69th year, 206th issuo 24, lv>2 gop cheers, nixon...
TRANSCRIPT
69th year, 206th issuo
/rfo /to ’s Lnrgvsl Evifnini> Nt^tvspaper.TW It^ FALLS, IDAHO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, lV>2
1 0 '
GOP cheers, Nixon campaign
MIAMI BBACH (UPl) —A the event protest dcmonstra-
linppK oncl peppcd-up Proslclont Hons (jot out ol liiind, Tliey
NiU)n hit tlic campaiun trail wcro not used.
today In search of the "new Ulcy were nnrt ol n
Nixon's first campa)nn-typo
speech, botore tho Legionnaires
In Chicngo, Included im attack
jm_thc "honcaUiut mimulded-
“Joln our now majority —not on
the basis of the party label you
wear on your lapel but whot
-bcUavR In youtUiejirtaJ^majority" ho promised to win contingent o( 5,500 federal and voiccs of those who soy we Ninon seemed convinced ho
for the Kepublicans who gave National 'Guard troops who aliould .wooken America and could w in, Uie "four more
hhn a roaring sendoff at the stood by as local and state naively liope for peace tomor- years" the ii}lcg«tcarcpcatedly
dose ot their notional convcn- police handie<l demonstrations row" -on obvious reference to chanted about, with continued
_Uon.-----------------------------------------whlctusaw4,100arrosU------------- hl«— Diimocratie— opponent-oppeolste-indtpmdentJ-nnd-to--------NixonhcudecltowurdCalifor- '‘We appreciate your servi- Sen. George S!* McGovern, ^thosc millions wlw have been
nin —with two spccches en cca,” Nixon told &00 fotiaue- ( whom Nixon djtl nnt montinrt ymir in thftrouto-with a personui thank-you clad soldiers from the by name) who has called for Democratic part>.”
and a round of fence-aide Airborne Dfviaion ut Ft. B/agg,' $30 blUion in defense cuts. “ ' 'Remnants of protest demon'
stratlons wero'still evident In
Miami Beach on the day after,
but the ocean playground was
fast returning to normalcy. A
C o n tr a s t
ATTEMPTS BY antl'War demoastrators to
prevent delegotes to Republican Natioaal
CoovcntloD from hearing -President Nixon’s acceptnncc speech on renomlnatlpn sparked u
series of clashes in Miami Beach Wednesday,
with about l.lOO {Arsons arrested. The
President (above) addresBcd b packed hall
despite clashes, which produced stru^tgles like
this (below) -as protesters were luuded intu
police vans. (UPI)
hondshaking ut Homestead Air N.C. .Tho GIs responded with Nixon promised "economy ol-
, Force Base for some paratroo- cheers and whistles. ways, weakness never." >
. pers who \vere summoned in While Ntxbn heads for Cl)ica* McGovern, vote hunting in
go and a speech to the Minneapolis, attacked the con-
j ginn, hlH running__vnnMnn wh|rh gnyff-NiTnp_h*°- fow-bua-bonohfln-ivoronQvtor
mute, Vice President Spiro T. third presidential nomination In turned bi tJie street and litter
Agnew, was nt work on the a dozen years ns “ tho most totted grassy strips of palm-
could ^thrust him to the national convCntior)/ln Ameri- protesters Who staged their forefront when tlie GOP picks cop history.”
Its next candidate four years “ l^ e Doinocralic conven-
from now. • tion,” McGovern said, "wasAgnew dropped by a meeting open to the people. The
of the Republican Nationol .Jlepublican convention was a
Committee for a pei>talk on place for the President to
party unity and presumably to hide."
consolidate his position among In his speech to the ..Mtum
the GOP professionals. Some convention’s final session Wed- Chuck Hall, said he didn't corc
party conservatives met Wed- pesday night -and the millions to host another conventiori of
nesduy and generally agreed of voters who watched it on eiUier party again, saying it
Agnew was their favorite for television—Nixon urged discon- cost loo much, for one thing,
10V6- , tented Democrats and others to and hurt tourist business.
m i l d
PxLoie
plannedWASHINGTON (UPO -The
Justice Department said Wed
nesday It Is planning no
investlgution of former Attor
ney General Hainsey Clark gr
former White House press
secretary Pierre Sulinyer for
possibly havinji violated the Ijiw
by holding discussions with
North Vietnainuse ufficiuis.
Both Saliii)>er and Cluck are
strung suppurters of Sen.
George S. McCuverti. Salinger
talked to North Vietnauiese
officials in Paris In McGovern's
bet\aif, and Clark briefed the
Democratic [jreaidentiai iiuini-
neu after retui iiing from Hanoi.
"We are not looking into
whether they have violated the
Logan act," a department
spokesman said.
maximum effort Wednesday night.
Judges were still processing
thp demonstrators arrested in
the disruptive tliough lorgely
Ineffective attempt to stoU
trafficandharrassdelegotes.
*nic mayor of Miami Beach,
Newsman sniffs fumes on way to GOP session
Cool spell not unusual in August
By DWIGHT JENSEN
Spcclal to Ihc Times-News
MIAMI BEACH - I walked Uirough'the
crowd of deinonstratorsbutslde Convention Hall Wednesday night, and, would you believe It, 1
was almost set'iousiy injured.I ’d been sleeping In pie hotel room during Uie
late afternoon and before leaving for Con
vention Hall I tuned In a local TV station. 1116
reporters were telling about angry demon-
' TWIN r*'AU^ — llie cool strators confronting angry police, aijd made the
weather in tho Magic Valley the '(‘•“■■ti™ sound terrible, Hley
past few days and nights is not “ I" “'»"•! <l<-monstrators have the
unusual for the month of bu' «'<•■>■<> barring reporters. ( from the area. ,
Winter-iike rei.lperatures are ^ beginning early this year in U.e “"■* P“
central Hockles.' Traveler’.
— jHOuulaln— paasG^
spraying tear gas In the street outside. But I
noticed no tear gas until I ’d gone five blocks. Hiere, some demonstrators .were trying to block
from the Caribbean Hotel to Convention Hull.
US family food costs hit peak during l y
W ASHINGaW (UPI)-W lth
retail beef and |>ork pt'Ices
breaking records, the co. t ,of a
typical family food market
oaskel Jumped 1.8 per cent to
an all-time high in July, the
Agriculture Department report
ed today. 'The monthly advance, the
slmrpest since February, was
partly due to normal seasonal
factors. After adJusUnent for
■uoBonalu variation, officials said, the increase would be 0.7
per cent. ‘ ' \ • Despite the Increase, depart
ment food ficonomists today
relifflrmed thdr belief that
consumers have already, seen
the worst of the year’s price
gains, and may get some relief
ut supermnrkot counters this
full.A spokesman said the July
rise had been expected, and.
there was no reason to waver
from a published foreciist
earlier this mdntli Uiat by full "the Index may show some
seasonal decline" because of
rising' beef supplies and declln-
Protesters drift from camp qui
Did vouad lor bn accordion
;tn tfidpy'i p b p tf?
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) - 'nto
ragged demonstrator^ who
came to Miami-Beoch to ohut'
down the Republican -Convcn-
.t io n drifted out of tholr
* Flamingo Pork, campground
‘todiiy, their fo rta defeated by
_moro than IJWO-arresta-ond' choking cloudfl of tear gas. '
The estimated 4,000 young, nntlwar protesters povo evlpry-'
thing they had Wednesday night, tying up troffic, pounding
on cors and cursing and
throotfi^nlngvdelegi}^ (or'blQc)ui
alonji tho resort city's., beach-
s|d<).- strip and outside \he Convention Hall.................
But the final session of the
Re|)ubllcan National Convention
convened only nine minutes late
and wpnt off on sche<^ule.
.I^lice said the pork, head-
quarters of the prptosters, was
being peocefully emptied as tho
young peoplo who spent up to
two .weeks there struck •their
tQnt3 and M t ’ as tholr, clty> lia^^d pern^lt bxplre'd“at noon.
ing fresh produce prices.
The department's montiily
food price report today said the
retail oost o^a-typienl-mnrket bijsket of farm-produced foods,
bought for n family of
four, rose from an annual rate
of I I,200 in June to 11,322 in
Jiilyi ^10 133 gain lifted the
c'ost to 4.5 per cent above o
year earlier. * ,* ’
Retiill beefr^Mces rose to u record 11.173 n-^und-in-July.
because of a sharp increase In
supermarket margins. But most
of tho montli’s price gains wcro
due to higher farm prices for
hogs, frying chickens, eggs,
potatoes ond onions, the report
indicated.
C o io riid o a n d Wyo„-,in« to d a y . ? 'O cc as ,6 n a l snow w in n m k e ‘ ''ild re n lo -stay in s id e because po licy were
fur hazardous driving as a
.fvOntiiUystuiiuuuvcsiJuLJif-tlic----------------—--------- —------------
central Rockies producing heavy thundershowers In Uie
high plains witl) cold wciUher
and snow behind tlie system.
TumperatUJ'es this - morning
were well down in the 30s at
higher elevations In Wyoming and Colorado.
According to the U. ^S.Weather Bureau in Kimberly,
Uie record low of 31 degrees for
August in TwlhTaliro"ccufred
on Aug. 31. lOOB. A reading of 45
was recorded here today.
^ In I960 record high tem- perature.^or August were set at
101 on Aug. 22; 102 on the 23rd
and 24th, and 103 on Aug. 25.
Twin Fulls recorded an extremely wet August in 10C8 with
2.77 Inches of moisture. Tho
norinu lprec ip lla llon for the
montK Is 0.17.'
‘delegates from coming out of the Saxony Hotel,
and the tear gas stung my eyes. I walked a block
Uirough It and, if I'd t«en a determined
demonstrator, could probably hove stood it
much longer. But I was inspired >by nothing
more fervent than curiosity, and I turned aside,
detourcd a block and got out of the gas. That put
me along Uie Indian River Canal. 1 thought of
-waahlng-iity-eyesrbut-oftcrlooWngTitihrwntcr* I decided I ’d rather take my chancQS with the tear g^s. ~ ^
(ContlnuedonP.lS)
F a s t C S I g ro w th p a ce m a y s lo w up
— TWIN FALliJ - The gush of-growth at Uie : the yearfollowlng. '
Chessfneii draw, 2 Jerom e fa ir, 15C d lla r la l. i F a rm , J T M a rk n lv , t : i TV ,iuav li<« .(i V a lley llv lnK. ia !-M .
College of SOuthcrn'Idaho may slow U) a U-lckle
Uiis year.Although finarenrollment figures are notVet
available, pre-reglsU-ation trends suggest Ihe
college's enrollment-wili bo about tho same or
onlv slightly larger than last year.This would tnean the ra^id expAnslon Uiat has
characterized tho college may have ended.AccordinjUQ CSI director of admissions Jerry
Meyerhoeffer, o student body of slightly over
3.000 ‘rull"ond pflrt*tlmo students Is qxpoctod'
when clnsBOS begin MOndoy. ThU would
compare wlUi 2,042 students at last year's peak.
CSI dpparently is not alone is projecting a
Blowdown In enrollmenta. Earlier In tho week, 'MiiR)nSrffoiiriUnnoflse'euiiv(rdiroctanirH!BK6f“ anti'mcomo7*
education, said reports from state collegos Hie draft throat has been romoved. "Four or
pro]ectcd enrollments would romtftn unchanged five years ago every young man coming In to
or Increase only slightly. school 'VtfSi somewhat concerned about the ^CSI's Moyorhooffor echoed SmairB,\_draft,.whlclj he isn't any mor«,^Moyorhooffer—
prediction. Ho said people ho had'contacted' sold..
from othercoUoRpa.‘‘thlnk thoy’ro doing great . •‘Hoyvey.Qc.'Lho. sold, “ many re turn ing :
if they hold tiiplr own." sorvlcomen / a i^ taking collogo .coilrfles.v,
" I think we’ll hold our own and probably somewhat counterbalancing tho effect of the
KroriJ lOCfl until 1071, the growth rate hovered
In tho neighborhood of 16 per cent each year.
• This year, should the enrollment peak at 3,150,
enrollment woul(l rise only 7 per cent. The
incfeasfi could be less.
Meyerhoeffer suggests that Uie trend toward
leveling college enrollments In the state may be the result of several foctors: '
Reports of many colleg»v graduates find It
dirricult to find jobs. On tho other hand, much
publicity has been hoard “about howyou'can' •
find a lot of jobs wiUiout going to school
Meyerhoeffer ix skeptical about the claim: " I would like to debate Uiot wiUi somebody." He .' fiold’cducation does correlote with employment
increase o lltUo,” ho sold.: - CSI enrollment hod grown faster thon'ony ot-
her Idaho college ncc It opened Its doors In JDG5. Since the>i its enrollmont grew to about five
; tlnie^ Ita initial enrollment.
Tholorgest itrowth took place In tho collego’s second year, os onrolln^eht nearly doubled, to
.,overl,l00 students.In Uic next two’ years, growUi.wos rapid.
draft removal
. He sold there haft been no pdrcoptlble change
in thgj'atlo of men to women s tu d o n t^ h e ratio
has rdraalnotUt about WW2. ' ’ wi- * -
Inooklng to the future,-Meyorhobffer predicti
Uiat U)e slump In enrollmont will la it only 9 year. *
"AfterUtal;^' he saya» "growth should reiume.’
'tlio rate of growth protMbly won’t be as high u
jumping one fourUi In I0fl7 and moro'Uiat^ii third jlurilljt the opUegq’s foundaUon years," he ,u ld.
p--r-
; I .
a TIm'ei-N«wi, Twin Falli, Idaho Thuriday* 1»72
N ix o n s a v o r in g'^Ile says h<i accepts, c h ie f '
MIAMI nE A C II(U P I)- it nil nmong Republican votorfl.' too good true (or MncQrcfifor cHoa i Minnesota
nichard M. NUon. poll, taken by Uig Mjpncapollfl
II0 leaves t^ a y on n doy< Tribuno, which sHowod Nixon long, hodfte-ljopping (a icago , 'getting the votes of M per cent
' Otica, Mich., San , Diego) of the Republicans. In one nows
Journey to his San Ocmentc conference, he .colled the
* homo wiUi no rcnson to doubt unanimity both "unprecedcnt-
ttie chant o f ‘‘four more years, cd"and'*iinbcllevable.’’
four more years" which greet* A Gallup Poll sliows Nixon
edlilsrenomlnation.
At this stage of Uie campaign
-some 10 weeks before ■ the
election—Nixon must bo as
prohibitive a favorite as was
President Lyndon D. Johnson
when he defended against
Barry M. Goldwater in lOM.
leodlng McGovern 57-32; a New
It l8 a remarkable situation
niany defeats as victories.
Going Into the campaign.
Nixon’s achievement rating is
’ at Its peak.
And his edge, in the polls,
had notlilng but troubles to add
to the troubles ho began with.
Ho was forced to rid himself,
of Sen. 'niomos F. Eagleton as
his vlce>presldcntlal candidate
In 0 manner that could only
have cost him support; ho has
been unable to moke peace with
labor; he denied, Uien admit* ted/Kc"st*nt.Pierre Salinger to
Paris to confcf wltli the NortJi
Vietnamese; ho is having staff
problems. McGovcrn has all but
squondered the five-week edge
in beginning his campaign.
And if money is a .clpcldlng factor, MacGregor plans to put
135 million to |38 million Into
the campaign. It is a figure
that McGovern, despite Innova-
York Times Trl-SUite Poll
shows Nixon ahead by almost „ .wvjw»v.m, ...
_ — H -|o»^po llU c l^w hosc_carcer— t|,o-gnj„c-nj^rBtTHn-NovrYorkr-\l^r\mlJ^laftHr'tccttnt(iac87has been marked by ahiiost as Jersey, and Connecticut, will find difficult to match.
and a Time Magazine poll gives Qut there are 10 weeks left,
Uie President huge leads in and Nixon has a history of
states with 10 or more doctoral dliisiputlnK.loud«.
votes.Alabama Gov. Qporge C.
M agic^alley ObituOTi«^sL . S . I l l e i H. Hiinscheid BarthoIotn«w H. Crawford
E,
Seen...Jolm Harti getting first hair
c u t ^ , . . Javier Gonzales
discussing high cost of
automobiiea . . , Diick . Hiatt
expounding on now grandfather
status . . . Dick Haynes
advising motorist about
interesting sight . . . Ollle
Horton wearlrtg hot pants under
modest lengtli top . . . Tim
Qualls complaining about'the
amount of Instant coffee he has'
consumed . . . J im Rosenbaum
reporting on hospital
remodeling work . . . Judy
Brooks holding'dpwn^two Jobs
- ^- .^B ob—Gollins-whlpplng-
oround corner in parking meter
‘ vehicle . , . Mrs. Inez Peterson
anxious to got workers started on awning Job . . . Gcne.Wliitc
feeding neighbor's livestock . . .
George-S.-McGovern,-thi>-WQjlucg-^l,o~pljc¥eUl)rrrrv' Democroticepresidentialcnndl- southern states remains para-date, la 80 large, U has the
markings of a landslide.
But what campoign manager
Gork MacGregor likes about
tlie polls Is the degree of unity
At ^ MURTAUGH - Lawrence S .' RUPERT - Hermon Joseph TWIN FALLS — Funeral Cr^'wfold fis Glenn Trail announclnR birth of
^ S e l S l ^ l T f i o u p ' n o t n Q i ^ ® * r ^ ^ 7 ^ “* **'‘f ' s e r v i c e s for "Irene E; Bar- Wedntisday morning at Magic gran^dchild . . . Mrs. Johnas toduv lover Hubert H ^ e d n c ^ y morning at GdTOing Wednesday at his home-of a tholomew, 09-year-old Twin Valley Memorial Hospital Doe«TworklngonCampflreGirl
nLT rev- ond b a r X w6n FaWs resident. wU\ be held at 2 following a long illness. Pr<^ect . . and overheard, q
. He was born Sept. 20. 1808, at p,„,. ,F riday at the Hove ' He was born Jan. 15. 1917, In young mother talking to college
Ident a seemfng sweep of the d i L e ^ t h a t If the campaign lAM. In Rich- Muenster. Tex. He camo to Funeral Chapel. Jerome. Belle Rive, Ul. When he was 3 IS u “ ^ ^ E f„L mond, Ind., he wus among the Rupert In 1906 with his parents Final rites-wUl be In the months old his parents moved to have Is 0 BA as In BAby.”
early formers on the MUner from Twin .Falls and has since Jerome Cemetery. the Twin Falls arco. He '
ar-iiigatlon-DUtFiot^Io-wafr-r0sld®d-her<h------------------ Smrwos-bonrJuly-2i.iB73rat-trailuntcd-from-Filcr-
lyzed from the walst^own and
cannot run, giving Uic Pres-
South.In x’ontrast, McGovern has.
had run another week, Nixon
would have lost.
McGovern raps confabedueatMl In nichmond and was He wo!( a retired U.S. Postal aarlo ii, "lowo. She attended &hooT'l'nra." ........................
a m embor of the Catholic Scrvlcc cjaployc, . retiring ' In school at Qnrlon and waa nn flrt. fi. I!l«. he marHciL
■ ■Juno, 1057: He was a diarfer niarrlcd to Arthur M. Bar- Genevieve HiKglns ot Gooiling,For 10 years prior to comlnB member ol Ihe Knights of ihblomcw on Morch 15, 1091, at
1 Proposal I
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPl)
—Sen. George McGovern den
ounced the Republican National
Convention today as a "slick ' and cynical spectacle” that hid
President Nixon’s real record
from the public.
■‘Jilst hours ago, the Nlxon-
Agnew ticket accepted 'a
nomination for a second term
from the most incredibly closed
and controlled national convention In American history,” he
said.
••Armed security guards were
even assigned to watch the secretaries who were typing the
Republican platform—after see
ing that platform I can
understand why they wonted to
keep It 0 secret,” he said. “The
Democratic cor.vention was
open to the people. The
Republican convention was a pluae foj; ]he President to
hide." - ^ .
McGovern came here to cap
a three-day swing through the Midwest with a speech to the
Amoclcan Federation of Teach
ers.' Uic AFLrCIO union which
is growing in strength among
the notion's educators.He also scheduled a spwch '
here to the Veterans of Foreign
.Wars (VFW). corrylng the same message he gave to U)c
.American legion In ClUcogo
Wednesday: that the Vietnam
wac wos harming national
security by dralplng off badly
Daley did not seem particularly enthusiastic when the two
men appeared together in
public for the first time since
tlie McGovern-dominated Miami Bead) convention, In which
needed resources and destroy- Uie mayor's aiiciiBO delt'KUtlon
ing the faith ol Americans in wos denied scats,
the military. The mayor predicted, howev-While he was in Chicago, that McGovern would carry
McGovern met with Mayor niinois in November and
nichard J. Daley and at a newF McGovcrn said tiie convention
conference afterwards the may- «.(is now "past history." He
or again gove his grudging .|,e was "salisfied tiiat I
support to the Democratic have the total support ot the
nominee. mayor."
Russians-lWge official protest
to Idaho, he wus stationed in_ C o lu m ^ and served as J h e Dqvvs. Iowa.
Chicago, I II . as an engineer for first “ a n d knight for the siie’ came to Idaho In 1927,
the Chesapeake and Ohio Rupert chapter of Knights of settling in Uie Jerome area. Mr.
Railrbod. He wa a veteran of Columbus. He Isa past member Bartholomew preceded her In World War I. and at the close of of the Rupert Elks Udge.
tlie war he was in France, On Aug. 25, 1925, he married
serving as an officer in Army 'Hieresa Wagner at American intelligence. Falls. Since their marriage, the
In June. 1923, Mr. Blei was couple has resided'in Rupert,
married to Esther Briggs of Rupert.
Murtaugl^ For ®me years he
m s dlrertor of the Tmn Falls
Bean \Growers -Warehouse W illiam Henscheid, Idaho ation. He was a member
Henscheid, Albuquerque, N,M.;
two daughters Mrs. Ken ( Mary
Association. He wus a member
of Biirracks No. 509, Veterans of
World War 1.
Surviving are hia wife; Jhree
son^. Richard L, Blei, Burley;
TYuinon Biel, Twin Falls, and
Bruce Blei, Murtaugh and twUi • brotliers. Paul Blei, Richmond,
and Pete Blei, Phounlx, Ariz. Tliere are eight grandchildren
juid two great-grandchildren.
Funeral services for Mr. Blei
will bd conducted ul 2 p.m.
death In 1059.Stie became a resident of Sky
View Manor in Twin Falls, in 19G1. where_ahe lived until her
death.
She was a member of the
Christian Cliurch.
She is survived by four sons,
Lee Bartholomew, A. E.
(Swede) Bartholomew, and
(Robert Bartholomew, oil
Jerome, and Michael Bur-
Anny Newman, Belvedere' tholomew. Gooding; three
Tlburon, Calif., and Mrs. Ed daughters, Mrs. NeUa Genesay.
(Dolly) Frlesburger. Rupert;
four brothers. Casper
Henscheid, Aloys Henscheid,
William Henscheid and Carl
Henscheid, all Rupert; two
sisters,Mrs. ElizubeUi (Betty)
Rausch and Mrs. Adam (Annie)
Emmett; Mrs. Bess E llis ,
Jerome, and Mrs. Hazel
WUliiUTU, Stirling, Colo.; 27
grandchildren, 77 great-
grondchildrwi and 40 great-
great - grandohildren.
She also was preceded in
death by one son, a daughter,Schell, both Rupert;, 15 ........ ... . .Saturdayat the White Mortmiry grandchildren and one great- two sisters and three brothers.
Cliapel by the Rev. Uam an grandchild. Friends may call at the' - Messley. Burial will be in funeral chapel this afternoon
REYKJAVIK ( U P I ) T h e Spassky had made a booboo Sunset Memorial Park. Friends He was prectded n death by evening and until 1:30
Russians lo ^ed an official yesterday which cost him a may call at the mortuary todoy, parenia and one
draw, Russian Grandmaster Friday and until 1 .p.m"
Syflm Geller lodged today’s Saturday.. Tlie fiuiilly suggests
official protest about the seats, memorials be made to the
Geller fired off an open letter charity of tlie c-ontributor’s
two days ago asking that the choice. /%
playing hiill be chocked for uny
tU f t lC R IP T IO N H A T I i ^
— JH E T IM E S -N E W ST w in F a ll* . Id th o
Oy C « rr l« r rP t r AAonth(D a ily I . Sunday) » SO
protest with World Chess
Championship officials today,
demanding that they return the
three rows of seats which tliey
took out at the request of
Bobby Fischer.
" The seats, filled with what
Fischec considered overly noisy
spectators, were removed when
lie issued on ultimatum—either
the -seats were takbn out or he
-WQuLd-nQL-Cont[nuQ_his cham-
He had farmed until 1969 when ill health caused his retirement.
Mr. Crawford wos a deacon of
the First Baptist Church, Filer,
und wos pasl grand of Filer Odd Fellows Udge No. 125. He
belonged to Miriam Rebekah
Ii)dge No. 80 and was past chief
putrUirch of CoHux En-
cumpnient No, 20, lOOF. both o f .
Filer.
Surviving, in addition to his
wife at Filer, ure a son, Lynn
Crawford. Vaklnia, Wash,; a
daughter, Mrs. Alan (3hcrry) Harvey, Moscow; his mother,
Mrs. Nellie Evans, Twin Falls;
two brothers, PauV Crawford,
Shoshone and Raymond
Crawford, Twin Falla; four sisters, Mrs, Doris Willlnms,
Tacomoj Wjish,; , Mrs.* Josephine Van^nte, and Mrs.
Phillip (Juanita) Brennen, both
Twin Falls, and Mrs. Jerry
(Myrtle) Bodenhamer. Eden, and six grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by
his father and one brother.
Funeral services >vill be
conducted Friday at 2 p.ni, in
the Twin Falls Mortuary Oiiipel
opinions
differHEIj:NA,Monl.(UPI) -For
mer newscaster Chet Huntley
and Montana Sen. U>e Metcalf
und Mike Mansfield, both De
mocrats, are lining up on oppos
ing sides as a hearing on a
wilderness proposal draviis near.
Huntley's Ulg Sky Rijsort
announced Wednesday it's sup-
porlinga road across the Spanish
Peaks area liouth of-Bozeman,
MonH A spokesman snid the »
road would give the resort tietter access to southwestern Montana.
Some-local officials also sup
port the road across the 11,000-
foot liigh range connecting the
Gallatin Canyon witli the Madi
son Valley.Mansfield and Metcalf are
supporting Metcalf’s Spanish
Peaks Wilderness Bill. Tliat bill
would set up a 113;000 acre wil- .
derness area and rule oiit the
number one route choice for thewith Rev. Roy Watson and the c-ontroversial road across the
"electronic devices or chemical substances” Fischer might be
using on Spasskyl Today ife told
arbltt.r I-otliar & hm id the
Russians were "against the
channea in U\e. playing hull.”pionshlp match with Russian ^ V ? w a n t IHos'iTThree or foTir TWiN-FAhl£-— Tho-Se
sister.
Dm“ "Frldav ^ ^ t ‘^T hf* wLlk F u n e r a l S e r v i c c s - ' ^ ^ M a d i s o n ' R a " n g e . 'iviortuarv Chanel Funeral ficiating. Final rites will be in HunUey is supporting a smnl-
w lllb e n t l l n m <iiitiiriliiv nt TWIN FALL5 — Services for the Filer lOOF Cenielery. ier wilderness proposal offered
St NlchnlW r^thoHc f S Uwrence A. Jncltson, 40, Twin may call , ot the by_Rcp. Dick Shoup, R-Montrwith- Rev Kenneth Arnzen Falls, who died Aug. 18, wUl be mortuary this evening and until Shoup's proposal would permit
—- officiatini! Final rites will be in conducted at 2:30 p.m. Friday noonon Friday. Memorials maV the-rood.-' -----------
the-Hupirt Cemetery - at. Hoynolds Funeral Chapel Senate-publitrlondj-sub-• . ; ' V . F r k S s m a T S at the Rev. U s Brown of the VaUey Fellows Budding Fund or the committee, chaired by Sen.S l a t o i l i n T l ' M ovL ry Friday afternoon I d Christian Church. M ilitary Filer Baptist Omrch. „ Frank E, Moss, D-Utah, will
evening and Saturday prior to graveside rites will be con- . . hold a hcaringjin.the.Metcaliiihva wm uc cun- | ^duned by Mountain Home Air INOVV y o U K-IIOTV BrMonday in Bozeman.
P a id In A d va n c i (D a ily 1 Sunday)1 M onth tU S
• JAAonthi« M onths < '4 30•1 Vtar «3^00AAjll lu b ic r lp t lo n i acc*p»*d o n ly
whara c a r r l t r d a l lv try i i .not
T IM E S -N E W SS U B S C R IB E R S
C a ll your carriaro rth a T lm ti-N a w i
P H O N E 733-0931B u h l'C a illa ro rd ' S43 4&4I B u rliy -R u p a rtP a u l'O ak ltV 'N o i'lan d 471P lla r-R o o irw m H o l l i i t t r ) ]« })75 W ardan-Jarofna
• Coedlno-Haoarm an 43*-JS3J
^ C O M M U N ITY CO RRESPONDENTS
AlmoMrV. Wallace Taylor 034*23»
- — B u h l'- ------------- -— ------------ j' -Pauline Day '543-5412F ilerMarlorje Llorman 32A S4&4 Goodlno County Peggy Chu 934-5704Haoarman -W ilm a Lario n e37-443«-Hanien . -
-O o ro tlw a Steolsmlth......423-5408JeromeCharlotte Doll 324-4761
- Kino H ill 4.- M r * . Arthur Greer - 3&ft-2SS8 M lnT-C aiila
. ^ Georgia Laylon 678-B90eRichfield
. D ixie Dlxort 407-2117Shoihona
' M elba Thorne ea4.2p7j, Sun Vallfy^Hafiey-W ood River
W rry Campbell . 708-4634 Springdale -Cam lla Bronion .
‘ w-x->
Boris _Spassky,________________
Today’s Iflth game was
scheduled for 5 p .m .d p.m.
EDT) with Fischer playing “White;— which— movrs— flrsh-
rows of seats back In place,” Citizens Federation. Uic. met at
“hiiasjan UranUmaster Njkoljy
Krogius, another of Spassky's four seconds, said.
-i-iiolinUd,-who-
ing the playing hall with~movrT*
Fischer holds n 10-7 lead and . . _
needs another 2,5 points to take Iceland organizer ,Gudmundur
tho crown. Spassky needs five Tlwurinsson on Geller’s earlier
points in the seven remaining-, request^ said he received the
games to retain it. Russian protest and think
While chcss experts argucil the chatrs wlll bi{ twick whereampng themselves whether they were.”
tht~~Tdaho~I*uwer Audltorium-
Weilnesday night to discuss
plans for moving into the Senior
in Center on Sept. 15,
TorcTBase at iiunset Memorial
-Piick -Hie iiraLwuinaii to receive a.
RICHFIELD - Services forpension.from thf U.S. govern
ment was Margarut Corbin.Hecurd numbers of high William Henry Gill , will be wounded.iu.,|he Hovolijtiunary -
Phms were iiw d ino funiiai in college. But uneinpltiyment ot Thompson Chapolr-command of a cannon after her
meals-on-wheels nve days a uniong collegtgraduates la at a Goocllng, Bi^riAl .will ^be at hasband-died firing it in the"week and luncheons a r Ihe
center, threo days' a week.
Arrangen»ent.s . for group
meetings will be m’nde following
the move into the center.
lO-year high. Elmwood Cemetery. battle of Fort Wasliin«ton.
0 t A V
- V M l i r
CLOSED FOR VACATION RE-OPENING
" S E PT .n , 197^
Magic Vslley HospitalsM n g ic y a l l e y IV Ie m o r in I
A dm ittedMrs. PeteFabcla.Eden; Mrs,
Joseph Shnw,. jackpot. Nev.; Mrs. Ronald Metzger, Jerls C.
Neaderhiser. Martina Sperle,
James O'Dell, Mrs, Thomas
Revol, Michelle DiMaggio, Teri
. Perkins and Looii Howe, all
Twin Falls; Mrs. Goorge WiUtz. H a g e rn ia n ;M r8 . W ayne,
Whltely. Cafltloford;. Scott
Clarkson. »/crQme; Lee E
boy Yoc'om Jmd John Farkslon, .'Admitted
both Uuhl; Mrs.- Edward Neil Hltchie, Donald Hanzel,
Kerbs and Mrs. Thomas Shield .Bell, Mrs. R o m Kun-
Gunnell, both' Burley; Mary zler, all Burley; Mrs,'Warren
l ia is e Borrowman. Arco; Ijtrsen, Rupert, and U*nz Hunt,
Merle Swain III, Slwshon?. and Heyb\irn. ^ ,
Terry McClaU) and Mrs. Pete UUmistied
Fabela, both Eden. . Hewayne Hondo. Fredrick
Blrthi ~ Shaw. Bonnie Vaughn, and_
Sons were bom to Mr. imd Ginger Cutler. :all Burley:
Mrs. Dean Allred, Buhl, ftnd tOjJJpuglas Turner, Declo, and JoeMrs. Theresa Annedtn, Twin Gurule, Delen. N. \1.
Dr. Jerry W. Jacksonis p le a s e d to announce
ih e o p en in g o f his
Veterinary Practice.in the Jerome area.
Preston and Trade'Ward.'both M s . A daijgliter was Iwrh fo
Filer; Kimberley D. Albortson, Mr. iind M r i Joseph Shaw.
Rupert; Stacey A. Jobnsoh, Sun Valley; John Francis, Wendell,
and Mrs. David Kraus, Paul. bliDilBieil
Hazel Kendrick. Wondoll;
Mrs. Ruth Ramsoy, Filer; Alisa
Whlt«. Vernal Sterner. Kelly
Rathbun. Fredrick Citron* Mrs.
August Flowers and daughter,
Mrs. Gerald WUllamson and
son, Brandi' LcMbyhe. Mrs.' Ludoll Waldron and daughter,
Mrs. Everotf Whittaker, Herb
Irving Arnold, JMra.-r^DcB.
VonEaton. Mrs. Alfony^i Ralph,. Mrs. Goroldino Corak, Mrs.
Jnmqd Munn and Terry
Jftckpot, Nev.
G o o d in g C o u n t y
McKnlgiU. qU Twin ^aUs; boby-hoBpllai offlelnis.
[V lin itloku M v m u r iu l
Admitted
- w n t ie ^ n l n , Mrs.“ Nedra“ Palomorez, tioth* Ru^wrt; Mrs.
• - • Admitted , . .... .Chrlatjne Fisher and iJndu.
John Gulnn, Rophld Helsley Howard, both Burley, and Earl
and Mrs. Charles Mulder, all Dakln, Heyliurn.
Goodlng_uiid. Brenda Sawyer, • DlsmlBsed "Boise.* ' . • RU^y Anderson, Jennie
. . Djgznlss'ed .B ailey , both Rupert; Mrs.
Imo Phillips, Dorothy Johnny Seal and 'daughte i'.
Severance and Clirls Hopkins, Paul; Mrs, 'niomas‘'Reed and all Gooding. " , daghter. Heyburn.
nirths
M o r i l /C o n i i iM in i ly Sons were born, to Mr. and Mrs.. Coleman Fisher, Burleys
f “utlont list nol refeiiscil by »nd Mr. nnd ' lyjra, Frod
'Palomorez, Rupert.
OPPORTUNITY COMES M ON DAY. AUGUST 2 8 lh
■Cel Tour On* Way Ticket To SoUt SuccfU lha
PATTERSON SALES C LIN ICPaiionnolly conducUd by PRANK A, PATTIRSON
and/or FRANK A. PATTIRSONrJR. ' — Amarico'i loiameil Sal* Tfalning Eap*rt«, g| , ..
— ---------------- CtS I . F INE ARTS C E N T E R -
M O N D A Y & TUESDAY AU G U S T 2 8 th & 3 9 lh
A lO iO O p . m , . .far c o m p U lc 'iiir it i $3?
AIm Sp«<tglOr»upRalM
n o n j im prov* you( cu.tom«r ignu, h
f<om nowr•la ^o n t in |Otl tw o n ighu, 2.'-/'. hgori
•PA'lnighy 100 licmt ha«i eiscu-livet ond tm ployaei.
tnvitcd Back Ik S |^nio(»d far . Th* S«<ond Tim* by lh« Twin Falli
Cham btr of C em niiK *
FOR IN F O R M A T IO N A N D RESERVATIONS . CALL 7 3 3 - 3 9 /4
Ybu may r« g iit* r In M rM n 'a t Th* Chamb«r O fflc* -a37Shoihon*Sl.N.
t a l l m lnut* RvoUlrotiffn a l lha C.S.I. FINC ARTS C IN T It DOOR
A lt t r 7 p .m . — Manday, AugUit 3 | lh '
BACKTO
SCHOOLSPECIAL
STUDENT DESKSAll »i*oi pf Finiihod and.Unfim»hed Sludc'nf Detki ii. four lo levon drawer modeli. Tha U R G fS ’r ^alectiorf in fow n i '
AS LOW A S ., 25 95
FURNITURE'In Stoeo'Financing
A v o ila h lo '
127 2nd Avo. W est 733-.1421
reason qiuestioned wVeeks kid 2BOISE (IIPI) _ Federal
Judso Rjiy McNIdiol'a luia q,u05. llonod why Uio Idulio Congress
of Pnrcnls nnd Tcaclicrs, hns
‘'lyought Us.cn clowmcnt fuml suit
jirto U .^^a tr lc t Court for Ida-
' Wlillo hcnring oral' nrgu*
. menls in Uic cnso Wednosilay;
U),o judge look note that two
stato agencies are Involved In
It-tJio U nd B«ard uncj the
Parks Department.
"Fedora] administrators don't seem to bo outraged about Uiis
matter,” McNlcliols obscryed.
Alter bearing nrguments. Mc- Nlcliols gave cnch side an ad-
ditlonjJ 10 doys to fiUTwritten briefs in U)C‘ case.
Support said need
in new youth home
Tlio PTA bnji, challenged Use
of public scl'i’ool endo\Vment
lands.for public parka, claiming
it. violates by tlie. Idaho Con-
stltutlon and U jo state’s ad-
Jerome
man due
in co urt
HAILKY - Community
support is the first essential for
estnbiisliinf' n* honje for problem youtli,
That \vHs empliasized
Tuesday during a panel
discussion on operatin« a.youth
hoint*, S[)onsored by "Tlie Other
Side of Time,” an nrtjunizatlon
whiclrhupes lo set up a home for
pre-delinquent boys in Blaine County.
During Ihe discussion, Carl
Qiristopherson and Kevin Kirk,
fi'om Youth Services Bureau,
Boise, and Farrell Drowm, of he
Corhiribnity Instiiule for Mental
Healtli, discussed Uie variety of
youth Ihni Hre^rCfefretl and
relative advantage ' and
disadvantages of placement for
more than 30 days in a foster
home.
The speakers said that taking
u youth from his own home for
division of the Department of
Health, Jack Steneck, discussell
with the directors *of, the
proposed home the relationship
a group home would have to
m en ta l' health and slate
agencies. Al the present, a
honie such ns planned already
In operation could qualify for'si) ' to $10 a day per child If U
provided essential social ser-
A!i£ca.
TWIN FALN':;-Cleve URoy
Starry,- 20, Ri.iute 3, Jerome,
was scheduld f< )r appearance In
Magistrate Coi rt today on three
felony charges
He was taken, into custody by
Twin Falls city and county
officers ''late Wednesday and
charged with two counts of rape
and one‘of bun^lary.
Capl. Tim Qualls of the Twin
Falls Police department said
-llie-i rAvas-rrrestedvnbout-
mlsfllonsact. • -
Attorney Kenneth Puraley,
argued Uiat lMth tJio constitu
tion and Uio' admissions act,
chtu'go UiQ land board wlUi ad-
mlnisterl;ig scliool endowment
property.
. He Urged the endowment fund 'bQ compensated for ujlej)f en
dowment land for parks._ Assistant-Attorney- General
Don Knlckrehm argued, Iww-
over, tliat no-lransfer-of- title
to tho land has taken place. He
stildonly the Qdmlnlstrnllon h»3 chJuiged.
Tljls dpes not give tlio Parks
Department any right to sell or
lease tlie lands, he siild, adding
JJie Department of Public Lands
‘Still has tluit power.
Ex-Idaho
aide namedBOISE I UP! 1 — Former state
health adnunistrator Terrell 0.I
p.m. in Twin Falls. He Is
clmrucd with I! rape of a
year-old Twin f alls girl on Aug.
14;-burgiury of a Twin Falls
home on Aug. :!2 and a second
Steneck sold, ' i think that all
regions would benefit from this
type of program.” He said the
home would a lleviate the
problem of "throwing some of
U ie^k lds m iali." or sending
Tltem t r ^ t . Anthony or To the -jvin Falls girl on Aug“ li'. .
State Hospital South.' starry was pi aced in custody
“ You are providing a of the Twin Fulls sheriff pen- program here wltl^n the ^.Qurt action. He was
framework oPyour own com- confined to the county Jail, munity,” Sten9cksald. q„.,i|jj the arrest
Home organizer Janet Small followed invesi igation by tlie
cfty arrd county'o(iid‘er^ *”__lessllian.30 days-doos not4>Foak—&aid the planncd^iome-wuuldbo^
the family ties that need to be ‘•qntl-institutlon.” "If yoi can
strengthened, but that a month give these kids the right kind of , —
—imoriAng■cnouBh-ttriYnitnnr^are nt-rrrritn:arTrotnr i' TCir“ |O tlf ly ~ S ~ F ~ U N N Y *
Carver lias been named health
services and mudical director of U)e ['iedmont Health Care Corp.
in Greenville. S. C. ____
Dr. Carver, who resigned his
slate post eaiiier Ihis^ear, will
'•Tie res’iwnslble for Uie standards'
of medical care offered by
Piedmont.
His first task in tlie new
position will be lo develop u
health services program and
recruit physicians and allied
i^culth— stiiif— Uic— Uic— C0C-.
WELLS, Nev. (DPI) — Two Collfonilo men
• died Wednesday (njreparate 00,cldentjUn iiorUt- vcditom Nevodfl.
Fred Mondcl, 16, Sonta Clam, was killed
when his cor overturned on Interstate 80 obout
14 miles from Wells. The hliihwny pntrol said he apparently lell asleep. Chnrles Todd, a
, paBsenRcr, wu« hurt.
I Adolpii Frias, 18, noBevilie, wna.killed When
the ear In which he was riding ran off U.S. 40 and struck a culvert 12 miles west of Wendover.
Injured were his niflters, Ocmlce Frias and ’
Cecilia Crowley, wife of the driver, who wos
appai'ently not hurt.
Miami Beach mayor scorns politicians
■ MIAMI BEACH (UPD—May- Convention, but said the cosl to or Chiick Hall of Miami Beach the vacation playground would
said today "politicians are be tlu-ee times that. He sold the
uauolly free loadors".and as fur Democratlcr Convention , lost
tis he is concerned, tliey carf month was also a losing
keep their national conventions, proposition, altliough not as
•— Hnll-aaid-that-as-long-ua-he—great-because-proteatera-wervwas mayor, he would not try to less active,
get eltl^er political party to holdJinolher nominating convention ‘i 'm going to try to get 0 bill hero ogaln.-unless-the-fodorul-ln Congross to havo thO:fodoral -
government picks up the^lab. government pay all the costs of Hall-aaid -tho- city- recolvpd--Uiow>-oonventlonBr^sald llall.-
about j i ' trillllon In funds oL "Tliey reolly don’t bring much
various kinds to pay~Jor Jhe money into the city. Pollllclans
Juat-ended Republican Natl|ffial are usuolly free loaders. -
Thuriday, Auou>l 34) 1972 Timot-News, Twin Pallt( Idaho. 9 •
Ori“site inspection for A- tests askedGENEVA (UPI)-TlMJ United
Statca.sald today li I9 prepared
lo accept a ban on oll'nuclear
. testing as. soon as It can bo
naaurc^-tito Soviet Union Ifl
unoble to run the rlak of
dlagulslng clandcatlnp under
ground ■ explosions as natural
eorUiquakes. ^
Joseph Martin Jr., the
Amerlcon nepotlator ot the ‘25-
nation'Genevo blsormament
Confcrenco, said there are about 25 large eartli tremors a ye/ir in Russlo which ore
dete'cted by long-range seismic
■Instruments but which cannot
bo traced to either natural
cauacsora nuclear test.
The only way lo ba aure tHat these events arc not t<»tB Is to conduct bn oivaltc In sp^ lon* .
Martin told tho conferonco.
. "Ttio United States U p<‘6'' pared to give up t)>o advantages
derived from nuclear weapon
toatbig only If wo can bo
assured, tluit 'other treaty
partners-- arej abiding by the
same reatrlctlona," ho'aald.
Even II oil treaty partners
abided by all tho rules, Martin ^ Id , a lock of' odoquatA
verlflcotlon capobllltloa "could
foster uncertainties pbout whe
ther other nucleor powers were
octually complying with ‘the
treaty in nil respects."
JC’s see aid filmTWIN FALl-S - Jaycees and
J^y-C-Ettes saw a flbn on the
-flrW-ald-troatment-of-bleedlng'
during a joint meeting Tuesday
night at the American Legion
Half.
— Byron • Hacking) firBt>aid
instructor, presented the film. A
-question- and—aijawer -period-
followed. ‘
Mias Jeannette Carter, who
recently returned from
Guatomalo after a. six-month
visit and study program, told of.
hertmvclrnnduxpcrtcncB5nnd“ presented slldea.
Rex . Lyle was named tho
Jaycec of the Month for July! A-
fnmlly - campout will be held
Saturday and Sunday at
Beor Gulch and Sho&hono
Springs Divide. Eadi family is
to furnish its own equipment.
ineanltlgful change in a youth’s
attitude and behavior.
Tlie liead of the mental health
lives, you can do much to
prevent di.sfunclion in their
later lives,” she Said.
4 - H ’ers practiceRUPERT — A practice style
review'was held Tuesday al the
Rupert Armory for 4-H mem
bers using the theme "Fashion
Modeling Your 4-H Garment."
The practice session- was In
preparation for the annual 4-H
style review scheduled for 8
p.m. Monday at Minico High
School, Tlie public is invited.
Carolyn Barnes. dlsXrict
lUrcetor, Twin Falls, gave lips
and suggestions on 4-H modeling. luislBtod by C1iurl«no Wicka.-.Minidoka County ex.
tension home economist, during
the practice session.
Miss Barnes reported the
judges will score models by
categories.
There were 35 girls taking pari in tlie practice.
'niere were eight 4-H club.s
represented at Uie session in-
.eluding Uiv Funlaalic Females! Jackson Acres. Goofy Gar-
nSenla, Buguloo Mixers, Thu
B le n d e r s , - M in id o k a Roadrunners, StiU’h and
Splatter and Jackson HillbiilieK.
TuJu}i fUNNT I. ill po, ilOO'. Iu< to<f> ui.g.nul ’ lunc , utcd Stncj oogi >0 Todo, t fU N N ' 1200 W «tl Tki.d St C lt.cl.ind OK. > 44IM
porution's primary lieaith care
center.
VTinners
announcedBUHl.F.Y The Burley
Duplicate Bridge.Club had five
tables in play ‘ Tuesday al
Burley Elks I-edge Hall, Winners were Dan Johnson
and Art Norby. firsl; Mrs. Gladys Manning and Mrs. Ruth
Walton, second; Paul Taylor
and Max Hogg, Ihird; Mrs.
Mabol llowarlh and lyirs. Virguua Marlin, fourth.
(luesls attemUng were Mr,
and Mrs. U*onard Ziirp, 1-jguna
Beach, Calif., uuil Mrs. Mary
Lund. Phoenix, /\riz.Kefreslimeiil.s were furnished
by Mrs. Howarth.
MAGIC VALLEY REPUBLICAN PARTY
SaturdayvA ugi-26— 6^30-EJVl arrhe FTtER FAIR (iR O U N D S.
•— - ■ -------------------------------------- ----- ------- --------
& - MEET THE CANDIDATESWHO WILL BE TAKING PAR T IN THE
NIXON SWEE P
PLENTY OF GOOD <JREEN GIANT GORN
CHICKEN And All The Trimming^ ]
G O O D E N T E R T A IN M E N T iTICKETS AVAILABLE-.
■ ■ AT THE <3ATEROPER'S, Twin Foils . '
• , . CROWLEY'S PHARMACY, Twin j=al|s .----------- ' ARNOLD'S DftY GOODS, Kimberly
’ BUHL;HERALD, Buhl' . $3.00 per Person 0.00 per Family
O V R D O O R lS O P m T O INTERESTED DEMO CRA TS
V • s* ■ ---- - ' .
RO W LAND EV A N S & ROBERT N O V A K
D o v o liid I 'o The C ilizu iiH O f M a g ic g a l le y
■niurtd»y. AoflUll 3<, l»73 Al Wmlergren, Publillmr . ’’ PHONE 733 0931
OHiciAt C ityAnct C ounly N ow tpA p fr v' A A om bqro lA u illl Outoauo I C lrcula lion-And UPl:>RuuuAnM o-S«c|lon-iO -IO t ld«lM> CoUb, rh u r» d » v - if rh e r# b y d e ifo n ii ie d n r th » 't t in ro f -m rv ^ jn ir rW T n tf i~
ItHJAl n o llc o t w ill t>0 ptib liU ied . P ubfithvd dA ilv «nd Sunday, fxce p i SaturdAy,*Al 133 Third Siroo l W n l,. Twin F«IU. ld«Jto,«3101,by M flo ic V « ll«y N e w ipd p& ri, Inc. C niorod « t io c o n d c U i» m « il fr to fle r A p ril t,
IP)0, /lU h c p o tl oM icu in Twin F a llt i Iddhoi 613UI. under Iho oct o f M arch 8. IB79
Message From The White HouseM IAMI BEACH The Nixon years was exposed when surprislniily oppeiircd at the
alirouiled attempt by the Nlxop Rep. Jack Kemp, a (reshman Fontalnoblcai^oU l . _____■
■Whltfr-Houje to shnpo-thi! conservotlvo from upstn^o Now ^ H l s nppoaroiice was
1 post- York ,_____ sudilonly____ .^o m l_au rp tls ln ii_ l
cancelled out that day os a pro- But the fight Iranscondj
reform witness before Uie Agnow. One conservallvo »t«t«
-Ropubllcai)-niloir comraltlM,— elialnnan vigorously puahliig
H A V E D O V E - W l L L T R ^ V E L '
The WinnerRichard Nl^on is on iiis way,
foliowing tiie Republican sessions'
in Miam i, and Jt Iool(s lilie he is ccrtain to spend another four years
, in the White House.Opinion poiis to date show un
precedented ieads for President -Nixon over opponent. Senator
George McGovern. No preaidentiai
candidate in history,, the pdliticai pros say, has been so far ahead at
, this stage of the game.McGovernTaflhcTiillirat point;
is given oniy seven stated and some : poils do not give Kim even that
nutnbcr.If .President Nixon is the winner
iilte most people expcct him to bo,
the flood wave will be so great he will take many state and national candidates with him. In fact, the Republicans will once more regain control of the U.S. Senate. If all this is true then James McClure will easily be the next Senator from
Idaho.It looks like it is going to be a
Republican year in the nation and7 of course, in Idaho. — OAK.
One Time?There are a lot of people who
now have the opinion Cecil Andrus will be a one-term governor. They contend he won the office he now
holds not because of his program,
the voters simply did not want DonSnm iiplHpp fp fw flrrmprj fnp -
wouldn’t take much to convince them they should make the roce
when the time is ripe. It could be
said they are actively seeking the job. They both know it is not too
“ti>—spread— tlie— si
backing.
term.Right now it looks as though the
next governor of the state might just come from Magic Valley in the person of Jack Murphy or Pete
Cenarrusa. Both have indicated it
The governor, of. course seek another term. But his com
. petition is Shaping at this early date and his mistakes are being entered in the little bli|ck book for use when the time is ripe.—OAK.
Jake With Vs
Washington. U buddon
bocauso kcmp had planned to bo in Wflshlngtbn that night
playing in the annual
Congressional baseball game.
Inateod, ' Kemp was summonGd, along with Sen.
us ho does not consider Agnew
clcctable In 1070 • and would . prptcr somebody else.
Neverthploss, he bitterly
opposes any leftward shift In tlte
power balance.That is not far from private
Jolin Tower of Texas, from views by Ninon campaign
Waslilngton to Miami Dench to advisers. They fear any
be briefed on a now allocation • delegate 'forinulii leading to
formula for delegates to the 1975 nomination of n liberal wljo •contfcnti.on whicli would benefit cpuld provoke.« -disaalrous
Uie conservotlyo Soutli arid west UtiM-party bid by conservative
and hurt Uio liberal Nortlieast. nepiiblicuns. At this writing,
That plan had been secretly Nixoii campaign aide Harry
: drafted by conservative state Flemming ia only a very
party leaders, with convert’ help ayinpuUieUt observer. But M r..
from VlcePt'osidenl Spiro T. Nlxon.miglit yet decisively imd
Agnew's staff (and President openly endorse • tlie Tower.-.•Nixon’s own-operatives us Kemp formula.
Interested obsorvers). It wus liven Mr. Nixon’s new
unveiled Uie next'morning by uillunce with Gov.-Nelaun
. ..Dfellci-orNcwVorlTTvas'compromise." almken a lilile. HockefcUer's
Tlie selection of u New Yorker state chairman, Cliarles T.as a co-sponsor attempted to Unigan, wus put out by Kemp's
undercut a .r iv a l nllpcotion use .byNixon-Agnew forces-'scheme backed by the New When Lahiji.tn objectedYork Republican party.
Mol-ebver, KefpfJ is on intiinute
, terms wlth’theWtiite House and particularly Herbert Klein, the
N ixon a d m in is t r a t io n 's propaganda chief.
, Thus, Kemp's sudden
intervention was a signal from
-----thc'Whltc“Houso“thflt, It favors"the conservative delegotli
formula but does not vot ogenly
to calling the Tower-Kemp
formula “ the Miami
compromise," Tower replied
the name wus suggested by
Kcmp, u former pro football
quarterback. "He's known to
be clevor at the hidden ball
playj^;,-aiwmsmlllng Ljinl«un
Who says American voters never have a choice, only an echo? A fellow named Jacob J. Gordon of
Worcester, Mass., has declared
Abolish all labor unions, which will no longer be necessary. (7) Eliminate crime, inflation and
unemployment for all time and
BRUCE BIOSSAT
support it.
., PrsoccupatlonJicti! overJOT sUims from heudy Republicun
cunfldulicc reBurdlnB 1072 and
Aynuw's probable bid for tht*
Prealdcntlal succession. It was first thouyht the struygle here
would center on McGovern- style , delegate refurins
atlenipUng to puck the l'J70
convention with untl-Agnew
bluclts and youUis.
When it becHin.e_ cleur
Hepubllcans would never
swallow a Mc<jovernile quota
Maneuverings for 1976
multiplied, lleoubltcnn national
himself a candidate for president---.return morality and God to theon The National Government ticket with a platform that makes those of every other party look like exercises in namby-pimibyism.
Stating that "a ll Americans and the entire world realizes (sic) the present existing federal government of the United States is totally, completely and hopelessly corrupt from top to bottoin," Gordon offers 0 platform which includes the following pledges:
(1) The complete removal of
American troops from Vietnam within 72 :hours. (2)^Guaranteed $10,00cr earned m inimum annual income for all families and $500 m inimum monthly pension for all
Replacement of all
United States for all time. (0) Reduce all taxes by a mlhilnum of
75 per cent.■ Dicidentally, "the armed services will in no way be effected (sic) by the transition of govern
ment.”The platform will be adopted in
convention assembled in New York City on Sept. 1. For those who can't
attend, at the bottom of Gordon’s campaign literature is a handy
form, for applying, for a job in tlie new "National Governhient of the United States," with a space for the position applied for — “Congressmen, Judge, Clerk, other positions available.'!
Maybe 7 States ?
commltteewoinun Cecil Harden.
In{liana,_u.jnember of Ihe
rules subconuiiittce considering
delegate (iliocutlcins, wua inclined to the Tower-Kemp
formula. She pruiiipUy wus
urged by lndl<in» national
conunittMiniun Keith Uulen to oppose It. The reason: Mayor
Richard Lu^ur of Indiana|>oIis,
a 1976 dark horse posalbilUy,
would benefit from a larger,
more liberal convenlion.
I Such maneuveruiga were
possible because Uie Nixon
intervention was indirecl.
M U M ! BEACH (NEA) -
Republicans gatliered here to
nominate the Nlxon-Agnow
ticket think it may win In
, .system . the focus turned to the ............. . .........
new delegate allbcatlon formula What’s more, Mr. Nixon aeenu
for 11)76 required by Federal to care less about ail this than
c-ourt order. A formula devised his political aides. Tliese uides
by party leaders from New were privately denigrating a
\Yolk, Michigan, Minnesota and McGovern-style t'oniiaibsion to
Ilhode Island W9uld make the consider future deU ial«197G convention larger and reforms. Less Uiu/i 2i hours
fixed re-elecUon candidacy of
Sen. Ted Stevens.
In the Middle West. GOP . . . . . .sources think Illinois and niore liberal than any in the later, the President endorsed u
Michigan look vei v gpod. Ohio Piirty's history. Congrosiiioiiul group’s reform
belter Uian earl).'er but still A c c o rd in g ly , A g ne w ’ s (WL'kage containing just such a
troublesome. Wis-; onsin seems lieutenants were deeply in- <.omuiission, n ia fs not the
McGovern’s best Ik *1. volved in preparing, as an nieiiiajje from Uie White House
With swing-staUi Connecticut alternative, the Tower-Kemp l^esideiu’s men here were pllin. - trying to cutivey.
elderly* (3) Replacement of all '*T h re ^ rnillinn^Qi^>mmont^|ob»-
-federah-crniiloyes-‘witirTTOW~dTTF are yours for the asking!” 'says *<4^-Bar-«ll7 !aw yers- from — H jO rH o n :----------------------------
s e r v ^ as judges in any court. (5), Abolish the national debt. (6)
M R. SPECTATOR
No references necessary.
going for Mr. Nixon still seems
to be valid, thitugh some
Democrats tapped earlier think
2fi-vote Texas can besalvaged.
sweep over McGovern-Shrlver Spot checking here, suggests all
this fall, and they’re trying to the rest of It is .lust to
' avoid gettlnggiddy over the McGovern, prospect.
A party leader from a large Gne key Hepublican doubts he eastern state told me: . will spend much time and strong for Mr. iN’lxon today,
■i don't want to be over- money In the SouUi, tliough onlyMassachusel.Us In New
confident, but 1 find lt.hard to.be-lher.c_ m «y._bejL iol of hopeful . EngL«Jld .is__ .b j Lng.^rated
underconfldent." talk and a few showcase trips. McGovern. The Ecujt's big three
I ran the &0-statc map with a The Republicans can’t see — New York, Ne»y Jersey and veteran GOP elect bral-vote Nlxon-Agnew losing any of the Pymjjylvanla ~ a ll fall in Mr.
counter, and apot*checked eight mountiiin states, or more Nixon's column right now.
about 15 slates. Including seven- than South Dakota among the There is real fear a couple of
of ihe most populous 10. There is five In the plains area. In the these mluht shift loter on as
—JusmoTJad iiews at the mament Pacific zone. Oregon and McGovern narrowM the gap. But
for President Nixon, though in a Washington are trending Nixon- no one I talkpd, t f in this city
few big stales, nibsl pur- . ward, andlne i"residerii;geis a thinks sucITii'sinTt WouJd s i^ a l anemic. She told me’ there was’ vUainms are NOT the only cure
ticularly Californala, the Alaska from the well* a winning McGov.jrn surge. no cure except to eat lots of ftjod • for anemia,
situation is considered ^ witlUrun and take vitamins plus <\netnia means lack of suf-
somewhal shaky. . . iron, but she didn't tell me what ficient iron in the blood; that's
The people I canvassed are P A N I H A R V E Y because of slwer without exception reaiisV. Not __________ _ ____ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________1;»-k ».r i r t .n n r _ii_ J u> ^ i iu l
GEORGE C. THOSTESON, M .D
I’m AnemicDear Dr. 'I'hosteson: I was anemia.
lold' by a nurse that ____Furthermore, iron and
Day Of MemoriesThirty-three years ago — on But the terrible legacy of war
'Scptr3ri!)3U — Brltaiirdeclared ^remains. In solving one great
une expecta Mr. Nixon t to hold
war on Germany. It was a reluctant dccisioiy, There opened on that September day a chapter in liistory
the end of whiciT has not yet been written. Out of that war* there
■emerged ne\y patterns of power.In 1B39, the Great Powers went
to wor. That meant Britain, France- and Germany. Six years Iqter the expression meant something quite different. It meant the' United Statiis'and Soviet Russia.V
But this was only dimly seen 33 years ago, if it was seen at all.
Hitler was not alone in underrating the red army.
Britain knew that it had’nothing to gain in war and much to lose. .The conflict was to confirm this in lives lost, war damage and the loss
; of practically all thatrwas left of the huge, fortunes in overseas in-
problem others were created, which is the ironic history of
sacrifice and conflict.Mr. Spectator thought all you
folks who were involved in World War II would do well to remember September 3 -i and, perhaps, just what you were doing back then when you first heard the word that
.war was starting.
tJtfkTn'd'orSB^lnr-plus lead he
has in the national polls, but, In
all but a few cases, they can't
see Mr. Nixon sliding far
— entAigh-ta-losc-thetrstntcs:----
Bedside1 have two t^niall children iind t)ii»'r.>'s » hu-ic of r>»H t!ens, whidii^
AHOY. M A ’AM !In the days of full sail, women on
board almost always presaged trouble. Storms and mishapi* at sea
were attributed to them, and in swashbuckling novels the captain
always wlth.^drawn sword defended ladies against superstitious crews.
A ll~~ bu t— lire— ra t1pna le"^has
•They. know, all-about this business of Mr. Nixon starting
out with his leads and then
frittering them away, 'lliey
think hlfl support; ampjig
disaffected DerjtOQrats is firmer
this time, and less likely to fjow
back across Uie line.
The Republican who gave me
tlie 50-atate rundown thinks that
Mctiovern today may be
lea^ng in no more than seven
St4lt(*)l
' South .Dakota, Minnesota,
Wisconsin, West Virginia and
Massachusetts. And this
Judgement gives the
Dentucralic nominee the benefit
of serious doubts In at least California and Minnesota.
'I'he seven states have a total
elc.cloral vote of 04, with 270 the
number required for victory In Noveinber', ' * ■”
California might better be
The bedslHe niunnera of most for that. ______________ ___________pfcople and some doctors are ‘lliey leave it to Ihe clergy and iron. Mrs. U.D.
atrocious. family to hypo the patient’s Wish 1 knew just a little mure
Very many sickroom visitors morale. Some do. Surely abour you. If Uie aurso Just
are careleas. Insensitive or everybody wants'iD. ’ thought you lookec^pale-tlial'sstupid, - . Maybe the doctor should hand not enough for a diagnosfs of
You can be too sick to move, the fiunily a list of suggested
to weak to talk — but you're not "do's "and "don’t i i " for visiUng
deaf. hours.Vttt doctors are sometimes Don't .compare, symptoms:
guilty and family members are ;'He looks better, h u t then Aunt
frequenUy guilty of expressing Minhle looked .'jottor Just-
was told last week that my are the ones that carry Iron?
.tjiJby’s blood count was lower . Is it pernicious anemia, which
than normal..! don’t want my nt/iSmount of Iron will help? Vet baby to become anemic. Please pernicious aneniia can be
tell me some‘ food ~tlifit have cofT^liTd wlUrYili«LU>» li*l2-
Is some chronic infection'
cjiuaing U)e unemia? Ur some
subtle but continuing hloud
loss? Ur is soine blood disorder
iiivolved?
BERRf’S IBLO110 morM^n pl,y, .|,o pe|™ a!i - u„d ev™ befori3 .Huwull._Cahfornla;-J^,' _ . . . . „
self-pity — In tbe audible
> presence of thu ulUng-kin'u' . I've heard loving wives say,
“ t don't know wlutt I'll do-U he
lingers; it's so expensive!”
'Oiat sick guy, tqo weak to
protest. Just ralibd an eyebrow
and died.. . - ^
So he wus dying anyway. So
what; we're all dylnij!
Don't discuss symptoms gr i
vflal'signs exce'pl. when those
sympoms or sl{{ns are en-
couraRinR.
Don't refer to his ailment,
whatever, as "another case o f . .
boh'’t worry the patient with
any talk of expeivses'on. other
All of lis past the age of 10 arc Problemsj^jt ho.mi iKBlnnIng to roveal Uil' many hc«‘Ven-!i nmnc
metastases of the Incurabicarninge
- . changed. Women are being tl^ained veslment!i_that_diligehLaod_adi^_iQ-aecvc_aboard_nu.val.-voisolii-in---venturous forebears _ had ac- other than a nursing capacity and ciuelloaijoarly orBaniiniion But the inlnuio one ai ua la |)otli-'ni
cumulated. " _____ojiejny_-muy--join-the-cohimana----cverybwly.^helon. A Ueute^ant, stationed at ™Lakehyrst, N.J. is the first wom an. adm in istro tive , officer ever
assigned to an American crew, and it ought not to be s\irprising if a gal
: As thS^anniveraaries ' of great events' come around, those who , took part in them and those who liv^_through-the item s, iii which they took place, recall them' as" thou^l^ t h e £ j^ o n g ^ J a ^ a period-
'^ longe r,than a third of o century
ogo, for this is an entirely different — ase — the nuclear and space age. _ , l t is aisp the jet-Age.Tlie olipost 17 dava It t<Mik/to circle the world by
propellQr plane in lOSO iias slirunic - to loss than I three days In.iom- '
mercfal jets. . '
By now the word Is spread
..wide that, the respected Min-.
’ “ iiesota’ poll curr‘ 117 give Mr. Nixon a 56-51 edge over
— discuss fupera’l
e ii^n ts— unless th o -
^ n i l i o . ’tes such
dlSCUSslJii:
starts counUng to 10 mention lllne,s.sva otdl’ou can kill anybody “U>era;. past or pr^.sunt. ,
preinulurely by compounding' D" “ “ f* patient as his frailty-with doapalr. . - “ tmforliiblo ai.pniwlblo; brush -- . Sir WllUam Oslor, one ot the •'air, fluH pillou s, straighten
great teachers of, medicine, sheets.-were honored someday for-runriing----WcGovorn, wllh_M-piir-ceiit qI ■■n is-mdrd Important— Dmrtnj^choorfTl - ai least
............................... ““ S ' ' “ to “ "nt sort of a pnUont 'they Intend to birck Mr. NUon. luis iho dlieaso Uuin what aofi---Uto voice of ii loved one,
Savcral, Minnesota leaders I" .^ f dlsooso the patient hag." ponotroUng Jhe conscloilsneas both parlies wy, however, that old-laahlmicd doctor had olacQmutoaepuUtVnt.comlM-tB,
litt)«-medlclnothatwaaworUi '■“““ “f ““. ‘n »y l'i!a l. ,
anything, but his bedside ' Do dlsciiss the patient's life,
manner .yas of linmcoaurablo situation before the lllness;-
psychologlcal benefit. , parUculary ItT^niirei pleasant-Today's,doctors are too,busy otpiicts.
a tight ship.No'nccd to be concerned, about
tho male reaction. Troditions are adjustable*when the Navy d e u ^ s . And to vyorried wives, Mr.-spec
tator would give words of comfort: They keep a guy awfully busy
aboard sTTip. tljese days. '
this sltuatioh Is pretty sure to
close' up In the weeks ahead. '
Thai stunning gencrallkatlon
about the whole llHit^ti!,Snntli
Whal w orm i me i i, i f things don't Uort getting belter lo r McGovern, he irtoy gel o tremendoui numMr o l ' ■\ ^ 'sympathy vo te i'!" ,
k . '
Vixoh vb: s defeiisfe budget tHmCHICAGO tUPI)-Prei)d(!nl 'opponent would m«k« It Impoi- (ijhttag .nun from .VUtntm— In contro'linB d*lenM nw ndln j mllllsryipendlniiwirenovorBnd
Nljon rp«n«d h li r«-*l«(<llon _ cu tip iign lodiy with a p ltd iit
to trim the t«t but not the muicle from th« nation',
-defenw-budget • and charjed that Democrat OooI’bo S.
.M(jO«vorn'« programs would _leaim-thB-natlon_a-Moond-ralfr
power,
ilble to auure. pe^e In the world or negotiate an arma curb. • ■ ytf* ■' "Econorrty alwaya, weakneu
nevrir,"‘Nixon told the annual convention of the American Legion a> he launched a cutting
and we havtT-done It without which now Impoaei the amalleit wherever It la ia te to do ao,”ulUlng outp our aUlea, without - economic burden oh the Muntry Nixon aald. “ But I never havelurrenderlhg to our entm lei In 20 yeara. . gambled—and I never w illand without abondonbig'pfl- WIttioul naming hla opponent, gomble^wlth the aatety of theaonera of war and tholu m lu liig Nixon la ld the (tfopoaalB' American people under a falMIn action," he la id. . McOovern advocate i^uttlng banner of economy. L a i t ^
The visit here waajlie flrU of the atrategic bomber force by peace l« built only on
men who lerved In Vietnam, gallant men who are not aihamed. of their love of country; brave meh who did not desert thelrnailon'a flag In time of need; heroes who atand Just a i ta ll as any who fought UBLt STAMPS
^gatast—■McOojrem'a-Tlhree-slOp swing jc ro s a the 00 per cent, cutting back on the He was scornful of those who ridicule m ilitary service and
, , ---------- —............. .......D— ------------- .....ni .luiuo «>•>«■, attacked McQovorn's stand onmisguided voices ol those who lenient attitude t<>ward draft Calif, during which Nixon also and trimming funds for wea- draft roslsters.’ '.say wo ahould wooken America evaders ond Ms offer " to pressed his • ottack on the pons dovelopment-would "risk "To those who try to moko _____________
nnlyc h j g pc lor unllgtMnlly— ^wlthdraw_from_Democrot«-for-talllng-to-danl-the-oaf«ty-of-ih»-n8xt-garf6ra— falsa-m oro l-hcroos-o l-n-fow—a-d«m p.-cloth Immidlatel; peace tomorrow, be rejected Vietnam. with the school busUig problem, tlon of Americans." hundred deserters and draft Don't give food deposits Unie
budget cuts “ We hove been able to bring NlxOn claimed he arfoady had "We have economized and , didgers, I soy the real heroes to harden. After utonill has Domocrotic homo half-a.mllllon American started a substantial program w ill continue to economize on are the two and q half million cooled, rinse it Immediately.
. f proposed HO.blUlon defens«.put- nation on route to the Western number of aircraft carriers.He urged that the "honest but back, his wllllngnesj to'take a white House at San Clemente, withdrawing troops from NATO
and said the proposed by his
Use prpper technl()uea when cooklng’ln aluminum. Spllla and bollovers should be wiped-with
D O U B U « e u S T M M I g V A H V S th ls
DOUBLI Jrour savings at Marty’s i liSDA C H O ltE BEEF I
Agnew attacks various Demo plaps in acceptaiice speech *
M lW l DOACH (UPD—At- McGovern (or advocating what by 1,345 GOP Convention
tackin^Uift^bualng, dcfcnao and he catlcd ‘'ple'ccmcai, Inconsls- dcleKales wlUi the solo oppoal-
VictnaJrwpoUcles of Democrat tent and Illuaory” programs. lion of one vote (or television
I George McGovern, Spiro ,T. “ Do we (ollow Senator commentator David Orlnkloy. A1- — Agnow-aeoopted-re^iomlnntlon—McQovern'sTJroposnls-forabTrrr-UlllcJrac’f e p tc T i jU ir m i lc h "
(or vice president Wednesday doning the South Vietnamese to mond, 20, o( Plnb Bluff, Ark.,
the invaders from Hanoi ’ and
for trusting or 'begging' tliti
North Vietnamese to return our
prisoners of war?” Agnew
asked the delegates who
shouted, “No.”
Agnew's plifce on the ticket
while his conservative suppor
ters laid plans to nominate him
for President In 1976,
Setting perhaps the tenor ol
his fortlicomlng' campaign as
President N ixon’s running
mate, tlie 53-year-old former
Maryland governor denounced
fLQ W rektUves
brqnclrpiatfqrTn
I\ixonb a ck e rs
. LINED UP like children waiting to i(ee Santa
Claus, Republican Convention delegates wait to .
i^hake tlie hand of President Nixon after his
acceptance speech Wednesday night. (UPl)
abstained from voting t>ecauso
he said Agnew was a racist.
Interior Secretary . Robert
Morton, a fellow Marylander,
placed Agnew's name • In nomination, declaring that he
. , was -a njan whose name hadwas overwhelmingly approved become a "household word."
Kleanwhlle, UPI learned that
a group of Agnew's staunchest
conservative backers had hold
several strategy mcetinRS
iilihed at helping Agnew
capture the presidential nomln- -ation-foup-yo'ttrtt-from'noi
The overwhelming defeat of a
liberal-movfr- tO' broaden-the
number of delegates from the
big urban slates, according to
many of Agnew’s supporters,
proved that they maintained
enough power In Uie GOP to
iin »
il'POTRjJAST
I ♦
I I ♦
I
CHUCK STEA KSEEDLESS
GRAPESTABLERITE MED.
EOGS“TABLETREAT
BREAD
1,000 plus delegates push,
shove to shake Nixon’s handWASHINGTON (UPI)-Tlie
General Accounting Offlco
(GAO), congressional watchdog
agency, withheld a report on
the handling of Republican
campaign funds,after confer
ring with the party's chief fund
raiser, Maurice H. Stans, It was
learned today.
Washington sources said El
mer B. Stoats, comptroller — general- of-tho- United-States -
and head of the GAO,. felt he ,
. needed more answers to
quoitioni alM ut. the use ■
campaign funds be(ore he could
approve the report. ____ ____
‘ ‘ '‘taati is a very careful guy
and me wants to. make very lAUu-thc-Tcpoiit-is-tor-roct-
Iden^ Nixon allegedly wound up in the Miami bank account of
Bernard Barker, one of the
arrested suspects.
Meanwhile, Stans said he
MIAMI BEACH (UPD-The and tlioae who iiave died in
largoi^ organization of POW enemy hands."
rcleptivcs has branded us "too Ttie lea^^ue telegram stated:
,ir ijfl^b le" the Republican par- ‘'Apprehensive tliat platform ----r — ................... - — -
ty’spllitform plank on Vietnam, indicates hardening of M;iy 0 ‘put him at Uie head of the
the National League of proposal by our government, ticket In 1076.
Families of American FVisoners Afraid that paragraph relating
and Missing in Soutl)east Asia to American prisoners Is too
said in u telegram to President Inflexible und indicates that uU
Nixon Wednesday that the POWs will remain interned
platform plank appeared to until all missing men are
represent a “hardening” of accounl,ed for. Release and
Nixon’s May fl peace proposal, accounting could begin simul-
The organization said the taneously."
plank could hinder rather than
speed the release of prisoners.
Nixon, on May 8 offered to withdraw iTS. tpops from
Vietnam four months ofter the
imposition of on internationally
supervised cease-fire through-
I
-S C H O O L SUPPUES-BIG 39 4
PEHCILTABLETS.,... 17*’-COrORlQ-
J0LLEIieAPtR.,H», i
STEHOBOORw 27*
While Agnew publicly will say
only that he Is “keeping my
Options open,” an associate
quoted him saying "1 wouldn't
put up with this ]ob for another
four years if I weren't
Interested in seeking the top-
one.”
MARTrnM A R K E T
IN SOUTH PARKI
“had nothing to do” with the
break-ln. "That is absolutely
my position and when the grand
]^d p r e d ic t io n
fore he signs his nunio," one
source said. A definite date has
' not been set (or releuHe Q( the
repoft.
Sources said that Stans, who -l*-Hillenfllni(-(he—Republican
— Notional— Convention,— lallced-
wlth OAO olllclals by telephone
Tuetdoy before a decision was
made to delay release of the
Bud« IlnUlngs. Releoso _.had - been expected Tuesda^^
The OAO Investlgalion was
sparked by the alleijed attempt
of five men to bun the
Democratic National Commit
tee headquarters In the early morning hours of June 17, The
' suspects Iqter were linked to
NlicQIi's re-<!lecllon committee.
Ifunds from the OOP’s
Committee to Ren^lect. Pres-
“ HONOLUtU-(UPI) - PollSler Burns W.“ Roper said Wednesday that President Nixon may be the odds-on favorite lo win the November election, but " I would not make a prediction as lo the outcome."
The president of Roper Research Associates told the American Society of Association Executives that U he had lo bet he'd pick Nliion
-T ra f l - j iv n a iin rw j ir --------- - ’ ~"Ru^ I would bet no more than I could afford
to lose, because I would have bet, and given odds, eight months ogo that Oeorge McOovern would not gel the nomlnalloni" he said.
the prisoners.
The platform Insists there
should bo a full accounting of
the missing before all U.S.
— trdops-aru, withdrawn.
' The league also demands an „_..ocs.qunt|ngjQrJhe_mlsslng.but_
said In Its telegram It would be difficult or Impossible to achle-ve In the timetoble set out In the platform, The result would be to block a settlement and delay return of the prisoners, the telegram said.
The section of the nlaltorm-
Back to School Shoe FashionsF ron . ROBIN hood;
Shoes for Boys and Girls
[______ ___ &ie SoElvii}!tob}i hfcoldr§'
states: "We Insist that, before oil American forces are withdrawn from Vietnam, American prisoners must be returned and a fuU accounting
r tm c tlo n -
Now come tho colora, Thay apark the look of Roblti
Hood's broad to« oxford, Made for the gtrl who’i all
g o w i t h braaay eyeleta,.bold unm i ^nd
tch|ard‘‘4re«t*d- pigakin leather.
Campaign funds Leaves
release withheldMIAMI BEACH (UPI)-More
than a thousand persons
pushed, swore, groaned ond
shouted to get to shake the
hands o( President ond Mrs.
Nixon when they left the
podium to greet the delegates
who renominated him.Standing In front 6f the
Presidential seal, t^lxon and his wife, Pat, Wednesday night
patiently puniped the hand of each person who got up tlie
stairs. Including an elderly
woman who had to be held up
tg keep from being pushed to
Uie floor and a child carried to
the stairs on his fatlier’s
slioulders.
Moat tQld him how proud they
rwerr^to-meet ■■ him, thot he
.................. ........ ....... would carry their particular
f!n\r v>»‘tnnii/i/fhTimH. three of State and that he gave a great’
whom were in wheel chairs. apeevli. Sortie gave mm glTlSpuCIl^nT-rnnBlnB— froni -‘0710 !— to " n '
Speech
hinderedMIAMI BEACH (UPI) -
niere was one antiwar demon-
iitratlon inside the convention
haU when President Nixon dellveretl ' his acceptnnce
speech. Tlie participants were
to 1 In Sen. George S. B E *™ (U P I)~ U s t McGovern's home state "and °«™'V'>«^■N»5«"l«‘ Abrahm , he wail extremely, happy.” “ Columbia. S.C., publish-
Moyor Richard Lugar of f f . announced ho waa leaving Indianapolis .went through the * » , Domocratic party and line and told Nixon the decision Join ns the Republlcons. . to greet the delegates "was a , Wednesday, he said he was great Iden. I f . n renllv ^e Repub lean party tremendous personal effort on bocouso It was racist. ■ his port " ■ -
Nixon originally had planned tho notl,onar level dnd In the ................................ state executive “.committee,to shake the hand . o( every
delegnte but decided before his Abrnhsm sold. " I hove bow speech to cut It short, U-ylng o gel \Uie party
He shook hands for nearly i.n “W n l f d [“>■ Nixon but Uie
hour on the small platform ’ f ”--built Immediately In front of Abrohnm sold the Republicans
Uie podium bearing the- Pres- oompalgnlng. nnoong
Identlal seal ond Uie lino was South Carolina Incut off. Mrs. Nixon Btumbled v^r uni secrocy to avoid ontaeo-
torword loklngly aa U Uie
couldn't stand any more while
- hundreds of peraona lammed i\' foot of the stairs crlyd.
" I don't think a successful^
campaign can be run for Nixon
id"Scn7^nrnim*tTnm(rTH^
»0h. no.Abraham said. }
Tlie four hadConvention gueat passes and twillpolnt pen. chont, “please don't go.' o n i«iSilt In the aisle in the bpck of Tfltsu Qgawa, an BO-year-old ' Us|ng 0 microjjhono lowered He said-ho would not rejoin
the h a l i W hen N lx o ruw a^ l iv e ,J a p n r te k H a w a iia n fo r m m I r o m _ t h e p o d iu m ,
minutes Into hiH spccch;'they JtJ'®wn Nixon for 20 yeflfa and Nlxbn dxplQlned that ho hewmo nn ndopendcnt.
held up a sign saying "stop the ■Wfil a^gUest at Julie and David hod a llghl day planned (of Abraham acnargeso(roclflm
_boriiblng|lntll8tarlcd tHtTslogan.
"1 anf guilty of.murder," une yslled J-iell- Ulc truthll We-Hl»0-Nlxim,- — _
. h.ivJ‘ sulloiod from this war!" ttoreon Allison, of l^uUi
"atop Uie TVOTa guest at Julio and David had a llghl day planned for Aoranam a cnargesoi racism
J shoutlnu Eisenhpwer.'s wrodng, prflsent^_'niuradiijUiut.told-thcrti-ii-U8ht-^-®-rfi-^®nl®^-by 4he-Rop.-U.S._ ed thOj President with a red .day (or him meant Irovbllng Loverott. a black South
"der’’ ime carn.itlon-lcl hO had brought*to acro.ss the. United States ^ ro jln a alternate delegate lo
'makfng five visits Uie tjOP convention.
/ Levorett is chalvniuii of the
. (I is(ihoiK one >s*(;uod{or t/ic.si! (Ifiys. . ,
Dakota, gave him u -large,
green button reading. ‘Tm
(rom South DakotaT McGovern
doeso't sp«ok (or mo:” She said told Nixon, he was leading 2
i...
A thought for. the day: British Wack, division' o ! h is 's tate ’s popt Robert Southwell, sold.'(^"^nnittqo for Ro-elociiun o(
'.‘Wlien fortune smiles, I smllo the Prosl'dont, antf ho acknow*^,
tp think how qUlckly.'ahe will runnlflg“ n very 'frown.;' i quiet cacnpaign. ,« ' ■ '
The brualied Icathur oxford with a bump toe and »haped heel. It’s'the look growing
Rirli like and jt 'l in the
^-grown-up ^izci they need»
B a n k ^ a r d s W e lc o m e OPEN FRIDAY NfGHTS 'TIL 9 P.M.J
DOWNTOWN S, LYNWOOD
: ' I --
6 Twin Idtho Thuriday, Auouit.a4, YW
N. Viet launches ‘’"11!’“*'attack
— ^AIQON-WPI;)-NorU^-VI»U-Natisrunerth^lown-was-hlJby-norUi^l-'niiinB-Blnlir^liii: namew troopi nicnoclng South M-rouficln ot tiro from IJOrtim govornmont cBiusltloa were
NEWBEnO,‘ 0 » . (UPII - QuakeVi In the
PacUlc Northweil vottd Wedneaday to^hgld a
. telleMrrilldg campaign to.urgo tht banning of alcoholic bovoragea on alrllnera.
" H i» yaarly mettlng of Frienda aald thay.aliO-
oppoiod Uu lowering of the legol drinking age and the aale and-nae of marijuana.'
The cAurch, wlth^M congtegallona In Oregon,
igtCD'Trad idsh07~ils6~urged”Tf~lettw
. Vletnum'fl aeo)nd largest-city
of Dfi Nang hit a hoarby district capital with artillery, Wodnos-
day and launchod a ground
atttack on a srhaller townUS miles ffonf\ the northorn port..
Other Communist -gunners
alio attacked a petroleum
field piocos and captured soven killed and 15 wounded.
158mm «unsWodnefldny,mllltfl- Tliang Binh U capital of one
ry sources snld. Three porflona of the two districts In l h e ‘
wore killed and 30 wounded as valley, and Quo Son is caplUltho North Vietndmese pushed of the other. Total Con>mlmlst
eastward-to follow up their control o/tho vital volley would
weekend success in capturing pose a stiff threat to Da Nang,Uie Important district town of an^ literally Qut South Vietnam
writing campaign to oppose any state lottery to '
raise governmental operation money.'
. complex arfd vlllogo six miles * Que Son and nearby fire base .in two. _ souUieest of Salgbn, spokcftmen’ noss -to oflfobllflh dominance in U.S. and South Vietnamese
aald. It was the closest attack the Quo Son Valley. pilots swept over northernmost
to the capital since Juno 2fl. UPI photographer Jeff Taylor' Qunng Trl Province Wednesday
In Saigon, tho U.S. command In Da Nnng said he saw South^ and destroyed 13 North Vletno*
todayonnouncedthat Uirpo U.S. Vlctnomose soldiers ln,_full mese thnka:
soldiers died iri Vietnam battle genr walking among the
Candidate
agrees to
debate
righting last week and 21 more
were wounded. Soutlr Vietna
mese battle deotlis totaled 017
for the wepk and Communist
war dead for the period wns 3,376, according-to-tho SnlKon
refugees leaving Thang Blnh- Y l fv vh w o 200 l io m o a w o re d e - IN C W S U l K e C O r d . i t r o y c i l a n d o h u g e ' f i r o w o i m a i i b i< i>i i . i c i u i i i ' Started b rthe barrage.
About six miles aOuU) of » ‘ "a Lou^.n. h WJlklmon. 44. bolh
high command.Thousonds of refugees fled
(the district cnpltfll of Tliang
Binhf 27 miles south of Dn
Ramsey
won’t be
prosecuted-- MIAMI-BEAGH-f-UPIt-
Justice Department has
plans to prosecute former
east of Saigon —Communist
commandos mad? “hit and
run” pnidfl on severnl villages
cost pf national hlglvwny 1,
demonslrjiting they could ,crfl3.s. tSTjrV Uie rood, military sources said.
Tliey said three “Happers” were
killed. .Tlie Sjil^on lilgh command
reported 5fi North Vietnamese
killed In an uttock on govern
ment positions near Duy Xuyen
district town, about 15 miles R".“n^drVi “ nS .south. of
POCATELLO.Idaho (U P I)- Democratic Senate hopeful
William E. Davis has agreed to.
a televised debate with his Re-
pubUcan opponent', provldng
anylndependent condldato for
the office bo allowed to Join
Bich«fci 6 aor#h. i». Vnd them.• nr* L •O im ftl* . it , M in Twin Pa lli. ^ .. _ , , . iCfiririrp-Ev.nTJrT70r»ndT3»bofiVr— “Both“DnV!S“and"nCD7"Jam08~.I>lnmn in >v<tn T>uln C«ll« DI.-harH . , f. _ I
A. McClure, R-Idaho, the Repu
blican aspirant for tho scat being
vacated by retiring Sen. Lon
... - B, Jordan, were asked earlier by Mirviou Television Network of Idaho
Uudoipn, JO. both Twin P a lll, Richard Ct^*rlt% Cappt, 10. Twin Fa lli, 0«l fl Arnold.. 21. Klmbarly. Wayna Voran. Tobtrar. 71. Duhl. and Pollyann 0 Pott, }0. Uillawa. N*D
Edward Gtorga Carpannr, 70, Twin........ " 'V i i a r i t F Wan»irom, JJ, Arco,
Q. K >fn«n, ii,'tr. 31 - ' -
Geni aide hits fatality rate
'BOISE (UPI) — Idaho Labor “Now they’re doing 1c m 'than
— Commissioner Bart Brown Wed* 10," ho Ba'id.‘‘'niey are not doing
ncaday accused the; federal' thelf Job." ^
government of contributing to . Because of the alleged failure
. Increased lniiualrla\ falallllfis in , of the federal government to do
thS state by falling to enforce the lob, Brown said, “We also
the Occupational Safety and..folji that both tho employers
Hoi^lth Act. • and eraployes In Idaho would bo
Brown said a comparison of better served by tho admlnlstrp-, tho accident and fatality rate tion and enforcement of the act
for the first six’mqnths of-1071 -on a atato level.*’ against tho same ]^rlod in J072
showetU Indus^ial deaths In Idaho increased by 07 per cent,
from 10 to 22. Ho added thl^
total- Included neither tho 01
Sunshine Mine deaths nbr the
state’s agrlculturol fatalities.
His comments came on the
heels of an earlier statement In
"'dcat continuously
Hcnlth Act of jOVO, (j,u
thn Wrcaa.Irnmod bSldlng waatho need for, more and better j
Mmprehensto
S i -Bpeotearso„‘‘ ln the bln.e’'
Oldest u n it........destroyed
GRETNA, Lo. (UPI) -
Tlio VoluntMr Fb-e Company
No. 1 Station has housed the
i»ti. 31, amTwin Fafl*
pn
Attorney General Hanisey
_gark-idiL-imtLwnr atatomfenlflark made in'North Vietnam.
Richard G. Klelndlenst, F^es-
ldont.NIxon^ attorney general,
sold WednesHny there was “no
credible evidence" that Clark ’
-Itod-vlolnted-fledlllorHnws:----
i lC Q n y ie t s ^ r e e -
Lovit Larton, 51. Twin Fall*, and «n nn nn n i*Jtan«ii» Snofl. }J, Hupari. Oary Otan n **P P «u r.
McClure has already agreed
to take part, his staff said, pro
viding the congressmon Is In the
state when the appearances ore
arranged for the two candidates.
Davis saltl he would be “de-
-opportu*-nity lo debate.
~^I-havo-o-lot-of-<juoflllonft-'I- wouUl like to ask my opponent
-rcgni'dlng-htnjttcndflTreinimi'
ItaxKr, ]9, FHtr. and Rebyn P 17.Twin FalU. Charlt* F Hooblir. 17. and HuDv C Richarduin, 41. tiolh Twin F a lli
Otnni* Richard «aln»Hln, 1*. K lm btrly. and Kathy J M llitr , 1*, Dolta Paul tu t t r o Jr ■ II, Rolia, and Opal L Kallay. 17. Kunoarly, Michatl John Tramoiay. JO, ard Connia S Ooyd. I?, oolh Moicow
Ricflard 0»M oon, IJ. and Darbara J Shulttn U, both Twin F a lli. Larry P. Raynoldi, 71, and Ka lhtrln L Sattlont, 70, boiti Twin FnlH. David n WHvon.'IV, Twin
C r i t i c a l 'VICE ADM. HVMAN' G.
niCKOVER, In testimony to the
House Appropriations Com-
mlttee last May and released
Wednesday, has called the
military's frequent rotation of
officers "a'form of corruption.” (UPI)
S iilH Ie r
BEl.FA S T ._ m £ lJ ^
ed with better ecucatlon and
training programs for all em
ployers ond employes.
“ However,Secretary Hodgson
in extolling the- virtues of- the act to the Idaho delegation (t9
the Republlcatlon National Con
vention ) In Miami did not bother to explain why the Labor E)e-
partment has not accomplished
this," he'sold. '
_______ "On Aug. a..,Gov, Cecil D.
Andrus wrote to...Hodgson ur-
~~ — pninyTe(of OSHA io reducing the num-
if-industrial-fatalUlo»-«nd—
Industrial accidents Inldoho to
n„r-Tno ^au lab le- re ^
COOL AND cuifortablei
five hostagesClark In o trip to Nortfi
Vietnam earlier this month'
denounced U.S. bombing ijnd called for an end to American
participation In the war.
Klelhdlenst said he would like
to see Qark and other antiwar
activists like Jane Fonda.
. DQvld Dellinger and WHUam Kunstler appear on television
every night.
if everybody heard
everything they suld, they
woul0 realize U)ey have no
programs,” Klelndlensl auld.
“They have no alternatives. All
they want to do Is eliminate the
free institutions in this country,"
Five convictjj who look a lab Tlie convicts, all described astechnician and two giiard.s ••Imrti core criminals," and
hostnye at knlfej>b|nt in the Uielr tliree htotages had been
inaximuni security Kddyvllle Uiside arf^Wowless hospital
Stale Penitentiary released pharmacy roorfi since 5 p.m.
tiiem unharmed today. 14 hours ( e d T) Wednesday.
. .. .. killed' a British soldier in avoting record over the post s li Cntholic nolBhborhood
years, Davis snld. "Idahoans Wednesday and a wave of
deserve some direct answers bomblnii, hit Northern Ireland,■One of the lively topics of indudlni! a blast by a bomb
£Chirc^s— tiod4a^-tttlok-and-flr«d4poiiwi--- wuspro4>mpt>—still undisclosed sources of funds
for his campaign,” the Poca-'
tello Democrat added. "Tills
topic Is of great concern not
Only to the average citizen, but
to many leading Republicans.”
after Ihc ordeal began.
"Kverythlng's O.K..” stale
Corrections Commissioner
Charles Holmes lolfl newsmen
gathered at the llHh Century
prison. "Kveryone’s safe."-
sliptyun.
An army spokesman said «
sniper bullet hit tlie soldier in
the head as he was palroHing
the Andersonstown d lslrid In Belfast.
Assistant Superintendent Wll-‘
Ham Uisley had promised the
five Inmates no physical
punishnienl would be doled put
if they surrendered.
State police ringed Ihe prison,Holmes had rushed hert* from located in a scenic areo of
his liome at Frankfort, the southwestern Kentucky hear
state capital about 200 miles Uie Illinois border. Gov. Wen-
uway, whfii {he Inmales dell Ford had authorized "anyrefused to discuss their de- action necessary to prevent
iTianda witii inslllution officials, twdlly harm to any of the
wjying they would talk only to j»uards.”
SNOOPY,COMEHOME!
snvu uur it)ySi source — human' beings.
this date, no anwer
has been received by the gover
nor," Drown said.
ed by .lhe federal-act from
making safety inspecllons,
Drown pointed out. "We were
doinj; an averaj'e of between
200 and 250 inspections a month.
::^£levisiojL SxihedulesT h u rtd a v , A u g u it >4. 1177
A l J p.m. or» c tia n n o lj 3b. } ,ind 11 - Movto "ApACho U p fii in o ’• R ory Caltwun f it iM aq<ilr> in _ th is
"w ostoro It ' is ari ac iibn ialt* o( cow tx iy t v»."ou tlaw s and rem^uadu
. Indians II Is repea l and runs lo r two hours. Corinne Calyot, John Russell a n d \.o n Chaney a lso s ta r
E v tn lrtg 4:00
J » l . i - News. W eather. Sports It j. 1, 4sl - T ru th or ConsFquences 7sl — Sesame Street 70 - Hee Haw ‘I - AAod Squad n - K id Power
t':30Jsl - Ironside
■■ Drug .P il t i
4Ti-ll7sl • W orld Pros^ "
10:10;U. U. n - J otm ny Cctr^iin
' 10 M inu lus• 10 ;Ji
M ov iv "V illa g e o l the Ddmnc-<l'4, 3 Uig Ptsh Show
I 0 :«i - M o v .f "K e l lv and M o”
ie;SO3 M ovie "T h e TiQcr and the Puisyca'f
11:004sl - Nows, W eather, Sports
11:10 4i l - DICK Caveti
J — AAy Three Sons HI - DriavrnUrtiFr*
J — To Be AnnouncetJ U — T h re iD o o N lg^ t. Concert
30. 3, 11 — M ovie "A pachel lp fls ln fl"4 il - K id P o w tr,40. 7 il - M ii l t r o o e r i iO , I — JUUe Ip e c iA i
T iMMl - Or Simon Lo ch t 411 - Three Doo N ioh l. Concert 40 - lo o k Beat 7 il - l le c t r ic Company
' l iMM l. )b. I - BobOy D arin V a rie ty 4«l - Ju lie . Special?il - j a i t 8#r40 - Idaho O u ld oo ri > « iNH I. lb . I - NBC A O vtn lu re ih e a le f }D - M a n n ii ) - - To Be Announced t t l - •O W itt M a rih a U
.40. U l H o l ly w o o d Television TheatreI — In g e iM r l H u m b ird in ck
M l - H aw a ii F ive 0 lOiM
M l, }b, 1, y I, 11 . News. W ta l^e r. Ip o r i t - 4sl Perry Mason
F r id a y . August ] l , 1*MAl • p m on Channel 4sl — AAovie
••EKperlm ent In T e r ro r ," a th rille r ' aooui a psychotic c r im in a l who i r iM to b la ckm a il a benh te lle r m io
-^m-tininira-TTDnTBOO. rilm ed 'onlocatlon-ln San F r'anc lico . Ihe t ilm Is h iahlghted .by a de ip e ra le chasethrouoh C an d le s tlck 'P a l'K "------------
■ venlnv ' tiM
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) - T ruth or Consegufnces 4«l> >b. I ' Summ er O lym pics U l - Seasame Street 11 • O ’ Hara
t()0Is i ^ f lC Nwws W hite Paper on v ie in a mi - M's A Smal\ W orld 4b D iac 'ric Company > — M y Three Sons................ »iOO - • - - •30. J. 11 - Pro Footoall
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Thuridav, A oou it u , 1«73 TlmM-N«wV, Tvy|;i F * l l i , ItUho 7
Idaho ffrm feels environmentalist pressure on new Wyoming pBy DWIGHT JENSEN
— S|wdil.to the T taw N ew i■vROCKSPnlNaS, Wyo. - Id« l» Powor.Co. Is
building lt» fltrt >l»8m BenoroUngplant^nni ' fHllng lha creuure of envtronmentallui o i b
re«J.I____ r' . .
About 39 mllM ettl by northoul of Rock
'Sprbiga, near a wide spot In.tire rood collod I^ ln t ot tloclu, cotiitructlon Is at Ua peak on tho
Jim Brldgor Power Plant.
Ute (Irst unit Is to go on tho lino within two
years, It the Job stays on schodulo.
Later In tho decade, when tho plant la com-
pleto. It wlU Include three units generating I s
million volts — half o million (or Jdoho Power
and a full million (or PacKlo Power and Uslit
~Co;, WWCtnratllMnglho cost o( tho plant.
Iho Wyoming site was selected because I t Is
close to tho raw.materials. 1110 plant Is being
’ built adjacent to a large bod of low-grade coal
that con be strlp^mlned at cijmporatlvoly little
cost. A 42-mllo pipeline wUl bring water from
thoGreen River. Burning coal and boiling water
will form steam to power the generating tur
bines.
As recently as |ts 1671 annual report to^
stockholders, Idaho Pjwer was.boastlng o f '
being an 11-hydro company, ana publishing
— photograph»-of-lts-m»ny-plBnttr^'niousin3 ^rlngs,'Malad River, Hells Canyon, Swaif Falls
and so on. But hydroelectric sites ar« running
. out and tlie company has at laat turned to sttam
generation-.--- 1--
reduce particulation emission) to on. absolute . back Into the soil-will b« cleaner'lhan when it minimum. Thli smoke ItseK will rlsi up a 900-
:(oot<smokostack before going out into the at
The concept is simple. Coal from tho nearby
fields will be crushed to dust and burned at high
temporoturos to boil wotnf bi ovorhead boUers.
The steam will bo'drawn off to power turbines
that will generote electricity. The condensed
steam will then bo cooled and reused in the boilers.' .
But tho builders are having to deal with en
vironmental issues. A (ederal government
report listed many possible sources o( ecological damage;
—Smoko omissions. These could darken the
air nearby, and oven bo carried away to con
tribute to ah pollution at distant pohita.Idaho Power has spent millions o( dollars on
anti-pollution efforts^ Including the building of
precipitators that tho company believes will
. mosphere, and the high smokestack is designed
to help reduce pollution.
7 -Land damage ftvm strip-mhiing and ditch-
digging. The companies say they will reseed
—mbiedout-areas-as soon as they'ro through-
worklngthemtAU.S. ForestS^vlceofficlBl says
that reseedbig a mined area is "Ijke putthig a
Band-Aid on aftef you've ah'eady boon cut."
It also prpmlsos to bo careful about digging
the ditch for the water pi|Hllne. and to restore
tho surface to-lts hotural appearance after tho
pipe is laid.
Environmentalists aren't sure the natural
appearance can be restored — the earth in that
area may bo too delicate, they say. And tho
■ (ederal government says It will not grant rlght-
o(-way over it^ land unless it is satlsded in
advance with tho restoration plans.
—Possible water pollution or deterioration In
water quality resulting (rom use o( water in the
plant. 'Tho company says that whatever water 'is
rotumed to tlie river or allowed to be dischorijcd
shortage of energy, Uectrical and other^
came out of the river. . wise,and construction of new generating pUmti '
—The effect bn wildlife. There can be.nordoubt---- is IrapaaUvsTWd iriT righrU iofat u pteplt
that much wildlife will reb'eat from the bn-
medlate area of the plant. The government la
worried that the effect may be too widespread
' and lo n g - la s t in g ._______^ ____-. ' '
.^The effecta d( the transmlssltm line. Hila
line will run MS miles to Pocatello.,Hie route
has already been explored (or archaeological
sites. Environmentalists worry about the e(- (ectsOn land and vegetation of the construction,
ond the govonunent report also notoa that the
route could become a favorite anowmobUe trail
and snowmobilers are known to sometimes
harass wildlife along the router either
.deliberately or by accident.
So (ar there has been no concerted effort to,
halt construction of tho plant, but future steam
' genorathig plants are likely to face an uphill
fight.
One sot of questions that haa not been asked
ls,"Do wc need this extra powerl
The power company says' we are facbiB a
and bushiess are, using more and more elec
tricity, oil, and other types of energy.
But a (ewyoicei are btglnnbig to u y that our
goal should be to operate on less energy and
begin lb preserve some of these resources.
Dr. Barry Commoner, for blstance, dies
many methods of reducing energy consumption.
He pobits out that making beverage cans out of
aluminum instead of steel used ateut sbt times
as much energy.
And traitsportbig goods or people by motor
vehlcl»-truck or car—Instead of on railroads,
takes about six times as much fuel, causes
about six times u much pollution, and uses lip
four times as jmiich land tor right-of-way.
Generally speaking, however, Americana
expect to use more and more energy and, faced
, with this demand, the.power companies plan to
' build more and more generatbig plants.
Dul a ma)or political battle over the Issue
many bo only' a (ow years oway.
C o n v e n tio n - re s e m b le s ^ l^ tro m c
hall of mirrors for. brief momeiit
the briefest moment Tuesday
night, the Republican National
Convention was like an electro
nic hall of mirrors, a gigontic
infinity game being played
across a television screen.
always is ensv to ^ e l
have used film and various
types of-graphics in the past. But tl)ere never bus been such
sucked up In the excitement of
a political convsntlon. When the
balloons come cascading down,
the signs bob crazily ond the
country of Pennsylvania, not
the worm noodlo'soup zanlneas
of Miami Beach.
Thlngs^started getting mixed
up on Tuesdoy.' First, In the
midst of convention business,'
-Uje*4iugfr lrlple-1
movie obfiut Nixon.
And. of course, tho sccnes of the President breaking bread
wiUi Chou En-lol wore about
things that really hoppenbd
earlier this year and praOtlcally
-had— aeeiT”otlng the rostrum suddenljT S v ls lo n .
-begoJuihowlng-ProsldentNixon---Hf-thot-last-refereneo-iloes-
a mix of the media before, such
S n i » k c N ( i i e k o f l l r i < l ( ' « > r p l u i K
noise rises wind ahead
of a tornpdo, it Is an effort of
will to keep from being drawn
Into the scene.
But this convention has
something added. More than
any otlier in the two decades of
full-scale television convention
coverai^e, this oi)e was tailored
for the screen ond all Its uses.
A {ir\e thing for lolKs al home
In front^of Ihe set, but strange
If you’re part of It.
"aTil^U ing opw har la really
happening before your eyes,
what was filmed and edited In
a darkroom and what Is being
broadcast to you, as they say.
‘Tivc."
In ■ the first day of the
convention, It was fairly easy to
keep the ephemeral separated
from the real. After all, Dwight
D. Eisenhower is dead, and the
scones of his widow seated in a
comfortable living room could
arriving at the airport. Several not make sense'to people whd
_thmisand-pQQple_MihQ_hpd_becn—watched—tho— convontlon-
doing something themselves
that wos being broadcast as a
newsworthy event found them-
selvei watching someone else
doing something even more 'Important, and in fact, part of
the point of it all.
I..ater, the fantasy of film
became real when someone few.
persons had seen In the flesh,
cowboy actor John Waj^e,
appeared In that condition
before the convention to Intro-
television Tuesday night, it is
because they saw m entirely
differentjNlxon film from the
one shown delegates.)Putting'that small goof aside,
thp convention proceeded to .
nomlnotfe’^ lx o n to run for a
second term as President. As
each state was callcd, Its
delegation chairman onnounced
the vote and was shown on
those big screens In the front of
the hall.
Laird criticizes McGovern^s p lan
Walkout
protests
firingCHICO,^Calif. (UPl)-Union
employes walked off their Jobs
at a match manufacturing plant
Tuesday to protest the firing of — —thrcB^TOJns^OTTtFvlng'lol^
----------- imit^--------------:------------------- r,-----Officials at the Diamond
International plant sold r the
three employes were fired July 17 because-'tholr halr-stylfls do-
not conform to ,, compony
' stundardi." 1110 poilcy stotos
that holr could not bo bolow the
I collir. .
About 170 momborn of the Workera' Union, M illm en’ii
Union Locil \m of tho
Brotherhood of Curpontem and Jolnteri walked off tho Job
ofter uttornptfl by ii fodonil
inodlutor to rsiiolvo Iho iMue
foiled,----. -------- -------
’Legality of
driver plan
assuredBOISE (UP!) - A ipokoimon
for tho Alcohol Safety Action
ProjBctAayi thore’B nothlnH Illegal about providlnB flnfln.clal
L m ililan c fl____to--- « lR 8d[lo_proaocullop of drunken drivoro.
Director L C. "Colty" Lowry
said Qoodlna County
Pros'ocutor Mtlrow F. Jwno® rnlsunderitjttndi the progrnm.*
Jfimos lald lo it wook the
program tiould bo lllogal
- bocttuio it would phy up to 1280 ‘ per caiie for handling tho
incroaiod nunibtf of-cagoi-
. --rUwry oxplfllnwj Jhe monw- • goes to cltlos and coWtTos whorothere iB a backlog o r iu ch ..
coiei.Heaold It la to bo usodto lUre assistants to help the
proa^Qutors dispose of the
cnsea.
SACRAMENTO, Calif.‘ {UPI)
—Defense Secretary Melvin
l.aird. Insistinfi he was not
engaging in partisan politics,
said during u visit here that Sen. George McGoycrn's pro
posed military cutbacks would
■■amount to unilateral disar-
mament."
l..aird emphasized Tuesday
Uiat he has tried to be
“religiously bipartisan,” but
said he ■‘cannot sit by and
a lB ^ someone to moke those
cH'arges” that the defense
budget could be almost halved
without Jeopardizing tlie notion
al security.
“A cut in the nature of |20 or
130 billion would amount to
unilateral disarmament and
would gravely endanger our
national security; severely Im*
pnlr the prospects of .peace and ■put an end to successful
negotiations toward greater -Intemntional stablllty-*^r:alrd
said.
C b j r a / a m n n m : . .
T o p . m odels
TOP MODELS In the Jerome County fair M l
Btyle review Tuesday night were Jan Mcchom.
lefti Junior division, ond Ann Peterson* ^6,
senior model.
Man fin e d 2 models named Jo jLdrug---atJ^r-ome-£ai]possession
GOODING — A Jerome niun
pleaded guilty Wednesday lo
charges of possession of u
conlrollod^suUslancTS orrd
disordorly conduct before
— --6oodtiiy Cuuiiiy ■MuyrBtTf
Qmrles C. Shjjw.
-Riehard- -Kulhunek-
fincd 142.50 for the disorderly
conduct.
Prc-senlcfice irwcaltKallon
was ordered prior to scntenclnK
for possession of the controlled
substance. Kultinnek was
arrested at Niagara Springs on
March 17 for disorderly con
duct. Tlie second charge was
entered when the'aubstance wus
discovered during booidng
procedures.
Kulhanek was released on
bond.Officers said tlie possession
charge wus brouglit during the
short period in which the Idaho
Crim inal'' Code had boon
revised. Under the code in ef
fect on March 17 possession of a
• controilod substanco Is a
misdemeanor.
JEROME — Top models in
Uio 4-H style review were
named Tue^ay night at the
Jerome County Fairgrounds as
part of the week-long activities
the fair and rodeo. l.ee Ann Peterson, 11
, award for the ton model In the
senior division and Jan
Mecham, 12, in Uiu Junior
division. ~
. Top winners in the style
review plus livestock and other
department winners will show
in the fairgrounds arena at fl:30
p.m. Friday. At tliis time
awards will be made with Jim
Messersmitli acting as nuister
of ceremonies.
Tills is the first time that all
the award winners have been
assenibled for one showing and
the event is expected to become
a regular par.t of the fair in the
future,officials said.
Wednesday exhibits were
with judging being
i_todiiy-
llie Ray Cununack Carnival
McGovernremainsfirm
WASHir^GTON (UPI) -Sen. G«orge 8 , McGovern • will
remain ‘‘it^lwart' to the prln* eiplei” of hU proposed welfare
refown program, Arthur Okun,
former chairman of tho Council
of Economic Advisors and now a McGoVem consultant, sala
Wedne^oy. ‘
- McOovorn's wolforo reform program hos been the target of
horivy criticism from Rep^ubll-
cons who hove doHdod It as o
giveaway. ' • ^
Okun acknowledged to a
reporter that McGovern’s pro-
posal as released earlier this
year was "distinctly tentative/'
but he snld "tlie.candid airing
It received will Itfad to n
progrom with broad acceptabl* llty.”
In a speech delivered Tuea*
day . before the New York
Society of ■ Security Analysts,
Okun said President Nixon’s
record was “dramutlcaily dis
m al” and warned that “no
previous incumbent administra
tion has 'Created so much
uncertainty about what its economic polic'y would be in a
second term of office."
In an. attack on critics of
-McGovorn^j-eoonomio-poiiciosr- Okun said “ it’s time to cut out
Uie mischief of painting Karl
Marx’s beard ^un 'George
McGoVern's picture.”
McGovern is scheduled to
address the same group next
to give
details on changes in his tax
-,and welfare proposals-------
Okun, who was council-
choirmiin durini.' thc_ Jfjhnson
and will be playing unti Friday night.
A western Jamboree on
Saturday night will complete
U»e weok-long activities. Seven
teams will compete from
Shoshone. Gooding, Valley,
IV in Fails, and several from
Jer(jme. Frank Slieppeard is in charge of arrangements,
administration, told United
Press International, however, tliat he expected McGovern to
remain “stalwart to the prin
ciples" on welfare reform,
■ As for his tax' program, Okun
predicted McGovern’s reforms
would ' ‘refic'ct his desire for a healthy advance in both private
investrijent and corporate after
tjix Income in a prosperous aiid
growing economy,''
^Loved not understood^TALLAHASSEE, Fla, (UPD
—Observing thot “women are mode to be 'loved, not to be
understood,“ the Florida Su
preme Court ruled Wednesday
that a Miami woman separated
from her muitl-mllllbnalre hus
band was entitled'to his support rights for women) that classic
despite a pre-marriage contract observation of I^rd Byron in
ruling out alimony payments. his 'Pearls of Wisdom': *Wo-
The high court said "perhaps men are made to be loved—not
a husband must consider to be understood’,'' the court(nothwithatandlng today's 'wo- observed.
men's llb'-for extended 'equal'
Boy's Shorts And T-Shirts From KentfieldQuality T iHlrtt and ihorti, 100% lo ft whll« cotton. Boy'i i lz « i 10-20, Non-iag nam lB ii,
~ j 6 l l a r , c e m r e l l r t t —i h f t n l c o g r —Strest levgl.
at savings timely clearance o^ classroom fashions for boys & young men
299
“Regulor b.OO Long Sleeve “ Shirts For BoysLatest fashion — dura press cut and sown shirts. Famous m aker, washable cotton in solids, p rin ts , a n d ' sFripes. Tan Sizes 8-20.
299-BoysBody-Shirts, Reg. 5.00 a t Big Savings NowBoy's Custom O rig in a l body shirts. Choose from solid co lors o r p rin ts, j] | | petm onenf press. Sizes 8 to 20. Sove on this needed school item now!
.50Sox fo r Boys By Munsing- wear and Kentfie ld Save!Regularly priced at .79 1.00 a pair, lox in oil colon fbTtym :k~^ftr^ichool—Quolliy— mode for long wanr. S iiM7 to 9, and 9 to ) 1. Street level.
299
Double-Knee Jeans, Reg Priced 4.50Rugged double-kee jeans for boys, a t savings. Perma- press c o tto n po lyes te r in brown, blue, go ld , navy. Sizes 6 slim to 12 reg, Street level.
/
199BoyVDeninT-----J ^ n s , Reg., 4,50. Ftere Leg StyleDenim jeont, tizei 6-)6 for boyi at loving i now. Swob* bifl itytB-wtTtrfttfme~gi, Son-
~forrzvch fo k i 5'dvantoge oT~ th ii back-to-ichool icvingi.
T H E JB O B I M A R C H E
“TWINFALtS"
sale 9.90STURDY AGMEBoy's H am ess Boot• Send, hirn back to school in th e ro u g h e s t, to u g he s t b b o t a roO nd — Harness Boots b y A cm e. Rich d a rk le a th e r u pp e rs w ith co m p o s itio n o ve r-s tich e d sole fo r lo n g ‘ w e a r . S iie s 8V2-3. a n d 3 'A to 6 , p rice d 9 .9 0 M en'b sizes q t ,18.90. Second level.
like it? Charge It!
" T V .
/ T h i ^ l ^ i x o i i .
lias lost, tooBOUNTIFUL, Utah , (UPI). - Rlchnrd M.
s Nhon, who hos {^(^col ambltldni but luiowa .
wh^t lU like to bo n loser, rcglBicrcd tp vote hero
Tuesday lilght. ' . *
The l!)i<ycarol(l ipcdlcfll student ond his wife
Pamela were (liti'last of the newly enlroHchlscU voters In their district to register. They signed
on as Ropublleans. . . '
NUon sold he had nin for office, severnl times:- OMce being elected second-grode
president ond the other running for the eighth
grade presidency and polling only five votes'llc
soys he'll-try again despite the^etbnck. ■e^ei
Jordan may make
peace with Israel
DyRWIGHTJEfisEN Spcclal ^0 thd TInies-Ncws
M IAM I BEACH - J ‘th la
economic question is going to
mnkc US or breiik u&as a natiorv U la a Wb or dpalh Issuo."
. ■ 'Omt is how strongly George
nomncy, secretary of Housing iind . Urban Development,
■'stroased the tiocketbook
question at a briufing of. five delegations at tlic Republican
. N u tio n ./ i.l C o n v e n t io n
Wudnesdijy.
Ilomney headqtl a team of
- administration officials who
talked to delegationa from .Utah, Montana, Arizona,
Hawaii and Kentucky about lipw to re-el«cl the president.-
Dicse delegates said almost
s e e sunnnlmoiiflly’ they think the.
most imik)rti)nt Issue this year
Is Iho economy.^ ;___________■Romnoy prrtlMd tlie prosldoht
for his actions on economic
Issues. Hc i id Nixon analyzed
tlio matter carcfuIly bbforo
imposing wogo and’ price,
controls. Ronuiey callcd tliose
controls essential to tlie pres-
erVntion of ''competitive enterprise."- lie said uncmploymcntis now.
tower than it was in 10G4 and
Uint Uie United States ‘'has
luindled its Innutioi'i problem
better tliah any other country in
tliG free world. We don’t know
whnt the figures are in
Communist nations, but we
luive less inflation than .any
Thuriday/ j i ; 1W3 .^Tlrtim-Novili, '"liwln F«l'l|>’ld»ho
a soUi'er free nation on eartli.V
Romnoy said that when Nixon
took office in 1009, "he inlierlted
Uie gravest crisis In American
history . V The crisis of Jho spirit. Richard Nixon did,a Job J
don't believe - any- other
American la qualified,to do.”
Romney said one reason for
re-electing Nixon is that “he has put an end to legislative action
by the U; S. Supremo-,Court. Wc
-no.w_have li_court-that^ is as
concerned about the victim as It la about the crUnlhal.."
Romney also credited the
president fo? reversing a
century long trend toward fed
eral centralizatipn. As jiart of
thid reversal, Rgmney endorsed
the President's revenue
is s u eahjirlng. . ‘said the President is ending tho director pf. th(S Environmental ' *
He snld President Nixon vvor. "Don'tTTatinhdorrBUCccsfl Protoctioh-Agoncyr said-‘‘The
wants to reform Uic_wclfar.<Lfor-Ui«haphakardpiJllcyofSon. Pro ildont’s . rccord- -In— T- program ^ t^U lired objectlvea McGovcrn,":Kl.6in-iiald.- • ' environment i i unporrnoUod in inm lnd. TIioSoonwelforowlM) W llllam-R'uckelshaua, the American bUtory.''*j . nro. able to work ought to work ‘ . vor be dropped from tho welfare
roles. Welfare should not break
up families forcing the liusbahd
■to leave home. And people on
welfare should not got more
money tlmn people who work!"
Herbert----K lc ln r thePresident's director of
communications, reviewed the Nixon foreign policy anXi
praised the Preaidoht for
"n eg o tia t in g m ean ing fu l
agreements" wiU» tho Soviet Union. He attacked McGovern's •
Vietnam, policy as naive and
N EW DIET PEPSItaste pfeo rBafc; ' apptjbieTake!
Diitpepsit. \
Dolil«cJ>iotl#<.tb* doilton'fy'oi pepuCo. N Y, '
TEL AVIV {UPD-Dofense
Minister Moalie Dayu’n beheves
Jordon. Is prepared to make
|)encc with Israel wlUiout
waiting for Egypt, the newapa-
|)er Yedloth Ahrondth said
Wednesday.Under a banner headline, the
front page story said Dayan
Have tills assessment in a tiilk .
to a groLjp of Labor Party
leaders.
“According to Dayan, an
ngreement with Jordan* could be based on Jordanian agree
ment to allow Israel security
Installations along the Jordan
River, to denationalize tlie West
liunk. to make minor border
alterations and to leave the question of East Jerusalem
open to further negotiation."
-tJio-gtopy-^ id
A Defense Ministry spokes- . man,-while-not dwiying- Uiii_
story, said it. was Inaecurate.
He would not elalMrate.
Accordittg to Yedioth Aliro-
noth, Dayan said Jordan has
softened its.policy following the
Soviet exodus from Egypt. King
Hussein Is reportedly ready to
be tnore flujdble, especially in
his demand that Israel return
all of East Jerusalem.
Israel captured East Jerusa- ■|e(n and the West Bank of
Jordan in the 19ti7 Middle Eiist
War, its troops pushing to the
Jordmi River cease-fire line.
’Jlie Yedioth story came two
days after Dayan had met with
tile mayor of Gaza' City. Rrashid al-Siiawa, who had Just ruturnud from tiilks with King Hussein in Amman.
Objects
probably
balloons-WK'HITA. Kan. (UPI) -
Iliose red, orange and green
unidentified Hying objects seen
bobbing above the Central
Kansas plains for the past few
w|eks may be nothing more
Ufiui helium-(il,led weather bal- luutts, an Army-Navy store
ijwner says.
iiliu siwulU know, June
•Kriedinan said Tuesday, since -sbti-iias-suliLuibout—100-of-Uiti-
SWENSEN'S MARKETS PROUDLY Proudly Present. . .
W O R L D 'S S M A iL E S Tm N E B O T T L E !!— The Thompson.'Flask — otherw ise known as the Thompson seedless grape.The Ecblogically perfect, com pletely blo-degradable beverage container. This T H ^ ^ J L I D S O Msm all hot,tie can be e a te n jig h t a lo n g w ith the contents w itho'ut any unpleosant *effect to the teeth , m outh, or,s ton jach . In fact, it's g reat fu n ll Because a t SEEDCESS
^ w e n s e n :^ -M a g ic MarUets-this w e e k e iid , thes& little Thom p^on-w ine-bottles a re -------- --------------------------filled w ith pure, sugar-sw eet, fresh g ra p e juice an d can be purchased a t the pre- M n r sprohibition price of 2 5 ‘ lb. B UN O J l: I f y o u 're lo o k in g fo r v in ta g e w in e w ith th a t n ice a ro m a far the l i t t le i M W . . . . ^ .b ubb les , y o u 'l l h a ve to go to a b ig g e r b o ttle a l a n o th e r sto re . ' This week Is the peak of the seedless erape harvest, so PUY.NOW.. . , f . 25 IB. lu g ’ 6.00
u.s.iijimnCHUCK-'STEAK 59 c
lbROUND BONE O A T
SWISS STEAK 89 lb
Uiree weeks to purchasers wtio told-her they attach flashlights
iM.'iide and outside to -‘scare;iny
neighbors to deatii." ' -
. PoUce7"howc*m,~said' the' UKOs aru ’ too fast Xy be
ballounj), ^Dan Garcia, an investigator
■for \he InteriUitjonal UnidciitU.. fiod- Kiying Objects Bureau in
Oklahonia City, has theorized
tlif obJect.s are scouts'for a
.moUicr siiip. «
AlmanacBy United Press International
Today is lliursday, Aug, 24,
Uie 2:i7th day of 1072 with 121) to
fullow. .The nioun is full
llie morning stars are
Mercury, Venus and Siiturn,
Hie evening stars are Mars
.and Jupiter.Ttiosc horn on th B datil are
under llm slBn ol Vil'iio.
Ilornun Qithullc Ciirdlnnl
lUthiird CuaWri« wus liorn Aiii).
24., 1IIU3.On Ihia (luy ill hlalw y : ,
III 70.-A.D.. Hiousuiida, wurc
klllcil'uml Ihu d llta M Pompeii
luid Horluliinciiiii buriod by the
eruiilion of voicnnlc Mount
Vesuvius laJta ly . > ' In 1814, Uio British captured-
Wnalilnijlon. D.C., burning tho
Uilillol ..Bulldlnii ond Iho
Enecutlvu Munnlon.
I n , 1032, Amelin Eorhnrt
bcL'ume tho .first wuinun lo
iiiiike a trunscuntlni/tul non-’
, 4 p nrnlit. ' ■ ' ■In 10^, Franco deton)itcd Itji
■ rimt hydrogon-bomb- to-tho-
South PocHtc. ' .
_ _ _ _ ^ B A N N O C K B R A N D
w^BACON SQUARES 19c
lb
FRESH PORK
NECKBONES 12C
lbSIGMAN'S “ GOLD NUGGET”
HAMSBONELESS AOWASTE FREE » V W VFULLY COOKED. LB.
L O G A l NO. 2
POTATOES5 0 LB. B A G
SEA STAR 1 LB. PKG.M E A T P IE S I pkh- *
0TURKEY for
FRESH G R O U N D
B E E F^ - H j 7 - P k q . . ................... . ■
# M 2 S IZ E
D E U M O N T E
T U N A
39 cea
TA STE W EL I-
MARGARINE
CASELOr SALE!!fr u it PRICES ARE GOING UP!!
-Pen^t-tol«e-otrr-word-for- W u rt-o-couple-pf-rn o rtth i u jid bBtj fo r your-se lf . C a n n i n g f r u i t is v e r y s c a r c e o n d t h e s e p r i c e s a r e t h e b e s t y o u ' ! s e e t h i s y e a r .
CALIRaSE2tSIZEAPRICOTSC A U R 0 S E 2 'A S IZ EPEACHESrannosEiMzrPEARS 35* *W ESTERN FAMILY 2 ‘/ ’ SIZE ■
PORK & BEANS Casebf 24‘6”... 2 7 *"w e s t e r n f a m il y 303 SIZE
CAN
c a s eOFea 24 .............
FRUIT COCKTAILrs 26MAGIC MARKETS CALINDA 1 T 0 Z .
TW PCO NVENIENTIO CATIO NS M ANDARINA r-— ----- ORANGES
' L
00CASE OF 4...... # 4 0 0
sfoRE I^OURSi 8 a .m . 10 10 p.m . MON.'-TKru SAT. CLOSED EV^PY SUNDAY '
. PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY. FRIDAY, SATURDAY an ^ MONDAY
T TASTEWEIL2K1 SIZE
TOMATOES/$ • 00 CASE ' SO F 2 4 '.
9 8
L O C A L 2 3 SIZE
CANTS( H U G E ! )
S | 0 0J W L .
KR AFT FULL POUND PKG.MARSHMALLOWS
$ ^ 0 0PKGS;
LIBBY’S 211 SIZEPIHEARPLE
. MUBlE LHcf0 3 S IZ L ♦5.-*
VAN CAMP’S - 8 OZ.
1 0 > :O ll
\
m I!
10 T(m«*'N«wi«\Twln F«l|i« Idaho 'piMtdAy. Auguit 94/1973
l ^ e G o ^ e r h ^
- ‘ ■ L '
WASHINGON (UPD-Henry
■ Klmclmon. flnancc dlroctor far tiio M ^ovcrii campnign, said
Wodnosday that tho bcmooratic • non^nefl's hqadquortorts had
r^f^ve'd sovoral mlllion'dollors during Uio l)ast monUi from
about Icndcrs.Aad contrl-
biilors. ' ' , .Kimclmnn said 00 per ccnt of
■■ Uie Individual givora h a d ^ n t
' less Umh. 1100 apicco. I ^ h o . acknowledged that a N ow ^m (^
TiVncs story', pubUslicd Wcdncs-
' day, was correct U)at jjrillllons
iii Joahs and donntlons had
come from nnHlonairotf, some of
‘tfiem young and with Inheritod wealUi.
Tlie next official reports from
all committees working for
presidential candidates arc due
at the General Accounting Of
fice Sept: 10...
Tltoso named In tlic Times
' i;iiciuded Stewart Mott, 34, scion
of a large General Motors C^rp:
stockholder; Alan Davis,' 24,
New York, a law student;
Morris Dees, Montgomery, -Ain., attorney; Julian Price', 31,
Oregon farmer and heir to a
North Carolina insurance com-
' pany fortu;ie, and Max Factor
III, 20, of ' the cosmetics
producinn company.
Mott was quoted as saying
tiiat he had loaned or pledged more than $500,000 .to George S.
■McGovern’s pre-convention aiid — general-oloctlon campaigns.-If
Mc(jOvern w ins.iio .said, ho
would Ilko to work on wmo special projocta Uiat most o^
t}>6 young large contributor's wore Interested in Issues, not
jobs'in (|,McGoven admljilstra- tion. . . .
Davis was quoted as saying
that McGovern is "a man who
speaktf for Uio p ^p le and needs
an alternate boutcc of help.’’.
Dees said he wasconcerned
about Uie war and regarded President Nixon hs a tliroat to
civl) llbectles.Others nam6d ()y tlie Times
as concerned about Uie war were. John H .Gutfround, 42,
partner In a New York, brokorago firm , and Marin
Pere’tz, 33, Harvard faculty
m em b^.Milerf L.' Rubin, 42, U)s
Angeles businessman, a fund
raiser and himself a lender and contributor, was quoted, os
^laying he believed MfGovern'
could reduce defense spending
and reallocate tiie money.
Howard M. Metzcnbaum^
unsuccessful Democratic candidate for senator from Ohicuin
1070, and his Geveland business
partner, Alva T. Bonda, were
on'the list with Bonda quoted
as saying their combined loans'
and gifts probably would be.in .
six figures.
Kimelrrtan himselfsaid he has loaned4C0,000 to Uifrcampaign.*
Demo defends defense budget-
MERCHANDISi ATLOW VER P r i c e s
SHOP AT PAY«; PACK
iBASEBbAftD H E A T E I^
5 2 G A L L O N
WATERHEATEItBy FOWLER
■ G la it Lined* 2 'E lom orits
M fg . b y F o w l^ r ” ^• 2 Tnbrm osta t*” Hi Tom p. Shut O ff
Models Priced from Only *52^
Several New Shipments of
LIGHT FIXTURESh a v e a r r i v e d . ' H u n d r e d s q f d i f -
f e r e n l ' Q u a l i t y F i k f u r e s t o
c h o o s e f r o m d t .
DiscouKTSM 35%Ta 50%^ O FF L lS f P R IC E !
A ll S w a g L ig h ts
D o z e n s to choo se f r o m ............. ii>i
2’ - 500Watts 11.50
3' - 700 Warn 13.50
4’ - 1000 Watts 14.75
6'-1500 Watts 19.50
“ S' - 2006Watts i 43r 10’ - 2500Watts 28.50
ThermostatsW all-o r-H iia r-
erMounted
7 95US. GOVERNMENT O.S.H.A.
APPROVED — Construction Grade
m N m N ^ C O R D r
. CHICAGO (UPl) - Sen. •
* Geor({c S. McGovern, hoping to
tell "what sort of man I am ,”
defended his defense budiict and his p a tr io t ic before the'
^ e r ic a n Legion convention
today. ' .
The Democratic presidential
candidate, weoring his blue
Legion cap from the Mitchell, , S.D., post, go.t poUte applause
and sometimes silence when he
told the Ibglonnalres his pro
posed $30 billion cut in the
defense budget would still leave .
tho United Stiitea strong enough
to ccfiist any threat.After the Ugion address,Jhe
,bil{ Item on McGovern's .schedule was a meeting with party
kingmaker Mayor Richard J . '• Daley. The 2 p.m, EOT
qonfrontation In party hehd-
qiiariers was the first meeting
' between the candidatc nnd-the
mayor since McGovern forces
helped keep Daley and- his
Chicago delegation out of tho
Democratic National Conven
tion lust month.
McGovern has called Illinois
essential .to. his presidential
hopes and Daley is generally
r e g a ^ ^ a s essential to.Demo-
c ra ts ^ lfh g to carry Illinois.
■‘““ Befar^latihching Jnto— hls=
—prepared" text “ i}Cforc— the'
'legionnaires, McGovern told them, “There has been so much
baloney about me both in the
..press and.Urara) my opponcnta-
that I'd' like to ' take th|s
opportunity to tell you what
Wnd of man I am ."
— -JiU(nbec one,’ witli every fiber of my being, ' I love
America," the. World War II
bomber pilot said, ‘lit is the
greatest nation in the world and
1 would gladly sacrifice my hfe
to serve It in whatever way I
can.
" It has been good to me, the
son of oi poor clergyman.”There were about 4,d00
legionnaires in the Arie Crown
Theater where McGovern spoke •
and others listened to him over closed circuit television in
adjoining rooms at McCormick Place.
The legionnaires applauded
him when he plumped for
benefits for Vietnam veterans
and "better and independent"
Veterans Administration hospi
tals. There was little other
applause, although McGovern
gota 10-accond^t^dlng ovation at the end of'his speech.
Afterward, McGovern said,
^know some of these rrfcn’ | d i^gree with me violently.
There were no hisses or
anything of' that kind. I
appreciate their courtesy."
National Legion Commander
Jolin B. Geiger said, ‘‘As a
legionnaire. wc respect
everyone's opinion."
RAIN GUHER
md
DOWNSPOUT
cunn ion.tM|(hi.......... f 1.49 'P 9 W N lP 0 U T i,..u .. $a.20W IN IS o rn R R IL I V h lIU»CONNICTORS |4<IN D I A OUT! 9S<V O M IT III ; $1,49 DOWN iROUT IL L I
ELECTRICALS U P P L I E S
.......... 4 / a 9 '4'p«r«al«iiit»<«piaiU.........D rv« fA rono t|lio> a llip ii«»d rr«m . • a "
1/79*Ucfy lin^U (m U iw ll ik « i . a / 7 9 *
3 9 '
1 6 — 3 — 15 f o o t .................................. * 2 . 3 9
1 6 — 3 — 2 5 f o o t . . . ........... ................... . . * 2 , 9 8
1 6 — 3 — 5 0 f o o t ................................... . ' . . * 5 . 4 i 51 4 - 3 — 5 0 f o o t - : ............. .........................* 8 . 4 9
1 4 — 3 — 1 0 0 f o o t . . . . ............................ * 1 1 . 5 0
1 2 — 3 — 5 0 f o o t ........................ ...* 1 4 - 9 5
1 2 — 3 — 1 0 0 f o o t .................................................................. * 2 1 . 5 0
MEDICINE c a b in e t sQueen Ann
l .o l tn lii'i
Simplicity with a touch^f elogonce. liio.pueon Ann adds Ilsdwn special clTaiim-lCLan^y^ioni^
STOKRS. Conn. (UPl)-^If^lI~[
the household (lies “ hatched
weren't reduced by various
means, we’d be literally waist
-deep ordeeper in-them:------ 1Reproduction of apair of flies
sUtrtin'g in April, if all lived,
would result in Ipl quntllllon, 10
quadrillion files by August,
says Extension Service Eh- '
tomologlst Dr.-Milton Savos-
---- l€> seton Russian tax
JERUSALEM (.UPD-Prime
Minister Golda Meir urged "all
freedom lovers.and haters of
s lavery"‘ Wednesday to Join
Israel’s "aacred battle” against
a Russian emigration tax on
coUe^O'^ducated Jc^s.
Speaking before an emergency seasiftn of th e , Knesset
(parllam ent),.J^s. Meir said
the ^v ie ts wefo'^charglng from - |4.800-to-|24,000 -for'-cpUege."
educated Jews to emigrate to
Israel, depending ■ on k their
^Idegroo of education. t ' “ I call on all freedokrj lovers
and haters o( jEdaver'y to raise ‘ their volce8^_ln._prgte^ and
bring the, riujBom to an end/;.
'.Nfra. Meir «aid. “We arc
: fighting a sacrod battle because
It Ifl Q Just battle for our
pooplo.” , .
FoUowlng her- ,20-mlnflte
upooch, the KncasGt unoillmou»
'ly resotvod to call ol goveni'’
! rpenta, parliaments, •• religious -JoadBrff aolGfitistB and Intelloc-
• 1 over ,to U)l?by
"this insult to humimity.”
"l>et our people inimigratc
without ransom, without bias,
without a price on them, and
without any discrimination whatsoever,” Mrs. Meir said,
"We’re ■ going to sock all
possiUe support to rescind the
decree."
Thirty per cent of the Soviets
-rnawarriving in Israel will facc
tho tax now, she said, adding,
"We also have reports that the
tax may be dpplled to high
'school and trade school gra-
•duatM."’
- ."T^e tax ia.only.port oflan.
, anti-slewlsh policy of the Soviets
aimed at deterring Unmlgra-
tion, puUing obstacles in the
path of advanceO education and
represaing the Jewish renals^
Banco,” die u ld .
”& m e countries still have
alave :irade, where strength fetdiGS tho highest prlco,” Mrs.
Meir aaid. “ In Ru|iala, the best \ price is conunanded by Intellec-
^ ji i i l ottalnmonl.” , ,
b y lkn ttM l
LIST PR!Ct-29.50
C 4 2 8 3 BARCLAYSiphon - Je t Toiletlo w , a t t r a c t iv o i i lh o o o t te s ty lin g .
Tho most for thfl toast — good fnlrror covoriigo and attractivo etorago space for your toilet orticlos at a ropi economy price.
1 8 " CABINET 2 8 .6 s 1 4 .9 5 HA * ’ CARIMET 3 3 .5 0 1 6 .9 5 3 0 ” CABINET 4 0 .5 0 1 8 .9 5
Copptr Lemtx
WIISEWIirll/ lw lH iJJ.
wln.tIU|^«Ml
JSOII.tolli,.....WiCany*CM,hKlt«kOf
WIRING
B O R G W A R N E RM oda o f d u r a b i* C o lo t b rp n d ABS. L i ix u r io u i ly tm o o th . Ia » y lu ( le a n w i th | u i l th o w ip in g o f a d a m p ( lo th .
$3995LESSSEAT
WIfTINGHOOSI 130 VOLTtONG IIFE
-UBITBUIBS4 0 -6 0 -7 5 -1 0 0 W A IU
YO UICHO KI —
WHERE PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL NEEDS ARE NOT A SIDELINE BUT OUR ONLY BUSINESS
SERVING SOUTHERN IDAHO ■ AT 3 LOCATIONS
6 „ * 1$ | 0 0
TOP QUALITY MERCHANDISE, DISCOUNT 1»RICES, COMPLETE STOCK OF plumbing AND
^ELECTRIC NEEDS /W E MEET 6 R BEAT ALL ADVERTISED PRtCBS
PRICES e f f e c t iv e THROUGH AUGUST 31
C^lechic and Pium U ^-8:30 to 5:30 MONDAV THROUGH FRIDAY: SATURDAY 8:30 to 4: 0
TWINFAllS- 1960Kimherl»Road-PH0HE7J3-730f •
'Boise, ho N. Orchards' Hantpa, 824 Clevelaml Blvd.’N i l
m■.' .11 j
. Ik. 1 !,
;
President
to reducelocal taxes■ MIAMl'Bt^Ctl(UPt)-Prc»- Idcnl Nlxqn proposes if ro-
*: cicclod to got locnl property
taxes reduccc) while Iioldiilg the
line agninst lidditionnl spending
Uint would force on Increase in ledernliaxes.
In accepting his party's
renomlnation late Wednesday. - Nixon did not spell out his
• . ‘ plims lor culUng tiie properly
' • tax, nor did he commit himself
'• floUy to oppose tax boosts at '■ . L the federal level.
« He charged that spending and -" 7 r tflx plans of Democratic
; presidential candidate George
‘.McGovern would wreak the
; • ccanomy, and predlQted Umt
: ^ e r ic d n f l won’t be '‘t^iken In”
by tlie Derriocratic proposals.
' / On the foreign front, Nixon
; npcused McGovern of leading a
; return to national isolation, and
of proposing defense cuts tliat
” will leave tiie United Stales in a
. second-best position to Russia.
In a preview of the Republi
can campaign tJieme Nixon said
millions of Domocrats had been read out of their party by
actions of tlie recent conven
tion. and invited tlK'rii to "come
liomo" to tJie • '^inciples to
---—which-htsmdminlstrntion^hnff-'
' committed itself.
■Nixon told cheering tonven-
• tion delegates and a national
prim<* time television audience
his administrntion hi‘d made
. "great progress” in solving
problems boU] at home and
Demosplanagenda
CORRAL tU P l) — A aUilo Democratic Party Central
Committee meeting and can
didates’ worksliops arc planned
in Boise Aug. ■26-27, stale
chairman Joe McC^irter said
Wednesday.-
McCarter said the Agenda ■ also Includes election of a new*
"state party vice chairman.
setting dales and locations for
'th e I&74 ahd'l97fl state don-
, vcnlions and meetings with the ^party 's senatorial and
^congressional candidates.
J - “We are expecting a large
•-turnout for the meetings,”
, 'M cCarter said. ".neW state
rcentral corhmlllee men and
tlwomen were elected after the
H.pcilharj' and Uils will be the
“ first session of the new central
; corrunlttee.”
• • He said election of a new vice
"-chairman Is necessary because”
'/Mtb. Gloria Cartan of Idaho
‘Vfllls has re in e d .
Other business, McCarter
said, includes setting the
—locolioivrund-dale-of-
Jefferflon-Jackson Day' dinner
and the discussion of a voter
identification program.
abroad. He ask^-for-anotljer
four years to finish tlie job.
. "ThD chtDice in tills election is
not between radical cluinge.and
no change," Nixon saijT. "The
choice is between change that
works and chiinge tlial won’t work.” . ; ■ .
Nixon put reduction of' property tjjxes at the top of his
list of= second term' goals.’
Although he did ript say so, he
apparently referred to possible
expansion of a $5 billion a year
revenue sharing plan now'
working its way through
Congress, with Uie additional
payments to states'and localities l o . be lied lo Ihelr
willingness to reduce taxes on real property.
.-In a recent Interview John
Erllchman. Nixon’s chief
domestic adviser, discussed
such a plan, and said It could
result in cuts up to 50 per cent
in local properly tJixes. .The
revenue sharing plan now in llie
works Is not tied to any tax-
cutting agreement.
“One {if the goals of our next
administration is to reduce the
prbperty tax,” Nixon suid,
without amplification. Me called
■propcrtytaxcBairunffllpWrden on the poor, the elderjy, the.
wage earner, the farmer Jind
tho.se ofi fixed incomes, .
As for 'federal taxes. Nixon
said welfare 4ind bther economic proposals of the Democratic
convention would add IM-1
billion la curimnt governmenr
outlays and force a 50 per cent
boost in federal levies,
"I oppose any new spending
programs which would add to
U e lax burden of Americiin
wage earners,” he said,' io a
pledge Uuit fell short of
specifically eschewing any plans for a lax increase. Some
economists say a tax boost will
be needed next year witliout
additional spending and no matter who is ele^'ted.
On olher domestic Issues
Nixon called for ' welfju-e
reform, removal of the ‘iast
vestiges” of race discrimina
tion, furtlier cuti> in inflation, development of more jobs, a
continued offensive against
crime, and a commitment lo
repair Uie American system
wherever needed rather than
t sar it down for rebuilding.
News Of
ServicemenT W IN FA L l^-M r.and Mrs. *
Earl F. Jordan of Crest View,
Fla,, are visiting In Twin Falls
witli his inotlier, Mrs. Fred Jesst!r,_and_sist<T, Mcs^Riiy-
Uwney.
Thur«doy, Auguit 24, 19?2 Tlmos-'NoWa, Twin Fajttl. Idahq ‘ 11.
United Mine Workers officials indicted
WASHINGTON (UPD-Four fnso testimony about Uic UKollolto, . Tcnn., a 'field United jVline Workers (UMW) slaying of Joseph A. Yablonskl • rcprescntotlvo-for-dlfltrlct.io.
■ offlchda In Kentucky and and his family, Uie ” Juatlco
Tennessee were indicted Wed-'.'Dcpnrtmcht (innounccd.
nesday on chargcs of conspiring Attorney General Richard Gr .to influence v 'itesses to give Klelndlenst said a single count
Indictment was retdrned in U.S.
returns
B ir d h o m o s l l i r c a t c n c d t
Geneva rules violatedWASHINGTON (UPl) -Sen.
James 0. Eastland, D-Miss\.
said Wednesday a study of the record offwed iittle room for
opUmism aboul. North Viet
nam ’s treatment of American
•prisonersof war. • ■
Eastland of/ered Uie assess-
n\enl in releasing, u 32-page
study of communis treat;nent
of war prisoners during World
-Vyar II, the'Korean War and the Frertch-Indochlna war.
Tlie study was prep{\red by
Siunuel 0. Oglesby, foreign
affairs analyst for the IJbrary
of Congress, for the Senae
Internal Security subcommittee
which Eastland heads.
“Wliat emerges from this
study.” Eastland said, "is that Uiere is noUiing'essenlially new
aboul Hanoi’s trealmenl, or
nialtreatinenl, of American and
Allied POWs and about the numerous violations of the
Geneva convention which have
char^jclerized its treatment of
prisoners, ‘
“ If anyliiing, the records of
die Soviet treatment of POWs
in World War II and the Qiinese-North Korean treat-
inenl of POWs during Ih
Korean war areeven moregrisly
than the dismal rccord esto-
bllshod by the Vietnamese
, Communists,"'
In releasjnn tha study,
Eastlenddidnotm'ention former
Attorney General Ramsey Clark, who returned recently
from North Vietnam to report
dial POWs he interviewed there
appeared, well treated ‘ and
healthy.
Tlie senator said that al
though there were differences
of treatinent of POWs revealed’
by the study.Tills should not be surprising,
he saldr"beeau3e-in-the^yea-of-
Communisls everywliere POWs
are not human beings but
political pawns—to be broken
ransomRAIilS lUPI) ~ Two FBI
agetJlH flew into Orly airport
Wednesday nighl from Algiers, carrying in two black satchels
Uie Si million ramsom paid by Delta Airlines July 31 to a band
of hijackers. .
'llie money immediately was
.loaded Into a Brink’s armored
car an^ driven away,- and
airjwrt authorities said llie Iwo
Arnerica'n plainclothosmen
would take Uie ransom on to
Uie United Stales Tliursday morning.
Eight air pirates conunan-
deeVed a Delta airliner over
Florida July 31 and after
getting the money from Delta
psychologically so that they can ordered the plane lo Algiers
•be used against their own after a stop in Boston.^ llie
country and to be exploited, Bliick 'Panthers movement -willjoul-nity-of-any^kindrras—“•‘>'<*-‘<WoMhe-money-forrlheir-
instruments of political warfare cause but Algeritm officials directed, in the first instance, relumed it as they did *a
agiiinsl their own families." previous ransom.
FKIEMEN stand by wlille flames race un-
cotitrolled In heavy underbnish In 6,000-acre fire
In Topntopji Mountains six miles northeast of
OJal, Calif. Some 750 firemen battle the blaze,
which has jhrcatcned a National C o n ^r Sanc
tuary for three days. (UPI)
District Court In Oevoland, Ohio.
Additionally, two oUier offi
cials of UMW district 10 were
cJuu-gedwHhcmbewllngtl ,135ln
union funds, b'im inal Informa-' lions agaUist Uiem were filed If)
U.S. District Court .of Uie
■Dlalrld o( aumblft.
Tlie four indlcled in Cleveland
were identified as: —Ajbert E.
Pass, 53, of Middlcsboro. )<y..
secretary-ireaaurer of UMW
district 1. He la currently In Jail in Pittsburgh awaiting trials on
federal and state charges
c'onnected with the Vablonskl
slayings on Dec. 31, 19C0.
—Wjlllnm J. Prater, 53, of
USE
Koops ^ar-B-Q Clean
Absorbs Gl-oase
Pol Dopt. . ..
Food &'Drug Stores
Revolationfzes Denture Wearing
'I h c n c iir rf tl (liitiK lo lu iv in |{ ym ir own Ic c ll i lii'iM issibk’ now w ith .1 pliiH tic Cfuauv <li»cuvcry ih u i ;«clu- i i l l y l i i i id u l i i i i l i " i i j ip iT s ' ' , :u n l ■■liiwrnt” ;is i irv iT liu luri; i«ivsili|c.
h 's ii r i ; i i i lu in i i i i i r y i lK iu v i r y c .lllfc l lo r i l in ly liotiur
Wj Uu
lliav.i;*!!. Uuuh, cvitik-liuiu■ i r r y <'l •U’i i tu r i ' \ Iimi-m*
i.ra n r O iiil tirlp-v a lis-.rti ilio Ol l) i l in « .in il i l ii'ttinB . Vmi- tu.iy
ba« Ic in lc r , c liew b e tte r,'e n t more n iitu n il ly .
n n y h e lp .y o u incak m ore ck-arly. tv m ore nt ense.
TJic jR-ncil |K iin l cligpenwr IX yi>u t>|)oi E'lXdj.HNT w i t l i pro-
w lie rc needed._Uuc-4ipph(uiuuii~-ntasia«t f0r-l i i j i i r t . ] K-aturcs t iu u C»t nre c is tn* Ih t l- . io ln* iilll> .-.S c r - y o u r t l e n t i i f r i ’ K i i lJ i r ly ( I r i tM Hy to -u s e I - ' i x o i j k n t D .n t i i r c A ilh fs tv c C ream a t a ll (IriiK i'i)iit>(cr».
Miz Jones loves to see how far her food dollars
can be spread, here, atWaremart
_ Jordiin is a retired Navy.Air.
Corps officer, and is rtow ser
ving in the Secret "^rv ice in
helicopter radar. He also visited
;er, Mrs, l^Ucrl
Hazellon, Another sister, Mrs.
Hazel Pepper. Placentia. Calif.,
is in Twin Falls during his stay.
QnUs •-(And Bankard)
TWIN FALLS
T h a t's because we love Miz Jones and love to save her m oney on her total food b ill.We know she counts trer Food Dollars, C arefu lly. And like a lo t of us, she likes lo see how (ar she can.^ make those Food Dollars slretQ.h, And tha t's why she keeps com ing back. To W aremart.She com es here once a week. She grabs a couple of em pty cartons, puts them on a cart, takes a m ark -
-<ing pencil and storm s every a isle in our m arket. She reads the p rice righ t o ff the outsid? p rlce 's tic te rs , m arks it on her selection, and shoots o tf to our next barga in on na tiona lly advertised brands'and quality
■ W arom art. la b o l items.-Of-course._ouj'^cTieckers__:know the prices, and if you forget to m“ark an item o r two, they w lH-help-you ,out a t th e 'ch e ck stand.
But, th is way, guess who else knows ou r prices? Our shoppers. And when they get careless and stop at another S -o-o-per f^/tarket by m istake, you’d be surprised how m any W aremart bargair»s they rem em ber . . . especia lly when they see the p rice o the r— m arkets have stam ped on top of the sam e item. , By the tim e f /tiz Jones has toured our m arket, she has filled her em pty cartons w ith values in meat, produce, da iry prdqiucts and non-food items. She has a lso found tha t when m oney can be saved o n ' one ite m . . . m oney can also be saved o n an entire case. . . .M iz Jones just-keeps com ing-back here fo r more.— She gets more. For her-Food Dollar. At-W arem art. We lOvS her, '
"WAnEMART SAVES THOSE' WHO HELP THEMSBLVES" >
OFFICES: DownlbWn Twin.Fnlla Lynwood Btiopping 0onler • Klmborly
* WE FEATURE U.S.O.A. CHOICE BEEF *
_U.I.D.II.'fOl)niUMp'COUPOHS
Glidls i c cs 0 ( tNEVER A ' MEMBERSHIP FEE REQUIDED.l.l- ' ■ ■__
1708 i,K lK lB E R LY .R O A D -TW IN FALLSHOURS: b,TO 11 M. t Nr U PR. • 0 T p O. S A f. • 10 TO 7. BUN,
j . , . . W A H E M ^nT FOOD STOngS ARE LOCATED IN; A n i^O N A s PHOENIXr C A LIF : SACRAf^ENTO; IDAHO: QOISE, IDAHO FALU8, NAMPA;i^PO( ' I , TWIN FA LU S ^R E Q O N :- 6UQ£NE; U T A H lO G P E N . SALT .lA K E :aT Y ;lW A B H IftiQ T O N :'O U ntE N (S B A T tl.E I, pV^R B TT. KENNEW ICKr W A liW
POCATEtLO. .L-A WAUL-A-
■ .''■t
I : ' ■ ' '
Tlm ei Newi. Twin F« l|i, ld«ho 'H ipi'idav, A uo ;jit J4, m i
. A b lg il l Van fruren *«* •
D E A R ABRIT: I nm vbry much In love with a vory (Ino
IfWitlcronn whoso ulfo pnsscd owoy about alx months bro. flhc^nd bocn nlllng for ovor rf^oar.
TOla mnn nnd I have known oach olfior for'sovoral ycnr/i. b»il 1 give you my word nothing, went on bolwoon ub wtiifo lu.' wan still married altho wo tiavo boon aitractAd to'
each other nlncA our first mooting.Wc arc iMth pa»t’<mldd!o flfllos, but this is-Bome wild
loyo .afnttr. He .wants to marry mo quJotly and quickly, I want (0 marry him, too. but it ims cotno back (o'me that many poaplL ' think wo' had somot^ilng going whllo his wifo
was BtUI Uvlng' Hiifl Is not true. '
Love ne^^ 'f wait
for appearances'
Pancake ■ , supper set in TF
T W IN FA UH S-nio 'ivom cn ,
or tho Moptfe mado plons
Tuesday night for n -mcnfi-borflhipdrlvopancnkosupper a t - -
the Moose L/>dg”o Snturdoy ot 7
p.nr>..Admission to Uie supper will
be' by b r in ing a proftcpcctivc—
member or $2 per family!
A cleanup of Uie Moose Lodge
is scheduled Sept. 18 and 10 by
Moose members...On Sept. 23, an appreciation
' Dutch lunch nnd dnnce will be
held for Uiopo who, work In Ujo '
fnir booUir'Any member who
• can help wlU> the fair In nny way Is osked to contact , Mel
Dixon, governor, or Mrs. Merlin
Miller, senior regent.'
Mrs. Uwis Hoffman gave a
Star llecorder report and rend n poem. Refreshments of cake
and coffee were served after thoi
meeting. , ' ' ‘
■ V
' '4 k . • . ' '. FRBDBRICKA THOMPSON
■ - B 1 9 A s h S ( . ,T > y in F o ( l i ■' , , .
AMQER APPLE BAKE remaining Ingredients. Bdng to
• I. package (8 ounco): rofrig* o ^oil, aUrrlng constanUy.crated buttermilk .biscuits . Pour over applcsand biscuits. '
buttermilk biscuits ' ■ Bake a( 350 degrees for 20 to 30
2 ciipspeelcd,cored and tliinjy minutes unUl'goIdon brownond
. bUcc(J. apoles, or one can bl&cuits are firm in center. Lift
lipploflrtlfnlncd' ........ * up apples In cenler of dessert to “
^ cup flrtnly packed brown be sure biscuits are Hrm' Serve
sugar , ' wiUi warm 'Vcam or whipped-
cup evaporated milk cream.
.■V4 -cup b ^ le r or margarine If have J .
Separp^ dough into 10 favorite r«dpe. Just m*U It-Iflbiscuits. Place on bottom of .the .Recipe Department. .
' greased eight-inch square pr. Women's Page Editor. Ttw .,two^unrt 'round baking dish. r«dpe becomes Um p r o ^ y of
Arraoge apples over biscuits. In the Ttmes*Newi and cannot h t '
a small snucepnh, combine returned
' MagicValley^avorifes
Troubled? Coll Hotline 733 )122 •
I have married children and^so has ho and I don’t want any ugly talk. To be on tho safe side, Ik>w long should we wait hefoi'e.mnrrying? . CLEAR CONSCIENCE
DKAH I f your conBcienre l i clp'sr, you have clear u ilin g . VVhy w all Q( allT ^
DKAU AUBY; I road Uio Icllor from ’ FOnTV EIGHT AND GETTING T IIERE" with some concern bccause os far back as I can remember, comedians hnve boen portraying old folks.
^Nnturnlly, they come off a bit wobbly, and some don't hear too well, b utJt’a all in fun, and I doubt if anyone sots’
out to ridicule .(jicra.________________ ^ ---------- —
WITH THE siart'mg of school almosi
horo, if}o.CSI Facuhy Wivos and Womon
h\lp\A/ I - Posted a fea Tuo^doy io welcome nowl l i c m u c i b * mombors. A m o ng fhoj'e aUonding'wore
Mrs. Michaol Glonn, loft, one/ Mrs. Ed
Hurlbut. Tho too was hold at J/ie home
of Mrs.—Jorry Meyorhoo/^or, Plain. Viow’
Drivo.
welcomed
show" wrilch Inchwlea skH.s showing Ukji old couple in their
..rdcWnfl.chairs,My n d ^ lc c to "FORTY - EIGHT AND GETTING
TIIERE"Ts to dovelop a sense of humor.
^•JffiyCNTY-ONE AND ALREADY THERE”
DIilAy}l THERK!: T h a ^ i^ .,fo r e ip re f iin g opinion, ■harcii by m lB 'w riter and many’ ^pierfl. Carol Burnett i t for loo kind and tentlUve to tntenUonftlly ridicule or hurt ftuy- •er.
D E V I ABDY; Our 22-year-old »on has a 21-yoar-old girl friend who spends a tot of time at our home,
Tlicse two cannot seem to keep their hands off oooh.
other. Tlic girl is always running her fingers Uuii his hair,* petting him, smoothing his sUlebums, massaging his ghouV
•tiers and legs, sitting In his lap and givbig him n hug around Uie waLsl. They often sit with their armR around onch other, kissing frequently.
This goes bn not only in the presence of the family, but before guests and neightxtra aa well.
My twsband and I have both told our son that such behavior In public is In poor taste and to please il out, but Jhey tell us tJjat "love" is beautiful and they are not
ashamed of it. Tlien we're told wo arc old fashioned.Please tell me what you think of such carryings on?
HIS PARENTS
DEAR I'AIIENTS; LAve Is InilfiK! beduUful. but luch eihibltlona a'ff out of place in public. -
DEAR ABBY; Okay, go ahead and scold those who
.write UiQhluyou. notos ■And-/ail -to- sign -thoir last nsmesr- Most people remember to whom they send gifts.
How about tho chumps who send gifts (especially wed- .ding glftaj jn d sign tho card, "M ary" or "From tho Smiths"? Or (are you ready for] "Love from both of us"?
Anyone who sends a gift and docs not enclose a card with his full name, and a legible return address on tho
package deserves, to be stuffcyj Into, a mail slot and canceled I. M; pISGUSTED
newsa bout
.th epeoplle^ V a l le yi i S L i i v l i i g ^ Eal
'. • . Tlniirnt'O
Valley students receive degrees
7 valley women named outstanding
TWIN FALLS - Magic
Valley area students receiving
in'
. Rupert graduates Include Floy Fay Crandall B igler.
' James___p igby Bradshaw,
•t)onald Arthur Cazior, Bruce R.
Hunsakcr, Ronald W. Jolley,
Lorita K. Nelson, W llllom
Howard Nichols and Dennis L,
Sliow.
TWIN FA U iJ - Seven Magic Valley women have been
selected "Outstjinding Young Womei^iDf Am erica,” the
director of the national awards
program rtnnounces.These women are now being
considered lor furllier slate and
roitional awards. This fall, 50 of Uie young women nominated for
the “ Outstanding Young
unlveralUea.
A complete biographical sketch of oach nominee Is
included in the annual awards
volume, "Outstanding Young
Women of America," which is
distributed nationul.ly as a reference publication. Tlie 1072
ediUon, to. be published in
November, will contain special
introductory messages by U.S.
lencenient exercises have I named ty Brigham Yo'ung
University officials.
Twin Falla students earning
degrees include J. Ken Barton
Jr., Stanley E. Cook, Terry.
Guest Hiijnter, Larry C. Pond, Other students receiving
Glen Russell Sheen, Robert L. diplomas include Louise
Stevens,- Marlon - Hunter McCarUiy, Acequia; Merikay
Swenseh, David Orvel MiAioney Thurber, Albion;
Thompson and Rex Van-Webb. Ernest D. Messerly, Glenns
IJsted from Burley are Selene Ferry; Jo Capps Glosset,
Burgi, Robert J. Christensen, Thomas * R. Newman and
Jerfy D. Davidsdn, KenneUi Deborah Ann Nye, all Jerome;
Oris DllworUi. Evard Hyrum Janice U e Doutrc nnd BrendaGlbby, Dawn Themis Hunt, Merrill Walqulst, both Paul.
June L illian W illiams and and Evette Ellen Bigler and Jon
Elizabeth Zollinger. Reed Hunt, boOi Wendell.
... 12.99Cool, Capless WigsCaploss, cool, com fortab le — so weightless you h a rd ly know you hove it on! 100% Kane- ko lo n AAodacryWi. M ode to sell a t 25 .00 , now 12.99 for. throe days on ly ! M illin e ry , Street level.
T H E B O N M A R C H E
O P E N M O N D A Y A N D F R ID A Y N IG H T S U i^T IL 9 P .M .
BACK-TO-SCHOOLWomen of America" program. Rep. MarUiaOriffiUjs, D-Mich., one from each state, be and Amy Vanderbilt, etiquette
named as their- state's^ authority;
"Outstanding Yoimg Woman o Announcement of this year’s
"Outstanding Young Women'
was made on behalf of the board,
of advisers by Anita Capps,
program director.
Uie Year.'
Magic^ Valley women include
Potrlcia Dyer Harder, Twin
Falls: Dorothea Mount Moore,
Wendell; Linda Zlttel Ekren,
Jerome; and Maureen McNeal v / I i.
Schelske, K a th le " Johnson V O l U n T © 0 r SSchm idt, Nancy Andrus
Patterson and Julia SabalaFrance, all Gooding. l l . t f t J U t J U
The purpose of the
"Outstanding Young Women of TWIN FAIJ.1S — Vo.lunteers
America" program is to are needed to work In the
recognize young women Veterans of .Foreign Wars and
between Uie ages of 21 and 35 for AuxUiory food stand at Uie Twin
Uie district fair in Jerome Sept. 12-lC. Tlie County Builders will
Conference in McCall Sept.
imd 6
VM.IS - Swinging Sixties will meet at Uit Odd
Uvc music will be featured for
dancing. All persons fiOyenrs-of-
age or older are invited. Those
attending are asked to bring their own table service.
TWIN FAL15-The Sew In 4-'
H Club wUI present the program
at Uie Kiiull Grange meeting at
8:30 p.m Fridiiy a f Uie Corrv*
Members are10 uruig
rclreshn^enls:
TWIN FALI5 - Tlie Slngle-
Ites Club will have a dance
SiJturday night at Uiu^ Odd
Fellows Hall. Twin Falls. Tliere
will be live music from 9 p.m. to
1 H.m. All single persoas bet*
ween t h e ^ s of .10 and 60 are welcome. ▼
F l l J S n ^ ^ u r a J. Vincent, W er, has l>een .named to the
denn's list at the University o f ,
Rochester. Rochester, New
■ VorU, for YchoVasilc excellence _ - for the spring semester.'...........
G lJiNNS FERRY - Tlie i-U .
Co4ncU and Uie County Builders
will hold ihcir monthly
mootings ot 8 p.m. on Aug. 28 in
Uio' courUiousc In Mountain
Home. Plans will be made for
Falf boots 'Bootfl take from shoes .the
Uiemea’of hlljnw htela with”
platldrm soles for women, The
rvildemess" boot wins for foil
in sports (t^twcAr. mode in
rough, shaggy suedes with
crop« or Uro-llke> soles. '
Wonderf^^f Varjtrift
M o rv« lo u t V a lu t f
. C lastic |iiiduK . . ihu n u m lx r onn c h i ld f in 'i ilic^o becpuia of tlio ir f«m oiis 'T ilT in‘^*OQlloM.
T'hev7e iinoniialo<4 for w octim an tliip too . Thoy'i .viilun priced oovv l^ r l)Bck-to'-(Chool lavinQ i.
THE J. D. SHOE DEPARTMENT
For those special lit t le under'C loum or^ w ho ore o ti^a ) to jum p (ope bock-to-»chool th i i fa ll, Your I.D.' Store 'd ffe r i o Dfat^d ,iew collect tion fro m P laym ore. Cute litt le m ix an d mo^tcf) ou tfits in Purple Hdo-
thpr th a t w ou ld rem ind o Scojchman o f Home . . . o il in 50% Dacron p o ly o itc r ond 50 % Q rla n acrylic. They are eas;- cqro <^nd w a \| \ '« .
' w e a r 'd n d w ill a p p re c ia te tha t, C lioose from S w oatcrt, Jumpers,■ Skirts, Pants, filouses o r Vest in i i i e s '4 to 6X and 7\A From $4 ,50 to S I 1,00..
t l lt lD ^ IIO DEPARTMrarSTORf - ON I I I t MAU - uSWMUWN - THIN fAlLS
Jacoby- Qpponentsl Help ' Declare/
k A s t* 108 7 2 V JOH♦ A Q J 4* 107.1
N O im i - 21 *Q 0 ( !
• V A Q r> a 2 « n 5 1■* 2
W EST* A J .1 V K 10 0'♦ K1073 Ij * - IC J 0 ^
^ SOUTH (D )' • *4» K 5 4
¥74 ♦ 92* A Q B f t 5 4
Easl*W(est vu lnorfih le Wcfcl Easl South
Pims1 NT- Pns!i 2N.T. 3 * ' D bk‘ _Phhs Piiss Pass
Openinfj k-iid— ♦ 3
R
n> .Oswiilci & James Jacoby
' .Expert South was in Ijad hi.mor. He had been holding bad cards and his palooka opponents were all winning Irom him in the rubbcn bridge I'ame.
tiirce-c'lub call cqaonly be a s tT i .b c d to that bad
,Jli|mor which was not im* proved any When West let out a resoi(nding double but wlien tlia smoke had cleared away South was positively beaming wliile East and West were engaged in one of Ihose verbal figltls that seem to enliven mbber bridge yames.
jettifionocl - a - honrt; • Next - ■ caiDo u henrt to the ace and 'a ruff of a henrt with East disposing of the deuce of spades.
East had had two chances' to u«e his 10 of clubs but. had held it back.
Now So\iih led a low spade and West .did his bit to help South along. Instead of ducking ht; played his aco ahd led ' the suit back;
* South cashed the king and queen of spades and led a heart from dummy. East lidd a last chance to beat tho contract but he still refused to put his 10 of clubs to work. He ruffed low. South over- ruffed with the • eight and West was forced to win tho trick and lead to South’s trump tenace.
(NIWtPAMS ENTEAPDISE ASSfJ )
V < f« C n R D J k '/ » J c < | k t
The l)icidinK hoii bucn:VVcst N o r } l i___ fZflst South1 V Pblo Puss 2 VDhle PuM Pusrf 3 iPush 3 V Piis.s 3 4PUS.S 4 « ' Pnss 4 ♦Pns3 4 W Pas.s ?
You, S outli, hold;A 8 t 4 3 V 2 * A K 0 4 3 A 7 « 3
W hat ( ill you do now?A—Vciiir parlntT Ik Uirlurlnjr
.vmi, hul you con'l nlfort] tn pass- ih ls -T n a - t itr tm ljr f lv 'ir f t iit i 's :------___ lO U ^ V i’S - Q l lE S T lO X -__. Y ou r partiii.-t't'ontiiiue.s li» five hpadi-s. W lu it du y tjii do now?
Answ er toMH»rr«w
O rganization p lanned .
■ ' PR6PARING rnato fia ls h r tho. schools fo r fho fa ll cam pa ign and o rgan iza tion o f tho ScfiJthyfostorn .Council o f Camp Fire G irls aro P a tric ia B lake, le ft, Comp
Fire G irls ; o ffico #ocro<6ry, and 'Mrs. John O oorr, o rg a n iz a tio n cho irm an, . VoluritQer workers w ith the p ro g ra m ore M rs, Rgy lA bund is , M rs. Julos Hgrrison, M rs. W illia fn Hughes, M rs. John Me- Noos and M rs. Lehman Sterling.
pldnnedHANSEN— A card party and
cooked food sale arc planned for
Sflptombcr by the Royal Nolghr
bora at -Woodn\an HaU.--- - -
Mooing Tuiosday at Uie hall,
Urn group Uiankcd Oio Modern Woodmen mombors for
preparing Ui()>dining tables in' Uio hall,
Pro-tcma were Mrs. 'Wayne SmiU). Mrs. Riith Wright and Mrs. Hugh Sanderson. Mrs. Elsio >
Henry presided In the absence
of tlio regular chairman^ Mrs; .Lewis Reed.
Members dlscusiicd solllnn surplus chairs, and they will
take the matter up before the
■Roynl Nclghbor*Woodmen joint board.
Mrs. Ernest j'ohnson and
Mrs. Walter Johnson provided
entertaincment. Mrs. Wayne
Smith and Mrs. Minnie Bedow
will be hostesses for tlie Sept. 12 meeting.
Decemberw e i
j ^ t d a y , A uguit 24, 19X2 Twin P a iii, Idaho 13
v a Le r a a r c h b r :
. . . se/s d a te .
ChairmanGI^NN S FERRY - Mrs.
Isobel s t ic , Glenns Ferry, has
been named “ Heart Chairman" for this area. She said she
bo happy to receive any
donations or memorials to tho
heart fund. Her tclephono
number is 360-2170, or write
P.O. BoJf 564 , Glenns Ferry, 83023.
planned ^- P A L IS - M r. and M r t ."
Delbert Archer, Twin PalU,
announce'tJie negngement. of
their daughter, Valera, to Jon*' atlum Myatt.
Myott is tlio son of Mr.'and
Mrs. Robert Myott I I . Kcnnesaw, Ga. .
‘ Miss Afcher Is a 1 9 ^
graduate of Twin FaUs’ Hl^n,
Miwol and is presently cmgaged
ih im iulonary woHc. wlth tho
Jehovah Witnesses.
The couple met'ln Mexico City
two and one-hMf years ago.Tlie couple l^lans a Dec. 16
wedding at tlie Kingdom Hall of
Jehovah Witnesses In Twin
Falls'and tyill then go to Ken.-
nesaw where they will reside
and work as full time missionaries.
r
Dumionds were continued wltli-Soull>-ruffit»g-tlie-lhitd— lead. Me finessed dummy's (jiieen of hearts and ruffed llie last diamond while East-
Tickets avdilab le- ‘TW INFALj^-T lcketsareitlllavallDbfefor
ti>c Twin Falls Sweet Adelines Charter Show set
at 8 p.m. Saturday*a( the College of Southern
Idaho Fine Arts Center.
Tickets can be obtained from Judy Freeman,
ticket chairman, 733-2034, or from Helen’s
Record Shop, El Margo’s Deauty Shop and
Wamcr’B Music Shop, Twin Falls, and Garth'ft
Musie^^torc and Studio'and Wood’s Music,
Durley. ^
Gathy Coulter, Lee wedKING HILL - Cathv Allene CQultcL^lateiLQLthtLbcidR. Mra. Dlecea.uscdhad.bcl
Coulter and Johnifllnnley U e Coleen FuIlmer was matron of great-grandmotlier. —.
-werc~marrled"ln ~an Augr-10 honor.'Bridesmatds were Sheila— Refreshments were served by
'ceremony. McHugh, slater of the bride, and Marilana Whitaker and, Cindy
Laura Lee, sister of the
bridegroom. -
Mark Simmons wes liest Tftnn.
. . yit s at the Parisknit tur t les . . . the best \ 4rieiid^M-wiM4r^^
President Hart pfficlated.
Tlic bride is the daughter o f ,
Bench. The guest'book was cared for by Diane Mourtsen.
Loralee Anderson and Brenda
Jatobs assisted with tfi gifts. ■. ,Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Coulter, David Talich* arid LaVelle
Pocatello.' former King Hill Coulter werp ushers,
rcsldenb, and the brldegi;pom A reception jn the Sixth Ward
la the son of Mr. and Mrs. LDS Cultural Hall followed the
Dean S. Lee, Glendora, Calif, ceremony. The ha ll was
The bride wore a floor-lepgth decorated in rainbow colorswhite gown with a bustle, a with a blue'Austrian backdrop,
rounded neckline and long A pond decorated with rainbow-
pointed sleeves. She carried a colored flowurs was set in the
bouquet of white-carnations, center of the floor,
red roses, daisies and baby's 'Fhe wedding (falfe was made , the bridegroom Is a student inbreath. by Mrs. Dean-Lee, mother of the Idaho Slate University
*Mald of honor was Karen L. Uie bridegrooiri. The serving Pharmacy School,
N o q u o itio n about' it . thi» is ih fl yea r o ( the tu rtle . O v e r p a n t i, ta p p in g y 6ur ik ir t* , under yo u r b la z e rt o r jackets . . . you can count on the turtlonecl( to a d d xip a nd
, tp ic o ta yo u r w a rd ro b e . A nd w ha t a -m b rv e io u t velaclion i 100% o c ry lic t. They look | luKurious, foe l even m ore luxurious, f i t ' t o pe rie c tio n . You fe a lty should hove more thon 'one . Sizes S., M ., 1. ' ,
After a honeymoon to
Glendora, Calif., where an open
house was held In their honor,-
the iouple returned to' Poca
tello' where they will 'reside
at 515 S. 10th.
The bride Is an employe of
Idaho Bank and Trust Co. "and
W hiteBlackN q jiyffroWn
Coup sets fall wedding
- . TWJN^J-.r:S.-Mf^i|nd>lrA-. Ernest Host, U ke Geneva,
Wis., announce the engagement'
'Of thei^ dFugHter, Cathy, to
inonaW W. King.
. King Is the son of Mr. ‘and
I Mrs. J, Wayne King, Twin
; Falls.
; Miss Most was graduated ; from Badger High School In 1968
‘ and attended Wisconsin State
' University.King was graduated from
, Twin Falls High School in 1960.
"ifrro tfAPPY" jom CHRISx j o n T v o u / X w e l l -a -H A V E A N V ^ I
V a /e A K M E6 6 E & ? J A L W A V 5
W M EKI X B u y *A U S E D C A T ^
G E . r S T U N G E V E R V T IM E / '
B ^E A K V O U R 6AMBLIWG HABB u y y o u R NEXT c a r a t
IvAOTOftS-TKEM y o u W o m V
HAN/E A S IN G IE fAU lX/
■ and In,1970 from the University
’ of Idaho, where he was af-
fiiiatcd wllii Phi Ganwia DelUj-
Frajernity. He is currently
etnployed.at Pratt and Wliitney
—Alt*<*iHrft—Got—iis-T-tt—destg
■ engineer. ‘
The couple plans a Nov. 10 wedding in Florida'where they
will reside.
19X1 MODEULOSi-OUTONLY JJ PONTIACS LEF-T T6:CHOOSE FROML
HURRY WHILE THE SELECTION IS G O O D !!
JuM
For
WEIGHT WATeHERS
____Now-ShtptnantL-.,___
MARTYRS .. FO O D FLAVORS
See the new
• - E«cillno* • o i io r lm in ls ' ,
. fKclutively at
CROWLEYPHARlllACY: O n lh a M a l l .
Dow ntbw ji
E
SHARP USED CARS1970 BUICK SKYLARK . . . , T - 9 - 9 5V B etiQiTic, liiitBd gla»«, radio, ciuio intifu Koiiu inm on, loctory ait totuJi liomrm,.l>nwp, tlcunnn. QQ'.n, lw „L« i -
1965 BUICK W ILD C A T ....... *5 9 54 d b o f, V -S .onoino, tin ted g lo » i, ra d io , o u to m a tic transm ii*
-lioiL-^wef-ttaatingr-fiowof-|[ttokeTi ' ■ " — ——
-^1964 g m t : -. 7 ' . ...................... 1 5 9 5V -6 diosol, 825 m 20 ru b lio r. 4 spood transm ission, 2 speecf^ ax le , 10Q inch cab to ax le , looks a n d runs eK ceptiona lly well
H95196 5 ^P O N T IA C 'C A T A L IN A . . .A dooi. V « .n g in * . iin lo il ulcuv •odio ou tom i.ln i r o m m U ^Moo'iiHj
1963 FORD FALC O N4 douf. 6 t'inii'iilBi angiit
1971 FORD P IN T O ................... .7 door, the perfect bcor/omy.cor.
1 9 5
*8 9 5
*6 9 5
1966 MERCURY M ONTEREY4 door.'VD •ngina,'linl«d tital*r, rodii;,powar iltfrinq.'
rodi(^, auloniqtic trdn^rAiition,
1966 CHEVROLET VMPALA . . . w , wSloVion w o g o n , V-B cnQine, tin te d glasv, ra d io , a u tom a tic transm ission, pow er steering., ■ / " ■ ' -4
19 68 X )L D S 9 8 . . , . . •..............4 door tiord top , V-Q tngind. lu ll pO wit, l in ltd g ia u , radip, oulomi |,ibnimiuior>, vinyl lop . la&lbcy n ir candiiioning. po w tr U«arlng, p o w ir t to l , powar.braket, power w lhdowi. w tiltew all t iro i. titt
1968 PO NffAC CATALINA — - - ^4 door, V*a enQlne. tinted I'odio, outoinolle tron im li' %lon, (a c to f / o lr contllHot^lno, pow«rVV#*?Jr)o, power brok^i,
JOHN C H R IS M O T O R S
( i o l ^ i \ i \ w i : . i :
OPEN EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL
' I< > n ,
- ,m1
.. ,M T lm « -N fw i, Twin Id thc , nn«-id>v, A ugu it 7^, \m
f Coi^^erecites vd ws :
TWIN' F A L L S '- Noncy
-.-HcllbwcItland'-.Pougras Rt Mctcialf • oxchangod mnrrlnKc
vaw0 In an Aug.’ ^ ccrcmony In
the Salt LokD City LDS Templo.
The brjdo'ls tlio dnu^htcr of
Mr. hncl Mrs. Oscnr W.
Hcllowell. Twin Falls, and (li'o
brldcjflroom Is the eon of Mr.
and Mrs. Rood J . Mctcalf,
Salt Uke City.
Tlio. double ring ccremohy ' wns performed by President
Sclvoy Opycr of the SqU Loko
City Temple.. ’
After the ccrernbny, tlip
^idegroom's parents hosted a
wedding breakfast at tlie Lion
House, Salt UUe City.A garden reception was held
at the Iwm6 ‘ of tlie bride's
parents. The guests were
’greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Eldon
J. Ilaskelf.'uncle and itunt of the
bride.The bride wore a floor-iengUi
white lace (>uwn. fashioned wiUi
Q ruffled mandarin collar. The
- neckline was enhanced by Q comeo necklace from Argen
tina, a gift from her brother.'
The bride’s head wreatlf and
bouquet were yellow l-jlfin rosie-
buds surrounded by a potpourri
of flowers. Tliey wore designed
and arranged by Uie natu/alist,
John Clnrk, Provo, where the
bride is employed,
................. .. coualn-of^tho—
in i'fs e M e w d
M R . a n d MRS. D O U G L A S M E TC A L F
Sail Lake-' City and by Holly
Haskell, Joyce Bergeson and
Judl Foster in Provo.
The bridegroom was grad
uated from the University of
Utah in tnternationfll relations
school.
Best Seller^
, ■ ---- 1 ■ *111 • The bride was graduated and political science.
I fn f nh.h"' -fromBrlgham Young University Vic couple wUl reside in
L »reL M ^s ie san d s taU ce in graduate
' adorned the tables. The four- ' ’
tier wedding cake wils topped
with miniature cherubic figures
of the.bride and bridegroom.
_ Assisting at the serving table
were Mcrilyn Metcalf, sister of
‘ the bridegroom, Mrs. John (Compiled
Bluth, and Mrs. Danny Boyd. Weekly)
Gyesta were served by Vickie
and Janice Metcalf^ Tamra
Haskell and Kelly Miller.
Mrs, Kelly Carlson, cousin of the bride, was In charge of the
guest book. Amy and Brad
■ Carlson assisted at the gift cart.Pre-niiptlal parties were
hosted by Mrs. Vem Harmer,
Mrs. John Dluth, Mrs. Uoyd
M iller, and Mrs. David
Hamilton at Use Banner home;
by Publishers’
Fiction
JONATHAN LIVINGSTON
SEAGULL -lllchard' Bach
THE WINDS OF WAR -Herman
Wouk •CAPTAINS AND THE KINGS •
Taylor Caldwell
MY NAME IS ASHER LEV •
Q iaim l^tok.IH E WORD -Irving Wallace
THE TEKMINA i . m an ■
by aunts of the bridegroom In Michael Crichton
THE LEVANTEH -Eric Ambler
Superbly Slim m ing
Printed Pattern
A POHTION KOI'l’O Ii_£ :a iE ;
McClary
;s -
DARK HOUSE -Fletcher Kne-
belTHE GPl'IM IST’S DAUGHTER
-Eudor-*-Wolty---------
Nonfiction
O JERUSALEM! -Urry Collins
and.Dominique Ijipierre
I ’M O.K.. YOU’RE O.K. -
Hiomus Harris
THE BOYS OF SUMMER -
Roger KahnTHE SUPERLAWYERS -Jo
seph C. Goulden
GEORGE S. KAUFMAN - Howard Teichmann
OPEN MARRIAGE -Nena and
George O’NeillELEANOR: THE YEARS
AIX)NE -Joseph P. [jish THE GAME OF THE FOXES -
liidislas Farago
THE SUMMER. GAME -Roger
AngellREPORT FROM'ENGIT^E CO.
-fla-Dennls-E. Smitli—--- 1-
tW IN FALLS - ' IV ln FoUl) Public Library officials iiavo'
U^Uod minkevlflws fof a few
of the now books rccontly re:
cclvAd at the library. '
' "M onhotlan North*’ by
Morthb Albrand. From \in drothfiUc opohbig scene to Its
. electrlfvUig cllmax .— here Is a* riveting novei of suspense..
' ‘.'All and Nino-,, by Kurb«R
Said. Sot in the Traiis-Caucasufl, thU^.is a story -of All, a
passionate young. Moslem, and
Nino, hla Georgian love, and ■
how their lives are engulfed by
the conflict between East and
West.
• "T iger's Daifgtiter” By
Bharatl Mukhcrjoe, When Tara
rodirns to Calcutta, she boord
witness, to Uio downfall bf her
own class. •
"Horatio Alger Ia\ Alivo'and
Well and Living In America” by
David L. Goodrich. This
colorful book focuses on ten
coptemporary men and women
In order to eiploro what It takes' .
■ to be successful under ..30 In
today’s highpaced life."Rome Wasn't Burned in a
ImpactratingsairedSurprised if on a future
supermarket expedition your
ecology-ooneerned-wife—flonds- you over to the meat depart
ment to compare Impact
Ratings.
Midwest Research Institute, a
Missouri-biased think ttink has come up with a new system,
called Total Environmental impact, that measures Uie
envlromnental effects of con
sumer products from birth on
the production line to abundon-
'tnent on tW* refuse heap. In its
first application to u specific
product, the system showed
that molded pidp meat trays
have nearly twice as much
harmful effect on the environ
ment as foam plastic trays.' To your wife, picking a lower
Impact rated product will mean
a cleaner environment, whllo to
some businessmen, tlie Impact
system will mean a more
perspicacious sho|)^r.
Day'.' by .Leo Rotten. a
treasur)' of wonderful^bloop«r8,
collected from evei^y .cbn-.
celvatil? soiu-ce or, concocb(]
by Uoaten. ' . : .
.1‘Under the Yoke" by Ivan.
Vazor. A novel, revered'by the
Bulgarians as* one 6f thofr.
classics. An exciting story of t h ^
A p r il. uprising of 1870 and .
Bulgarla'ii liberation from five'
centuries of Ottoman tj^anny.,
“The Kllldeer" by Dbrothy
Ham ilton. This story^takes .
place (m a faixn In .Indi.ana',
emphasizing the ImportailM of
Genesis; 2:^4. .
*’M lleH ig Ii-Knee Deep" by
Richard K, O'Malley.' A Hory 6bbut Buttq, Mont., In the
turbulent twenties when the city-’
was a lusty, two41sted copper
camp.
"A fter LetfVlng Mr.
MacKenslo” by Joan Rliytf. A
terrible, but superb book about
the final floundering to
destruction of a pitiful woman. '
" n ie Devil's Daughter" by
FVank Yorby. Joan Paul Marin,
the hero in Frank Verby's now*
novolrls only part devil.
- f ■,
'D id1-g-trip'DAIJLAS (UPl)-.-T DaUai .Treailt 8y»Um '
busfii do dot travel DeaiLFark&liuidr,.a Iiouilflg_J__. development for the elderly. But Uiey will itr^y
. . ;.j o f i^ e regular rbuteatafewnipsoftheflnger.
. . The clty*owDed system has ilflrted Its "dUlra*' trip" program by which Park Manor resldebts '
' . .Deed only to dial a telephoQ^ request sad a
dispatcher will reroute the next bus.oiit of Its
. way to make the. pickup. Tbe same return
service Is alio available. /
And, the city buses plan to start another In*
Dovative service next week when they
Inaugurate their own version of tlie airlines
"stopover prlvllegea."
On Sale Friday morhing at 9:30.
St. Patrick, Mo., is tiio-only
town In the nation named for
IhepatrorMaint-of-Ireinnd:---
iO PPenG h ...D odya iiiiSD ie !
. 9 2 2 0 \0V, - W/j t\i
Do everything. yo cvfrywiiere in u strennjlinud
paritsult or dress lupikid by a flip, lilHf scurf lie. Choose dip-
dry-don polyester.
Printed pattern New ' half slze.s 10‘a, I ’i'*!, 14'j, lG*j,
I8‘*i, Size ibust 37} tunic,
pants 2\ yds, 54-lnch. 95SCVimty.five cents for each
J pattern — add 25 cents (or euch
pattern,for Air Mull anil SiJeciul '
HandUhgl Send to Marian
Martin, . Times-News 305
■pattern Dept.’, 232 West I8th St., — ^G W ,Y o rk / N. Y. 100U-. Print ,
. j j a m address with lip, size and «ylc?r\umber.
IDO top Fall-Winter patteps
' In all-new Fashions to Sew
. _ catalog! Plus fabulous bonus-
’ choose a free pattern, 75 c'ents.
IUjtant ayylng Book sew
' today; weai* tomorrow. II.'
' , Instant Fashion* Book — -
I pf fdshldn facta, ‘II.
■ J .
V a m .f - e m u n n r ^
Dunham French Paters!.. the new^hQe^happening from France! Buttehsoft suede minhwedgerbottomed off with the porthole sole that has
rOveryonp- ta lk ln g lit’S”THE shoe for this season’s “ differents"... and in your , favorite colors.
. in L y n w o o d ,
OUR ENTIRE STOCK OrACTlVEJUNIOR SPORTSWEAR
$ I 00Broken Sizes 5-13 Regular to$ 1 2 . 9 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . NOW
62 CARDIGAN AND SLIPOVER
SWEATERSJunior & Subteen Sizes
Reg. to$ 1 2 .9 5 .. NOW W
47 PIECES ACTIVE
JR. SPORTSWEARBroken Sizes -5 thru 1,3
$ 3 9 9Reg. to , $29 .95 .. NOW
r— - H K i H l 4 l(
OUR, ENTIRE STOCK OF MODERATE W E D JSUMMER DRESSES
$ 2 0 0Broken Sizes 8 thru 20 and 14'/2 to 20'/2 REG. TO $34 .95 ....................... ...NOW
ITA B L tO F O D D S n S rE N C
Missy Sportswear $ I 00Reg. to
$14.95, , NOW
OfACltEAMOUS RANO----BRAS Sizes 325 th ru 38C
* 2 ”
,N
Reg. Priced 11.0ONOW
0 N £ G R O U P O FSUMMER ROBES
$ 3 9 9Sizes 10 tliru 16Reg. to $ 1 9 .9 5 .. . . . . . . .N O W
PARIS SHOE SHO Wa t th e T o p o f^ h e S ta ir
Charge Down town on the Mall
gaplQaf-4-H OtQp Jerome fair fio aJE R O M E —"nio Siyjorloaf 4*
- n Club took first ptnco In Iho flont division ^of Uio Jcromd
County “ Prfagrcsa *.72" Fair and
Rodeo parnile Wcdncsdny.
vA tol«l of $250 in jwlio money,
was awarded' to parotio cn* tranta.
. The Sutfarloaf i- ll Club
received 150 (or. (IrBt place In •
Uie float division.'Second place
and 125 was awarded to Uie
Ciooilinf' Methodist Omrch. ,
The Jerome Slierl'fCs Also participating In the . Mounted Posse took first place-
parade was l971;Jerome Rodeo .{»nd |25 In the pdssb.ilivlslon,
Queer/Debbie ^cheoc. wlio &con(| was Uie Gooding Purple
reigns over this ycnc's fo|r.and, Sa«e Riders. The Jerome rodeo activities until TJmradny Junior poase placed third,
night wheii.thejiew queen will . In Uie novelty division Van
Lnnn Drackenbury, Jerome, former Miss Rodeo America;
served as parade morslml; '
nnd iWrdi. thif'Joromo Senior
Citizen Fund, 110.
Tlic Valley High School drill
team took first place In Uio drill
competition, winning 115.
Second was Uie Jerome Girl
'&out Troop led by Mrs. Dale
^Itimmond.
Ti\o purnilc was led by the
Jeromo High School bond,
directed by Larry Standloy. It
followed Uie some route as in Uic pnst, proceeding down souU)
Uncoln to East First, then Uiro«
blocks cost to Clovoland, ono
block to Main Street, and down
Main to the fdlrgrounds where
children . parUcipatlng In tlie parade were treated to Ice
cream.
Jerome Moyor Jock Rusaoll
nnd mnyora from Eden ond Hazelton, as well os several
c o m m is s i o n e r s .f r o m
surrounding counties, por* Ucipated in the parode.
be.selected. Following ,Miai»
• Scheer In the 'parade were Ujc seven qucciv candidates. ,
Camp's-space shutUe was first, $25. Second was the Rev. Dill
Barrett family on hiking, |15,
Ghallis rider rodeo leader
GARDEN OF EDEN constructed by the
-Goodliig-Uuitiid-Metliodisl-Voulb-C^ti
Populai* float
Writer finds tear ga& real
popular float In the Jerome Cuunty FoIr (mrade
Wednesday. During tlie trip from Guuding, the _ .,. ,
tree wofl Uowii offllicjfloal, but was repaired in • time Ui enter Uie luirode.
I
D e b b ie h o m e
JEROME - The first night of
Uie Jerome Rodeo Wednesday
iUiw Jim SmiU), Cliallis, leading
.In'Uie bareback’ riding with a
total pf '59 pointif.'.
Taking top honors in calf
. foping was Jeff, Copenhaver,
Lone Creek. Orc.. wlUi a time of
• 10.5 seconds, topping the
, crowd’s {avorittt.Puun Oliver of Uolse, ■
Uuye ^{urt. PyL-utello.^'is-
leading In saddle bronc'riding
wiUi ,U5 {joints. Steer wresUing
winners was Jackie West,
Jerome, with time of 4.7 seconds. ,
A tie for first place resulted in
’.llie girls’ burrel race between
■'DarliJne Collins, Sweetiund.
Wyo., .and Jody Thunnun,*
P’aUon, Nev. Both bad times of 10.9. seconds.
First place in Bralima bull
riding wjuj captured by Benny
Stoddard, Rexburg, -05 fwints.
I ’he'Cassia County Sheriff's Posse also |)erformed during
Wednesday night's show. A
novelty act including Roman-
riding (uid .trick roping was
ptTfuriiit'd by Neul s<}hinldr’
TTiey will present shows again
tonight in the final rodeo performonce,
Highlighting 'Hiarsday night's
rodeo will be the crowning of the
new' Jerome County Fair queen.
Fair queen candidates' are Debby Slagel, Betty Will, Janet.
Illa inc CamoN C a s N i a
Elmore Goodltii! Jerom e U ncoln
M inidoka , Twin rnllN
M a g icV a l le yThursday, August 24. 1972
Three hurt
in crash
at Jerome
Uilli)tT3, I'ixie Unrncs, Urcnda
Pflersun,' Shurri Muir and ‘Patty Sonniciiseii.
(Continued from P.l)1 could see where cinderblock
walls had been lorn down to
provide m ateria l for street
borricades.* Once I passed a heavy pioou of iron pi|w und
tossed it mto Uie I'anal so it
wouldn't be uround us u weapon. Twice I came upen
lines of masked state troopers,
but they didn't try to stop rpe.
At uboiit 24th Street, yix
blocks from Convention Hall,
the demonstrators began to be
Uiick. AcToss Uje streets from
them, wcll-dri^sttd people
“Hookfcd (lown from hotel
balconies to watch the fun.
Dem onstrators walked
run.' But Uie runi)ing con
tinued. Soon 1 heiu-d other
voices shouting ‘Get out of the
way'.’ Stale troopers currying
cluba began to run past me, coming up from behind. Twice I saw troopers holding clubs in
boU^hunda*tf)e hands separated
by Uie lengih of the club, run up
behind demonstrators, plant Uie club In their backs, and push
lhem~o ahovc not l\eard ent^ugh
to disturb a blocking guard in a football gome, but enough to
catch ihe attention of the
demonsU-ator. n\e demon-
Rl’IlLEY - Debbie Flowi>r», whu WnH Injured ■Imu' 'iG when ii car run Into the Purley High .Schiiol band, has buen released from Cashla Memurial
She is now at her home with her parents, Mr. and \;rs. Janies Flowers, Burlvy.
Miss Flowers was In Cassia Memurlui lt((si\ltul, theu truWHierred lu u Salt Lake City.
Utah, houpltal and then returned to Casdia Memorial.
Family members report that Miss Flowers Is able to recoguife them uiid emlverses with thejH althoagh she dues nut open her eyes. SJie does move her arms and legs, however.
The family reports they are encouraged by ■ her progress.
Action obtained on Malad Gorge park
GOOD lN ti - The Idaho
Parks Uuard will put up parking
biirriurs. fences and signs at the
• prupoJied Malad River GorgeSlate Park soon. u’cco} dli\g to County lust week to examine the
state Rep. Vernon Raveiucroft. site, and that Steven Biy. sUite
JEROME — 'hvo persons
were listed in poor condition
und another in fair condiUon at Hospital this
morning following on Occident oh liUeratale 80.
"Hie accident occurred about I
a.m. near the rest area just
north of the U.S. 93 Interchapge.
north of 'I'wln Falls.
' Officials at the hospital
reported Richard Murphy. 28,
. Uiicago, 111. and Cht^rlene Sloas,
'22, Uemta, Ore.. both In pqor
condition with multiple Injuries.
Ustud in fair c'ondition.IsEd-
ward King, 33, S^'otUc. State
pohccinvestlgated the accidcnt
but tbereport was not available
today. . . MANfLA (UP IJ-A 32-ycar-It was repdrtcd the single car old escaped rtJurderor from the
accident occurred when the southern Philippines' Dovoo native . stones for parking .west bojind vehicle, left the -penal colony, following his
bjirrlers, warning and.directlo/i highway, overturning and arrest told ouUiorltldshe bribed
the site.
Wednesday. Ravunscrufl lold
Uie Times-News two state park
officials came to Gooding
uiriiidt'x-
7 8
l)is|)*‘rsion;' .7’o</«y; ICxvvUvni •Ttm iffht: I*ook I’ r i.: I'lxveltvnt
may b t olle<ted by
Buys escapeparks board director, had called
iiini to say a work crew would
be in G or ing soon to put upHe said the state parks board
.responded limnediately to his request made at the Gooding
C oun ty c o m m is s io n e r ’ s
meeting Aug. 14 Uiat sofety signs and to fence one or two, narrowly missing a conal near a prison trustee wiUi 20 pesos precautions' be established at overlook areas._____ the highway. . ________ ($3.30) to allow his cscnpt*.
sU-ator would lurch bi/t not full, look around, und go back to a
Walk.
alongside delegates, urging
Uiem, to dppose Uie war. One
woman delegate was saying to a demonstrator,‘You're offensive
to me. Wliy aren't you proud of
America?' In frynt of heru-iiian delegjite was sayipg to iinother
People cumc out of stores
yelling to the police, ‘KiU those
hippies! That's ihe only way.'
That wave of excitement
passed! I saw si>me den^on-
strators Uirowing boards under
fwissing cars, as if trying to
T
delays project
demonstrator,•Well, it's in-. mi»ke Uie boards land in front of
teresting to hear your the wheels and stop the curs,
argujnents. Thank you very' The cars, kept going,
much.' 1 heard no obscenities at At one intersection, some anv time on this trio. demonstrators fonned a llneJn.
TSw^hirwalklh irdelegQC^• wimm- inFgr iitrcKs-orcoirventlon Hall, a group of
delegates were walking
together down Uie middle df the
street. Demonstrators walked
anU-way sentiments at them.
'Hiere were some shouts and
demonstrators begun to run.-
Some dcmonstratdrs yelled tit
Uieir feUows, 'Don’t run. Don't
'T . r i -
l ip s
O U . t l
HUPER'i’ ^ A new federal board at a meeting atteni|edj}y
regulation iias cau:ieU a liOnlay •'’‘-‘Vt'ral nort^t^lde area farmers'
delay in the start of an Idaho ‘*"d led by Rep. Steve Aiitone,
Highway 24 nuproveiiienl Rupert, ami himself,
project, according to sVdW .Sen. Diu-ing the meeting. Uie i)nard
John P*5avey. agreed to develop the Center-
Uie new ruling requires that all Plan was to begin al the Dietrich
projects involving federal < '‘d und improve'about one
money carry an approved Uiird of the unimproved sectione n v i r o n m e n t a l im p a c t at a timcf which would have
statement. ' ‘ made the' Center U jkc im- '
. ' .. .nutorprovernent of six miles of the said,
highway w«st of the surfaced- Sen. PeaveysaldUie hlghwoy rttiidway., -.west, ..of ..Kimama, project should begin this fall so
which woqid • elim inate the Uiat the road'bed will not be* small walled terrace open. As almost yearly closing of that flooded next spring,
two Dollccwen stood on the highway by the Hoodin;- of
tcfruce.Icllmbedoverthewall. Center l4»ke, Peavey said.Tliey said nothing. - Hie Senator said that the
I entered ‘the conYontlon importance of, improvlnB the
grounds. And Uiat was when I section of Highway 24, crossing
.almost got hurt. I tripped over Center Mjike, Waa oul
u'sprinkler head. ■ last spring to the stale highway
nvorce?^ they’re available at SY auction
A motorcycle policeman drove
up, dismounted, and advanced
on the demonstrators with a can
of Mace. They scattered und
I t u m ^ down the last block
toward Convention Hall. TIio police had buses parked from
wnU to wall. leaving'only a
^By TERRY,CAMPUpLb , featuring local waitresses, auction block.
TImesiNews writer games and dinner are aU part Of ParUcipanta will vie for a
\ the Ketchum-SurT Valley scenic airplane ride over theSUN VALLEY — An Clianiber of Commerce’s "Fund Boulder Mounmips and Wlilte
opiwrtunity to sinjj in Hap a Bus" event, .scheduled to Gouds.doiiutbd by Jim £k)nurt'
Millci ■!i^aOT~A^l.■onlpl■!^e benln at 7 ii.m. FrldflvJii-thc n nvp,vrnmimnh<iiahli>-lii-th«-
divorcer- Fou^ German IJmelight Room of Uie Sun Sun Valley Ski Club, donated bySliortlmir puppies. Valley Inn. Gordon Butterfield; a day of fly
lliose are some of Uie items flawing wlUi Jack Hemingway:
that will go to Uie highest bidder Under the direction of a vasectomy, donated by Dr.
Friday night, with proceeds to auctioneer Nt‘d Bell and casliier Robert G^^lnnor;- or a
fund two shuUle bufies_Joc_Jack—Cosimanr-»—myriud-of-honeymoon for two nights?winter service between-services and merchandise, three days 'of boby sitUng
Ketchum and Sun Valley. donated by urea stores und service and a bottle ‘ of
Heidelberg inn.Competing for the Utle ofMIss
Fund a Bus wiU b e ’the 14
waitresses representing eoch of
the restouranta In the chamber
Tickets for Fund a Bus will be
110 per person nnd will Includc a
sit-down dlnner'and |3 worUi of- •
script 'for playing Uib many
Ka'mca set up' in the- room.
Tickets may bc-pui'chosed at
the - ‘Sun Volley Lodge
------ — » ______ V- information desk and theTlic auction, u queen contest individuals, will be put on the chi^pugne._dQnQlcd_ by., the.. chamGci^ffice'iHTCetchunT“
Demonstrators^ trouble some Idaho delegates
Hearing
delayed
al Rupet't
tty DW.IGHT JENSEN
Special to the TlmeS'NewB
MIAMI BEACH - The Idaho dcle«aUon sat
“ Uirough Uic final aa-plannpd, sessions of the..
Republican National ConvenUon, got conned by
Uie Secret Service, and headed for home.Only Uiree rpembers of the Idaho contlrigenl
hiid U-ouble wlUi Uie Wednesdjiy night
domonihcator3. A -Utxl contiiining alternates ' Ruth Johnson and Eliuibeth McReynolda, oloiig
y>ithf^rs^McReynbid^sjothcrtWnjatoppgdjieQr-:.lUio-PreAldentT“ Convenlibh Hall by dflmonstrotors who spray- -palniod lhelvTn^dshrold^d'rlpped otit engliie
‘ Wiring. The Uireo' got out-and walked to
ConvenUon Halt wlUiout flirther. trouble.' .L t . .. Gov^. Jack Murphy and nine oUier
delegates simply walked the IS'blocks frcm the
hotel to the hail und, oxcepl/or being rerouted
Uirougft alleys a coUple of tlme^'hod no troublto.
TTio finarseflsloii jf/Uie con'v^Uon'Wcnt off
_8ocordin'g to plon. '' . •
RUPERT — A motion to
delay the preliminary hearing
of Joseph Arturo'Ybarro was
grunted 'Wednesday.
He first appeored Aug. 14 fn ’
cx)urt on charges of forcible
rape and assault wtUi a deadly
'I’htt Idaho dL‘lcguUin,.inuiiudonly seven rows from Uie rosU-um, got Into lino to shake hands' D istrict Magistrate
wlUi President and Mrs. Nixon. There was an Blacker extended the-Umrnodlate-ruahiindT)rcssTrfT)oopUrtaimToThT~hem1nB” d a n n D "" 'a « y w rD ic
ppdlum. Some o! Uio big men'blonrf the line had rctiuest of Minidoka Proa. AUy.
oil Uiey could do to forestall the rush f r o m - w h o sold,Uiot
behind by pushing backwards.. vitid-titoio'a evidence hocl been
Finally the Secret Service stepped in. "Movj; sent to Uie F B I ’crime lah-bi
back, move back,!' they shouted. "People are Waaitlngtoni D, C., for analysis'
getUng crushed up. here. Movo ^ ic k and . no^ been rotumod,.
... everyone will get' a chance to sluike ritifida wiUi ^ aame octioj^Mog[B^a\p_._' ------ ---- --- Black(»';donlo'd Ui'o dofondonftf
Tlie Sccre^S^rvlce pcQvedlli^bajliuii«curuio„-nVQUQivjQr_a_cl>imBO-ol-vonuo.— ~\ TTiose who moved back lost Uielr places InJIno ' 'I’bo denial was bused oh
and never-did gel to thQ'roatrum.''niose who i procedural .uiatters, as ', the
Ignored the request und crowded aheod got to dofendanl had not been bound
atuike hands with the Prcaldent. lUoliohud'SomB over'lo any court and cliunge of ^delegates in each category. ■' .V venue wus not warranted uLUiio
■ Then It way bock to the'hotel, a'^QW, hours of early stage, sleep, and up to catch airplanes, some of them Ybarra ren}ained ln;Mlnrdoka
■ *“ Vlng tojeove the hotel fo^ Uic ttlriwrt wlUdn 'W ^ead fty withU ^o rli f o r bus
flvo hours p( th^ond of tho.hiind9h«l(rn«. und not at 110,000.
PUnCIMSINO TICKETS (or Friday nl(hr>
Fund t Bui srASus Volley mayor Wlnton Gray,
left,'ond Pete tine ,. rlghL TIckol id le r Paul
■ Plchon, Keichum, center; li one of a number 0/
are* yoOnjilert eompeUnj Jor a new-bloycl*;
, which will be nw n td^ lb Uie ode who ielljfTho' m oit tickets. . V ■ '
I ,* '■ I '
1i Tln(»»-N«w*i Twr'n Thuriday, Auguil » , m 2.
M ^btirn coSidiicts iutorijng project
HEYDURN A tutoring tutorlfJBproafom In Durloy Will planiwd for-20 flmt' Hirough. -prberaih fo r ' children ago 6 ' be hold Aug. 30 ot 7:30 p.m. in rourtli graders, ^vlth 20 hiRh
Uirouglr 10 Is being conducted Uio Durldy Neighborhood school students tutoring. Any
_^n to r . ^ adults who would , lllto toDolton, assisted by his. wifo vplunteer ns tutors nre nlso
June, has conducted a bobk- oncouroged lo do so, BoUon
lending service in Hiiybum tlils said.summer. Each week, the Tlio summer progrom will
Rarenta ond child ore yisited In concludQ. Uie last wobk inand tutoring progrnm director, ^ o homo and given a Augiut, with this fall's prdgrRm
Tliegoaijiof.the probram are ..programmed reading book scheduled to. begin two wookstd help clUldrcn develop better which tlio chid redads aloud to after school atnrts.
the parents. Bolton's nsflignmcnt as o
During the school yenr, the . VISTA volunteer in Ujo Dilrloy-BoltonsJ^lan o two-hour after- Hoyburn area will end Uiis
school progrdm to meet, four December, days a week at Hoyburn
elementary school. Tho tutors,
who are high sclu)ol students,
will meet Individually with
. . _ . children for help with reading ike amore active part in theit skills,
children's educaiion. . The second hour will bo o
A moot/ng for all persons structured time for amali group may contact Tom
InKirested In organizlng^a craft work, 'rtio program la Bolton .at 078-3074.
this summer ot Hoyburn.The phogram will bo
expanded to Includc Burley
elementary schools this fall if
. enouftli interest Is shown, said Tom Bolton,. VISTA ^volunteer
reading .skills, bettor study
• habltji* ■ and constructive
approaches to school Work; to
Introduce the children to a wido
range of experiences, such as
crafts, cooking und art;-to help
working parents with after,
school care for tiieir children, and to, encourage parents to take ■
GOP dra^s for 197(6.M IAM I BEACH (UPI)-Foiir 'of Uu j ' 1052 struggle bctwp«n, ^^ld/i976-UiaJ’s what the boll alternative .
yetirs In odvahco, lUjpuUlcans, c^ lo ‘8 Sep. nobert A. Toft and game Is all aw u l.’V Sen. Charles H. P<)rcy o!
^ n . D ------- * " ............. ‘ ■ .........................hove disown tlio battle lines for
tho party’s : 1070 Presidential
.mmnlnriUon. •
- In pno camp 'are tjie South,^
tlio West, the small states, tl.ie‘
c o n w r^ a d v o ^n d Spiro T.
Agnow, _ j . . , . _ .In tho otbec ore^tlie largo,
Dwigh^D. Eisenhower.
Ilift first fltep was tak^n here
Tuesday jit tlie 30th Republican
National Convention.
In a political powei^ play; tho
party's conservoUvo wing im*
posed a formula designed to
give, small southern and wcs«
Boj^nd question*.. Agnew is ' lUinols, who four ^ears ago hod v
tho man-the flght-wants and visions of being Nixon's running
boyon4 . question A ^ow is inato and wound up In almost willing. mado'his Vnovos'
- Even bo'foro Niion announced uuTiveek. ' •'
ho would keep /ignew on tho 7 Ho lod tho Rules CommHteo
ticket, the Vice Fjre^dcnt {old dghton beholf of tho big stptfs
tho A^anchestef Unlbn-Uader infokr a blggdr share of dologotes ..
/ hcavily*wpulotod oi/ban and tern states the balance of an Interview that ho would tiqI'^I/i 1076 but in thq end was
‘ Industrial states, tlie ronmants pOwer at tho 1070 Republican 'occcpt unless he^^vas consider^ forced to obandon'tlie effort'on
of Uio GOP's eastern llbdraHeonvoAijon^._ . '** : ■' ing, running for the Presidency tlio convention floor.
■ ' ' * ’ Tl is upshot was U\at ho
antagonized his enemies, do-
In order for tlic tutoring
oroKriim to contlhuo after the
qndof this year, locol people will have to show on Interest in
ossuming responsibility, Bolton
flald. Anyone wanting more
information' on .the program
Juno
Winners at Cassia fairCMILOOavlLOPMINT
Unil I Carol Amenua, Kenpi* M«f Smiin, M in Dlut «nd did rlcr; Gloria Dtnutn. Cindv W«rr«n, bolh blu*. Elam* aowtrt. Anna M c lln d i. Julianna JOIlay, Carman Walker, all r»<l
Unit II L<natl« Clinom VarUa Wffinar, and Sandra Whitakar. all rad ,
ClolhinBCvtnini] Elaganca. Sutan'Amand*. blut,
and K ritt** AOatri*, fad
' Unill Oarla.^lj*vi»?**w'llara SmiJn,” Siavan Patar«on, all- blua and d itlr ic i. Alayna) Hardlay. Malania (tarbata R atm utttn, all fM
Unii II K tnn it Maa SAiim. d iitr ic l '
ta ll Oala^minad ClQdy’ Garner, blua, Jodia Anaerwn,
Karan Uoatiy. UcOmlay, f ia n ta tMoiernick, Oebr« S itwart. Snail« Siewarl. Valent Slewirl. Cheryl Winlle. all <ed
Mofarcycl*Mat Kuwina, Mark Kuwana. Andy
Kioar, all blue. Rickte Ceorga. Jerry Kuwtna. all rad
TractBrMark Kuwana, Dean Ringham, boin
blua and d itln c t1*oraitrv
C»ro> SarQeni, Roaanna .^myer, OebUia Smyar, uoOita Moncur. all blue and oiylncl. MIcnalla Turner, Lon Palarton. boin blue. Jill Hitl, Marlea MQncur, Oarrto Smyar. all red
■aalFai I.OiOpound* and up Su»an Payion,
Anne pierca. Jerry Lynn Udy, Sally Payion. Ted Oaitt>. M irk Sm jo , Ooug Oarm. HarlonhW.ird. Sarah Jana Spencer. Pamela tla rin . Debra Ward, Carl Erlckion, Jellrey Jontt. Mike Larton. Scoll Carler. Clark Ward, Patty Harper, Vairy Ward. Trbdv Ward, all blue
Fat I.O M totO poundl Slaven Ourtee, Jonn Wrlglay, Dili CitaiOum, Julia Ourlea. Jukia Ann Joiiay, Pal Parke, Nellie Ourtea. Perry Tracy. Wayna Hurtt. all blue, Cindy Ola(ker. Tin| Crar>ey. Pat Roo*r<. Cardalt Sheridan, Parry Vracy, Mallhew Swan. Ron Ralley. Scot Allan, all
^at. »4I lo l.oso poundi Kenna Harper. Shelley Hogert, Lloyd Hichini, DKnn Harper. Joan Harper, Cratg LariOn, EOtvard Harper. Scot Enckton. Sandy Harpar. Oryca Ueck, Mary Pierca. Richard Swar>. Kanny Tracy, Taddy Qiacliar, Kanny Tracy, Tarlya Jolley, Cindy Craney, al| blue '
f=al, «10 poundi and unaar. Bob Feriic. Ronald Harper. Rick Harpar, Kenneth HvUhliofx, G rtfl JM\n, M *rU oShtritl»n, Lanae Ourtea, Dt<h Ferlic, 6 0 ^ Richmt, Kanny Tra(y. Dili D^rkdull, Randy CoiiK- Charla HuKhiwn. Oel Jone«, Halan Parka. l le h tWard. Jelt Chaibufn. all bjoa, Mark_
Dlackar. LaOawn Teaier, Donni. Hutchiion. Paul Rodo^r»- Ton> Oa<i«y. Dabb Oaiiay, all rad. Cariea dann, Nancy Conrad and Oarlon Thompton. alt whita
Dan Kidd, grand champion, rotalta, Randy.Curflt, retarva champion, roiatla
■aa(Fal. 1.0S0 and up. Pal Hogert. blue.
Jim Kanak, Alter) Harper, Oallvn Ward. Cryital Payion, Janet lUylon, Rod A»her. Jamai Parka, and Kent Kidd, all red
'a n o u ic o w iRay Sarganl and Slevan Saryont. both
blue
M ICIIAKI. lUJUGKSS
. . . aAKI^IUMl
News Of
ServicemenTWIN FALLS - Airman
Michael Alan.Burgess, son of Dr. and Mrs. Herbert E:
Burt{e3s, Twin Falla, has
completed basic* training at
Uekland-Alr Force B o se .^ n
Antonio, Tex, - .
BurKcsH has also completed
technical training at' Keesler
AFB.'Biloxi, Mi.«w. He has been
assif’ned tu Ent AFB Colorodo
wing—«nd who?
In recognltlonio Qie renomin-
ation of President Nixon'9 total
control of the party tho doop
poiltlcol split in tlio GOF^paved ovor for tlio time being.
. Joining toge'ther In well-
orchestratod harmony arc Now promise, tlio' conservatives took
York Gov. Nelson RockofoHqr, on tlio liberals on tho conven-
Nixon’s politicql enemy for tlon floor In front of more than
Edward
chuselts, 0 black In a basically than two4o-ogo margin,
whito party; and Sen. J a m e s / TlierO were efforts on botli
Ignoring overtures 'of com- In V97Q.
i TIien tills week, an assoclato
quoted Agnew as saying " I
wouldn’t put up \rith hhis job
for another four J'erfrs if' I
weren't interested In seeking
tlio top one.”
Agnow himself told rejMrters
in Miami Beach tliat . " I ’m
scrtod his allies and could not >
dven control tlio Dllnols dologa- tlon.
SImt out of top party councils
slncc lOfiO and demoraliicd by Barry -Goldwdter’s nomination '
lnlOG4. tlioGO^ liberals lyivea
surfeit-. of familiar faces.lA/ttKCHl Cliviltjr |U> UUII (tu y i lit l iu i l t U| U I .. ' y lU lllU lU T lUUCH,inn n -decodo; Sen, nntlonwldo tolovlsian uudienco “ooplnB my options open. I RockcW lor, Sen.
W: Brooke ot Mnssn- nnd Uirnsliod them by a boiler Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania ond
Bucklcy of New Vork;
Conaervatlye passing
Hepubllcan!
Four years, from now, that
harmony* could well be burled
In .another liberol'Con^rvative
a sides to picture it os merely a
croas section of tfio party."
California Gov.:Roniald Rea-
•gan, - a possible challenger
™ rron tiuonbe tw een lw o nd. “ nniiinn«.A nAn*. Anrffn^alniv onnowhere near endorsing an Agnew candidacy. Ho put it this
way;
“Vve admired Ted Agnew as
neth Feflic and OoU Farllc, both b iu i ’ flH lnoandlHaw ltts
Ten to II year old t Once Deck, tilua, roM lla-anft <i>»lrlcl;>M|ka Larlon, rvd. roteiia anil d i» lric l. Scoll Carlar, while, rotaile and d it ir ic l. Todd Uarlh, C ryilai Payion. John Wriyley, Trudy Ward, Cmdy
bluit jn d d i«tricl, Ueity Moorman, Tanya Jollay. Ten Lynn Slangar. Tvrri Money,Cart'.Seymour, all Ulve. Sondra Sau*r.Tarri Burch. Dawn Hujjinga. , KarenOedke, Carrie Walker, K im Ooman, Ttna _ , . ; .Dradthaw, Honald Harper, ChM-let S p rU lg S , C o lo ., w h c rq ; l ie w l l l""“ '“ " .n ,; . " o,™ serve as . lennl service'Durch. blua and d itln c l, (.aDawn Eartir», u n n r 'ir iH 'lt Jill M ilt; both blu«, Tony G loflliia . VtBlhiFitihugh, Sieve Ourfee, Wondia Kaeiflunn, H e a n d hj.S W lfC . th p fo rm p r
small states for 0 bigger sliare
of tho ^Jie witli no reol
Influence on 1970.
— ---------- ,---------- - But. Clarke Reed, tlie Missis* ,
sliowdown, strongly reminiscent slppi state chairman, candidly ^ ^ ^' ' * , president but 1 tliink he himself
would be the flrst-to soy that to
be trying for 1076 now would be
loo crystal-balling.’'
, Sliould Agnew be os strong In
1976 as he appears now, tlie
party’s liberal wing (which
dominated the GOP from the *
lime of Wendell L. Wilkie to
DwiRht D. Eisenhower) would have lo come up with a viable
Sen. Jacob- K. Javlta of New'
York.
Their problem Is they have '
no candidate—and only four ,
years to find one.
DIacker, Sleven OurJamt% Parkt, allPaul Rogeri, K tltey H urti, Richard . . Parry Tracy, V loyd .R ichin t, Royd Rlchlni, all red, Tma Craney, Janel Payton. Carolea Uarih. Dill O^rkdull. narloh Thompwn. Jedd Geary. Wandy Dunn, ^il.w h lf*. . • ,
Twelve year o ld t Craig Larton, blue ro ialla and d itt rlc t Rodney Curli». rad rQ«alle a n d d itln c i. Allen Harper, white rota lla a n ild ltir ic t, Jerry Lynn Udy. pink ro«e))a. Edward Harper, Jail ChaiOurn, Julia Ann Jolley. Mary Pierce, Kent Kidd. Doug Oarlh. M allhew Swan, Cindy Craney. all blua. Lea Carler,- Tedd Olacker. LaNaa Ourlea, Tommuaiiey, llene Ward. Valry Wad, Crag Joi*e«, Shalley Rogert. all red. Pal Parke, Pal Rogari, JuHe Ourfae. Linda H alm i, LaDawn Teaiar. Stevan Sergani, Margaret Dakar' and Ricky Geary, alt White
Fourteen IS year o ld l Dan KidU. blue rotette and d ittn c t. Randy Curtii. red rotelte and div iric t, Rick Harpar, white rokalte a n d 'd i i t r ic l>* P a lly Harper, rote iia . Sutan Payion, Ronnie Harper. Scptl Allan, Jim Janak, Rod Ainer, Hon Dailey, Kenna Hai'per. all blue, Oallen Ward, Clark Ward, Dill Chalburn, Detl Oalley. Kenneth Huichiton. Wayne H urti. Tere«a QIackrr. Pamela Darth, Debra Ward, Sarah Jana Spancer. a llrad . Haodv Colllrfr~Mkrlon Shefldan, Jellery Jonet, Ray Sargent, Jim Praton, Mark Kuwana. all whila' Siklean and up Ann Pierce. Dob Fariic, Joan Harpar,, all rgtatle« and d iilr ic t, Dalh Ferllc. Kenny Tracy. Sally Payion, Tanya Jolley, Diana Harper, Cardeii Stitridan, alt blue. Halan Ward, Dea Jonat, Helen Parka. Charlet Hutchiton, M ark Swan, Janal Oeyiry, Dpnnia
allHOB»M
year old or ovkr yeldm^ Kavin
Eddia Markham, Debra Oilwortn, Scott Carlar. ail while
Junior w atta rn pleasure Jodi Sammann^ Jeff CKalburn^'Ron-Dailey, all bfiia and d it lr ic i, OiannaitiDurch, Pal PJrke. bolh blue,' DebDia H ill, Jamst Parka. Lea' Carler, Scot* Carler, Tony
Delrdra Coats, Filer, wlll reside
in ColorJ^do Springs, '
China unruffled by Quemoy site-JEAiaElWJP-I-)-4VlUJbolh41ie-lnterdiel-eotnmunlst'9e»-trftfi
»•«<>•• 11 >«i I,a,a I
For PiO(t»p|,Pi(|cU(i O f . .
D E A D A N I M A L SOarfio Oitporchec/
PHONE COUECT TWIN r ALLS 733-683S GOODING 934-S4I4
C.U.I. INTERNATIONAL. fo„ne,ly
Idoho Hide & Tallow
SnoSHONn; - U . Cmdr. and
Mrs.S, J. Vaden and two
children visited relatives in the
Shoshone.area this week.. He Is
1, Sandy Harpaf,- .Olorlield, Greg Durch, LaDawn Er N tlU * D u fltt . Slava Ourlaa. Fran Huitinga, Carta Crane.
Valerie Chritlian. Wendit Kae Uunn.Julianna Jolley, Vikki Reitman, Kavin Sailon. Jill M ill. Roy Week*, all red,Eddie Merknam, Kalhi Filihugn, Nancy s ta t lo n o d , a t C hcSUnO »ke^**'Vn. Conrad, all while . i “ .. . >
In le rm td ia ie w nte rn hortemanthip b u t WCrC S p e n d in g a ICOVC In Jodi Sammann, Je(l Crijtburn, Tom 'Dailey, Roy Weekt. all b lu i and d itlr ic t.DIannt flurcn. Carla Crane. Julianne Jolley, all blue. Lorann» Andrrun , Fran I^K inga, Vikki'Redman, Kevin Saaloiv Oebbie H ill Pal Parke. Le« Carler.Valene Chrutian. all red
Junior reininu Jell Chatburn. Keyin Saiton, v ikk i RaOman, «U blu< and d ii ln c l. Julianne Jolley. Jitl Hitt. Pal ParkB. II blue. Roy Wcek», Debpie Mill,Jamet Parke Leo Carler. Scoll Carter, all
' ‘ tills area. l.t. Cmdr. Vacjen Is a
former Richfield resident, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. M. H.
Vaden, Moiintairi Home.
Sasion: Tjnya Joiiay.
Junior weitorn rid ing Jell Cnatburii. Julianne Jollev. Kovm Sa<lo«. all blue at\U d u lnc t. Vikki Hrdniiin. Jill H ill. Roy Weeki, Tom Da.ley. Octibio Milt, all blue. Dianna llu rch , Fran H u 'lm ga . Jodi Sammann. Pal Parke, /jm o» l*arke. Scoll Carler. all r«d. Wifndic' Kae Dunn. Nancy Conrad. Lea Carler. all while
Senior reining Melon Parke. Tan,a Jolley. Non Dailey, all blue ana d itt rn l Dill Chalburn, blue. Sondra S^ger. i»ct»v
Doman. uonnia M ulcni\u i\, C narle i Hulchiu>n. all while
Senior wettern ndiiig lliil CKdtUuin. Helen Parke.i'Hon Dailei J it ir ic l. Debbi* McCuitiiOn larcn Dedke. Oet»y Moorman. Tanya Jolley, fe ri Lynn Slanger. Cnarlat >tuKh>»on. all blue. Lorana AnOerwn, Tern Uurch SontJra Sager. Kim Doman. iloxnie Muicxi Carl Seymour, all red, Tma - UraiiWiaw. Ronald Harper, both while
Senior we»**rn p leatut* »>>1 Ch»*burn. Terri Morley. both Oloe and d itlr ic t. Ten Lyim Slanocr. Helen Parke, both DeblJie •• 'I McCuit
H tre lo rd t M *rg ar« f {taker. Pa>W Harper, Ronnif Harpar. all blue. Pat Roger*, Wfndy Burn*, bolh r»d
Twelva to I I month* old Handy Curti*. Joan Harper. Rick Harpar. Dob Ferikc. ati blue, Edward Harpvr, Sandy Harper, Lma Helmt.ailrad
Under one year,' Dan KiJd. Edward- Harper. Randy Curii*. all b iu i. Honme
- Harper. Handy Curli*, Dob F frti? and Tim Pration. all rad
Champion*nip Dan Kidd and Dob Ferllc, both roieile*
PaadirCaina Caroie« Dkrlh, Nancy Conrad. Darion
Thompton. alt .blue, Janei .Geary, jed Geary and Ricky Gear-y. all red
B ie llc I rM tf*Doug Darth.and Shellay Roger*, boin
. . . . ^ - • Humnga. Karen lledke. ...Slanger, Hon Dailey, v l i P ifke , Scoll Deiiy Moorman. Tanya Joiiey- Carter, all blue. Xddi* Markahm. Sieve Driothaw. Donme Hbtchi*oii. Ker Ourfae, Fran Humnga, Carla Crane, Hutchiton. Ronald Harper, Cni Carna Walkar, Wendia Kae Runn. Jodi
----------------------- - - H ;II, l e . ta rfe rT - J Fred
Four year Old or over mare Hoy week*. Julianne JoUey, Helen Parke, TomDaiiey. all blue and d i» inc i. T trri Durch, Dill ChalDurn. Jen Chalburn, Carl Seymour, all blue. Tony Glorlield, Greg Qurcti. Dawn Humnga. Karen Uedke, Nancy Conrad. Vikki Rrdman. Ronald Harper. Heidi Holtman. Kim Ooman, Oabbia McCuiilion, all ted Lorana Anifar*on, Sondra Sager. Kennein Hulchiu if, all while
Junior halter thowinanihip. Jill H ill. Scoll Carter. Lor I McCui*lion, all blue and d i*lnc l. Greg Durcl], Nancy Conrad. Heather Hallman. Ht<di Hoilman. all blue. Eddie Markahm. Steve Durlee. Jay Heward, Lenny Rehn, Jamet Parka. Edward Harptr. all red. Tony G.orlield,
zEiijar-------------- ----- -
“ bngllifi
Dradinaw
FerliiPole •■ndini
Tanya Juiley t ir t l . Juali. Jell Ch.itou'n. third
I- I Tand d i* lr i( l. Pam Aincr. i d itlr ic l. Him Muolgomrr y Keyin Sniycr, RiCky Hedm d i* ln c l. Kelley Jard>ne. Kc Dyron Clark, Trudy Ward. Le*iiv
CORPUS CIIRISTI, Tex, -
Navy Lt. ^j^{.l David E.
Menilng, son of Mr, and Mrs.
John J.'KleniinK. Uliss, js a
student pilot at the N^aval Air
Station here.
His wife i.s the former
' Deborah r'orrestcr, Hurley.
TWIN FAl.I.iJ - Navy Air
man Gre^jory L, Yehle. Twin
Fjllltf, has reported for duly at
tlie U. S; Marine COrps Air
Station, Iwakuni, Japan.
UUPERT - Second 1>1.' Elden
R. Condie recently completed a
nine week tranyiMirf.iUoa-offw
^*4 basic course at the U. S. Army
7^ "-Transportation School, /Ft.
Kiisti^, U
He is the son of Mr, and Mrs.
Ray C. Condie, Rupert, A 19G5
graduate of Mlnlco Hij{h School,
he received a B,S, dej»ree in 1972
from Utah Stjite University,
I,^Kan.
United States and Japan trying ’ Its total area Is only 175 square
lo court its favor, China does' kilometers.-
not seem to mind the Nationa- Agriculture forms the back-
llst Cliinese military presence bone of the economy of
on Quemoy, yvhere 0 massive Quemoy, where oVer i>i,000
offensive was launched H years people live. It is self-sufficient
af»o today. In food except rice, which Is
It was at fi:30 p.m. Aug. 23, imported across -t}ie ]004nlle
1958, wlfen Qilnose shore Taiwan straits frontTalwan.
batteries near Quemoy opened In 1065 a land reform
fire at the tiny Island complex, program was started under
which has suice been hit by which all tenant, farms have
nearly one million 'artillery bee^ enabled to own the land sliells, they till.
No traces of war can be Wltii the steady rise in tlie
found today on Quemoy, only a per capita Income, the Islanders
few miles from the Oiinese began to enjoy modern anleni-
mauiland. */ ties. Including electric lights,
Tile intensive artillery duel city water, ra^io and TV sets,
between the mainland and the School attendance rates have
Quejnoy Island complex conti- soared. Tliere are 25 primary nued for U days. On an schools, five Junior high schools average, more than ;0,000 and a senior high school,
rounds a day were fired against Students constitute 28.50 per-
Quemoy during the period. cent of the population.
On Oct. 6, Peking suddenly Few worry about their future,
dpclured a self-lmposod "cease- One old villager, whose home
fire,” under which.comniunlst .was bombed flat 14 years ago
sliore batteries have continued today, described his experience
to shell Quemoy sporadically on ' as "going through helK" odd days. , " I ’ve' seen the worst, and
Mnn.T.se-Tiing has .■iiarp h»f( \vp’vi» hf»rn grnwing lilr-nnnflr-A
Uie Island complej alone, he said. "Why should I worry
Uiough he hiis stepped up his about any more communist
.auiipajgn tn Isnlnto NatinnalisL- nttackZ
ClUna from the real of
world.
'Hie Quemoy complex comprises Quemoy, Little Kinmen and
12 islets, 'riiey are located at the mouth of Amoy bay und .
Back-To-Scliool Special!'
MATTRESSAINO
BO.XSPRINliS, f a c lo r y C to 4 ® -O v l Cover m altes 'lh is spe-' c io l buy po ts ib le l
Rattonk
Twin Size
One Groiip Only!
R e g . M 1 9 ”“
Par S«l
k. blue ruveilr cd roielie and Mike (‘ rellon.
■ News
Of Record-
___la d u ie ha lie r %howmaninip.Julianna Jollay. Jell Cnatburn. Tom Dailey, Hoy W»*k», all olue and d n inc l. Craig McCui*l*on, Kevin Sailon. Jodi Sammann, Pal Parka, alt Diue, i.orar>a Ander*on. Oianne Durch. Fran Hu>M'ya. Carla Crane, an Bird, V.kki Hedn>dn. PtnaiB Milt. U fcC flfte f. LaNflB n iirl«c ..* li.
__"£S£i_5,‘m_Donno^lien.Jiioct^dt£a__fc am e r all Sm vfr Dict^ KclifY^.N H Iit Pur Inc. Shcc.'f
Taylor. Roanne Smyar. Danny Kel*»y.iiyer. Danny Ratry Pet«(\on. Adaiv Hale. L«>\a .Cra>u Dorm. MaHhcvy Clark. Sharne' Boren, o tjke TAylor. Dabra McDonald. C>ay Stnnonam. Lola Oarnct. Oeana Uedman. DAvid Judd, Uretl jackwn, llrenda Jonet. Kim Montgomery. Paul KcDey. N rit HrIvrMn, D att Ward, iu i jn
C«kt(l*COUH'tY • M ig l i l r a lt Court
W illordV Robarlion. *0. Sail Lake Ciiy, Ulan. O l M overweight on iruck: Leonard O. Evant, 11, dnid: 0 k la ', ' i | } SO, no' pro i-attd »iick»r: LtoyO K Witvsn, H, O a n c ro ll.tiru , toaadmu,.LaNa« Oayiey. II, Ourlty. t i r iO, »lop iign , and Randolph B. Dial. I f, Durlay, 11} U, aipirad veKi^ie late ly <intp*ciion Hicker
Data K Black, 47, Draper, Utah. t)4. QvHwaionion truck. Jamat E- Canady 33. Mulual, Okla , I I ] iO no pro raied iiic k e r , MicAaal 0. Klo«plar. 20. Rurlay. in ' » ,
S*nlor KaHar »howmnnihip Helen Parke. Hon Daiiay. Dili ChalCurn, Hetty Moorman, all blue ang divUici •‘.a rtn Xadka, Tanya Jatley. Ten Lynn Stanuer. Terri Money, aU blue. Deuu<e MiCuiH'on. Tern _Our<n, C a m * W alk{r. Cart Seymour' a ll'rad , Sondra ' &au«f' Dawn Huitinga, Tina Dradihaw. all «vhii« '
Sartior' w enern nor»eman»nip .D ill Chalburn. Helen Packe. Non Dailey, all
'i^F'>lcdhcr. OAlcn ^myer.Iwlne
l-ai Oan mdd. Cnritlme M iline. Karen Caiv K Rhonda Mcpwodh. DarrenSni.er irrrv Kuwana,'John Wngley, . Mike ^chnxdl. all Qlue Oonald Sandman Pill* .Dencti. f’ n iilic strihui'.a. w iro ra .Wnuley U Washburn. Philhp George. Gilberl Wdih|n;rn. C.trl Sandniann, W4yn» llei’ ch. Scoll A iiflitit. Paul Warr. all rodi Mat Kuwrthn. Steven H.ty u iln wt><le
•■pired veMcit late ly m ipafrion, and John W Diair, 2*. Sail Lake City. Utah.
J o i^ h 0 H ill, I I . DKIO. I i r so. patting • I tn ia riK lion. i lw e n Sprague, Burley, W SO. drag rating Jonn Haiiarton >1. lurlay . H IM , t ip i r M yen ifi* ta>*ly mtpoOKM. Kathy * Callon 21. Rup«rl. tl> u . loiiftwino *00 (low iy #na Mildred M Won. U •wria*. »I0 no driver » i ic a ru or> par ton
O a o i i t . i r •wriey. 1 0 W. ^O. iir*A«a T«<v B«nd«i.'lS .'-|uriey,t i l . no ' onvfT t li(*r>M B rifn <C MOMrl«A« l». Burior ' tU ii(U .« n i« le backin* C(*v>i» LM »*rrent>w*o. P . •wri#y. UB t'oa iifk *. 0*y» Oary 0 ** varM«w««< | i ^ u , »anu(» 'e"•9,*v«rnan«iA«
D lV O tC It - ■ «ey * Haiwav irom Roiiarm
Hei»**».Aw U > « > . JMhC ».iO*aeliMary C fi|l>«r. Av9 f t . tH I ■
>f r«f«l«i}♦ 1* 1. «ino» Oa*».
King H ill Grangf^
acciepts rnefnbers .■ r
KING H IIX — Mr. and Mrs. each King Hill'Grange family
Ijirry Smith were accepted os will furnish a fried chicken, plus
new member of the King Hill a salad, vegetable or rolls.
Grange Tuesday evening. Glvctlon 6f officers will bo*nie purple jjrand champl9n held Sept. 28 during the regular
ribbon .from the King Hill meeting. Tlie secretary will
Grange produce booth at the write thb lda)io attorney
Elmore County Fa ir was
nwunted In the hall. After a
(iiscusslon pbout Obligating and welcoming npw members, plans
were made for a special
general for informat^lon about
the Idaho Highway. Board's
auditing system. *Mrs. H. 0. Lipe reported on
the attendance of 12 King- Hill
' Ji.Qum*;'” ! ! . tiui , this stAtc Grongo mabtcr, Daji reported on' tipmyinft of tho
,nobln?oiT, aiklna'subordinate ground chcrry weed.- "■ . G w e c ^ to send In rtsolutlonsr Mri. P. M.,Tlmbcrs,'lect^dr,
iu .mo. M n" li! ' tS ‘r?! S !!' “ “'o QT‘“ '8® connWorotlon. proscnlcd tho program speaker,■——olii'-illKirijSi -AnothoT-lotteif,-lrom Dnvid—MrarJonra, who roportmliin'a
M, wfi'iiim 111 iin A., e ; ' Hortcrt, chnlrmim of Iho Bint? ’ new.«yslem with four quartori «r« . 11.100, N « N . Qrongo Ejccutlvo Commltteo, *n the school ycnr. Each student
concomed tho pay sbalo of state l> requ|re'il lo attend Uiroo
oftlcors and the clpcted quarters each year. She also
aecretary. told of a visit to the new moUiod
tMfihswp7c n)ode for 0 school Hagermnn High School, of ‘/nstruction by tHo.,-state .. ArtljurlCfeer tead an article
officers for Elmoro C oun tjm t"™ nowT.uhltorm probate Iho King HIUGranse Hall, Sefit, code. Mr. and. Mrs.. D. R.
w iiiia iii I I I iin Ave c •>ruc« AMlior. conlraclor. ll.iOO, N.A N . nc. u n i K i n p i O a li lub.. 114.000; M
S l09*n t|H . U l} AM Ilon Ava. B:, UOO,'" •V L. Conyeri, > » Ifh Ave. E , f ip a ir i.U06i Jo* LaVallH i Lol l l l Creon Acr»i.
, tub.. yjO.DOO Rickt Parki. L o ll 2, 92.C«th. H U .luO . contr»ciar. t i.OOO. V
O lu h irH « ll* n l ir u » U v 'I R u iu ll fldwartf Cummlni Jr.. 4 il
J t f f t r u n I I . . ' TWIn Kni».’ JOMsft T. U rtd K i. M l iM lh C. Rupert; Otnnjt W«yrt*W«lk»r. R t l . San ) l . l> *u l,'W a llic 'Roy I IM M IM . in « ConanI Av» .,Buri«yi ■ 12; ■ irov i m Nof mai .av«.. . Mem bers. of Ma^ipoaa
Grange will furnla|i deport, and
Anderson were the refrtahmfint
commlttoo-V.'^.. _•
•'-a;-; " ? S S
V -
je^m e falsiock sale
■ ^JT^uriday, AuflOst H 1 W 3 T tm M -N^w i, Twin F if l l i . Idaho • 1/
crop losses dim hope for better living standards
jteROM E — Tlie nnnuni
'Jerome County 4-H Oub anil
Future Fanners of Amerlcn fat
' stock sale Will bo Saturday at
P r o d u c e r s .M v e s t o c k Association aalc yards.
•D ll Priest, Jerome county
ngcnt. said the sale, wfll start at
12; 16 p.m. Tlioso eligible to
eriter stock In Uie {flilc are
youngsters who have shown
(heir ahlinals at the county fair
and have an iuiiipal which will
• grade gbod or better.
He .explnifled tliat the sale Is ' limited to one animal per tlub
m ^ b e r and the livestock will
' sell in the order In- which they
' were graded at t)ie fair.
Priest said that oil the day of
the sale, tlie animals wUl be
weighed in at 10 d.m. as Uiey.
arrive at ‘the yard. A uniform
alirlnkage will be applied,
■‘At Uilsycar's sale we plan to
have firm commitments
from packer-buyera as to what
•tljcy will poy by grade for the
animal entereii,” Priest said.‘‘AS’ an • exfuTiple, If ,a calf
weighed 1,000 pounds and.
graded hlgli citolce wltli a
commlUci\ prlcb of $20.25 per
hundredweight, the bidding
would start jU this figure. Every cent bid above Uils price would
mean ilO above the commlUcd
I^lco," Priest said.
' " If tlie buyer wonted to have
U»e animal slaughtered antj use
it, he would pay U\e (uU, price and lise the animal. If he
wanted to resell it. he would pay
the difference between the
$26.25 per hundredweli'hl and
his bid,” Priest said.
Peak achieved by meat prices
, WASHINGTOl') CUPD-Meal, The l-obor Departm enfs
prices have toiipped out'after Bureau of U b^r Statijstica
’largely c'ontrlbu':lng to the five- (DI-S) reported l\iesday‘ titat
montli peak Jn tlie July Cost of jlie cost' pf living rose-O.-l per
living Inilex, ‘ according to cent in July, the highest since
administration officials. U'lc 0.5 per cent Increase In
tlieAgrioiiUur.e Department's FebruarJ'.Tlie hike waa O.2 perUve^ock Markc UNaws Service cent In June. “
In a report lo be published this lllgiier lood prices, parlieu-
week wiirshow thiii wliolesale Inrly meat, accounted for about
beef prices set! led six "weeks two-thlrda of the Increase. BI.5
Hgo into- a Umg-predlcted sjjid. Prices for moat^,j>ouUi-y
downlvirn. and fish went up 2,8 per cent,
But tlie lower prices meat Is while fruit and vetable prices
now bringing or the wh,ole.sale increased 0.9 per cent, market may not be reflected in** The Index stood at 125.5,
retail food stores. ll\e officlala meaning tiwit gogii».and servi'^
Pork grades, egg controls proposed
DyBERI^AnbnnENN ER '
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A special series of
"marketing team "reports due for public release here .soon will urge efforts to tag retail pork cuts
witli the kind of quality gradca long used oh bei)f. • ■
Tlie reports will also recommend a study of
methods of controlling surplus egg production,
it wiis learned today.
Five reports^— on marketing systems to
improve farm income from pork, eggs,
potatoes, apples and canning peaches — are *
included in the package, llie documents,
currently being edited and condensed for
publication ai;d release expected in about a
,montli. were drafted by expert teams named
early this year by Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz. -
RecOimnendotiojis in tlie lengthy original dr/ift8 ront{o from compnrntlvely bland
i>uggestions to some which could touch off shdrp
contrpversy. like the proposal for a study of
supply controls for eggs. The House earlier this
year rejected one version of egg control.
Pro{)«sals made in. the reports are not official administration policy recommendations, .
Assistant Agriculture Secretary Richard E.-
Lyng said In an Interview.
’ Lyng said sUggt'sUons which call for govern-'
Tnbm^nm '^llin)b~feTe7f5aTb” Agi'lciJti^^^
Department agencies for stiidy and possible
action, while others calling for action by fqr-
mers or marKeimg groups will 6e left ^or th^Ir
consideration. ' •
Tlie fact thot some of the marketing team
proposals may .r.uffle^li few feathers does not
surprise or upset Lyng. He said the study teams
of federal and state experts^.()uslnesamen and
fanners were told to be “ Innovative and
creative, and not to worry about confonnlng to
estabUsihed policies’’ In making Uielr’ studies.
Hie pork team report suggestt d one metliod
of stepping up siilesAvhich have U igged In recent
yejirs in'coniparLson with beef, inlght be to
'’identify ” l\ig!\-quuUty cuts for cc naumers In U\e
same woy beef is tagged with retail grade
names like "prime" or "choice.* ’
Tlie Agriculture Department 1 lus for years
operated a pork grading system which.,while
not -using n ^ e s , grades hog < iircasses as
Nuifiber 1, Number 2, Number 3 or Number 4.
But the system luis been use( I almost ex-
cluslively for whole carcasses, i ind is almost
never used on cuts In retail cour turs,
Officials here say numy meal jwickers have
been cool towiu-fl the use of fede ral grades bn
retail cuts because it miglit weal ten consumer-,
dependence on pucker brand nai aes.
Other experts cautioned, howe\ er, that they have not yet-developed a practical and con
venient method for assuring that i^rade stamps
can be kept on retail pork cuts aft nr the carcass
is broken down.
Tlie outer fat layer on whicfi pork grade
stamps are applied is usually 'ximmed tuid
discardcd.before consumer cuts are fabricated,
the specialist explained.
Another proposed for ii^iprovt'd marketing
efficiency In the.pork report calle('i for efforts to
provide more competition in hog buying,
perhaps by-de^velopment of regi .mal or area-
wlde markets ' in . which eleuti onic bidding
ces worth $10 In 19C7 cost $12.55
last month.*’
B I^ also reported . that
average wagfis • of .workers
increased enough -to cover the
higher cc st of living and to
iiuprove workers' purchasing
iwwer 0.4 per cent In,July.
Assistant Treasury Secretary
Edgar R. Fielder said .the
rej)orts were a "mixed bng" of
good and bad news. But he
, a d d ^ , “^We expect to seT~
flfrther signs of cutback In
the pace of inflation before the
end q( the year."
Tlie B l^ survey was made
during the first week in July, In
which wholesale beef hit 'its
1972 record peflk before tiirnihg
into a decline. • 1 ■
Wliojesale prices of kteer
carcanses in the week ehrling
last Siiturdiiy dipped to 55.05
cents a fwund, down 9.1 per
cent from the 60.5ii cents for
the week ending July fl..
•'We .should be seeing this at
retail," an Agriculture Depart
ment econotnist said.
HOW much of the wholesale
decline will be passed un to
con.sumera remalhs to be seen,
l^ibur iind Agriculture officials
jiiiid. ■
By PHIL NEWSOM •
tJPI Foreign Ncwfl Aaalyat- ^ , Savcrc crop (allures' la U<c
'Soviet Union could nqoan’ a .Kctback for hopoa to raise Uie
Soviet consumer's standard of
living, particularly In conaump-
, lion-^ment.
HlgnN^inda, drought, a heat
wave, iW ds and admitted
mismanagement which have cut the harvest in Byelorussia ■
and the Ukraine by 15 per cent also could mean a huge upward
I revision of* last July's agree
ment by which the United
States Is to ,se ll tlie &vlet Union . at least $750 million
wortli of American wheat, corn'
and other grnlnsiOver the next tliree years.
Department of . Agriculture
expertsjhave eiltlmntcd that In
t)ie next 12 months Soviet
purchases of U.S. farm pro
ducts will total $1 billion.
. CYop losses this suinmer are
being piled upon heavy losses
during the last winter estimat
ed to have affected^^ti tlilrd of
* ^ e grain crop.
Target figure for the grain
harvest hnd been 100 million
metric tons.-A metric ton l^
2.200 pounds.
l.jist year's harvest also was
a disappointment.
Tlic crop falluMS arc occur
ring at 0 timo wlii^ tlie Soviet
lewlcrahlp hnd 'ho ^d to exp©, dlte n shift from bread gralna
to livestock feed grains to meet
growing consumer demhndfl
wheat. Tfic.ren
puch: food] groinswill be la
reflecting the gradual rise In
Uie Soviet stanjiard of living.
Soviet meat conaumptlon la
leas than half that of tlio United
States fper capita.
Suggestting the extent of tlie
emergency Is a nationwide "save bread" campaign being
cftrrled .on by Soviet newspapers.-
A newspaper In tho Soviet
Republic of Kazakhstan in
Central Asia blasted parents
who set bad examples for their
children by wasting. bread or even fcedln|? It to tlielr-plga.
A Moscow publication de
clared that "to thriow a piece of
bread on the floor "or Uie
ground Is "a graye sin against
tlie people."
Agriculture DepnrtWient ex
perts estimate about half of the
anticipated $1 billion Soviet
grain purchases^' will be . In
com,’Borghum and soy beans.
Assuming tlie Soviet grain
purchases do tal(c place, tlie
result will be a huge Imbalance
In U.S.-SGviel.trode.
Under Uie original agreement for the purchase of $750 million
worUi of U.S. gr^aln. Uie U.S.
agreed to extend n maximum
of $500 million in credit.
AnyUilng over thot presumB-
bly would bo In cosh and
probably, would mean the Soviets would have, to soil goIc| on Uie world market. ‘
Lack of agreement on ^v lb t
repayment of IcndOeaso deUs
Incurred; during WArld W or'II
so far have held.up any general,
occord on trade between tho
two countries. .
Minting p eet ion orders issued■BOISE (UPI) _ 'All mint
rootstock must be inspected imd
certified free of disease Ijefore It may t>c planted in Idaho,
Stale Agriculture Commissioner
Oscar Arsteln reminded
growers Tuesday.
"This control order prohibits
the removal of mint rootutock from the grower’s property to
be planted elsewhere wltliout
first obtaining certification
from a state inspector," Arsteln said. "This year’s high price for
mint oil hai caused a sub
stantial Increase in the desire
for mint acreage for next year.’'
He said the mint disease con
trol order of 1971 was adopted to
avoid furUier contamination of
agrlculturol land and to protect
the growing mint oil Industry In Idaho. A 1970 statewide field
inspecUon showed 1,330 acres of 5,932 acres of mint fields to be
Infested.
"The control order would
require 'a former to obtoln a certificate even if he was
removinj* the rootstock from his own land to be replanted by him
on rented land," Arsteln sold.
CA E l p ^l i i M -
_C Q n ta c k .th e „ T im e > 'N e w i. Farm".Sole& D ftp a rtm « n t- for com p lete advertis ing coverage of your fa rm «ale, hanci b ill i , n e w ip a p e r coverage (o ver 7 0 ,0 0 0 ro a d e rt • In M ag ic V a lle y ) ad vance b illin g . A ll o t o ne tpeclo l lo w lo te . Evefy ta le lif te d In .lhi« Farm C o len d ar for 10 day» before ta le .
AUGUST 26DEUS TRANSFER l> STORAGE
Adv*rHi«m«nl: Auguit “lA Auctlonaaril: Kay* Wall & Don PotUfion
AUGUST 27MR. C MRS. CLYDE PRYOR Adv»M li« fn«n t; A u g u tt 3S
A u c tio n ta ri: l y l * M a tU f t & CarV O«born«
i’ AUGUST XTANTIQUE AUCTION. PAUl A d v a r li ia m tn l; Au b u iI 34
A u c lio n ta r. Jo« O u fU k— Sal* M o n o g td by C l«n Oa\)UY
O M A H A ^ ^ L lv o s to c k :
Hogs G.OoJTbarrows and gilts 75-1.00 lower and moderately
active:'l-3 200-250 27.75 - 2a.OO; some 2-3 uneven weights 27.50-
27.75: 2-3 250-2G0 lbs 27.25-20.00;
bulk 27,50-27.75; few lots 200-270
Livestock
l^rain SEATTI^ I UPI I — Today's
-gmin-prices, f.u.b. Srottlcy---
Soft white'l.94
White club 1.94 Hard winter l.OG
-Gopn-Wr7&- aT60-------------
CHICAGO ' ' d mf'OtfllOM lol4l »t
systents could be used7
Running through all the flv > .marketing
reports, department sources sa Id, was one
common thread — Uie idea Uiat, i n one way or
another, producers should be looVilng for more
effedive ways of tailoring their output to the
demands of domestic and foreigr: consumers.
Produce Prices .
Its uneven lamKiT
32.75-33.50; load high choice and
prime 807 lb heifers 3100; nine
loads same grade 925-1050 lbs
33.-ID-33.50; choice {150 - 1000 lbs
32.50 - 33.25; mixed good and
choice 750-975 lbs 31.75-32.50,
Sheep 200; small lot slaughter
265-300 lbs 26.60-27.10; some 1-3
190 - 200 lbs 26.75 - 20.00; SOWS weak to 50 lower, mostly 25-50
down; aOO-G25 lbs 24.25-2fi.50.
Cattle 3,500, calves none;
slaughter steers and heifers
slow and moderately active;
steers mostly 25 down^ heifers
weak to 25 lower, some 50 off;
tliree. load’s high, choice and
prime. 1135-a2aD-ib-sU‘ers-34.75- -
35,00; load choice with end
. Oct 13 ; ) 3? 8/ J3 »UOre J] )Q 13 I I 11 }7
• 34 35 34 34 J1Aur 34 30 34 34 }2
( l i l t32 Ki HJ3 11 43 410
primeV loao lljs 34.50; choice
950-1250 lbs 33.50-31.35; .mixed
good and ^-hoice 950-1250 lbs
steady; ewes scarce; choice with some prime 90-110
lb wooled and shorn slaughter
spring lambs 31.50-32.00; mostly
choice 30.00-31.50,
DENVER (UPD-Llvestock:
Hogs 350; barrows and gilts
1.00 lower; 1-2 28.00-28.25; 1-3
27,00-27.75 ; 2-1 20.50-27.5'0. Sows1.00 lower; 1-3 22.00-23.50.
.J O U ie t. Ill (UPI) - Live»locli_ C**ii»-7,JS0r-trio# m 6def*f»lv'actlv*.
»le»f» 15 50, m»t«ncci 100 lower
- . . t i« « r i 14 JS U SO, th ou * uood «r>d cnolc* JJOOJ4 7J.
good 31 SO 11 00. nigh choict and prime h t iie rt 14 00. crtoiCf 13 W 14 00. goog and chpicc 11 OO 1} JO. uood 30 00 Jl 00.
Barley 59.0W)D,50rtporlnl bv U&DA
k price* paid delivf'cd ii 10 tirm. cenit prr iloie
Potatoes come in two general lo l"
types—long imd round.' Round
white ones uro recommended 1“
for bdllinit, frying and salads ^and round red ones, for salads,
boiling or fresh. Round russets
ure : uU-purpose spuds, and
Idaho russetSk or long whites,
lire for baking.
Paul news Hem? Call Georgia
Layton, .Tl^ys-News community cora*spondent, (}7B-fl90fl,
Tha toliawing w ilt b* i«ld ot pullIU dudia li lo cov^r tlornnabail. lo<oUd 134 1. RcilUopd St..%urUv, Maho.
SATUR DAY. AUG. 26 .1 9 7 2Salo T im eV l P.M.'. N o Lunch
PO lf/lAM P. .•,SWING SEToookcase
OYERSIUPfEOCMAUl 1>WN MOWER- , '
V SMAll SUIT CA'SE CMfcST Of DfiASNtHS ‘
BABY etP.• 3/4 OED.
CtOJHES RACK.• TOYS. ..COUCH
pOrta die i v f l r . *ENDTABIE “ W HlfllPO O l WASHLp DEbK.DEO SPRINGS & MATTRESS. TABLE,
.Sohit M iuallonaout Carton* whUh havt n»l b«tn op«n«d,t t * r iS M Whot'iln Ihtm.
TWMSrCABHBELL MOVING & STORAGE, Owner
('1^ i S — '^^7K - O FriC iSA I , . • . • V
BurUvJdaho ' KImbatly, fdahs' Twin hilUJdohp .NQmpii'; Idaha67«.9735 , 733-5363 <»6»4007.
- .A U U I O N U N f -KoytW^lliDenralUiMn
Jim Undwy, C U rb .
AUCriONa i i U N D A r , A U G U S T 2 r ; 1 9 7 2
SALE TIME — 1 :00 P.M. LUNCH SERVEDLOCATED AT THE HALL BUILDING
P A U l . . I D A H O _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __-■^AflPET DACi GER CHAIR
__C0M M 0DE/Oak__ROCKERS O A K H A U T IS E E C H IN A C LO ii ETS O R G A N STO OLS BRASS BED COAL R A N G E TIFFA NY TY(»E LAMPS PATTERN LA M P S O A K PATTER lN JlA C K CHAIRS O A K B E D R O O M SET, B e a u tifu l 3-PIECE W AL N U T B E D R O O M SET,
M a rb le roal nice
M ANTEL CLO C KS G R A N O FA TH ER CLOCK
-W A lL C L O C IC T T d w p rd i— -------------
. ■ . R O U N D O A K TABLE. cloW foot - O A K DRESSER “
SLANT TO P SECRETARY, O o b C AM EL B A C K TRUNKS FLAT TOP TR UNK P IA N O STOOL, re a l nice W A LN U T W ARDROBE O A K BEDS TELEPHdNES
' SMALL LOVE SpAT O A K BUFFETT W IN CLAW FO O T SLEIGH BEDS V IC T O R IA N LOVE SET, m a lc h in o chair* O A K anc^ W A L N U T PARLOR TABLBS
CLOCKSW A IL CLO C K, S W ino «r
• O , 0 ,_ W E lG H T X l0 C K ,-fe re » » e r— W ESTM IN ISTER C H IM E S CLOCKS
MISCELLANEOUS ANTIQUE ITEMSDISHES JU G SWASHBOWL AND P I K H l l t . COPPER B O Il tR ■ 'PICTURE FR A M E S M I I k PITCHER?CdPPER,. BRASS, IR O N ITEM S CAST IR O N TEA KETTLE
LARGE C A S T IR O N D IN N E R B E ll
S | > C C I A L N O T EThere i» »eli of 4-6-B potterr> BocIt' Chairs. There will be o lof of real- nice Lompt. Ail Clocks or.e rurrninjQ and Qood shape. Alt the ’(urnltures U- In reol _Qood ^ondilion, Also ihore will be a l t of other (niscellonoous • dishes, furnitures and olher articles
'too numdrous 1 o mention. This will be a large auction of real nice ontiques. v OREN fOR VIEWING — AUGUST 06 "197i
' -*A lt ,M y k N A G E D OY M R. A N D MRS. G U N HAXSitY.— PHO H E 436-6027 'T M M S - C A S H D A Y O r i A U
lONIER — J O E D U F F E I ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ THE IPAHO DEPAITTMENf STOREI . ■
V
•JV
I I Twin p«lli. l<l*ho Tliuridaw Auou,t J4, IW '
Killaniii sets aboutmpic
.MUNICH (U PD -U rd Mi-' jifcflldenl of Uie Intornallonal m«n of.many talcnta and one alrc who has ruled the nmatcuf
chad Klllanln of Ireland, who , Olympic CommlUeo and snid liked by nearly'everyone In tlio aporta body since. 1052. '
came into sporU administration his first Job will bo to heal tlio IOC, succeeds Avery Orunduge, Klllanln won out In a Iwo-mon
tljrough tlie back door 22 years cracks. ; the often prusty-and unbending race witir Count -loun do
UKO, Wednesday wa.s ijamed Tlie 50-year old Killanlh, a M-year old American million. Beaumont of Franco. No vote
count was announced in keeping
with IOC troditian. with do
Beaumont mpving up o step to
senior vice-president and .Wllll Duume, pres)t]cnt of ' Uie
Gprman Olympic Committee
and organizer of Uils year's^
Munich Games, taking over do
MUNICH (UPI) -CTOrgo 20a-incterdniaijilgh j im p mid registered Ur ' brat limu In the Pl“™ vice-.
Woods 0 Warden, Mo., led a 1' boUj relays Wednesday night In'^ 200-meter heat, '20.24 seconds.2*3 American sweep in Uie shot the finul major tuneup for the Rod Milburp of Soutliem (L a .) ' Killamn moved Into a hot
put and tho United Slates men Olympic Games. University took Uie llO-meter Z'® remains
also won tlie llO-meter hurdJes, Gary Black of Miami. Fla., liurdlcs In 13.7 and Dwiglit ,tbe IOC canStones of UCLA captured the - survive its current problems,
high jump in 7-1 2A. , »>“ve a lot of-nie U.S. 400-meter relay “ieople^ nights,” lie said, "but-
team won in 3fl.89 seconds andthe ICOO-iheter team won in politicians iiaye taken over
3:00.09, tlie world’s best time the IOC will have to
U.S. sljoiputters^weep top thre^places in tuneup meet
L.A.’s Bill Singer
shuts out Cardsm SANGELES(UP I)-H ard driving in six runs Wedne.sd«y
luck hurler .Blll Singer restrict- night, aa Uie Montreai-Iiljipos
ed St. U uis to four singles sliutout the Cincinnati Hods 11-0
Wednesday night to snap o on rookie Balor-Moore’s four-
personal foyr-game Joslng hit, 13-strlkeout perfgrrnatic-e., streak us he pitched the Los ctncmMii Mor.ir.»i
- Angeles Dodgers lo a 3-0
victory over Uie Cardinals.
The shutout was the 'fifth straight between the two clubs
at Dodgei* Stadiuiii. In posting . Iiis first victoi'y since July 22,
Sinner joined teammates Don
Sutton and A1 Downing wiUi
-sJiulouts over St. Louis. Cardin
al ace Bob Gibson has tossed all shutout innings against Uic>
Dodgers fn his last two
•performances.
Uiis year,
I'he U.S. did not enter anyone
in Uie flOO-meters and each of
four heats was won 'by Kenyans
with Kip Kelno, the
do a lot of serious thinking."
Killanin drifted into sports
but he started out on a senior
level —back in 1950 when, the
Olympic Council of Ireland
AW ARD WINNERS were honored at the Twin
FaUn slowpltch aBSoclatlon'B (Inal meeting
Wednesday uight. From left are Dewey
Williamson, Atlantic division MVP; Don Meyer,
representing champion Coors-Flrsr Federal; Kirk Williams. Pacific division MVP and
leading hitter, and Kay Reece, coach of the
Atlantic- division champion Gallatin Valley Seed.
H o t* II Mofu«r< Jb Chdnry.7b' lisncn 11U ttii III
jAVKr ](>
I D 0 0 M c C .trv r r (0 7 0 F o il k i0 0 0 S inulotw> II0 I 0 M i r l v II)Q .O' 0 J o rg rn ls n c0 0 0 Woodi rl . 0 I 0 - | l.< i lry )l>-
I 3 I
Olympic 1.500.meter gold medp-
list, clocking the best overall
tim eof 1;46.41.
' Ben Jibcho of Kenya won the ,
first heat of the 3,000 meters In
7:54.7 and Grant McLaren, of
Canada took Ihe.second hent In
7:50.2.
ip r . lg u e p T g t i l tcm<inn«i>M o n lr t i l
I; l le iu i i .04 004 00> - t l
io n o u *. I-OII Ol' 6. M o o lrp ii l
president.
Killunin has worked as a
buslneastnan. a Journalist and
more recently as a member of
the British House of U rds, His
ex[u>riunce in tlie latter profes
sion should serve him in good
Woods, a 6-2 , 300-pounder, f I h u n liftdy iiuiIfHl hin Im‘hI sHni nnt‘ **u*.r tn his electlon.-
Oply U hours before lie was
named president, the IOC was
rocked to its foundations over
Olym pics peiid Colorado vote
MUNICH I Denver,
Olympic Organising Conmiittee
Slowpiitchers-cile K ru m rit i and P lankey
I ’ l l rveB wins
Dean Krum m and Fred Barry Espil and Don Meyer,
^ I"lunkey were named to the .500 and Charles' Uowyor .485! mg Uie-^97fi Winter Games in -tsuin x,\„Ur,A ...hi..u i.
Moru.it>. McC.ii
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rgui p Ournam p CrutUv I t TolaU )i t l Lsuil Lot Angtlct
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/\.str4»s (i|i M vts u 'U h bi|{ liin in g
equaled his best sliot put ever
with a distance p! 70 feet; V a-4
Inches to pace the American
sweep. Al Feuerbach of Sun
Jose, Calif., was st^cond with
G8-1 M and Brian Oldfield of
South Elgin, Ql., was third with
68-1-4.
Tom Hill of Jonesboro> Ark.,
had th6 second bust time in the
110-meter hurdles at 13,85,
Second overall in tht* 2U0-
metei-s was Ita lian ' -Pitiiru
Menneawith 20.4. Liirry Burton
, of Purdue had-the Uiird best NKW YOUK , UPI, 'The of 20.6.
Huusten Astros scored five runs ' tk,„ guarrie, a University of
on SIX hits in the fourtli innlni! Soulliem Culifomiu slur from and wuiit on to defeat Jhe New ,,ntl - th» fn.u/,.rlHYor. Mets We.U,esday holder i . this event at
10.8. clocked the feurU. fastest jown ns presiilent ut
tlie fUiudesla problem, finally
settled by the ouster of the tiny
African nation from this year's
(James, which start on Sjitur--
day,
'i ' in under no illusions about
tJie task ahead," Killanin said.
■ " I would have been very happy
nut to have been elected, but 1
was, and now we have to try tu
heal the cracks."
• Naturally. Killanin was asked
how he stoodfon the lUiodesiaii
question and ‘what did he think
about ending the Winter Games
after 1976 —a proposal p\U
eliilj crownJim Pul-ves won the Blue
.Lakes Countt-y C lub’s golf
championship by defeating
Cliarles Cosgriff in .sudden- death.
Purves and Cosgriff turned
the final 38 holes at M7 cach
with F^urves going 75 and 72 and
\i)agriff 7J and 74. ^ •
:r Saitip-air-M tnisiiEShSi:i4. ,
Denver will be.almost impossi
ble if Colorado voters reject a
J4 million referendum Nov. 7, " If the state of Colorado
denies us the additional funds
.'I'win Falls Slowi>itch softball Coors-First KederJil, which Is
association "hpll t)f fame" and 'headed for regional playoffs in
Kirk WUliums took the must Cueur d ‘Alenu this weektmd.
individual playing honors. won die Pacifi division title with
'l>ie association (x)ncluded-its • Hoyal lounge and Depot Grill '
1972 season wiUi an awhrds , tied fur second- Gallatin Valley,
Willi^ims was named the
Pacific; division most valuablemake it aUuost hnpossible fur
"f "ef‘"Sir i::;s:r."However, if thb International
Olympic Committee ilO C ) wants us tu ^o ahead despite
Uie financial pressures, we will
do , our best tu stiij>e a
succe-ssful meeting."
A $15.5 milliun bill fur the
giinies IS pending in the U, S.
Senate. Hut it is void if the
referendum fails.
Atlantic division with Caiji's
and Pepsi-Cola second!
afternoonH o u ilo n
C u b s d o u ii 1' i id r t ‘s 7 -5
SAW DIKCJO (UPII Billy
Williams used a single, an
infield out and a sacrifice fly tu
drive in three runs anil lead 1 yOiicago to u 7-5 victory over
Sim IJjego \Vednesday night.
C n ic ig o t« n D itg o
Houtun H iw V ork
OPHouMof* 1. H o u^ lo ii 4 Nvm
I I I U.«u«r A iou l»lMddcr
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Now Y o rk 1 lO H
time of 20.66'and Chuck SmiUi
of Los Angeles was fifth with
2 0 .G 0 ,The winning 400-meter relay
team consisted of Ujrry Black
of North Ciu-olina Central.
Ilobert Taylor of Texas South
ern, Gerald Tinker of Kent
State imd Eddie Hart of
Pittsburg, Calif. France was
second in 39.4, Polimd third in
3!).9 and Saudi Arabia fourth in
44.1
Tl)e makeup of the l.tiOO-
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l b K t i» ir io e r . C b lh fr l H H H uU vf.II. — fir - - J e t I i-d r - T n S kmlJToM !,h
^ » p .io n « [J i . W il l i« m t
l l a r r , U ia iitN
b 4‘lt P ir a te s
SAN KHANClSCO I UPI I-
-Uiglithander-Jim Barr retired-
U)e last 21 batters in succes-sion.
. meter relay squad was Vince
Matthews of New York City,
Wayne Cbilett ahd Jolin Smith
of UCTAiind LeHSvans of San
Jose State. Italy was second in
3:07.5, Canoda third in 3:07.7
and Austria fourth in 3:^1,0.
H u l i n U s
tile conclusion of the Games
here.
As for the firt question -
iibout liiiudesia - Killanin said, ■'1 alway.s have to .sui)port the
majority." On the latter, he
replied, "1 have no thoughts
either way."
Brundage wantji an end tu the
Winter Games beaiuse of
commercia lism , but K illan in
said the Games could continue
"if th(*y are run properly."r p p i i i l i u . H
'IVoubled ' Call HoUine 73:W)122
year and also won that
division’s batting title with a
.523 • averagt!. Dewey
Williamson took the Atlantic lx*ague MVP. Caiji’s Furniture
ajid Culligiin-Paris won the
■sixirtsmanship avi'ards. ,
'llie top five butters in the
Atlantic d ivisidfi were Ted
'Manker,.627, U r r y Lewis, ,619,
Mike Phillips, ,597, John
Bryant, .5BU and .Steve 'Rjomas
,5fll. Pacific leaders beiiind
Williams were Rusty Eller. .508,
RODEOTICKETS
- CALL COLLECT
326-4398 'Twin Falls C ou n ty Fa ir
; SEPT: 6-7-S-9HAKE RESERVATUHS NOW!! ■ , FILER, ID A H O
big problem, even though the
country was denied a spot in
the Munich Games by a 36-31
ouster vot(J Tuesday. There was
httle doubt that jwlitics —
pressure type politics at that -
figured in llhodesia's ouster
and much'billerness remains in UVe lUC,
Bruiidat'e' wlw__had the
( ■ O U l l t O I 'S U I l
W IAh»rO r# ,I L i I. C o rk .n t ACOII* N o rm a n
} i
Aco«ia to } ua ltcft
1 J » A
I I r a w s w u tliis t J * h i l l t c s
PHII.ADEI.PHIA‘ (UP ll -
I>usty Baker drove in three
runs, two of them wit}) a home
run to allow American l4?ague
reject Jim Hardin To pVclc up
-his- th ird . Tlctopy'Wednesday' night as the Atlbnta Braves
uutlasted the Phiiadelpliia Phil- hes, 0-0.
and piteiied u two-liitte.r Wed7
nesday fur his first inajur
le^ague shutuut as the Siin
Fraiiuisto. Giants blanked the “Pittsburgh>irates tt-U.
Tile Pirates mounted only one
tiu'uat against Barr who I'.iced
just !i0 batters. Wilhe Stnrgeli
led off the second inmng with a
single and advanced to sccond on'Milt May's hit.'Barr fanned
Jackie Hernande?: to end tlie
ixming and allowed only one
more base-runiier .viivn losing
pitcher Bob Moose led off the
Uiird will) a walk. ”
ujihappy task of aimou/icijig the
-oust«r-vole-4kjesday-but-
CHlCAGOi U P I)—Bobby HuU pleasant chore in introducing filcKl a countersuit iii fe de ra l _ Knianiii tbe next president
court Wednesday to try to 1* hours later, said•prevt-Til—Die—UticMgo— Block—l"hln.‘al-|)i4;f*Mures-Avithin-tl
Hawks'* from stoppiag his 10(* woi’l becoming ‘'iijtolera-
attempf lo piay w^h the-;ble" and tliat his successor
Wiiuupeg Jetsof the new Wurld “ t ^ogh road ahead. Hockey Association. But Killanin conie.s to the Job
. .'i'he iluwka. last week sued excellent credentials.-He_ HulJ-in- Cook County -Circuit -*‘»s-beet»-H very-actjvc-member“
Court seeking an injunction to sinceJiis election in
prevent his departure on the served as Chief of
grounds that his c-ontract, I’rotutol for two yeurs and as which expires Sept. 30, ciuTies pi.csident of the i>ress a n d .
hiblic . Helatiuns CuuumMiiun—
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i n i MiMan.' H tl OR ■■ to
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Savt Hotrnar IS)T 3 J« A lO.OSf '
H r
Expos win with W o g i l ^ ’ 6 I I B r s
MONTREAL (UPI) - Hon Woods slununed two homo riuis
Into tho leftfiold blcucher.H,
t :
Wilkens unhappy with swap
' SEA 'rn .E tUPH_- Veteran
All-Star 'guard imd former
Scnttlc playur-coach- I.i‘nny Wilkens said Wednesday ’his first reaction was not to rej>ort
to tho Cleveland Cavaliers,
where the Sonics had traded him earlier in the day.
"At thiii point I can't sec
mysolf going tu Cleveland und .l don't Intend to,” ‘Wllkena.said
in a shakey-vo|ce<l radio interview with the. Sonics'
official broadcaster,Seattle tf-uded the 34-year-o|d
Wilkeng, an eight-time National'
along w ith fo rw ard .Barry
Gemens to the Cleveland
Cavaliers (or young all-star guard Butch Beard.
'*My first r e o ^ n —I was
shocked, very dls9|nnted and
disilluslohed," WilkciH said. '
__ , . . —option— ....... ............................... _ _________ ___-requiring ixith parti u i uj suUnit. J-^?ILr.iLji*!iaiiidicunicly_
any contract differences to ri»i"g fi'r a man wlm still iioldsarbitration.' membership in the British
. •> , National Uniun of Jounuili.sm.
(lard (fi'id aitlo
<ii(;s on |)laii(‘
HOUSl'ON I UPI) - Chuck
Drulis, a St. U uis Cardiiuds
defensive coach for 17 years
juid a coiich in. the National
Football League for 22 years,
died of an ai^pa^ent hciut
tittock Wednesday a s ^ e flew with Uie teaift to Texiis. Drulis
Was 53.
l l ie Cardinals, en route to
^loufltpn.Jor a 'Hiuraday night
pre-season game ;ugalnst the Oilers,were over Arkansas
when Drulis died, said u team
spokosm^-The s{wkesman. said Drulis
•suffered'.oAe previous hourt
u ltuck/ln l^W TRlrbody was
rciitoved from an airJliuT at
Uttle* Rock, Ark. '^ s d u y -
nlght’a game will be ployed aa
8chedul9d. ...Thu veteran cqach_,'hnd
overall 'res^nslbUlty for thp
Cardinal'^ dcfenajvu unit
‘ .'V
( ^ o o d i i f h O K s
longer pai'l
l.NGl.liWOOU, Cullf. lU P D -
‘ Gad Goodrich, who led the"
world champion I.«s Angeles Liikers witli 2,217 points last
season, has agreed to extend
his contract with the club for another two years, it was
annowiced Wednesday.
'll)e former UCLA All-
. America guard has one yeal'
rt*malnlr\g on his - cid-rent
contract and the two addltionol
years will begin with the.l97p4
campaign,. He signed ,f6r‘ an undisclosed sum. ’ ' ‘
The l,4ikera open tlielr pre>
seasoi^agaitist Gulden State ut Simta Barbara Sept. 27.
The Gcan-Uex Movie theater
in Buenos Aires,"with .3,281
seats, la tlie .largest In SouUi
. Aiyerlca, says Argentine Air*linoj<',' • ' . . . .
Tigfers: edge. As-tp protect
vigor- ' • ,T)iur»d«v; AuoutI j ^ r w j ' T lm M -N iw i/Tw lii P»lii,
tw in FMls foo ibuti hopes
I ■ DETROIT (URl) - BUI
Fyocliim's sccond (jriuid ulaifl- liomcr of'Uie soason cappcd b
seven-run' sccond Inning Wcdnosdiiy nlshl which helped
Uie Deu-olt Tiijera to protect
Uiiilr 1-2'ijnmc coat division lend ,_wlUl a 7-5 victory over Uio’,
Ouklund Atlllctlcs,
Joo Colcmnn, with ninth In- ■ nlnn relief help troln amck
Seclblich, won hla Ilrst gnme In
n monUi nnd helped Detroit stay
1-2 same up on Ooltlmore In tho
American League East.
CAlMornli.
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‘ Hood and Allen Stop Vanks 5-2
CHICAGO (UPD-Dlck Allen
blnstod an nwono/no iwo-run
V homo run .and aub. LuU
Alvarado hit a two-run single
Wednesday to load the Chicago
White Sox to a 5*2 victory over
the New York Yankees behind
WUbur Wood, who raised hla
• major-league .leading. victory
tot^ to 22,
Allen’s homo run, his 32nd of
tho season, put tho game out o(
^ roQCh In the seventh inning ond
was only the fourth ball ever
hit Into the ccnterfleld bleach
ers at White Sox park.
The blast by Allen, which
came off reliever IJndy McDa
niel, cleared a Ifl 1-2-foot high
waU: beyond an abandoned
bullpen 440' feet from home*
plotc.N«w YBrk cnutao
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K € slops Sox on oiic-lillier
KANSAS CITY { UPD-Rogcr
llolson allowed only o^o hlt->a
line single to right by rookie
Ben Oglivio with twp out in thfr
eighth innlng-T-qnd ’ErKlrkpa-
trlck-'hll a threo-run sijith
inning Iwmer Wednesday nl({ht
to lead the Kanshs City Royals
to a 3-0 victory over tho, Boston
Hod Sox Wednesday night.■otlon
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Indians run iitrtiak five
CLEVELAND (UPI)-Buddy
Bell drove In tlu-oe runs with o
' bascs-loadcd . floublo in < tho
seventl) inning to help Stove
Punning pick up his Uilrd
victory Wednesday niglit as the
Cleveland Indians, ran U)elr. winning atroak U>_flvo games
with a 9 1 vldtory over tho
Mlnnesotn Twij^^11)0 Indions, who were hold
to one hit by starter Dick
Woodson over the first . five
Innings, pushed across two runs
In the sixth. Bunt singles, by
Dunning and Bell jind Jack
Brohamer's sacrifice put run-,
ners on sccond and tliird with
one out. Clirls QiambUsa was
given'an intentional walk to fill
the bases. Dunning scored on
Alex Jol^ison's sacrifice fly and
Bell trotted homo when centor- (lelder Jim Nott\os threw tho
bail into tho Twins’ dugout.
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211 Kelly HK A|J(t> (J'2I ,^U M .lr.
IP H H EH DD SO
Cavaliers, Seattle
make swapCLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Cleveland Cavaliers of the
National Basketball Association
■Wednesday traded cuptuln
guard Butch Baird to the
Seattle Supersonics for star
guard Lenny WUkens and
forward Barry Clemons.
“We’re thrilled' to get a pfoycr of Lenny WUkcns'
ability," said Cavaliers^ owner
Nick J. MUeti. -Pairing Wuk-
ens with Austin Carr, we think
we have the moat exciting
backcourt In basketball. Butch
Beard is o fine young player
and gehtlemwi' nnd we wish' him well at Si,'attle,"
Coach BUI Fitch, who hfjs
been stressing u young buUclub
since he look over the head
couching duties, said he was
always looking for someone like
Mlnneieli
WooawnLU n tOrino»r 1 •LaOoche. - - Iounnino W 1 1 }Mennioan 2
Wood topiich id to two
Save HinniuanMl)
14 17 I000 ees io»-i 600 SO liOR-l
H o le -in -o n e ,Gordon Crqckott scored the
, second hole-in-one of his career
Wednesday at the Twin Falls Municipal golf 'course.
With Vey Gish and Dale Crlat
watching, Crockott ac
complished the feat on the par
.thr^e, 150-yard fourth hole with
a six iron.
S t a n d in g sAmerican (,eegue Itandlng*
by Uniled P re ti In lirna llona l le « l
w I pci. OB
DotlonCleytlandAAllviaukea
Cnicau‘>OakliiiK} 'Minncwila K jn ii i i Clly Calklorniii loxis
to SI JW 2'.
w I pci ObA« 41 SVO69 4V $IS ’ <60 )) S22 IU S9 417 1212 tt 441 17';
' 40J 21’ -W id n iid a v 'i R eiu llt
O r io le s w in on Ni.i^-rnn innlufii
BALTIMOnE lU P If- Haul
Blair’s three-run hoiner cli
maxed a ' six-run Baltlinorje
fourth inning and Jim. Palmer
W l f c
‘‘Altlwugh we’ve been building
pn youth, we were always
looking for an outstanding
veteian and we fuei Uiai 1^'iuiy
IS jUst such a player,” Fitcli
said. “ Lenny not only is a fine
ieader and student-uf the gaine
but I pul him in Uie samt: clas5^
with Jerry West in the last
Amblvalonco best describes
Cofich Norm Ttiomas as ha
gurvcya' his 1972 ,Twih ' Foils Hfgh School football team.
Ho seOs a lot of pluses, a few
minuses. Ho sees po'tentlorof a
strong team, Ho seos
possibllltlcs that the potential
mlgtit not.be roached. In sliort,
Oooch tliomias may bo less-
certaln of whot .lo cxpecl .Uila
fall than any oUie'r time ih-hls (Caching career: He's really looking forWord to Saturday'’s
1:30 p.m.scrimmage for some
answers..
Tl\c numbers aren’t ^ood,
only 47 rofipondlng to tlie call,
and tho ln)ury bug already has
struck and perhaps struck hard.
“Our. depth appears' better
than Rist year since we’re
looking at two or Uiree men
going boU) ways where last year wo usod five or six. In Ironman
roles,” he opens. “ But we’re
really undermanned In some
positions.’’ .
For Instance? ’ ’Ouk'
linebackers (M iirk McKain,
•Gary Irish 'and Dick Walker),
will definitely be all right. But
there's question marks behind
them. We have a couple of men
that show potential as corners
but everyone behind them will
be new. Our first-line offensive
tacWea are good. Those behind
need considerable time for SIC
football. We're very deep at
guordx-but it's thoso same kldi
who w ill bo providing tho
Unebacklng and a lot o{ dq|en&e.
However, they provldi us with
enoughmatcrial to help In other
oreos. Wo con sort of spot them
for help In other positions.
" I ’d rate loam speed as pretty
good, better thon last year.
(Gary) Scott onJ^B lU ) Wbotl- son‘ give us perhaps the two
fastest halfbacks in the state,
but they're both small. ^Pat
Keegan and (Paul).VanNoy are
only a step or two behind.
Hiey're also small. (All fall in
the>7 to 5-fl and 146 to 160- pound category). So physical
endurance over a 10-game
pounding comes Into con
sideration.”
Coach Thomas is more than
happy with the'response of his chorBe8/’ '^We’ve had some
really pleasant siirprlses.
(Jun ior Dave) Galvan has
looked very good ot guard and
even better at defensive end. Irish Is- up a couple of inchcs
and 20 pounds and could go both
ways, guard on offense and
linebacker or end on defense.
Dick Walker (back after laying out last yoar) will help us.
(Shawn) Livingstori and
(Brady) Barbour give us two
starters back'at safeties. Ross
Deahl Is another of those j^uards
who' is fine ' offunsively and
looking real ^ood atiiose.guard.
It’s things like that Just about
everywhere we look. It gives uslot of hOpo.”
.'lie ’s taken over os team
leoder," CoqcIi Tlibmus said.
"Ho was leading. Uio wind
sprints nnd tho cheers' Ho
performed so much'better tlian we's expected of Kim at quar-
terbnck. He took to tho option
like he's played it a couple of yeaVar-Now we dottjl know when
or how or if weVe wen going to
have hiin". And Ije probably
would be as gOud a. defensive .player as we.had', toq.,”.'
— Junior-'fullback’ Curtis Ward
has u Tlare up of clironlp ahlilb trouble, and luckless i le fb
Arnold, u senior center,
sustained a brol(un leg in the
sccond hitting drill and is out for
the year.
On the.oUicf aide, Twin Falls
1s returning a fair sprinkling
of veterans witli five back off
tlie defensive team and four on offense. •
T)ie Individual rundown in
cludes quarterbacks, ^u rg lll, 6-
1, 185; Ron Schapffer, 5-7, 155,
and Pat Cliarlton, (M), 170.
Halfbacks Bill Woodson, 5-0,
157; Gary Scott. 5-8, 165; Pat
Koegah, 5-a, 100; Paul VanNoy^ 5-10,17tf; lyilkaDostron, 5-a, 165;
-lillennis Mnughan, 5^7,'145; Doug
Macliamec, 5-fl, 145, and Kovin Wt^bb, M , 140. . -
Fullbackii,.Mel Harder,
180; Terry Hillman,G-1,207;and ■ Wfird, 6-0,105. • ■ ■
ends, Bruce Cooper, 6-0,180;
Mike Back,' 0-1, ‘180; SlJawn
Livingston, G.i; 177; Landy
•Hayties, -VlO, 147; Fran
Florence, 5-11, 175, and Jolin Blaku. 5-9, 150.
Tackles, Clay Asher, 6-3, i02; •.Toiiy Kevan,' 0-2 , 205; Kim
% ‘llsen,M , 105;.A1 Brodley, ^ 2, 184; Bill ’lililler, 0-1, -200;
Steven Day, 0-2, 188; Rod
FIndlayson, C-t 202; Bryan
Thompson, 6-0, 102; Honk
.Reeling, .0-0, 484 and Dave Hamilton, 5-10,200.
Guards, Steve Brawloy, 5-8,
100; Jesse Hernandez, &-0, ICO; Ross Deahl, 5-9, 100;' Dave
, Galvan. 6-1,175; M(jrk McKain,
5^, 175; John Wilcox, 0-1, 195;
Gary Irish, 6-0, 175; Dennis
Mitchell, 5-9, 100, and Andy Cover, 5-9. IflO,
Centers, Jlh) Millor, M , 180;
tom Afllionbrener, ft-1,174; Dick
Walker, 5.8, 164, and Herb
Arnold, $-0, IM.
Thb .Twin Falls schodulo
includes Sept. I , Joromo at
Thomsen has '
T.F. crown
Jeff Thomson, succeeded older bj'Qtlic’r Curt TJiomsen as
Twin Falls city golf c)ianipion
by defeating Dick Reed bnd
Greg Sn)utncy in Uie two flnol rounds.
llionlsen,' a sophomore at
Arizona S>te, defeated Rood 1
up to win the champlpnaliip
round and.ln U\o.special playoff
agnlnst flrst-fllgh^ winner
Smutnoy, won 4 and 3. Smutnoy
nipped Sherm Williams 2 a(id 1
for first night honors.
Bert Bolling dropped John
Miller 3 and 2 for fourth flight
lionors and^Russ Gage topped'
^ b j ^ k a r d ^ up' In the fifth
night.
Twin F a U B i^p t, 16, t^dWeU
at Twin Falls; S«pt., 23 T#ln
Falls at Borah! Sfipt..29. Twin.
Falls at Pocatflllo; Oct. 6,
Falls at Nampaj Oct. 13 Tvyln .
Falls at Idaho FalU; Oct.-tt. Highland at Twin Falls; Oct. XI» M6rldlan at Twin FaUsi Mov. 3.
Skyline at Twin Falla, and N6v.
10 Twin FalU at Mlnlco (1:30 s p.m.) .
Under q new Southern Idab6
Conference format all but the
Jerome game wlll'count In' SIC standings.
B A R
By 1‘IIIL PASTOIIET
Difference between thO/ boss and us: Wo bring.our lunch to work— ho*, brings . his .launch.
An angry father Is a man with a bau sonburn.
Df JIIT MISS THESE
H U H n H G
u j i lU E SFrom
I (iiiehr. ppa . r National League ilanding i
Qy Uniled P re it In lirnalionei E4»l
ii Loi«*-t.*rMunlU'til .I'iJJdUvlphia .
TJltarcd'aTTve-Kitt^. tor Ills I7Ui three minutes of the game
■victor-y-as-lhe-Orioles-crushed— ^-lirSnaitlerSupbrsontCs’
w. I. pcf. g.b.
Line coach Dennis! Almquist
added “Tl\la is a hard working and very coachable bunch.
They like the K.ame. TJiey hustle
and have a lot uf enthusiasm. I
tiiink they cuuld surprise sotnc
iwople."
At the same lime, both know
tliey have only six or seven nien' ■tiill_iind_oyer aix teelJ
Huutlon S3 ssajily six
over 200 pounds — ond that’s
the Angels 7-1 Wednpday night, nerul Manager Bob Houbregs
^ e Orioles sentiiine men to said U^adlng away the highly
the plate in the fourtlj Inning in popular Wllkens was “Uie most
----- thelr-secpnd-nioiit-productivo—diffleuU-det'ision-1 have everInning oC' Uie year. * .made.”
AtldnlA Si i i 4SS 20Sdii Ffdiiciicu S3 442 21’San DicUU 4S 72 MS 21
Widnaulav-‘» R eiu llt Houtlon I New York 4 San Frdncikco 8 PIMlburuh 0 AAoiilreal II C iiicinnall 0 Iilivli1l_
' A lijn iA 9 PiilladvlpKlA i (night) (.niciigo t S.in iiio go S iniohil Lu» Angelc% i Jt Louil 0 ImghlJ
{unbivalence.
Perhaps a major setback
already has occurred 'w ith
senior quarterback Mike
Sturgill fighting an ear InJjiry.
sustained while sw imm ing.
Learn a s k i l l .
A nd liv e a l i t t le .•The Army's 9th Division is now th®. Northwest's own Division. Fort Lewis, Woshington is its new home. AfuJ they're looking fo r good men to contirroe the "O ld Reliables” prouo tradition.
At a stfirting salary of ^286 a month. With promotions dnd rolssi o t you move up. With lots of additional free benefits and '30 dcfys paid
‘ vc^cQtlon a year.
Living and working In the great Northwest. Where outdoor recreo» tionol activities are second to none the yeor 'round. '
If-yo.u qualify) we.ll put it In.writing and guorontet you duty wlth-th» 9th for 16 months before you ilgn.,up. T^ilk It over with your h»ar«it iocot Army Repr^ienfatlve. ' • ,
ItodasOi Army wanli to
S P q ^ A R O L D 1 J O YTWINFALIS — 733-2671
“ DEErARCHEirrSESPlOPEN SEPT.2nd
Ch«ck Our Archary Dvpartmant
SHAKESPEAREBOWS
COLEMAN
SLEEPINGBAG
if!l133C63S-
PRICEDFROM.
SIERRA • ■ XUSTER • CASCADE
NECEDAH
* 2 7 “ . ’6 6 "
OXFORD CEDAR SdAFTSf r o m n o r t h r u p a r c h e r y
■■ Proniii>fn Grade #} Croited and Flelchod
5" Toper
- VALUES TO $ 1 2 .0 0
OPENING DATE FOR DOVE SEASON IS SEPT.,1st
FEDERALSHOTGUN
& ^ I L L S -U C). Camt Im i. 3 % dnm I « . t'» 018's . . 1 .
16 C). C«ME Load 2V, dram 102’. 6'i or t'l
20 CtCamLoid- *'*
$ | 9 9
• I 8 ?^
$ 1 79
NORTHW ESTERN “ W JSTIN ’:
-G a L F
3-9 Ironi, 1-3.5 Woodi, 4 ‘ Putlort. Syncro-boloncod.
REG: $ 1 2 6 .5 0CLOSE OUT...
WHILE THEV LAST
'far ParGOLF SHOES
M«n!i & Women'i S liti
VihiMtoS22.50Ckise Out .
31b. Iniul. 200 Fill Cotton Flannfll LInino 33‘’ K75''Flnl»htdS)i#
2 bagt will mot« for doubt* bog.Quantity limited-'Z4‘* Value
BU5HNELL "BANNER'3x8
POWER
V A R IA B L EMed. Croiihoir.
5 yeor guaronte*.
$39.95 VALUE-NOW
W IN C H E S TE R -W E S TE R NC L A Y T A R G E T S
135 PER CASE
* 3 .6 9 V A L U E
TRAJJ, RACK PICK-UP OR AUTOW W HACK
$ 1 .4 9 ,1
_ y .a iu e
ereSGUNRACK NOW$169
WOOLY WORMSHa„dT ,.d ,
Mogic Va»«y \ ■ $ J 0 0
REG.2tWCH- '
LVNWOOl)SHCPPINQ CINTBR
. OeM'l u a .if W nU i>i'-, t i.ni..r ir«. Iii4i>i
■■ ■ ■ . V - , ; .•’ » -TlnutNawl, Twin Fajli. Idaho 'niuViday,. Auguit 34, \m '
M a r k e t R ev ie td’----- ......... ..
' Idaho Tenij^eratures
V all4By Wii^ather t
L n e w YORK (.y iM )-i«co« '-i!
were lower ln'»luggl«li Irndlns sfler Ihreo liflurs on Uio Now D1.M111. w
York Slock Exchhngo Hiuw
■ djiy. ■ , ______ „' Shortly ntler 1 p.m., Uit Dow g " “ “ ',S Jonoo Jndustrlnl avcroeo of M ;DoPoni i>.ci
selectod blue clilp stockfl wns olt 3.M to M«,5I nnd-declinea
were ahead of hdvnnccs, 712 to ““S74, niiion|! the 1,057 Issuos
, c ro s f lln g U>c t f lp c . H jc O irc o - Esnm t u i
tlinn lO.C m l% n aliares,Stock brokers ottributed tho
mnrkct's hesltflnl pattern to concern over hlRber interest
• rntcs flnd news Umt mont
prices hnd struck rccord” levels
in July.- Tlicre wns renewed
conccrn over inflntlon, nnolysta
odded. .•Profit loklng hit n number of
Rlomor issues. Some of the bit*
losers included Corning; G1iis.h,
by-<,»\Wlt.Dlsney iVi. IBM 4.
Burrough.q 5*tt nnd Honeywell
Other iaauei, however, mnn-
ORcd fnir>slzcd gnins. Curtiss-
Wrifiht tflcked on I'n, Echlin
Mf(j. picked up H and Getty Oil
rose 2^.
Steels and motora._ were mostly lower In frflctlons.
Rnils, nirllnes nnd nircrnfts
moved irrefiularly in frnctlons.
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> 137 34«» 34 34H t H1391 I I '/ . 1/’ . 17'/>-
i 173"! 17}'« I73W+ t«. 31‘ . 33 '..
30'7 30V.71 14 34 t t«91 19i. I9'4 »9' i3i 13»» 13'1 I3»» .t l 40 39*. 40 -t- ' .9 70U 70 70«»+ <t
337 I9t« 19'-. I9t»33 44', 43V. 43V.-1I-*
N m i o n i i l
Temperatureslllf lltM P c p .
UM Wl A1HI« lOIOCASI ®
Fair, slightly warmer by Friday
-AtlanU-cy-_: .Boiton pc .
•91«
W_
71Bulfalo^cy 81 70
Charleaton^.C. c S4 78 .88Oilcago.c 80 •7 .81
Oorumbufl. 0 . cy . 85 87 .34Des Moines cy 70 50Detroit cy . , 85 68 .05H P f ls b c . 00 74'I^uaton cy ; 87 78Indianapolis cy. ■ 89 68 .24Kansas City pc 70 87
Ixs Aiigeles cy 03 70
Memphis pc .s 84 71'
Miami Beacli cy 81! 70Mlnn.-St.Paul r ‘' 04 53 aNow prleons c 03 72 .02New York cy 88 72,Orlando ,c 83 74
Plioenbc c 107 70'c
Portlmid, Me. pc 80 82
PorUandr Ore. q 86 82 ....R a le l^ c 87 88
Richmond c 88 66St. Louis cy 62Salt Lake City c 77 50
San Francisco pc 85 54Seattle pc 77 56Spokane c 71 52
Tampa cy ■ 80 78 .05Washington c 87 72
Wichita cy ‘ 00 65
Twin Falls, northaide, Burley-
Rupert area:
Fair ond warmer on Friday.
Overnight lows 37 to 47 wlUi
Wgha tomorrow 75 lo 85. — -
Ttie outlook forSaturday calls '^en ther,
for fair and a little warmer Synopsis
weather.
Camas Prairie, Hailey and
lower Wood River Volley:
Fair and warmer on FYiday.
Overnight lows wiy range from
35 to 45 with highs tomorrow in
the low 70s.
Tfic outlook for Saturday calls
Wr fair anti a IHtle warmer
Uie aoutiicast and near -50 In the
southwest.
Into nortJiern p-itlah Columbia.
Ught frost V ll l probably be
Afternoon temperatures on reported In the higher volleys of
Wednesday were on ^Ihe coot eastern Idaho and ahoujd kill
Fair but cool weather covers
the Gem State. Morning low
temperolures were In the 40s In
side ranging frpm 66 at Salmon
to ^ degrees on tlie border at
Ontario, Ore.
Slight warming is expected on
Friday. Skies should remain
fair as Uie next storm system In
the Gulf of Alasko-ia.divcrted
Twin Fails Temperaturea
potato vines to begin the har
vest season In those Important
seed growing arcqs.The extended outlook through '
Monday Indicates folr weather High U»w
ond alow warming. Highs In the Vcsterday 76 45803 with lows In the 50s. U stycar 70 S9
Normal 88 46
Mutual Funds S u c c e s s fu l In v e s t i i igp i, Entrov 13 3) D 33 MFD
------------- .. . t i l l EqutW F 9 7i 10 47 MCDo» bid »na «tk*d '1*3 'lO J M *'t»
• ic ti on M uto il Dun 11 OS 11 OS M<ii<«i«"«'•»»' ......................t NASD Inc
W odnttdty AuQuU 33. |473
■ rd A«k ADtrdn <11 I t ) AOMIPALTY.Orwlh 4 39 i 19. Incom 4 40 4 1) In .ufn 1103 13 M
A d v ilir 104 SSI Aetna Fa (I) <i) A(utur« U 9? I< 91 AGE Fd 4 23 * 3* A ll l la lf 14 41 IS 71
IS i« IJ 04 in Dean IS J3 IJ 32 17 >6 19 43 SlOe.Fd 9 40 10 S34 1] 4 13 tIO MA PUMDS.
U 37 14 37 Cap Shr 10 S7 II SS. ..... A t] 7 33 inv I 3 t l l 3 l i
F ID IL IT Y Many f^d 13 S3 14 79 Tr»l 9 47 10 ISOROUP: MIF FJ a t t 9 14 Venlur 13 43 13 79
Ond d«D 9 t3 10 S3 WIF Cro t 01 t S3 Smitn 0 13 13 13 13Capital 13 31 14 43 MuO<n gl 4 33 I 17 SD l iG r 13 I I 1} II
“ ~ ......................... ' " 14 IS 11 349 75 10 14
Amcap F 7 34 7 93 Am O vft n 43 12 49 Am Eqty 4 OS 4 43 AM I X P A I I IPUNOI Caplal incom invitmSptCI 9 72 10 43 Sloch
31S S0>| SO734 17U 17 ................................131 33** 33*» 32»»— *n i Mul 9 tS 10 SS ^0” Of 17 14', S3*. S 3 'i- >• AmNi Cr 1 44 3 9| PO UM M RI
Ctplal
Conlr'a I0S1 1QSI W u0m ln l0 93 11 17 So GtnF iCv iS ft 197 197 Mul Stiri 14 13 I t 13 Sw»lD«»l 103 Mull Tr» 2 04 3 04 Sw invG 113 9 SSE»4«. 14 1114 19 Nat indo 13 39 13 39 Sovf In IJ 49 14 77e»tr« l I3 0) 14 3t N A T S B C fO I; Spactra 131 9 07Fund 17 74 19 39 Daianc 10 41 II 43Purlin 10 41 II J3 Dond &r S 33 1 70 Coni Fd t01 t 17Saltm F 111 t 39 Oivian 4 33 4 t l Olvatil t OS t i lT rm d 3 l 3 t M t l Praf Stk. 7 31 t OS P(oof% 1 111
Incom S 49 4 00 SI F r Gr 4 9t .<4 94Slock Sr 7 9t I 70 SI Fr Inc 9 91 9 91
10.11 11.09 State Sir 14 OS S4 10
FINANCIALP^RO^AMl
4 41 NJI G w t i im IJ39 ITBAOMAN PD».4 30 NEL Sia 17 9t 19 13 Am Ind 4 10 4 105 II NEA Ml 10 93 1 1 14 A iw fd 130 I JO 14 35 N«u C«nl 7 10 I 30 f io u c r 110 I 10
Neuwin _ 13 30 13 33 STflIN ROE POI.Ntwlon 31 0) 33 91 Ualanc 34 77 74 77
9 24 N(,V Wid 14 I I 14 34 CapttI 13 33 13 J31343 Nichlat 34 41 34 41 SloCk 17 93 17 93014 N ttI iv ir IS ft) IS 9S IIIO R O U P .
ich 9 19 10 04 *1 M ull. 10 IS 10 IS Oceang 131 131 Ofwtt. 7 17 143Grin 4 39 4 91 »* 'H Omaga 10 00 10 13 'ncom 9 4S 10 SI
— ..................... I»P S itrr 4 15 4 74 O n7 mo IS 04 IS 04 1371 1393’ O"* Will I I 40 I I 40 Tacnm 797 173
POUMOJIRI OPPSNHM PO Syncro »■ 10 43 II 40OnOUP: O p'A im 11 « 14 94 TMB Ap 13 30 14 43Grwlti 19 01 20 10 Op Fnd 9 31 10 33 Teachri 11S3II7J
111 9 70 'ncom '3.99 14 20 op Tm t 11 00 13 03 0 7 | | I t lm u iiiv 9 15 10 47 P Mtual 9 73 Id 43 q TC Sec 11 14 13 17 Tow«r C 4 44 7 31Grwtn 11111391 FJpac ll 13 49 14 94 p^ram t 9 14 9 99 Tran C«p 9 44 10 31Incom * 39 9 01 Fovriq F 10 27 I I 33 Paul Rev 9 43 10 30 T fa v lE q l2 3 4
f>a Mul ’ —• “ ’ * '•Penn Sq
l l lF d Va 13.04 l*IR IT
9kS 10 }S m V ltT O R t;9 33 10 19 Dt»c Fd - '
Roger E. Spear
0 - Could you tell me If there y„ur holdhiga are very Email InvralirB, all lljted on tho Bigis a possibility of Upjohn Co. n^d sole is recommended to Board
splitting Its ahnres? I bouliht M staplHy your portfolio. Palm (To order your copy ol Roger
shores at JlOO, - M.S. Beach Co. (NYSEI has recently Spoor's 6l-pogc Guide to
A-C^ertolnly when shores In turned comings around; shares Succoaslul Investing, send I I
any company move up over the should tie held lor recovery and with name and address lb Hogor»100 m orli,^ spilt Is always a then eliminated Irom your list. E. Spear, (Timos.News). Box
’■......... Aa far OS-your funds permit I — _ • . _ . . . . . . .
Venlur 13 70 11 92 PR4NKLIN W« Nall 15 01 I t 45 CUITOOIAN ,
A ilron S 04 5 S3 Pr Grwl 111 9 11 Auda« F 13.34 15 SI ONTC 1 1 20 13 37 P ||n r„„
F r U l l l l lS l l l r 701 - PUNOI II
Tudot 10 ; 10 W '' CG 00 v t t i 20in Cl 13 13 IS Unilied
IS SS 15 IS
possibility. There arc, however, ________ ^___ ______
u substantial number of Issues would favor rounding*^ to 100 which have traded ot and above shares Allied. Maintenance,
that love! for long periods Dymo Industries, Hoyes -
without splitting shares. Albion ond MONY Mortgage Although Upjohn has one of the.
lowest 5-yeur growth rotes in
the drug Industry, a new-line of
antibiotic drugs, Increased
chemical capacity and foreign
plant expansion should reverse
this trend. In the March quarter
1018, -Grand Central Shatlon,
New York, New York 10017.)
Copyright 1972,
CencrBl Feature* Corp.
I 134 41 7 41
Axe Scl -5 40 5 17 DlC Gin 13 95 14 IS QftUion Dsyroc Bayrk gr Deacn Hi 13,01 Beacon IS 50 Hergrr K 13 34 13 34 UcrkUir 4 30 4 71 Dond>U
1 H I GE S S P 37 13 ’ ■ 0*n Sec ' i 77
Gibri Gr GROUP IBC. Ape. h 133 flal Fnd 141 Com
9.40 10 49 PLI OHO IS 41 14 14 N a lM nvl0 30Ir IS 94 17 43. v o ic e DOWE < «P' '4 49 15 14
179 9 41 Grwlh 33 14 33 14 Wrilr>al IS40I701>ltS I3S9 Nw Era 11 VO 41 90 UN1TC0 FUHDt
l« Mor 4J 57 43 17 “ ■ " “I 77
13 13
Pro F I 13 41Pro Horn Providl 100 I 46 Provd Gl 9 1/ 10 34 Prud SIP 11 10 U IV PUTNAM - PUMOS
Ond Fd 8 34 VOS 'Com ow 13 34 14 51 Com ln< II 54 13 67 lt>(.o<i' I S U I t t i Scicoc 113 9 14 VAnUd 10 46 II 46
W all Street ChatterNEW VORK(UPI)-W alston' lent. With a vigorous real rate
sales rose ID per cent with net & Co., noting the recent auna|)ot' of growth, the country should
year average 12 to 15 per cent
over laat year, the firm says.
And, the market may follow
this trend.
EauciUiAfc
VALUE LINE FQS.
- 13 36 I
3 SA Gin I- Aii> tDruwn 4 35 4*4 G>in )nd 35 44 35 44BULLOCK Guard 34 91 34 91
-4 PUNDt. ^mH OA 4 11 5 30'» Uull fd 1191 17 SO Ham Gr I SI 9.4*'» Cdn Fd 33 34 35 45 Ham lr<c 1 47 7 07■t Div Shr 4 07 4 44 Harlwel IS 43 IS 43
H Nalwd 10 93 II 94 Harl Lv II 35 It 35U,----H3C-Ucn- l l . 33J4.47_Hedbwi I 99 9 1 3' i Ornnm 14 IS 14 15 f»»doe 9^8 t 36‘
Q u»m (d 4 97 7 64 Mer.toe 3 31 3 43 ........CG Fund 13 41 13 63 ►‘Ofrtce 19 55 30 3V!6ayn,ar ) 14 3 14 Dos I'nd 6 )» V 14CapAmV 1 34 9 14 '•yNORD M OM 'T sct>u»lr 1140 13 «S llc.% L>)flO J3 11 ib
Cap ln»» 3 50 3 12 “ “ P ICUOOERPDS '•I"'*' V «4 U blCap Snr> a 14 7 40— 100-Fnd I4.J9 li.43 in ir lc)v I t SI la.13Cap Trin IS lt.4a '01 rn d 9.31 lO.U o«innc '• '
Crni St<» 15 03 t t 43 ColLtti 14 IS H 46 Com 13 09 13 09 v .iiii uvu a JjCHANNINO 35>und 7 01 7 74 Specal 39 79 19 79 Vflt.ccl i 4 49 4 4a
FUMO li Impri Cp II Si 13 63 iB C U B lT Y F D i. ’ V.Kvy G. f w ( URained 13 34 13 49 , '" 'P Gr 9 40 10 49 Equity 4 41 4 48 W .illS lgf 9 99 10 93Ond Fd 9 73 10 43 m e'dAm 14 30 IS 43 invo»l l i t 194 Wrt%i>Mul3
Com Stk 1 74 1 90 I " ' (‘ o»l • '
37x price-earnlngs m ultip le doubts this has had any
shares have omply discounted influence on ^ e stock market,
the improved profit level. as suggested’ by another aifO-A~ I havebeen advised to sell lyst. More to the point is the
the nine slocks on tho enclosed hassle over prices on 1073 autos
list. Ihese 1 hate kept since my which Walston says helpedhu.sband’s death a year ago. In depress the market. But It adds
addition, I hold 62 shares of thot the upturn of
American Telephone and W.OOO depressed groups, specifically
V.In lrl ' 11 66 17 U ' i ‘SANOBNS
1/6} Vdi'urd
Moody's Investors Service
says ‘investor psychology Is
some beginning to firm, cand the
growing confidence In economic
in Anierlcun General Bond the oils, has brightened the (M‘0|>ress seems to augur a
Fund both NYSE-llsted. I have market oatlook. continued stock market ' i i ^
monthly Income from Social ---- turn,” Moody’s notos -tho-Security and an annuity of $250 ic. F. Hutton says one of the increased margin trading which
plus $42,000 uT various savings keys to tlie stock market
accounts. Many of tlie stocks perfurniance has been "tlie
40 10 4930 IS 437* ' ’ 4 U ltra F 10 84 n IB Wr>no f<l 11 33 II 7:
, JJ IndFAm 4 44 5 13 tELECTeOFDS WELLINGTON140 10.14 1173 Am Shr 10 43 1 1 40 OHOUP
ipetlVtnluf 14.13 11-30 ^
•OtTON: ‘‘O' H40 I1F no no i 13M 13 33 ‘NVBiTORQUP
Cp 9
I 14 i . p l o r H i
■ U T :IDS GIK
may Indicate public portlclpa-
. tlon, Moody’s concludes, “furth-are well below Uiu prku (laid clouded .st^itus of the doUai up er expansion of profits and
and 1 woulcrilke yom opinion on ihe world . currency scene,” broadening of Investor partlcl-
selUng. • H.M. Hutton wjp^ kforoign investors patloti v^ilUiJO tl't* stock market’
A— BecHUSf your- income think tiip U.S. economy is the headed upward
from all sources is evidently strongest among Western coun'-
adequate for yoi\r needs you are tries but are’ withholding
probably concerned with investment fUnds until after
preserving or moderately November. Hutton feclh the
enlarging your t’upllal. Sevfcral ^i;^>rlam public will have to
of your holdings are entirely too participate in the', upturning
speculative In your situation jnarket to restore confidence
37’ .30*.33*.
71'.30' , 33
Morf.» Knu 1, MolnroiA 40 17
17 . 17'. 119'. H I ,
17'.111'.
'• F>nl Sll 30i< '• l-u<aC4-'l« • F ror^lier Air
^ ‘ 37' /- \00
l l ' i7»' ,
354
3J . •
314M lS lfJ i 1 36
, MurpCo 1 30
3 33U 33
• S ’ l jS "
33'. •
30• tIumyOl 15 17 I I ' . '
4Q7 10'.7 'i " v i
39'. 10 N.il).»ci)^70 1031 N-----
54' . 54l.»rLnl ]4il J }»
1 1 . '. , N-ii Alrlit>f»
4053 IV . 31'.
]5>. J4'«3B .14-. 1 lA .
I J . ' i ' * ]U ’ «4I>.)3‘ .
31'i 47*, . 13'.
NrtUJ*'" 90 k, 50
Ntl OVP 1 05
103371334
30'. 19',’ 39*. 39 .
30 . 39>. . * PncuJll Dyn
• I ’u tiio t'l 154 5*‘
JO 1) .'J ' i
N«IMcn 2 , N«toit.rt% 35 90
40'. 40‘ . 40’ . 40'*
40'.40'. use lr«l i.u
«■* Solilfoti 05) 3‘ .
94 10'.3‘ t 3'.
34>.
{ i .
31*. • 11
J' Nrv 1*. 1 30 ,* NewUc' I3l> ,• NEr.(,l:-l 1 43 , Ninu'^t* 1 14
7014
33s ' 33 '- 34>l 34 .16'• 14
34 ! ■ 14' . '
. Stainam m i Synlpa C 40
47 }4 'i 474 93'1 41- US
I9W11'.
34’ »90>,1|*>
33*. 33‘ . 1* NC H’JuV* 1 * NorlolkWiS * ’44
I4‘ . U '* 69.'. 49'•
• Univ ConI 3i Ulali Sof 10
11 3’ . 3 U ‘\
3'.14
° SMEARSONFOtApprt Incom
1119 a IV h j 3b IJ J4
C6i"P I Concwi Con» Inv 13 SO 13
' Cnlln □» 41 7 Ot
(]ommodity Fiiliiros
CqoMI . , .Conlrail 10 41 10.91 Corn Ldt 14 31 17 I I Co.»lry C 15 90 17 »* C«n Oall 7 99 I >3 Cy>n Oiv 4 34 4 13 DaviJu 14 93 14 9) DtfLAW ARI
imUKlCl.lilY, Calif, (U P D -
Tlje -piijjers -of • the-lnte
Ernest 0. Lawrence, who oev'JJn
iani.» fd I I n I JMan gilt 9 11 v vy Johntin 31 97 ;n 97 KEVJTONB Cull n i 19 37 30 36 CutI (13 30 44 33 44 Cull 1)4 9 31 10 13 CutI Cult
' category are LVO^ Corp
'iN Y S IO an' Liberty^Homes iiie morket Is ’ In a good
IOTC). In the case of Magnavox po.sltion to continue on Its short-
Co- iNYSK) and Technicon, Uihii uptrend, according to
Harris, Uphiim. The technical
picture has been Improved and
S ilv t?r the fundamentals look cxcel-
O v i * r T h e C ^ o i i i i t e r
Windshields$1 AS!;
FROM i« f FOR ALIIIAKESCFCARSBarger Mattson Auto Salvage Inc.7 3 3 .3 7 % 3 ,
S a llied ^ if l
Q u o ta tio n s f ro m NASO at •Q p ra n lm a lt lv noon.' An b id i a r t
___ . . . . . . . In l t r d a a la r b ld» . In ta r d ta le rCult 33 41 3 5 19 quotations do not Include ra la ll Cull S 3 ir9 9 i3 i4 m v b u p /m a r k dawn o r com iCull S3 91Cull $4 t so ' 13
7 33 1041 73 4 35K in
T h t i t qu o ta tlo n t a r * tS 'W ldM } bv.. M c R o b a rti. S tu rs lll «. U lrich , '
NEW YOiiK (UPI )-HiUidy L Hiirman Wednesdiiy quoted |H silver al 188.7 cents per (ino
.ounce up 4,7 conts. .
Krikr Gl|i 10 4V II 49 L«0» »-a ! I t 10*
......... 9'Js 10.10
May Idaho^ potatoes"
May Maine potatoes
Aug- llvp cattle ..- Dec. live cattle
Doc. hogs
Sept. wheat >
^SeptT-com-----‘“ 7 '
Sept. eggs
Sept. silver
July sliver coins
Ouotations from touis N. Rittcn Co
Prev. 11:00Cldsc lligh Low Q4n:
1 6.W 1 0-R5 1 6.86 1 6 .^ '
5.2.*! 5.20 5.13 5;i6
34.85 34.90 34.82 34.90.
33.90., •33.07 33.70 33.90
26,05 27.35 26.A7 2 ,27
■ 188 *, 101 186 187H r
127H 120 “ 127TS“ /“i2 8 ^ n i.3505 .3555 .3460 .348$ ..
181D0 100.70 180.00 180.60
1450 . 1462• W5C 1402
invented the cyclotron while, a , ! ; l». q, ,
prolessor ot the University of gV;’vVLio-i,;-,-" tl™ f " " ! i " "California, have been given to oryi » u 1444 ',Jhf Bancroft Ubrary here for sp ine’r ^ 'lv '” ©* cAn*S*‘3V44 33 44
The use of qualified scholars. ’1 J? '! J? \l IJ. Uwrence’s key i^ole In the Ea«itGr 9.17 1013 „
history of ioth century sclcnco hovA « di’makes hia papera of IneatimO" u i i 11U i-u"har 1312 nbs
ble value. He Was the orlglna-' ;*?; |
torergrbup-typo research on o slcif fa u v Uu ISJJSmo $
grand scale, combining pngl- eoTc'sd io9*j Jow '• ■ aPCAAduTaBP. “ vJenT -
Indp F
Twiti FalU
Btuiiu HLuii:, L’am om m g pngi* eoig sp io n 3091 neerlng and science toproduco
tlie.ofttin massive equipment. I j k ' ' ' « . i . f u u u m
needed.to penetrate tlie secrets eor.t oi i . jh i i i i * if,V '"m si u ,iofthoatom .■. i - m ; «,Jig innii!IS IS I I 54 .
First Sec. C.
Ida.lstNnt'l
West. Bank Cont.Ufe
Ida.Pwr.Pfd
Iti’nn.Gas '
Kellwood :
Long. Fibre
North. King
Pac.'Eng.
P jc St Ufe
Quantex. . Rogers Bros.
Sierra Ufe'
Surety U fa..
. B i d
45.00 38.50 ,
-J4L2?'
Alik.
■15,374
3945
40.00 '38.00
Post oi’fice
bid taken3.00
57.tk) 16.25
20.00 103.00
25.37MI
2.pO
' 3.50
M5 15.00
4 50
. 5.02^^-- 6.00
MOSCOW, Idaho {UPI) - A
Seattle firm’s bid has been ac-
bepted for' coruitructlon of a
’Ih i General Servlces^dmln*
l.<itrfltion said ll had occoptod
Uio btd of 17.463,2U,by Chrla-
berg Construction for Uio project,
Work is BlQted to got under'
woj-. thla fall with a one .'■ycol*
'construction time planned. *—
61.00
106.00,
25.07* 1
••2.37V43.75
.18
10.005.00
W E HAVE A WONDERFUL SELECTION Of CONTINENTAL 4 d o o r s , 2 DQ0R HARDTOPS, AND Th E WQRLD FAMOUS MARK IV A T CLOSE O U T PRICESTho opportunity of th« year it .ready for' you now a t Jh'flitan M o to ri . we hove o lipilted num ber'of Uncoln-Continentali, a ir loaded, wi^h op llo n i aKd In nioil of Ihe popular co lon , {uit woltlng ^or ownerihlp. W e must sell theie before Ihe '7 2 '* ifa rt rollino |n. And iho Iromendous tdvingt can be youri . . ■ th* fin* cit ta r inud« . ■. ihe 19 /2 . UiKoln f^onlinenlal.
-
Cassia fair resultsHMIt KM«MlC*
0«MMt(rtlU« eMiM* ,Junior d ivlllon - Jll Wuat€, k t r r i t
tv fw PowiM'. T iu iw Udy. al( b lu f «nd d li lr lc l; M Ic liO li AndK un, 0«wn Batlon, H»y Lynn* Hyd*. HolMi l>trlU i, D«bt)l* M kh*IU T u rnv «ndLyn M lt W irr tn , •(( btu*; B a rb tr* Jo Daylty. ThVMa Ann o«lan«y. A ltyn * lU dKy. K i l l l AU l. Kim M arl* M allfr,Ml in lfl su« OarttariRatmutian, Larry ll»tiwall. Kannia Maa fm irn and Olalna Turnar; all rad.
Inlarmadlaia d ivltlon - CInd/ Warran, ,b lua and d li i r lc t i Suun Doolh. blua and wcodni Ranaa Pratlon, blua and third; Pam AAalhaw*. blua; Danya Kallaf, rad.
Sanlon dlwUloai— lu ia n Kuwana. blua and d li lr lc t; Janat Oaary, blua and ucond; Oana«« DarVdull. blua arw) Ihlrd
H»M» Ic M a w lta Cantai)Junlof dlv lilon - Carol Oirrlngton.
fIr ilrD a b ra Pavli. tacond; Julia .Hakar. ' th ird; Cindy Warran. f i r t t allarnala, and Cindy Blackar. lacood alKrnaia.
Sanlof divltlon - Marla - Darrlnalon, | l r * i ; M Ichilla Hanichlad, lacond; Jinal Oaary. th ird , and Davarly H u n t, allarnala.
OamwtiirallMi. Junior d ivlilon - J ill Harpar. I l r i l i Karria Lynn f^owlar. wcond, and Tauna Udy. Ihlrd.
intarmadlata d ivli t in t ; Sutan Ooolh,Prailon, third.
Sanlor divltlon - Sut«n Kuwana. II Janat Caary, ta<pn, and Ginata Oark< third.
. >l»a<lat Award"P oyllrv -< Suian Kuwana. f ir it .
Puric, k lrii Malar. L iu lia Moncur. Marlaa Oabbla Smyar. RoKanna
•M ljia lla Tumar, JacMa Punk, Cindy. Crurch. Dwina Matthawi. 0«b Dayliy, Danny Rahwalt. all blua.
Malania Patarion. Michala Martlndala. Lynn RatM, L « 'r l Ci-ltchflald. Ptm Oglay. Hollla Parlih , Tracy taaman, Mictialla
'Oich, Rialna Land. MIckI Raddar. ilK la Hantchald. K t lia y C rana.'Kalhy
'a rata Ta«an, Alana TH,liv. Tarry w fo«r. Tharaai Dalanay. Jannia Ford. Donna Mowall. Kay Lynna Hyda. Pam Kuhn, Kaiiy Wabb. Pbrrall Daylav, Larry Nahwair. Latlla Warwood,.all rad. ..
Scolt Jonaa, Oary M illar. Tarry Saamorf.Barbara Oaylay, all. Whitt....... • --
' L l l ' l anlarlatn - Kalfiy lo Zolllnotr. blua and d l i t r k l j AAarla Darrlngton and
LE G A L N o t ic e
NOTICVOrtAm N o llc t l ih « r » b v o lv « n iM t .W . W ..
D r««d lna . 577 Jackaon T w in P « lit .■Idiho (V )4^W ) uHll UN to th* — -------------------t i lq h N * b id de r o n * 10 8 « rM N w h M l M il to H i* h lo h M bkk»ar en*i ^ o o r a«dAA‘ (R * t io ra to lt) . 8vlfe l< l ^ . A ^ l t M inor. ID No. M U )*.No. LH 1 I34 I. B ld f w i ll b« b « rM lv « |U n ( l l AUQIMf M.u t l l lA u o u i t a i J » n . H ita d v 'M ’tK w I fn * TTia M v o n i i i r rM ir v M Hi*T B M (V M »hkT loM > D r* l»c1 in v or ..............................................
L E G A L NOTICE
MOttetlOI»UL«
. N atic* I I h*r*fay alwm Hiat Budd/ Cm ph(»r. Rout* Mo. I, P U t , Idaho
L.EGAL^JjOTl'^EM Q T IC B T O C R iO IY O R l
IN T H ^ IS T B IC T C O U B T O P T H E AN O R D IN A N C E OP T H E C IT Y • p I F n y jU D I C I A L D I5 T R IC T -0 P OF T W IN F 'A L l.S , ID A H O
L E G A L NOTICEO R D IN A N C B N Q . U44
-Thuraday^uouM 2^, ) m TlmM-Niw/*, Vwin P«Ili, Idaho 2T'
L E G A L NOTICE L E G A L NOTICE
ion , Sylvia. McOlnla< r l. Shalla Stawart. Valarl Samualwn, Charvl Wlck< Ilk . all rad.
JodiaOabra
Francli
r l o h t t e r t l k l a n y o r a lt b M t.
V M D IH A N C B NO. .^ N O R D IN A N C E 0»= T H E £ IT V
OF TW IN F A L LS . ID A H O . AN-
N O T IC E IS H C R E O /G IV E N Ih a l p R o v Y o iN G ^ F O R ^ T « E Z ^ N E p u b lic h .a r lrM ) .w m b « h .H lb . lo r # T « E 2(?NElH o Z o n ln o C o m m lM lo n o llh o C lU 'o l ' uX ^ c d g a s ' o r lo r tu
le jja tlc ;;
N O T tC e OP P U B L IC m tP B C T IO N Tha annual r f> o rJ o f 1»i* Nor-
ihw a iTarrt D a n evo lfn i. Foundation , in c . , a p r l v a l * fo u n d a t io n , l» ava llab iB fo r In tpa c tlon a t l i t oM Ic* al 9lh and E lm S tr« « ti, b iih l, Idaho,
in ip o c tlo n m » v ba m ad * d u r in g ' i r 'b u * ln * t i .h o u r « w U hin )W
P U B L IS H : AUO. 14. 17; I I , 30, 3). 33, 2J. 34. 31. i J f , 1?73.
N O T IC B OP P U B L IC H B A R IN O
------------=ATE OP ID A H O , IN A N D G R A N T IN G ’ TH!e^ P E T IT I0 N ^ 0 FFOR T H R C O U N TY O F TW IN T H E S O U T H L A N D C O R - p a l l s - . P D R ATIO N .FO R A C O N D IT IO N A L
. . M A G IS T R A T E D IV IS IO N USE A T 111 F IL E R A V E N U E .• t w in .F A L LS , ID A H O .
IN 'T H E M A T T E R O F T H E W H E R E A S Ih * lo o ltx o C om - , ES TA TE OP V IV IA N P . C A R L , 'm lu lo n o M h t . 'C l ly o f T w in F a lla , p7 fnclD a i’, -D -c.aw d, h«vlnohald a public haarino w iiM n ^ ^
a t rw ju lra d by la w upon, th * no N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N b y -p llc a llo n o l th * South liind Cor.
m * u n d a rilg n a d A d m ln la lra tr la o t .p o ra tio n fo r a co n d liio n a l u u fo r-a _________-------| b * - * a t * t * - o f — V iv ia n — P .- Car , •e M '« « rv le * -o a a - it | it lo n u p o n - lh * - u i j i «
d e c e a t» d . to th * c ra d llo ra o f a n d a ll SaVon Elawan S to r^ p ro ija r ly lo c a l* '* ’ ■“ pe rio na ha v in g c la lm a * 3 * ln » r ith * .« » \ \ \ f » « - A.v*nu«, T w in PaUi
H a rry
PU BLIS H ,1 3^, «?3. •
N O TIC B TO C R B O IT O R Iiaid- dKtda^r,'tB '.\hllTf -'ih idahi: .■nd-|h*” 'r;co“mrn’ahd;il'o ':o’ f \VjH ^UDICl^L*'dVsVric7 mU kry VOOChara.WllhIn th« 7nnlfUi r n m m l. t ln n h .u in n C .^ V V -.* ’ ‘^5 '? L A ^_ P .IS T R IC T IN'N E w ith th * n o c * i i ) i r y v o u c h * r c ,w l lh
j (Council . 331 ^ Ic o n d
........... .................................. .......... Fa lU * IdfllK ), Ir. . . Room o f Iho C ity H a ll. A beaver!^ nose vnlvcs Avonuo E aU . T w in Palia, laanp. a i
■mlomnllcolly close wlicn, U,o “1. C o n tid o r the lo n in g o? p ro pe rty
proposed to be annexed Into la ld
Slyla rav ir =unk.. and Kalhy Jo'Zoillnoar. lanlor
Pony - J ill Hilt. Poal - Haathar
AAorlay, tKOntf. Yaarllno - Lar
CHatburn, iHird; Jamat Pt Four yaar old or ovar i
Waaka, i l r t t ; JuDa Ann .
McCllourih
itloo. It
ntarmadlala tiallii >utla Ann Joliay. tk tacondi Tom Qalta Waahd. (ourlh.
Sanlor tiallar thov Parka, l in t ; Ron i Ctiatburn. Ittlrd. am lourih. ,
Oarlar_Vao«
I Oarkdull, »acondand
a Thompwm. tacond Plchlai and r.altthai — Sharon Hatch.
•ir»t. and Sharon Kiptng, tacond.Jam* and (aH<«t - Mary. Palmar, l in t ,
and Agna* Orady. tacondCannad Pruitt
Applatauca^ Uulh Aartow. tJlua.- taN ita■■------- ■■ ■ and Janal Child, whita
I Oavlt. blua; Janalrad. and 1
coilChild, rad. and Lo
CharrlM. black blua; JoanAndario
blua. I
nn Swan, wt Swan, bli
Cartruda .
n n lm o l goes un d e r w n lc r ,
w here its "b v e ra lred lu n y s
p c fm lt i t to s la y for a s lo ng ns
15 m in u te s .
LE G A L N bT IC EH B A R IN O i
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N th a l a pCibllc hoaring w ill bo U IV b N th a t a public he a ring w ill be hold be loro Iho C ity Council of the C lly o l T w in PAlts, tdaho. In the Council Room o f the C Itv H a ll, 331 Second A vonuo E a it . T w in Falls,
.Idaho, a t 8:00 p .m . ot) Septem ber IS, 1973, on the (o iiow ing m a n e r i:
I. C onsider the jon lng o l p ro pe rty proposed lo 'b o anneked In to la id C ity, fo -w lf iP a r t o l the N W '/. o l the
' NWV4^ Section 9. Tow nship 10 South. Range 17 E .. D. M ., T w in Falla County, Idaho, described as Iq llow s: D eg lnn in ga t Iho northw est co rn o r ol la id Section ihonce S. Odoaroos 48 m ln u to i 00 seconds W. lo r J02.99 loo t along Iho w es te rly boundary o f said Section 9 lo th a rea l 4>oint o( b e g in n in g ;.the nce S. 09 degrees 09 m inutes 58 seconds E .. fo r 1000.50 fe e t; thence S. 0 degrees 30 m inutes *S seconds W lo r 867.81 M e t; thence N. 69 degrees 10 m inutes 00 seconds W, fo r 779.83 leef a long Ihe sou th e rly ; boundary of sa id 'N W '^ o l Ihe NWV4 of Section 9; Ihence N. 63 degrees 30 m in u te s00 seconds W. fo r 69.38 leet,- Ihence N. S9 degre'es 10 m in utes 00 seconds W. fo r 168.67 fe e t; Ihence N.00 degrees 48 m in u te s flfts e c o n d i E. to r B37.UI lee t along tne w e s te rly boundary ol sa id Section t6 the rea l p o in t o f b e g in n in g . The ab o ve described p a rce l conta ins 30 a c ro t, m ore or less.
3. C o n s id e r.a p p lica tio n fo r. con. d itlo na l use to p e rm it op e ra tion o f a beauty shop In R esiden tia l Low - D enslty Zone at 3038 C oncordia W ay, the p rem ises described as fo llo w s ;
Lot 1 and the W est 16 leet o f Lo t 3, C athedral H eights Subd iv is ion,
.,T w ln F a ils C o u n ty ,l
C ity . > w il :
P a rt of the NW'/4 o f the N W /4, Sbctlon 9, Tow nship 10 South, R ange 17 E .. O .M ., T w ih F a lls C ounty , Idaho, described a>^ fo llo w s : * ’
Q o g ln n in o a t th e n o r lh w o s i c o rn o r 01 sa id Section 9; Ihence S. 0 dogreOs 48 m inutes 00-
'soconds W. lo r 403.99 feet along Iho w es te rly boundary o l said Soction 9 to the rea l po int o l h n g ln n ln g ; fhonco S.-89 degrees09 m in u tes SO seconds E. fo r 1008.50 fo o t; th w ico S. 0 degrees ]0 m in u tes 45 seconds W. lo r 067.Df lu o t; thence N. 89 degrees10 m in u te s 00 seconds ^ /. fo r 779 03 loe l along b o un da ry o f saic NW'/« o l Section \ degroos 30m inute lo r 69,3(| foot; iJegroes 10 n
NW'/4 ol the once N. 63 loconds W.ce n- O’)
fo rdugroos 48 n
.67 toot; thence N. 0s 00seconds E.
proceedings the Zoning C om m ission held Us he a rin g as prov ided by law- and has recom m ended Ihe lo n e fo r Ihe a rea to b * annexed.OE IT O R D A IN E D DY T H E M A Y O R AN D C IT Y C O U N C IL OF TH E C IT Y OF TW IN FA LLS , ID A H O : -. Section 1. T ha t the to llo w in g described p ro p o rty be And the sarne Is ho rebv *nn»K«d and de cta re d lo be a p a r i of the C lly o l T w in Falls, Idaho, to w l l ;
N '/iN E '/4N W '/4 except Ihe W est 625 feet o l the NW)/4NE>/4NW'/4, Section 10, Tow nsh ip 10 South, R ange 17 E., 0 . M .. Tw in F a lls C ounty, S ta le ol Idaho, except Ihe N orth 35 feel th o reo l.
Section 3. T ha i said p ro po rty h e ro in a n n e xe d Is io n o d R E S ID E N T IA L LO W D E N S IT Y ZO N E . *■ •
PASSED DY TH E C IT Y COUN C IL AU GU ST 31, 1973.
' S IG N E D D Y T H E A C T IN G M A Y O R AUGUST 31. 1973.
W ins lon I. Jonas A c tin g M ayor
A tte s t:E d ythe D. K oon tt C ity C lerk
f( . - . ............... .........pu b lica tion o f iM * no lli A d m ln is fra lr l i
thPZon lno C om m iss ion hav ing be<ifv t h e ’ S T A T ^ O f T jO A H o T i j a n dh * l l r s t rece ived b y the C ity C o j(^c ll. ^ 3 5!> th * » a lt f W H E R E A S
L,.........- 0/ hav ing hpid It 's hearingby laur «nd ha u ln n rm
roQ ulredand ha v in g considered «
Oicto,, C ity o f T w in P a lls , n ia l iu . .th - O R D A IN E D 'O Y TH Etn is M in g the p la c e j lx * ^ ^ A N D C IT Y C O U N C IL,
ion o f th * business o f sa id c i t y OF TW IN F A L L S . ID A H O , • ■■ • Uie 0 o tit l ‘ •
Ion loi
FOR TH E C O U N TY OF FALLS .
M A G IS T R A T E D IV IS IO N In the M a tte r o l Ihe E sta te W IL L IA M C. AAcCLURE, D eceai
Iransai estate ..
Dated Ih is IS d a y o l J u ly , 1973. s- H E L E N B. CARL
A d m ln ls lra tr lK o l Ih * estate o f V iv ia n F .C arl, deceased ■
■ PU O LIS H : A u gu s t-3 . IJl. 17 «. 34
N O TIC E OP H B A R IN O P B T IT IO N POR PORflAAL P R O B A T B O P W IL L A N D
A P P O IN T M B N T O P P B R S O N A L R B P R B lB N T A T IV B
IN T H E D IS T R IC T COURT OF THE F IF T H J U D IC IA L D IS T R IC T OF TH E S TA TE OF ID A H O . IN AN D FOR TH E C O U N TY OF TW IN FA L LS
M A G IS T R A T E 'S D IV IS IO N In the m a tte r o f - th e . esta te o f : H A Z E L D E L L DROW N, Deceased.
rea l p o in t o l bo Abovo described p. 20 dc rcs , m ore or loss.
a. C onsider ap p lica tion for con d it lo n a l use to p e rm it opora tlon o l a boauty shop in R es lder\tla l Low- D onsity Zone at 2038 Concordia W ay, Iho prom ises described as fo llow s:
Lot' 1 and the West 16 feet of Lot 3. DIpck 2, C athed ra l Heights Subd iv is ion , Tw in F a lls . Tw in F a lls C ounfy, Idaho.
P U O L IS H : A ug. 34, 1973.
. *7 O R D IN A N C E NO. 1S6SAN O R D IN A N C E OF T H E C ITY
OF T W IN F A L L S . ID A H O , G R A N T IN G C O N D IT IO N A L USE TO M A R S H A L L B R O TH ER S, INC,
OE IT O R D A IN E D DY THE M A Y O R AN D T H E C IT Y C O U N C IL , C IT Y O F T W IN - F A L L S , ID A H O :
W H E R E A S th e Z o n in g C om . m ission h a v ing held a pu b lic he a ring as re q u ire d by law upon the ap p lica tio n of M a rsh a ll D ro thers . In d lo r a con d itio na l use to /b u l ld an 8 unll dw«l«ng-upomT\»T6»VprfttvWTy there in described and Ihe recom . m en da tlon fo r ap p ro va l ha v ing been
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N thal 0 . E . B rovM i-has f ile d he re in a pe tition fo r fo rm a l p ro b a t* o l w ill ,« id h l i .p p o ln lf t iK it • • p « - io n . l „
esentalhH earing has been set upon said
pe tition on th e Sfh d a y o f S *p t*m b * r . 1973. at 10:00 o 'c lo c k a .m . * t Ih * C ourtroom o f th * ab ov* na m *d Court in Tw in F a lla , Counfy o f Tw in F a lls , S ta la o f Idaho, and a n y p *rson In ta rH te d m a y a p p *a r and contast M r d ^ l l l and m i\y o b |*c t to th * appo in tm ent o f B. E. Q rown '* • P ersonal R a p r*s *n t« flv * .
Dated th is 3rd d a y o f A u gu s t, 1973. B. E . BROWN Pe titioner
P U B L IS H ; Aug. 10, 17 a. 34. 1973.
NOTICE OF H E A R IN GIN T H E D IS T R IC T COURT OF 1 F IF T H J U D IC IA L D ISTR IC T • THE STATE OF ID A H O , IN A FOR THE C O U N TY OF TVi FA LLS
RAY ROY THOM PSON, a m ir by JU A N IT A C H AR LTO N ,
■dian
N O TIC E IS H E R E D Y G IV E N th a l . ^ - • undersigned has been appo in ted
I. u l the South land P e rso na l R e p re s e n ta llv e o f Ih e I con d itio na l use lo r above-named estate . A lt persons las s l a l l ^ a l Ihe hav ing c la im s against th * said S to re , 111 F i le r deceased a re r e q u lr e d jo present 'IS, Idaho, be ing the Ih e ir c la im s w ith in four, m on lh s
a fte r Ihe da te o f Ihe f ir s t pu b lica tion o l th is no tice o r sa id c la im s w i ll be fo re ver b a rre d . C la im s m ust * l lh e r be presented lo R uth I. M cC lu re o f the estate, at Mha o ffice o f P a rry . Robertson, D a ly & Larson, Idaho F irs t N ationa l Bank B u ild ing . T w in F a lls . Id a h o ,o r f ile d w lth - th * C ourt.
D A T E D th is Mh day o f August. 1972. .
:S. R U TH I . M CCLURE CO P a rry . R obertson. D a ly S.
Larson 1 ,P .O . Box 535 T w in F a lls , Idaho 83301
P U U L IS H : A ug. 10.17.34 L 31. 1973.
a selt servlL Seven E lo v Avonue, Twii
. sam e Is 'DCanlod and appiPASSED BY T H E C IT Y COUN
C IL August 31,' 1973.S IG N E D OY T H E A C T IN G
M AYO R August 31. 1973.. , W INSTON I. JONES.
A cting M ayor A ttes t:■ E D Y T H E D. KOONTZ
C ity C lerk PU O LIS H : A u gust 24, 1972
Case No. 3SM9.N O T IC B OP SALB
ON P 0 R B C L 0 S U R 8 --------- ----------------------------- -----------------IN TH E D IS T R IC T COURT OF T H E THE TOTAL AM O U N T OF M O N E Y
UlARtNJl .m'THB MATTim OP rADOPTINO UNIPONM RULHf..
AND RBOULATIONI RBLATINO. TO THI PLUMBlNOj HSATINO/ iLlcrniCAL AND BYNUCTUltAL lYITBMt POR MOBILR HOMRt AND N B C N B A T I O N A X VBHICLRi. '
N o tK * U h « '* b v e lv« n -H i* f th * e i*c trlc« > M d H o m b ln o a » « rd * o f th * M a t* o M d a h o . d *p « ^ im *n t« o f
- Ih * D * p i r t m * n t ' o f L * w E n fo rc*m en t, w i ll he ld a pu b lic hearing a l A .M . on th * a i r t d a y -
-’ Qf— 8 * p i * m b * 4 t - 1 f 7 l , - - f n f - t h * - Conteranc* R o o ^ n M h * D * p * r tm * n t of Law e n f o r c * m * n ^ ld ln g a t »1 1 Wasl S ta t* S ir» * t . D o li« , IdaHo fo r
oovem lho th * * l* c t r lc a l. pTumblno> heatino/ and s tru c tu ra l •y s tcm s fo r m o b ll* h o m *s and re c r e a t io n a l v a h ic ) * ! . th a t th * R u l * i an d R aom atlont In lu b s ta n c * a r * t h o u ad op iad b v A119.1 and A l l f . S A m e r ica n N a tio n a l S ta n d a rd ! InslltiKc.
A l Ih * t im e o l ia id h *arlno< *11 p 4 r i ^ i in la ra s tad m ay ap pa ar and . g iv e - o r a l o r s u b m it w r i t t e n iM t lm o n y b a fo r* o r to a ha a rld o • x a m ln a r d a a lg n a ttd fo r th a t purpos*. C op!** o f th * p ro p o ia d rules and r tg u ta llo n s 'm a y ba obtalnad b / * - r * Q u * s t In w r it in g K co m p an led by a c M h le r 't c h K k o r money o rd e r In the am o un t.o f U.SO.
D A TE D th is I t ih day o f A u gu s t,
-s- John Dander C om m issioner o f Law E n forcem enl B Y :«A rtle D arker ^
S la t* e i* c f r lc a l Board OI*nn G ** rh a rd - -
S tate f*lum blng Boar.d PU B L IS H : A u g . W, J4 I . 31, W l .
o r d i n a n c e n o . ISSfAN O R D IN A N C E OF T H E C ITY
COUNCIL OP T H E C ITY OF TW IN " LLS. ID A H O , SE TTIN G FO R TH
A p e tition b y R ay R oy“ rhom pson , hn rn M av 7, 1954, a t Salm on. Idaho, County o f Le m h i, now res id in g at C larendon. D Ialne C ounty. Idaho, proposing a change In nam e lo C harlton has been file d in the above e n tille d co u rt, tho reason for the change In nam e be ing ;
The ’ P e l l l io n e r 's m o th e r re m a rr ie d R obert C harlton sho rtly a f te r the b ir th o l Ihe m in o r. R ay Roy Thom pson.' A t a l l lim e s . R o b e r t C h a r lto i ' 'suppo rt tMtAn'j
F IF T H J U D IC IA L D IS T R IC T OF TH E S TA TE OF ID A H O , IN A N D FOR T H E C O U N TY O F TW IN FA LLS
C O N T IN E N T A L • L IF E AC C ID E N T C O M P A N Y , an C orpo ration. P la in tif f .
Idaho
d been'a la th e r lo th e sa li I he has, a t a ll tim es,
n of c a rp o rt at 1301 Tei.fo r m ade to the C ity C ouncil. __
W H E R E A S iv in g held
Ih e C ity C<
pileiq u in la'
tio n and ha
ib llc he a rin g as
r saii fu lly con-
iria n ceip lic t io n fo i
I N alw irt. r»d.
B a an trKnopp. rad; Gladys Tanni..... ........
fiaani, fancy cul - Jaan NariwarT.
set back re q u lre m e n ti 1 p e rm it Ih ree loo l set baCk fo r )ns truc tlo n o l c a rp o rt a t 1301 Tenth
Jones A d d itio n ,
_______ a ll m a l l - ..OE IT -O R D A IN E D OY TH E
M A Y O R A N D C IT Y C O U N C IL OF T W IN FA L LS , ID A H O , the ap
I p lic a tio n ol M a rsh a ll D ro th e rs . Inc. ronditionat
d w e llin g 19 fa llo w in g described proved pei
and
n. blua,use
foi
- Charl>. blua. Judy
mka, rad, ana '
*Jlla Hantan, rad, Janal
Z on ib u lld l p rd p e rty :
•E W , Lo t 3. T w in F a lls , Idaho.
Any person ii
Pearson Subdlv ls lBh, Tw in Fa lls C ounty.
I 31st dev of Augui
P U B L IS H : Aug 24. 31 an(l Sepi
ftatpbirrv l»«v — BorU,Emma Thompton. rad. and Cay Nai wniia.Strawberry (am — Mary Palmar.
N O T IC £ o'F P U D L iC H E A R IN O
N OTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N b] ihv Board o l County C om m issioners Tw in F a lls C ounty. State o f Idaho
k 'l and th e roquos
O R D IN A N C B NO. 1S67AN O R D IN A N C E OF T H E C IT Y OF TW IN F A L L S , ID A H O , A M E N D IN G SECTIONS 3 A N D 4 OF A R T IC LE V I I . C H A P T E R V. C IT Y OF TWIN F A L LS , ID A H O CO D E R E G A R D IN G A P P L IC A T IO N A N D P E R M IT A N D P R O V ID IN G THE A D O P TIO N 0 1 ^ - TH E . . . N A T IO N A L E L E C T R IC A L CODE
DE IT O R D A IN E D ' OY THE M AYO R A N D C ITY C O U N CIL OF THE C IT Y OF TW IN FA LLS , ID A H O :
S ection I. Tha i Section 3 of A rU cle V I I . C hapte r V, C ity d f T w in Fatls.
’ Idaho. C od* be am ended .to p ro v id e C as fo llo w s :
-tlr^p T APPI IT A T ir^M lL U i\.
in ing to Ihe loH describea rea l p ro p e rty :
Tow nsh ip 10 South. R ange 17 E., D .M ., T w in F a lls C ounty, Idaho Section 10: A tra c t o l land com m encing a t a po in t 1.008 fqet East o f the N orth w e s t co rn e r o l the SEV4SWV4 ; thence South 331.5 le e t. thence East 338.5 fee l 1 thence N orth 331.5 fe e t; Ihence
. w e s t 338.4. fee t Jo the p o in t ol be g in n in g . E X C E P T a s tr ip 35 lee t w ide a long the N orth line ol sa id above de scrib ed p ro p e rly fo r a pu b lic road.
PASSED OY T H E C IT Y COUNCl August 31. 1973.
S IG N E D BY T H E AuousI 31. 1972.
W IN STO N I. JONES A c tin g M ayo r
N O T IC B O P C L A IM T O A W A T B R R IO H T
N 0 .4 r -4 « n N o tic e i t h e re b y , g iv e n th a t
Q lf fo rd O. D av is , R ou t* 3, Tw in F a lls , Idaho has fi le d a c la im lo a w a te r r ig h t estab lished by d ive rs ion and ap p lica tion to ba n e llc la l u t * o f 3.0 cub ic feat pe r second o f w ate r fro m waste w a te r w ith po in t o f d l« )* rtio n In t h * SW’/ iN E '/ . , U c . 1, T. 10$, R. U E . O .M .. Tw in F« iis Counfy.
T h * w a ltfr Is c ia lm a d to b * used • ro n ' Ap'^ll I to O ct. 15 fo r the
''* '‘" 0 Ir r ig a t lo n o f l3 8 * c r * * w U h a p r io r it y o f AAav 1, 1910; the p la ce o f use Is w ith in th e W>/iNE'/<i. B 'u NWV4, Sec. I.T . 10S. R. 16E. O.M .
A n y exception to th is c la im o l w a te r r io h t m a y be file d w ith the Id a h o D e p a r tm e n t o f W a te r A d m in is tra tio n , 1041 Blue Lakes Q ouleva rd N o r th ,T w in F a lls , Idaho, 83301.
R. K E IT H H IG G IN S O N D ire c to r
Pub lished In th *- TIm es-News, Tw in F a lls . Id ah o ron August 17 and August 34, 1973.
'atlon 0r ito i
led
VE R N O N J . SHORT and IL E N E M . SH O R T, s ta tu to r y tru s te e s fo r C O N T IN E N T A L H OM E ASSETS C O R PO R ATIO N , a de funct Idaho c o rp o ra tio n ; D . SPEN C ER GROW ,
-do'
fo riChool and f6 r eve ry
o tne r purpose. A t no l im e has h is rea l fa the r eve r v is ite d %ald m in o r,
• supported h im o r In any w ay acted as a n a tu ra l la th e r . This ro le has been a lw ays pertor.m ed by R obert C harlton . Now Ihral ' th e boy is eighteen yea rs b id and a g ra du ate ol h ig h school, he des ires to assum e the nam e o l C ha rlto n , s ince th a t has been, in fa c t, h is nam e by use since
Such pe tition w i ll be hei 33th day o f Septem ber 19! p.m . and ob lec tlo ns m ay C any person w ho can . In jec tlons, show to the cou reason aga inst such a <
s L u c il le W llcock D E P U T Y
W A L K E R , D E P E W 1 \ R esid ing at T w in F a lls ,
:0R PUOI 1971 --------
E d y lh e O. Koon C ity C lerk
■ SH : Augus
L B O A L A D V B R T IIB M B N T P O R B ID S
C TIN G M A Y O R Sealed Proposa ls w i ll ba re ce lve d by th e Salmon R ive r Canal Com pany, Route No. 1. Tw in FaIJs. rd a h p o /n tll 3:00 P .M .. M ou n ta in OaylT(jhf T im e on August 31. 1973. fo r construction of M a in Canal R econstruction lor S a lm onR lver Canal C om pany. Tw in F a lls County, Idaho.
N E C E S S A R Y TO OE R A IS E D FROW T A X E S ASSESSED ON T H E T A X A B LE PR O P E R TY W IT H IN THE C IT Y OF TW IN F A L L S , iOAHO FOR T H E F I5 C A L Y E A R BE G IN N IN G JA N U A R Y 1, 1973.A n d e n d i n g d e c e m q e r a t.1973, A N D P R O V ID IN G TH A T T H E C ITY C L E R K S H ALL F IL E A C E R T IP teO -C O P Y OP T H IS OR- D IN AN C E W IT H TH E C O U N TY A U D IT O R O P T W IN P A L L S COUNTY ID AH O .
_____ _ _ _____ - BE IT O R D A IN E D OY T H Eig business under Ihe n a m * and MAYOR A N D T H E C O U N C IL OP
d e s ig n a tio n o f G R O W ‘ IN - THE C IT Y OF TW IN P A LL S ,V E S T M E N T A N & - M O R T O A O 'g IOAHOt— ----------C O M P A N Y ; A M E R I C A N Section 1. T he re Js- hereby lev ie d R E P U B LIC F IN A N C IA L COR- upon all the ta xab le p ro pe rty W ith in PO RA TIO N , a Nevada co rp o ra tio n ; the corporate i lm l ls o f Ih * C ity o f F IR S L F ID B L IT Y T H R IF T A N D Tw in . F a l ls , • T w in Fa lla C ounty , LO A N A S S O C IA T IO N , a U ta h ’ Idaho, ad va lo re m taxes * s fo llo w * : co rp o ra tio n ; GROW IN V E S T M E N T !< I- M 9,500.00t0 d * fra y Ihe g e ne ra l A N D M O R TG AG E CO., « U tah^-curren lexper^ses Of u i d C lly lOT the co rp o ra tio n ; D . SPEN C ER G R O W .'H sca l^yaar b e g ln n ln gon th * f ir a t d «y and A R T A L ; GROW , husband and of January. 1973 and ending on the w ife , S IE R R A L IF E IN SU R AN C E 31sl day. o f D ecem ber. 1973. (m il l C O M P A N Y , an Idahg co rp o ra tio n ; llm lfa llo n — 30 m il ls ; SO-335, Idaho U N IT E D STATES OF A M E R IC A ; Code).and L Y L E PO O L, doing business 3. tM4,500.00 to de fray th * *x - under the nam e and deaionations o l pensas o f s tree t Im provem en ts in- g p g L E L E C T ^JC , Defendanta. eluding lig h tin g , s p r in k lin g . H ushing
U ftdW » d b v v » n u * 0f l h * i c w t* m o '«n g . re p a irs , m a ln la na nce , ludgm en t and d e c re * o f fo r* c lo s u r* r tn s tru c ti(w o f s trM ts . o f sa id c ity , and o rd e r o f u l * and w r i l o f dur no said fis ca l yea r, ( m il l - execution on fo r*c lo s u r* lssu *d ou t H m llatlon — none; SO-313.' Idaho 01 Ihe D is tr ic t C ourt o l the F ifth Code).Jud ic ia l D is lr lc l o f Ihe S la t* o f IdW io 1- 1105,000.00 In and fo r the County o f TU/ln P a lls , on August V d . 1973. In Ih * above- e n t ll l* d ac tio n , w he re in C on1ln*nt» l L ife t Accident C om pany, the a b ova iiam ad p la in t i f f , ob ta in ed a judgm en t and decree aga inst the ab o ve -n a m e d d e fe n d a n ts , w h ic h said ludgm en t and de cre * w as, on August 3rd. 1973, f lla d and docketed in the o ffice o f the C lerk o f said Court In la id C oyn ly .
. ______ - - in ta in a freepublic l ib ra ry in said c l ly du r in g u i d fiscal yea r, ( m il l I lm lt a t lM — S m i l l t i 33-3403 Idaho Code).
4. U 3.0»-00 to p rov ide lo r ,« Capital Im erove m en is p ro g ra m In M id c lly d u rin g said fisca l yea r, (m ill l lm lta llo n - 3 m il ls j SO-336 Idaho CodeJ.
5. (53,500.00 lo r m a in ta in in g an d !
Aug. }4, 31, Sept.
34, 1973.
I. Donna M «« d i.«
and Joan cumbar r il l
Palmar,
Oarlow. Iblua. Snerv
^"bfua.“ i?tor*t I C v o g rd f^ lc
lOft bullar ~ t liifon Kip
NOTICE I Ihd l a public tw lo rc the a
hea ring ' wlM M rd of Cour [ ~ (Ko" h 'ou~ on Tousday.
P E R M IT Now basic w ir in g sha ll be covered
by an a p p lica tio n (or a w ir in g p e rm it a l Ihe C ity C le rk 's o ffice . Such ap p lica tio n sha ll g ive the nam e o l Ihe
'o w ner o r tenant, stree t num ber o f the p ro p e rty o r bu ild ing and a de scrip tion o f Ihe Ins ta lla tio ns lo be m afltf. A N Y P E R M IT R E Q U IR E D OY TH IS CODE M A Y BE ISSUED TO A N Y PERSON TO DO AN Y W ORK R E G U L A T E D BY THIS CODE IN . A S IN G LE F A M IL Y D W E L L IN G USED E X C L U S IV E L Y FO R L IV IN G P U R P O S E S , IN
i C L U O IN G . T H E U S U A l
O R D IN A N C E NO- IS66AN O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C ITY
O F T W IN F A L L S , ID A H O , V A C A T IN G P U B L IC S T R E E T RlGVtT OF W A Y AN D P R O V ID IN G FO R . C O N V E Y A N C E TO A D JA C E N T P R O P E R T Y O W N ER S '
OE IT O R D A IN E D OV THE M A Y O R A N D C IT Y C O U N C IL OF TH F
P ro p o s j w i l lp u b lic ly read i
fo rm s , and f l l * fo r A s to c ia le d Gi
the
o ff ic e , n o f io r th 37th SI
- In fo rm a tio n a r * n in a t lo n a r t n e ra l '
A L IA S iU M M O N tIN T H E D IS T R IC T COURT OF T H E F IF T H J U D IC IA L D IS T O ir r n r TH E STA TE D F ID A H O . IN A N D FOR T W IN p a l l s dO U N T Y
J O S E P H ' M A R V IN O E A T E Y , P iB ln t l l f , VS. M A R Y A N N O E A T E Y , D efendant.
T H E STATE OP ID A H O sends gre e tin gs to AAary Ann 0 *a te y , Ihe •b o v e iia m e d d * l* n d a n li - -
Ynw f l f f t - b w h y n n t l f i f t r t^ h A t-
i am com m anded to t certa in lo ta . p la cM , ani land s itu a t* in Tw in F a lls , Tw ii Fa lls C ounty, State o f Idaho, ani m o re , p a r t ic u la r ly d e s c r ib e d ai fo llow s, fo w if :
U ls I7 a n d IS In B lock 73 o f T w ir F a lls Tow nslte In Tw in Fa lls Counfy Idaho, as shown on th * fin a lam ended p la t th e re o f, o f r The o ffice o f Ihe Recorder county In Book l o f P la ts at
u r ln o ^ s a ld l ls c a l y e a r . I m l l l lim ita tio n — 3 m il ls ; 50-331, Idaho
>11 th o se 'C o d e ),' i . 161,000.00 to p rov ide fo r and regulate rec rea tion a l p ro g ram s In said c ity du rin g said fisca l .year, (m ill llm lfa llo n — 3 m il ls ; 50-303, Idaho Coct*},
7.1119,000,00 lo r m a in ta in in g and equipping Ihe .F ire D e p a rtm *n t o f said c lly In said fisca l yea r, (m il l iim ita llo n — 9. m l l l i T 50 309. Idaho Coda).
The fo fa l o f th * a b o v * la « t .349,300.00,w h ich Is fo r th * sa id purposes ass*ss*d upon a ll th *
p ro p e rty w llh in (he cor- o f i h | - c i f y or T w in '
HO:I. T ha t the fo llo w in g described
pu b lic SKoet r ig h t o l w a y b o and the sam e h vaca ted, to w it :
C om m encing a t tho soctlgn cornor com m on to Sections 14, 15, 22 and 33, T o w n s h ip 10 S o u th , R a n g e 17, E .B .M ., T w in F a lls C ounty, Idaho, Thence South 0 degrees 23 m inutes W est a long Ihe section line com m on to S frc tlo n r7 2 and 33 a d is ta nce of 714.85 feet fo a p o in t; Thence N orth 09 de gra*s 3) m in u tes W est 40.00 feet to tho re a l p o in t o f be g in n in g ; Thonco c on tin u in g N o rth 80 degrees
i_ W 0 S L O 7 A ^ - lM t_ ta
i W hD ID D ir ilG P U R P O S E S F R O M : t tm p la ln lh a s b e m file d a g a liC H R O N IC a, A S S O C IA T E S , In Ih * OlStrlCf C pu rl o f IttJG x is u ltln g E n g in e e r*. 707 N orth 37lh J u d ic ia l D ls fr c to f ih e S ta ieo f IdahiS tre e f, O o lse , Id a h o 63703; o r in an d.fo r T w in F a lls CourS A L M O N R IV E R C A N A L ab o ve fla m e d p la in t i f f , amC O M P A N Y . Route No. 1, T w in he reby d ire c le d lo appeal F a lls . Idaho (H o llis te r).
A copy o f the co n tra c t docum ents m a y be ob ta in ed Iro m the Salmon R ive r Canal C om pany 's o t f lc e or Eng inee r's o f f ic e upon a doposll of S30.00. The deposit w i ll be refunded upon re tu rn o f said docum ents in good condition w ith in ten days fo llo w in g Ihe b id opening.
ic o rd In o f said P a g* 7.
*40T1CE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N That on Sapfam bar 13, > 9 7 3 ,a lm o o - po ra la l lm it i o 'c lock A .M . o f th a t da y a t th * f ro n t F alls . Idaho- door o f Ih * T w in Falls C ounty section a T h * C Itv c ia rk Courthouse If^ ^ T w in F a l l i . _ T w l o _ ^ ) f Ih *
ttT T -ln "ob em en ce\o 'w % °*lu 3S ii^^^^ and d irec ted to c V f i f y to
I p i*a d p;;*
DC no io C E SS O R Y QU IL D IN T .S A N D —lL - m ln u t l t t - W 0S L a 2f l ^----- Q i t t^ - ir ih H S I N C O N N E C T IO N ' P o in I; T he nc* N orth 0
•h ^ iT W ITH SUCH B U IL D IN G S IN TH E m ln u le s E ast 50.00 leef
lid c om p la in t w ith i d a y s a f ia r th e da t pu b llca flon o l th is sum m ons.
The sa id action Is b ro ug h t to ob ta in a jud gm en l and d e c re *o f th is C o u rt d is s o lv in g th * .b o n d s o f m a lr lm o n y now e x is tin g between p la in t i f f and d e fe n d a n t; also fo r genera l re lie f, as w i ll m o re fv iiiy appear In the co m p la in t on f i le to
ip D C ia i r g fa r a n c r i r h e reb y
f fo re c losu re and sa id o rd e r s a i* and w r i t . o t execution on e c lo s u r* ,s * ll lh *a b o v a -d « s c r lb *d P * r ty ,o r so m uch th e reo f as m a v necessary to sa tis fy p la in t i f f 's
ludgm ent w ith in te re s t thereon and costs, to Ihe h ighest kn d best b id de r for cash. In la w fu l m oney o f the un ite d Slates.
D A T E D ; August 7 lh , 1973.P A U L C ORDER S ie r l l f o f Tw in Fa lls C ounty, Idaho
P U B L IS H : Aug. 10, 17 L 34, 1973.
Ih ls 9rd lna nc*-im m e d la te ly a lta r It* p a s u o i-
PASSED BY T H E C IT Y C O U N C IL , August 3),' 1973
S IG N E D OY T H E A t T lN G M AYO R, August 31, 1973
W inslon I. Jones Ac ling M ayo r
ATTEST:Edythe D. K o o n ti .C ity C lerk
PUBLISH I Aug. 34, 1973, n
I llu* uround Moor. 1 IhL- Counly Con
m tj ro r the c o u n ty r
degrees 33. . lo a p o in t;
Thonco sou th 89 degrees 31 m in utes East 395.10 lo o t^ o a p o in t. Thonco N orth 0 degrees 33 m ln u tos East
lonco South St-5Q.0QfODl.
South 0 d u g ro u s l3 m in u tes W est 300 lod i to a p o in t; Thenpe South 09 dogrcos 31 i\iin u to s “ ■ ■ Thonco
^ t * ^ h i r * » ” 6q u lre ? 1o r ^ A n d vau a re fu rth e r noH ffed th a t
LEG AL NOTICE
H O T IC B O f l A L I
e Is hereby given that 0.
E V E N T TH A T A N Y SUCH PER SON-IS TH E BONA F ID E OW NER OF A N Y SUCH D W E L L IN G AN D A C C E S S O R Y B U IL D IN G S A N D /uo uu le o i ,10 a p o ir
-O U A R r E t t i . - A N O —T H A T - IW E - - M d tu ru c i-a iJ n ln u li SAME A R E O C C U P IbO OY SAID ‘ ' "O W N ER . P R O V ID E D THAT SAID O W N E R S H A L L P E R S O N A L L Y PU R C HASE A L L M A T E R IA L AN D SH ALL P E R S O N A L LY P E R FO R M A L L LA B O R IN C O N N EC TIO N T H E R E W IT H .
Such applIcaVlon Shall be m ade and p e rm it secured be lore any basic 2- That tho M ayo r a nd C ity C lork w ir in g is en erg iie c t, any "ro u g h In " are a u th o r iio d and d iro c te d to> ins ta lla tio n s a re covered, or not over oxocuto Q u it C la im Deeds to said 73 hours havo oiapsed sinco-tho new vaca ted p ro p o rty and unto ad |o ln ln g w ir in g w as s ta rted . This 73 hour owners,
p e r il
South 0 dogre 50.00 lee t tc O E G IN N IN G .
Dated jh ls lOfh day o f Augui
TH E O W N E R iS A L M O N R IV E R 1C O M PAN Y
D A L E M ESS NE R O ia irm a n . Board o f D lreclo
■ unless you so appear and p lead to sa id c o m p la in t. Jhe p la ln t l l f w ill ta k e lu d g m e n t a g a in s t you as p ra ye d .in said c o m p la in t.
W lT N ESS m y ha nd and Ih o seal o f lh » - 01s lr ic t - C o u r t - th le - « fh - d » v -o f - August, 1973.
N O T IC B O F S A L B LO C A L IM P R O V E M E N T D ISTR IC T NO. I i
C IT Y OP T W IN P A L t I , ID AH OSeries F e b ru a ry 1.1973
(S E A L)H A R O LD A LA N C A S TE R
— rnB*eitror*Twm'FfHU“wni7eTe7ve"soarca‘bTc lem be r, 1973, up fo 8:00 p.m .. a t Iho olMco.of II AvenuQ E a st. T w in F a lls , Idaho, to r Ihe purchase
Qonds In Ihe am o un t o l ts,? l0.48, payab le Ird ih i on p ro p e rly in acco rdance w ith tho bone llts receU
Local tm p ro v o /tie n l G u aran ty Fund. The sale
s on the le ih da y .o L S a p ^_ le C ity C le rk , 331 .Second >f Ih e lo llo w in g bonds: specia assessm ent lev ied
ed and fu rth e r secured by bonds a re Issued lo r . the
By ( ^ R O T H Y M cM I LL A N p u fp o so o l ACQuirJng funds to pay fo r a par t ol the cost o f con s truc tin g curbs.
P U B LIS H Aug. 10, 1 / 8. 34,
Deputy Cli P U B L IS H : Aug. 1,17, 34 8.31. 1973.
go tie rs .A nd pi
■■’a ; ' ind Iv lng
CBS* H * U lMNOTICB OP A T T A C H M It/r .
IM TH B DISTRICT COURT OP THE PIPTH JU D IC IA L DISTRICT OP THB i VATB o p IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF TWIN F A L L I ,
OREGON TRACTOR l i EQ UlPrJ' »AEHT CO.. INC., an Oragon cop. porallon. P lilM lfl,
omoi- I h A jy t v
alla i ASSED OY T H E Cl TY C O UNCIi
Casa No. 3S3J0A L IA S SUMMONS
IN T H E D IS T R IC T C O U R T O F THE P IF T H J U D IC lA L ^ D L 5 T J tm .T _
A L IA S SUM MO NS
by Ihe Coui «no 6in aay o l J u ly , W \ .
Tho bonds da ted F eb ru t dunom inations o l 1100 oac denom ination o lS I IQ.40, sh annum , payab le Febru<)r
ipon and a long < Id by Ordi
. . po rtions th ereo f a . f^o. J5I8, p a u e d _ a n d approved
d M a yo r ol Ihe C lly o f Tw)rt Fal
y 1. 1973, sha ll be num bered 1 to 89 In c lu s ivs , in . except bond num bered 1, w h ich sha ll b * In Ihe III bear in te rest not lo exceed seven pe rcen t per 1, 1973. and annually th e re ^ lte r . and p r in c ip a l
Ot-ORC M B NT
dba OLORE C O M P A N Y .
JACK EQU Dalandani
- -'NOTICE liMBR^iBV GIVEN tha t. a Writ e( A llK hm tn l was l u u ^ out
.o l Hia abova-afttltlatl Coirt. liHhis action, on Aug-ma prepKlv o l I«
tan pKcant ( W> par '
CMrkof District Court : by a e O ROBINSON
OMuty a*rH
y M n u J. jo fM , Jr.. t o H l i Jonas . i«n W. J*ffartOfi
- . i t l l IM II
■ Comm Counti
TEST
N O TIC E OP SALE
htotice is hereby g iven th a t Nor- Ihwest Crane A R iga lng and A ll- Northwest Tow ing , A ja iso p Aye. W., T w in F a lls , Idaho w ill sell lo Ih * highest b id de r one 1963 C hevro let 3- do o r Im p a la . S e ria l .»4o. 3I847S119465. Olds w ill be rece ived la i l l l August 31, 1973. The adve rtise r reserves th e r ig h t lo re le c l.a n y or all
.....................-PU O LISH : Aug. 30, 31.' 33, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 39 8. 30, 1973.
N O T Ip B O P iA L B
FOR SA LE to Ih * h lg h*s l b idder th * A llo w in g veh ic les lo s a lls ly lien
. lo r pa rts , la b o r and storage.' 1 -« n iy 19S6 Ch»v, p icku p , i d No .
V3A56L004333 1 -o n ly 1963 Chevy 11 (3) 3-door,-
ID No, 304110150387 •1 -o n ly 1967 P lym ou th F u ry I, ID
■No. PK31H741695I5>.
. b id s W ill ba a cc *o t*d a l W a ll's Texaco, W *«| AA aln fa t l~ IO No;, J iro m * . Idaho. T h * h g h t tg .ra ja c t M y o r all b id s ls ’r*s * rv a d ,
W A LTE R TH U E S O N .
to E fV c tn co l Inspec ly e le c tr ic ^ w ir in g not covered b y 'a perr
above, ho m ay in s tr i s Jp p lle r to dlscQnni
e d rop to I'
SIGNfeO OY T H E A C T m G M A Y O R August. 31. 1973. H A L L i
W IN STO N I. JONES A c tin g M a yo r
ihls ordinance ortru in g v )o lh ."
. Tha i Se<V II, C hapter V. C lly o f T w in f- Idaho, Code bo am ondod lo pr< as fo llo w s :
'S e c l io r lW ORK- Upon roce l specllon o t Ini
IN S P E C T IO N OF
ig a .roquost lo r in . a lla llo ns covered by
r in g p e rm it , it sha ll b * Ih e d u ly ot m e E le c lc lc a l Inspector lo m ake such insp oc lldn w U hln tw e n ty .lo u r hours, M onday th ro ug h F r id a y , >)Ol|days oxcoptod, a p p ly in g such
a». h P .ih f llL d o flm -n c c f is s a ry -. N ^lfce of ap p ro va l s |ia li be posted on ly on Is la lla tlo n s m ee ting the rog u la lio n s tandards as sa l lo r ih in m e laws o f Ih * S tale o l Idaho and the special re g u la tio n s set fo rth In th is ord inance. T H E 1971 E D IT IO N OF T H E N A T IO N A L 6 L B C T R IC A L C O D E P U B L IS H E D BY T H E N A T IO N A L P IR E PR O TE CTIO N A S S O C IA T IO N IS . H E R E B Y A D O P T E D .' T H R E E C O PIES OF SAID CODE SH A LL OE M A IN T A IN E D O N F IL E IN T H E O FF IC E OF T H E ^ C I T Y C L E R K FOR P U B LIC IN S P E C T IO N ."
PASSED B Y T H E C IT Y COUNC IL , August 31. l»23 . ‘
S IG N E D O Y T H E ^ A C T IN G M A Y O R .^ 'A ug us t 31, 1973.
W inston I. Jonas A c t in g M a yq r
A tte s t. ,E d y th * D. Ko'onti
C la rk '•Aug. 24. 1973.
KOON
P U U LIS H August 34, W f3.
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1S61 •AN O R D IN A N C E OF TH E C IT Y
OF TW IN F A L LS . ID A H O , AN N E X IN G . P R O P E R T Y , • A N D P R O V ID IN G FO R T H E ZO N E T H E R E O F .
W H E R E A S p r io r lo com n \o n c o m o n t o f a n n e x a t io n proceedings Iho Zon ing C om m lssibn h e ld Us he a rin g as p ro v id ed b y law and has recom m ended the zone lo r ihi
GE O R G E D U N C AN . P ia ln tl
U T I L I T Y C O N S T R U C C O M P A N Y . a pa rln o rsh i E R N E S T E O a N and W IT H E R S P O O N , as in d iv
TH E G R E E T IN G S Above Tiamud
E OF ID A rO : E rr
C om pla in ! in the DIs J u d lc lo l C Idaho, Pn reco vorlno In lu ry to
■ndant:Coby n o tilio d th a t a
as b e e n lile d against you r ic l C ou rt o l the F ifth s tr ic t o f Ihe State o l nd fo r lh f t ‘ p u rpo fe o l dam ages, lo r -p e rs o n a l
e p la ln t l r ' '
-Be—IT— otny«TNED~oT— rm r ’ thir-pt
Tha t said cause o f Action l»-based upon your m a lic io us
L. I-. ^,1 M* ..V I*M A Y O R A N D C IT Y C O U N C IL OF TH E C IT Y ‘ OF TW IN F A L L S , ID A H O i,
Sectl6n I- T h a t the lo llo w in g described p ro p e rty be and the sa m * Is hereby annexed ond d e c la red to be a p a r t d f th * C ity b f Tw in P a lis , . Idaho, to w it :
S W N E ‘/4NW>/4, ■ S o c llo n , lO i Tow nship 10 South. R ange 17 E -. O .M ., T w in F a lls C ounty, S ta io o f Idaho, I ' ' ^ .
Suclfon 3. That la id p ro p o rty he ro in annexed Is lo n e d R es id en tia l. Lo w -D e ns lly Zone.
PASSED B Y .T H E C IT Y COUN- C IU AU GU ST 3^. >973.. S IG N E D BY T H E ACTI.NO M A Y O R A U G U S T -31, 1973.
n tltfT and TOO * r * d to appear and .p lead
C om p la in t w ith in tw e n ty (30) days of the se rv ice o f th is A lla s Summ ons upon you ; and you a re fu rth e r n o ilf ia d tha t un less you so appear an d p ie a d ito said C om pla in t w ilh in t h * t im e h * r * ln s p « c l f l * d . | h * p la in t i f f w i l l lake lud gm en t against you a t n ra yed In sa id C om pla in t.
W ITNE SS M y hand ana s*aih is " ...............1973,
F IF T H J U D IC IA L D IS T R IC T OF <VIN t h e -S T A T E OP ID A H O , A N D
FOR THE C O U N TY OF TW IfJ F A L LS
A R L E N E E . G A M E R O Z. P la ln t l lf , O N vs. M IK E Z- G A M E R D Z . D e fe nd an t. and
VCK TH E STATE OF ID A H O Sends a ls , g r o o t ln q \ lo M IK E Z. G A M E R O Z.
th e above na m od de fendan t:You are bccflpy. r to llf le d th a t a
NOS C om pa lln th as been l i le d a g a in s i you > the in the D is tric t C ou rt o f th e F ifth
Jud ic ia l D is tric t o f Ihe State o f i l a Idaho. In and fo r Ih e C o u n iy o f Tw in VOU F a lls , by Ih * above n a m ed p la ln t l l f .
fo r Ihe purpose o f Q btdln lno a D e c re e o f D iv o rc e , s e v e r in g ab so lu te ly , Iho b o o d to f m a tr im o n y ' no w ex is ting between you and th * p la in t i f f and d e te rm in in g custody o f Ih e m in o r ch ild re n o f th e p a r fle *
Ion of he ro lo . le re o y— ^ T h a n a t d x a
Uond N um bers(allU nc lus ive ) D enom ination M aturing M a tu rin g
12.1110.48 1973 S 110.48
2 110.00 ‘ 1973 1.100.0013 23 too.00- ■ 19X4 1.100.0034 34 100.00 1975 1.100.0035 45 100.00 1976 1.100.004A M 100.00 I.IOD.OO57 67 100 00 J ? 7 8 1,100.0068 100.00 1979 . 1,100.0079 89 ^ 100.00 1980 1,100.00
upon irro cQ n c (la b le d (lf« ro n co s ; and you a r * he reby .d laected lo appear and p la a d to said C om palin t. w ith in tw e n ty (30) days o f th * s a rv ic * o f th is A lla s Sum m opa upon vow; and w u a r * fu r th v r n o t l l l* d th a t un l*s« you to appear and plAad to said co m p a lin t w llh in th * f im * he re in t p * c l i | * d . t t \ * p la in t i f f . w i ll ^ak* |u d a m *n t aga inst v o y -*s p ra y e d .Ir . .ry . — naint.
jrlcv
C ourt, th is , 32 d a y of Augus t. -^1*10 L o m p ia in t. iX ' ^ ' ‘• ‘ ^ - ^ W IT N E S S M y ha nd and seal
E d y lh * 0 . KoonU C lly C is rk
P U O L IS H : AupusL14,JV73.
>1. A . LA N C A STER ‘ -C L E R K . 1L U C IL L E W ILC O C K
O E P U T Y ,C U e R X G O L D E N D E N N E T T ASSOCIATES Dy'^B- E . 'R . ’-P ra th ls e u r 346 Second A v *n u * N o rtt i '. T w in F4ills> Idahb 8330) A t io rn a ys fo r P l« ln llf f
A ug, 34. 31 a. Sept. 7,
s C ourt, th e 10th da y o f August.1973. ■ ........ -
, H. A . LA N C A S TE R
fA A V . fAAY t . S U D W 6 E K & f ly J . A L F R E D M A Y A tto m a ya lo r P l* | i f t | f f '51* Second S tr * * t East •P. O. OOK tOS ; . * .T w in P a lls . Idaho i3301 1
• P U B L IC A T IO N D ATES» AUQUSt 17. jg u s l 3<V»71.
None o f said bonds sha ll be sold fo r le u than par and acc'rued in la re s t lo da te o f d e live ry th e reo f, w ilh p r in c ip a l and Interest on Ihe fo regoing.t)onds - bQina pavabta in la w fu l m oney . o f th * U (tll4d S la taa o t ^km arlca , a t th * o f fice o f th * T reasu re r of the C ity o f T w in Falls, Id flho , A l l bonds s h a ll,b * . sub ject to p r io r ro d e m p lio n a t Ihe op tion of the C ity a t a ny lim a w han R iar*Is m oney in Ih * bond fund o f th * D is t r ic t by v ir tu * of p r io r paym en t o f In 't s ta llm e n is o l assessm ent or p r in c ip a l and In terest in ad d itio n lo tha t necessary to redeem the m a tu r i ty o f the p rinc ip a l o f th e bonds ne x t ac-
•jnQ ,fll flbavB p ro w idad ..w h ich bonds sha ll be c * tle d T n id -p a td ln - re p u i* r~ ' q rd er a t « p rice equal to the principal am o un t thereo f, payab le
accrued In te rfts i lo ins red em ptio n da ta p a y a b l*
Sealed b ids fo r M id bonds sha ll be accom panied b y a c e r tif ie d o r c ash lc r's cheek rep re sen ting a se cu rity depos it o f good la llh ' In an am ount no t le u than fl.ve per<;enl o l lh a am o un t bid; w h ich check s ha ll be i**iu rned if th * bid is no t accepted o r a p p lie d upon the pu rchase p r ic * o f salp bonds. Said check of.depos it 0| se cu r ity rep re sen ting good fa ith shall ba m a d * pa yab l* Id Ih * ' C ity o f T w in F a lls . Idaho. - ;
Tha leg a l a p p ro v in g op in io ^ o t E la m . Q ur^*, ;»npes»n. E va n * k Ooyd,’A L lo rn *ys a t L a w , o o is * , Iftaho, a n d ox«cfuted bonds wDl b« lu rn lsh ad to th * successfiil b id de r.
Sealed b ids w i l l bo rece ived by th e C ilV o f Twin F a lls , Idaho, a t Ih * o f f ic * id the C lork , 33» Second Avenue E a s t, T w in Falls, Idaho, up to 8:00 p .m . on S to te m b a r 18,1973. a lW h lch llm e b ld sT o Y a llT to n U rw Ili be i v o p e f T r o — ancNfi on re fe rre d to the C lly C ouncil fo r rev iew and c on s ld a ra llo n o f lha b id s ** a t a r m u la r C ouncil M e e tln g ilo b * h * ld a l tha C lly H a ll 331 SKoiSd A va n u * E a s t. T w tn P a llt . td ah o. on th* 3nd d a y o t O c to b ir, >973. com m ancino a t o r abou t 0:00 p ,m . T h * C ity r *s *rv e a Ih * r lg h l lo awar<d o r r t fa c t any an d a ll b id s and to a ccapt sa id b id w h ich In Ih * opinion of th * C ountU Is In th * b *s t in t* r*a ts o l . lh * C ity of T w in P a lls . Idaho.. 'D A T E D Ih ls 31st day of A uoust. 1973. v . .
.- C IT Y -O P T W IN PA LLS , ID A H O - r - _ ,Oy -Sv E D Y T H E 0 . KO ONTZ - . . . < P
. ' C l ly X le r kP U O L IS H ; Aug. i4 , I V 1. Sept. 7. 19 73 - - .............
■ J ,
j'j TlmM-Nt*<. 'Tw|ti F»Hi. Idaho ,Thurid*y. AuguH H l«>2. O m Io u M* * t l .« V
' ' ■ - AWar-umphf Ertbiiflhof/ This, Iie Ki-ump, I ' "YVes! I rem ehiie f)(<J'V : explidWiT
e-2v
” Sm ilol"
H o r o s c o p eCarroll Righler
FORECAST FOR FRIDAY. AUGUST 25, 1972
OENF.RAL TGNOENCieS: Indicstlng in .'in(er«it In the loftier attfibutei of the mind,
tuch u in v t , muiic and cultuje. can eliminate a highly dam ^in i condition that prevail! in the itmoiphere today. Uikfl cerriln you avoid maklng.any prom iu i unleu absolutely Hire of ail fact! involved.
ARIES (Mar. 2 1 to Apr^f9):YoU-may-ba in a rut-new bu tif you let kindly toward othera, you can make real heidwayjurt tht iinte. Don't follow a hunch -which tempti you to go on a
~ (an|entrK»epi)olaed^-TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Don't depend on reliable
friends today lince they have problemi of their own and are '.perplexed. You know ju it what to do, anyway, lo ittnly^^ factori.carefully. Tomorrow ii a better day. ’ r /
OBMINl (May 21 to June 21) Make sure tHat jewelry bnd other valuablei are In a lafe plac« fot-the weekend Do nothing
that will irk higher-upi. Take no chancei where your reputation is concerned
MOON CHILDREN (}line 22 to July 21) Ydd cut lu llt
other! now and ihould do lo lince you are In a fine poiltion at the preient. You can alio expand loon, lo make preparation! now and gel neceiiary detail!
LEO (Ju ly 22 to Aug ?1) You can handle your reaponiibilitiei nicely if you contact perioni who have the data you need. Increaaed affe(!tton for the one you love will bring fine result!. Avoid one who opposei you
VIRGO (Aug 22 to Sept ^1) Carry through with what auociatei want you to do and avoid argumg with anyone for best' results today Compliment asiociatei and express appreciation. Show that you are a practical person.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You have much work to do, so get started early Don't count too much on co-workers who are not feeling up-to par now But show higher>ups that you can be relied upon implicitly .
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Ndv ^1) If you show others more affection you can have a delii^tful time today ulong social lines. Give compliments when due’ Moke a bettor preparation before putting a new plan mio operation
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 2.’ to Dec 21) The situaiion at home could be unpleasant if you don’t Iccep your)vornes to yourself and annoy others with them Moke your home more charming. Think about the future
- C A P R IC O R N (Dec 22 to-Jan '20) Much can be accdmptished now provided you use extreme care m travel,
and avoid arguing winrassgciatenrc'precijc m doing errands, Don‘t cor^ too much cash in your wallet
-inak«-«-grA’error where,, money is concerned if you are not careful Seek advice from a business cxptytT Plan time for balancing your budget. Avoid one who bickers
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar 20) Plan how . to make yourself more charming and get out to places wheie you cun succeed instead of worryir\g'abput troubles and anxieties Don’t let ]?lurself become too annoyed with othdrs
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TOD^Y he or she will be one of those delightful young people who fiom earliest youth mu!t learn not to take offense at cvaty little.thing, but to use
_ Jhi® magnetic quality lo charm-Qthcra^whcthetan-business.or. - liaflfll ..life... Ideal rhnrt-Jni—the-auisv-th»
W h a t ’s W h a t
L, M. Boyd
Q. ':How'lonflr la thb nVorago grown tifforP" A. About 11 foot from noae to tnll tip^-----
-Q, “WHAT aoH of (lowdor do drug addiota diluto thoir ,
horoln wIthP", . • .A. Quinino,-doxtroBo, laotoao or aomothlnfj; onllcd-.
mannito, usually.
a "WHAT'S tho com- monoat error In tho oount* orfotlng .of rarO' poatago' atampiP'’ .
A. Wrong number of por-. ^oratod 'hoba along thoO d g O B .
* T flXT Loa Angoloa ha- ' bordoflhor wHtoa again to
ask for my varloua clothing ^aizoa. Saya ho'a an export on ■ reading aomothing about a man’a charaotor from aamo. Ail right, I
woAr 10-EB ahooa, 40- long auita, '7 - 1/4 hats, 17 '/^-OS'ahirta, arid bolts labellod, novormind; that's poraonai. ThU drivol oan go on too long. Only character trait I can road from maabulino attiro is: All men who woar rod veata are lonely.
, Q0NTA0T8
W aarar ofoontaol loi^aea are more nu^Aroua on the Waat Cpoat than oiao- whare, far moro v num- • oroua.
NO AOTORB oan atay .overnight at the Palace of Madrid. Houae rulea.
IT 'B In tho Oral three houra Of your aleep .youVo loaat apt to dream, that's known.
A FE M IN IN E oliont aayi ahe ia tirod of in- aolant propoaltiona from married men. 6ho haa our Love and W ar man'a profound aympathy. But ho'a pucilod, alight. Her reaction appears to contradlot that oft-reportod obaorva- tibn of tho great Ovid In
hia - monumental work on* titled ’“Tho Art of Lovo." .,
Ttt wit: ‘'Whether thoy „ yield or rofuao, ' it do- lighto womon to havo boon naked." :
W h i p l a s h
• That painful ailmont < nallbd whlpfaah affliota moro girla than men,
' ploi^o not'o. Nothing oom- plioatod about why. Al
though that long alondor fominino nook may be a
'de lig h t to tho eyo, It'a fragile. At loaat moria ao than a man’a. A Oallfomla dw tpr namod Edwin W.' A i^ o a notoa tho thin fo- mlUo nock la roquirod to support a hoad of genor- ally tho aame weight aa the aturdy male neck. Thia, ho aaya, la Imprao- tioal.
AMONQ the plalna I(\- dlana, It waa.thought to be ' a far bravor act to touch r a living anomy, thon get;: away unaoatheij, than to kill aame, hlatorlana aay.
AOCORDINO .tothaU .8.. Department of Labor, 1(; the wife and her huaband both are averoge. ahe'a exactly STOTTiOOOtha aa strong aa he ia.
REM EM BER , too. if you're 6B yeara o)d thla year, you were bom at just ab&ut the aame time thla country’a flrat tax icab took to tho road.
Add/m mail lo 1. M. Boyd, P. 0. «o« }7076/ Fort Worlh. TX 76101.
Copyilghl 1972 l.M. Boyd
Mpdhshif) rolls First woman
out, returnsCAPE KENNED'i' (UPJf)— Evnni aiUil. " I waH'roady to
With Apollo, .17 uatronnut charge on ourtljcroV’ Enrller'
Ilonald E. Evonfl ridiny aJiot- he snM^jip wns nnxious to yet ,
-gun,—tho IflBt of - Amflricn’a U jc spoceslilp on Uic rocket
• moonships was rolled out of Ita "bocnusc the closer you. get to
chcckout lyiildlng Wednesday, • Uie pad, the closer we come toonly to return 15 minutes Inter noing." •
bdcause pf high huiniday. Tlie coinr^and module pilot-
There waa o touch of said engineer's were ^worried
noatjilgln present when Uie 53- ihat the .high'humidity might
foot spacecraft, wrnpped tightly resUll'in comlensntion settling'^
in white tarpaulins, edfied put on critical elL'ctrical pnrts In
of 'Uie cavernous monncd Uie four‘legged lunar module
spacecraft operations building landing craft hidden behind a
on its way to tho rocket hangar white aluminum shell that will
four mllfls away. It was ta be , protect it during Uumch.the last moonsl>ip to leave the ^ ,will-S(;rubbod,buU(llni!. Once It Is inovod to the
But when Uie eleht-wlieol "«trnller reached t).e end of Uie » lll be lifted to tlu,
pnrklng lot. apncecroft officials ‘“P “ s three-stoBe Saturn 5
clmnucd . tlieir ’mlndii and Th“ rocket- •ordered Apollo 17 back Into Uie sPncecnift combination la sche-
air coadltioned building. Evans, bo .noved to the Oceanside hiunch pad next
nARROW, Alnnko ( ^ 1 ) - Eaklmo Breiida Ittfl won over the elements and on Incumbent
V opponent Wednesday to beeomc Alasko's first
. i ^ ^ ^ w o m a n to win a primary election for a state
legislative seat.
Miss Kta, 2A, walked, flew and flooied over 10,000 miles to i;cacli 16 isolated communities in
' District 10, known as the top of the world.Dressed In a parka trimmed with arctic fox
fur, Miss Ilta.beat two Democratic opponents.
Her neni‘cst competitor was Iqcumbeni Frank-
• rufguson whom she beat 717 to fil9.
More Cassia fa ir winners
M0N
■T^or»t«y. Tlm*i-N»wi, Twin F .ii,, ituho 3J
C LA S SIF IE D IN D E i( ■' H*i 0«v lo llnd to veuf wm I or n««d in Tht TimH-
RtM h»r W«n» Ad celumni. L li l* d b«low I t ih t K iv ' to ^ I c d iv t r i l l l td AAvkMptse*. Q« tur« to H itd.Md UM.HtM* oolumnt r*ou<vly Yeuli pram In lo ititny
Aiir>ounc<m «n(t
.•t-fUrlirt» niMi
wearing a light blue amock
over loud green and blue
striped alacks, rode the trailer back in.
Engineers cflMinued to moni
tor the outside moisture con
tent. but they were uncertain
when a second attempt would
be made. Tlie delay will not,
affect preparutlona (or the
December launching.
• i t ’s Idnd of disappointing,"
Monday.
Apollo 17 Is scheduled to set
out on the nation’s lust lunar landing expedition at'0;3fl p.m.
EST Dec.'6. Evans will remain
In lunar prbil while commander
Eugene A. Cernan and geologist Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt
land in a moon valley near the southeastern edge of Uie' Sea of
Serenity.
Soviet bombers
fly JapaiinS^TOKYO (UPl I—Soviet born- 2,000 miles,
hers mode it round trip fHnht Four Budliers were picked up
Wednesday from Siberia to a by Japanese radar Wednesday
point in the East China Sea off flying south over the Japan
Shanghai, China. Japan's Self- Sea.'Ille Air Self-Defense Force
Defense Agency said its Jets said it sent up si* l'’Oll fiijhlers
scrambled twice to keep the to watch them. Two of the
'rUlO Badlier bombers under Suviet planes tamed back
surveillance as they flew over before reachintJ the Korea
CUOTttlNO Oarr«(> bmyer. «ii iva.Tfunltr lAilorrd Su*rt(' Kuw#n«. O iv lilo n II C>n0v GI»«»om»nr,
U illr id 411(1 Diur ' AngcU Tullle. blur and ( lit lr ic l. ColircnllAihelor irMiMu Ma i Kuw/inA. HctcJ. tiluir. Lmeila OInuni. Sandra Wnila
iloBlinan «t>d Kenny SHolnian-all Her. UOlh red. VerOa Walker, whilet)luc OUN lAFETY
-Colton cnarnirr Pomala narin, Jerry Kuwana. blue andLourri L«r Cole. Laurie Grron. Cherl ELECTRICITYHantrn. Taininr Quatl. jan icr , Taylor. Mar SargenI, blue ant^ d i t i r Id . SievehKaren Wcuti. la n in iy ilrackcnbury . iargcnl, itrerMiali Hnll, both blue.Julianne Jolley, Mane Darrmulon, Kaltiy <loer. red. Paul Kloer, wf^lteJo Zodinuct, tni6Tty Oommaroi). ^u^an SMALL IN O IM B llloolti. Kerne Uytin Fowict. Heainer Suian Kuwana. blue and d lt in c l. Mark
Hpllmah. Cindy Warrrn. Letlie Cai'on. Kuwana, Kenney SteeJill Harper. Panirla LuKe. K ru li f ' l i . — .'Jerri Keener. Trudy Claetemann. Clecky ......... _ .. . .
(nopp. ^licrcv M 'liK . all Uiue Keony SiMlnsan/Ureihda WtsW. iiu^an" • (taker. Mally ikown. Joan Hall. J<ll Kuwana. Mark Kuwana. dll blue and
Kruie. Jeannir Keichrr. Penny Atner*. d itlr ic lJune Tracy. Laurie Kr.opp. Ponn. Picltell. JUNIOR LBADBH*HIPYvonne Hodriouei. M yra lyn WriilMe. Oivi»lon I ^ a r le Oarnnolon. CtneveArlene Lloyd. jDdir Andervon. Ocbr« llarkiluU. Ovbora*t Cole, jaoel Ccary. AllSlewarl. iill ret], . blue and d tn r ic i. Sandra W h.laker.' Jane Carvia. Kriiline llurch, Karen Micholle HoniCheid. boin blue. ScoMUodily.'Sheila birwarl, Valerie Sluwarl. Mannmy, Ray Saryenl, Tina Orai)t*’ aw.Cheryl Winlle. >-ranci» P rieriiick. all all red. Corey Webb, whil^while ■ ^ Div*»ion II llrenoa 'lU ill, Krulee
Junior ini.ev Mmiiv Cowcn. Deanna Adamv. .tjoth UlUe and d ii ir ic i. HickeePeck. Oianna' ShuHv, Dnrla Oavit, Pam George, red. Carl Seymour, whileM .ilih e w i, H<;nec^ J’ r ff ilo n . Conme O>vition i l l iu ia n iCuwrfna '/o llitiu rr. Jeanne Daniinareii. Pal Parke, d ittn c l. Paul Watt, blueCmUy Garner, llcne Ward, all blue tAPETY
Lua Uarkct, tlam e Dowert. Sandra Jerry Kuwana. blue and d it lr .c l, OlOnaMuiini-i. Aniir iVcnnUc. Cnalel Hobini. Ilmuni. Carmen Walker. L iia .Walker.Daria innm orii. Jule Ourtee. Valry Ward. SanUra WhitakDarieen G e rfa ll, Carol D arnnoion, Kennie Mae bmilh, all blue, Lmellallrb rr ly • M uril. Kalhy Kidd, all red. Ilmuni. VerOa Walker.. Alayna Hatllei
Uinum SAuUt.« mmrara—R7^
llir r it io 'o n ileui.KH'
Mallhew 'W.»r, Suiaii Ward. _ L u i i l l r ileiich. Drin
SdichKlOlfW'sA>b»»4 M W M l' *U M e w r « fn M e
) • r « n * le IM p - I I -U l» « n )« i w iM rtM aH nln
Cm*U- b(uMlMl« WMM U - t u r n M W hW an lM )>V- H uwneu Q p ^a fn n ily U - M « te y m T m 0 WmIwI '
ta w r w i lM tv Utnu •»uta«
) l - in tu r M e '
Q u t ln M t ServtCM
Rm I Estate For SAle. . - ito m M to f U ie U -Out •! Ta«tn tbut*« ‘ M - B m I EUM e WanlM l IV-Famt ft RaniKn I* - atMMew nr»p*rtv D AcrMoe i U U lt-C«m»«wv U l t 1* -VMMIOfl
)» -A W u ie tia m e t U -O IU f. t % •u u n e u U 'SanlM A««rvcle« •-W B m m la Beni l * - r * r m * tar Kanl
For F a ll RmuIIi c « irn ] o n i today A -Tm pU Beachtr' m viior w ill b« haw v lo halp you word and ichadule your Ad lor Ih t im t re iu llt at lha lawMl cotl o r call ona ot lha«t to ll num bwi - SU u m m t>r Cailia««rd. P i » » In Ourlay. Ruparl. o#clo. Paul or Norland. 5U }M$ in Wand«<l, Ooodlrtg. Hagerman. v JtfOmt' n* MM In Holiltter. nootrion.iackpol. Navada ______ _______ ^ -----------
- ForcorrK tlon(ornofllica llone(.lt*m trtfi<»dorio id - pieaitrw>i<«y rh» ClaiilHvfl DapI by « a m. We can Itien maak It "re n ftd " Qr - ta ld " lor mat day* iHUt . ,
Plaaia rtad ’ your atf lha l i r t i day It appeart ai credil adlutlmeni 1 i allowad tor t in t Intartion only
TM C la illllad Deparlttieni i» open waekdayt between I 00 a m and S 30 . P m , Salurdayt I M a m to t^OOp m. Clotedon Holidayi
The Daadllni lor placinp apt utinp im a ll iyt>e only i» 11 in « m me __■'■■■ ........ appear -------- ’
Uiu Jjipun Sen.
HovK'ver, ii defense jjt'fiicy
‘apokcsinnn refused to confirm
reports in the newspaper Asahi
• ;«-A«u»lla«a*u» fa r U ie - r -«I-War«l»dto iwy ®-**oe» 1. Oalfiktg 44-U(a!<^lAU rim M »' «~aadla: IV L Ueraa ..
. 4»-F>*iiHu>e I. CarpM
« :II#M IA 0 fc A ir CAAdiiiaAxm • - iM id ifto u h w iu k ' ' »-Oarao* Uie*
• Lawn, Farm 8. GardenSl>-r.aMl T>itA«t la Cat Q-HMv. 1iM> %. Uvfuta n-r«e1lll»«r Tap tall U -ra rm tawf ' '" lJ U v . OralA » /e *d '
*-Flr»«Bad —. A h w lle i '
«• *Wrm ' 4 I -U V M ( .
U liVMlackt s f a rm 4 natwh lu o p liM a*-fa rm lm|M»n««nu U fawure* far Bant
RscreaUonalu AvtatmW lwal» 1 Marm* Mfmt
n htaw V«*iul»in Travel T railert I tti Matar itomeH Touritl I. Trailer Parkt
i A c c r tu r ie t n A u)o t w i l le d» n«\»■0 -Cycm 1 Su(i(>lie« at- U lllly Trallrri
, Trocki
•*-A i*a * For U lt
'0 'nierllon
LOST W H E E L 6ntl <tr« 900* 30 SprinoHeld K e llY O fI« OMC T ruck. L o l l la»l weak In R ic tido id 6r C A tt ie fD rd a r« « . T w in F a lla T rflc to r ar^d lm p le m *n f. Phone
Striilt .sepnriitltif’
Koreit-
Tlie other two Dew on to tlie
China Soa, and the Japane.sL*
L O S T : G E R M A N S H O R T H A IR . d f lrk brown ticked. A n iw o r i to nam e ol A rn ie . LO)l on F ile r — ' T w in H iahway. R EW AR£)I 733 3090,
LOST — M A N 'S w a lle t downtown .^ a p e r i and c a ih REW ARD!
JobtoflntarMfM aUtPamala
'that the twin-ent'ine bombers fi ^hters followiiij’ them turned
cunie close to Cliina'a largest back when the Russians pas.sed
beyond the Goto Islands, off Japan's snuthurn island of
Kyushu.
After 30 minutes absefice
from Japanese radiir screefis.
Uie Badgers were picked up Mf ain heading nui th.
'Hiey flew back toward Soviet
Siberia’via the same Japan Seh
roiite, and more Japane.se
planes scrambled . to watch
tliern. ^
..One published rejwrt said the
plane.s were on course toward
.c ity .Hu auld Ihoy disjippourcd
from Japanese radar screens in
tJif Cljiiia Seu. .
Asked whether American fighter planes on Okinawa were
sent up to check out the Soviet
planes, a U.S. military s|K>kes-
'mall said only;.'•U.S. Aircraft do routinely
identify...unknown aircraft en-
teriiig air space iissigned to this
air defense sector." llie ^ ,S . military also aw>ided the
-£)uu«liQn-aii-to-wlielh(4|^)iii<
jets went up to keep the Soviet
planes under surveillance.
•‘We-cannot comnieHt on the
range and capabilities of our
radar,'ithe spokesman said.
Prom Vladivostok in Soviet
Siberia a round trip flight via to Approach China from the
the Korea Strait would be about Pacific.
- '-^WmMs^X^ouniy Fair
MAN OR .WOMANRESID ING IN KIMBERLY - HAMSEN AREA
■ FOR M o t o r c a r k ie k r o u t e .
INTERESTED PERSONS CALL:
TIMES-NEWS CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
733-0931
-fighters abandoned them at the
(lotfl'Islands,
n ie newspaper Asahi said the
flight might have been an
"ostentious display" to demon-
strate the Soviet Union’s 'ability
Deoble Collier On<- lo 2 ycart Caltiy Eakm. u
PcIerMJn and Clenda &loO>inu, ail F itting and Stiowiny
Drhbie Collier, red Calhy liaKin Urucr P fie rion. bolh blue.Siotkmu blue and oraod t
•» WAoda KirMftiiQ. pillow t . ..> cate* tjlue Orpha MechaM.
blue. Mary Eldreuuc.
- . I ia n i i lv Luiag—UiMJinliiy Illy ruuiii and ilOkcl Cmdy
Oljiviwiianri iiiu r Carol Ddrnnotoi'
llup iitu Moi» and Dau J.ic kie > u»k. Kamy Coolo, D iirien f Crsvpj. "T f r f is leuan. Alana Tilley, te rry Weorr. all
Cailetf; C U yo llt. blue . collun Donna ilu r t i i a>. red. and Cnarlollc
. (iubeMr Mawamurti. o rsn a 'j OPEN C tA t t F^OWE.
irvipdriiaunt - Mnrcy W nitliy. t HeM,, Muni i*i^j and Unrbar.i T.n
Jeane Cla
t i l l ie i
tihei t unki;. red >1 L Ulacker. blue
eynoldi. blue and
Jumper Sally Oiath. red
Play logk or »wiiii (lerryman, blur.'Ann i
Play lout, knil Lot and Carleen Clayv>lle.
Jeane Oiaeteinan. blur, anilCarlren ClayvMle. red ' . '
Suil Careleen Ciayviiie. blur tmgerie
blip nail Ounna liu iih inuc a'ul
I'ciunoii - bma V>ai. blue Knit, women'* Donna llon h yuie
anil tjd a Mai. red■ I'nnfie i Cbarlellt Wicnei. blue, andfn 'ire ft c iivv ille . red. . - - - ----- --
C AttIA COUHTV f AIB R C tU tT \ Machint MIQIC ■
Lynnellt Dallmu- Cdnnie Funk. Kmi M aier. Maidi Holtnian. DonneHa Menaericii»on. sha rry M itTir,, Sanor* Welu, Jaineitt Oueteti. Mtlaule-Jonev b lie lliv Lloyd. Jackie t-unk, Shellet Olaki’iiiinn, Tereta Teu*«. Alana TiHe«. Cyiuieile Wnrrert. Terrr Webei. Wendy Lainbi-rl, Dnniia Ma IIIkwv. .truUy ^<IU all blue., Cindr Ch(|rih. Caiol AMifiiiie. June n ra lo tie i^ Laura Kenner.. Jean
^wiiir ^ualllv Lance U<4 (4111111/« .
^l>et|i i)ual><v ~ Vain Procki purple: Laren Swccl. Tcil Sullivan, blue
Snefji lillinu and lliowmo Sum. Prock p.;r(ilr Larrn Swri-I. t rd Sudiyflfi, red Drrcdi'iu pwfS t.arer' S ^ rrl purple f\.wF\ l lill ^werl blur
Opin C latlJ::;:'rS z :;" ;X TSaiKltr Tramps mtplay blue
vrilnw *gua^n RuQpnr SiiMiVitn Sue M a'tin blue /u c ir r< )(|ua\h tutfrnp Sull'van Carrie H i'fily r i i /a lji i l l i. I l'a i y Linda I ru tle iiM ' utxir
^quaVi t lila b c lK INiaty, Si/r Marlin, le il Purplr brai<* Carnc Ueedr blue M riilu lk y wonder t lijahrih tira i y. biui-
Onion» f;uuenr Sullivan. CarneHeeUy blur Carrulv L lt\el Lc«».. blue Itrotciih i-ugpiip Sullivan Cluabelh tlracy b lur ApriioU- Carrie Ueedy. ’
Wed po la lo ri l»rcM llra ty Carne
Irovlcnvon. iiUii- Head le llu ic t th r l teek. biuv
Tornilfbet Cladyit rro tltnvo i* blue Kotiiranr'— c ;is flv i“ in’0 ii»nw)nv"niu» ‘ Clrnameftlai gourd* ••• GlaOyk t-ro»tefi»on M l^adlloweri Einel Leek. blue. Jelly
Aila.i.w>n ■>«!.Swrri peas
Orpna Mpchai Wt'He
Qluna.A^cUiaiii. till and Wesley Hum. 1
Janel Sparki blu
Orp'sft Mecham. •
, Shaiia dDaliliav
daiilia - I Mined a
blue Aslrrt
Olten rt-il Daisiev /•iin.at
arrviiioeitH PWOli Pfinkiei
M aiy lUlredue. I rvada SIrode. blur
arnatio
Janel Sparki blue Deloret Keay. blue
nl Dorn Harlon, re< Melody Peck, blue
Melody Peck, blue •\\ Marion Edward RTIFtCIAL FLOWER AHRANOfMCNTI
tp ia ye d li 'iil while t-rancit Ji ft Olue llower». blue. I
OPEN C LA tl FOOOti \ aeity — fcnMly VrawhetT
blue J ia ty PcIerMKi. raipberr red and Lillian Ulten. retpberr
piUow. r-ed. Elhel SelanOfr. flOll BlllO«.Wtilte----- ■
kimer nyingipn. lhau rvu. blue, Judy Cenarruia. dayeno ^el. blue, p.oyiiis H endrrton . ■ puric.U lue, M oronte PelerMn. <roc>ieled vetl bfuv. twealer
. touCoQdvon ruD. red. Hockie PclL-ruii. ■ ruo. wniie.- Leola Payne, ruy, blue.
Maureen Edwards, quill, red Leola Payne, nuilt red. Quill blue. Dornlhy Whiiby, qollt, wnlte. Friendly Neiol'borilu ill. blue
Leola PaVne. baby duill. wIk U, Annie Shaw, baby quill, red. kcaihy Paile 'ton baby blanket, blue, Lou Coodson, dome blue, doiiie red. doilie while. cei\lcrpirce nivie tenleTpiace. - red, centerpipre while, and Uatielle Wnrihinuimi. centerpiece, blue. .
OPEN CLASS AOTt AND CRAFTt Ctramuk . .
I blue, wood or«if\ scoop red, red. cu lQ latt pilcher . white '
ttQusel. sialue, blue, Lena (luck, ece ceramic set blue. Uoyd
and Mildrad -Oarion,
inned Cl . CVr.
inlermedlale 1 Advanied -div Ouldooi cookii
...Canned . J r u i t ____i rancu .Johitkiwi.|>eacnts..Ulue. EhiIIy Olten. peaches, red. and i rancU'Joiinsion, apple sauce, wnile
Canned beyelabies .' f-rkncls Johrtslon. tir inu beans ,tilue, tomatoet '*< Ted >n(|pickled neats - 'wmt».... v
Pickles relishes i rancis Johnston, peppci relish hliu). Linily Olsen, pickles, red and f fanciv ^oiiniion. p itk le fl b
Siockinu, lamp, red, pair of tiulls, while ‘ on Palnllngt
I j Molly Peck.'sunsel blue, •’mooniioni" red. and Cmiiy Ouen. Hed F iih Lake.weed white
Mi»< P ic iu r il0 rod ' Carrie Howard, lewelry picture, liiue.
and Helen L'aldlaw. cerantlC picture red. embroidery pictures ' white
' VOUTM PicTurkt f-rancis Jonnsion. dried ilower ana
diinentional pictures, bolh blue, Hockie Pfterion, p a ln tln i^-'b lu t. pamfitig m j.
•ana-LmOJ'Hunl.. tolqretl picture, while
U kddy ) ClikllMna
Sidn
itkha i'iIClldlK
Olson1 . Debbie Simon Debbie Tate
t ly l* Ravltw
- ju n io r dr inler mediate Advanced division
karaiee inompson, uaura u«»i«i, rm'-r j L j ^ r d ix is 'o n*—’ ’ Katie McCartei Vun«. Shjrry K«<.. ^mdv lo i.tm w ia ^ ; o.vi.ion - Na^.y Oaen.iiTarnmv Srnllh, Tauni Udy. Denise v«,niof n iu iilo it ' Debbie Tale ». Williams, Varda Walkar, Ranaa Crump, . Hanes ^all red; HarUa/a W lll la m i/ D a j'tn ; • Qu^niy Nina H unt. Uiowmanshi
M i^ellaneous thohecherry syr neclar
Ira n iis JiKuislun.
1‘ rafttis Jotinslon. blue. an(| apricot
. na
Short day
«^enslermaker,
Artrra«» Vi
Kent.Harper, (.indy SaniueiMiti. Jean Lung, llene,Hfud. rammv llrasketibtlry. H o s a ^ ir l i Carrillu.-Cu(Jila Hartiirer|-aii-
'hlu«i A flr lin U«(\Ct\. Janlaci tlanch. Jav Bench, Dtborah £ola, ‘ Laurel Uea. Cole. Jimmy SlHlman. Koonie Anderson, D»in
, Harper, Laura Ha»». J h i l ly e i t i i i . '‘ • " 'v .-O o o la .-^ ll' rad;- Carmtfl-'NaHon,'“ UOn
ArmsironQ, «u w hit*. '. Hama lm pravim *nt
Vjftil !.• Trudv Olatiaman, Jtieliav Olaesaman. Uynnatla D alling. Tina Hartien, ' Tamara Maikaii. Maritia
A Lambkri. Kandl Udy. Ciridy-Warran. |H 6fua, Kaltiy Kidd, Lila lampie, |-yf l
divisi6n ••I ^'auU.Wi.'Slri [.leasuii
■ eeluuaiily CUH.OIMH1 irtnwntafisnlp
Clara.Dison Dairy quaiily Shelly CrandaU ^tiuwmansntp ^^elly Crandall
SAN JUAN,-.p,R.. (UPI) -
«,u.; ooru ! " » Coiialltutloii^of th ij-U . S.Wanoa KirUantt. untt>ai| (ooWtas, white C O m m O n w e a U n Of PUCrtO HiOO,
1 0,'iS 'S i.r'rA” ' " ' ’' ™lobr„icd 20tl. «nnlvo™ ry
? :K ' »" July M, H la modcJedjKkr- u ,s , .&niitituiiDn. imd is
V 'caiaa bijje...... more apfeclfjc In detail. For1 oais
#w£la. , __" ANO FRUITI
-OM BM CLAIIVIOITAVLCt'' ^ a u r s B D l i lT * oxuin|)|i!, It spoclfl«s thoTldlit
K u .“'.li , a ” 1“ “ Tree ciliicnllon, prohlbl«~
Qualilv ___ ,Sam’.Prock Miiceilaneom livestock - Warren flow itf
Overall showminihtp. Joani Pauls Tractor driyinu. luntof division Oavif
l ’rO«> itm o i UtuiWon. • Joe MtCart,«r
. _ — -j— ,
Mecttam,. lomaloa»,-red pouioe^^ p l n g , InflUrOS lljJlO f, if lo f j lg h t tO— Li»*t* rVr«''pt<0r7 '
orB"«uiio ni[a''Kiorn'‘couw.** * ... ..-....ABl. K.nanA «/t,,Aahl Al-.. ■ . . .IX a n * a n il u w i i — an iw u . a iiw o i ik im. ,» V U I I V b '< lea ls iu>t0 8 0 w o r k
o‘.“, v , sssiToI^ . , ■ •p°ro ti.nn_ .c inn t_-arler «(\(i Uuih CioHv, ( acl an<t w«\U« " lUUTHi • _
todays ClossKlod section, tho Want Ads, CountlosB now arid ■liko<new4tom&-«r«-----oHorod d.ally. It's tho ' im ort way. lo sovo in 'todoys modorn World.
Want Money to say...
Helloto you
Y6u can start-money comlno your way b y . turning your un- noodod Horns Into welcome cosh, by u^lng tt\e lasl-aotlno, low cost
TIMES- . NEWS
WANTMysOlVE THIS
NUiABER A IIN G IE
733^0931’
B e g in n in grp o t e )
(You m ay ®nclotB o “ ChecV or have u t b ill you.)
____________ - . J ----------
A ddr«»t
C ity
M A IL TO:
TIM ES-NEW SC ja u if ie d Dept.
Tw in FalU, Idaho 83301
S p tc la lN o f ic M
LEARN TO EARN’ wi'lh A m o n c o 'i (,orQ«tf
I ro*,S flfv /ce
' h&r blockLEARN basic: income
TAX PREPARATIONThm'isands arn) earnifiB Boort money In Ihe nrowin(i lie l^ Q/
frotokiional Income lax Service luollTTionl open lo men .and
wunTcn ol all anu& Job Inter- '■vieyvs • nv.iil.')t)l(* ' lor be&t blU'. du iits Si-nd tu i t tu u intotm a- 'tiori ,iiu l clAvs fccrtodulot > f^UHRVl •
M attes Stan Wa«k o l Sapl. 11
tURBIack.
')'33 OIQ6i-!’33-7()0(l .
filpr .
Y O U N G M A N OR W O M A N TO
W O R K PART TIME - IN M A IL IN G R O O M
A p p ly in parson,9 . ; I a.m.
TIM ES-NEW S 'C IR C U L A T IO N DEPARTMENT
WANTEDM A N OR W O M A N R ESID IN G IN
-B V H L E Y — P A U L O R H E n U k h TA R E A FOR ESTABLISHED M O T O R
ROUTE.
INTERESTED PERSO*NS CALt-; TIM ES-NEW S C IR CU LATIO N DEPT
6 7 8 -2 5 5 2 .
GIRI;S AND BOYSw a n t e d
To Deliver the TIMES-NEWS In All Areas:
of Magic Valley _Fill out the blank ndMail Direct to TiniesiiNews,'
■ i ‘ rrO. Box 548, Twin Falls'or Call Dir«tl 733 0931
To Times-Nfws. : ■ Circulation Sept.
'Vos, I would Hite to obtain.ort ^ oflBrnoon TIMES— hiows Paper fipulp.
My Name is . ...........iTSm . . . . . . ^M y Phona N o. js M y Addrov« is . . ATTEND . . . . . ! Am iirt fiio..w -.,, . .
. , years ot oge
...................Scfiool c (n ^^ . g rad t—
I - ■' ^ '.1- ^
r
74 T lmBt'Nvwf. Tyvln F a lli. Idahp Thurtday, Au0u it 24, 1973_
We Guaranfee Results or YOUR MONEY BArK# W « r f « | lw l y .C W W A * » r t M r t
■ b a l E M E t f k i i M . ' .• V o u r N o p U I U o d - r W a n l ^ F o f A i
— U « U o f 7 # * F W » M * ^ ( 3 l i ^ — I.ODoyt'
— Get The Want Ad Habit And. Save Money 733-0931Of coll on* oi i h t i r (all h t t num t»f«~543'464l) in OuM or C a ilU lo fd , 670-733? in BufUyr Bup*f1. D«clo, Pool or Norland. ^ 3 6 ‘3S3S in Wancldl, Goading, Ho(f^rinon or Jtrom *. 326 S37S in H o ll» ti> . Rdgkrion, or Jatkpol, Navoda
*
M
Lo»e w e iah i «nd m c h t i i h t aa»y w «y I — Pont W allen D«lt V ib ra to r* . I ^poMi Q ikot. Action cyc le and
M a s ft f lo * R o l la r i a t D annar r=u rn ilura 711 U3).
F a l l i C ou rtH o u it. W adn tw lav at fi:QO p.ni'. A l'A non 3rd Floor-
'R e H a b tio u ta . ?tti A v a n u t E a it.
P R IV A T E in v M tlo a lo r - U Hour
H O K Y c a rp a t iw a a p a r r a p re k o n ta t lv e and O e ilc ro p ro d u c ti ia ie i. H a ie l N a tu i. 733 S6U.
M a lt HalpI F U L L T IM e AN O 1 p a rt t im a m an ,
good w a o e i. oood c o n d lllo n i. M N orth M o b ll..n 3 7 4 3 4 .
p a r io n R ogarton R a ita u ra n l.
W A N T E p ^A A M E O IA TE U Y : Ona •x p a r ltn c a d C la c tr ic ' m o to r ra; w in d a r, ona a x p a r la n c fd a la c tr ic m o to r ra p a ir r ta n w tio l» a lto capab la o f la rv ic a ca lls . Paid v a c a t io n , p lu i la o a l h o l ld a v i) t io ip lta l p la n , top w lio a* pa id lo r ttia r lg t i t m an . w r i ta a xp trfa n ca .
T R A CT O R M E C H A N IC W A N T e O .
TRY OUR Corn Oaat and Rueben la n d w lc ti . . wttt a g la u o f baar in a tro itf td Q la t i.
THE COVE'496 A dd iion W a il
M a lt A F tm a laF U LL E R BRUSH no ed i l a la i and
Phone 734 1S7A lo r 0 por ho u r > a lW ;
COOK AN D KITCHEN HELP NEEDEDE ip i'ie iic r Krlplul A>k lo i ocirnimttiolo> Cliti.f Hotpirol Iw in F o llr
76 USD H O SP ITAL neofls rog ts lo red hufbps lo r ch<irgc du ly on evening and n ig til i h l l t t Sm nll com rrtun lly to c rtle d n e a r ocean beacho» .
- Hood'» canal m SoaMIo, 20 m lle l W osi 01 iho s ta le cno lta l Salary range 16411692 lo r 24-hour week depend ing on.hotp ifa ) bxpcrlence . L ib e ra l In n g e b o n o lilt inc lu d ing re fire m o n i W rile or ca ll M ark Rocd H osp ita l, 'n o B irch , Me C lea ry W ashington 9aS57 Phone 1206) 495 3244
JE R O M E COUNTY Senior C ilUan C oord ina tor AAuil ba In ta re ila d In Ih t w a ita ra o t Senior C lliie n . S ta rtin g sa la ry U 2 i a m on th . A p p ly Senior Center o f fice 100
•N orth f i j lm o re .
N E E D 3 m a c h a n lc i w ith a ir co n d itio n in g and pow er .steering cK p e r ia n c e . E x c a l le n t f r in g e b e n e f lU • In c lu d t v a c a t io n , ro tire m e n l. and g ro iM Insurance
S lans. T^p sa la ry a t 14.03 per l i f t ou r on passanger c a n . 'w i t h {A
cont bonus por hour a lte r 1J1 h o u r i —Bnd^L-bonut-i>er7hour~4flar-?0(
hours. T rucks — l4 .]2 '/3 pef; fla l ra te hour w llh sam e bonuses. A p p ly In person to Del H arpe r at Bob Reese AAotor Com n^nV-
R E T IR E D C O U PLE w ith m ob ile hom e to he lp In new m ob ile h o m t p a rk . Lawn w ork and club house c a r t . C ontact Dob W ilis . 734 44)1 days. 733 *460 evenings. F r e t ren t and cash Income.
m T
m ust h a v t h y d ra u lic axperlanca. V a lle y T ra c to r and Im p llm ta t C om pany, Ouhl. PhorW
M IL K C R W A N T E O , t x p e r l t n c t d a i lra a b lt . I4J0 m on th , no h o u it . 934 S334.
O U A L IF IE O M A L E A D U L T oaeriM i In w o rk In t ir a t|u )0 arul s a rv lc t s ta tio n . M u t t h a v t kn o w ltd g to # sa ilin g , m ou n tin g , and various l i r a w o rk . Good wages, h o s p ita l b a n a l l ts . a n d o a ld vaca tion . W r ite .Q o x X n . c o T lm M N e w » . I ___
E L E C T R IC A L E X P E R IE N C E D dependab le m an. No d ru nks . PO Box 614, 733 4906. T w in F a lls .
F tm a la Halp
H O U SEW IV ES and college students to w ork n a m . — 2 p .m . week days. B u rg e r Chef. 733 9B37.
L A D Y B E T W E E N 30 and 50 to w ork in loca l d ry c lea n in g p la n t. E m pe rience not necessary bu t he lp lu l C a ll lo r a p po in tm e n t 733 9672 or 733 3fr5t
W A T K IN S P R O D U C T S needs wom en In T w in F a lls , lu l l o r pa rt lim e . 324 2693 a lte r 6.
FR ESH FOR SP R IN G h o m M , b u in g a d v e r i ls td m toda ClASsilied Ads Chock now )
Employmanr Aganclat
PE R S O N N EL SERVICE o l iVUolC V a lle y . 624 Qjue Lakes N orth , phone 733 SSai.
11 Salatqian or Satetwoman
W A N T E D A lte ra t io n la d y lo r m en 's c lo fh ing and la d le s ' W rile Bok X 10 f<3 T im es News
W A N T E D : L i v e i n b a b y s it te r beginn ing August 26th. Room and board p lus sa la ry , 726 3^69
W ID O W D ESIR E S housekeeping on la rm o r c ity . Lem oyne H oie l. B u f le y . Id a h o . R oo m 33. M Johnson.
E X P E R IE N C E D W A IT R E S S ■ A pp ly in person, fu ll o r p a r i lim e . R ogerson Hotel R es ta u ra n t. :
)1 S ala im anor Saltiw om an
F tm a la H tip
•M A ID W AN TED AT P u rp lb SageM ote l. A p p ly ----------K im b e rly Road.
W A N T E D ; E sp o r ia n c td fu lM .lm o m a id . A pp ly In person, .‘ Im pe ria l 400, 330 AAain Avenue South. ,
e m p l o y m e n t
OPPO RT U N IT YO p en in g lo r n e a t, re s p o n s ib le wom an In loca l l l r m . E x p tr lo n c o In bookkeeping and ty p e w r ite r — adding m ach ine use a re a m ust. Q u ick le a rn e r — s e lf s ta r t e r a b i l it ie s a re d e s lre a b le . If q u a l i l le d c o n ta c t R epal M an u fa c tu ring C om pany 733 9137 B a.m. *-• 5 p .m . t//eekdnys. ,Equal O p portun ity E m flo y e r .
M Baby SiHara— O illd Cara
D u iln a ii Opportunity
FOR SALE OR LE A S E Dolh'S Pirtco, bour Tavern P jiu l. Idaho. P tione 430 S30S
NOW IS An exce llen t o p p o rtu n ity lo r you to leaso A tla n tic R ich lie ld S in c la ir S tation. We o lfo r one o lth e m o s r c o m p o ll t iv o lea se packages in the business. Wo p re le r a m a tu re person, w ith lig h t m 'echan lcal know ledge to become an IN D E P E N D E N T BUSINESS M A N . Chock 9th and Shgshone Street East, T w in F a lls , loca tion . S M ALL IN V E S T M E N T RE>
.Q U IR E O ,,. Phono 733 620) a f l t r ' S p m
BUY OR LE A S E Ih is busy FftH% re i la u ra n t , o w n e r s / .— ..,., lo rces sale C all to d a y ./H a ro ld
733 0716, across Irom Seara
F O R ’ R E N T OR S E L L ; W ell equipped ca/e in R up ert. Id a h a Idea l setup fo r m an and w ile com b in atio n A va ila b le O cjober )s i For fu r t h e r ir i io r m a l lo n con tact M ASTE R S O N / R E A L T Y . P O Do* 541. R u p o rll Idaho.
I l l U N IT' Loca tio n •
iiv a i L.yii«wuu, Qr 733 9010, 733 779J.
B A B Y S IT T IN G IN . M Y hom e m a tu re , re s p o n s ib lo , good ro fo re n c o s , lo v in g c a re
''A lo x .in d e r Street 734 2170
K iM D E R L Y M O TH ER S W ill c.tre lo r you r l i l t lo ones, m y home L o ti
“ orToyS . lovO and ca ru 412V
W A N T E D IM M E D IA T E L Y Live b a b y s i t lo r R oo m , b o o rd . ni s a la ry . )oann Tacke r 436 9S6S
B A B Y S IT T IN G I N » M Y hom e M onday th rough F r id a y , lencedy^n ya rd IPhone 733 0630
6 a 0 Y S IT T IN G IN m y hom e, nice atm osphere. Phone anyflrV ie 734 4B30.
W IL L DO B A t tY S lT T lN G .
JACK AN D J IL L N u rs e ry , licensed ch ild care . Supervised -activ ities 1104 10th Avenue East H3 6647
U lu atlo n i WiinladBACKH O E S E R V IC E .'ca ll 733 9340
ROTO T IL L IN G and b iada w o rk No lob loo la r g t o r s m a ll, g ive us a c a ll. Defoy D lngham . 733 34J9.
cents a hole. Phone‘ 734 i
"?arm oriTwanttd
f^AUL-s-ffeALTYrrnTiaaj:
A N Y O N E IN T E R E S T E D In a Ford T ra c to r Iran ch lse please contact F o rd M o lo r Com pAny. Box 594. T w in .F a lls '
SHOE R E P A IR snop ctoing good businc-ss. idrgL- i to d ra w tro m . M ach in ery in vu n lo rv . bu*id ing . <ind lot in f lu d fd , *8,000 Owner w ill t ra in lor 30 days F A R M B U R E A U , 702 South L in co ln , Jc rom v, 324 437B. DON W A LL A C E , 733 7616
V E T E R IN A R Y C L IN IC m M agfc V a lle y low n Illness lorces owner to sell im m e d ia te ly P rice reduced »6,000 th is week Owner says m ake
R E A L T O R S . 733 0716
C LE A N IN G H U S iN b bb localWuU c'iUiUNMu'a liuMnevs
P n c i-d 10 i f l l .11 u itly iU.UOO * . IK 15,000 |>i'r. yin tr nol C .ill Sl<in W .l lt tT i, l U JIO/ or LA N D OF P IC E 0(- ID AH O W tA LTO H S ,; j j o n *
W EAL N IC E T * .n H .ilh k i-^ l.tu r.tn lu r %<>lc Oooi) liu^ini'^% Rl',11im c Uuildirig m i ' i i l L O l i O lp . K .. .M i-p into . t.u o m ij U u n n w *^ Ca**- H .iro ld KL-iltil7 '7~^iJ 341)0 or LA N D O P M C L O r iC^AMO h u a l To r s /JJ 0/16
N E W L O C A tiO N \o -la liU ' (or att.cc s p . ii i- or l)u»in i‘ S!> D owit-tow n Tw in Iw ilfs m oni' of ida lio luM vii'S i lu M o n u T Ifc il l ic .triM ! A ir lO i'ilit .o r iK K j. hL'.it furm iru-c;
€•>11 E.«ri I rtu lkn c r i ^OH i / j j 1506
iM A L L j A N IT O K IA L Irr tti. ruM 150 <> m on lfi M crfi-c l lor roMrcc couple Prioni- 536 ,
OOOD IN C O M E New H um l (.om plex, cxception> illv 'W L'll u u il l. a l l 2 b e d ro o m s , ap p ii> incvs , ca rp o tcd , drapes, iau rid rv room lllQ.OOO Owner bu ild v r D Luke /34 J32S
H o m ti For S>l« n
16HARRISONREALTY
' N ew 3 badroom , I.XIO iq u a r t fttt. Top xo n s tru c tlo n . F u lly carpalad and d ra p e d . N tw s u b d iv is io n .
L u x u r y b r ic k d u p l tx . K itc h e n b u ljt lns. Choice loca tion . C lo tt to shopping cen te r. 142.500.
N ortheas l. Spacious b r ic k ra m h le r; 3 bedroom s. D o tu tllu l p t t io and yard . 150,000. ,
Full REAI. ESTATE S.r.'c.
I ? 3 3 - i3 6 5 J i M M A l H M . SOUTH
Spacious 4 bedroom hom o on Fa lls pM i n c w 2 baths, b u il l in ap
New 4 bedroom h o rn T .'sp lit l evel,
ca rt)o i And co lo rs ,
C om m erc ia l bidg dow ntow n in Iho m a ll 4,500 sq. » , w ith fu ll b ftsem enl on Shoshone oxcc llon t lo fu j te rm investm en t
C ^e acre , mco hom e. 2 ba ths.' (ru i|. trees and m an y c x frd s - F ile r
N EW 3 bedroom b r ic k homo In cou n try . M us t soe to a p p ro c ia lt. 1‘ 4 acres or m ore II desired. 3 m iles w est. 1 n o rth ot w est 5 points 733 9676
SPACIOUS N EW 3 bedroom , doub le ua r< ig e . b a se m e n t, p lu sh ap p o in tm e n ls . 127,900 AC E R E A L T Y 733 5217
HoitiM I ’lir S a lt
L ^ r e a Ct y "
ADDISON 733.3A4J , ^
IlM O O 3 BE D R O O M H O M E On- n th , A v a n u t East. Jus» pa inted In s is t and ou t, Ow nar w ill c a r ry c o r tt ra c f w ith I ) . 000 do w n to q u a l i f ie d b u y e r . I m m t d l t l t possession.
LA R G E F A M IL Y H O M E . O rick and Ira m t. S be d ro om i. 3 baths, la rge ya rd w ith a t lr t c t lv e pa tio.
2 O EDROO M fa m ily room , cute s m a ll h o m e or good re n ta l p roperly.USO O..
E s the rD oy le -733 5 406 N k A rv ll la Robbins 423 4 4 ]6 i ' c > D ill R alphs 71] 1033 Jerry W oam ni
4 BE D R O O M HOUSE new ly car
E e t td an d p a in le d . l in is h e d asem ent. 420 East A ve nu t G,
Jerom e. 324 5436.
3 N EW H O M ES under con s truc tio n by bu llda rs . Or w ill b u ild to
>eclflca lions on you r lo t o r o u is .> lntm ont 733.B6S) or
B u ilders.
spec ifica tions on Shown by appoln 734 3489. B ohm [
BY O U IL D E R : 4 bedroom l.uxury h o m e; t l r c o n d it io n in g , lu l tJflM rnifnt. D ea utlfu lly ca rp o led ix f r a la r l j j ' d o u b T i l i i r s i j i r ^ O T r t7 J 0 « I7 '
3 BEOfeOOM H O M E IN W endell, lu ll basem ent. 2 firep la ces , ba th and a h a l f . 136.500 T e rm s . iJ A IL E Y R 0 D E R T 5 R E A L T Y , 1020 N orth Blue Lake* OI«J, Phone 733 4262.
4 BE DR O O M m o M E lo r sale Fu ll bas ' in u n i N ew ly la n d s c a p e d Located ou t at c ily l im its out Fa |ls Avi-noe Easi on D esert V iew Dnwe C a ll lo r a p po in im cn i /33 6J4B
FOR SALE by owner N ew 3 bedroom , baths, all e le c tr ic , if . in i- ^ ir t ie possession See al 1012 ' i.-< •’ Ue West 734 2211
R E A L T YC O U N T R Y ^ ^ I^ ^ N G L U X llR Y
LA N D S C A P E D to p e r le c llo n with e x tra pa rk in g Double exposure lire p la co in sunken la m lly room
LO CAL L iquo r Lounge and lu o a e r c lu h .o n e o f T w in Palls* fine s t The
J N IC E BEUi^OC M S, P^irt b r ic k
ro lr ig e ra to r and disposal home Is e x tra clean and sha rp. Im m e d ia te po ssess ion . t23,800 •^G IC V A L L E Y R E A U T Y . 733 r r Evonings, 734 4090. 423 4109, )3 65l»
S D E O n oO M -H O M E w llh lire p la ce . rc c rc a tio n room and l; t l i i ty room 15 m ile s southwest ol Salt Lake C^'v^or sale, trad e o r lease Phono
T H O U G H T F U L G IF T ? pe rson a l" m essage to one )ve in the W flni Ads. Oial 733 0
R 0 M 6 T 5 r s7fT6 •SHOSHONE
2 B locks o il h ig hw a y 93. 2 bedroom, .home Bath. l iv in g room , din ing room , g lflsscd in ba ck porch Insulated. Furn ished . M ust go lo r cash (6,000 New ga rage, ya rd tool sto rage p lace and la rge sto rage Shed in back ol ya rd . 2 Tots. Phone 036 2182.
FOR SALE One Ol tlie be tte r all e lectric Uiomes in H a ie llo n . 3 spacious bedrbom s, baths,lu liy carpeted. P riced at 121,500
CARL BUTLER
REA LT Y120 E M am Jerom o, ida tioBus 324 B166 Res 835 5573Chuck Henloy Res. 324 8367
E X T R A C H O IC E HOMES
F orm al d in in g room , fire p la ce , covered b re e /w a y , double garage, lu ll basem ent. T h is '> love ly. Large loan can be assum ed 2 d a y t possession U9.800
4 BEDR O O M S, 2 ba lh s . b r ic k Choice loca tion , i p l i t leve l w ithChoice loca tion , i p l i t leve l w ith basement 3 l|rep)aces F a m ily ro o m , e x t ra n ic e Im m e d ia te possession, i p i , 000. Term s (a best
□ R IC K H O M E Now lis tin g 3 bodropm s, b a so m tn l w l lh ta m U y- room , la rgo garage. fllOOO.
Out of Town Houias,
CAFE buiio«>V| go od </ciuipm«ni,^ lo rge inve n la iy , good loco tion . doing large lurnover wilh no com. p a lio n . B u ild in g no l in c lu d e d S7.000 I ■ •
'NICE 1 bedroom home in- good Hnritnn localion O llly 57.000
REAI nictf 3 badroom tioine ori large tornor lo l ' in Hanven Hoi oil lui* nace ond uliN'ty room {10.500
TAYLOR AGENCYMtlmbor o l lw in Follv. ">AlS'' SofyiCB
Danold Taylor. Droke, 423 52Q9Moton Smith ' 734 4906Virg.l-Wilvon 4J3 4I37
LA R G E 3 bedroom p a rtia l b r ick hom e In N orth East section ol J e r o m t . D u lt t - ln a p p lla n e ts , c a rp e ltd , p a r l l t l basem ent, largo lo t . g a r d tn , d o u b le c a rp o r t , 134,000. 33/S630 o r 324 4048.
JE R O M E . 2 bedroom o ld e r home - w ith la rge u t i l i ty , neat and clean.
Nevyly redecora ted F ru it Irees, n ice ya rd E x is tin g 5 per cent loan
. 324 83SS
K IM B E R L Y , 4 ba d ro o m b r ic k , la m l ly ro o m , g a t ' liro p la ce s baths.R E A L T Y 733 5217.
2 LA R G E U eOH OO M S u p s ta irs . 2 d o w n C o m p le te ly tin is h o d basem ent 2 ba ths 2 lire p lace s C om ple te ly carpeted FOR SALE BY OW NER See to appreceiate 4V5 East W asnm uton Phone 423 4065. k irn b e r ly
R ta l E ifa t t Wantad
W A N T E O to buy or lease 100 — 300 ac re la rm w ith o r w ith o u t home. P re le r W endell a rea bu t w ill consider any a re a . Call 536-3738.
as r^armi &.|Uinchai
F a fm i'ft.R a n d ia i..
too ACRES, ro w c rop fa rm . 1335 par a c r t . C lo u to tOMn. W r i l t tW>K W ' 10, c-o Timas N tw s. ___
20 a«re», 3 h m iUt from J«rom« Cood houtf and o^ l buildings. J3A,500410 ocre't - 160 und#r irrigo lion3 good wellt w ill ru'r> 300 head i60.' 000.00 Budey oreo{Iricli 3 bedroom wilh ctnKol oir conditioning. 4 levelt o l plu th living o n S u n ru iN o n li S3I.0004 Bedroom horn., Wendell. H 4.000
Plush 4 badrooip at 1540 P rince ton D rive . DJo F a m ily room , qu a lity carpel th roughout, gas barbecue on covered P a tio . 2'1 ba lhs. T h e , pe rle c i home lo r «2t,S00,
A(j»nU lor fitu o / Hom«i
BAItEY ROBERTS J .REALTY
1030 Norih DIud lu lie i Twin Epllv. Idoho
- PJmn. 733 4262 Gli,..nD9.iofi Eldon Gougli lu ^ e ll W illt Duriell OxiVfl Ea Bonch Ruby Edmoni
—p a ibcdi
in hay and G ooo ina— r ~
___^room m odern homo F a ir set o lou tbu ild ings. Ideal d a iry or sm all stock la rm t40,000 w ilh low down paym ent
Im m e d ia te possess ion o l bu ild ings. lOOacres jus) 15 m inutes Irom Tw in Fa lls on N orth Side ot R iver 145,000 w iih te rm s
23 acres. 3 bedroom m odern home, open stream throughout la rm lo r year around stock waler t 22.000 w ilh le rm s
V ery n ice ca ttle r.inch , 2 nomes. good co rra ls , 440 acres ot Oeeded land p lus range righ ts SI30.000 w ^h le rm s
Iv e r so n R e a ltyGooding. Id a h j
H arvey 9J4 4054Dwaln I ■ 934 5322Roger 934 4040
48 AC R ES, Southwest K im o e rly 141.500
9; AC R E FA R M A ll pastu re and t ie v , good stock setup wa.ooo
Isl T im e hsti>0 JoOacrus, 2 bedroom nom e ' j basvm i'n t H u ll w a it t r ig h t - recomrner>d/H] lo r s lock or .
•d a iry fo rm tSO.OOO
600 ACRES deeOed 400 acres , jr iv . iie a llo lm c n l o lte red as sell con la in 'x l spread lo r 250 head. tl3U,DOO
One h a ll Acre - New 3 Dcdrpo/n hbm c - country l iv in g -w iih C ily conveniences Bath 4 JJ • m cely carp eto d — c a rp o rl and storage com p artm en t tl9.400
T W I^ FA L LS R E A L T Y 733 3662
A v e r a l L a rg e C a tt le ra n c h e s , am p le w ater, pasture and loc-d
— • - ■ " ------
SALE5 PERSONNEL ,SALESM/ N WANTED
TO w ork in the Twin Fail* — M ountin H om t o rea . Requires txpe rienco in ia its , o( sprink le r ir r ig o lib n systtrrs an(jl pumps. P ro ttr lo m e o n t w ith e x p t r i tn c t in soles of p ivo t systems,
CO NTACT:'ROLAND BARTON
_ PARMA V^AIERAIFIER CO.- _• • ' B Q X ? 4 fl PARMA, ID A H O 8 3 660
Phone 722-5121
CUSTOM P LO W IN G , ro to t i l l in g , 8' - m ach ine . Denver F ine . 32A-4&31 or
733 0690 DIade w ork .
CUSTOM G R A IN com b in ing - 51G Massey FergiJson L a r ry Luper
HAY AN D STRAW stack ing 38 40" bales. W illa rd Tnae li: phone 733 2176
H AY H A U LIN G and s lack in g w ith tru c k Evenings 734 2078 ^
W E H AVE a W holesale business, all casn accounts, g ro w in g by leaps and bounds We need a dependable associa le m you r area w ith S900 00 m in im u m to 'inve s t in equipm ent and inve n to ry whicn w ill tu rn over about tw o fim es m o n th ly In c o m e p o te n t ia l exce p lio fia lly h igh A ll rep lies s tr ic llv con lide n tia l.
. C O N SO LID ATED C H E M IC A L CORP
i-re e ie D ried P roducts U iviS ion 3B l5M ontrose, Suite 12(1, •
Houston, Texas/7006 ‘ .
asi>d or purchased.
Lynwood Realty" 610 DIue Lakes N orth
733 9311,A lte r Hoursja c k O is h o p 733 7/61R .J Schw pndlm an 733-7100H arley AAathtrs . 733-8473M ike G ray 733 0101
/ ^ a g i c y a l i e y
R e a l t y181 N orth Blue Lal>ts
733 SUOL a ffv Jones ^ 4 4090Mrt« G jile y • 423 4189Gordon C ro c lie li 0 3 6531
UY OW NER A cre , 4 bedroom , bath, g a rd e n , o rc h a rd H u lle r * 536 H eyburn Avenue West.
W A N T E D : Custom been cu tting
BR A N D N E W h o n jj in Je ro m e 3 bedroom s, love ly ca rp e tin g and drapes. P a tio , firep la ce , double garage. Good loca tion .' C all L A N D
-O F P rC E -O P -tO A H O W C A LTO ftS . 733 0716
SAbES-Pa5rei<2tN—. WITH A PRESENT & A FUTURE!
' 3 M E N — EXCEPTIO NAL O PPO RTUN ITY AVERAGE OVER $ 2 5 0 PER W EEK
TO QUALIFY; Must hovo cor, educcftion o nd chor-acto r b ockg round . bor^doble. Some trave l. M ust be o le rl, agoressive, and am bitious —v,
- If You Are Selected YOUR FUTURE IS SECURE----------------—
You w ill be‘ given cr com plete 2 .weeks sales tra in in g p ro g ram in Soli la k e — expenses p o id — Ihen be guOr- on leed a mmimum o l $800 o m onth to s to rl w h ile b e ing > tra in e d in the fie |d (com plete hosp ita l ^ d m o|or m ed ica l.
V ery lib e ro l pension p ro g ro m vested 100% in 10 years.)O ur solesmen ore g iven every o p p o flu n ity fdr'odvar^TTTflenT lo ko|| m anogem pnt positions This p tione c 'c lPcon changey o u f
For p e rso n a l irftferview C a ll D w ig h t W d ts o n
Phone 733 -0 6 5 0 .W ednesday o n d Thursdoy, 5 P.M , 10 9 P M.
Phone 733 1T83 F ridoy
CUSTOM PLOW IN G and d iscing H oary trash a s pe c ia lly No lob too
, la rge J L J Farm s S43 59^4
rO O K INGT O R - rr - LA R G K L OAN T A s k ab ou t o u r H o m v o w n e rt. p ro g ra m G A C F inance 140 2nd Street East, T w in -F ^ lit . ; j j 1064.
120 ACRES N ORTH SIDE D a iry Farm w ith p le n ty o l irr ig a tio n w ate r W a lk .th ro ug h d a iry barn w ilh prep s ta ll. 90 head o f m ilk c o v^ can be pu rchased separa te ly 1 3 bedroom and 13 bedroom home Priced at t90,000.
DRYDEN A G EN CY3 3 0 2 3 2 402 So im .o i r
n * 4612 Q, M {, J60*
JEROME, ID AH O
N O R THSID E 1152. acri>s p r ir
(evenings 733 8 211)
Feld tm an— Realtors932Sho&hone.SI N 733 1988
.CRES.1 3 bedr
1/1 shares o l w afe r, yooa -> uooroom mam hom e Also 'enant house 4 s ta ll w a lk th ro ug h , u a iry barn w ith pipo line m ilhor and b u lk lan k Loaling ihe d and c o r r j l s illO .OOO W E N D E L L R ‘ A L IT Y 5W •>•>’ <
ne w ly pa in te d and re a d y lo rim m e d ia te o c c u p f ------ -1846 Shoup ta
ANX&CU—T R U &K4 NG-CHe-
g ra in ,>U-i44l
C O M O IN IN G PEAS p lo w ln o w ilh an itydrouk - f L R SoronspA- ,
C U S T O M ''g r e ' e n C H O P p lT T b ’,S pan ba ue r* Custom F a rm m o Phone 324 5141, JerornH
C U STO M S W A T H IN G , b a lin g . S ta ck in g D ia i r ’ s C us iom F a rm in g , J24 4459
HAV S T A G M N G . Jicw-J-w iUu-JM -— 41" bale Oesi s lack Huy I i i ie y 423 5614
CUSTOM HOTO T IL L IN G and blade w o rk . c■orru^>dJlng Houser Uj^o^thcrs Ptwne 733 j 16} or 734
C O M P L b I t H O M L S IU D Y . Hujh S flio o l •uut M -tr et.ir lal courses F re » D ro c r ii/r t- e x p la in s A M E K tC A N SCHOOl D ISTR IC T Q I FICL- HOK /646. Uoise, Idaho
Econom y K ick?1 bedroom In SouiK P a rk . Corner lo|, ve ry c lean homo w llh n ice yard . Good pa in t, near new roo t Rent th is one out or m ove r ig h t in. 14.800 00, ' ^
- M m i o r y n i K o f n ) ] or
G E M STATE REA LT Y
Snake R iver Canyon. P riced <it less than *1.500 por acre Very good te rm s to qu a lllicd^bu ye r
Call H a ro ld K e ith le ' L A N D O F F IC E
'H h A L IU I^ S .---------
■y 733 2400 01 OF ID A H O
733-0718---------------
I Vor S
EDGE OFTOWN
W E A R E NOV/ OOlno fu s io n p lo w in g . M oore '« Inc- 423 5533.
HAY STACKIN G anyw here L in e u p •■ M ^^^e ssen ge r and Lew is C,.li
lo u b le g a r a g e
IS B u t ln tn O p p o r iu n l lv U . B u i l n t i i O p p o r lg n llv
^ . 1 R CUSTOM F A R M IN G ........»¥»e*o t f * r m \w ir k . h«v sw ath ing r and ba ling and g ra in cdm tjfm m r— ^ 334 405a or 334 4855. j
G R EE N C H O PPlf^G
L . u f f f l n q e..........C U S T O M P A R M iiiC
733 S363
mM L E T T
E A L T Y
AWE VOU tOOK444G- I^OR A H OM E W ITH A L L THOSE EX. TH AS y o u * H A V E 'A L W A Y S W A N TED ?Soac lous 4 I>edruom br ick hom e lo r .d e a l la in i ly l iv in g an d en ' ( • r ia in in y Sunken iiv ir^ n T ffltf - la c tiii^ r< < u ii ba ins , la rgec a u i i i i y h i lc h r n , h r a u t t tu H y i . t r p f le d and .,m-..iiedDrt-jv.ii.-'” -..in fe c re a lio n room and 'out stiop, 2 car ga rag e , paho. a»Hl la rge lenccd ya rd w ilh room lor sw im m ing pool and tcpnis cou rt Deep w e ll. ad |acont lot k iu e d lu r horse a va ilab le h te a i lo c a lio n lo r p ro te s s o r. business or p ro less iona l m an. Call fo r flppoln»menl-rf33-252fl. 733 5691
O n eo l T w in ’s^linest hom es Ur Ick 3 bedroom 2'< t>ath Pool, sauna G rac ious ■ liv in g »42.500
D R AN O N E W Span ish m o t l l . W hite b r ic k , -beau lilu l l lre p la ce . Mflnv_ojUr.flS. »42iW?,
N EAR C O M P LE T IO N , 3 bedroom w ith ove r ' j acre . Good loca lio n Outside c ity Ifm lls 117.000,
2640' OF E LBO W room B e au tifu l fire p la cc A ir A ir cond ition ing M any bu lll4 ns . O n ly 134/900,-
COM ING SOON DeautHul co lonia l2B00squai'e loe t,e )(cellcn tlocation
JO H N LUTZ, '
REALT ORSNOW O P EN F U L L T IM E '
Phone 733 0574 .. AN Diwt
rOBEREALTY
200 AC R ES Lo is o l Cheap w a te r, 2 Dedroom tiom i'. nood c o rra ls , crop in c lu d e d . ' 5125,000 F A R M
733 2^23 733 5457 733 5045 733-2340 733-M3S 73 3 3 546
1500 acres Lake fron tage offers rec re a tio n a l potential. Close |g Air s tr ip . Tw ohornes. I3SO.OOO. Ilex ib le lo rm » ‘ Gene'Coonv- 733 4019 or K ay H arrison R e a lly . 733 3323.
70 A CRES, 75shares w ate r. Ideal lo r Slock Close m 130.000 C LE AR LA K E S A G EN C Y , 1114 M a in . Uuhl. Phone 543 6444 Evonings 543 4180.
30 acres ba le land. fli.C kW ’
20 ac ru s 'pa s tu ro N or ren f
■ i.-y , Ufoi I /W 4 0 ;9
N 0 5 E lllt - J G . . . KEEP YOURJ>RESENIT JOB! \^H O LE S A LE DISTRIBUTOR W A N T E D
m v ic t company etlobliihed oil <oth occourtit not o com ^pe ro ltd vending roule. f i»een on IV void in locohons »uch a i u .. . . . . . .ww^w i ... ,..u i.t io ra t. Iinanciol i i^ i lu i io n i. im o ll mai\ulacturino p lo n li. warehouse* and «moll ir t ililu lio n o f^ c o u n ii. The d iilribu lo r
4fn» orep, Thu n lomous brand product^ .you've
retail
dependable d iilnb u io r. mole o rU -. lum to invest in equipmani and in- imet'monthly. fo rn in g i con grow to
e select w ill be re ip o n iib li for momtaininQ thete locotion t'a ridVailockino inventory. All Ibcationt la b lllb e d b yo u rto m p q n y JVeVeed mole, in this area with SQOO.OO mmi venlory which can turn over up to twi l i . X O o n . „ a l l , on il „ a. w ._ i;,i1U o ..................... _ _complete in fo rpo lion . including phone number and Areo Code; AH inquirie i tlr ic t lyco n lid« n f(^ . *
CONSOllDATED CHEMICAX cd R P O R A T lb K T 'Freo i* Dried Products D iviilon <
3 a i5 M a / ilr o u e iv d , Suite 130 - . Houiton, Teio i 77006
733 '
G R E E N C H O P P IN GYour hylago lo ra g i u w e r dealer
i- )* ':« .9 ‘ ^ ‘^ ^S T 0 M F A R M IN G 124 4/UJ ly*
TR AD E W HAT VOU H AVE ' FOR WHAT ,YOU W A ^T
R o c k Y MOU N T A I N "
. REA LT YM 3.1406ISII N u rth M a m
A lte r Jp rn. Phono W ijlflrd P rice 733 4600
Do You Need A TanlShelterT ■"
Th is no w u l t r a c o n le in p o r f f ry .(]uQlox_hAs.3 b cd roo m t por i ld o i din ing roo m , ba lp & ''1 , gas f lr e p le c e , b a lc o n y , m a s te r bedroom , sun deck, e tc ., e tc. This p ro pe rty i i show ing a good re tu rn , P lu i <1 w al'>no l i l t of p o te n tia l re n lb rs i Solve your la x p rob lem today. t45.SO0.00.
P a lllo N a l i lg e r , 7a3-3374 a r—----------
G E M STATE REALT Y
1 your own hom e lor no m ore than Iho cost of ren t .Lot us he lp
tinanco C onven llona l, FH A , or
X BUTLERREALTY
ID EA L D A IR Y place /S acres. 7b ' stiares ol w aler Set-p ‘.Ire a in . ID stancti'on block barn and m ilk roo m V40.QOO W E b'T E N O H 6 A L t-V,. IJO O rftrtdw ftY-South:
— U ulil. Plionu S4J-4409, —- ' -
160 ACRE D AIW y b fc lU P U Sian t lu n ln .'rrm ijiK jn f barn Lots ot hay and p .is lu ru . AAodurn i bedroom
F M -L SPECIALS 120 acrcs row crop and pasture near-jw rom u . JiuU w ater shares. Newly rem odeled two bedroom l)ome, good out bu ild ings and corra ls (70,()00 00 w ith le rn is w ill pot >K)u on this place
ir r ig a t io n , good tw o bednoom tiom e .no rs i' barn and co rra ls Gel in is o n e lo r 147.500 00
230 acres sprink le r ir r ig a lM row c to p and pasture 17 m iles iV>rth 'o l Twin Falls ju s t o il H ighway 93. House t ra ile r and m achinc shed A good producer fo r.»lOO,OO0.0Q w ith , ___Lou Thoraon. 733 3291 or
STATE REALTYm U3A
G ^ M S
1 2 0 E .M a lrv -------- Jerom o, Idaho[Jus 324 814* Res 825 5573Chuck Henley ' R e i. 324 8347
185 ACRES,-.Gooding area, le rm s negotiab le, 4 p<7drooni house, to m o - oquipm ent included. Im m o d la t* possession ava ilab le . 934 54 1 7,
H A N D F IE L D s lack in g and hay h a u lin g done anyw here Phone 7j4-^- 3088. • ____________________
T ^ t . lE T T tN 'S A u to s la c k i i . j C ou rteo u l, dependable se rv ice Phope 43 > W 8 o r 733 6274
C O M M E R C IA L D EAN th rash ing . Two 660 C ftie cpn ib in cs w ith tw tls and loaders. 734 4431 o r 326 5271.
DY O w n e r o lder home in Tw in ^ •1 l ls iv iih b fd u iy sa lo n . 2 bedroom , I balh w ithout' salon 4 bedroom Ideal investm ent lor re»iia l p ro pe rty Good deal to r ig h t p a r ty W riic M a n n a H arrison,’ ^49
83400 , •
•M O Q E L H O M L S O f'E N D A IL Y ROY/kL CREST TRACT •
4th Ave L ' I b lock o i l M ad ro na l 3 bodrooiTis, lu l ly carpeted, drapes Ssnd Appliances
734 3325 , -------
F IV E BEDROO M S — one ecr# iw o b»th». N lc t v»Td. Phone 314; 3 l 3 ^ t a r t | :0 0 « .m , A p p o ln lm tn t o n ly . Jerp m C *
W ORTH TW IC E T H E P R IC E I The ep itom e o l e legant l iv in g can be pad In th is exci* ng hom e In K im b e rly , offerir^g 4 spacious o ® droom i. !a m lly ^ i l in in o ,- fo o m -
v w llt i superb v]ew,d»h,3TTnm l«C H , J ' l b a ih t and • fu lly flnf&hed U nsem tntJ i l lu a te d on an e v lra la rg o lot w ith fo m p lo le sp rink le r s y s te m . Fo r y o u r p e r io f i f l l ap po in tm e nt c a ll 473 5343.
B E A U T IF U L S P L iV leve l hom e fo r sale. A lm os t ntfW 3 bedroom , \** bathA, la m lly room , - u l l l l ly o il k itchen and d in ing room . N ice k llche n , do ub le c a rp o rt and la rao s to ra g e , le n c o d -y a r d , 131,500 E v tn ln g ap po in tm ents Q A IL E Y
__RQUE.flLS-ttEAt-TJr.^U-LoWell' W ills 733 4543.
74 A .CRe ROW CROP fa rm south o f T w in F i l l t . H igh w a y fron iag e. Fu ll w a ie r th a ro * . 145,000. Gene Conner, 733 4019.o r Kay HarrI.to f) R ea lly . 733-3MI.
r Property
C om m erc ia l P rop e rly •A SPEC IALTY
Fe ld tm an R ea ltors 733 I9H8
40 ACRES o ld e r -3 badroom 3 s fo ry
■^S3?iSr*STb?KMeN“ ^ too South L inco ln
N O R T H A V E N U E 3 b e d ro o m , .ca rp e te d , »12.500. ACE R E A L T Y .
733 5317.^” -. . ’ .V-
' AcrNO** LoM
,HOR S A L B 'b y ovm er -aVbedroorfl hpusiVwlthrUasem enl'. 739-7540! .
- J
IM M E D IA T E POSS£S5TON. new to ta l o lo c lr ic 3 Wedroom. ca rpe led j.
OS. ,U« balhUi f 19,506 AC G*appliances. ,U «b a lh in U A L T Y 73:15317,
itA 'ZE lL'TO N A R E A , 100 a c re s . M o if iy h a V U n d ^ i i i i iu r e - r - N r c * hom e w llh 4 bedroom s. 3 b a lh i. firep la ce . I50.XO. Gene A n n e r 733 « T 9 o r Ka i( H arrHon.>»««IIV .
20 ACR l:S close to J iTom o, m odern lidm o. priced lo si-ll C all Stan W a lfe rs , 734 3107 or L A N D O F F IC E OF ID AH O RC/VLTORS. 733 0714'.
Tliursd^y, Auguil 3i>!)97} Tlme9-Nowt«,Twln F a lli/Id a h o 35 ' .
FOR AS -U T JIIA S - 7 0 ^. S «JfoutteM aj^B e Placed For Sale With A Money Back Guarantee*
Boo^fw
1 AC R E, 3 b fld roo m -ho m e. P a rt b j i i« n i*n l, c o r ra l i , } c a r o«rao«- <17.000.
JO ACR ES, 3 bjxJroom Jiom o, ne«r J e ro m * , 3 m t le i o f f r ro o w a y MS,000.
L 8 .N R E A L ■* ESTATE CO.
Jorom e, Idaho 334 4U)0
to u 334-4404D ick . 334 SOa«Ed , . 33441B0
TWO CHOICE sdlD inIno lo t i lo r la lD , W arm S p rin o i v a lle y lub - d iv l i lo n , K a lchp m , Idaho, Im ' p r o v t m e a L P r i l r l c t lA . 13 300 iQ u a r e T f tm c lp o l . IB ,000 aach lo bB to ld lo o t lh M ca ll 733 B531 a f lw 1 p .m . ____________ ^
\ ACR E C O U N TR Y lo t, C alj 734.4JW,
N E W LY R E M O D E L E D 3 bedroom tiom e on tm a lt ac rp flov j ie a r Ourley. Can bo su b d iv id e d , l/n m od ia to possei&lon, ttS.SOO. 533-
. 1200ACRES
- V irg in Potato Ground 4 30" w e lls d r il le d , w a te r w ith in 100 feet of surface.
E X T R A N IC E A N D re a io n a b le l 13' X. 44' 3 bedroom m ob ile hom e w llh fu ll ih a o ca rp e t, > 'a lied ilv in o roo m , g a rb a a * d ltp o ta l, washer and d rye r hook uO. E q u ity and assum e loan. 334 5573. a lte r 6.
EO 'S M O -O E L A IR E • M O B IL E H O M E P A R K
Now ready fo r occupancy — 13, 14, double w id e units,- ga», phone, cab le , rec rea tion h a ir 317 South D lvd, W est, Jerome. 334 3009 or 334 S740.
SlUPSOKSj
MOBILEHOMES
"
PARKWESfPAITSSIRVICE
Par ts & S e r v i c e
1971 O ROADM ORE 14 * 64, a ll e le c tr ic , 3 bodroom s. U * baths. V i l la g e M o b ile H om u R ar4 , K im b e rly See a fte r I p.m Key at Space No. S.
M O B IL E H OM E to r sale Ketchum Area 0 X 40 1963 Nashua, new ly carpeted Clean. c o :y , cute 733 7975.
0 X 31 A M E R IC A N T R A IL E R Furn ished o r un fu rn ished, ve ry good co n d itio n . 037 4134 Hager-m an ________ ___________
1971 A C A D E M Y 50 x 13, rea l clean, p riced to sell at 1439S, M ao ic V a lle y M ob il# -H o m e s, 2'/* m iles we*1 o» West 5 Po ln is , Phone 6141.
GET YOUR H OM E sk irte d be fore cold w ea the r comes, 't p r ice w ith the purchase o1 an awni»\o. Ca» Irw i Petersen 734-4Ui.
10' x^O ' m ob ile hom o, v e f ^ le a n . a li conditioned, fu rn ace , re ^ rlg e ra fo r, i lo v B . new c a rp p . tm m e d la le po iscsslon . 733 9378, space 8 D, G racem an's C ourt. Shoupe Street.
^ r n g T i LK 3* T eKpaAuO. 2 badroom , fu rn ished. Phone 733-0I4I, 733r 9831.
1964 NASHUA 10' K SS' W ith 7' K 13' Uwlno room expando. also 7' x 30' back room . E xce llen t cond ition .
« 334 S040. ...
INTK.CHiTY
BAKER’SFINE HOM ES ond
. .PLEASURE CRAFT-’P a rts • S u p p l ie r ‘ Se rv ice
17 YEARS S E R V IN G ' M A G IC V / I l f Y
- i i r A M n o n A v e . W .
M O VIN G M UST SELL 10' x SS' Nashua m obile hom e 3 bedroom , D xpando on l iv in g roo m and f i l f l l t c r tJo d roo m . - c a r p e te d r ik ir te d Oest oMor 733 0433 a tle r S and weekends
SAVE UP 10 11,000 on m ob ile homes, south o l<Tupperware, Jorom e AAA discount
A iW A ) : s B f r r e i n u v s
mA G IC V M lE Y : O B I I B H O M B S
SINGIE — POUBIC V/IDIS ' 3 /* miles W«s't of W t i f 3 Pdnli'
P h o n « 7 3 3 -6 M I
1972 G o vernor
-------- 6 9 'W 4 : —Cloleout Sate
O n ly , $ 8 9 < > 5
e xp a n d o o f f ____ _ _______ .bedroom s. U nfurn lshad. 733 S9^ o r 733 J37I.
3 OEOROOM M O B IL E hom e ready' to m ove Into. H ave lo ap prec ia te .-P hone ,433 4336. .
M obil* Hom»i
USED M O O ILE / tQ M E S needed — T r M * yoyrs to r » r^ew bne. H a c lffi^ a Homes, Inc. 733-7S4I.
V A LO AN S o n . m o b ile hom es a va ilab le w ith Hacienda Homes, Inc. n3-75«l.
FOR SALE: M ob ile hom e axles w ith b ^ k e i. Hacienda AAoblle Homes
S K YLAN E M O B IL E H O M E PARK N ow Open - Healed sw im m ing , po o l sauna , e x e rc is e ro g m , clubhouse, pa tios, tto ra o e sheds, b o a t and c a m p e r p a rk in g , sidewalks and paved s tree t. Large
w ide spaces. Call 733 4407, 734 4411, o r 733 0460.
SE£SIMPSON'SMOOILEHOMES
I4 W id « (Dtoadmort or F liitw o odI
GaodStfaclion0/Sacufil^Compt't.
U p fu m lih td Apt*' A DupliM *!
. r e l r ig e r a to r , s lo ra o e , garage. Adults, no pe ts, *150. 733;
N EW GOLD M oda lllo rt 3 bedroom bricK duplex, IV} b» 1t>s,'.d ish- w asher, carpeting, drapes, yard- w o rk , u tllltlo s , except e le c tr ic ity . A d u lts tIOS. U 6 Buchanan 733 046S,
R e o m i
FU R N tS H E O 3 bedroom m obile ho m e. No c h i ld re n , no lie ls . References requ ired . 433 S964.
3 O EDR O O M -M O Q IL E ho m e, fu rn ished, by w eek or month, Jerom e 334 S606
M O ffic t A B u fin e iiB R A N D NEW b u ild in g In exce llen t
dow ntow n location fo r lease. 1760 jiq u a re le e la n d w ill design in te rio r to su it fennant's spec ifica tions. S u itab le for P rotekslonal offices or re ta il outlet. C all D ick Messer . s m ith at Gem State R ea lty ' / u . 5336,
FOR SALE; 1969 T am erack 13 x 60. W asher, d ry e r, s to rage shed, a ir conditioned. Phone 734 3464: '
O F F IC E SPACE ava ila b le soon on B lue Lakes P ^ rlh - Phone 375.3616 o r 733 0716. ■
SI ORAGE ^»HACE; as m uch as you w a n t. Easy lo a d in g , phpno ?34_
Wanf»dto Rent
COUPLE W OULD lik e lo ren t smAII h o us f. Phone 336 4431, aMor 5 p.m.
W A N T TO R EN T Sm all house In co u n try . 733 776J.
W AN T TO LEASE Stock ran ch, BO * 244* or more, w ith hom e 436
M ltc tll«n > o u i For SatoGERTSCH A M P L IF IE f^ , H arm ony
e le c tr ic g u ita r , - (75. 13 s tr in g hoU ow bo dy o u i la r , e n c e lln n t con d itio n . tIOO. 1970 Dodge P o laris oKcellen l cond ition t17S0. i960 E l C am lno ready to rebuild . 19S9 a x 40 tra i le r house, exce llen t con' tJ ltlon -Phone 543 6645 or 543 47Q3.
FOR SALE; C ltlijJn band rad io , L a fa ye lie Telsa t SSO 35, l ike new. Phono 43B 4B71.
C O R R U G ATED F IBE R G LA SS fo r pa llos , fences, tra ile r sk irt in g or any use w here a good looking cheap ly priced m a lo r ln l Is desired. W este rn N urse ry . Tw in Falls.
W A N T E D ^ U sed f u r n l lu r e , ’ a p p liances, ro ll top desks, baby th in gs , an tiques. Hnyes F u rn ltu re i
B tC V C L E 5 E ^R S bosi lO spcod, 1973m oilp l,new condition. UO. 006-77nt> '
•tAUST S E LL - M o v ln g l F u rn itu re , appliances, ya rd and household go od s . E x c o lle n t buys. 393 F illm o re Street. Phono 733 9470.
M O V IN G ; M UST SE LL .' 13 ho rse , boat m o to r and lan k , good con d itio n , « 0 . One 3 cyc le tra ile r , t75. W elsh pony, ISO. 1956 Ford Crown V ic to ria , *50. 3 - 19" Model A Ford t iro and wheels. 3 — 16 " M odel A wheels A lso o lh o r Item s. 935 N orth 9 lh, Quhi.
31 IN C H TO R O se lf p ro p e lle d m o w e r , ••'«p m JocI c o n d it io n , guaranteed . *59,95 a rC a ln 's 733
3M A T C H IN G G O LD upho ls lered , 3 pos ition re c ljn o r cha irs w ith loo t rus ts 6 m onths o ld *100 p a ir . IS " po rtab le TV, w orks fine . *I5 . 53& 3330,
3 P. A. HORNS,-! cab ine t w ith 3 15" U lah SRjakers. 837 4937.
I X D A L U M IN U M w indow, ca rlo p ca rr ie r ,' w a te rp roo f, rose cofored nyW n cavuno, good shape, 433-' 4943 ,
I f iE A T r u u i- x io w — tn a ta u b o a de ligh t II c leaned w ith Blue Lustre R en t e le c t r ic sha m po oo r *1 K R E N G E L'S
Wanted (0 B u y
ya rd Phone 734 4339
CASH FOR S C R A P M E TA L Copper, D ra u , A lum inum , R ad ia to r. B a tte rie s . Etc,-
H. K O P P E L CO,153 3nd Avenue Sofllh
lA ^ lL L BU Y d irec t o r Auction you r, fu rh itu re — appliances ~ odds A, ends. Snake R iver Auction, 733
35' HOUSE T R A IL E R for sale i
1969 TOTAL EL E C T R IC m obile hom e 12 * 60 3 bedroom , shag ca rp e l, th roughout, like new Call a lte r 3;' S43t&47l
1973's ' ARE HERE
On D iip lo y N ow 1 973 1 4 x 7 2 A lta
Fionl Kilchen 3 B«d-oom I >4 Coll.Miiium Deluio Furnitlicd In Sluck Fu> Immedccilc* D"l<vrty
' .$ 9 5 9 5 •
BROCKMANS TRAILER SALES
S Muiti AcfO\» From lliei\oi> Motot» V Twin FullW 734^67
I iHi ^p fl 0 “ t ‘ lnnfj.Wv Ito d t lo i C o 'i fu tn ilu ii & <oll'
'4 0 M it c e l la n M U t F a r S a lt
Ig r e a s e . o i l . i n k , spots. It W illex ; w on 't fake tt ou l of the ca rp e t, get I th e scissors Call 433 5643
(W A R E H O U S E C L E A R A N C E SA LE Over 100 usi-d sewing m achinus, Prices s ta rh n g at *5 A ll m akes and models SKIN N E R 'S SEWING SHOPPE Save On Shoi oing Center
STOW A W A r bud lo r re n t, *4,00 a w m Jl ^^BAN NER f-U R N lT U R E ,
n y o ra u iic acks at AD BO TT'S AUTO S U P P LY . 305 Shoshone SI, South.
FR O N T E N D A L IG H M E N T . T ra ile r h itches insfaited. Overfoad springs in s to ck . M A S T E R S P R IN G S SE R V IC E . 3019 K im b e rly Road.
R E d u C A T IO N POOL ta b le , antique p iano.’ both in good shape 733 6834.
1971 Great Lakes 13 x 60 3 be d ro o m m o b ile hom e A ir condition. 16,000
Feldtman-RealtorsVll.Shoshone St. N. • 733 1988
31 Fum iihad A Unlurn H a u u t
N E W LY R E M O D E L E D I bedroom , p a r t ly fu rn ished, a ll e le c tr ic . *150
_4_m o nlh—L m o n fh -lrc e -o fv -v e a r^ - lease, 3 adults on iy-no pets. Phone
^ ( f^ r • 6 733 0753*.
AD U LT .C O U P LE , t . ik o c a re of lawn and fu rnace lo r p a r i ren t 335 4th Avenue East Twm F a l ls.^ 3 3 ^ 9 66.
3 Q 6 0 R 0 0 M H Q M 6.< 1 i3 -W a«m «i\, *160'per m onlh. 733 730B.
n ^ u rt^ th a d ^ t t . A DuplaKa*
R E N T E R S . We h a v e th e in fo rm a tion you 're look ing fo r. Phone D I D R E N T A L SBRVIC E 734 3488 or stop’ by a t 641 W eit M a in ,
3) Unlurn lihad Apt*.A Duplavai
FOR LEASE lo ad u lts o n ly , la rg e 1 be d ro o m b a sem e n t o p a r fm e n t, bu ilt m appliances and carpe ls 1 b lock from Lynw ood Shopping C en te r u i i iu f e s p a id . *135 m on lh 73IA?61
1 OeOROOM S. 3 bo^hs A partm en l. Call 734 366S between 1 and 5
FOR RENT La rge 3 botJroOtn a p a r tm e n t, f l f ^ p la c o ; stov«< ro tr lg e ra lo r , w asher and dryen. *175. Also u t il i ty ap a rtm en t, J ioo .(, Pfione. ;34.Joa*------- ---- - ,
G IV E YOUR DUDGET A U H E A K I
.......................
P t i r i t ,APARTMENT
154JAAURICE STREET
■ 7 3 4 ;4 1 9 5O flir ln g Yo ui _
1 and 7 litd io om t ' all opplionctt including dithwother, ond^ d iip o io !* cor|)ti and d to p tt * laundry ' fine landKaping . * pool * air con' ditlqniilg * wOlk-inclcualv
F O f;^ S A LE : B la n k e ts a t IM L .F r e ig h t , Inc 393 South Park \A v e n u e West at 8 a .m . on Ju ly i 'd .
O rig in a l conslgnee-Van Englands.
16 'GLASSED BOAT, New tra ile r . 35 e le c tr ic Johnson, tent, 33 r if le , cots, car cooler, b ike . B86-7664,-‘
SA N ITA R Y M EAT scale to r sale. P ra c t ic a lly liew. 733 7356._________
g O ^ . ( L 4 N H Q U I i t —
p S Q im J ' ' '
AD D ISO N A L L E Y .A N T IQ U E hn ^ ch ina , glass, s ilve r 10 per cent off l in co llectab les, B U Y IN G ;33 SBJO
3 W H E E L U T IL IT Y tra i le r lo r sale, *&5. Accordian In now condition. 73f3 3350.
r o U R RCUS S h e ll re lo a d in g e q u ip m e n t d e a le r . R E D 'S T R A D IN G POST 315 Shoshone
U SED BA LD W IN Spinel organ — percussioo ~ exce llen t condition.
,.733:W 45,___ ____ _G O LF CART - C ushm aa.clBC ii:l{L
^m m acu lo le condition. Phone 934-
I X 0' DOG HOUSE. *50. Steel stock ra cks to f i t U ton p icku p , a t ha lf p r lc ^ *75. 734 3406.
LOFTV pile, tree from soli',Is Ihe corpet cleaned with Qluo L u s trr Rent eiectrtc sham pooer * tg r e e n a w a l t z
A L U M IN U M PLATESI 33'., ' -x J l " X 007" 70 cenls each o r 15 conts in lo ts "Of ~5<h o r - m o r e .- S e ^ -O e rry W hite , Times News, Jw ln Falls.
N C e p L E P O lN T T A P E S T R V .ya rn , canvas; Crewel k its and stbols. H ours 10:00 a m lo 4:00 p.m . w M kd a ys . Saturday 10;00 lo 13:00. 733-3804. M rs W lllla r fi O ruloy, 153 9 th Avenue East
DO IT V 0 U R 5 E L F I Shampoo W ow n carpet, pro fessiona l resu lts R ent a C larke shampooei'—w ith c o m p a n io n va c u u m . D anner F u rn itu re , 733 1431.
FOR s a l e o r T R A D E : L ike new >30 bass accordion and i ro n / lg h i Iron e r. Want good t r a i l b ike or anow m ach lne . Call 733 36fl0or 733 3140.
B U IL D IN G
4 s,-3 X 6's, various lengths up to 16'. Plywood cu fou ls , 'Z . 3
I- _-5o*rfeiUnctLJju:aiad-ft#geJ-AAen- , " n j t h c j r n o Company 3 m ire s East
.a n d V'l m i l l South.from M olor. Vue C o rn e r on K im b e r ly Roe'd. M « l i r la l ava ilab le noon to 5 p.m . ^ n d a j» through F r id a y . Phone
C AR PE TS COME Clean w ith our M ech lne . Rent HOST •» . W ilto n Dates Tw in Fails, and Jof^ome,
MXJFF^LERS ir ts ta lU d 'w h ite v o u l Complet# m u ff le r serv ice
Inc lud irto custom du a l* fo r caTt _ _ a f id _ p lc k u p s i-A O O O T rs -A U T O '
S U P P LY , Jo i Shoshone Sf. South.
1967 CESSN A-173 ne w Annual 1400 T T . P rice *7,500. Phone 703 755- 3317 o r 755.3355. Jackpot, Nevada.
10 S P E tO D IKE - M a n '» - 3 V Oondee; New, u ie d I m on lh .
B E A T E N down carbet n e lh t to w hw B lue Lu stre a rr iv e * , t^ent e le c tr ic s t^a m ^ o er 11. V 0 L C O 0 U IL 0 E R &
:O lN £H O P sum m er hours. F rid ay 5;00pm lo B.OO p m Sa lurdoy, 10 lo 6 733 0593. 438 N orth M ain.
W ANT^ED; W ORK ca r. W ilt pay *-0 .
SH O R T B E D p ic k u p p ro lo r C hevro let Days. 733 6370, n ig h ts f3 3 4563.
W A N T -T O B U Y s m a ll t r a c to r p ro lo r ab ly F ord , and m ach inery . C a ll 334 4U3
W A N T E D E A R L Y model Falcon lo re b u ild or less engine and tra n sm ission 733 4035.
W A N T E D - used TrucH one ton or la r g e r , p re ie r D um p T ru c k , reasonab ly p riced , running con d itio n , a lso c im e n l m ixe r P O Qo* 03, Tw in F a lls .
49 AntiquesB E D BAWN. I'.a N o rih Wast\!ftOton,
Iron w are dishes, fu rn itu re , Buv and s ^ l. Restore.
VAISIT OUR Hoard House. Pete Johnston, 313 South W ashington (A irp o r t R oad) 733 3345
M uilc a l Instrufnents
P IA N O LESSONS; Eula Connor, 546 ?nt»—Avurroo Basr,— Twtn— FsnsT daho, Phonc 733 B3S8,
o « N o r -« j.-A » tN e -T ♦weelleiSt co n d itio n , « 0 - 7:‘S lW .33^
S C A N D A L LI AC CORDION given to i l l t o d b r id e b y ux fia n ce to re im b u rse lo r cosi o( cancelled woUlllfSU *WS.- J33 094S
O N E A P O LL O e le c tr ic bass guHor in exce llen t con d itio n . One stadco ♦ -•fi^ lho e le c t r ic - g u i ta r , oood c ^ d l t lo n . M ake o ffe r . Phone ?00
N E W Y A M A H A p ianos, used p ieno t, Y a t r a h a gu fa rs , K L H -S ta re d
O E A U T IF U L H O M E m od e l , .H am m ond organ Sold new *3650.
Po>fecl condH lon. W ill sell *1495 See iJ (how rocm .Q ob Reeto Motor
• C om pany.
B A N D IN S T R U M E N T Ir la l ren ta l - C on n , S e lm e r, B u n d y , A r t le y , Y a m a h a . 133 Shoshone S tre e t N o rth . 733.7083 W A R N E R M USIC .
W OOD C L A R IN E T and c a te , P ie rre R evan, m ade In P a ris . Exce llen t c o n d lllo n . *60. 334 5843.
ftadlp, TV A S ItrM
Avenue East, Open M ondays t i l t 9 p .m ., Saturdays t i l l noofu.
WHILE TH EY^ASTl
.New 13" P o rtab le O lA fk and \)VhlloM Jtgnavox t V Sot* . __________
r W » » * W ,M ' • , N o ^ *79.95
K EN 'S M AGNAVOX430 Main Avenue South '
W13 3333 ,PO R TAQ L€ STEREO, g o o ^ i
i l M
C LOSE O U T .— > tra c k tapes and cassettes — SA VG I A lto buy, s«lt, tra d e . T H B E - T A p g ^ M o R 34|.
Radio, TV A Starao
F u m itu rt A Carpat
x^ -T 3 L m O L E U M R U G S, ASSORTED P A T TE R N S , 17.9], D A N N E R P U R N IT U R E , .T w in F a lls , 733-1431.
AAOVING s a l e : 'H o tpo ln t 4 0 " 3 owlen stove, . like new , s tu rd y d in e tte tab le , 3 chd irs , 3 stools, d is h w asher. IB33 S io rid . Phono 734-
U N F IN IS H E D F U R N IT U R E , tMghest q u a lltv , good selection . M a ry C arte r P a in ts , 1936 K im b e rly Road 733 3493.
R U M M A G t SA LE -. M l A BuildiOO- fund p ro je c t. August 34, 35, 36th. 330 Shoshonv Soujh.
U N F IN IS H E D S tud en t b p s k s , la rge s t se lection , v a riou s s i jo i and m o d e ls . C o m p le te r lin e o f un fin lA h e d fu r n l tu r o B a nn er F u rn itu re 733 1431
SPOT CASH For F urn ltu re -A p p llan ces
T ilings o f Value BANNER F U R N IT U R E
137 3nd Avenue W est 733-1431
FOR SALE: L iv in g room fu rn itu re — 7' f sofa, 4 'i ] ' rock ing love seat s o la , r e c l in in g lo u n g e c h a ir , ta rm ica d in in g ta b le w ith lo a f, and 4 chairs. A ll in good cond ition . Phone 733 0770.
T O M A T O E S . C U C U M B E R S , reasonab le p r ic e * , also p ro pe rtv fo r sale HuMer 536 HeybOrn Avenue W est.
F R E IG H T d a m a g e d -g e n u in e posturpcdic m attresses, fu ll a r ^
j iu c e ru 5 l iU ._ d ls u )U Q l5 -u ii percent at C ain 's 7337111
s e T OF 4 lig h t m ahogany oc casiona l tables, e x tra nice, a ll four fo r *90 at C a in 's 733 7111
OASSETT C H E R R Y ^ O O D d Ining 9 l't . blass door china 63“ tab le . 3 leaves,' c in e b a c k -c h a irs , gold ta p b s lrv Oaby bed, m a ttre ss , c a r top c a rr ie r . A ll l ik e new. Phone 733 7933 or 733 5999.
3 P IE C E E a rly Am cF ican go ld sola and cha ir, c lean *0a at C ain 's 733 7111
7 PIEC E tu rquo ise and b ro n j d in e tte , very n ice , *66 at Cam ' 733 7111
U N C L A IM E D la y a w a y 3 p ie . . Spanish bedroom set, Pay o tt ba lance, over *60 a lrea dy paid d o w n . D A N N E R F U R N IT U R E 733 1431
47 Appllancas
e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n 3 beds m a ttre ss , sp rings, -Some cha irs 733 5400.
IN E X C E L L E N T C O N D IT IO N 40' range , 3 s to rage d ra w e rs , c lock, t im e r 543-5473,
M U S T SELL Q U IC K L Y , 9 m onth Old G E re ln g c ra lo r F ros t free New J398 W ill sell lo r *350 Also, stove, *34, 734 2734.
;ain 's 7.1.1,t l-U -C O PPER TQ N E s ix cyc le flrV e f,
econditioned and guaranteed , *98 It Cain's 733 7I1J . '
3 Y E A R 0 L 0 ap a rtm e n t s i lc P ti'tco co^ jie rtone re lr ig e ra to r , *75. 734
M O V IN G M UST S E LL 1973 .Sony tr in lt ro n co lo r. T v 19" screen,
.A ntlQ U jf^ ro un tJ lo ilk , Iflhle_. Sears_ 1973 Coldspot re fr ig e ra to r F e o je r 13,1 f;i^h lr tn n t^a u tn m a H c .d o lfO tfr E le c tr ic • stove. 433-5936.
41 Heating A A ir Conditioning
U SED GE o il l ire d w a rm a ir fu rn ace M a x im u m ou tp ut 05,OW, w ith m olor. fan and other ac eessoriesr Phone -733 ♦Sfl?-------------
Building MatarialT.
M IS C E L L A N E O U S B1 :S y P P L IG 8 — N ow -and 4 ' i . 3 X 6's, va riou s lengths up to. 16*. P lywood c u to u t* , '/*. * q u a r te rs In ch . L o c a te d R egal M an u fa c tu rlnp C om pany 3 m iles E ast and W m fle Soufh fro m M otor Vue Corner on K lm t> a fly Road. M a te ria l ava ila b le noon, to 5 p m , M onday th rough F r id a y . Phone 733 9I3>,
K IL N D R IE D STUDS 935 0 " 3 x 4's 47 cen ls 'each. 1790 F lo ra l Avenue. C all 73 3 4673 o r 734 3670.
P re -fln lih e d W all Paneling 4' X fc' Wood;^ tu r n ( w tM t« l *3.49l^a e itlcB lu e *4.49
D ro m e {cab in g ra d e l *3.9B ’/4 " Leathe r (cab in g ro d e l *3,98 Banana *390Drown H areiwood - «3.»9
-W alnutfe *3.49■ /4"N ugget'(cab1ngrade) *3.19 ■/4’'C h arcoa l (cab in grffdo ) - *3.19
.4' X 7‘ Wood;
V4" D ronMSaturn (no 'D i'tiovos)' '
^V iriyls:HICKoryPecanGolden E lm -V4" B lrc h e s -N o . 1 Shpp:Vermont Birch \ •New Y o rk B irch ’Salem Dirch
-;*3n3
&*3.99*2,99
*3.eo
i m
Northwest P ly wood
_____S a l o s ^ 3 . S 9 0 9 —
1 B lo c k W e ito f G u lf Station
- O ara g t
O A R A G E SALE fla fu rd f iv . Sunday 10 a.m . - 4 p .m ., 643 R lrp V Ipw p r lv f tB lc y d e . rug s , etc.
O A R A O E SALE < Jt Lv ii»10l)ll D ouieyard . We have the Item s you
‘ need. '; .T h i|r id a v . and ..F rida y..
Oaraga Salat
Y A R D S A LE ; 9 a.m . F r id a y 'a f Peace Lu th eran Church P a rk in g lot F ile r . C lo tlijn g , books, dishes, m isce llitneous.
Y A R D 'S A L E : Thursd«»y, F r id a y 10 a.m . - 4 p .m . 781 N o rlh V ie w D rive . C lothes, g u ita r ch ild c ra ft , p o rtab le steroo, sw am p coo ler, m isce llaneous.
Good Things to Eat
C ABB AG E , CORN a n d re d potatoes, Bodtinstab - 3 n o r th , 1 w est o t West 5 Points
PO TATOES, T oW kT O E S , p a p e rs , co rn , m elons and ta k in g o rd e rs fo r cucum bers Q a k.jr '% .'1 n>ilo west
FOR S A LE : Tom atoes,green beans, corn , Dewey N ipper U W eM. 3 n o rth o f D uhi. Phonc 543 4739,
R E D PO TA TO ES , 5 cents. Sweet co rn , 55 cents. V ance 's stand F ile r and W a lh in g to n s trae t..
93 . Plants. T ra a i A ShrubsG L A D IO L U S , lo r a ll occasions.
south M oto r Vu co rn e r. (. Loon W rig h t 733-7473.
Hay, Qrain A FaadGOOD D A IR Y h a y lo r sale, by sem i
tru c k load. Bonded ha y 'a n d g ra in .buyer Dorda T ru ck in g , 934 4036.
W ANT TO B U Y : A p p ro x im a te ly 61 bushel lu th e r b a r le y for seed, r
V A N T E D ; Lease o r lease p u rch a io //J O ^ 'o d g rass ranch. Handle 100 500 ca ttle . S36 3156.
ftA tV B S FOR S A L t: AJI Hinds, ell ' sliee,Be«3Wesf.Vi South.*iiWeeT
of jDUjI on hlohwey 30. Phona M3-
R E G IS T E R E D ANGUS he rd sire . Son o f P a o ra m a .o f E a s tfie ld , 8 years o ld . Chance lo Im prove m ost herds w ith a proven s ire . Call 543- 4053. -
4A B S OREO h e ife rs ca lv in g M arch th ro u g h M a y . H o ls te ln s , G uernsey, red r t j ls fe ln . Call 734 4857 a fte r 6:30,
S M ALL H O LS TE IN d a iry he rd for la le . 788 3B33before 6 a .m , o r a fte r7:30 p,m .
FOR S A L E : 90 Head o f H ols te in co w s . Y o un g h e rd .. A .O .S . Oreedlng, d .h .I.a . reco rds. M a rk P u rc e ll, Route No. 3, Box 30, Idaho F a lls , Idaho 83401. Phone S22-4507.
Hughes, Buhl. 543 5825 o r 543 5469
GOOD QAOY and pasture ca lve s 'fo r sale. A ll Kinds. K o n e 334 4163 or 334 4038. Jerome.
100 to 154 H olste in he ife rs on nand. W elgt\t 1,000 to 1,350 pounds, tw o w ays to finance . One lo fo u r years. Cows Insurod against death. A ll h e ife rs g u a ra n te e d . Eugene Hughes, 334 3415, Jerom e,
W ANTEE7: F a ll p a s tu re up to 300 brod d a iry he ife rs Need feed lo t la te r. 536 3156.
P a ts A S u p p IlM
T IN Y TOY b lack poodle pupp ies. 0 weeks, reg is te red and w orm ed . Phone 733 5337.
DAIRY SMEEVERY'FRIDA.Y^>\ A.M ,C ottle , SheAp Hogs, hforses
EVERY M O N D A Y - 12 N O O N
SHOSHONE SAIE YARD \ 886-2281
Bill t lo rn i QQ6 7516O J H otrn 1)06 ??42
C O M PLET E D A IR Y
D ISP E R SA L
F R ID A Y , AUGUST 35 SHOSHONE SA IE YARD
086-338)B ill H a rr is 886 7516O J H a rr is m i 3 i 3
40 Hortas
FOR S A LE : Factory b u ilt 3 horse ta n d e m a x le t r a i le r . Good con d itio n . Phone 733-0189.
FOR SALE AKC reg is te red N or w eg lan E lkhound puppies, *50. 43B 5B34.
f iE T S IS rE R E D A U S T R A L IA N S h e p h e rd s .' M a le s . N a tu r a l heelers. Proven w o rk in g pa ren ts . Top blood lines 543 4094.
H U N T IN G PU PS 6 weeks o ld to r sale. AKC R eg istered, phone 543 4515.
( t - C i ST E R b P ' ST B & H N A ff lT puppies w ith srjo ls Dorn M a y 7. *S0 and up. R eg is te red b lack Scotty pups, *75 and up, PO Box 606 M o u n ta in H om e 507-4031 evenings.
13 Y E A R O LD Sorre l G e ld ing , very •~ «e n lle . Good pack horse. *150.
Phone 788 4461,
L U E L L A N SE TTE R pups, r.eady to hunt, 533-4191 or 800 N orth iOO East R upert.
AKC R E G IS T E R E O Qeagte puppv, e xce llen t b lood lines. 734-4597,
W A N T E D ; Horses to tra in , P h on i 9 jO ;o a e f lc ly m orn ing or eve n ln r
R E G IS T E R E D S ilve r Toy poodle pupp ies, R easonoble. Phone 733-
— 8009 —m o rn in g s —or— ove n ln o *—
AKC R E G IS T E R E D N orw elgen E lk )und pupp ies. y47-446l.
T E A M OF w o rk horse* and har- -n e i* e i. -a o e -0 -v in d --1 0 ,- b a y -a n d
■ W elgri“ ir0 0-p ao nd s each,'
P O O D LE -.G R O O M IN G , Stud ser v ic e , p u p p ie s . C h e rl M il le r , K e n n e li , W est R eca p c o rn e r .
5 M O N TH o ld G e rm an S h oriha lrs . See a fte r 6:00 p .m ., 3 ’/j fJorth D e a d m a n 'a -c o m e r,'f* llo r .
A K C G R E A T D on os P o od les .' B e a g le s , B r l t la n ie s , S a m o yed ,
^ e c T a l on N orw eg ia n E lkhounds, G erm an S h orth a lrs . A lso Po in te rs ,
. Toy T e rr ie rs , O rifa -P oos, G erm an —6he^ei'd,~AAa&^s—iCennels^ 536..
r e g is te re d D r iU a n y S p a n ie ls , puppies, 3 m onths o ld . m'alje o r fom a ie , 543 49S4,
R E G I S T E R E D G O L D E N R E T R E IV E R S C t^ a m p io n sh ip s tock, Phone 733 7043-
FOR SA LE D oberm an P inscher pupp ies, 14 weeks o ld Phono 337 3519, Pocate llo .
G E R M A N S H E P H E R D fe m a le , 11 m onths, good w ith c h ild re n , w atch dog, obedience tra in e d . 678 5313.
A nijn a i Braadlno
breeds o f bo0f a y ii lta b le . OuKl' ( iid ' 6103; Jerom e, IJ»56 iJ .J»hQ *hone, 886 7507, O u r le y , 678-93S3,’ M aJelton, 839 5303.
5» CattiaH O L S T b lN H E tP G R and b u ll - c a jy e s , W is c o n s in H o ls te in
S p rln oe rs , 30 to 60 days fro m ca lv in g . -A lto , open and b red h e l le r s , j N T E R A A O U N T A t-N .
- P A o m r d - D A ito Y . c a t t l e c o ...m e . ' 337-H03;-' Pocate llo .
3 R E G IS T E R E D ..B LA C K Angus ye e rlin g b u lls . (S ire — T r ito n a d v e rtis e d . t)V M on Repose as
• looaest. b u ll) 7930a91.
r e g i s t e r e d H O L S T E IN b u lls to lo a n .-Ike BiOKham 733-13061
9 rE G IS T E R D O O LAC K A h g u l, ' cows. Bred, B V tl fo undo fjon he rd . _333.0»B1. - -— r--............
3 M A T C H E D P A LO M IN O and 1 Appaloose. A ll been b ro ke good grade sfoc>». 733-3«38 evenifMJr
. a f te r 6:00 and weekends.
H O R S E S H O E IN G , T R IM M IN G . 336 4631 o r 733-0690, D enver F ine, F ile r . A ll shoeing cas^.
SA D D LE HORSES for sale Ages 4 and 5. A lso 3 n«W saddles. Can 733-
TH O R O U G H BR ED S. AAares, f i l l ie s , co lts . Spec ia l, 3 year stud colt over 16 hands. 7^3-()e95,
FOR SA LE o r tra d e m a fc h fd p a ir of re g is te re d Welsh stud yea rlin g p o n ib s . G ree n b ro k e , f i r e ped ig rees. 334 3464,
*500. 806 7766,
G E N T L E G R A Y M A R E . 10, N o fto r ch ild re n . Good hunting prospect. 433 5776.
A L L T Y P E S O F HORSES, bought, sold, trad ed . P lenty o ) ranch ge ld inas. Ren H aley, 733-A05f
Shaap
F 0 R ~ S A c e —<5CTIuw
a F arm A Ranch Supptlat
Farm Im p la m an ti
F A R M E R S , D O N 'T TA K E a chance on h ig h p r ice d spuds, heve e x tra h a rve s tin g c a p a c ity . Curl D ire c t P o te lt H o rve s to r, fAoOel No. 45. Duo o n ly 400 acres. Call 733 0719, reasonab le .
TRACTOR re p a ir in g , a ll makes, &«Q'. Tom DoUnoer-or b i l l H o lm an
. . j i l M O L Y N E U X J lAAC M IN ER Y, I9B3 F lo ra l A ve . 733 7547.
]' - JO H N DEERE 720 D iotel
r - y p H N DEERE'aO IO O ioiol
i - )OHNDEERE.X.T190
1 - IN /E R N A T IO N A I 504
1.-'MASSEY FER9 USON 165
"1 ^ IN T E I iK lA T IO K u r B 2 7 5
2 • MASSEV F tR p U S O N 180's
1 - MASSEY FE/1G;US0N 65 ■
GEM„ E Q U I P M E K I T , I N C .T>»in'Foll» 733 7272 ,-D j M J 43-4392 O ie t Sli«>feit 733 52AQD«e Oorlon . . . . . 543.5452 ■ fta ga r,N iw to n . . . . \ . 733-3604
Farm lm plam a«iti
chopper With hayW esl'o f
F A R M HAN D 1 row beet h e rves lo r sell o r tra d e fo r Calves, ha y or g ra in . C all evenings 536-3490.
5<W G A L L O N ,;? A !« V K O O L m ilk
W AM TG D TO T R A D E : • double f r i ^ t end fo r a s ing le fro n t end fo r ^ 6 0 0 O live r o r buy a s ing le fro n te d . 433 5001 or 435-5133.
ID AH O TRACTOR sM vsoe. Cash lo r used tra c to rs . Used p a rts a t big discounts. 733-B393. r
FOR S A LE : Omaha S tandard fo ld dow n s tock rack. l i ‘. vary good cond ition . 334 4071, •
■FOR S A LE : F arm hand power box
s"d T y3 4 .*4 g 7 7 "‘‘ °^
EVAN'S O L IV E R
TRACTORLocated In Oen's A u fo Repair. F ile r on M ain tak ing ove r O liver T ra c to r franchise . Can o r d ir ani' O live r parJs o r . eqolpm ent. For m ore in fo rm a tlo n -ca ll 336-5067.
W A N T E D GOOQused 7' hay 'm ow er — 3 po in f h itch typ e p re fe r r td . Phone 733 3367.
FOR S A LE : 1 5 'beet bed also baled h a v loader. EarJ B lacker, R upert. 438 5971. ^
1 N EW H O LLA N D 383 h e y ba ler, tw in tied , P.TO.O. used'1 season. B ig savings. M rs . Roy Dopson 473i 47i0 or 433 5733.
FOR (SALE; Cheap 13' O live r self
' Pasturat For Rant
H O R SE P A S T U R E fo r r e n t, K im b e rly Road, c lose -in . T w in FW Is. S43-61S1.-
Boati A M arin a Kam t
JUST A R R IV E D I 1973 F lb o ffo rm boats. E v ln ru d e and M trc u rv M oto rs . DUO AN D M A A K 'S , YourE v ln ru de *and AAofcury ’ Dealor.1163 Blue L a kM N orltt.
1971 16' STA RC R AFT J u p ite r , 650 M ercu ry 7'^ horse po w er tro llln p m o lo r , con ve rtib le to p , *3650. Can be seen at Ken R oundy's M otor Lodge, 761 M ain Avenue W « t ,
I a TE SEASON « SPECIA(.S
14' G T I4O C la iilron , new Colbint ifoile t, uiod 35 hp •l«ci/ic ilp>|.£viri' - rud« Onij, $ 169515' W elcfoll, open fronl. vol(-<op, • lu ily carpet.d, n«w Calkin TfoiU,, u t t( i 35 hp elecl'ic i la r l Evlnrude 51995S n t l HAVE S O M f GOOD USSD aO ATS A N D 7RAft£ffS - fiOlCED TOseiiii
CENTURY AUTOMOTIVE . M ACHINE
261 Add.ion a'»«. W. 733-5070
•STARCRAFT DoV t S CUSHMAN TR AC KSTE R , JE R O M E IM P L E A A ^N T
>, M A R IN A ,, JE R O M E . ID a Mo .
c n o ^ A L E - IV Sport boat and t r a i l e r . Oood reasonab le . Call 733-1934,
Sportino Ooodt
GUNS DR O W N IN G JO^luage, 3 " m a g n u m ,- B ro w n in g H l-p o w e r 9m m ^ ^ r u * l ie d ; Colt -f i a u to m a tic^
BR U N S W IC K , D elta and tH E A pool tab les, accessories. Seles and Serv ice . Jam es C la rk . 731S6Qt a fte r 4:00 and ' ' weekends.
SH AR P 1970 Ski-doo, 640 T N T , new lyo v e r h a u le d ..___Rhona----- U4-3383d a y tim e , 733-1056 evenlf\Q*.
AAAX'S FLY SHOP1106AAorningslde D rive
JO E 'S GUNS AN O Sporting Goods. A ll po pu la r m akes and ca lllb e r. R if le , shotguns, p is to ls . Open 7 a .m . to t l p .m . 7 days. 761 M a in A venue W est, Tw in F a ll* . Phone
T ra v tl T ra iia rt
FOR R EN T new 16' K lf T ra ile rs , • ' K i t c a m p e rs . W ilk in s T r a i le r Sales. Gooding 934 1769.' C all fo r rese rva tion s .
1973 S U N FLO W ER 35* x 8' fu llyw in te r is e d . M u s t s e ll d u t loovw tec'* fa iU ng he&l\t\- U nitedC a m p g ro u n d , A lec H illto n In te rs ta te 80 Tw in Falls.
FOR SALE K e n ik il l trove t tra ile r ,, , gcuxl cond ition ,. . ^43.UA7,^
K E N S K IL L 34' trave l trailer.^ bath, sh o w e r.v b e d ro o m . E k c e lle n t
—con d itio n ---------Phone---------
1971 n * R O AD R U N N E R cam per Queen s ite cabower, o a s - e le ^ ic re fr ig e ra to r , w ate r pum p, steeps ------- ----------condition on iWO F ord '
^S' 1970 K IT K ^ - " " ? '« m p f r a i le r . .lik e r .« w > -u s -SOLD e». tUSO.-^P fw ne 733 3431. •
'f o r 'S A LE O R TR AD E to r an 'o lda r cam p er tra ile r 1964 .C hevro le t' cqupe. Phone 436 330V-*
1973- N O R T H L A N D • * ' ca b o ve r c a m p e r . 'te e bOK, s ink , tu rnaca . L ik e . new - cond ition 9 I4 - I IU .
Motor H a m n -
1970 1 8 '.sport klhcr~1f1oldr hon^ai sieiDps te lf -c o n fa lp e d . J q w - ' m lle a o e .-------e k tra s ..........____ ::____ !_ __• »-
- - - -V - ; r - r
1 V-,
34 -Tlm«l N «"> .1 'w ln F«M», Idaho: Thur«d»/, A u flu it U, 1972
• Private Patty Clasiified Adv«rtisers '• Reolistate Excluded
V o ur P w p U R « ith » r W o n l> d For 01 l iH l* 01
( 3 U n t « - |O p « / l )
( 1 3 W o r d i )
DIAL 733 0931OR CALL OF OUR TOUTREE NUMBERS . . . ■
5 4 3 -4 6 ,4 6 in B u h l o r C o j i la f o r d j 6 7 8 -2 5 5 2 in B u rley^ R u p e r t r D e c Io , Pq u I o r N o r la n d ; 5 3 6 -2 5 3 5 in W «n<^«ll, G o o d in g , H o g e r m o n o r J e ro m * ; 3 2 6 -5 3 7 5 in . H o l l i i f e r , R o g e r to n , o r J a c k p o t , N s v o d a .
Visibilityunlimited.
C y c lttA S u p p llt*
1972 HONDA S t 100, 4 0 o in lle 'l, COtt tSSQ m u ti CBcrlflce lU O . P h on *
1071 HONDA CL17S, under .3300 m’ilO f, (425. 324v(UB.
FOR S A LE 1970 V *m « h a 133 Gnduro. low .m llta o t , e xco llen t con d itio n .. 733 S30A.
/ L L T Y P E S or tp r ln g t rap fflrad , o v s r io i id s p r in g ! In it a l la d . M A i l E R S P R IN G S E R V tC G V
' 3019 K im O«rlV R ofld . 751-7*11.
1971>ton C H C V R O LE T 16' LvOnard bed, 5 3, l ike n o \^ , |Phone l3 /-4 flW :*
1973 Honda CL3S0 S cram b le r, low ' m lleaoe, eKcellenI con d itio n . Take
over p a ym en ti.. 733 3431 before 5
7S H O N D A »e m l Chop! In v o ite d .w lll lake«149S T av lo r o r 733 779S
l . , - i I’ Irn t , hc<|l- I
IT • pum ■
WILLS Motor Co:336 Shoihon* 51 W 733 3091
734 4lh Av« W 733 7363 '
A u to S « rv le t —
P a r l i t A c c t i t o r iM
1963 C H E V R O L E T 337, 350 ho rio p o w e r, F I. H oad i. bip v a lv b s , q u a d * , engte . D u co ll J f lh n j Phono 733 3097
TWO 10" w ide, one w ith po lstrac, and tw o 6" w id e ,'a ll ET m a g i lor C hevro le t. t9S 733-(41S between 4 p .m anti 6 p.m . w eedendi,
1 5E.T OF M ic k y Thom p ion noodle b a rin g rocko r a rm i to III sm all b lock Chevrolet C all 733 3193 ^ lle r
1967 ICO YAAAA oxce llo fit condi 0&53
1968 C 0 350 HONDA lo r r m g . w in d s h ie ld , lo chrom o 6,000m ilos L ik c n e 5059
194? XL CH H A K L t*Y Engine in p i- r lfC l th .ipu M od if ie d C hrom e U cAulilu l p a in l t650 537 6t{)9-
USED MOTORCYCLES, Hondo 70 W,.s S I fl<J NOW S I 49 Ho.Ipy 17 V<.
W o, S3H9 NOW. Tiiiim lui l.o i l UK)
S?'.'!) NOW SI49 -AfHhrrt-Mrfnrryrfprtr'mirfn'---
I■IIIIIIIII
W.
PEDERSEN'S•i'69 Mini. A.vhuu b.Ml ; n
AS O C Y C tlN D ^R BSA Sharp, ready to go . tw in c a rb o 'ra lo r t^ pe rfo rm ance cam sha ft Phone 733 9176
M ake oMer 314
1971 HONDA SL 175 S50 ac lua
FOR SA LE : 1970 Honda 750. very good cond llion . C all 734 4414 o r tee at 1414 n ivc Lakes B lvd . N orth .
■■^'Q Y A M A H A -174 E n d o ro ,- -1335. Phono 324 3145. •
H t s v y E q u ip m t f ih
USED INDUSTRIAL EQUIPM ENT
JOHN OttWt 5000 eACKMOE
JOHN OttRf R andA l t c o SCRAPEB
-------- iu .o o o
C A6 t W /'7 loQ d if JOHN O tt« ,tk ic k h o «
500 « .
CAT URAUkU
V I .s o d
s i6 . ; f o
■^ELLIOTT'S111 Ovedand Avt . OucUy, Idaho
Phof*. 670 3385B O B H O U S T O N
So/tt ffep'eienfofiv*» Home phpne 733-1490
. MOBilE PHONEfiurley Areoi fwin Folli Areo
479-3319' . . 734-2331 Unfl313^ . JJn itJ l37 .
---- :"—T
1967 QSA 441 V ic to r, t r a i l ip ro c k e l, ho lm o t.good condition . Phqne 733- 4513.
F O ^ S A L E 1944 Honda 3o6, s f r ^ m odot. 5335. Pifone 734-3050 a lte r 6.
13 H i» v y Eqiripm ffil
LO ADERS JOHN D E E R E 544. 1970 CASE, W 7, 196B M IC H IG A N , 135 A M IC H IG A N . 75'A CASE 680 Dackhoe- CASE S&O Oacttnoe CAT 13 g rade r. 0 Call m e lo r any new \e qu ip m en t need.DIM Lo ughm llle r
T r u c h i
1959 C H E V R O LE T ton pickup, ne w ly overhauled , good t ire * . Cali
•o v e n ln g i 734 3439,
1965 F 0 r 6 T 850 tandem w ith FM C a lu m in um bu lk feed body. A ll In good condition. B a rg a in , $5,500, 1965 F ord C BOO t i l t ca^ , new Ford la c to r / 391 engine, w ith te n than 20,000 m ile * , a ir b ra k w . 33’ fla t bed w ith 13,000 pound w inch. O argaln 13.500. New P lym ou th 37B
FOR SALE 1969 E l Cam ino, low d o w n p a y m e n l. T a k e bve r paym en ts. 536 3134. W endell,
3 TR UC K S 1600, 1937 In te rn a tio n a l, ru m OK, 1959 In te rn a tio na l w itt i 13' beet bad, and h y d ra u lic aide h o l i t . Phone 139-5007 a lta r I p m .
1971 F O R D 350 ;.p ic k u p , p o w ifr steer Ing, pow er braket< au lo m a llc t r a n tm ls i lo n , s te re o , . '^ u x l l ja r y l a n k t t p re m iu m ' t( r « s , (ow- mlloAoe, o r io in a l ow ner. S3650 firm .-P h o n e 733 8361.
FOR S A LE : 1968 C h p v ro lf l heavy d u ty '/3 ton p icku p , good condition 1973 L T D B rougham ' w ith a ir cp n d ltlo n , v e ry c lean, low m ileage. 1963 C tiovro lo t II good condition. Can be seen - 'W a ll* T exa co , Jerom e. Phone 334-83^0.
1969 C H E V R O L 'E T 1 to n , lo w m ile a g e . E x c e l le n t c o n d it io n Phone 334 8019,
FOR S A LE ; OW or D iam ond T ru ck , fla ^ b o d . Phone 733-4639.
i'C AAAPER,»395. Gas tru c k tra c to r . Gds 10-whaoler w llh 30' bod. 3 10 w h e o lo r d ie s e ls . D .losoi t ru c k tra c to r . 40' s tock t ra i le r , double dock. 40' f la t bod. 30' l la f bed. 31' van , lO'W hoeter d iesel, SI500. Good 1959 Ford *150. 1' j ton C hevro let t ru c k »150- V 'i ton Dodge t ru c k , V 6. C om m uns m o to r, 6 71 GMC po w er un it. 733 0717.
196s Ail ton in id m a llo n a l p icku p , low m lle ao e , ilSOOn O o H - f4 9 ^ ^ i le y . -
1966 FO R D 4-wtf««l d r iv e p icku p and 8 '/> 'c« b o ve r cam p er com b in atio n . See a t 415 South L o c u it. Call 734- 3354 a lte r 5.
1963 C H E V R O L E T p icku p ' j Ion. ro b u l l l ongino. 4 speed. (600. 334 5657
1964 FO R D '4 Ion C am per Special, P iv jna 334 3393. Jerom e.
FOR S A LE ; 1951 Ford Can 3364813,
1959 IN T E R N A T IO N A L L 160. 3 ton. runs good. N ew c lu tch , good tires . Licensed and ready >lo go. (795, A lso, 14' beef, g ra in bod, (350, 15' Lockw ood spud bed. (350. And F a rm ha nd pow er box w ith In ,salage sides (450 W ill se ll all
her or sep a ra te ly Phone 334-
im port—Sport* C art10; i - VO LK S W A G E N , good con-
11500 o r eQ uily and lake p a y m e n ts 733-6115.
1966 V O LKS W A G EN A -l condition Inside and ou t, low n llls a o e . 336-
a l lo f 5.
1967 V O L K S W A G E N , r e b u i l t engine, r a d io , good c on d itio n , 1773. Phone 733-5^4. A tk fo r K aren.
1969 DATSU N STATIO N W AGON 1 ow n er, 39,000 m iles. E xce lle n t con d itio n . Phone 336 5335-
\9A4 VO LK S W A G E N bu g , new llre s , good ih a p e . O u tlaw t r a i l cyc le , good t ire s , and c lu tc ti, no m oto r. 733-5598.
1969DATSU N SRL 3000convortlb lo .. Lo w m ileage, exce llen t con d itio n , ra d io , new lo p , godd tiro s , good scho o lca r, 670 9369, OurleV, Idafio.
1967 F IA T Station Wagon-, 33.800 a c tu a l m ile s . E c o n o m ic a l
. tra n sp o rta tio n . Delojv book. 734
^ •p - 4 W hM lD r iv M
1948 J E E P U N IV E R S A L , new top. exce llen t in te r io r , good tire s and s<)arB;’ inte r-locHIno tiubs. V - lengine. Safety Inspected. 334-3906.
1953 W ILU Y S 383, runs g re a t, Needs b r a k a ^ ^ r k and seat covers, l i7 J .
A u to s F o r S a l t
1973MERCUR>C.A4PNTEGO 3door, loaddd, 1 ownerTTow m llonge. 734- 3394 evoolng««
FOR S A LE : M y po rton a l ca r, 1971
1965 C H E V R O L E T IM P A L A , a u to m a tic t ra n s m is s io n , po w er 734*^7lP ' good.
1968F IR E O IR D , lu rb o h y d ra m a llc , 400 m o to r, m ags, good cond ition , 733 6559,
1970 TO YO TA CORONA. 4 door - sA dan . . 4 speed tra n s m is s io n ,
M IchoHn ra d ia l lire s , low m ileage exce llen i con d itio n . Call 7X ^70^
" im T O L K S W A G E N O l/G , e x c e lle tir con d itio n , w ith-^low m ile ag e, w ill sa c r ific e lo r q u ick sale, phone 733- 0995.
DATSUNFROM N IS S A N W ITH PRIDE
Baof Inflalion At . ■ .
D E A N M O T O R C O . 409 2 n d A v o . S. 733-2022
J « t p — 4 W h t f l D r W t i
)967 JE C P S TE R \A6, au tom atic Ira n im is s lo n - Low m ile ag e , ex tra good .-- 678 7535 or 436 4783.
1967 F IR £ O IR O OHC 6 cy lin d e r, p o w e r i le e r ln g , a u to m a tic tra n s m is s io n , M ic h e l in t i r e s .
1964 F O R D F A IR L A N E 4-door v o d a n , 6 c y l in d e r , a u to m a tic , oxco llon i cond ition , (395. 733 8363.
1957 C H E V R O L E T ' 4 door wagon, 337 au to m a tic , body fa ir , lu ll carpet (350. Phone 734 3379.
FOR SALE*: 1969 Duick E le c tra . 335. Low m ileage, w i ll consider
1966 1948 ca r on Irado. 438 487) ovenlngi.
1968 C H E V R O LE T C AM A R O R a lly S p o rt. '3 2 7 . 4-Spood P o w er steering , good ru b b e r. (1500, 733- J4A4
A u to s F o r S a lt M A u to s F o r S a lt
1968 O LD S M O D ILE Cutla(S 3 door ha rd top , new tiros , good cond ition . (1300,’ 734-4755 a lte r 5:30
19*9 NEW YO R K ERK w er. p r iced r ig h t.
i t .
W hsn p fo b U m i, la rg e -o r »mgll, o r ite in yo • f the ik iile 'd ip e c io l i il* l i iH d b e low . Ye i;‘ i: Unii lU e 'd p e r io n le f i l l 'm o i l - any ip e c io li ie d need you m ight hov< PHOFfSS\O NAU Y o u 'll t in d th>m conven ien tly l i lte d be lew .
I I
Appliance RepairI I15 M E F R iC E R A T O R S . F re c io rs .■ rang^Di, w a sh e rs , d ry e rs . .2 V E R N ' i a p p l i a n c e■ R E P A IH . 733 54 « , 875 F ile r
Avenue Wi'St
I Penclna
R EFR IG E R A TO R S, ' washers, d r y o r t , ra n g e s R ea son ab le ra los SO vearsexpcrience Crtll S H U M W A Y A P P L IA N C E R E P A IR , 733 6167
I P rin tin g • ' T ra ile r tw itches.
OLSON FE N C E 6. POOL CO ■' in s ta llin g a ll po pu la r styfTs fo r p ro te '^ tto n , u J U ily , b e a u ty
- Phone 734 4306
Q u a lity o flse t p r in tin g p rice s Q u ick Copy Center I 3nd S«. W o sr ............
10^ : T R A IL E R H ITC H E S and bra kes '117 I -insta lled, e q u a lite r and o the r,
m 1300 > Fast se rv ice 761 M a in Avenue H i «« u . 1------------- -- I 0141
I- J
F U R N A C E S C L E A N E D ano serv iced , (13 OH slaves (8 17 years e«perience Phono 733 n u
... l A s w e l L'S S E R V IC E I Trash * O e rb a g tjS e rv lce C o m m e rc ia l r o i r Ig o ra t I o n . ----------------------------------------------
, D i lk I PARKS AN D SONS - ! U 4 «[ 2583 I C om m erc ia l and lo iid e n t la l,1 I hau ling? C ontainers - specia lI . . __ , ^ la u li - inside or fio fs ide c ity
R in la l l I
M A G IC -V A L L E Y AW N IN G CO F ree estim ates g la d ly g iven, LO C A L 5 A L E S A N D IN STA LLAT IO N f34.4900.
I S P E C IA L P A T IO C O V E R S , | " — C A R P O R T S ;— a n a ~ w 7 n d o W “ i ■ a w n in g s . R e s id e n t ia l an d *
G R A V E L , f i l l d ir I, top soil w ith in 3 m in u le s fro m to w n . U n lim ilo d * sup p ly . . de livo rod 733 lj234. North West C rane. R igg ing and Transport
,Co
R cnIa lm a s I a n v ih m o. h o u r, da v . I — ' - -----W W KTm W lfi O s 1 FTZFTO nts I Tree
Rentals 733 B0A3 <Service
TR E E T O P P IN G and rem ov in g , m F ree estim a tes and insu red. ■ 733 6001 or 734 3403 any tim e .
• w n in u * ' r tv a iu v n i ia i o iiu ■m ob lle ho m e s, F r e i es tim a tes. | Home D u ild trs ^ ,
-------- -------------------------------
_ X L A t t J t_ A A lU U E a - G U 6 M - I - R ANCH. Phone 77,4 3535 or w r ite K tflchu m . Idatio 03340.
733 6001 or 734 3403 any tim e , ^ TOWN A N D C O U N TR Y T R E E I
-S E R -V IC E ________________________ J .
sta r C ra lt Homos, de livered on I Dnaiina 'your lot Samples at 1013 F i le r ' * . - j j—— ____- ' - _____________
I H E A R D R O O FIN G C O M PAN YAve W, 734 331,t,
K O N IC £ K iT R E E SE R V IC E - —Now do ing : M echan ica l tree |topp ing and rem ov in g . A ll ^lim b s cu t and sa fe ly low ered ■ h y d r n u l ic f l l ly . Save • •
1,733 6 ^ 0•In su red ,7Call 733 17M
Beal Service
I F IO E R F O R M Doals. M ercu ry■ an d E v in ru d e O u tb o a rd
m oto rs BU D >. M A R K U 63
J a n lto r i i l Sa rv lC t'
T H E JAN ITO R M A N - a ll types . o l c le a n in g , c o m m e r 'ia l re s id e n lia l. bu s ina s t, Pfione 536 3331 W endell
Lawn C o n itru c tto n
“UTueTTjbUermvd N-
C arpe l C leanln« |
"O IG E L O W K A ftp E T K A WE , |Custom F loo rs of Idat^o Ad id ison Avenue East Pnone 7U I
, NEW LAW NS p la n te d ! FVee - I e s t lm a te t Top so li, fe r t i l i ie r ,
I b a c k l i l l , le v e l in g - M o y e r 's Landscap ing J33 8 7 ^
Rool Spraying ^
M i M CONTRACTORS — RU>f spra y in g our spe c ia lity . D on 't n e g le c t y o u r ro o l. a i r l spray ing
___C.0 a.t.1,
Vacuum C leaners,^Service
Sewor Service
L ivestock W antad ._ _____ II D E A D . A N IM A L S p ic k e d up | I p ro m p tly C all c r t le c t 753 48351 ' I Gooding,
I
I ■ I
V A C U U M S E R V IC E C e n te r , I p a rts , re p a irs on K irb y com Z pact. M ost o the rs . Tw in F a lls . ■7">1 ilrtjl
C le a n s Sor V IC o .T T lV iT e c * 44 lA ^a inA ve . Bast j |
I A U T H O R IZ E D Hoover s a l e s ' ! and s c rv ic e V A C U U M ■ C LE AN ER S OF ID AH O . 3nd ' |
Ire e inspociion
Avenue East and Oiue Lakes.
Cement W ork |------ I L K k s m il| i ln «
ALL TYPES o l cem ent w ork w arned Free • s t tm a te i ' 543.- 5396------------------- , -
-||—Custom^tasii
I
DonOec] Lo cksm ltt\. Sate S. Locti. .1 -_ C om binaliOns Changed, Keys : M a d e ,.( io s le r Key Shop. 733- I 4030
ROTO R O O IE R sewer se rv ice Sower l ln e i and septic tank cleaning: A lso , a ll types of o j^ v a l i o n 733 3541 o r 733
SH A R P EN IN G SA W A N O TOOL,
SH AN E 'S
Weed Control
"ID ra p e r ie s . Sw«o>, C a lc a d e i, , | H U G H E S . AAoblle H om es. ■ A u stra lns. CuslonJ m ade to I .-L o c a lly o w 'ie d . Insured c a rr ie r I Suit. Samples shown in hom e • ^ o c a t and Iona d ls lanco 7U - *
3'S lh'Avonu'c N orth 733 3454
W E E D CHOPPING(Jbn va ca n t l o l l and d itch bu rn ing . Call B u rl 734 3050 '
H OLEY 1 H E N R Y Twin Fa lls and M u r'd u g , 733 1065 o r 433
__________________________—
I WHERE
B e it Food in Town, F rie nd li e llic le n t waitresses. - O i i t l t f Inn,. 0^ Main N o r ^
AAoney to toan on any tn ino v a iu t, ja c k 's Pawn Shop 1517 K.irnberly^ pd- 733 5796
I I
o T - !
t ic k Room Equlprlliim l -
I Ptio lo P in tilt in o
D ra p a r li i , U pn e lile ry
D R APE R IES ,'- U PH O LSTER Y,* A W N IN G S . C a ll R a m s e y 's , 713 1979, T hey 're a t 336 A ^ ln
I 34 hour Color Photo Processing, IA M O R O S E ^ ^ O T O , 305 S, I '
I Llncoyi,. J t r o m f, 334-3737, |
I **Butlry P roca is lng
HO SPITAL □ E O S ,'w tiM l cha irs . k e r s , v c r u t c h e s - .
co n v » ie s c e ;it a id s and I eKerclsing equipm ent. For rent ' o r l e l l i .
' I ___ C R O W L E Y -H E A LT H ------ i -i ---- ^ Y a rec en t erI SO IAddiU n A v e . ^ , 733 4800
t P O U L TR Y S U P P LY . ?13 \ Av«nu« W e^l/.,733'3!««.' '
I INSeCT A N D W E E D p ro W e m i, I C a ll G E M S P R A Y IN G , | , SERV^iCG, 733 4306,,
SOLVEPROBLEMS
FOR PEOPLE V
, £ V m DAY.
DOG GONEH ”man's best friend has wandered off, the best, way to find him is to put a Super Sleuth to worJ< on the job — a (Name Newspaper) Want Ad. A "Super Sleuth" Want Ad
~w!irgo1nt<rOOOOO“hbtrios alerting thousands of dog lovers to be on the lookout for your pet. Chances are good that the happy reunion will occur quickly.
' "To Find the Lost• To Report the Found• To Puy • To Sell• To H ire • To G et a Job
IF YO U ’VE GOT A MESSAGE
GET IT IN THE WANT ADS
TIMES-NEWS . PEOPLE REACHER
WANT APS!"W h e re p eo p le so lve prob 'lem s
fo r p e o p le e ve ry d o y " ^
733-0931
A u to l F o r SaM
A Volkiwaaen guarantee doein't have to guarantee a Volkiwagen.
A n y u g o d c o r ih a rd c U Q h
o n o u g h to p a n V W '< p o in t ii^Y p ec lion d a ia r v o ( a V W g u a ra n ta e . N o m o tto r h o w b ig i t l i .
Y o u s o b .g V W g u o r a n lo o •in 'L2 .£0/ £ 0 d o a l b u t o u r fu ll 100% g u a ra n te e - to r o p o ir o r ro p lo c o a ll m a io r m och o n - l e d w p f l i in g p a r ls * fo r 30
' da ys o r 1000 m ilo i. W h ic h e v e r c o m o j f irs t.
So b e fo ro w o g u o ro n to e a b ig used c o r , w e m ako ju r o i t ' j as lA u gh a$ o o r l i t t le c a r .
H o ro a re som o b ig c o f j —who^f^ougl>-onougf>i-----
'•ngino, iiommiiiion, n o r a«lo, front oala otiembllai, brake lyitam, •Uctficai tyltam.
1971 VEGA3 tpped 1toiHin.\»ioii
butkcl 100U. fa tlb a tli
$2095
1970 VOLKSW AGENSquuro|ju<l> \u nruo f M ld iu lhrr
$ 2 1 9 5 "
196? MERCURY COUGAR' 3 jpccd iranim im on, viri^l lop
'Tv. tu6bi>. come »cc it i . f
$1395
. 1966 VOLKSW AGEN BUGJc- r.ujne yiiod JJO.OI
-t \|>red buikel kcuh
$995
1966 RAMBLER 770Sfuliori »cigon nrwinn .c'-
•pondciblc pKulloni trarnpijticii
$795
)9 6 7 PONTIAC G R AN D PRIX• ooclcd Wilts' r i i t a t ilo too d im oic (on lio l uutomalic licirnrni^Mun po>.
ticoriiiy dbii I in i\t lin t oiip
$1195
BLUE LAKES OVOLKSWAGEN O1133 Kimberly Road I S n a
733-3934 Q u I
TREMENDOUSSAVINGS
O N NEW 1972's PLUS ALL DEMONSTRATORS
m C E L L J O MQVE.i)____* O lds 98 's & 88 's >' Even Electros on 'd LeSabres
* P on tiac G ro n d v ilie s a n d C a lo lin a s* C he vro le t Im p a ld s , M a lib u s , N ovas, a n d Vegas
PLUS WE H AVE A LARGE SELECTION OF N E W J972 CHEVROLET PICKUPS IN STOCK A T C LO SE~O VTl>R IC ES THAT W O N 'T LAST L O N G . . . HURR.YH ____
N P W IS THE TIME ■, PRICES W ILL NEVER BE 1.0WERI
LEO RICE MOTOR CO.
.'N
^^l"Drive A Little-S^o A Lot" Goodiot^-lddfHo^i.\^
■ .934^438
1971 PLYMOUTH. ' SATTELI ..._s«fvinQ,.2;(k)or.4-iflciofvl'ii’*>o-ooom l l t i . •Kco llenf _condlflom Call
L IT U
f i o n SALB: )M 4 F o rd O c l ix l t , j W o r t H 81415 Shoup A v M u i'
19&4 OUiCK R IV IE R A , r u n i ooob. V ir v Clean. n 3 »975or 7M 3r47.
19M DODGE SU P E ft-O C E , good ■ ' condition. 4;tp««d. 983, K o o p t on
hofid And •liJe. P liort* 731-7604.
n W F A IR L A N E C onvtrM b It, 1- •p M d , b u ck tt w a t t , ra a l.g o o d c o t i l lo n . Sea to apprecia te . 734-
^949 M E R C U R Y M O N TEG O J=<J6of, * c y lind er, itlcK .'^tf.ooo m ilH , new I r e t p lu i itu d d e d tn ow t i r e i , ca r I
.0 new conaiU on. Can be u e n » t m ^ Elkn Street N qrtti o r ca ll 733-1133,
Y949 P O N TIA C le d a n , 400 V t onolne, a u fo m a llc , power ite a r ln o ,
' 'iBCtory Bir c cnd ltlon irio , new t l r e t , c le a n , 733-4346 d a y i . 733-4443 even lno i.
M UST SELL 1947 Oodge RT 440. Red w ith blAck v in y l top, au fo m a llc . pow er stoorInO' power b raho t. NAda 9S0, w ill to ll for tPOO. 733 8404.
19« QUICK R IV IE R A rU f ry rc iH ffT ' I. 73J 2793 j j lte r
• • •w u u i w n . K I V t l i n Mpow er, n ic t looklno .
(940 C A D IL L A C . 3 -d tQ r, r« d lo . t n o A te r , fa c lo r v a i r . po w er
t io e r in O ’ excoptlonAily good condition and c leflp . Ptione 324 3400 Of 833 YAkfm A, FH ef, .
FOR, SALE I94A Torino f a i t tu c k , tm a l l V I , . rune oood. W ould take o ld e r car in traH e / Call 734:3314 or •ee e t ISS AAonro* Sfraet.
FOR S A LE : 1949 AAuitanp Grande, au to m a tic , pow er ite w ln o , t i l t • te e r in o w heel, rad io , ite re o . low. m ile «o « . Phone 711 0707.
W O R KM ANUROTHERS
Ponllac-C ad lllacC M C
R upert, idah<i 434-3474
PONTIACS.s.. QUICKS \
C H EVR O LETS O LDS M O O ILES
A T. L E O R IC E MOTORS
G ooding, Idatio
YOUREE'SAUGUST HOT WEATHER
SPECIALS1971 FORD Colo»io ? doof hatdTop, «odio. P®’*'® 'J ^ Q Q Cvteofing. nu conttiiiomaq, whito walls, low milooge, sUaip
1970 FORD Golo»io 7 doof fo in u il H aitiiop , ' “ d i o , j < ^ ^ 0 Cv in y l lo o l. u i , c a n c ij liO 'ie d . m o n y q llio > l in o ie U ltM e i. k ffb 'tpvinyl tool. UI, concijlio'ied. mony qllio>
1970 MERCURY MoKjutt? iJoof haidlop, *'‘*'”$'3X 0*1vharp. '□<liQ, power klopng-wmdowi biokot. a» <ondilioning 0 ^ 7 >J1970 FORD MUSTANG V Q. auloinatic.liQ n u t iod)0 , Q>* tondilioning. Uctoo
1971 FORD TORINO 4 dooi liuidlop. 7ctiooie from, fodio. povve> ilesrino & b'aVei. vinyl roof
' ^ 2 5 9 5
» s2 9 9 5
1965 CHEVROLET 4 . i . „ v , ^ 3 4 5
M 4 9 5
^ 2 3 9 5
M 4 9 5
M ANY MORE SHARP CARS AT THE RIGHT PRICE!
■1970 VOLKSW AGEN, .ad.ohooter A ipood, »*iarp
only I 6.00 uclual'n ilev |u\t tiko
1969 VOLKSW AGEN Fuiib (i(l>I 'c u lp f 4 » p r r d o n w O w npf
Youree Motor Co.Jack Cox 733-6811 Kolly Houk
664 M a in Avo. South — ‘Used Car Row'
WILLSSUMMER SPECIALS
ON USED CARS!M 2 5 ^ 0 '
■•■'14-095-
1966 CONTINENTALdpQulituI luiury cUr. t«olhii( Iflo li f.j liorrmg Wo^ $M B 6
1966 PONTIAC GTO3 dooi fjiird lop low mileogo (
_2i2ni!imi!QiLmdia-flflwiu-Uoiii
1970 COU GAR 2 d o u r ' l iu fd lu p . b e o u l ifu lBronie witfi Herjiiiobonc ploid »inyl lop with maiching - — _ — - •nlotiof, V 0 engine, oulpm otit lran\m iw o,i on Kie Door tZ QrodiO, power Uoor.n(j_;JVu» $26^5 Sun.mc. Special Z . O O \ J
1964 RAMBLER-2 d o o r « d n n e c o n o m ic a l 6 ty ln id c r . - lu jx ir o o lu m o tic 5 ^ 0 ^ IrC iri^m m con o r ig in o l in lo r io r rc id .o ^ c c . l " lu \ r 7 W
1967 PLYMOUTHy III * doui h a r jio p V Q o^tun.
iiing. .ad.o Wo» S995
1968 PLYMOUTH
power ilccnrg Well S 1495
^ 7 7 54 door Slolion W oyon _ ^ _
............
T96& CHEVROLETIrtipolo ? door hordlop. V 8 uo lon io lii triuism.s.ion -pow ) 1 Q ^ tfr Ueer.ni). nidio. nice t iir W o-S l.lV 5 ' . Now | C j \ J
1971 PL'mOUT.H C u ilo m 5 u b u rb « in '9 pu>»Bp?-,>miiPD3-»!nt 2 ml'
r. UUnci diK .lirukuk.)rnile^ like new
Soinmor 5pq<n
1967 FORD’ • fu « lu « t 4 iluor »odon. (iul»rixil<c Irun^m.ttion power,
tic rru iy . riiilio Sumriior S|)e{ii>l
- 1971 MATADOR .^rom Aiflcnnm Molor> 4■* duo* \edat\ V G. outon\o lu'» iftn \m iW on uuwni \1eonmj
f<idio. oir tonditionitjg, vjQyl rool Wa» S2U95 $ *Summer SpetKil
1968 0LDSM0BILE ’ , ,9H 4 dtior vcdnn. (u*ury cui w i'li ul touuc ^ T ^ ^Ircirnrnnvon mdiO and oir fo n tlilio iiin y Soninior Spotml | x
, : : ^ 3 8 9 5
' 8 9 0
'2575
1972 PLYMOUTH SntoHne Sioi>on\Vnonn.V pimon<|rr 3 2 way <)Ule V fi. ou loniolit trtnnm n- ^
, >io'o. UUwci vtcotin<J. «oJTo, an to iK lillom ng------‘ -------------S 'O Q Q ' CSummer Sponol 7 * 7
1965 CHEVROLET BEL AIRSlohun Woyon. V Q engine. oulOmatK Irnntiiiivkion pow 01 klveiinij. iiid io . W<n S99S Summer bpocial
■ 1965 CHEVROLET 'Impolo 2 <blJt htiidlQp. IV (} iiu lonuiln KunuiimiOM 5 0 0 Kpower ^iDcrind. /odio Soinmoi bpecinl / / %J
1970 JAVELIN SST ......... . .,,,,1, „ - ^ .cuiiupy rool nu lom olit liuii^nnitiDn V I) ongmo power j * j O tZ ilaerm o, radio W ut (249S . Summe, Spocml
m s
1964 FORDFolton 4 doot tednn. ttiind iird tr<in> cconomy Ironiporln lion
1971 PLYMOUTH fu„ m .— W.fl au«omnt>t lrantmi\»ion, power power.— liTTiVirriio'o'uTifni'iffBTfinm-fitarwnit-BnrvTiitnrvtni -
WntJ3797 . •
1968 MERCURY Momerpy 4 doot vedcin .uulomotic Uumwmion, power bi\c b idkct. (lowoi tlonr 5inO. ladio. lo(lo(y on iondilipm ng Only
1 9 6 8 V O LK S W A G E N ,■ t , n n c2 doo*. 4 tp i»d. lodio. rtonorny fjnnsporurtion • ^ | | V j | ' 7 0
- 5 9 5i i i r d lu p , ___
' 5 ™ r ^ 3 1 - 8 ^
1 3 - ^ 5
USED. CARS. 254- 41I; Av». W . PH. 733-7365 NEW CARS^36^Shoifione SI. .W. Ph. 733-2891 ' OUALITY CABS — SALES «■ SERVICE , , ;
i
Aulet Per SiU
-19)9-CHeVRoV&Vr«bullf-*nolntr new c lu tch . Phone 733-3441 a t te f S:?0.
1947 C ^ E V E L L E M A L IO U 4d 00 r, V ^ r ^ u fo m a t lc , new t i r e i . ptione
1970 FOR D G A L A Z IE SOO. 3-door, ha rdtop. V in y l ro o f, V I, au to m a tic t r a n im l ia lo n . P o w e r - i te e r ln g , pow er.b rjikee , • a ir-conO ltlon lno . U w ^ l le a a * - N e w M lc h e la n t lr te . S h trp . 734-3495.
1971 P L Y M O U T H R o a d ru n n e r , m e ta llic v io le t. 313, 4 -ipeed, 13,006 a ctua l m liea . top con d itio n . M ake offer- 734T$47;
19&4 PO NTIAC G ran d P r ix , } door^ ha rd top , bu cke t le a t i , eMcellent cond ition . C all 334 5U1.
of c a r t,p ic k u p s , t r u c k ! on S a ie ^ ^Som e le t* th an w ho lM A le Opon S u nd avtA nd EwsnlnQt .
1947 FORD STA TIO N W AGON 390 ' unolno. A u lo m a llc 1r«n»m i% *lon.
p o w e r t te o r in g , ne w t i r e t , exco llen i condllTon. In q u ire at Ca»woII AAoblle Court o r 733-0507.
Amo» For S»ti>
1944-Q U IC K R iv ie ra ; low m tlM O t, S900. (MK »4V, H a ljey .
FORD'SCOURIER• IS HERE.
* 2 3 7 7Delivered In Twin fa llt
SEE mil
Bill Workman
FORD
THE SALES LEADER IN M A G IC V A L L E Y ... :. >343 il/u« (oUi 0/v . Norf/i
Open a.m, fo 9 p .m.'
Auto» For Sat*
194* COftv'Brri?-«MarW6»'k7'iee , a f te r 4 a t n 7 . 7th Avenue N orth .
3 -M E R C U a V C O M ET, eKCellenIcon d itio n , «U0. 934 4340.
' \
. . . T H A T ' S . . . . THIS WEEK'S
SPECIAL ‘ V946 PLYMOUTH
Fury III tedan, (nil ' power, air, rpdia, healer,
aulomotic.
JO H N
CHRIS
M b rO R S
601 Moin Eqit — Twin Fallt Phone. >33-1033
..Tliuriday, Auju,, Tlmqs Nom. Twin F«Mi, Idahp i t
AuiMl^rtol*.
THIS W EEK^ SPECIALS FROM
BILL W ORKMAN FORD1971 CHEVROLET CUSTOM IMPALA . ...................: ...............$28902 d o o r h a r d lo p . V Q e n g in e , a u lo m a l ic I r a n tm i tv io n , p o w e r itee riM Q . p o w o ' b ra k a t .« o i r c u ' id i l io r i in g . lo w m ild i
1970 LTD 4 D O O R ............. '...................................^ . . . . . . . . r $2270V (i o n u in i). a u lo m a tK t io ( itm iv t> o n p o n o r t lo o f in g . po w e r b r u k e t u i( ( d n d i l io n i itg . r a d io , re a l rncc
• 1971 GALAXIE 500 4 D O O R ...................................................... . $2840 'V Q e n g in e ; o u to m a iic l ia n tn iiv M o n . p u w c r t lo o M r ig . Dir c o n d i l io n in g . v in y l i n le r io i . Iu«v rn ilU i.
>>1 1968 PONTIAC BONNEVILIE . ................................ ............. $T190' 4 d o o r . V 'O e n g in e , a u lo I r a n i p o w o r v io o r in y . p o w e r'b » o V o » . o ir c o n d ih o tu n g . lu l l p o w e r
(^S
i1967 PLYMOUTH VALIANT 4 D O O R . '............................ .............$85.0
V 8 c f ig ir ic . a o lo rn a lie I t i i tu r n . iw o r i ^_yd iO g o o d l i r e ' .
1968 VOLKSW AGEN BUG 2 D O O R .T . ................................$1050l o t \ o f um Icuv a n t i " c t^ lo w iinlt-o<)c-. t i r o n
1969 M O N T E G O 4 D O O R .......................................... ............. $1290V 0 on y in c t, o u lo in o lK l tu n » n n k iio n i i i d . o r g o o d ru b b e r .n l.n e r o n d i l.o n
1969 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4 D O O R ,H A R D T O P .................. $2090V [) iT iig inn . ( lu lu i i io t ic Iro n v tn itM O n p u > v r ' k lr o r m r j p o w i-r b t ( ik i - \ . a ir c o n d i l iu n n ig . o r e u i fm o cur
1971 FORD T OR IN O 4 D O O R .................. .................................... $2790V 8 f i ig in o . a u lo t t iu lK lu j iu in .N s .o n ................. .. ..............................y . . . u i lo w m iie u g r
1969 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 D O O R ..........................................$1860V 11 (TMginB a u lo rn o lic tru n M ii.W io n (io w .m \lc < -iif.< j l i< j~ i- . b m k r v (u( c u o 'I 'I .O ii .n y <ir>tt o w n e r
1970 FORD 3 /4 TON P IC K U P .......................... ............................ $2460V 8 cng in i.-. u u lu in u t i i Iru n w ii.v v .u n lu J .u . l i .K l i ,n . . r u ik l i i o i . y < lu lv l l . i u u g lx iu l ' •
1968 JEEPSTER 4 X.4 r o a d s t e r ..................................................$1890A u lo n ie il i t l (d n i ,n n v io n l iu b \ V 6 ,- .u ) iiip m k I>o i v . lr d m.h - ,
1970 TOYOTA LAND C R U IS E R ...............................................■■ . $2690. 4 » 4 w a g o n . h iib » , o « lro \o u U , \ b u r p .
1967 OLDS CUTLASS CONVERTIBLE..................... ........ $690V 0 onginq, outomotic lran»ni.»Mon„powot ileo tm g rudio. vinyl inlonur
1971 PINTO 2 P O O R ................................................................ . J 1 7 ^lallC TroriMUIUiun. ruo.u w y ir McJr-woll l.re i low rnileugo '
F O R D --------
Bill \Th e Sc
/Vorkman FORDj/es L e a d e r I n T h e M a g i c V a l l e y
,1972MERCURY.II0MTEREY4 Mden, beeuhful v*|Uw tn*ld« end •<i1.1 t M . . i . . . i . - . i i . H e e l in g . *pewei d iu bieliei. ri'eTlw Iw eTv-T m o I"
in« l,.p«w «i v«n)lUli«nw hiiiw a I belled IS ln«h ll ie i. rf«lui« wheel (ewer*. biotX Iful brecodt geM nylen In te ila i, 134 In ih wheelbate. w oll U w a ll (•rpetlpg. i m i b«lli.-tKauld- ■ r lifiU . o il Ike Mfety •aulBmanl.
END OF THB YBAR •Slock ii>M-36 ^
1972 MERCURY MOMtEREY3 deer hardle|i, beaUIlM tullong while, g re in ell 1 nyUn t te lih Oueid IrtUiler, th li (gr ho t a i vau wauld (■ M tl flbM lulaly aveivlhlng. yU Irtik whaetbaw,
wKHawaH.iJiai. a\) ihe Dniali^.MeMurv da- . tlgnad tile lavlitg is la ly fealuret. 1 tpaad aulamBlIc
^ 3 3 8 0 ^ 3 5 5 0' END OF THE M O N TH
siocb.Moiia
1972 MERCURY MARQUIS4 deer lida n , beoullful llgh l gra in malalll* w ith vlny) lap, ih l i (ai af caurM laadad w llh hale vlnvl lap. hi >g)l4 ieg> « le , whlfHwatl H 7I ■ IS llr< i, llil ilaering wheel, 6 wgy pawar tael, (lani t(unip«> guoidi, whitpai oli (andhlanlng; AM codla. tinted g la ii cempltie, one «f lha fined liding (ai« in lha weild. ---------------------------
FACTORY EXECUTIVE CAR1972 MERCURY COUGAR '
XB .7 ■5hU Itttie iv *ieiu«Ua ipr hat )>* the b*t> buy w hove le efiei. il . . . . . .•ilvar inalgllic w ith bloda vinyl 1/4 laal. i«d leather inieriar. fg ile ry o il (endillanlng, pawar •laaring, power brgl'et. AM'/FM rodla. lagulai fuel V>l angina.
N p W O N tv ” . SAVI' .^ N p v v O N i r . . . > A ve .
’ 4 5 8 0 M O O O
I10 SPEED BICYCLE
(One of the finest 10 speeds Made)
WITH EVERY COMET SO LD . . . REGARDLESS OF PRICE, MODEL OR COLOR.
1243 Blue lakes Blvd NortK . Phone 733-5110
ACRES ANP.ACRES O f FREE PARKINGI!
. N EW s u m m e r HOURS: WEEKDAYS 8 A.M ; TO 9 P.M.
FINAL CLOSE-OUT ONFALL DEMONSTRATORS AT
-- A C E H A N S & N X H E V R Q L J i E---------------BIGGEST-SAVINGS^F—------ --
THE Y£AR, NOW!-A -£E W -D A IU -B E N JA lS ^© IN e-
c
■ ATTREM ENDOUS AVI'NGS -
Stay W ith The Big O K f f Save. — . Tod ays S p e c ia l on Q K U sed C a rs.
1970 IMPALA CUSTOM COUPE . . 5 2 6 9 5V -6 o n g in v , a u to m a t ic t ra n s m is s io n , p o w o r s to e r in g , a i r ' c o n d i t io n in g , v in y l t o p , v u ry s h a rp . '
1972-V EeArST AT ieN iW A QG N . . . - . « 2 3 5 02 d o o r , 4 s p e d tra n s m is s io n , r a d io , l ik e n o w .
1966 IMPALA SPORT SEDAN . . .■ ............................... ..... ^ 1 1 9 54 d o o r , V -6 o n g in e , o u fo m a f ic tra n s m is s io n , p o w o r s te e r in g ,5 1 ,0 0 0 a c tu a l m iles .
1970 CHEVELLE STATION. W A G O N .......... ^ > 2 7 5 04 d o o r , V -8 o n o jr iB ..p Q w o r s le e r in g , U a n d a r d tra n s m is s io n , v e ry i h a r p .
1971 CHEVROLET EL C A M li^O . . 7777- _______ ^ 2 9 5 0V-Q o n g in e , p o w o r s te e r in g ', s tp n d a r d I fa n s m is i io n , l ik e n o w r
............^ 2 9 9 5
1965 CHEVEILE4 dear tadan. oil while, tharp IlMie cor. aixallenl eianamy.
w o y iifla w beak price
1966 MERCURYCemel Calienta 4 dear ladan.
iica llen l tiie t, light blue intide «n< aul. need ia llttla bady wark
1966 MERCURYMaWieray 4 dear sedan, w hile w ith blue lap. (iaon o i a pin Iniida and eut. we leld Ih ii ana brond new.
* 4 0 0 lsg- » 2 9 0E O M
.PRICE * 7 0 0
n 9 6 r M E R C U R r
Celeny Park i|g l
J -
1965 CHEVROLETlm p a la ,^ (e ]lt i it
tion>narftiiier<, runl
1970 FORD FALCON•dan, 4 cylinder engine, gula-
E.O.M.PHItE- * 3 9 0
:j;|a un iu i- ^ i ld a •Ad-4wh-t-vwnvrmwW'nirira4e7ri7 "
b '1000
i m CHEVROLET I I9li4 RIMBLER I I9ES BUICH4 dear tadgnf 4 cylinder er>gine, X;* , Cloitic tla l|an wggen, 6 cylinder, leSobra 4 deer ladon, 3 U
tlandgrd t«ar>imli(ien. a i gaa<( a o: oulem alii lian im iit lan . pnini, aulornotic Itc in tm iiiitag'll av«i *ee. 1; aocellent tign iparia lian, pawai «le**ioe«
2 5 0 ; »^*350).Ve * 5 0 0
1962 PONTIAC 1 1965 OLDS 98r .
,Oead TronifMrlglian. -
E.O^V. $ PR IC E.
4-daar»adan. haiavi^lhlng, runs paifact.
1968 FIAT• -K
4 deer, new cg> irgda. turn f ><«Uanl, yau f|\utt Ma Ihit
«<ta la opp«a«igta it.
' 0 0 1 s^S4O0la *590-
.1 9 7 0 G M C BLAZER4 W hee l d r iv e , 3 5 0 V *0 e n g in o , 4 s p e e d tro n s m ’in io r^ , lo c k o u t ' h u b i , b r a n d n e w lire s , v e ry p le a n .
-------------
1960 COMET i 1964FORDT-BIRO I *968 MERCURY
H's a p le a su re t6 d o business a i
Ac0 Hansen ChevroletBlue Lakes Blvd. N. , Plrone 733-3033 ,
' Open Ev'enings Til 9x30 1 ^ ' ' __
4 daw Mden, llQhl bjua', * <yllndar '> N/-lar»glne. •ylematl{1i»niwli»)an, X; . p,iiad way baUw baak •»... ^ pewar Meailn(f. S'
The eu$ie$t p la M in th e teorld tp buy n «?«r > .7 0 1 M a i n A v a n u i t i t t e l > 3 3 - 7 1 7 0 0-— r ..............
}
ytubM i
j l TrM«<-N«wl. Twin r i f u , IdJlw l IHuffdlV, Augm
OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHTW oiic iu rfu l D iscounf Prices N o w
a v a il a b l e u n t il m i d n ig h t
a t S a few ay D iscount
EV6RY NIGHT OP THE WEEK
Grade A Fryers,7 lns|«ctod~Ar traded A
37Sliced Bacon
Tyson 's - UTS;o ;a . Inspoclod And U.S.D.A. Graded A
Whols C
lb.
Fryer Breasts WFryer Drumsticks 1";:" ‘ tb 69"Pork Chops lb 94"Pork Party Roast .b 98"
M orrell's Goldon Crisp Lab^l
r 7 7 -^ . r t c g :
Sliced Bacon Sliced Bacon iZcL;.
Turkey RoastU .I.D .A . Grado light Rango
2 9 <
NorbQst H indquarter - U.S.D.A. Grade A 5 to 7 Pound W e igh t Range
WienersSterling Skinless Franks
lb.e v e ry d o y discount p ric e 36c
Chunk Bologna J;';:."... ib 65"U.S.D.A. Cholct W hoU or Half
.b,1.29 88"
lb. 64Boneless Hams
>pljcious •f Quarter
99‘Bonanza • Delicious
W hole, H alf o f Quarter
Leg 0 ' Lamb Lamb Rib Chops a Pototo Salad
1.19
A lw a y i f i# ih
Short Ribs of Beef cnl Round Steaks Chuck Steaks Safeway
Boneless Pot Roast
b v o ry d a y d isco u n t p r ic e 1 .19
B9,ne[essHamso;w'c':: ,b 1.29 69" 66"
Cornish Hens " a , : . . * ” w 87"
Turbot Fish FilletsoZl'd
Safeway Cofke^A lr o a d / G ro u n d — 2> lb . B a g
1.35-• «vi>yJar diuount p r ii* 1J»
13 Gold Medal Flour@ Tomato SauceEd c" 11"(g) Sandwich Bags^::,r 46"® Finish “it;;:,'"” X 76"@ Mitchums r i : : ; r ; i .98 Q Hair Spray Sr.,'
■Q Biscuits'cs„„
CantaloupesC alifo rn io G roat Big M elons'-
e v e ry d a y d is c o u n t p r ic e 39c each
. 14"48
t t 8 ^
PotatoesRusset U.S. No. I's
1 0 - 5 8
Fancy Bananas qX ''J u m b o ^ e l e r y S r ^ , , . — iiat
Red Radishes Upw-Onions-^
reen~Cabbage M cdiym H«odi — C r isp ^- i
or C>*an Oniont Larg* Bunch
U S No )
everyday discount pticesck Crackers "
Crackers,':K t ib U r
EVERYDAY IS SATURDAY AT SAFEWAY
«0I.Pfctj.
lb.Boa
lOOKt.Vitamln'C 5” “ “"ch.woM. ..«u Rolaid Tablets Antacid
T o b ttli3.ro ilPack
50"52"99"57"
C r i s p ^ r r o t s a iv a ^ '» 2
FROZEN FOODSAt Discount Prices
BAKE SHOP DISCOUNTS
^ Skylark Bread ■1 1 ^ r ~ cOInd • 20 30 OgllonTrash Bafls z. 67<
Pancake Mix^ Kraft bjnner = x22^^ Pudding Snacks^'i'4irr5“8?^ S &W Coffee sf ^2,29
Thli Advortisomont Effecllvo At Safoway Dlicount
In All O f those Towny:*Bolia *J«rom« Blackfoot *Poyell« •Pocotello ‘ Idaho Fallt ‘ Waller Gooding Monl|i*llsr
Rupert ‘ Caldwell ‘ Twin FolU Burley ‘ Nampa *M»n. Home
And ‘ Ontario, Oregon ‘ These Stores Open Sunday
P r ie s t l lo m i E ffac liva T o d a y T ilry W ld n a id a y , A u o . 3 0 , W 7 S
® C ortliO H l IM0 1*(IWAt l i o m INCOiKIIAIIB'
C r e a m P ie sBel-air Premium' Q u a lity .
. ’-s 2 9 ‘e v e ry d a y d is c o u n t p r ic e 31c
gH MCP Orange C gj) Assorted Popsicles
L aye rC akesT w o M o i t t Rich L aye rs o f C h p c o ia to <
C a k e C o v e re d W ith B u lfe rc re o m Ic in g . U n iq u e Freshness.
1 ? laye r, 8-Inch
99Can
Bag
g|- Potatoes r . ‘.20"
e v e ry d a y d is c o u n t p ric e 1 ,40 ;
Glazed Doughnuts 5"Sugar Doughnuts i„b 5" French Bread . t r 'uj; 38"
A x i i lo l i le o . i l , A l S ic jre. W ith Btike Shop S ic llo n i)
0 Hawaiian Punch Orange Treat‘I t ' Orange Juice
•—•^trawberrfes^ Bel:air Green Peas
^Broccol i Spears ; White Bread