363 engine, au'o- matie tranimitiion, power Heering

'65 O ld s m o b ile D eUa 8 9 .

BBiElymouth_Slallo.n_Woflotrvs engine,' aulomdtic trarMmitslon. powof steering and broket.

'6 5 ' M ercury■MdrtlefeV'Drccie'w9y'sbdor»rV8'e gine. aotomotic trdnsmiiilon. p

'•iR5i

■63 Chrysfor 3 0 0 . . . , . . $ 1 0 9 5Convertible 413. high perFormance

■■'eiSgTno/ p ^ ef jteeririg and broket, ■■ cutomalic transmission,' extra "nice; —low.mileoge.. J '__________

. .. ing and biraket, low mileage — trode-in-«»—o-r>ew Chf.yilef.

'66 G T O P o n t ia c ........... $30 9 5Hordtop' coupe, V8 engine, outo- fTotlc transminion, power »leerit»j

. .ond broket, factory air, iljarp.

‘6 2 M ercury M o n tere y Cu slo ir■ '4.doer ledon. Vfi engine, oulomotle

tranimiislon. power ttescing and brakes, almost n^w tiiet.

• 4 » ;p ld « n o H lu V a . . ' .$ 2 3 9 ? '.Xbitvmnatiwt. Jull.pBw«r,u.(ocleiy. oir conditioning, one owner.

'6 8 C h ry s fe r,Town and Country wogoti, 440 V8 englne.-oulomatlC-tianunlHlQll. toC-. Tory aii> condilloning, • power-steer- ing. powBf brokes. enUa nice.

TRUCKS5 of Them

“2WAmiLarger.

- B o b ^ e s e ^

D O D G e CITYLEE PONTIAC :

OMC TRUCKS - IN JBROMH

-sraiiv^iype^oeflrTno:30^jrf«i?^^fK' hutch (ug uxtc. G30IM mllus, Bood condlilon. Western Seed Inc.. Hey-

......... Ititerlor. power »ieerii.,■nil brnkci. radio, stereo .tupc, 350" cubic.. Uxcelteni tfnr.'Sec; .tto Emt.A. Jorome. 32<-«ai, 8:«». 5:00. 324-<aOJ. evcnlngt.

Autos for Sale •^200 A o to s fo r'S a le -/ * 2 0 0

WORKMANBROTHERS

P O N T IA C -C A D IL L A C ' CM C

Rupert. Idftbo 43S.tU7_jIc«iiii^toKs»Z3'llldi?irdJj'irV'i'JiASlLl£QR_CAR5_-^^-Aiiy-^^

30,000 uw i aunruntee. Low riille- -Any model, UlieoutH AutoWrcck- nse. ll,H&0.00. 73!l-7<}24. Inn. Additon .‘Av^aue West'. 733>------------- Mai.

: cmeT r

- W B - I U J X L - C A R S _

. ■ . O R E Q U I T Y .See

WILLSOied Cur D epvrtinent--- — 2Si_*iiL^¥eau*_WMt- - - - - >-

.• Twin Fnlli 1P07 URANP. PKI.'C. Mlchettn tlre i.

ftuiom«ilc_ iran»mt_»'

J i=URU Ualuxic 'SOO. nutom adc tran im itiion . 4-doot, 733-3C68,

't'WftysLtiR“ sintlon__:aiKlon; ' MIchelln lire t, dunl o tr condition.

■ Ing. 440 engine. 733-8M4.' lBti3 CllEVY U reenbriar Staiitin Wa^

io n good condition. Phone 733- ----- tf te r a;DO p.m

* 1865 OLDSMO»ll,li. All powered. I8U2 OLUSMOBILli: ...................—.~T.conditioning, A-1 ihape. Phonej-. ccllcni condition. Make nn otier.

19G2 INTEHNATIONAL Truck.-e n g in e . «. 2 irB ntra ittlon .-U -'------

blnatlon grain, beet bed. Sell ■ rile , con ilder• trade of o l •- ' 53•6020

OLDSMODIUU Toronailo, power, low m lleuu' Make ofrer. A tler b:00. 733-1022,

i ’O Jl-SA i.U i-iBsr. u i cnm ino :i!«e: w tire t: m agi; 4 speed. Phone

£ORD 2-ton heavy <iuty (r.'ck,-y0Ux20 diUiTrwi;n*teach-19^ord-n^draullc ■arbage . dlr.poial bodyJ Caplerun Sales. B...... ............... 'Ruperl

IDCH____________ and cam per. V8.speed. U9S. -RIctifleld. Servic West. Addlion. 733-9784, •

i w a c:'h h v r o Li>t . ' h ' . . . . . . . . . t>cw paint. 4 ipeed transm ltilon new bcd,, 734.^M.

MUST S1£LL. I9S7 Chevollc SS 396.

malic trantmlMlon. "Very' clei733-7S85 or 733-MM.______________

18C7 VW. 1068 Mustang, bolti like----- . 324-5492. Jerom e, Sunday, af.

-;.~>0 weekdnyi.te r 5;.^o weeknnyi,_________ •IBC2 MERCURY Meieor. ExcelKinl

condition. RcatoQable. 825-5253. E dcr

A u t o i for* Sale1931 MODEL A Ford. <

tion. JJ50. Z33.7459,'

29 P IC K U P S A N D T R U C K S'6 3 C h evro let ' .

‘A -ion, long, wide pickup, ,Hig 6 ertgine, 4-speed transmission, com­mercial tliet ond wheels.

'6 7 D o d ge— ’A-tui'j, Ij iig wlJe-Hi

d e r ' engine, 4Ispeed tronsmlsslon, 6-ply tires, trailer hitch.

-Vj -ton ., long, wide pickup, V9 en- gine, outomatic transmlssiort, 6-ply tires,- one owner.

'6 4 D o d g eVi -ten, long wide pickup, V8

,_glne .—4-tpeed -.iran»mliiion,._lraller

A.Vylin. _ riwr gn^l

•65 Ford F -7 0 0 2 «/j.to ntr«ck, 330 V0 englr e, 4.speed,

’ ironsmltiion, 2 -tpe<d rear axle, 900*20 tires.

‘6 4 Chevrolet___________________~:Lotig Ai^e~Yj •len'pickup.~big ~t — engina;-4*ipafd .Kontmittlon, - al­

most new 650x16 6-ply tirei. Reol_ goodly ______•66 C M C

long wida V,-fon pickup. 2S0 6- cylinder engine,-4-speed trontmit-

'63 C M C'/,-lon.' long 'w ide, pickup, 4-4ylin. rfwr gnnlr>e. 4-apeed trontmlnlon, whitewall tires, trolier hitcn, new paint. - . •

A Good Selectlor> of 2 and 2 V i-To ri Trucks

The 'UtUeProfir

DealerBob Reese 's Dodge City

5 0 0 B lo c k S e c o n d A y o n u o S o u th

O P E N ^ 'E N T N G S ’t l L l S .K E N N Y M O O N • W I N N E L U S ' • " J O E B U T L E R "

A B B I E J J R I G J I E N ^

top 100 USED CAR SALEM A G IC V ALLEY’S FINEST - ID A H O ’S LARGEST

OLDSMOBILE - BUICK DEALER 'IS G O IN G A L L O U T T O B E C O M E ID A H O 'S L A R G E S T U S E D C A R D E A L E R . We've set our sights on topping 100 used cars during October. T o do this we've reduced the^p^ice on every top valtie U S E D C A R on our lot. S A V E H U N D R E D S O F | D p L -

This W eik’s'1968 VOLKSWAGEN $1595

2-doof tedonT^-ipee^ tfonsmi t slon.—— •

1967 VOLKSWAGEN .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 3 9 5 ,2-door (tdon , 4-tpeed Ironsmissior).

19 66 V O L K S W A G E N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S I 69.5

^ 6 5 V O L K S W A G E N :;::: $9752-door sedan, 4 -ipeed transmission.

1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC 660 . . . . $ 5 9 5 -4-door tedon, V-8, standard trantmissio;

_ , with .Oierdfive. •

YOUREE MOTOR CO.-------------- 1 6 4 4 M A I N A V E . S O U T H

/^BEN E LD R E p G E -

b P E N E V E N IN G S

J A C K C O X

CLO SED S U N D A Y S

Another Reason Why . t r ~YO U CAN DO B E H E R A T W ILLS

1970 JAVELINTh is javelin Is one for the money. Lika .all. of o u r 1970 Javelins, it's a 4*passonsor sportster.- Classy,

_RlaB8yr-Ja22y,-o n d -po w e rfu i.—Th o -bBB io-engino-is-a - -c 6 m p o tB n t-2 3 2 -c u b ic -in c h -8 ix -o r -g o t 'W ith -a -g o — paci<aRe in a 360 o r 3 9 0 V -8 and a functional ra m - alr induction system. Th e re is no doubt th at oni»

_of-tho-new-197-0^avelina_w/ilLfit-your.'mQSt dlscrlm -— Inating tastes as well as yo ur pocket book.

- f l S I ^ D R I V E -O N E -T O D A Y -A T -

WILLS MOTOR CO.2 3 6 Shoshone St. W e st

1969 OLDSMOBILE 1967 FORD 1966 OLDSMOBILEDeltn nn 4-doof sedon. All power, %-.Ion pickup, V8 .engine, outo. , Toronndo. AM power," fully equip- leSnlire 4-door t^nn. All ppwi

ef ttet lng, p#d, foctofy otr cond., ono owner, lully equipped, ftctoty air---------------- ---------.................................-new car.trode-ln.-

$ 43662 ^246a1968 CHRYSLER 1966 MERCURY 1965 BUICK • 1966 MERCURY/pott 2-cloor hardtop,'All p(Xv. Monlbrey -<-door lednn, AN pow Rlwlero, All power, (octory air con- , Cornel Calient#nir condltlonlna- *0 one owner, new ear Hade- dlHonlna, one owner, new cnf 3-cleor liordlop.

In. Itade-ln. ■ All powit.

^ 4 2 r 0 = q T O = = ^ 2 4 6 0 = = ^ l 6 « E i ^

— 1968-CHEVROLET— 1966t OLDSMOBILE- - - - - - - ^ 1 9 6 5 -M E R C U R Y -7 — 1953-CHEVROLETCfimlno. VO, nutn, l»nn»,, pow- ' *'90". All power, fnctory nlr eon. Comet 4.door. One owner,stnnrlncj, rlolu^ii Inlo'lor, 11,000 diltonlna, one' owner, mow cor 4.doo, sBilnii. ciutoninllc Irtinsinliilni

iluni iiillei, (|Oile ln, wiioleiciie, Nsim cnr tiiida-lii. AS,000 ciciuni miles.

^2870 * 1775 770 *188i T O D i w i ' i H 6 C l | m o L n : i m » e o n i u c . 1941 v m k s w m e i i

« ' V \ ' \ \</tanil^Pfln. lO.OOy 'Wtuirt «illei. \m oo.whneli,. oil powerJVod^oiy olf ' Aulomotle

, foloro^.rioor fiofcfiop.' Alt' power, 'r condltlonino, one owner.

Pol Air4'dooiledni)

$ 1990 *880 ’4495 *1660' W A T C H A B D IE ’ U R IO U E N 'S M O N D A Y N I G H T A T T H e -M O V lt S .

■ “DESERT FOX” ■

733-8721" M A G IC V A L L E Y ’S FIN E S T ^ - I D A H O 'S l a r g e s t O L O S M O Q JL ^ .p U K iK D E A L tR " •

- , T O IN FALLS

Page 36: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

A -1 6 T im os-N ew s, T w in F a I l s , 'I d ^ o ;^ S u n d ^ y , O c to b e r 5 , 1 9 6 9

S A V E A T S A F E V N W V Y : P l S e O U N T O N E V E R V S H O P P i N O T R i

: & T ^ f e w Q y D i s c o U r t f y o i r v i r T t l - f i n t t - e v e r y t h i n q j L p i i i c e r f I b w e v e r y d a y .

C o s t s o f o p e r a t i n g t h e s t o r e s a r e h e l d d o w n I n e v e r y p o s s i b l e w i a y .

A l l f r i l l s , s u c h o s t r a d i n g s t a m p s , a r ' e e l i m i n a t e d . O u r ' c u s i o m e r s

b e n e f i t i n l o v y e r p r i c e s o n e v e r y i t e m * . O u r p r i c e s a r e a s lo v ^ o n

M o n d a y a s . t h e y a r e o n S q t u r d a ) ' s o y o u c a n s h o p o n t h e d a y y o u

" w o n t t o s h o p ] . -

. •Ixe.pl gov.f<im.M.Mn»rflll.d.bnd Fair Trod.dll.mi.

.S A F E W A Y D IS C O U N T STORES IN A L L O F TH ESE T O W N S : . '

L ^ {A l l^ ^ t o r e s )r B !a « k f o o » ^ P o c o t o i lo , -T w in -F a lU -(B o t h -S t o r © » )^ M o n t p © l i® r r -^ o o d in g , - W eisar, T i r o m e , C a ld w e ll, N a m p a ,. Id a h o Falls, R ig b y , P a ye H e , M o u n ta in H o m e , R upert,

\— B u rle y ,-a n d . O n ta rio , O re g o n ;----------------- ---------------- ---------------------- - ------------------------------------------, -------------- ----------

'm T C ftm teu fh suP E ff^AW ie n w e tnslcc a n cxct-ptioria! purchnsc, we pasa th e savin? righ t niong to you. Similar price reduc- tioHB are also niade posalble by prom otional nllow- M ces g ivca b ym anufacturcrs..B cca«sc.thw _aro

- te m poraTy ear<ro-MvinB8rW»-nw>t S U EEB - _ SA V ER . S tock iip whilo tbcso cxtxa*saving8-aio

in cffcct.

LOOK FOR THIS MARK>

DISCOUNT PRICES

msmmmmm-Cream O'-Wheal— -------- ^ ^ 4 9 " -4 8 ''

S uper Saver Pricej Effective T o d o y TK ru W e d ne sd a y. A lj O the r Price* A re "E ve ry d a y Low Prices.

Te Chong.

Post Toasties 2 i>

, Lucky Chdrm ■(oliraiiC ^ (d Z' iy Kitty Cat liHer

Wo* NOWBetty Crocker Betty Crocker

Crocker

DISCOUNT PRICESPooch Dog Food- Prime Dry Dog Food Vet's Nuggets S i'.,.,/ AIpp Weat“ Jf;J^'' -

PrieoW a> NOW

Swanson TV Dinifers— ~ 5 6 " -48'' Morton J Course 'S T79 '’ 67*Bel-air Green Peas ; 'Sr‘ 20*—1 9 "

-B e l-a ir-~ £ "^!^«* -------^ -3 4 ''-''2 9 '‘-

Pkg.)O.Ib.S 1.49-1.14

3 4 « - 2 6 ' ’-

’ t ‘ 1 .6 4

Pjirjna-Chuck-Wagon-a-S,M.05Pooch Dog Food

1;1992'’-

5.45 4.99

BAKE-SHOPP u t M i l l r

CrullersL u c e r n e S h e r b e t s Libby's Peaches "V.: i

I* 'II Annt. M> lA l •

E v e r y d a y D i s c o u n t P r i c e ^

s r s -P i n e a p p l e g o l l o n

-—Town-House—S --------------------

Apple Cider “t : 1 Cling Peaches J S " V : ' - ;

Hershey^s_B n - N o r-.L'iJBS' 71*

Hershey's S Hershey's S

12. 59' 48«^." 32« 25»

LeSeur Green Peas Green Giant Green Giant Green Giant Niblets

23'

30«• Con . . * 7

'^ ;7 9 '

MEATS at Discount Prices Every Day!

Golden Heart Flour Kitchen Craft Flour Gold Medal Flour S '°' 2 79 Betty Crocker

-Duncan-Hines-SfiV Pillsbury Cake Mixes

EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICEPriceWflt NOW

-S p e c ia l Pock

Detergent S ppclol P9 ck

bottle

1.44 1.17 1.441.17

*i»e -

k i n giiz e

I It's A lw a y s I F resh ly G ro u n d

A^sbFryers l^ronniUeef5 5

S po clo LP ack

White Magic' ' Ivory liquid

- g i a n t -

pi<0.

‘X: 89 76/Datergant 32>oz.Special Pack bottle

S o f f o n a r

93<^ 6 3 /

B a n q u e t B u f f e t

Suppers|H3anquet Frozen

Eight Varieties

U . S . D . A . I n s p e c t e d

F o r W h o l e s o m e n e s s .

- ........ - - W h o l o --------------— l b .

PRODUCE at Discount Prices Every Day!■ F o r H a m b u r g e r s ■■

- | ~ o r - M e a t - L u u f ' ' i D w '^ i

C u t-U p Fryers « ; ■ lb. 33' Chluiik Bologria ^ ”.°ri.co rb 5 4 /

-G ilbe-Steaks-S-Hfa"— ^ i i r l ; 1 7 ~

Sliced Batbd ho' T g .., ,b. 85^B la d e C u f C O /U .S .D .A . C h o ic e . . l b . 3 0 ^

U . S . D .A i Cliolco lb. 1.08lb, 47<

Chuck Roast Round Steaks u'!s.fA Short Ribs llZniT’' Beef Cubes ot"

V e a l B ^ r d s t ^ S „ ’

Fried Chicken Pr.cookod 2 D rum sticks

T>Bdne Steaks S a fe w a y T rim lb,

U .S .D ,A , C l .o k . .S a fa w a y Trim m a d

'(■J: 98;^ •

l i s

EVERYDAY.DISCOUNTPRICE"

U n i f o r m C u b r i J n n d o r O o o f l b .

Rib Roast Boneless Roast »< TurjjotJFilletj

I .S .D .A . C h o k e D e a f P o l R o a i t

1.39 lb, 1.08

lb. 8 8 / Bananas

I S te w - I Y e g e ta b le s

EVERYDAY .1 DISCOUNT

.•:£>« |LPRrCE

F f l r n ie r l y C o l l n d L Q jG r o e n la n d H a l i b u t l b .

Golden Ripe - ‘Selected Pruit

C arro ts Turn ips

[C J ^ P arsn ips [ .R u ta b a n a s

SAVE MONEY EVERY AT SAFEWAY DISCOUNT

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- ( ‘1 ■ l i

Complete • NEWS * SPORTS • 'P l t : t U i l l M | i i i | ^ ^ P ^ ? ^1 W3|

'■• " 'v ivV- / **J

- 3•• • '■ c- •»-' .‘.a‘'VBS£ai*iKi*ewir;-.Ta

I 'V E B E B N A U M A U lE h J A 6 L & ., iV Y A -A D C t E DfM W P f Z ^ A ‘ j f f r W ^ R lt^ 'lT ^ S A ^ ' A ' l A L L D i * r ^

^TB!i^^^75 iS W O U U D M A V E C tO S E O lA L t . L -TH IS-D U M RA . UON&

■ „ . „ ^ ^ - T H I 6 '— ^ T I M ^ . ---------l A T v ^ W ir y Y o o R

’a s io K s/ .

I S ^ i M A T - T B R i ^ >UL"BE e u A P

B a ^

fi IV69,.^r Wj<»itf>.«i>,.»t»«n Any

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l 's «p a ra t 'a 'ih o ‘ T ro n f ''f rb m -th e

’ D E A R P O L L Y » A ( le r washing boieboll caps, strc lch cacfi one over'on inverterf

^ sauce pon to dry. Th is will prevent shrink* ing end the cop will dry in shape. Th is is

_oUoJi«lntuLlflt-mllitary_vfiYM wha.waiti_ rotigue c a p i . ~ C A R O L Y N N

3 P I i l S C I I - i r A ? S P O P l» y A 1 V e y m e e y= W i t e E r = “ V / ^ - O R “ W | b b - A ^

T H E Y . H IT Y IT B E A N T H A T LINE /( P E S P E R A TIO M

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" \ - r -

W Z X 'O ’T X Z X i O X I^ ^ ^ J ' - PfEG.WEteE ,_ V(Xi wonvmind mareied ■ HIF! HAVE , , --- WINTHRQP?

-- ---------------------------5*-'*^---------

to3T ; p i c k O a ; i ^

^ O t J ^ O I E T B W A X '

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Page 41: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

rriEftE7\RE-THlNe^TriAT-Al2E-NAfURAt^ v T H E P E i S -N O T M lM S A C T l R C I i M . A B o U T . T H E j r A $ r e — - -

'< 3F < $ P P IT e ..5 W lTCri.TO 6 P P IT E . '

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T ® H ^ r o C K^Fill the .squares with the hgW;: words and the words wi II

N ' : rin a h f f m e ^UNSCRAMBLE THIS GIRL'S NAME MADE FAMOUS BY THE KIRST. EMPRESS. OFl^OME ANlbWHlCH

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O C T O B E R 5 . 1 9 6 9

The Reasons Bel

By REBECCA LISWO(

Page 44: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Ask Them yourself WHAT iSe WORLD!— F O R -P R E S ID E N T ' R IC H A R D M . N IX O N '

’3 I T I u i f tM < y o u r m o a l m e m * o r a h le e x p e r ie n c e d u r in g th e e ig h t y e a r s y o u t e r v e d . t u - y . i c e - P j ^ i d e n t ^ u n d e r _ th e ia t e D tc ig h t D . E ise n -

P O R J ^ A L T E R j . h i c k e l , -S eg re lary .Q f ik e t n le r io r

. P o w n jiany b u ffa lo . a r « l e f t th th e V n i u d S ta ie t?

■ ^ - ^ a r o l d S a r p e r J r ^ B a r - tO K , F la .

- P M k a b o o P r a m — N o t -o v o n -ln f a n H -/ ha ve p riv a cy no w . A BriHih firm Vis mork®tif>g a transparent b a b y carrlagW W h y ? S o M o nyn x-ca n w atch b a b y from '

>_fieccDLa fl_af_lhft-buffslo.hcrdaJii_.the U.S. and Canada ohow a continenlal .population of about 22,000.

h o te e r? — B e r n a r d ' A . B lu b a u g h f A t- l ia n e e y O h io '] ,V

# There were a number. One, of course, -was my meeting .with-Prem ier. Nikita , ; . - ; F O R G O V . D A N IE L E V A N S

-K h n i.h r .h tr f r in -M ii»n r ir .in -1 9 5 9.'-A ii-V ic .»^^-------President, I opened the first U.S. Exhibi­tion ever held in-the Soviet-Union-and- held taUis on behalf of our Government with the Soviet Premier. ..........................

F O R R O G E R B R O W N ,I Los Angele* Rams

A b o u t h o w n u tn y p o u n d s 'I o f p a d d in g d o y o u w e a r

'* d e v ic e d o o n c r a s h e d !on«*?-— D .

c a s te r . P a .• Washington Slate’* new law requiring installation of *'downed aircraft rescue Iransmitters” (D A R T ) w ill add a new measure of public- safe^ to commercial

r-will-x o n . L a s V eg a s , N e v .

A boqt~~12 pumids. It used tu weigh much more, but now there are excellent tbei^y-Baving lives.

air-search effectiveness and enable search- •er«—4o—looate-missing-Hiiroraft—<|uiek];

protective gear mode of various compo­sitions which are light, yet strong. '

F O R G R A C E D A V A L L ,a u U la n t cu ra to r, B ro n x Z o o —

i - W h o —fira l—u s e d ' e a n i e r 'I p i g e o n s to c a r r y m e s - ^I s a g e s? — C o n ra d F io re U o ,

B r o o fd y n , N .Y .♦ The carrier pigeon shoul fused with the homing pigeon. The for­mer is a show breed. It does not “ home” and is not used to ^arry messages. Hom-

Greeksand Romans, often to report spom and games. The present breed was perfected

— iir-Belginm reBrly-inthe-W lh 'ccntury.— ^

F O R W A L T E R J . M cN E R N E Y , pnsident,B lu « Cross A u o c ia i io n

W h a t is t h e b ig g e s t h ea lth - ~ i n s u r a n e e c l a i m e v e r

p a id ? — S . P . , P a tM m a 'V U y , P la .• Probably tlie ^ , 5 0 0 bill recently paid ’ rBlu'e-€roa»-on-bflhalt-ot.JUra^am nel

a n y or»g lo . A lso it permits b a b y to o b - — s«Tv e "a li 'h ls “ 4ufrdiJrKJln0s/ w h ich sup­

p ose dly stimulates his mental grow th.

N e w « p a p « r b o y s , T h e n a n d N o wIn spite o f our o ge o f a fBoence and a u to m a tion , the e a rly -m o rn in g o f after*

^ p o p u ia r, occorcfirig to C y r u i Favor,

- C ircu la tio n M a n a g e n Assn. it's hot'th e m o n e y, it's the m a n h oo d g a in e d . K c l i

' b o y is a n ln d e p e n d e n fe o n tra c to r,^u y - ing the p a p e rs a t wholesole/ selling at retail, k e e p h^jf^bo ut 3 0 percent o f the

■‘ profits. Hoore ran p e f r o m .7 ^ ..to ’ 1 5 .a - w e e k ; profits from $ 7 .5 0 to $ 2 5 . The ye a rs o f senrice used to a ve ra g e five; n o w , w ith families o n the m ove a n d school p re u u res , it's o n ly orte o r tvro. A Vecent Innovotten i^ the use o f coun-

- E x i t -W h H e - Re m em b e r-'the conven-' tional w hite, button-dow n*colldr shirt? A lth ou gh o nce 8 5 tOx90 percent of oil

• m en's sh lrti used to -b e w h ile j'n o w more than 5 0 percent a re c o lo ( ;^ or pat-' te m e d . T o d a y butt6n*downs ore not much In d e m a n d , a ccording to the

— M e rw w «rf R e to lle rro f -A m erica , nor the classic n a rro w tie w o rn vfith it. More pop u la r is the sp re a d a n d long>po!nt

. collars, w o rn w ith ties four to five inches w id e . W h a t 's replacing while?

i i i I { ^ I t : : t ) M ^ n ! ^ ^ I o r M r » - m u lb s ^ gre e n, g o ld , m e lo n , a n d blue.

- J a e k - l h e - K n l f e — ^^N o-kitehen-tooirii m ore tim e-consum ing than a dull knife " says Ja c k V a n B ib b e r, In his new book, 'T a s t Feasts, A C o o k b o o k for Hurried G ou rm e ts." H e refects most elcclric

~ knife sharpeners as "sa d ly inode-

F O R R A Q V E L W E L C H• I s i t t r u e fh a t y o u a r e a

m e m b e r o f th e M o r m o n C h u r c h ( L a t t e r D a y S a in ts ) a n d th u s r e f r a in f r o m jm o ftjn ir a n d d r i n k ­

in g?— M rs . A ._ C h n te ,_ O g d en , U ta h

• It in true limt I do i^olidrink or smoke,. hu( lhii>. is not becaUHe of rrliRious ccm*

- ^ v^ulionH. !tV a mailer of pcrBona) taste.,

F O R W IN T O N M . IHjO V N T ,I JfoM tm atler C e n tra l . .

-I^ e o r e co n B ta n tly r e c e iv ^ ' in g m a il re q n e sU f o r di>- n a tio n s f o r 'm a n y k in d s

l lo to c a n tee h e s u re th a t th e d o n a - . I lo r u u e s e n d a r e .b e in g u s e d ieg iti^ '- m a te ly f — A . E . F ish e r , M o rg a n to w n , W . V a .

% linlew n comjilalnt is lodgwl, the^P<^l. . OfHce Department would have no way of tnowiiig a aoliciling cnoruy is Icgilimuto.

Taylor, 60, of Everell, Mass. She was " hospitalized on A p ril 25,1968, with acute •_polyneunlis, a rore nervous disordCT Aot

causes“ a‘>«akenlng"andT)ar«lyal8-of-the— muscles. After tests confirmed the diag­nosis, she wa^ placed in ■ special res-

— pjfatory-unifc-which-costi-from |2S0 to - $300 a day per patient. M rs. Taylor re­mained in it for eight months.

F O R J . E D G A R l lO O V E R ,. D i r t e l o r ,F B f

W h a t p e r c e n ta g e o f th e 1 0 M o st W a n te d m e n a re c a u g h t? — M r s . - G e o r g e M o e, M ilw a u k e e , W is .

C.Since this llsl was Iwgun oh. March H.^'19^0, 300 fugitives have been listed. More ihnn 90 percent of these liavo been apprehetjdl^.^

F O R E b z i B E T i r r o s r r ' ~e t lq u e t if a u th o r ily ■

H o w m a n y t im e s s h o u ld a....... , .............................

be l/e tw th e o c c u p a n ts t o 6<r III h o m e ? — L lo y d P e r-

io n ,G r a n d J u n e t io n ,C o lo .• THrbe or foar times. If they ‘do not onswer by ihcn, they are .either not an- HWerlng~aclibWairly-or-aro_fla]o}p,iM»I^ cannot hea the b^ll.' ' ' •

distributton points, fo r a b o u t 1 0 boys. T h e y , h e lp ,w »K .re d ’u iting( distribution,

- com pkilnts.— W h a t -o bo ut n evrspopiBr - ---------g«r/s? T h e re a re a few , b ut most p a ­pers discourage theni— too m a n y j o b ; ha za rd s . fi

Ja c k V a n Bibber

q u a te ," a n d hon in g'ste e l is.greot onlyJ _______T -e n -e d Q e ,-but-not-sbofpef>’

ing. has

'M y to lu tio n - is - m y butcher; ho a professional knife sharpener

::< o m e -| n -to -d o -h i s L o w n - knives— ond m ine, too , fo r a v e ry small fee. Mojt butchets a re fr ie n d ly fellows and will d o the sam e fo r y o u . " ______

P/ione fo r the b/fnd

F e e ^Se e P h o n e This fa ll.th e first telephone for d e a f-b lin d persons a re expected to b e mbn ufoctured. C a lle d C o d e C o m , the set con b<

‘ connected to a conve n tio na l phone. The vibro tions o f the fin g e r p a d a llo w the blind to fee pre a rra nge d messoges; the d e a f con see then in coded flashes o f lig ht. C o d e C o m require

-so m e c oo p e ra tion 'b e tvw e n the. ow n e r a n d spe ckil rallers. Photo shows th e 'f lrc u la r vlbrolln( p a d at left of g ir l 'i h a n d . L igh t flashes comt from the recessed b lack recta n gle In t h e i f ^ o r of the roised porttop o f the ^ t above^ her fin g «r* , which a re o n the se nding key. ^

JF a m ify W eekly O c t o b s r i . i o e a .

LEONARD S. DAVIOOW / W «U «| -M t m O N .f lU iN K P »W M U r--

W .V a q I TH O M KO N W r«»* r06 N A IO M.KOURT I . BROWNR W m i L W 4 » ltm A iw ^ U t i> 9 M ^ o tAd»*ftM ma O fl

ROtUTT f m o i U O N

MAJtmj N . TRlNQUt A r t ^ • e t o r M OANii DR n o n

Titrr *

A t iU U n i A r t D f r H U r : Oim i R»»«»« Sd lU rta lO /

Mwer from lb# |• tk ra ««h tkU tMlmmt, and w cH gel

ea i^ ,~ lo W M hln M l* nT w' yp*k, *N.y !J 0 0 2 2 . W e c s |iM l.iK liim » « la « M — tio m , but »S «UI b e p aU for M cb mm

__You.«f«- nv«8d to mkii your ifUMtkins or comment* aboot-any trtteta orithrertljemMt that• iBttjr will reMlve a prompt imwer. Writo to Service Editor,

Family Woefcly, M l Uxiniton Ave/iue How Yort, K.y. JD02Z

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D lscm ^th e secretsTjf

/ — a n d m a k e u p t o $ 5 0 a w e e k s e l l i n g y d u f g i f t s , i f y o u c h o o s e . )

I M A U i N c ! , J u s t I I l i i i l e p a i n t . . . 3 s i m p l e K r i i s h s t r o k e s . . . i i n d y o u c a n l u r n i r a s h i n t o i r e n s *

u r c s . i i i n k - p i t c ( l i s c . - i r d s i n t o R t a m o r o u K —•- even if you ’ve never hclil a brush" b e fo re . In

you r hiind.i :i huiiered old cotTee po i now be­com es a w ork of urt . . . a riislccl te a keiilc chani:es into a charm inp cifi p lan ter . . . a for- uo tien CH m g|j>ack-mink_bccom cfc-o-lKutnifu|-~ nand -pu in tcd hope cheM.

It's easy— no special talent needed T oday th e IJeeoruiivc'A n* InMiliitc is lielpin |t Ihoiisutids o f men nnJ women crcnle bcaiilifui ilcco rn to r pieccs ai home. Y on. loo . will be Ihrillcd U> dis'covcr you can c reate lovely ireas- u res— even if you can’t dr;iw a Mruiviii line.

profit, as you cnoj»sc. 0 «"CKly a n j easily y o U lt' see exqutsilc H O SF.S^anil FLO W ERS . . . PK U IT . . . CUIMDS a n J HOWS . . . B1KDS a nJ HUTTER KLIES . . . com e alive under your brush as if by mnpic!

_Eam-whlle-yotr1eOTn allTome.

o rators, even jiifl _____ ..... .......your unusual one-iif-u-kind creulionii—« . . lim es o irerinn $ It). SI 5. even S20 for one. .Soon

E', ; bein|( iirnbbetl

lansA t depariinen i storu W hot’% the secret? The discovery lliiil ^ i tb ^

••imple b ru sh Mrokes (the s.ime strokes iiscd to , -T ipp ly-lipM ick). yoii c a n -d c c o ra tW o r-fn i t- i> r-

0 6 o n antlque tfeasure hunfalI'.verywhcrc you look— hasem em s. ham s.

band-painled dccorutor picces for ilwir homes, liw . *’M v friends and neinhbors," says Mrs. KTurllyii IRIftmrT>r~Tt>ltar=t)klaboTna. "Hnie- kept me busy painting milk cjns and recipe boxes. antI I've done two trunks. Whul a happy whirl I ’m in!" And within days fiom now you.

• io«>, can be in a happy whirl enioyinu ilie fun, —thc-q’ccltcmt'inrinul u you wish, tlie protits ol

ilccoraritii! );ifls ul liome . - . . .Enloy 15-day Eitamtnation FREE

The complete Course is shipped to you at once. Yes, you eet everything in one bis ihip^iem . , . 42-piece decorator's kii — 87 patterns — 2'4 les­sons— all the paints, brushes, and decoratinc supplies you need— and much, much more! Vet ihe eniire Coiitse is yours for only S39.50 eom- pletc, plus shippinB. if delighled with 15 day

.Studgots c ^ a t e ' beautifu l Klfts, tben u n d letters praisint! th e }oys and prof*

-ttST»fT5tft-de«>r*tk)oI—------ ----------— “ 1 cleared,S2S0.00 last month— and7 I didn’t even leave the house!”

— l.<iis Puj.Lio,.iLoi<(>/ii/>q__

"I have iK quired 30 k IiooI desks . . . w hich I <im rcllnishinK . . . I have them praclically . a ll JMild." I — KoBtRf W KITZM ANN^rM - rorfc"'•"Wanted yoii to know how very pleased I have been with your coursc. And ,I diun’l know how 10 hold n brush in the berinnlnB.”

_LoUISl! DlEI£.Co///»r»/u

"Nothinit 1 cun think of now c<

........... ............ io n ............................ ....... - , __linil "<rciisurcs-in-thc-rouith"— awiiiiinn only . few strokes til lu rn them into stunning object'

tfiql ftrst. And even tm i small a m o i^« "jay he • O ccor:itive A rts InsliluUj. Ipa id In easy monthly installm enis. T h is has to s iy objective in tn k irv ihe ir cou rse 1

■ be the b isBest value o f its k ind in A m erica when wus to supplem ent social, security 'you . basic

-lis ttL A

lebigBest value o f its k ind in A m erica when wus to supplem ent social, security 1co iis iaen lra t-yD U 'rc 'jte tling -m ony-o f-thc -----und-a_siaa ll.n inn th lv te n s io n . T h is ■

: m aterials olTered in the nationally ndver* I um doing . . . " ^ ................................. J dsli- K. W it.soN. /V /tim

• SPECIAL TKINNINO MOOiriER • 3 BUllCTINS OF PflOFESSIONAl,TI)>S A IDEAS

C D E C IFVOUVr T i c c act i oM/f4 woodcut and engraving iroductionsthe (.'oiirse.K l-tU * » R tf-' even if you re lu tn the C ourse.

0 ; r - < m ^ E n S 3 J n E E ! D — ,

Page 46: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

auses and7\“ m x irr ia g e -"d o c to T " -h “Qs

p s y c h o lo g ic a l

I AM a m a r r ia g e “ docto r,” a n d , a s y o u m ig h t guess , I

r a r e ly ta lk p ro fe ss io n a lly to coup les w ho a r e sex u a lly com^ p a t ib l e — j u s t to th o s e w ho h a v e 'n e v e r been ab le to a d ju s t

_ tO - th i s - v i t a l , j n t i m a l e p a r t o f - m a r r ia g e .

T h o roaaon I b co few , If any, sex- u«?Iy attuned couplcs ia thot they have no psychological problems eeriouB" cnough' to 'p ro v o n t ' thorn from np- proachinff each other w ith lovo. Th o

- i n ible. ipXuh- ■ tho otltcr.

compatible couple take fo r granted, b u t to others they are incapacitating obstacles to m a rita l love— at least, u ntil recofrnized and attached.

H o re are tho reasons I'v e found most llk o ly 'tb ' cause s exu al. inconit patib ility in a marriaffo.

Com munication, in ils truest sense, in not merely an exchange of words. I t Is tho expression of in* tangibles, a discusslo;! of hopes and fears and, among other -ve rb a l in*

- tlmacles, the enjoym ent as well as tho ■frustration th at prevails In a m a r- rlugo relationship.

hand, havo serious, “ hang-ups." I t ’s m y Job flrat to find out w hat the psycljologlcfll problem !s ( i t very ra re ly is a physical on e )— and then help the individu al cure i t

_____ I'v e , foundjthe problems can prettyw oll be broken down into five cate-

4 i^am U yW *lclu, October S,!BOO

i.> ia )u u w h o ^frightened and unhappy about her m nrringe. She and her husband no longer were close.

I discovered th at th is couple had never mnde any elTort to conflde to

other, their, innerm ost thouRhts- and feullngs. D tirin g th e ir llrist year

they had each other and th e ir now homo. Th e n , slowly th eir lives con- ^ sistcd m ostly, of tv-w atchini;. T h e y ^ watched it d u rin g dinn^ir and throughout the evening. Th u s , they shut out any opportunity o r need to talk to one another.

• W hen 1 flUBBCsUd she and her bus* band seek to shard ih e lr thoughis and feelings and discuss th eir mar* riage relationship, she said, startled : “ W o wouldn’t know How to start. A n d we’d both bo. embarrassed .to talk

I' about sox.” , • •I recommended they s ta rt by ad-

— m iU ijtg-n ll-th iffrnndTtry - tq -trnco tlio ,

- neither, of them,especially articulate, to achieve true communication. But she rates th e ir efforts infinitely worth~while.“ N ^ l6 n g e ir“ is 'therenni invisible wall between them. And

— patiently-switched off-the.tv.because • i t interfered w ith w hat they had to say to each other.

.“W e ’re so relaxed’these days,” she toid me, “ th at neither of us hesitates

_.to-a3k-for-a.special-Careas.*!-Resentmont a nd hostility impede

-th e — w a nh dra w ing together that“ s l i ^ d “ b e ~ ttie “ fe8S B nc«r'ofT rT nnH !

embrace. A husband m ay resent a w ife who seems more concerned with * her own fam ily th an w ith h im . A wife m ay resent her-huaband-’fljsfu s a j to

^beeom ^ihdlgnantrany-tim e-hts-m pth-^ e r is critical of her. A husband may­be irritated by w hat ho considers his

— wife’s lackadaistcaUhouaekeeping-or— •extravagance.

A patient of mine, in- her middle *40s, was .resehtful-bwause_ herjhua* - band had bought a boat and spent his weekends' ftahlng. “ H e paid so much . fo r that boat,” she said,- bitterly, "there’s nothing left fo r a m ink stoicfo r me^” l - -............

___She told me th at over.tho 10 yearsher husband had be^n w ith his firm his income had increased sufllciently to buy a house in'.tho country, main­tain two cars, belonig to a pountry club, and p ut tw o Bons_thr_ough .col­lege. A n y job conducive to this k ind

,of prosperit}; jhas to bo attended by severe strain.

I to ld hen " I t could bo yo ur hus­band needs— and k n o w s he ncetlti—

■the cscapo from pressure th at Ashing provides. H is boat and his flHhing

rcaflohs ; ^ r i t Likely. I siiid, they would discover that childhood p re j­udices o r perhaps tho shock of somo youthful experience was at fault, I , assured her Just shnrlng.tlills-know l-

— — edg e -c ould-w e ll- p ro v o -a -g ia n t -step - t o w a r O u tu r e communlcotlons.,

_ io r th is couple.

■. co ulU _a d d -y o a ra -to -h is -U fe .~ l^n -.i!i -- his position are too often prone to heart attacks.’’

’’M y husband’s not going to havo any heart attack,” she insisted. “ He’s a b ig healthy g u y— as o m atter of fact, all-ho-thinks about a fte r Ashing

' all day ia m a king lovo. A n d lately has been g iv in g md fu n n y looks. Ho

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■ Paiaify Weekly/dciober s, ^

^JielpecLmanyLcouples-find^eiv-joy-in life by discovering the "hang-ups” that were destroying their marriage'

By REBECCA U SW O O D , M.D.foun<Ut «nd ExMWtIv* Dk«ctor o rih * U a n ia ^ CowomUdi of C««ot*r N «w Y<wk

- f l s ^ t o l d J o - A d e l e J W a u i e l y J P ' I o J c h e r t r - ^

know s som eth ing’s w rong .” 'I told th is w ife th a t i f sh e was '

pun ish in g h e r husband by being de- lib era te ly unresponsive, she w as in ­d u lg in g in a dangerous fo rm o f re­ta lia tio n . and i t w as im p o rtan t shec o rre c t I t at-once:---------- ^ ^ — -----

----- l-roeommentlod_that_Bhe._telLhec_husband how sh e fe lt, a ssu r in g him th a t , i f he h ad a need fo r th e re laxa­tio n which fishing provided, she'could

• only b e g ra te fu l fo r h is b o at and theho u rs he sp en t on i t .----------- -----------------

Because o f h e r re sen tm en t, she did n o t find th is easy to do. B u t she did i t — and w as glad, t i e r hU9bnna\;Rtt--

“I ’ve m ade i t clear she 'd w a n t fo r nothing-,” h e said . “A nd she doesn 't g ive one hoo t ab o u t m e. T h e kids a re h e r life. She’s so w r a p p ^ up In them

“ s t ^ d o S n ’t w a n t ’t o ' g o ' l i n ^ h e r ^ o r ’ “do an y th in g ^ ’

Teuiiuded th is m au hu aIso~muslhave w anted ch ild ren o r th ay ivniilr^__no t have h ad fo u r. I p o in ted o u t th a t th e cU ld ren ’s well-being: w a s h is rcr spoQ sibility a s well a s h is w ife ’s and th a t i t would ill serv e th e m to g row

-u p -w ith D u t'a 'fa th e r:----------- ------------------"Y ou an d y o u r w ife / ’ I rem inded

h im , "once h ad excellen t sexual rc>- BponBo.-it-i8-pos8ible,-o£-cour8e^that—

you could ag a in ." -He shook h is head. “ I t ju s t doesn’t

w ork an y m ore. W ho, t a sk you, w a n ts n-W onmn-who-aloAhea-Arftimft—

- w ith cold cream all o yer h e r fa c ^ a n d h e r h a i r in c u r le rs ! ’'

N evertheless, he ca re fu lly weighed -w h a t- I - y a ld r 'In c lu d ln y - m y proposal

■ conditions a r e q u ite sep a ra te . A nd those who heed th e ta l l ta le s o f Don Ju a n fr ie n d s may- w onder if th e ir lesser n ^ fo r se x ind ica tes a lack of v irility . I t la th e quality o f a couple's love-m akinsr' n o t i t s f re -

-h fT J____ .W om en_w ith ' sn iall bOsoms m ay

th in k th ey 're .u n d e rse x e d . Follow ing a hysterectom y o r m enopause, a wo-

;■ m an m ay w o rry t h a t she w ill b e an u n sa tisfac to ry lo v er o r find sex leaa

p ra ctica l. m atter-of>factnes8 o f mar* r ie d li/e m ay seek escape in th e ro­m ance and excitem ent o f an o th e r co u rtsh ip .

W om en enjoy th e titilla tio d o f flirt- . inff, th e excitem en t o f clandestine d a te s, an d ^ h e A a tte ry 'o f being wooed again .. Men. seek .to .prove.they.haven!t . lo s t th e ir old m agic, to re lish th e joy o f conquest,, an d th e f la t te ry -o f-su c h -

cnjoyable. O ften , v rith t h e 'f e a r o f pregnancy rem oved, th e c o n tra ry , is likely to be t ru e . •

a t te n tio n th a t they no longer receive a t hom e.

Kinsey reported 76 percent o f m ar­ried m en and 25 percen t o f m ar^i^d women have h ad e x tra m arita l a ffa irs .

m itte d he had been re ac tin g badly to office p ressu re , hSd several tim es lost h is tem p er b u t th a t , th an k s to hisw eekends on th e w a te r , he_v?as b e - i__g in n in g to feel hum an again . Th^tfv tak in g ' h e r in to hik arm s, ho had sa id : “ So th a t 's w h a t’s been bothcr-

— inlr' y 6 u I~ I“ k new ~ 8dm cth ing“ waR ~ • fw ron g .”

H ere , o f course, a lack o f.c o m - R u n ic a tio n .w asr.thc-T oo t.o f' all-.the—- tro u b le ;-H a d th is husband confldcd' h is problem to h!s w ife , she would not have tu rn ed re se n tfu l and unrespon­sive to him .

' ' P r o o c c u ^ t l o n w ith th e children is , in my- opinion, one o f the moat u n fo r tu n a te problem s of m arriage. W hen women tra n s f e r th e ir a t te n ­tion diaproportionftloly fron i hus­bands to ch ildren, th ey risk ea trang-

____ in g - th e i r - husbands- a n d -d e p riv in g ......,. .t h c i t _ c h i ld r c a _ o O b o _ m o s t _ v a lu n b le ____

th in g in fam ily life— a happy relaxed homo and loving p aren ts .. A well-known dress ' m anufactu re r, who had m ade m illions, cam e to m o.

’ in s is t in g th a t, ho no longer loved h ia '-------- wife ajid waqt t ^ d ^ ^ jW c y H tT t^— m a n y - a- m odch------------- v--------------------

“D o n 't th in k I'm taken in by th is g i r l ’s b eau ty ," ho told m e. “ She’s b e a u tifu l all. r ig h t. B u t m ost im- ' p o rta n t, I guess, is ^h at she makes me feel 10 feet tallV ’

. ------H o”c6uldTiot"uAdorstand'TVhy"hlB —w ife opposed a divorce.

analysis. M any w om en, how ever, a re incapable o f com pletely en joy ing sex

'o n ly because th e y w ere b ro u g h t up

th a t he tak e h is w ife on a luxurious holiday, leav ing th e ch ild re n a t home. --yW hcn_his_wife came^tA see m e, .s h e , .. ,v^ns e a g e r fo r a second chance. “ My m o th er w arned m e I w a s m aking, a - m ista k e co n c en tra tin g on th e ch il­d re n ,” sh e adm itted ;

“ Should you go on th is holiday,” I sa id , “I hope you will b e weJI groomed and 'T drcsB ed 'as a llu rin g ly as g o o d ' ' ta s te allows. Men, r e m e m ^ r , a re v i­sually stim u latod .”

In tu rn , I rem inded th e husband - th a t ,, j u s t a s m en .a re .v isually stim u.*.. la te d ,. women r e s e n d to - verbal en ­d ea rm en ts w hich m ake th em feel de- ' s lrab le an d loved.

T h is couple is now' in H aw aii. Wh<?ther th e ir m a rr ia g e can be saved is gtiU a question . P u t because o f

— t0-think-0f-it-aB"B0W ething nice p ^ pie don’t ta lk ab o u t, an d I ts a c tiv itie s • a s 'th in g s n ice 'people"ddh’t 'd o . They are , a s a : r e s u l t , on ly passive p a r t-

in the, p a r tic i-

T l h o i r . m utual .w li l in ^ o s s - to"ltiy~to"save it, I am optim istic.— - ■ -------

Insocurlfy takes m any form s, all detrim ental to m a rita l harm ony, w ith physical Insecurities especially so.

M en m ay w o rry unnecessarily ab o u t .th e ir m a8culli\ity o r advanc-

— in ff-a g o r -T h o s o w h o -a re -ijte rH e -m n y - fco r Impotonco, nlthounh tho tw o from courtolilp » n d honpymoon to thu

■ patlon th a t m ig h t well dispel any btigaboo o f .f r ig id ity a n d add im ­m easurably, to th e i r plqnsure^and^that of th e ir h u sb an d s. .

Another h ln d ra iiM to sexual com-. . p a tib llity is th e u n re a lis tic descrip-

't lo n s o f th e m a rita l em brace found in books an d m agazines. Tho hum an body is capable o f hoIdJnff consider-

• able p leasu re, b u t I t ju s t isn ’t up to th e E lyslan ra p tu r e s w hich ce rta in w rite rs—hopefu l o f m ak in g th e b est­seller list— a tt r ib u te to It. I ’ve Iraown th ia fancifu l re p o rtin g to cause cou­ples to re g a rd each o th e r w ith dls* Hatisfaction an d c r itic ism .

E m otional im m a tu rity m ig h t be expected to c o n tr ib u te to sexual h a r ­mony, lend i ts e l f to an a tt i tu d e o f all- for-lovo-and*tho-w orld-welM ost. B u t i t -doesn 't- w ork l h a t - way.- T h e - im-"-

—-.m atu ro a ro -lik c ly -to -w a n t-w h a t they 1 do no t have. T h is sense o f u n re s t

engenders d isharm ony . T ho re su ltin g qu arre ls o f th e im m a tu re a re a p t to be f r a u g h t w ith accusations and

, sneers, even d o ^ - g r a d in g insu lts .“ ■ Vor-unabU-to<«dJust

K « r re tfu lly. I wouig ra tse tnose fig- u res , am ong wom en especially. P e r­h ap s th e P ill has som eth ing to do w ith th is .

Dozens,“"lra p p e d in ex tra m arita l, i ^ a i r s , have told m e: " I t all began in n o c e n tly enough;"W e liked 'to ' ta lk to each o th e r.” O r “ W e enjoyed danc- in g to g e th e r .” — — ------------

A p erson w hose im ag ination is d raw n tow ard som eone o u ts l ie o f h ism a rr ia g e is, undorstandab^_enough,.,___less d raw n to .h is m a rr ia g e p a r tn e r .^ e m ay even re se n t h is p a r tn e r . A nd o ften he will blam e h is p a r tn e r fo r w h a t h a s hap|>ened.

A w ife , fo r exam ple, will in s is t she . n ev er would have become involved h a d h e r liusband n o t been im m ersed in hill business o r taken h e r fo r g ra n te d . 'A husband ' will blam e h is w ife fo r ' a lack o f in te re s t In h l ^

' buslnoss o r an tagon ism tow ard- h is fam ily o r fo r In te r ru p tin g him .

All a re ju stiflab le com plaints. B u t — i t is m ost un lik e ly .th ey w ould have* led to an y e x tra m a riU l em broilm ent had n o t th e husbaiid o r w ife , emo- tipnally im m atu re, so u g h t th e excite-

-nxeht o r-a nev? co u r tsh ip .-•______ ^To_the -couplo._w ho_feel_8exually--

Incom patible, I would say , “ S eek th e reaso n and co rrec t th e fa u lt ," My experience os a m a rr ia g e couaaeloi^ Ind ica tes t h a t cu re Is qu ite pcm ible once you k n o w tho psychological f a u lt

-w h ic h -d e p r iv o a -y o u -o f '- th e - jo y - o f— m arriag e .

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-S p l i t D e clB i6 n ~

T h o u g h m y t a p i s g e n t le ; ., F o r o fact, ___

r— I c a o ’t b r e a k e g g s w it h - T h e y o l k in ta c t.L e t m e g a m li le T h e y c o m e o u t w h o le T ^ h c n I p la n to s c r a m b le .

_ _ — B e t t y I » l e r

----------- In - a - c h u r c h - T i o t e d - f o r i t s -8t o n n y ~- - congrcgfetiori, the pastor told a fr ie n d :

"W e have jiia t had the greatest re­vival ou r -church has experienced.”

" I 'm glad l o hear it,” aaid the friend. " A n d how m arty'did yoii add to the fold?”

"W e d idn 't add any,” said the pas­tor, ‘‘but we got rid of three/’

________________________~ L u c i l lc :S lJ ia 7 ^ e r — -«TVc-eo«W ->M 0-a-K »fe-»H ore-o/'that-.<A eafl-dal/B ,

f lu ff ia * t h a n s c r a h ^If you've been making pancakes with some

•—other mix7-»top~nnd-t beluw. It.shows you pnncakcs that prizc' winning bakers of Eugene, Oregon matched against New Blsquick.-------------------------

fluffier— better eating— Ixcause they’re made■ r\h ___________ .

easier to use than most pancake mixes. The shortening has been added for you.

Every'time, the New Bisquick pancakes turned out lighter. (Even th o ^h the same amounts

~ o f batter were used.) That’s becausc Bisquick uses a spwial lighter flour.

The New Bisquick pancalccs aUo turned out . . . . inner lining n-AfdU. . . (id n;-c2oKsShown right: N ew tear-upe package ft z‘Pi open

~ h a d 'a close "biru8h“ w ith ~ death when the car door flew open as his fam ily was d riv in g along a free­w a y. B u t the boy held on - t ig h t to the open door and ’ rode a t least a quarter of

* a m ile w hile h is frantic

pulled h im inside.W hen he knelt to say.

h is prayers th at night, his m other suggested th at he ^hank God fo r saving his U f C t h a f d a y T '

" W h a t fo r? ” the littlebpy_a.aked._'7_was the one__th a t hold on ."

■ D o ro th e a J C e n t—

C h i ld 'S Ig h ’c h o lo K y

M y t i n y s o n h a s T e d d y ' b e a r s ,

B l o c k s , a n d c o lo r e d bendi»—

T o y s s c ie n t i f ic a l ly

T o s u i t h i s a g e o n d n e e d s : P u c e le a . ba llad o n d j n ic lc a

S o * t e l l m e w h y b e p la y s W i t h p o l s a n d p a n l i a n d ' m b d n g s p b o n s . a n d

: b r o k e n tv t r a y s ?— M a r g a r e t A a b e r h a r d

A long-tim e cgstomer received a second notice fro m the. locnl department atore, threatening to at­tach her salary if her

lo vcfd uo b ill wero^not paid im m ediately.'......

F u rio u s , she phoned to p ro te st: " I ’vo always paid on tim e in the 20 years I ’ve been a customer. Bo-

first b iU y e t .”"O h , w e’re w a itin g fo r

Q re -o rd er o if^th e . first form s r ig h t now,” ex- pinined a new clerk. " S o T m u sing the second no* llces. T h e y tu rn out to be much m ore effective.”

— A l R o b e r ta

Page 49: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

HUNTING FORECAST:

Good Season for Ducks- By-^ERWIN~A.- BAUER A w tW .of .'.TW-(HKk H unt«r'. 6ibU" ----

■Mils f a l l d u c k ■ h u n te r s w ill l e-

-C eL v ean u n ex p e c ted bonus, bo th in be t-te i-n u n fm g an d p e r- ,h a p s in a l o n g e r sh o o tin g season .

T h e reason is a' tim ely comeback of o u r w ild w a- 'terfo w l, following Hever-

- 'a l's u m m e rs ■ o f -d r o u g h t - in the m ajor waterfowl, nesting grounds.

B u t heavy snows last w i n t e r , fo llo w e d b y '

-• s p r ln g -r a in a .-f i l le d -th e -potholeV so nesting was successful. T h u s there

“ iHould“ b‘e ~ a '“ver>^g6od crop of birds around this

B u t duck hu nting is a specialized sport, and not

__all hunters are succeas- f u l 7 T [ H t r it'Ts~mote^of- ten hu nting over w ater than on land. A n d w ild ducka are more , w a ry than ■iiioflt-uplBnd

' birds. Some hunters cred- _ it_ t h o _ :b ird a i_ w ith -t ^ o -e q u iv a le n t of*8rpower v i ­

sion, so It is necessary to k now something about the targets.

B a g in n in g iri'the fall, w ild ducks' and geese be­g in th eir annual m ig ra ­tions from n orthern nest-

• ing groimdfl to southern ' w inte rin g spots. Some

opcclea begin m oving In Septem ber; others dp not reach th eir destinations u ntil early w lh V errM o st ' w aterfowl pause en route. H o w long they stay In suitable ploccR depends on the food they flnd, the

.................................................................................I..... .»•

A b o o t to u g h e n o u g h to w o r k h a rd all w e e k ,

can sure ta ke q little ru n n in g a r o u n d ; a

o n this W eekends.

Wolverine Durables arc tough. They’ve got to i be because they work hard every day. They Vc

got to shrug off oil. gjrase andTia^'khockST" They've got to take cold and heat without cracking up. O r the sole parting company, frotn the uppers. And they can’t slip on any

omfortablc.-Or- t hey:-D u r ^ b lM ,_____________

a u l d n X - b e ___

itwasbnly a matter of tlnic before outdoor ■guys found out th iy’re great for hunting.

■ or camping too. Especially now we’ve ■ so many difTcrcnt styles, in-

din'g a new insulated boot. Are Durables more of a work­

ing boot that’s sporty? O r a sport boot that works? You decidc.

m m a ’ F o r t h o W o lv e r i n e d e a le r n e a r e s t y o u . c o l l t h Ui n i v K t o / l f n o n u m b e r : 8 0 0 -2 4 3 -0 3 5 5 . In C o n n o c licu t: 6 5 3 -3 6 0 0 .

Th e beat periods to be the b lin d -a re - before--------

— d a yb re ak -o r d u rin g jth g_____ _last h o ur of daylight, w h e n -d u c k s -a re -m o v ln g -^ —from resting to feeding.

S erious duck hunters use such re trievin g dogs as L a b ra d o rs , C h e sa - peakes, u r goldens. T h is is a conservation mea- ’

_n^iro rotrievp_______d o w n e d .-b ir d s w h ic h m ig h t o th e m ise be lo s t).

Tho ugh the w aterfowl "p ic tu re is"brlg h te r this

year, the duck population ia atill lower than a gen­eration ago. So every duck hu n te r also must make a special effort to

— bo-a-^;onBarVationi»t.-------------------^-------Before go ing afield you--------------

m ust b u y (a t any post offlce) a M ig ra to ry W a ­terfow l .Stamp foe $3.

- N e xt, observe all shoot-in g regulations. B a iting w ith g ra in and shooting over live decoys are ille­gal. k now the varioufL— — -

^Icinrig^riiEItagfnwl fttngp-,'the shooting of.lciaa-abun'-._____ :

— dant-species— is “ illegal?------------A n d never shoot n t ducks th at a rc beyond the nor­mal 35-yard range of a* shotgun. T h is increases the chahco of mlHtnken identity. ; ■

T h e fu tu re of duck hu nting depends on each <

.-hunter’s behavior th is *Hopefullxat wllibe

them a w ay) , and also the hu nting pressure. To<lay these m igrations are fa ir ­ly prediptab|e, both as to tim e and stopovers.

Good duck areas can bo located by personal

-o b « to w aU onr4> y-«bcck lng .

o r w ith l(icnlconBorvntlon onicers. T h e n , before opening day o r be­fore the actual h u nting, build a blind which blends ns much as possible into Its natural surround­ings; T h e r e -a re -m a n y ty p M i)f_

ro p m y'e n o u g h .‘forw ith other waterfowlorn. two Others are sim ply p>is tiug*"

n t the w ater’s edge. Camouflaged boats also-are used.- • '

Ducks are gregarious creatures and attracted by other ducks, ex­p la in ing w hy hunters use artifi­cial calls and decoys.' C a llin g is an a rt and can be developed by

' IlflleBlf Ig T

(o r to duck-records», then try ing to Imitate, them. Decoys should bo as natural-looking as possible. A n d it’s lmp<)rtant th at they bd dark, rough In texture (avoid b righ t shiny tines I , and tho more tho better. O f course, they should

a v ery good year.

OuIdetoBest ^-- ------------ H u n t in g D o g t — - —

and Other*>-Save $11Ht<ul»rn wiahhtg to khotv

more ubout Mo hunthiu qualitu o f ilopt iiiau ■«!((/ fo r "T h o C o u u trn lAfi>

— m n K -hT-D auM\i ^ ir a p » f / r - ie^ntlu i7/u)ifraf0<i' volutiie -OH all lupea ol- huntvm, hnutulu, and nhow Mnil fg .liS lo F. W.ltookB. DepI, AH O /jl, par. 707. G ratid ‘C en tra l S ta tia v , New York, N. Y . 10017.

regular

Fiimilu Weeklu, Oelober 5, lOOP

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Q U I Z

- W f e t - D o ^ o H - K nAbout Your

Achos andPains?

■ 1. W e ’re all subject to aches and pains.2. M ost pains are induced by em otional stress.

Y o u can feel nonexistent pain.4. -M en can tolerate pain better th an women.

- 5. P co p le .w h q are im m une to pain are liicky.6 r lf 'y C irh a v e a toothache'^nd'orennxious and ■\vorricd~

= ~ a b o u t^ i t ;^ h f e im i ju :^ l I f c e l - w o r 3 e ~ ~ - ~7. Y o u con lessen any pain by te n sine .you r, m usclcs.r;8. T h e sever ity of an ache or pain_depends on.whnt time

of the day i t occurs.

;-d isc o v -e ries a b o u t ac h es a n d p a in s , a n d som e o f

•5 ^ h e s e ^ n d in g s re v e al^wayfrto -lesseh them .^W ith -th is quiz, you ca n cheek y o u r k now ledge a g a in s t

—4 th e re s u lts o f t h e s tu d ies'.

TTbday, Ih is^u tg -D e hbm yboyer—^ -7 w asted the 'o le day

up leads pri her own. The score: four houses.sbejMouldaa-hav&asqiftSr81 miles on the car, two'screaming children and one headache.

-— Why-in-the-world-didn^t--she-lookfor^ a hom e the way she shops for . clothes and appllance§^by nationally'

-recogrilzedJ>rarKJneime?^ ^ ■■ Tbe belowlff-theibrand^name-ln-

real estate that Identifies a Realtor^— A -p fO fe 8 3 io n a l^ r» - fe a l-e s t a t e ~ w h a w i l l~ ~— c o u n s e l w i th y o u , r e c o n c l l e .y o u r .______ ''‘~ < lc^dm s w i th y o u r { X > c k e tb o o k a n d

— s h o w ^ y t> U -o n ly 4 h e jh o m i9 s4 h a t—are right for you. To make home buying a pleasure, s e e your Realtor.

-^National Association otBeaLEstataBoatds^

1. False. Studies conducted a t the U n iv e rs ity o f”C in -”' cinnati College of M edicine nnd_other_te8eArc}l-Centera-- have deifiohstrated that some people liever feel an ache o r a pain and lend a completely painless existence.

___-.2. TVtfe.-Studies conducted at_thciMonroe (W is .) C linic,over several years have shown this to be so, p a rticu liirly~ w ith headaches, back-of-the-neck pain, and assorted pains . of th^ stomach and digestive areas. Such pains are often so psychosomatic th at they induqe you to say, "H e gives me a -pa in ,” o r “ I can't stomacH m uch m ore o f th at," or “H e gives me a headache.” T h e pain resulte .from your emotional reaction to the p a rticu la r person. _

nly-jfl-it-qtt*te-p0B8ib la to fecl- pftin -t o r—which there is no physical 'cause, bu t m a n y persons have actually fe lt chronic pain in a linger, arni,. o r any other

— hndy-pni-tJnnff nffj»r nmputatjon. Sucb paiBB. may o r i g i - .nate .in the b ra in , fo r an o v e rw ro ug ht-m ind can im agine”

— p a in -im pu lse a -th iit-w ill-f le e m -Ten lr^fte n rh o w e v er, tneydisappear completely when a physician prescribes ‘‘medi­cation— in -the -form -o f_a .harjn l.e8s_sjjgo rj)n ij_p jit^g_thc patient’s m ind a t ease, so th at i t ceases sending pain '

"TnesSHsre3"to- a ^ iv e n -p lo c e -in -th e -b o d y ;--------------------------------------.4. Trxte. In 'V e tera ns A dm inistra tio n studies, psycholp-

g is U tested th & pain reactions of 100 m en and women of • various agea a ^ found th at the men had a 'greater ab ility

to tolerate pain than the-wom en. A u n ive rs ity study of hnth wh'ftwffrt wlm ilny TJihnrntn ry in d i-c u n i t m np.s

m d lain th a t she'is more scnaitive to pain, fee le i t more', and I less to lerant of it.

5. F alse. Those people who are incapable of feeling pain ore fo r fro m lucky. W ithp iit pain to sound o w a m in g .s ig - nal, a person runs th e 'ri^k of ex tre m e ‘dangers and hoz-

“ Tofds'urileatf hltftnk'i!»'8i)CciQrprech\itlbnB7Fbr”exam plerhc“ m ay p ut his h'and“bn o 'h o t stove and suffer a Horlou.*! bu rn before he realizes w hat is happening. A n d since he doesn’t feel a toothncho, ho m ay never see his dcntifll u n til it ’s too late to save o tooth. M edical studies citc numerous instances of this kind, m aking it evident thnt poin ia as much of a blessing as o curse.

6. T ru e. In a recent study using n dolorimoter to. mcii- ' sure the intensity .of pnin, psychologists tested coUckc

fltudenta’ reactions under vorious degrees of anxiety, ra n gin g fro m m ild to extreme. Th e y found th at w heir anxiety (m easured b y pulne nrid blood pressure) incrcnflod;' sensitivity to .pain also skyrocketed,

7. Falae. Physical o r emotional tension cnuaes the brain to ovor-evaluato pain signals .it receives from varioiiH porta of the body, causing o given pnin to h u rt much more than the In ju ry Justiftes. Th u s anticipation o f n dentu l~»p^ointm o nt,-for exompl^, c »n build up so much tenHion th at y ou begin to wince w ith pain before behiK

- - t o u c H c d ; ^ " ; : j ~ , —8. T rue. U n lvo rs ity HtudjoH nhow thot sennitlvity to poin

dooH v a ry m orkeilly w ith the tim e of d vy , degree of con- -tontmont, deproBfllon, o r'fatig ue , anti ipoiiy other jilm iln r factori). Reseorch at Johns Hopkins U n iv e rs ity showed, fo r oxomple, th nt a rtilld diHtroction of attention can nltor a pernnn'n pain thrcahhold an much bs 45'perCflnt.

. ___________________________________ ^ .„ _ T r J O I I N _ E ._ G I » S P N l

F a m i t j f W««klu, Ootobtr 6 , 19B9

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AMAZING VALUES

-^ = ^ p irc r is p 7^elicate^traw berry^tea-cloth-and-place-m at& - w ere insp ired by a h is to ric res to ra tio n n o w going.on

in P o rtsm ou th , N ew H am psh ire . W hen th e ea rly settlers a rrived in th is charm ing p o rt, they found th e rive 'rbank '

— covered-w ith-w ild-straw berries, hence its o rig inal nam e S traw b erry B anke." T h e design is s ta m p e d ^ n heavy7~

cream yvhite 100 percen t linen . B oth th e 48 -inch-square d o th an d 'm ats are a lread y bound-w ith-a m oss green -'beauty . - a edge ," an em bro idered Bnish th a t insu res a fla t edge. C om plete ly finished 100 percen t linen n ap k in s a re included in the k it an d com e m th e sam e so ft moss green .

O FF E R W ILT. N O T BE R E P E A T E D T H IS S E A S O N W e H i r ^ e - y o u - t o ^ r d e r = t h e - S h * a w b e r ^ T e a € l o t h ^ d ^ P la c i M aF k its now , w hile the sup p ly lasts. Y ou w ill be delighted b y the color a n d b ea u ty and fu n th e y w ill add to youT hom e. T h is is y o u r on ly chance to o rder. Be su re to fill . • o u t-c o u p Q n and-m a i l i t ^ o d a y J D i i ^ f f e r v ^ n b t be re^?eated in Fam ily W eekly th is season! —

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WHY PEGGY UPTON SAYS: I E h l T . E R T A I N M E I J J L ^

i i I May Never Be Happy 99

“ T J U S T m a y n p v e r b e r e a l l y

i . h a p p y b c c a u s e w h e n I

a m " a l o n e , I w f t n t t o b e

- o e o b l ^ A i i a ^ w h e n I ' a m w i t h ^

■ t h e m , I w a n t t o b e o f f b y m y -

" ' s e l f . I ' a m ' v e r y c o n t r a d i c t o r y . '

Mod Squad" w ho was m aking such an. admission to me through a th in veil of European c ig a r smoke, while she

— took-huramingbi'rd sips o td ry -s h e rry — She was w e arin g a loose-knit see-

-tlfirough blouse. A s though t id in g to give me a w m p le of her m ercurial

— peraonalitjiv -afae . co n t in u e d -w it h , - ‘ ‘Sm oking is a disgusting h a b it B u t I th in k these little cigars are sexy if

— they’re smoked rig h t . .

_ lw eek s. T h a t’s v e ry good for. m e!” Peggy paused, then added, “ I get so involved w ith a man th at I th ink only of him and entirely fo rget myself, which begins to destroy me. So before

-------I -g e t-to o -in v o lv e d ,--I -p u ll -a w »y ^Her current romance w ith Lo u A d -

ic rrth o u g h r-P e g g y -in s iste d , is-just^. of tv ’s “ T h e ' the opposite. B u t it d isturbs her so

'"•'tnuch th a t'flh e -'a d m itte d .^ lJg e lmuch into h>8 feelings th at i t annoys

;h im and scares him off.”Pegg y aaya th nt ,her_need fo r love

and affection goes back to her child­hood when her fam ily Uved in a m id­dle-class Lo n g Island,. N .Y .. suburban

le a v in g her u gly adolescence be -, . hind, .Peggy. ?‘tum ed pretty;*' B iit her m any hours of introspection a nd lone­liness developed into independence. **I w asn’t ra is e^to be independent," she_

d _ i!b u t-I_ fo u n d -I_ h a d to be for m y own'needs." So a t 16, she became

-a .m o d e l-a n d h a te d -it .^ L w a s so shy and introverted. I ju s t knew what th e other g ir ls w ere th in k in g aboutm e ! I t really bugged m e !'’ P eggy re^ called viv id ly . B u t he r eahiings paid fo r acting lessons, and w hen 'she and h e r fam ily moved to lxjs A W eles, P e ggy got a break.

It w as by chance th at she met-area^To-begin with,-she was tHe m id - - -D ic k Clayton, who, unknown to P e g --

“ aie“‘c H n a * ^ d ^ e lt “ co m ple te ly-o ve r-----------g y ^ d b^ n w aiting u n til she tu rnedlo o k ^ . “ I was socially unacceptable. 18 so he could offer her a c o n tT ^ t”

- ^ e g C T -c o n t in u e d - to -c o n fu s e -n ]adm itting th at she craves love, hav-

j— ip g -h a d -ii-d o s e ro f-lt -w h e n -B h e -w a s “ only 1 4 .'A t th e same time, th ou gh^ she demands'assertion ofrher-individ— u aiity and indep'^ndence/ " I had v perfect relationship ju s t once. W ords were unnecessary. I t lasted ju s t three -

M y teeth stuck out, I stuttered, had a . and couldn’t a f-

ford the local beach club, even i f I ’d -b e e n asked!’’-

_ . A ll of th is gave th e jm p ression that she -w a a -s ri6 b & iiliT .E Y ^ _ t^ a y ,lP e g i^ g y ’s reticence to reveal her Inner self • suggests that she’s cool and distant." I don’t mean it to be so,” she sighed.

T h ro u g h him came the role o f Ju lie B arnes in "Th e Mod-;fiqtrad.”

^ A b o u t fuinuiijg inreeZjnpTe yiM A ftf her present tv contract, she j a id .“ F iv e y w rs ' in a n y th in g is too m u ch ! _I_haye so m~any otHer~ th in g 8 -I-w a n t— to do*like m aking a movie.” '

P pggy’8 contradictory natu re never seems to leave her alone. She longs -------------------------------P E E R -J . O P P E N H E I M E R -

to ' travel and sometimes docs b u t tu rn s r ig h t around and returitff'h‘o m ^~ because she gets so restless. These Same m ixed em otiona tire h e r easily and often tr ig g e rh e r-te m p e r;- ;

M arriage?. “ I t terrifies m e,” she admitted. “ I w ant it. I t sounds so

— rig h t,-B u t-rm -s till-to o -im m a tu re fo r it . A n d I hope I can get show b u si-

“ hess'out of TOy-system-so-I-ll-be-ready— some day.”

S ig h in g deeply, Peggy said, “ I ’m - s ^

W h a t w ill b rin g eventual h a p p i- ness to P e g g y? -“ A b ig -h o m e rlo ta of—

-m oney.-a n 'd -tim e to-be b o t h -w lfe -a h d - m other.” She s m il ^ r ~ t H ^ ^ a^dded,’ “ Th a t's w hat I say, now . .

TK e^im ^ess tobaccos.T h e y a r e n ’t l i t , p u f iF e d o r i n h ^ e d . T h e y ’r e t o o g o o d t o s m o k e .

|-Puta;pinch-between gum - and cheek, and enjoy it. W ithout even chewing.The smoke,less tobaccos are too good to smoke.You g e ta llth e satisfaction of prime aged tobaccos. They cost less, too.Sure beats smoking!..... ^

United States Tobacco Company, Dept. FVV, 630 FifflvAve., New Vofk, N .Y n0020.

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AFTER

S C I E N T I F I C M E T H O D T O G E n i N G T H E S L I M M E R ,

S T R O N G E R B O D Y y O U T W A N T ~ D E S C H I B E D I N F R E E b o o k l e t :

“ In^jusrfiveweeks-M r—J—UT-incrcascd-hisxhest-by-5iVhis-bicepsJxy-2 his neck by 1", his thighs by 3", and his calves by 1". Of course, n

_ . WORLD WIDE PRAISE ____________“ TELEPAl^DER is used by world famous athletes and lias been endorsed • by judo champipn__Wim Ruska. You’ve probably heard .about the revo-

—l u t i o n a r y I s o m c t r i c * I s o io n ic ^ o h c e p t7 A v h ic h " h a ^ b ^ n - r € p o r t c d : in ^ c a d c r - J s ^ Digest, Life and countless medical and scientific journals. Today i ' ' concept is acclaimed by doctors, aihleies and thc President’s Council Physical Fitness! The TELEPANDER maikes use of

everyorle can expect to attain such dram atic results. But today, instead -^7rf-fTO||iig->irpil ^ Itil I. II. iiiunAu/-;!in ihi> pin V y biirsting

w ith Strength and vitality. T he sw ret? The_amazingTELEPANDER_ .,! ^^jnr:exciting=new^cvi'ce:tM nielps-y^u-gain:new -strength-and-vigbr— I _^iaiu5t:51-n?»nutes a dayj__

-this__very_samcJ(sftfnctric-lsotonic concept!T rR E E ^O O K L E rS H O W frfT O W F

B E F O R E

W e guarantee you w ill’jec the difference— and“be' able to venyy the results with a tape measure in just 2 weeks! H ow can we make such a fabulous guaran­tee? Because results arc based on scientific prbof with thousands o f m e a iust like vou. M en w ho ride to work, take eleVatoTs; and whoJi^vC-not_parUci=_l pared in any 'o rgan ized athletics since they left , school! M en who are too busy— and too bored;—for hours of strenuous ' ‘conventional” exercises. Yet in as tittle as five minutes a day, T E L E P A N P E R is making these men healthier, m ore pow erful and vigorous.

N ow is the time to get the youthful physique you want. Mail coupon today for 20-page illustrated iirochure— in color. It’s FR EE— no obligation. No­body wiii call o r phond you.

TELEPANDER helps you to :Slim waistline bulges ■ Firm-iip flabby mu^scles ■ StrenKthen arras, legs, back and Sboulilers " Takes ju s t

" day • N t .fle id to disrobe-*-!, ofllce. ataywhere ■ .fa r t iMU|u/[. easy t t

i|se • Safe fo r a ll ages, fun • Spot de^ Velops any muscle group ■ Eliminates needless repetition • Overall physical

machines needed.

F R E E B O O K L E TMARGRACE CORPORATION, Deptl 436 250 West 57th St.. New York, N .Y. 10019 .

I — ^ CiiUdarHdmo’delivery duty free. A*K tor FBEt booklet. <£> MAHOBACE CORPORATION, 1969J

Page 54: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

Acid indigestion is thropigh,by gum! f a m i l y w e e k l y c o o k b o o k

S o o th e d a w a y b y C h o o z--------chewirtg-gum-ant3 cid—

Gas, heartburn, stom­ach upsetdue to acid

• — indigestion all vanish. And fast. Added at­traction: Chooz gum

‘ ^ is just plain delicious. Pass the Ghooz, please. Chooz. . The only chewing gum antacid.

N ew w ay fo r y o u r c h u rc h o r g ro u p to

Raise $40-0® with Festive Christmas Table Covers— You doiiH spend

one cent of your own money!. Anna W ade can help you raise S40

for-vour C hurch. Q u b__G kiup wi«h bright, colorful hcstiw

fTrristmas Table Covers. H er fa­mous p b n has helped over 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 _Church groups. C lubs. PTA's, S co u t- --------— ----------— .Troops. V eterans' Auxiliaries. Fra-lMNA«UIE.D*9L236HTlyMbtartVa-24mi

To star). Anna W ade ships yo'u IO C |^ rT Festive Christm as Covers ON C R E -i*“ '“ '

—D IT ;-H avc - lO -m em bers-o f—yourj-hi--- tiroup cach 'se ll just 10 covers foriA $1 cnch. Then, you send S60 of ' *

.proceeds to A nna W a d e - keep S '^u.^ profit FO R Y O U R T R E A S U R Y .l-

" iS ,

Dog Nearlyilc h e s — ^

-NDWi=Rid=your-homei«{_miM't«>7>-_ picu ly with d-C O N ' Mou»e-Pru(e, the amuInK m o u » killer Ih al’s —MOST C m C T tV E . . . has lwir« u much

brand*. It't a'h y th e U i . O ovcrnm cnl.CLCANCST ANP CASICSf . . . Jual i^iU ta b —ball fc«l* autom allcaU y.BAFCST . .V when usod aa dlrootnl, Mfo around rhildrrn and peU .No wonder M o u io .|‘ ru(n outsails all othar moUM kllleracomliloed-i

dCOW MOUSEPRUFE

tolTeatii‘7 tho u g h t w ^ d have to p u t D a h y to steep , s h e . f i if fe re i l io fro m large ilc h in g so rts , f h a d a b o u t- H iven u p (ry litg ih ln g s w hen I lo i iiu t Su^lodtne,T h e Iteh lngs lopped .sorts toort healed, h a ir g rew . ha ck . B les t yo u f o r Sulfo iterte." toys

■Mrs. Jo hn D iirm e s itr, N e w Jersey.BUU'oncNE liquid mcdlcation relieves

frenzied ItchlnB nlmmt Instantly. Quick­ly nromotcs heallns pf fungui Itch-sorn

Y O U M A Y H A V E

PINWORMSA N I^ N O T K N O V irr r

{■'IdKctlng, loM nfalM p and * torm cnl- I n e ltd t aro ottu n tc ll la lo alxnti o( P in .V .................................

T o m rid ot Pln-Worms, llioy ni Iw klllod In the lanro InU-ailne wl tbiry live and m u J ll|) lyT l.a t’««»at- wliat Jayno'a T-W Ublota di>. . . and

hoH* »bpy‘>0 Kirat—• BclenlHlc coatlnv cairlon

r,«asliyi f o i t r pnmrmm ettt.u o n 'l U k o chancf* with dangfr-

oua. hlch ly conUirioua i>ln*Wnrn>n — whiidt W e e t sn tim b ^U et> ..C ict KCti-.

iilno Jayno'a I '.w 'X e n n l/u n e . . . ■m all.«afly'to-U koU M flta.. .8 |mh-U1 alMfl Xor clilldr«n and adullA. «

At drug stores and pel dcpa

WAKEUP KARIN'TOGO

W U h o u t 'N a g g I n g B a c k « c h « N am lna backach*. h««>taclM an<1 m iif GKlar aJiM anti paint may «>m« im with iiv»r*«xerlli>n, •m otlunal u|iaeti,.4ir •veryJay atm a and alrain. I( tlil* na*. alntc iMickacha. with rnllfaa. a>r«plc«a nlalita. U wrarlnit you oiR, makln* y»u mU*ratiU anit irfllatik. dim't wait, try

li«v«r.~nii«n'« iMtin.rvllcvinit action on naaalna ‘■"'li'.'***** '•0»t l)..an*. I'lIU - >lrus liiit a «r*ll-kni

_ lial>lt-(>irml> _..... ... . - ...............jtandani r»me«ly•orcmarulltf liy mllltona '

FMiiy w ia ir

packaged sliced cheeses, as well os ji of in trig u in g cheese spreads. H e re , we have used p o p u la r cheeses and one cheese food in these rccipcs.

Egg Noodle Bows ------- with-Three-Chee»

Fine d ry bread enimbs 4 qts. boilinR water

IVx Ublespoona saltH a l

6 c o p s ) o r 1 2 ox- m e d iu m e g g n o o d le s 3 e u p s T h i n W h i te S a u c e ( s e e r e c ip e )

'2 t a b le s p o o n s b u t t e r o r m a r g a r in e 1 c u p f r e s h ly g r a t e d P a r ta e s a n

— : c h e e s e C -T o^)” '- • X.)l-cup-dlct

1 . c u p d ic e d M o z x a re lU c h e c s e ( 5 o x .) '" IT C o a t a butfcfed”S -q trb a k ln ff-d ish -T v ith -

brend cru m bs. Set aside.

R ich egg noodles are enveloped in m e ltin g ~ S im 8 s-rM o zza reU (rr -a n d -P a rm ea a n -o h ee6 eB — _ a 3 j j i i f i tm x iv r e hea ts and flabora m ing le .

2, A dd sa lt to b o ilin g w a ter; ^ a d u a l ly ndd noodles so th at w ater continues to

, boil. Cook, uncovered, s tirr in g occasion- - l i l l y , u n til tender.

3. M eanw hile , prepare a thin w hite sauce. Set aside.•1. D ra in noodles in a colander; t u rn intoa larjre m ix in g bow l. Tohb w lth b u tte r o r m arga rine , then Parmesan checse. A d d

•Swiss and M ozzarella; triss lightly.R. Tttrn h a lf the noodle m ixture into the

-p r e p a r e d -d l» h !■ top w i t h -h a lf -t h c ^ h i t c — : sauce. R epeat Inyera. If'desired, sprinkle gnvted Parm esan cheeao or bread cru m bs over top.6. Hake in 3G0“ F . oven 25 min.

6 t t c r v in g n .

T h i n W h it e S a u c e : Melt 3 tablespoons butter o r m a rga rin e in a snucclpan; blend ' In 3 tnhloH poons^our. Ilca t u ntU m ixtu re ' bubbles. Remove and, adding g rad u a lly , Htlr in 3 cups m ilk . Cook ra pid ly , s t irr in g constantly, u ntU sauce thickens, 2 to 8 m in. M ix in u blend of teaspoonH bbU, */i teaspoon pepper, and Vs teaspoon n u t­meg. ^ 3 Clips sauce

Cheddar Puffs

-2 -M ijr in -n -b le n d -o f -th e --d ry “ iftgretlients:— — 3. Shape dou gh into ro lls about l> 4 -in . in diam eter. W ra p in waxed paper and ch ill i f necessary.A. C u t in to '^V i-in . slices. Place a b o u t !

iv ro n 'irg lT tlir ir rc a B c d c o ^ k iG -a h B c tH ;— :— ■ 5. Bake a t dOO^F. about 8 m in. S erve as

—appetiser-flnaokfl.--------- AJioutX.d6z^<}okica

Seasoned Blue Cheese Spread for Steak

“ V i 'c u p B lu e c h e e s e ,-c n i ra b le d 2 t a b le s p o o n s c re a m

Vt t e a s p o o n W a r c e a tc r s h l r e s a u c e Vj te a s p o o n s a l t Vi te a s p o o n p e p p e r

1- Blend a ll Ingredients u n til smooth.2 . -Spread generously onto steak im m e­diately a fte r b ro il in g '(a l lo w about 2 t a - - • blespoons per servin g >. k to 0 acrvingn

c u p b u t t e r o r n a r g a r i n o , s o f te n e d 2 c u p s (H o x .) s h r e d d e d s h a r p

O i e d d a r c h e e s e 1 % c u p s s i r t e d r e g u l a r a l i .p u r p o n e flo u i

% t e a s p o o n p a p r ik a

H ot Cheese V Beef Dip' ■ \ V t lb s . b e e f r o u n d s t e a k , g r o u n d

' 2 lb s . p a s le u r ix e d p r o c e s s A m e r ic a n c h e e s e fo o d

2 o n io n s , g r a t e d 6 o r 7 h o t p e p p e r a , m h ic ed 2 l a r g e to m a to e s , p e e le d a n d

f l n e l j ^ h o p p ^1. Cook beef and dra in on paper.tow els.

- f c - C n l uii H n t o -c h n hput-H

n d r y m u s ta r d . ' .\ i t e a s p o o n c a y e n n e

double' bollo r to p ; set over s im m ering w a ter, s t ir r in g 6ccasionully, u n til melted. 3. M ix In onion, hot poppers, and -tom a­toes; then the beef.

— lT -filcn d -b u tte r-o r-m n rw rlh e -a iid -e h e «H 4 u n til smooth.

Fam ily W*tklu, Ootober S, 1900

- l . - S n r v c— t<mHt6d-bult-

fla _ »_ d iP . or spoon o ver

A bout 5V4 Clips 'dip

Page 55: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

H id e -a -N a m e

Th e name c»f a cclestiai • body much in the news th ^ c paat jnohths 19 h id­denTn’t'fiis flentence^'Tho—

- qld-tirnie chromo, once It- w a s -h u n g in th e riR h t

light, got the attention of everyone entefriug the r— room.

\ s u i t r - B o x ^ —

l*lus O n e

T o a five-letter word . l^or, w h a f yoii arc when

— you_iift.vei]!t any money ," add a last^ letter and gci'~

■ whiat'a plate is when it ’s been dropped and shat>

'• tered irit4j'pieces,(.See A n sw er B ox)

. R iddto M* This* W h a t d id the earthsojr

, to -th e moon?. {See A n sw er [Box)

H irM a th F a n s I .•HowJ 'con yoQ make

1009 into 9000?

Jiist a typical American mother.Arid her victims.

Th e re are s ix paira o f socks and one odd sock in this draw ing . W h ich 1b tho odd one?

(S e e A n sw e r B o x)

A n sw er Box1

*uo}(Ojq>o]{oja : a u o o n i j •0006 = W X I iX IW

•uooK S9waN*«»:?PlII, / j o o u ino/C u o ^oHoA.no ., s«mX*K »ippm

•do ; o m 0)|t{AV }o puu q p uu 0 |fl

t l « * 0 PPO®m « I H»IHM

The ftVernge mother has to be 'way aboyo averase these days.

,y \0 r she could be a menace:To Dad, fo r instance. If she’s un­

aw are tha t tho color TV she’s buying ' may hold radiation dftflgora.

And to baby. If she doesn’t know that-the_mo3t_flavorful baby., food isn’t nece.s.mrily the best. I t nmy be tastier becuuse it has more salt.thanis goodJtov_h|m;__ -—

And Sia’a new spray : H er hair may gleum brighter tonight. But will it fall out faster next month?

ing care isn’t enough. There are too many p ro d u c t and pressures. Too many claims and confusions.

Prevention M agazine can help. For, every month, Prcveution ex-.

= T n 5 i= B = = p iW e H t im n H < r o r ? m l« h » ^ . views confortince reports, In te r- —viewB-authoritios>-And-thon-bringR

you a treasury of fascinating artl- clea-all dedicated to your family’

welfare.There.are no m iracle health solu­

tions in Prevention. The average family doesn’t need miracle solu­tions! But here you’ll find an as­tounding .variety of topics for ev­eryone concerned with a healthier Hfe,XQ-MlJLrf!®coYejr nJclpeS that are more nutritious-ajid tastier!

Prevention recognizes tha t you can 't prevent all disease. And. when_ you’re sick, you’ll sec a debtor. But, if you can get sensible health infor­mation beforehand, it may help you

life.That's one reason why more than

600,000 people read this no-holds^ barred publication. Many of them

. look upon Prevention as a knowl- adttflttbla friftntl who wharcs their concern about tho most important subject in ,the world. Their heaUh. L,

We’d like to prove wo m<?rit your - | cbnfldonce,'too. So, wo ofTer you this

money-back guarantee: Subscribe fo r ten months of Prevention a t the special introductory rate of $2.87r- a saving of $2.08 bn the re g u la i^ rate. If anytime during the entire period of the subscription, you are no t completely 8atlBfied--toll us. Wo’lj refund the fuH amount. . ;

b o it today,-won’t.you?-T here was never a better' time—for you an(i your family 1

, . . i f o r t e n m o n . l h i i / P iow nlion at ilw #pocIb1 prlcu f 'ot 92.Q7—B kavlnBOf m ore than

4 0 ^ an Iho usub( rolo, I undor* . 1 IhBl I will rece ive a lull

/ rolund If not sBtlilled a t Br«y lima ' wtilla I am rocolvlnB Pfovtnllon.

ottr>on,fOfa*,tv%3aJ.

Page 56: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

— M E N W A N T E D N O WT O T R A I N A S C L A IM S A D J U S T E R S

Pontier U .S . A rm y mecluuUe knd tervlcc ctatton EDW ARD O .-P A IG B U now «m ptared u arOtuter b y PIM s a t e ' A d J u n m in V lfiln U . *‘V«ur I.A .S . H C m S tw ]/Couiae, in m y o ^ o n . Is lh « best that c*n b e ■ o b U ln ^AU o^ e R esident TnOnin# I rec«lv*d^*gfe m e a ^ <>od

fiotdi'Insurancsih-bHObn>^f-dollar»-

annu o ilv .-T h o tr c m e n d o u i Increaso o t a u to a icc idenu slorVo havo doub led th e noad o f Qu a lified nH it.s io k IWS U R A N C £A D JU S rE ft& S C H Q Q L S -ln ts . ■YOU-tralfwat-taoma-lf»-vouf-P3Are-tlmez^fQUQwedJiv.^a]dcnlJjainlDg--at^ school ow n ed focllltlM a t MIAMI BEA CH . F L O R ID A o r LA S V E G A S, N E V A D A . Natiorpw lde e m p loym en t a u is ta n c o . D o n 't de tav l W rite fo r F R E E in fo rm a tio n . A ec » d it» d N a tio n a l H om a S t H ^ q 5>uncil.

~ I N S U R A N C E A D J U S T E R S S C H O O L S . D ^ t . F ^ 1901 N.W. 7 S t^ M iam i. FkK ida 3 3 1 2 6

THOSE HORRID

^GrSPOTSschedule of work and clay. You don' want to slowdown. And you don't h

-lo . 'Nol even because of menstrual tress. How? With MiOOl.Because MiOOL*'conlaint;

■ M«diCill/-atiOfO<Ed infirodicnts lh*l RCLICVC Hcadachc. Low Backachc . ..C alm JoHT>y Nerves...

■ Plus 4 spccial mood-bricMent^'thit' S'ves you a real litt...setsyou thfough the tryingpre-mensltual period (I’Cling calm and comtorlablc.

Be on the go. ^ d a y . Will> MiooL.

P A T T E R N S

Stuffed 'J'oys^ 0

By ROSALYN ABREVAYA

N e x t T O '^ th e 8e c u r i t y ' ‘6 l a r i k e t , o n e o f a c h i ld ’s m o a t p r i z e d p o f ls e s a io n a i s a c u d d l y t o y . I t i s t h e a e n t r y

o n n i g h t w a t c h , d e l i g h t f u l c o m p a n i o n d u r i n g w a k i n g ) r a b l e 'o n “ d iB p la y 7~ A n d ~ t h e o n e - y o u - c r e a t e - b y —

h a n d g i v e s t h a t e x t r a i n g r e d i e n t l o v e . '--------The3erfrom -three-patternB,iare^im plp:t ^ Tnak «u-n f Bwh-—7 io r \ - p l a t e d o l l , c o m p le t e w i t h i n s t r u c t i o n s f o r a w h o le w a r d ­

r o b e o f c l o t h e s ; s l e e p y t w i n s m a d e f r o m a p a i r o f m e n ’s s o c k s ; a n d a q u a r t e t o f c a p t i v a t i n g b a b y 'a n i m a l s .

A h a n d f u l o f f a b r i c , a b i t o f w o o l y a m f r o m y o u r r e m ­n a n t b a s k e t w i l t c r e a t e t h e s e b e a u t i e s — a n d c a p t u r e a y o u n g s t e r ’s h e a r t . Y o u s t u f f t h e m w i t h a n y w a s h a b l e8 y n th e tie -f ille rr^ c h -f t8 -fo a m -ru b b «F -o r-o ld -n y lo n «.------------

T o o r d e r t h e s e p a t t e r n s , s i m p l y f ill o u t t h e c o u p o n . *■

^leepAwayHemorrhoidI f ' P n U th e K c h ^ ^ u r n

— o f - i i e m o r r l i g Tt t sm ak e life m iseraM e, try .th is

i l t t l e trick; Get som e Cullcura O intm ent and apply ju s t before going to bod. C uticura’s em ol­lient m edication so o th es Irrita­tion , q u ie ts itch ing , e v e n a id s

. h e a l i n g . W ake u p f e e l i n g wonderful! Cutlcura M edicated O in tm ent. Avail­a b le a t a ll d ru g ] counters.

Destroys odor on

sanitary napkinsA tU st— adeodorant tor you

whct4i you can 't eve n U ie an o rdinary tie o ilo ra n l. I t 's rom oun , onny*tO' — C]imiT l>oc^orn iit l ’ow <iorl'' (1 ) Q u k s t lietiHi your bo<ly

, odor-free — even In the .— moat Inliinnte nrona. __-I.-..-.

(2 ) QURBT’ d oflJroys-1---------(mIot on n a n iln ry nnp -

' k inn .lIe lj> s^ T evon to (lu r

. p«n ty*ho!w ,.....................S p e c ia l d e o d o r a n t f o r a w o m a n ’* i p « c l a l n e e d i

B re * se le « ba ae fo r s o f te n in g ,-------e a tin g « k in a s i t c lear* u p th o se blem U h e s . I f yo u h a v e t h e « a ^ e -reveallhrfT>r6wll .l|W U. btotdj--------If y o u w a n t c le a re r , l i g h t e r ____ .u s e E S O T E R IC A . A t y o u r fav o r ite d r u g a n d to i l e tr y c o u n te r , t t - 00.

More Security WithFALSEtEETH

A t Any Time...... D on't b a » o a t r '

t«e lh wUl com e K --------------- ----------th e w roas tim e. For more aeourltr and more com tort. ju st ■prlifkle a l it t le P A S T S m i on your pu tea .PASTBBTU boWa b o th -i------------- -lo w e n nrm er lonner. "easier. F A flT E rrfl U _____ ___ . . .Rummr. paaty tastet Denture* that

4 e n m t T e g S l a r l y ^ e t F ) f e S g A i ! ^

p r o b l e m s f o r m o n y w h o h n d d c B p a i r o d o f o f f c e t i v o h e l p . M i t c h u m A n t l - P e r s p i r a n t

. . w i t h . c o m p l e t o u o n tle n e B B to n o r m n l s k i n n n d c lo th in f ; . T h i s u n u s u a l f o rm u ln f ro m n t r u n t -

- w o r t h y 5 6 - y o a r -o ld I n b o rn to ry i s g u a r a n t c o d t o a n t iB f ; - - - d o n l o r w i l l r e f u n d p u r e p r ic e . S o g e t t h e p o s i t iv e p r o ­te c t i o n o f M i t c h u m A n t l - P « r -

W o m e n SufferWITH BLADDER IRRITATIONmi-n, « rion cniislnit ivnw nvM nnd ncr\-f)iii<nc-M fro m .trc iiu c n l. burnlriK, Ili'tiInK u riitiitln i). Sccondnrlly. you

. l i r a n t , L i q u i d o r c r c « m .$ 3 .0 0 , >0>day s u p p ly . A v a i la b le u t y o u r

f a v o r i t e d r u g o r to i l e t r y c o u n te r .

iill.v h rlnua rclnxlOK c<inifiirl hy 'r iifb - liiK K»Tm« In ni-lit u rine, nnn ctiiInK iniln. CYSTKX nt druKKliU loilny.

Tortured 9 Years byIbe, art gamf ib^kk, to Df.RMA-SOFr

rMk a ll c r tm t," u r i ln s b tp p f Mivr. Now you can tmy goodbre lo lamlns cortu, rallum . comnwtn warn wllh wondct-woik. in>,nERMA-SOFT. Thli unique (ormula

'tollcnt anil dliw lvet ihoM haitl la rcmort iinwihi >n they rub off palnletilr <> tafdy.

OOWN'SHIflltlCl. «OUQH SIliriINQ, SUIGOlSlI ACTION. cuAnANirct). Ar SCHVICl i.!AIlON% AND AUTO UlOMCb.

Pofla -------- ---Pog«'4i Robad W. Voung for D P I.' Page Oi VIvlenni (or OPI. RAOtATtta IPtOULTV CO., CkartaM.N, C

SrCClAL BARCAtN OFfER-Sand >1.00 for oil THREE Potletnt I(*dlue|1.30r ISend tQ> FAMILY WEEKLY NEEOlECRAn PATTERNS, IBon 133, Old Chelteo Slallon, Naw York. N.Y. lOOl) I

CHECKBARGAIN OFKR~Alt 3 poltern. ..................................... $1X»0 □7432-0«,H or>d Nlr>a.pU<a Wordrob* .................................30« □723B-roof U »U A n im al....................... ................................30« □

SA7-5Uapy Twini and N Igh lla t....................................... 50« □Add for poXoge and hondDng. Send (aih, check, or money order. NAME

I STREETI —

Be lufe to u .e your ilp . PHASC PRINT" - - I _ ■ I

Ifli I

Make All Yoyr lawing la iU f wllh T>>at« Cemponlen Borflolni jH W aild't mott procllcal dreii farm-chech boK for parUct

'■Adjuito.Mollc Ponn." Adiuitoble B lo 20. ervtlo»e »3.49 plot ISSf poilage, Send (3.49 eklra for il»« l tlond. |

□ Check box to racalve world’* flneil tewing book, ihe Safl.poge • I "Com plex Book of Sewing,'* VoluobU hem Qovga Included-- I freel Remit iS.93 •■Ira'wlth Ihlt coupon. ' |

Fam ffi/ W tek lu . O cf66*r«» JPtf»

Page 57: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

F A B i l S D O V E R 4*9 Y E A R S A G O! . Pmle. et>k>f» m»ke Jhli «JellghiluJlandscapooiSeof tbe.wixhS* great an

Large 15" Reproductioiis! tinder 6f' EadM -Im ag in e! 100 o f th e m o s tb cA n tifu l p a in tin g s o f a l l tim e . . . th e g re a te s t m a s te rp ie c e s o f

' V a n C o g b , R e n o ir , R u b e n s a n d __ thti-CountryJ>aye-W »l€he_d_in_am azem e n t a s

a s y o u gttM a t o n e * rem arfcab le a r t T H E FA B U L O V S W H IS T L E R M A O T E R nE C E l t r c a w r c a f te r t h i o th e r. T V v iw e r a a l l o v e r N o w h m p in tb e L o U n * .

9 6 m o re o f th e g re a te s t p a in te r s w h o ever l i v e d . . . a l l rep ro d u ce d f o r y o u a s su p e rb -large-15-inch rep roductionyin^aM then t l c t n ie- life c o lo r. I t 's a ln io s l im p o ss ib le to 3 c sc r ib c b o u n d p o r tfo lio . th e im p a c t o f sh e e r b e a u ty y o u w ill enperi-

f a m o u s s ta r s h a v e sh o w n t h ^ e x q u is ite re ­p ro d u c tio n s o n T V . N o w y o u ca n h a v e a ll

~100 to i r e a s u r e 'f o r a life tim e in o u r am o zm g

X “Grind Tour’ Of The r G a H e K S ~

Asseofbled Whh Approval of Famoos Musenms

L if te d Below A >* 55 o r T lw

T E L E V IS IO N r F a n lo u s s ta rs h av e show n th e s i- fc l l - c o lo n T p T o d o c ~ lions o n T V program s. H ere b your chance to ow n *n7io- W oitd 's M ost D eauiifu l'A rt C ollectionl"

A n U n p re c e d e n te d A cU e v ca M ad

A lm o st $ 200 ,000 .0-b c B U ty n o g c th e r ; I h e L q u v re . i h e N a tio n a l G a l le ry , TT*

M e t n ^ l i t a n M useuA i o f A rt , T h e C o rc o ra n G a l le r y . . . g re a t m in e u m s a ll o v c r th e w o rld , e v e n -b e h in d th e I ro n C u r ta in , a ll c o o p e ra te d in g iv ing th e ir s p e c ia l.p e rm is s io n so w e c o u ld b r in g th e p o r tfo lio to you.

Dti.VkmilMh.HaovirricMMMdKr

—............... Joshua

An Art Efloattteii ¥6t VourVaxmOy r' A s y o u r fam ily a n d c h ild re n g o th ro u g h th e - po rtfo lib M h ey - w ill- s e * a r t

to d a y b a ck lo th e 1500’s. T h e y ’ll see th e ______ ____ _ .v e ry b e s t . . . th e c re a m o f o v e r 4 0 q y e a r s s o th a t Ihe artis t, a n d te n s o f th o u M n d s o f j ia in tin g s . T h e y ’ll

d a V in c i t o P ica sso ancT D a l i, i t’s a l l h e re , rpieco-

Cfcn*B,UcwM tiWHlVmkk

l ia n t ly w ri tte n s to ry o f ....... ......................... ^U h is life a rid h is V o r k c o m e

— ---------- ----------------- o f p o in tin g s . T h e y ’ll to l i f t f o r th e view er. L o o k in g th r o u g h 't h ev iew th e g rea t tr iu m p h s o f Ih e m o d e m s , ih c p o r tfo lio be co m e s a thcillii ' 'F re n ch -S c h o o l, th e I tn p ressio Q itls . Ih e .g rea t .. e x p e r ien c e f o r young a n d o m nsfera l F i n m M ic h e la n g e lo a n d L eo n a rd o , , -------

m e a n in g f u l ' . .m c a n u ^ .A lU td w B ^

Hang Hie Worid’s Most Bcantiful Paintisgs In Yoar Hcanct

<7 OF THE AjCTUAL RKTRODUCnONSI . Now MMlcL Ccnapwv l*r»a itia of

IwMHUul M cotor reptwluiaioft* you rcc«iv«.

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Page 58: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF264/PDF/1969_10_05.pdfBo Twin F^ls Juvenife^ Use myself .bui I knowl It Is a. lot. in higher

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