faiO N. Juria Davia nr.

Weather n f l o m e ☆ * Chance O f Showers F inal Magic Valley's Home Newspaper

VOL. GG, NO' 178 ' TWIN FALLS, IDAHO, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 24, 19G9 TEN CENTS Fighting Flares Iii Lebanon U.S. Gives Base Syrian To South Viet Troops SAIGON. (UPi)—The U.S.[spokesmen reported air- Cotnmand turned o v e r”anothor craft tosses for the w ar were Gather b4£c to South Vietnam today'one short of the G.flOO mark, a and said .two o'f its m njor por_ufinaii<;ial - lo s s ''e s lim a te d — at By United Press International _ faciliiies, including’-‘''t1ie one in more than 5‘J billion. Street fighting broke out in Saigon, were next on the'lisi 10! I.t.' Gen.. I'rank f . M ildrcn, the northern Lebanese city of be “Vietnamiisd.”. • !thc deputy U.S. coinmandcr in Tripoli today between Palcsii- Government soldiers look i Vietnam, told newsmen at niaii ■ refugees anil Lebanese over the Blackhorse Case 33 ^ Blackhorse that the ports at security forces and there were miles east of Saigon as military Sai,']cn " ' and at Vung 'i’au, reports a force of 200 guerrillos miles southeast of Saigon, or Syrian troops had massed on would be next, to go to tte Lebanon’s borders with tanks South Vietnamese. and armored cars. Disneyland “Alrcaily'thiTUnltcd’ Stales has Heavy fighting also was given South Vietnam its bases LAWRENCE H. BERLIN ROBERT PrPAGANELLI (GEORGE R. MAROTTA reported in southern Lebanon in at Dong Tam in tho Mekong FOREIGN AFFAIRS SPECIALISTS with tho Department of State, will be In ^e Mount Herman area where Delta and nt Nha T rang on the Hosts Two Twin Falls next week to appear a t a series Oi com m unity meetings. An open forum session ^•riii. Lebanon and Israel Central Coast, llie government has been scheduled for 8 p.m. Monday nt -thj College ot Southern Idaho Fine Arts Center. meet. Guerrilla radio broadcasts w ill use Blackhorse as a Fourth member of the visiting party wlil bo Lewis W. Bowden, who previously was not isaid the, A rab com mandos were regimental headquarters and Cosmonauts' scheduled to stop In Twin Falls. fighting both Lebanese and ■ ir a training can»p. Isr.ncll.army troops. It lies in the III Corps area, : ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI)— Lebanon Imposed a strict comprising the 11 . provinces Nikita Khrushchev couldn’t see curfew in its m ajo r cities to try surrounding Saigon, where in it-10 years ago, but two Soviet to restore order but Palestinian five clashes Thursday. U.S cosmonauts.tour it today. tJ.S. state Department Experts refugees an d a large group, of troopers killed 50 Viet Cong and unarm ed supporters ignored it SOVIET SPIES Peter and Helen Kroger prepare to board And appropriately, the first North Vietnamese soldiers. «n airliner In London for the lirst leg of their flight to War­ thing .scheduled for veteran in refugee camps on Beirut’s saw and their return behind the Iron Curtain. The Krogcrs, space pilots' Constantin Fcoktis- outskirts where security forccs £cm to prison by Btltalii in IM l for selling British Polaris tov and Maj. Gen. Georgiy were ousted in fightli^g Hiurs- To Speak At Twin Falls Meets day: submarine data (o Russia, were released In a deal with tho Beregovoy was a simulated House Votes Soviets to swap kcturer Gerald Brooko for tho Krogqrs. Mr. moon ride at the one-time' off Lewis W . Bowden, chief of Director of Ecuador and Peru­ The officials arc appcnrlng in 'I'he crisis between tho Brooke was freed early today after four years of imprison* limits facility—Disneyland. Soviet Multilateral Affairs, and vian Affairs; R obert P . Pagan- Twin F alls a t the request of the .. o v e r n m e n t of President Charles Helou and the guerril­ ment for anU*SovIet actions. (UPI telephoto)______Khrushchev expressed a wish three other foreign policy ex­ elli, officer In the Bureau of College of Southern Idaho. While To R epair las, the refugees and ths > visit the entertainment perts from the Department of Near Eastern and South Asian In Idaho the men will speak on neighboring A rab states center on a visit to the United State will be in Twin Falls next Affairs, and George R. Marolta, other college an d unlveraity reached such proportions Al- 3 tat6s in bUC U.S. und ^veek-»4o-appoar-at-a-8crics of ' ■Vietnam nnd campuscs.______Capitol- - ^ • • h ‘3 • q ^ f ^- torm-T^afllti - Soviet security chief-s decided it East Asian Policy Direction. Prof. Frank Acree,“pollt(^ predicted another landing of Sleepy Driver Dies was too risky for then Russian WASHINGTON (UPI)—The It previously had been an­ The men w ill speak at an open science instructor at CSI, is co­ American troops In Lebanon to prem ier. House has regained the offen­ nounced M r. Bowden would not forum at 8 p.m . M onday a t the ordinating the Twin Falls agen­ stop in Twin Falls with the rest College of Southern Idaho Fine da tor tho officials. ,ry to save the government. The cosmonauts, first Soviet sive in its battle with the Israel today sent Its plane^ visit the United Senate on how best to save the of the group, but would travel Arts Center. The o{ficials also Betty Donovan, officer, speak­ w ill appear scpaifclely a t sev­ ers and com m unity meetings. against Egyptian rnllUary tar­ Stages, flew from the M anned west front of the Capitol, directlx to Boise for . meetings In Interstate Crash there. eral service clubs in the county Bureau of Public Affairs, will gets at the southern end of the Spacecraft Center in Houston The House voted 199 to 165 Gulf of Suez where tho Thursday and visited tho-sixth Al-so arriving-in Twin Falls and will speak belore student accompany tho foreign aff ._ HAZELTON - A Long Beach. when the accident occurred Thursday to save the west front Egyptians wero reported, to annual meeting of the Ameri­ Monday for a two-day stay will bodies at the C SI and T w in Falls specialists o n their tour of Ida- C alif., m an died T hursday after­ about 4:10 p.m. just west of the — the solo rem aining exterior of bo Lawrenco H. Berlin, Deputy iHIgh School campuses. Iho. have set u p a series of surface- noon at the sccne of a one-car Valley Interchange. can Institute of Aeronautics and tto original Capitol— by prop- ir mlssil® (SAM) 8ites: Astrpnaiitlcs.^...... accident on Interstate SON, Officer Jim Roeder said Mr. ping- it- up . with -4W- acTEff-of Upon their arrival at El Toro -1 boosting the 1969 Magic Valley Carter was thrown from his 1984 toilets, theaters, offices, restau' Marino Corps Air Station both death toll to 43. Ford and tho car rolled over ronts and escalators. men expressed puzzlement over Strong Winds Idaho State Police Identified lim, crushing him. He said Mr. A construction project of this the atmospheric conditions. Hailey Protest On the victim as Oliver Carter, fiS,' Carter' apparently went to sleep size could cost S-IO million or who was alone In his .vchicle nt the wheel and the veliirle U.S. astronaut Eugene Ccr- more, nnd ihc Hnii.se v/nnis iri nan, who is serving as host. Buffet Rocket ravck'd about M'l feui along l'’c lay out $2 inilliDn this yciir in Informed them the unusual ;himltJer of tho road, M r. Carter planning funds. ippurently then attem pted to overcast was smog. ' Two days ago the Senate, Air Route Discussed "They don’t have that In Japan Says >ring -the car back onto tbc referring to reports the wc.st D uring Test road. Tho vehicle veered across Russia," Cernan explained. front was about to crumble as By 0. J. SMITH to a jam-packed m « tln g of the ;hc highway and onto the m ed­ "poppycock," voted S250.000 for TImes-News Man«ifllng Editor Hailey Rotary Club In the Hla- CAPE KENNEDY (UPI>— wathii Hotel.here In a "le t’s set The 3G-story tall Apollo 12 U.S. Jets Fly ian strip, rolling twIcc and tho National P a rk .Service for HAILEY-Officials and com. the record straight talk." rocket was buffeted by 35 to 40 t|irowinB the victim out. Brothers Are studies on how the west front munlty leoders o( IJalley, Kct. could be ' preserved in its His. appearance was prompted mllo an hour winds during the His death was the sixth trn(: chum and .Sun Vnllcy, as well ^5 second day of a countdown test fic fatality this year in the original form. by a belated protest from the Near China those In Rupert nnd Burley, todajt but officials said th« Jerom e County section of Inter- Hospitalized In other legislative action were notified well In ,Jidvanc,o of Hnlley Rotary Club to the Civil Tlnirsdoy: Aeronautics Board against the exercise wns proceeding with­ TOKYO (UPI)—Tlib Japanese stnte SON and tho 1.1th for Air West’s plans to consolidate out difficulty* -^Congress completed pas' Air West plans, which >vould news tificncy Kyodo rc|Mjrtcd Jerome County. Its M agic Valley operations Tiio. rehearsal count((own, Mr. Carter's.body was (aken of n bill nuthorl7.lnK eliminate mlhlllner service to 'I’liiirsday. nlKlit that U..S, B53 thro'JKh fet scrvjce to tho Twin Apollo 12's la st big tost before A fter Falla^__ thtrairport-in-Hnilcyr- ' fwmiicrs loaaod with iiydroj^iV r-rb'ncrar^Chnpclr Tails uTrporfTTDon Cooper, .tirs- launch'- to tho ■ moon in ” three " rome. road lit tiie eastern boundary of trict sales m anager of A ir West, Tliu club.'in its letter, had ac­ • bombs have been on rcRulnr Two Twin Falls brothers are the Great Smokv National Park weeks, hegan Thursday and is patrol mi.ssions near C om m u­ sald.Thuraday., cused the airline of not Inform­ hospltallrcd at Macic Valley Mo- In North Carolfna. almInK-toward_a-inock_lounch.- nist China rfnd North KoroH. U Mr. Cooper mado his rcmtirka ing people of the tiroa about morlnl Hospltol after'being'In­ ^T lie House'passed and sent their p la n s ...... ‘lext, Tuesday.—A'Space agency'' nald the planes were based In Blasts Jolt jured In two separate Industrial to the Senato n compromlso bill Mr. Cooper noted that he had K IM A O N EW pokesman said ft was nof Okinawa, nccldent.s this month. to ban tho sale of children’s m et with m ayors, other offlcjals iffected by tho windy weathtjr. - J control of the Union Carbide plant rested early F riday m orning by a day, but sho got over It." nest building. Is IlMcd In fair ntso had charged that the city Tho n.’V2s fly out In a siX’ Thursday night injuring two Twin I ’alls C liy Ptilicn and Vico President Agnew was ciindltlon. nf Hailey hud spent considerable plane formation from Kndcna porsnns ami. sending up balls of chiirged with Illegal sale of quoted as saying thot “ Parent* Both wero taken bv Miigic Cleric Hints money, at tho request of Air Alrbaso, Okinawa, nt p.m fire seen 20 miles away, enumernlcil drug. USD. nl-lypo power m u lt bo oxor- ‘F all Back’ Valley A m bulanu) KiTvlce to Ihe West, to pave the runway, and local lime nntl return to the Hundreds of families, wrre Detective Lt. Tim Qualls snld elAed, Somo parents have for­ hospital., according to Cloyce was currently oxtendlng tho run­ base the following morning evacuated from tho area while Dennis Tubbs. 20. tflis arrested gotten how." (UPI (elephoio) Kdwanis, operrttor of the Pope ‘Stalls’ way because nf an Inference by Kyodo quoted tho sourcc.i flronicn foupht the hliire about 2:.1() a.m . and Don Hem- Fo^- Season vice. the airline that this might on- naytng. "nie nows' agency .salcf Ingwiiy, 21, was taken Into cus- bringing It under tontrol about M r. Edwards snid Harold I' nble Air West to service the thn hombern arn always accom' an hour after tho first explosion zier, 4K, Twin I'alls, was taken KhIv nt .1 a/m. Both are charged WASHINGTON (UPI) —The community with larger aircraft. pnnlcd by KCl.irt tankers. On Decisions wilii salu of tho drug In related National Strike tlmo has como lo fall back­ ns rcportml, to tho hospital Wediie-sday afte Mr, C(i<)|M!r denied this em ­ Kyodo said the sources Texas City was tho situ of it he fell from a liiiy stack at' i Incidents Thursday night, I.t ward. VATICAN Cn-Y (UPI)- phatically, stating.that the pav­ belleveviit--u«M)mbly,------Jhejr homes on w n m in "la iitiTftdny's'iwpinsion W y lliti'nnn also ncoldrd Iho Holy rug...... iFSuiidoy appears part of tho •'sprlnp forward, Leave CoS] m inor dam iigo was 'caused to inevililbic, .S90 H A IL E Y , P g . 2 Col, 3 nill bockward** reminder many honien surrounding the Union .Seu for "nuetlleH.s secrecy" In tho Twin Falls city Jail and . Court Ousts Suit Paul Jennings, president -o: penplo for changing their WASIHNGTON (UPD - sen Carbide plant, most of. it 'by preparallntii for tho svnod, Ho Hemingway Is in cu.stwly at tlic U80 fjtephcn M . Young, D-Ohio, sak Tho internatlrnuil Union' 0 timepieces. You turn them aa flying debris...... spoke at n ncssloii which also Twin l-'alls county jail. Bond has FlOetrlcal, Hadio nnd Maclilni hour forward In tl>e spring. today ho will retire In m il A piece of flheetmetal ripped Filed By Giiard produced tlieso devolopmimts: been set at }5,000 eneh, but nel- Brandt Calls ...... (Iio-«nd-of-hlii curronl torm ,' - through' -tho-- hnmo - nf , - Cardinals itrunoolH -Marty-nf 'ttirr has-•posted'bond;------Wurkura___UnIuu^(IUE),__flaU Jjttdtward-in.tho.fttlL------rluirsday tho strike I Is a The transportation depart­ At Bf), Young Is the oldost Narvaez, who lives 300 Mards Paris announced lio wouhl ask Tho arrests wore the third and "virtua l c erta inly ," M^iril than m ent liati Issued very precise, ' member nf the .Senate, iio tiald from 'the compound and iin Of Mrs. Onassis tlio ncKt. syiuxl to deal with tho fourth.drug arrctils made this 110,0»U workers uru Involved. itiRtructlonss ‘ 'Clocks In 47 of hn is In excellent health but " I cight-foot length of pl|>o foil Into >blomA of tho prloiithood, week by city officers. Cabinet; May I can not ignoro tho reality of tho backyard of Mrs, H.D. orts the action ijilght cnme mained-nonrly stationary today Iho defendant ■ profcflRlonal nctlon, education an d coopera­ bofnr« nightfall. Phaaannt soaoon nponn at noon from a ll na'rts o f tl^e notion,1. « photographer, this incident tive movements In theau in tho Gulf of Mexico some 330 “ ■ ‘ ...... ' of n Tho m nrk which wns sot free Saturdnyj nnd already Twin rvoy 01 motels In tho vulilley would never have been i>ofdru countrlo-1. miles from Ke/'West, F alls U fooling tho cffocts, renlod. the court,” Judae Dernard Forecaster NepI Frank sold lust month to float to Us own Itivel -wan up nllKhtly moro than nuslnosBOs that carry lloms One mnn contacted by Iho M oldow aald In dlsn\f>fllng tho any future m ovemot of Ihe TImcB-Nown nald lha bird . ohurge. I 'QUAKG n r X O R D E D H per cent on uurupean money lumtortt might need iiro reported depreislon will he "slow and Bon, tom blncd with tho deor nnd MotdOw'a ruling cnme after I.O.S A N G E LE S (U P I) — A erratic, but-wlll nrobnbly bo (n markets today. Il was ^wllDyed huiiltliy and hf)t6U and motols elk aaaflun o]>an In tlio itata ho hoard two .Sucret Sorvlco iQifotUo onrthquako, tlio sec* It would he otdclnlly upgraded throughout Mnglc Vnllcy aro ox- a wostorly direction," jid iir two (Inys In mmthcrn by 0 per cent. poGtod to 1)0 filled to capuclly now, lias mado thl* tlmo of year ogonts testify that thn defen­ HlghoNt winds in the deprus- no of tho best ot tourlat dant, Bronx phHtogrnphor Ron Cullfornla, swayed buildings and Tliero was heavy speculailve during (he wockond, slnn were 3S to 40 milcH an Iflsh and O am o offlcl...... O n lella, 3a, had tried to sncip - rattled windows in tho l.os An- hour In a few sfiunlls, but buying in London and; the value ...... *-‘nlfirLuuUn plcturp or- thB far^mer Fir geleii area *ear)y today. There of tho m ark shot up to 27 renin, ' tho upland gamo birdi.' hunten tho Holds shortly after th« open­ Lady and her loii John a» J w m nis 'rtj>flrijrora4iSiSib. bt M^ctcq^’w *WB0*^°rvua 8jT '8 por CBiit n w u ver •ra coming Into Magla Valley ing znlnutoa Saturday, rodo bU btoyclo la tho paric. In ju d e i, ■Uength during (he day. Dormal valua of ^23 c«ntt, 2 Tlm®*‘Now8,Twin Falls, Idaho ^Friday, October 24, 1969 Twin Falls Damage Is Magic Valley Obi^u ^;Ties Seen . . . News In Brief Services Lloyd Nelson and Reed CouU Daily Weather Reports $10,000 In • Nelle Bifliford Funeral St am trying to-'find someone 'to Carolyn Davis, 1737 Maple­ buy coffee . . . R . S. Toffle- Mrs. - Nolle M. Bickford. 76. G ale l V. Atwood. 4 p.m . Satur- wood Drive, will play a role mire chatting with friend about 259 Picrce St., Twin-Falls, died Twin F alls M ortuary Chap- in the Cottey College production, •‘old -timers" . . L.„J3r,; L. N. ■ From Times-News 24*Hour Weather Bureau Wiro Ai*ea Crash W ednesday in a Boise Hospit "T he Children’s Hour.” to be Sterling hurrying down hospital of a sh6rt illness. pre.‘:cnted Nov. 7 and 8 on the M rs. Jc.ssie Raver. 10:^0 a,m. hallway . . -. Jjm Messersmith An estimated $10,000 damage Slie was born July 15. 1893. at Nevada, Mo., campus. Miss Saturday, Hov.c Funeral Chinwl, making chcertui comn\ent as he was-done to three Kcnworth Curtis, Neb., and moved to Twin Davis is the daughter of Dr. Jerom e. passes through office . . . Margo tractor units Thursday morning Falis in 1912 from Curtis. She Temperatures and Mrs. T. Davis and a first Butterfield taiklng-'about.Jife in when the vehicles went out of ied to Charles A. Bick­ year student , at Cottey. Hawaii . . . M rs. M arge Sum- Forecast control and 6ff of Interstate 80N ford a t Burley. He preceded her a l the Valley Interchange. merfield greeting • friend . Vorlablo cloudlncss and cool- dav In the 40:.. death. Mrs. Bickford bdoi „ .. Mr. Elquezabal Betty Bever w riting news col- The Walther Lej . Idaho State Police.officei Nktional r with a chancc of showers hv Today’s 8 a .m . M agic Valley ... the First Presbyterian church *in . . , Rudy W illiam son and manuol Lutheran Green said' Francis Raymond B O ISE — Rosary w ill be reli . ito afternoon; mostly cloudy and primrose Rebckah Lodge irlle Crane walking along temperatures: Twin Fallsiyicj, cvv Trotticr, 47. Seattle, was deliv­ lited at 8 p .m . toddy at tlie Max. M'n.Pcp* tonight >and’ Saturday with oc­ W eather Burcau,‘ 43. with 74 No. IG. ^ ._ in Avenue ,. . . M rs. Terry day evening after first niceling ering tlie three units to Kansas Gibson chapel.. Boise, for Danler Atlanta casional periods of rain or per ccnt humidity; Entomology Survivors include one'daugh- Niendorf planning ja m session it M em orial Lutheran School. City. Mo. The units were piggv E . Elquezabal, 27, Boise, who Bism arck mow. High today 50 to 60; low Laboratory, 48, with 70 per cent; r, Mrs. Helen Reddington, Gene Hull-waving at friend Chicago j backed, he said, and tlie reai Boise: o ie sister, Mrs. Leona won killed in an auto accident Mrs.'Frank Depew, talking tonight mostly In thb SOs; high Jcro m «, 47; Rupert, 47; F air­ Winners of the-Elks Pinochle Cleveland wheels of tho back unit dropped Dufre.'sne. Boise: one step-son. near Boise Wednesdi •about Altrusa Club m eeting . . . Saturday 45 to 55. Chancc of field. 29; Hailey, 34; Buhl, 48; play of Wednesd.ny niRht in­ off the oil and the tractor slari- Denver measurable precipitation 20 pci itleford, 40. Soli tempera­ Earl Bickford, Twin Falls, andl Requiem mass .will be'cele­ Doris Stradley discussing forth­ Dos Moines cluded Mrs. Vnnco Pujsipher cd fish-talling. ccnc today; 50 per ccnt tonight tures: Twin Falls Weather Bu­ three step-daughters, M arie brated at 10-,30 .a.m. Saturday coming Delta Kappa Gamma , first for women, and Nellii ■ Mr. Trotticr lost control of and Saturday. Outlook (or Suih reau: Four-Inch, 5&~I5; eight- Clark, Boise: Ethel Martell and at-St, Elizabeth Catholic Church luncheon . -. . And overheard. Fort- W orth Trout, low for womet!. WinnlnL inch, 52-48; 20-Ineh,. 5^51; 36 his vehicle and one of the unh; Fltircnce NichClson, both Twin in Gooding. M r. Elquezabal was I hope I feel better M onday ' Indianapolis day — chanco of showers , and men’s play were Larry cooler. In tho C am as Prairie, inch, 57-36; Rupert, four-inch; tipped over on its side and wai Falls, . • • . a designer for the Boise Floral fter-getting that extra hour ot • Jacksonville • Horejs, first and H. W. Zimmer- high today in the lower 50s; 56-47; B uhl, thrce-Inch, S7-48, dragged about 242 feet acrosi Graveside services w ill be Co. and formerly lived in Good­ sleep I lost last A pril." Kansas City ■ , low. the Interstate before all three low tonight 15 to 25; high Satur- ind Castleford, three-inch, 5W5. conducted at 1 p.m. Saturday at ing. Las Vegas units went over the-embank- Sunset Memorial Park by Rev. Survivors . include one son, , A. charm school class spon­ - Los AnRCles . Keith Maxwell, of the Methodist Tony, and a daughter, Laura, M emphis sored by the Campfire Girls and Church. Friends may call at both Boise: his'parents, M r. and A nnual B'all M iam i the Ju n io r Club will be heW Twin Falls Mortuary Friday M rs. Fred Elquezabal, Boise Weather Synopsis IS scheduled at 1:30 p.m . Sat- Mpls-St. P a ul night and..SaturdaJi untiHime two brothers, -Fired Elquezabal irday at the Idaho Pow er Co. President Of • New Orleans The high pressure over the Highs Saturday will be in the of ser^N^s. , Bois and Henry Elqueza.- auditorium. The subject will be GleanupWill New Y ork Northwest and the Intbrmoun- 40s an d SOs. bal, Cedar Rapids. Iowa, and hairdos and don’ts. Ih.-s %Vith above • n orm al public accountant certificate wood Cemetery. Lloyd Nelson, ' sanitatlpn In- ' Spol Cooler a ir has spread Into the Council discussed ways of get­ He was born July 18, 1895, in im ounts..The norm al precipita- after passing a thr«je-day .exa­ Was'ashlngton plateau reaching East-Central ting greater participation' from Italy and moved to the United spector, said the cleanup is be­ ion in th e -vallcjK during this m ination recently. ing arrang«d-^o the city trucks Oregon and Southwest Idaho the low iocome paople during a States in 1919. In 1928 he moved period ranges from .15 to .20 of to-thc P a ul area from Colorado, Mrs. Sauers will, be one day behind the sani­ late yesterdajj-where some mi­ an inph. The normal tempera­ meeting Thursday evening. Mr. Fontanari was retired tation trucks. nor cooling occurrcd. •' tures are Idaho Falls, 55 and 28; During the meetirig.the resig- Idaho Union-Pacific-Railroad employe SHOSHONE- —-MrsrTbelma Mr.~Nelson. urged all people —Skies" will be mostly cloudy Pocatello, -58-31; Burley. 58-30; Powder Puff ation of E . E. Hedrick, councif "High Low Pr. and had never married. Blanche Gwin Sauers, 64. died throughout the valley areas-to­ president, was read and accept­ to have their garbage in'their Aberdeen 67 25 Gooding.- 59-34; Jerome, 58-32; Thcfe are no'survlvors in the at St. Joseph's Hospital in To- day and some scattered showers ed; The croup decided not to alley on Monday, since it is.dif­ Bear Lake 5? 27 B uhl, 55-33. and Boise. 60-34. United States. Rosary will be com a. W ash,, Wednesday aftei are expected this afternoon con­ elect another president until its ficult to tell just what day tho Boise 68- 43 Derby Ends recitm - "All tied,up achy McNeill. Final' ritps will after graduating from Albion Wffi^'pick up limbs and, debris nountains lowering to near .the five areas. These areas include - Fairfield 68 IB afternoon.highs ranged from 64 and the .girls are beat” ; was the bftheld in.the Rupert Cemeter Normalb.School, she taught at which is in boxes. M r. Nelson 4500-foot level by Saturday. Washington Courts. Third Ave­ Gooding 70 41 at Mnlad and 67 at Pocatello to fitting com m ent-m ade by the Friends“ • ‘ all at the Wi BesHn, St. Anthony an d Gilroy. asked people not to set out sacks The outlook for Sunday is for nue West, South P a rk Avenue, Grace 62 34- 71 a t Twin F alls and 68 at Boise, announcer a t the conclusion of MMortuary ortuar, Friday evening and Calif. She .was m arrie d to Paul of ,garbage-tD. be pick'cd up.. — little change cxcept for coolei Blue Lake.< Boulevard, and sen­ Grangeville 72 32 .54 the foiJVth annual Powder Puff Saturday until■ tim e'of services. in the mid-193()s. He died temperatures. The- lows this morning under ior citizen living areas. A.rneet- Hailey 64 33 football game held this week. - 12 year^ a^.- She retired from The highs today w ill be mostly partly cloudy skies ranged from ing w ill be held in each one of Idaho Falls 68 33 The game, scheduled for Oct. leaching school .two years. a.go In the 50s and 60s w ith.low s 20s through the 30s these areas an|d each area will Senior Shows * Jerom e • 71 39 17 a n d postponed due to rain, Ralph Black and has resided in Tacoma sincc tonight 'generally, yn the 30s, to the low 40s In the w tst elect a representative to -the Kim berly . 71 33 ended in a 6 to C tic. The touch­ that time. Mrs. Sauen . . K u n a ' 69 36 downs were made by Glenda council. [ WENDELL-iRalph M. Black, member of the Christfan Science Slides Of Trip Lewiston / 68 45 Lapp for the Dunn Devils and The campaigh will begin Mon­ 75. died Thursday evening at the Church.;- M alad 64 — Magic Valley Hospitals by Susan Turner for Leon’s Li­ day and nearll' all the low in­ S tate Tuberculosis Hospitaij • S h i is'sur-vlvcd-by one daugh­ BURLEY — Brian Baguley, Mountain Home — 44 ons. Coaches for. the. teams come families} in the city will Gooding, of a lingering illness. ter, Stephanie Sauers, Tacoma; _jn of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Bag; ■ Parm a 65 • 38 ‘ w hich were composed o f the be contacted.. He was born June 2, 1894, in two sons, Franklin P. Gwin. San uley, Heyburn. and a senior at Pocatello 6? 54 St. Benedict’s. Jerome Magic Valley Memorial senior and sophomore girls vs, Forkston. Calif. Arrangements Oiegn. rnlif.r nnd_Rfth(»rt r.win, .... '--'I'fiQl'' ghnwpri Rupert 70 42 ______Adm itted Admitted- ...... H tii iM i -p?ni Leepcr Mortu-... lives in the East, ilides of a trip to F inland w hich Salmon B4 29 Jam es O'UonneUi Wendells Willie Boesiger, Dora W. Ni­ were Ben Dunn and Leon Sa Marijii?ina ary, We ideil. Funeral-services will be at 2 the youth took last sjimmer. Soda..Springs 64 29 ;rnest Braun,. Gooding; CMris. chols, Mr.<5. Ralph -Claycomb, Assistant coaches were Rick ■p.m. Monday at the Bergin Fi during meeting of the Burley Twin F alls 72 32 ary Hyde. Jerome; Mrs. Wes- Kecia A. Thornton and Fred A Bendorf and Jeff Tuppcr. oral' .Chapel. Shoshone, with Lions Club. ley_Prouty, Hagerman, and Mrs. Powers, all Twin Falls; Kerry K elly Behrens was crowi VaUey Rev. Jam es Holt. Shoshone Bap­ - The self-organized trip to F in­ F. Dean Jensen, Twin Falls. Kruse and Mrs. Joe William: king during half-time ceremon­ Costs^hootfl tist minister, officiating. Con­ land was narrated by the youth. , Dismissed both FUer; Mrs. Harold Surbev ies w ith D ick Bennett, Dean Bi cluding rites w ill 5e in Shoshone He also took a sido trip to Rus- _ Burley Has Diane Cramer and Mrs. Le id M rs. Jam es W. Cobb, both tey a n d Gilbert Hafen as prii Traffic Courts Cemetery. Friends may call sia. Roy Craig, both Jerome, and Buhl; Mae P. Plumlee, JJey- ces. Sky Hjgh • Jerom e Justice of the Pei . the chapel Sunday ilnti until Eiden Wood spoke on the mu­ Charles Shorse, .Hagerman burn; M ary.E. Rowland.-Wen­ With the cheering section Irving A ltm an fined the follow- tim e of services M onday. sic program In local schools and Gamed 370 Births * dell, and Mrs. John Conway, made up oMhe male portion.o . .WASHINGION-_CUP-I)-=rIht Introduced-a girls’ sextet which .son-wa^born -to-Mr.-and -mg-in Jero m e Justice Court for Shoshone, Ih e ' .student body, the "chccr government said Thursday it! sang several numbers.' M r.— Mrs. Wesley Prouty. Hagerman .speeding; Jollne Olsen, S ll; Dismissed , . leaders” .stopped the "show.” Irive against m arijuan a smug- Robert Rodriquez, $15; and Dan­ Students Oppose Wood Is m usic supervisor for. ;Telepliones lid Richardson. Teresa with their enthusiasm and ant­ jling had made the potent iel Howarth, $25; all Burley; the Cassia County School dis- - Minidoka Memorial Smith. Gladys P. Parham, Mrs. ics. VIexican varietji unavaiiobic at Vernon Cox, J20. Hagerman; trlct. . . • BURLEY ~ Since the first of Admitted Ronald Groeger, George E. Loft- Complete with short skirts and some ixtlnt.i_.Jn_ the United Jack_-Eopc._$J2:,_Rohcrt_>Iew.; Policy On Dress the year Burley has gained 370 Mrs. Pete Martin Jr., Cald­ Is, C lifford Blades^ niW Leo D. flfiwlng tresses7“ th'e cheerlend- Itates and had driven the price m an, .$12; Robert Rice, $15; TWTH MOON ’mAVpLS “ well. - were Jeff Smith, Dean B; ip elsewhere “by as m uch as 100 GLENNS FERR'Y — Student telephones, reports Dean Gib­ McCracken, nil Twin Falls; Larry Barry. S18: and Everett SALT tAKE CnV' (UPI)— Dismissed , cy, Kelly Behrens, J im Pierce, per cent. spokesmen have told members son. manager of the local Moun­ Lawrcnco Griffith. Jerome; Prim. $13, all Twin Falls; Hans Mahd State Treasurer Marjorie Arthur Smythe, Rupert. Mrs.-Winnie E. Howard. Filer; )lck Bennett, G reg NIcUolas of the Glenns Ferry Area" PTA tain Bell Telephone Co. In tho first progress report Kuhleln. $12. tind Herman Ltir- Ruth Moon was to be in Utah IJlrths D cbbra Hutchln.s(mT Dietrich, ind John Boyer. since the crackdown began cuel, $35, bolh*Sun Volley; Lyle ,that they feel present school re­ The company's third quartci today to address n-meeting of . A-daughter was born to Mr. and John W. Copeland, Paul. - . Referees were .Rick-Bendorf, :pt.— 21- along the Mexican- Sim mons. $13. Caldwell; Rod- strictions. on dress and hair results also showed a stend^ in­ Utah ’Democratic women here. and Mrs. Pete Marlin Jr., Cald­ Ron Ciuter, Bill Partin and, -jrder, officials said "the ney M ills. $35, Filer; Wayne styles aro qnfair- crease In telephone usage and well; Mike BSWn. Jock Martin was preferred high-potency Mexican TIngey. $21, Boise; Darlene At a recent PTA nicellng a conversations,-stated Mr. Gib- Cassia Mcifiorial timekeeper. varieties were not available In G launcr, $13, Shoshone; Susan student .panel. Including Karen OUR KNOW -HOW and fion. Goodini; Memorial Admitted New York City and Chicago and Fattig, $14; Wendell; K aren Thompson. Rebby Mes.serly, Ej^perlenee can SAVE S.tatewlde, M ountain Bell In Iti Wallnco Banner, Max Brown. Adm itted "scarce to -very scarcc" in Ploss, $15, Richard Tliompson Bonnie An Messerly, Roy Hull, YOU MONEY! operating area south of tho Snl- Mrs. Reed Vestal, Gwendolyn Roso M . Krieger, Nelda Jean Applications For Kansas City, San Antonio, $41, Ronald Stulilberg, $18, nnt Mike Jones and Jeff Thomas, ninn R iver, now shows a total of DeM ain, and M abel Swendig, all Huntsmnn, Deana Bench, Qrownsviilc, Dallas, Fort Patricia Weiglc, $.15, all Je ­ asked for a student "bo ard of 241,000 telephones. This is an in­ Gooding. George Wcideiher, Tad Zemkc, Worth, San Francisco, Plioenix rome; Raymond Slagcl. $19, Ne­ control’-’ to decide dress TRIMMING, TOPPIKG crease of 9.000 since the end of Births M rs. Thomas J . Matt. M rs. A r­ NROTC Are Due and Philadelphia. vada. hair ienglh, apart from tho atu* 19R8. The number of Idaho tele- thur Schenk and Hugh Allen^ _A_,son_\vna_J)Qrn-lo..Mr. :and - a spot cheek -of-collpge -J'ined by Judge Altman f< dent council. phones has doubled ln- the-pnsi all B urleyi C; Lindsay and Louis REMOVING M rs. Reed Vestal, Gooding. solid line violation were Carmc The students said m any girls For FREE •itlmatoi oiiywherB cnl 10 years. State long distance Schuitr, both Rupert. . In Near Future — jpuses, t h e government DraSiCr- $25, Boise, and Vornt believe that the currently pop­ 600Q or * our claiilfied calls avem Bc around 50,000 pei found Mexican marijuana ai- 10 o< Dismissed Applications for the Navy!s.rc: jnuat.. unavailubic__ a t— Yale, Ske_en, $25, Twin Fnlls, Robert ular -’-pantauUs” would-l)o prof- day. Locnl colls per day numDci Rose M . Krieger, George War- servo officer training program Harvard, the University o! Dewhlfst. Rupert, was fined $2.1 'able school wear, eliminating TOWN & COUNTRY well over a mlllinn.. Open House rell, Mrs. Arthur Johnson and m ust bo received by Nov. 14, California at-Berkley, and the and Clayton Anderson, Boise, worry over sklrt'length. Present TREE SERVICE ‘ Mrs. Quinton Warr, all Burley; •Telephone statistics reflcct n Twin Fails Navy recruiters an- University of California a t Los $35, for basic rule violations. - school policy forbids w earing of (fully insured) Mrs. Donald Chnngdler, Mnlln: communities economic health Angelos. Gertie Pearson, Eden, was pants or trousers, however, the PHONE 733-6088 and growth. Our company .sla- SetTuesilay MrsT nitnn* Hnsselntrom.-Mrs, students said, • The report added that priccH fined $300 b y Judge Altm an for tlsllc .Hhow that most Idaho I.nrry Hall, hoth Paul, and Mrs. ■ n.nk i Air L ines tnul l-'rnnlier ’ Air- ---- SUnSCRfPTION-ltATES --- ir-lR-linrrnnrTtmniTmtcnrtly-tBmn lines hiivc filed n joint apptl.' T IIR TIMF.S-NEWS not 10 tcrminntn the locnl rhnp- Ihlo for tliu conjpany to nuiln- -— ^IQuart^ ^ tcr'n m emher»liip In the Natinii enlioii to the Civil Aentnai ' Twin Falls, Idaho tain year-nroundJct'servlco in Board to liiive Uniteil’s r< nl C»nijrenH of parents nntl Tea- the area through iSvln Falls nnd By Carrier cliors, hut no decision was Iteiween .Salt l ake City and San itlll cnntlnuo tli6 miiiHinur ser- l-rniiclscd, via Ely. lilko nt ' REGAL AQUAGLO Per m onth rcuched. /ieo. llo siild (lurilm the first Runo, Inm slcrreil to V'ronllor, INTERIOR lATEX SATIN FINISH ENAMEt (Dnllv Sunday) leven months of this year Alt By IVInll ' Tho proi)OMe<| "wot Ichsi Went loHt $200,000 on Its mini- calls for Frontier to supply the P a id In Artvonce 6 Trainees Take liner n itra tio n nt tho IliUiey ATTHE SPECIAL (Dallv A Sunday) ulrcrnft atid flight crows on airport. 1 Month ...... nno fllKlit dally In niich direc- P R I C E O F 6 Months ...... Part In Program llernii'ic of ndvnrsn weather, linn, wlille Unltod would con- 9 9 t 1 Y e ar ...... ho said, tho airline was locked tinuo to provida ground faclil- , anti lliii coupon M a il nubscriptlonii nccnptec .Six new trainenn were enroll­ It nf the llalley alrimrt on II lies and porsonnol. only' whero cnrrlor delivery li ed )n the On-'i iie-.1ol>-TralnlnK weekends during tho Inst skiing A s im ilar appllRntlnn between not maintained. progriun In M agic Volley in tin inHtm. . United nnd Air West was rc- past two WPokH, according It During n c|upstlnn period nfier ciintly tiirned dovvn by the CAB. Ken HauinHnrtncr, area direct his lallt, Mr. Cooper was asked or. whnt would hernnm of thn nix- jigarlner also nolod passengnr; tnlnllliiers after- ser­ NQWr TIMES-NEWS throe tralnecH succossfiilly coni- vice In thH area Is discontinued. pieted their training wllliin thusi Me said they would he used o Kie h o u r SUBSCRIBERS .two wei!l(K, along Iho Oregon Coast where New conirncln for trainhm lli« conjpany would'’'lose money DRY CLEANING for servica on workers iiavo linen set wllli slower'' on tho scrvlcu tlini ' Paper Dttllvery .Stcp-Ken Aiilo I ’arts and tile the rasR in this urea, SERVICE . VOLCO WnNhlngton .Slreot North Ail; ,lso was asked about plans son’s., f|toro., , tn got tho,paHS(inKcr« from the NO EXTRA CHARQB Call your carrier T hem ar«i now npproxintnlely TwFn Tallg iilr p r t In the Hailey "SANITONE" BUILDERS IS O JT tniineeH WJirking on ron Knichiim-Sun Valioy area whei or 7?a-:0! 31,; trncis in Ilia Mnuli illoy nron, Iho jot ncrvice ii rinaugui M r. BauntBarlm loid he Thla wUl.Jjo,^n8 nnder . ______iCllW 1-6 SUPPLY -ceired-rorrrsn B-frnnnnn ---- ''Thlt Is a member in h e nallonal goaJs re ie a rc^f/- ^ 'JpoifflaU ont^ b»for» 10 a.m. ori'tundayn Oolao offlco tliU week lUtliift 4« oxplalnoru iJiiin $!,()/)()[ workhorse tasks, leading lo a to maneuver there, Faget said, -Memphis. Tenn. voutd have io-be approved b’y • new era of spaceflight,” Faget ;he trusioes before ihe purchase said. ------kvas made, It would have to be Jle said it could serve determined t|head ofi time— if-' cargo or passenger liner operol- Eye Glasses sufficient funds were available— ing belweon' earth and space Greeii Beret .0 pav for the iteuK statio’^is, perform independent If funds run short in a budg- military of- scjenlific reconnais­ Are Clue In ?ied area. Irustees will be .noli- sance missions in orbit, retrieve Gets Divorce ^'ed. — damaged- unmanned satelliles' The school Iruslees heard and eject robot spacecraft into Tat^Deatlis“ plans for conventions, which In­ •precise orbits. In Mexico clude meetings in Pocatello and Speaking during the final day Snokane. The group approved LOS A N G ELES (U P I)—The of the Sixth Annual American JUAREZ; .-Mexico (UPI)— plans for four delegates from Institute of Aeronautics and killer of actress Sharon Tate and four other persons left a Capt. Robert S. Marasco. 17, the local. county-schooLdisirict___ _ Astronautics meetinR7"F^ B to attend a national meeting at pair-of amber-rinmied eye glas­ one of seven Gi-ecn Berets said development of the craft F IN A L R E H E A R S A L F O R “ Crime on Goat Islan d” fitfdS Sunday. It Is the first production b y .th e .C S I dram a depart* Atlantic Citv, N. J. ses at the scene of the mass chargcd by the Army with ' would be "a m aiv. engineering director H . P a ul Kliss, left, giving instructions to Leah Gels- ment this fall. Performances tonight and Saturday are at 8 m urdering a Vietnamese double K irby Wilson,- district trans­ .-task.” Space ofnciaJs.hope to m urder, polfce revealed Thurs­ ster and J(m Hackney. Hie drama-opens (onfght at the Col­ p.m. and the Sunday performance will be a matinee at 2 p.m. agent, was granted a final, portation supervi.sor, was au­ have such a vehicle operating day. lege of Southern Idaho Fine Arts Center and will run.through quickie divorce Thiirsdaji from thorized to attend d November j)etective Lt. R obert Holder, In- the mid-1970s. his wife of six years. transportation conferenca in " I f the design Is deficient the man in change of the Phoenix, Ariz. • either as a rocket, entry vehi­ investigation, told a news M arasco appeared with his Mcxican lawyer, Jose Maria Trustees decided lo investigate cle -or--airplane, -its payload CQnrerence_.police have_ been Drama Season At CSI Starts Tonight the legality of paying mileage • Buhl Theatre Q u e f e ^ . His complaint citec carrying ability {and economy) able'to reconstruct from the to-members-driving-to-board-- ' probably would suffer greatly," glasse.s a sketchy portrait of "incompatibility of character," departure from the norma! meetings from oulslde the city. Faget said. the murderer. With Production “Ciime On Goat Island” They agreed to allow seven When pul Jn place for launch- Slates Annual JuarC7. divorce complaint. Mos He is probably a man complaints simply charge "in cents per m ile if the legaj ad« . Ing, Faget said, the space between 20 to 40 years old. He By MRS. MARSHAL^ If BARON plays is not an easy one, but for his work in this production. compatibility.” visor for the board finds that sKutde would stand 225 feet and has a small head and one of his The drama season at*the Col­ the expressiveness of her-voice, The play moves well most of such payments are proper. weigh'2.5 million • pounds. It ears is about a quarter of, an Meet Monday Mrs. Marasco did not appear lege of Southern Idaho begins relaxed rhythmic movement tho time, ll ie only comment would 16ft 25,000 pounds into or- inch lo\ver’than the other. He is Her husband presented a with the production of "Crime of her body or an arm in ges­ which m ight be made in a nega­ -btr--- extremely nearsighted. , B y H L — F ifth annual meel^ certificate showing they were On Goat Island” Ijy the contcm- ture all contribute to her suc­ tive fashion is that the first act • The two-stage vehicle would Helder said there were some ing of the Antique F e s t = " ' t^nrried April 27, 1963, in porary Italian'plJjiwright^ Ugo cess in this part. has a few slow places, but by look like a pair of airliners — fingerprint smudges on the Theaire is planned for 8 Jersey City. N,J. They have no Betti, Vf- .. . Friday evening these will prob­ glasses, but - no identifiable Dop, Grflybiil \Vho takes the Monday at the R and R. - children. The, play it.self is most Jnter, role of ‘‘Angelo’’ surely deserves ably be up to the pitch of the Two iruslees^vill-be-eleeted '*ridge.s".... inve.stjgators could The Army' recently-dismissed esting. It is surely not a murder considerable praise since he rest of (he production. ' — jse to trace their owner. to the theiitre board, accomp­ chaVge.s against the s ""' mystery in the usual sense, and took over this demanding part A ir Force The. glasses were Intact, no The .set a n d 'lig h tin g effect* lishments of the past six years Green Berets, because to tell much of the plot would only two -weeks ago. surely deserve mention. The set will be reviewed and plans dis' bloo^was found on them and Central Intelligence Agency spoil the subtle suspense which Leah Geissler, who plays FLOWERS & G inS there was no hair caught in the is interesting ■ because of its •cussed for future theatre activ­ refused to let its agents testify is generated almo.st from the 'Pia,” and Cathy Gilbert, in JOEL & CON PETERSON rames. Holder said they were beautiful simpliclty_and the im­ ities which w ill contribute to the at their proposed courtmartial. Missile the role of " S ilv ia ." complete a o j SHOSHONE ST .1.- 'one of the kcj» pieces of beginning lines. pression it creates of stone educational, economic and cul­ Marasco, of Rutherford, N.J.. Suffice it to say that the stage the cast of principles. Both of PHONE 733-3141 evidence” in the murders, but structures without being blalani tural growth of the area. was discharged from the Army s occupicd b y four principle these young women play their he would not elaborate except in its proclamation of stonii\css. John' M. Barker, chairman nine days ago. He received an Plan Probed :haractcr.Sj three women and a parts very well. Tho fifth char­ will conduct the short business W HERE to say no murder weapons had The sets were designed and con honorable discharge. man. This kind of dram a, wilh acter is seen only bricfJy sCructcd by the D ram a 51 class nieecing. Special speakers wil FLOWERS CONVEY been found. ^W ASHlNGinN (IIPT) - Thf>.. the first and last j^ t s . The a Police~sliir ^lich eronom y in number a t_ C S L Lighting was done by include D r. Terry Smith, dean Air Force is seekmg permis­ ‘ittt-Waekni " -hr^edi of the College ot tjomneni Ida­ For the macabre slayings Aug. 9 -GARDEN CITY. N.V. CVPH SYMPATHY sion to test fire its minuteman iring off successfully than a tho role of "A duardo,” and Rose Skrudland was in charge ho; M rs; vie (ioorizcn,- laano at the Benedict Canyon estate —Vice PresIdenfSpiro Agnew' missiles minus warheads — production wilh numerous char­ when he is on stage in the -first Department of Commerce nnd leased by Miss Tate and..her of coslumos, The costumes a teen-age daughter, K im , want­ LOVE and from Montana, across tho west­ acters. In dra m a there is, in­ act, he com mands the audien­ not elaborate, but they arc com. Development, and Jo Ann Ben husband, Roman Polanski. ed to tr\arch in a demonstration ern slates and Into tho Pacific deed. often, safety in numbers. ces’ entire attention. pleiely appropriate. David Bol­ singer, administrotive director ‘‘It could be almost any­ on moratorium day but be > FONDEST Ocean. The present production is very The play is being directed by ster is stage m anager. of the Idaho Commission on the thing," the detective said. "If refused to let her. it was The chances of a missile ac successful for several reasons, Paul Kliss and is his first pro­ "C rim e On Goat Island’’ will and Humanities. we could pinpoint a motive, reported Thursday. MEMORIES cldentally falling short of its Dne obvious reason i.s the mn. duction for CSI. M r. Khs.s ha.s i)e presented for Ihe public in m embers, .subscription, we'd be halfway home." target and hurting someone, ac­ ure understanding which An­ made his mark both as an actor three performances, Tliere will sustaining, corporate, patron Holder said it was his opinion SPECIAUSTS cording to Air i^orce calcula­ drea Parenteau brings lo her and director In the area, lie he 8 p,m . performances tonlghl and scholarship donors, have FJNEST the.killcr.lost.tho glasses while ______I N _____ tions, is 1 In 10,000. ’The odds of role as^^'AgataT^'The role "she must—bo “highly" complimented voting'prlvllcgcs'andtheTroblic SkAC»e The underblilder was the ageni Energy Coniniission’s Nevada w ith Pre.'tidenl Nixon. hlained for tho nation'H drug . . SIke.i predicted Ihnt If the for an iinonymous prlvitU tc.Ht Him was killed when hit on problem. The real bliime, Ihe Bdniinlslration ever' sent the collector. Tho galleries hac Iho head by an HO-foot length of .iflld, rnsl.^ on Ifip .plan to Congress It would gen- estimated the value of the stone plpo while working In nn under­ at WOfl.tKW. . ground shaft hero 'ITiursjIny. government, which "hasn't erato a '‘jimlor ABM dispute,” done its Jo b." i Kenmore would An A E C spokesman snid Ihc whether Cartier would use the victim , Howard W, Ison, 2B, fitt>ne as a display piece o Blast Aimed At M ercury, wn.s working 1,000 whether It iiad been purchasec feet undergrnijnd when the ac> CONSTIPflTEDO for n client, Ho fi«lcl, however cldent occurred. DUC TO LACK OF FOOD E Agnew Following that the 'stone >vnuld henceforll atlLK IN YOUR DIET ■ hn known as' the Cartier Tlio spokesman *nld tho sec- TRY^ Diamond, TWnny A Co.. a rival floH rif pipe, VA IftcJics in dirt- Muskie Criticism rifth Avcnuo ^Irm, has long meter, was being lowerrd Into displayed a yellow diamond tlin phaft when It slipped and WASHINGTON- (UPI) —Sen. fcll...hllllna_,lson, . ■ fSiophen YnimR, ^D-Ohto, said known bs.U iq ..Tiffany_DIamond. -11iursday-Vio«-Presid?nt-Kplro T. Agnew flpporenlly had come down wllh flomi) violent form of Itmif and mouth dlHeiiHe,” Young and several other senntors Joined In MCorinK Agnew’s outburst against .Sen, AVhirlpool D R Y E R S Hdm unil S. M uskie, D-Mnine, nnd his sharp criticism of • Cutiom Dry fonitol > Spfclolly datlgriaii lo Qlvt )Q rnlnulat ol (Opj rinwn ol antiwar ilcmiinsirators, 'llie • TiinibU Putt'S Conliftl '( (or no-lrotl trir* .vico proxldunt conlertdrd Muh> * 3 Ii«lec11oiii (or (uop«r 1(1 of kle was playing ‘'Rtis»lnn dtylng |1 ‘ TouloUe" wllh the natlnniil > S CY'(i>i ptnvlili III* ilglil ^ Sr>ncl«iiti(in«nt p'BM Icihriri t 1) )l*»i latcrnl ' half »n testing

\ ROWLAND EVANS AND ROBERT NOVAK. “^ixon Vetoed Those Moratorium Plans M agic Valleu*8 Borne Newspaper WASHINGTON President who denounced the whole Mora* designed to put the President House and dcciare his own sup­ With whites substantially out­ Nixon emphatically rcjcctcd a torium idea as having originat­ on (he side of those wanting port for a "day of commitment" numbering Negroesxjp-the voter Friday, O C T 0^24 ,1969 PhjQNE 733*0931 series of proposals from Repub­ ed in. a Com m unist confercnce the quickest possible exit from to peace.' That should be follow­ rolLs even after passage of th« lican Senators aimed at easing in East Berlin, advised the Pres­ Vietnam, without endorsing ed, said Schweiker, b\i a Pres­ 13G5 Voting Rights Act. ..this Al WESTERGRCN T>^O^^^S HOWABD ' O. A. (Gu»» KEl«R , , WHEY DOOM ' idential address to the nation would Insure a victory by white ' Anluonl 10 the Publiiher Edilcr Ac

FORMER JUDGE DIES House Votes MOSCOW (UP!) _ Jack F. SamuerBeckett Winner 0£ VIcQuade, 60.' form er District Court Judge for Latah Countjw died here - W ednesday after a Nobel Prize For Literature Disputed ;ong illness, . it was learned' Thursday; STOCKHOLM e writer-phllosopher, who befwccn the one-year J-l.D This is the address of my fives in F’rance ^nd has written billion house bill and the two- new State Farm office — ir $6.4 billion extension of mainJy in French .since W orld whore I con better serva Deep In Mine War II, has been a candidate fsing. programs voted by the you with the best in auto, senate earlier. for several years. I'fe and fire insurance_. MULLAN,. Idaho (UPI) - D r. K arl R agna r Gierow, -Weicker. who recei\-ed bipar­ The m angled body of Francis permanent secretary- of the tisan ‘supfxirt. snid his plan ^jurinlco. 40. a veteran of 16 Swedish .A cadem y, .said Beck­ would put "human renewal” • years' of underground mininfj. into the urban renewal pro­ ett made a name for himself •...was recovered Thursday from "in the space of three years” THE IDAHO WING OF THE Civil Air Patrol has won three work and search and rescue work In evaluation by the Air gram. Rep. Thomas Ashley. D- iyider tons of debris caused by Ohio, one of the opponents of through five works. He cited of the top trophies in (he Rocky Motetain Region of the CAP, Force. The missing trophy went .to Col. George Forschler, a rockburst .in the -Lucky F ri­ the novel "M o lloy” (1951), Its and two of the trophies arc viewed nere. On the left Is Ma]. Burley, commander of (he Idaho Wing of the CAP. It is a the plan, said it would not only day Mine.near here. upset 2,GOO' proposed urban sequel “Malone Meurt” (Ma­ Albert Decarla and with him Is Maj. Hans Forschler. The personal trophy and Is given to the top commander in the renewal proJect.s but " it will Murinko. a widower with a lone Dies), the same year, the Idaho wing won trophies for top performance in civil defense Rocky Mountain Region annualljr. married daughter and eight play “En Atfendent Godot" ruin, it will end the urban other children, was~smashcd by (Waiting for Godot) and two renewal program as we kno>v it today," the rockburst caused by un­ novels in 1953, "L ’lnnommable” A p p ro v a l even pressures in the mine (The Unnameable) and "Watt." Legislature Authorized $10.5 Million In VERL HECHAM walls at the 3,250 level of the f i l m ,S H 0W IN 0 O K ’D Like fellow Dubliner Joyce, WASHINGTON. (UPI)-A mine Tuesday afternoon. His Beckett -s peaks- a lm ost -exclu­ BOISE'^UPD — Ada County '31-ycar-cld brother, 'Michael,' bill that would-aUow people^ 2rosccutor Ellison. .Matthews sively through his works. to look' irito the' files kept narrowly escaped. DHicit Spending!, Auditor Tells Soldns said today he would not Inter­ He lives in Paris with his on them by credit rating ® STATE FARM Rescue crews had worked French wife but only intimate fere with screening o f the movie bureaus won the Senato "C an dy" in- Bol.se so long as INStJRANCS COMPANIES around the clock since the acci­ friends and his publisher know, By RICHARD CHARNOCK tor for the Burcau-of*PublIc Ac­ mittce his preliminary findings Banking Committee’s unani­ dent o n ' the -slim hope that his address. He rarely talks tor counts criticized internal con­ indicate there is virtually no in­ theoters did not violate* Idaho's MOSCOW, Idaho (UPI) -Tlie mous approval Wednesday. laws on obscenity. M urinko m ight be found alive. publication. ' trols on the Permanent Build­ ternal control cxercised in the The measure, which now legislature appears to have au­ aclminlstratlon of the Perma­ Murinko had gone to work ing Fund in a preliminary fis­ pocs to the full Senate, was thorized $10.5 million worth of nent Bu/iding F und. He said at Lucky Friday slightly more cal audit he is conducting. mspired by the disclosure deficit spending on public build­ M ilford Keeney told the there Is a definite need for im­ than a m onth ago after spcnd- Fii’m Reports ings, an auditor told an interim "that people have been turn­ . ing 16 years working for the proved bookkeeping and ac­ ed down for credit and for committee Thursday. counting procedures, in addition Sunshine M ining Co. In M ullan James A. Defeabach, Legisla­ ‘ ompl.oyment on the basis of and at Butte,- M ont., and EU’ to improved financial report: Missing tive Post Auditor, told the Fis­ Inaccurate information kept reka. U tah. ‘ . Food Additive and a need for more detailed by the nation’s'2,200 private­ cal Budget Committee tiie law­ Instructions In legislative ap­ * He is survived by three makers have authorized $22,5 ly operated credit agencies. brothers an d three sisters and propriations. million of construction but will his nine children. His wife died Securities have only $12 million in revenue May Face Ban thus past sum m er at Butte. to pay for it. M urinko's body was taken NEW YORK (UPI)—More "S o in effect the legislature to nearby Wallace pending fun- than $13 million In negotiable has over-appropriaied,” Defen- For .Effects Cosmonauts Explain Decision crpl arrangements. U.S. Treasury bills- were - (Includes Previous) reported missing Thursday bach told tho committee- and he from the m ain offices of the questioned whether this is legal. NEW YORK (UPI)-Movc niinrnntO«» T niSt Co, “You have appropriated an over cyclamates, here comes Against Cape Kennedy-Visit A trust company spokesman .....OUia wUIlIi n ill ubHgate-tjte- ,HOOC r-CH(W42.)—C H 2CH2COO- Na. Ked Team Is said the company had informed 1971-73 session of the legisla- HOUSTON (UPI)-Two visit­ wore meant to dock to make an ture,’’ Defenbach'said. "I ques­ banking and law enforcement T hat’s the formula ing Russian .cosmonauts said orbiting space station. authorities that $13,194,000 was tion whether that appropriation monosodium glutamate, (MSC5) Thursday they skipped a sched­ After the news confererice, Honored At discovered missing during the is legal.” a food additive prevalent in uled visit to Cape Kennedybo- Defenbach urged -the com tho cosmonauts left for An* company’s regular auditing baby food un^ "Chinese” food. causo they had no authority to aheim, Calif. They made mlttee to seek an attorney p«-n- One researcher-reported Thurs­ procedures Tuesday. invite American' astronauts to couple of whirlwind flights eral’s opinion on the question. day it causes .brain lesions* in Lodge Fete Earlier this month, $600,000 their launching ground. Wednesday—to the moon and to high denomination notes disap­ His recommendation was one nf test nnimals. eight resfulling from n m anage­ The admission came at _ tho top of the Astrodome. HANSEN — The winning Red peared from the Wall Street Sometimes called Sodium news conference at the manned offices of Chase ment audit conducted on Ida­ glutamate, MSG is a white, or Tho moon flight was slmulat* Team was honored by members ho’s Permanent Building Fund, space center by M aj. Gen. cd, but tite Astrodome voyage of the losing Green Team at Bank but were recovered' last nearly white powder which i.s GeorgI>( Beregovoy and scicn- I M contim e,. ri m anaging audl- very soluble In water ond was the real thing, ..complete a “Payoff" dinner at the Wood­ week. 11 s t cosmonaut Konstantin possesses a mcatllke taste. It Is with the famous scoreboard men Hall as a result of the last Feoktislov, who are toitring-Uie widely-used-to-enhonee-natural which— paid— homage -to—tho — BiK-month’a-contcst by-the-Mod» U n « ^ ” Stdfes: visitors with a couple of c m W oodmen Lodge rifle teams. food flavor and Im part m eat Use Of-Jawbone’T ^niique flavor to foods. “ "This Is the bcglnnlng-phase animated routines.-One of them Lydia M a c Pyron with a score of the establishment of rela­ depicted an argument between of 280'points and Norvillo Rey­ Just five days after'the sugar substitute cyclamate \vas or­ tions between the United States an umpire and baseball mana* nolds, with a score of 272 points, ami' tho -Soviet spacemen,' gcr. were honored w ith gifts os the dered off .shelves by Ja n . l ”by Smooths Inflation Controls Feoktistov said. "You under­ The cosmonauts attended best Individual contestants dur- the federal fiovornmcnt. Dr. John OIney' of St. Ix uis stand that In tho first stage we private dinner Wcdne.sday night Jn/j Ihe sJx month'.s contest. He wont on lo relnlc Ihnt the WASHINGTON (UPI). -A reported the same dosogc . would like to Dilhcre to the with their Am erican hosts, CoJ, Plans were m ade for the winter practice of calling pi'ople’r sharp- controversy hns arisen MSG used In baby food principal of mutuality. and Mrs. Frank Borman. ficason contest. ____ ovor—w hothet-Pxesidcnt Nlxflli nttention to their greediness, "Gen. Beregovoy and I don’t Joe Hill whs e1ecVcd presT3cnT producod=braln-damngQ-Jn_UL is, o r is not, "jaw bonin g" In his and appealing lo them (o help test mouse. Tiave tho authority fd Invito of the Modern Woodmen Lodge; curb Inflation by being less efforts to curb inflation. The Washington University American astronauts t BANK CALL ISSUED James Bennett, vice president; WASHINGTON (UPl) —Th« In last week'.i radio address selfish, became known researcher, whir«—Is__.<«udyinp launching grounds and that's M rs, Rofl-u-Nuckols, secretary. housewives, or whomever ''jawboning." why ■ we did not have the federal government today or­ Jack Nuckols and Mrs. Minorva under a National Institute nf chanced to bo listening, Nixon "The jawboning technique M ental Health grant, reveoled ■ lity to accept your dered the nation's banks to .Smith, judges. New team cap­ repudiated the Jawbone as on hns been used by a numl>er of Invltnllon to Cape Kennedy.' report on their financial condi­ tains named were Mrs. Mnry his findings nn N n C ’.s Huntley- anti-lnflatlon weapon, sajJng his U,S, presidents,'' he said, "F o r Brinkley report. Tho Russians said the only tion as of the close of business . .'j:ruscoit,.Rcd..TA!nm . nnd Nnr- ndinlnlstratlon.was.using back­ instance, John F. Kennedy used westerner ever to visit their Oct. 21. , villo Reynolds, nrecn Team. D r. Olney said bah\» food bone Instead. it in his confrontations with the cnmpanies would be using "bad main launch site was Gen. ___Nuw-tcam.-membcra were cho- n uf Irt n- flprech—to— iha sLccL-Jnduslry. and l.yn,ilQr\ J\ judgmoDt^^— if— thoy— continued Chorlcs dc. Gnullc of.Frnncc, . World Isljind— |n tho name ■'seii,' Women’s National Democratic Johnson used to ixilster tiie putting-M.SOHn their products During their first U.S. news sometimes used when rcfcrrlni At the, evening's shoot after woge-price guidelines laid down conference, the Russian cos­ lo the combined land mass the dinner, the Kcd Team w Club Ihls week, economist wlthnij^ further research. W alter W . Heller insisted by his administration." “ I ’ve treated a num ber nf monauts did not mention the Eurasia and Africa. hiph with 391 points to win ov . I said, "W hat liapprns if moon once. They chose Instead the Green Team with 37r> pnliits. Nixon’s letter tirging huainoss spccles of rxperimental animals and lalw r lenders to i use labor and business lemlers don’i n the perlixl of infancy and to mention tho earth, sun, K ach had nine mcmhers parti' respond to presidential Jawbon­ planets nnd nlnrs. I1ic Soviets clpntlng; rcHtrnint was .a form of I’ve found H\lllior do not publlciru in advance the oott, Slinron Trusrott and ft^rs. cxactly?" 1 naked. from .Sliito Insurance Connnls- launching nnd programs ’of Idaho Slot* lnip«cllen Simbn #1 Cine Wooch, lielnR for third with ■•Jawboning is nn economy Reminder Given sloncr l.ouis Mastos, claiininp mIsslonK. Itils Iradltlonal ap­ * Motor Tuna.up * Dialiit .scores cach of *13. theory that gets Its name from ho fniuduU'ntly mlsapproprint- proach to tho problem Is rather * AllQnrntnl * flalnnclng Dr. 1-ester P. Jawbone, a 17ih : siiosiioNn: mw oiticcrfi pd 7,000 nhnres of stock which unusual to you." century English banker wlio hero are nlerting tho public lo wcTo the company’H principal Tho Russians said Ihe recent 417 M a in E. 733-8213 Change Is Asked believed ' that Inflation was the need fur rniiiiwal of their nsser. Soviet troika space nhots never caused by greed,” my friend vehicle in.spectlnn cortiflcatcH replied, i with recent cItiillonH for I h c On Listing Of i said, “ If ,ho|l>eUevPd Infla­ lupse of tim e on the Inspection tion wan cuuncd' b y greed, did period. ££ CHOOSY ABOVT YOVR COMFORTI ho Iwllevo depresnlons were Tho pnlrolmen have l)een Candidates caused by philanthropy?" making check on tho ccrllflcntc! A story In Wednesday'!! “ No, ho believed depressions for the past month now iin< If tho Inspections worn inui)ompering-gently-firm— gentli CIk also l«llcved the peonio whose was good for thu entlro...y£nr Tills Is not correct, It wns greed wnn cnuninB Inflation did byi.A_z£silifintLlAyfiSjQL of IDIli), but thnt is not neces' reported, not rcallfo they were being Soalyfoom'S*. Booply The Citizen's Commltlc® U greedy. (inrlly tho case. Tliey are fiooc(>uncll. In econnmlcfl,*' m y friend said.

EASY GEORGE vyONENBERG;, DDS TERMS Has Opened NeW; Offices A T / • Call your local FREE 338 BLUE LAKES BLVD. NO. TWIN FALLS 733-5452 WARBERG'S CUSTOMER MOVINd & STORAGI agint 733>737\ ' PARKING 204 Ma in a v e n u b north PHONB 733-7111 ( T1m8i»Ne'iws, T w in Fall*, Idaho * F riday,-O ctober-24 ,1969— In basic hom em aking skills, OOier Items assigned to various Survey Says Car Coats members to .locate Indude a Lindsay Leads .sofa, twin sized bed and mai- tress, sewing m achine, washer . MiUionQuil; NEW YORK (UPI) — In­ Are Needed and dryer. cumbent Mayor John V. Donations • of "w hite ele­ Lindsay who has reportedly phants" ar(/ needed for prizes . Smoke Habit said he Is a n underdog in At Jerome to be given at the Special Edu­ his re-election bid. holds cation carnival slated at-/Jef­ an Impressivi^ lead In the* By CRAIG A. PALMER .'j’EROME' — Children's cloth ferson school. S aturday.'T heso— ■ mayoral race, according to ing and car coals of all sizes Items may bo left at HOPE. W ASH IN G T O N (U P I) , first results of a straw vote new’ government report scl;^ arc urgently needed at the Outgrown and used toys also conducted by the' New Y ork h o p e building on_ West Main are needed and they will be re­ dulcd to bo issued in-several Daily-News. — ------weeks >yiil show a million ini Jerome. paired to be given- a w a y at ’ • The. poll, w hich'has ibeen Bedding also is urgently need­ Christmas time. Americans quit smoking In wrong only three times In 196S. It ><111 also disclose more ed, Including sheets, pillowcases Mrs. Sloat said mOre workers Its 41-year history, showed and blankets, reports Mrs. J. E. are needed and anyone interest­ young persons are. declining to Lindsay polling 44 per cent take up the hnbit.- Sloat. newly elected president ed in donating a few hours of of tho-vote, Democrat M ario of. the. volunteer organization time and talent should contact The report, to be. Issued by A. Procacclno with |}3 per the departm ent of Health, whose Initials stand for "H elp her or any of the officers. centT Republican Jo h n J . Other People Everywhere." Education and Welfare, will be M archi with 20"per cent and based on "Census Bureau _Mrs^Ed-StocktonJs-vJcc.pr.e5k ■"Ihreo per cent unaecided: questions directed at house­ dent: Mrs. Lyon Sm ith, secre­ ENDS SATURDAY! holds across the country. HEW tary, and Mrs. Gevevieve Waite declined to issue the detailed Is treasurer. | "The perfomianc* that' »heuld (indinps ahead of time, but Officers said H O P E members have won tha ojcaf for Vonona orriciais con fin ned the results. Manpower have voted to purchase a full RedQtave for tbs Beit Actteii of It -found thatm ore than one length mirror and a toaster for lis Year." — Vincent Conby, N.Y. Tim'ai iTjillion m en an d women the Special Education classes smoking last year and which n ^ d equipment for train- .-women smokers are less Lack Gted VANESSA Inclined to quit than men. REDGRAVE According t'o the latest HEW In ff/jurcs, the percentage of the In Mining House Committee populatlon_:^17_and.,.older-who “ THE LOVES smoko declined from 39.6 In SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)- A Votes To Forbid ' 19S6 to 39.1 in 1957 to 37.7 in lack of manpower “from muck­ V 19(58. ers to'companji presidents” was OF ISADORA” - The new HEW report will cited Wednesda_y as the biggest Job Influence com plem ent findings of the problem facing the m ining In­ Doer* Optn 6;'45 Agriculture department, which dustry in the United States. • WASHINGTON (U P I)— The Showi at 7>00 t 9,30 said in its quarterly publica­ TIMES-NEWS A ERIAt picture shows changes taking place Thursday. The new structure Is in the center of the picture. Hollis M. Dole, assistant Sep>- House' Post Office Committee Adullt 1.75 • Child .7S- tions Tobacco • Situation last in the industrial area west of South Park, The Longvhsw Fibre Union Pacific railroad tracks are at the left and the building retary of the Interior for mln- voted Thursday to prohibit month that cigarette use per erat-affalrs, made the comment Co. box plant Is the latest structure to rise in the section and at the right arc those of the .Haney Seed Co. congressmen, other politicians person is on the decline. building wails were being placed when thls-plcturo Tvas taken before a board of governors and state officials from trying 'T he sm oking age populatfon m eeting at the closing session to Influence the appointm'ent of STARTS SUNDAYl la increasing," It said. "But if the. American M ining Con^ postmasters. increasing cigarette prices and ^ress. As a result of dwindling The move to take i»litics out the smoklng-health publicity Viet ‘Hawks’ Admit Their Cause Seems Mission Fails ~manpower, he’said, the United of the Post Office came as the c APbllO 11 FLIGHT. Now a re reducing cigarette use per States may be forced to import committee continued drafting a ■ person a n d possibly lim iting the CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)- m inerals normally m ined In the postal reform bijl behind closed --- number-of-smokers.’-!— ----- “jbURNEY.TO THE Hopeless As Escalation Plea Backfires Tlie failure of-a-S25-million • lountry---- -...... — • . doors.— The —panel r hopes - to FAR SIDE OF Tobacco Situation said ci­ satellite mission designed to "Y o u do not have m etals or complete action on the bill in garette consumption per person pave the way for advanced mineral materials unless you tim e for Congress to vote on it THE SUN-' 18 and older this year Is By DANIEL RAPOPORT his nam e. Haiphong. Tower’s fellow hard­ weather and communica­ lavo mines,” said Dole. "And before the end of the year. estimated a t 2.5 per cent below WASHINGTON (UPI) - Morton, who doubles as liners greeted his call' with - Starring . . . Republican national chairman, deadening silence. tions spacccraft has bwn there Is a m ajor • shortage of 1968 w hen 4.165 cigarettcs (209 -lawks are no longer fly' qualified men today in the min­ ROY THINNES IAN HENDRY formation over Capitol said he signed the letter What has happened to most blam'ed on a misbehaving HAS SURGERY packs) were smoked. ing Industry, in the U.S. Bureau LYNN LORINO They are alive and well, reports without realizing it was some­ of the hawks? Why haven’t they space radiator. GLENNS'FERRY — Wayne •'This w oild be' about the of Mines and in the U.S. Geolog­ one, but they have given up thing less than a complete been hoard from very much The radiator was added as Bostic has entered a Boise hos­ same rate of decline as last ical Survey. >pe on Vietnam. endorsement of Nixon'’s pe?ice recently? Rep. F. Edward a n im provement to an .appli- pital for car surgery. Mrs. Bos­ year when consumption fell 2.2 "%is^ng_recrultlng programs per cent." the publication said. Hislory_may_xecord as thcjr H ebert. E>-La.._____proud_mer -cations- technology-satellite tic w lll.be In Boise while he is last flight an ill-starred sortie a ABoiit a week previously, Sen7 ber of the fraternity, explains . re overly Inadequate, from hospitalized. f/Jr. Bostic runs the ATS5 launched Aug. II. But muckers to company presidents. few days ag o In which 14 House Jo hn G . Tower, R-Tex., said this w ay: West End Conoco Station here. once the spacccraft reached We need to close the personnel members urged President Nix­ that If the other side did not "I pave up hope a long time 3 Suspects orbit, officials said Thurs­ gap for the future." on to order a "sudden and respond positively to adminis­ ago. The w ar has been lost. It day. the cooler dfsrupted major escalation” of the war. tration diplomatic moves the w as lost by, M r. M cN am ara"— Dole blamed "public attitude' J=IRST TIM E TONIGHTI ATSS’ff balance and started for placing Increased pressures Originally 15 signed a letter to United States should resume referring to former defense its tumbling out of control. Would Take the President but Rep. Rogers bombing North Vietnam—in­ secretary Robert S. McNama' on. m ine operators through pas­ C. B.--MQfton, -R-Md., withdrew cluding Hanoi and the port of sage" of mine, health and safety bills and reclamntion hills. As Ti^uth Test a result, he said, U.S. mines SWEDEN... AVCO EMBASSY have begun to suffer from a .where The PICTURES C HICAGO' (U P D —Three of lack of manpower. Facts OFLife the “Chicagoj E i| M " say they "The public attitude Is forcing Kuhwii tfl lie detector ,re-Sicaj _ tests to prove the testimony prosecution -witnesses false lie is unaware of the technical ThorrFictionl the conspiracy riot trial Inio problems Involvqd , in getting HEAVEN . violence at the 1968 Democratic minerals out-of the ground and National Convention. Into production. R ennie Da.vis, Abble Hoffman ^ H E L I i ■ and Jerry Rubin made the offer Thursday after an Infprmerj-an TRY THIS FORIUNCHI • ' acquaintance of some, ofth« FRENCH DIP SANDWICH defendants in N N*w «w YYork ork Cltii,Clf but on the ]payroll " 6T the“ I. BureaulU-oi-lnvestigatioQ __ ___,90c- — testified. Louis Salzberg, a presa • Exotic Tahlllan OrlnV hotographer,—said he_heard • Co)de» Boer In Town ?bm Hayden urge a-meeting in New York in march of 1968 to O ^ou'iTood go to Chicago In August' of 1968 Flib & Chlpt • Chicken -forlhe..purpose of ‘ -up Shrimp * Finger Sieaki the convention." Saleberg said he received ORDERS TO GO! about $10,000 tn pay and cxoenses from the F B I since FOR FINE FO O D A N D 1967. W hen he aoproachcd the T H E H O S T . defense table to identify Hayd-' t AN EVENING OF REVOIUTIOKARY on, It seemed In the disclosure ‘ ENJOYMENT MOST PERMISSIVE he was an F B I agent surprLtcd SET SAIL FOR LIFE-STATE IK THE WORLD! and angered by the defendants. •'Quite a lot down, 1-ouis. Wilfln ind Oificted by LUI6I6CATTINI *rhot»gfvMbr CUlUDtO fim* Uusie ^ RERO UMIliWU We're disappointed In you," _HMiiWbytDm0mD0«rAKAyMEVWSSTrLtf-|NCOCfiR^"'‘ g ^ j ^ ^ ^ ^ said D avid Dclllngpr. •'Oink, THE CO-VE .oinki" said other defehilants, — “After - Salkbtrg - IcsllfledT” !)®- v is, Jloffm nn 'a n d Rubin told newsmen a t their dally news EVER HEARD OF A 50 mile an hour house? Well, now you ot Twin Fails. Tlio homo belongs to Dr. Robert Monroe. Tho conference that IR of the homo was moved safely at high speeds on tlio Interstate BON Ce.HII aeo one. It is a four bedroom homo with a two-car garago “Thi Tau(habl«t'* n m o l government’ s 18 proseculinn botwcon Meridian and Twin Fails, olflclals Raid. Tlio speed attached an d measures 28 by 60 feet, B uilt by the Bnlso Caif* Deart Open Ai43 witne-sses should take lie cade Corp. In Meridian, it was hauled through Twin Falls was reduced when It got Into tho city limits of Twin Falls dctector tests, and they offered Wednesday lo Its permanent location a mlio and a half south Wednesday'artomoo‘'n. There woro'cscorts ail.tUo way.— to do the .same. Theiiiu threeuiiirv produced iiruuiiuuu na copy lifm n column hy Chicago Today Wahot 1 1 Tinnkeepers 1 T»Request . TUESDAY to n ig h t a n d s a t. o n ly GATES OPEN 7:00 P.M. iskliajflkj GATES OPEN 7:00 P.M. State Travel Commission CE@D] . RatlrUlcd la ptrtoni under 16 PHONi 733-3928 PHONt 733-6236 Eoil on U.S. 30 le fadland Drivi R» unltit a«atnponlid by parvnli. W.il »n U.S. 30 10 Orandvliw Or. THE ACTION STARTS AT 7:48 NIQHTLY nOl.SE (UPI) — Tlio-ldiiho Incomplete knowledKc of tho In­ A T 9:45 NIQHTLY Mississippian Innkoeper.s A-ssoclntion, con* dustry.'’ Soo-Big. Soo G re ftw e mu8t stay open one more w eekend. . . ccrni-il over’ .stiitcinciit.t, from Hand said tho aHsoclatlon was TO PLAY THE T —^ Still In Hospital Coninicrco anil Devol also concerned over report.s of Secretary Al Mlntoiu.jiroi>osod personnel loiivinj{ tho Depart­ bic^ 3 An Olivo Branch, Miss., resi­ Friday that the IU70 l.cghluturo ment of Commerce and Duvel* dent rem ains In fair condition cstiihlisli a coniplOtely Inde- o pm ent and • rep'orlH that re- at M agic Valley Momorlnl Hos­ peiulcnt Travel Cnmmlssion, Hoarcli dollar!! available were pital of Injuries received In n Dnvti H and, Idaho Fulls, not upenl, advortisiiiR contracts o ne *c ar accldenl earlier this [)rv»hlunt of tho sliito assocla- have been cancelled, and pulv llcatlon iM)11clcs havo been re- CVCIF week. ■' lion, said Innkeepers wore H<*njflnifn J-amnr KehcJcy, <(>{, “/{rcntly cnncorned" with A'Jnto- vised. , was driver of a 1008 Bulck which menh made h>4 Minton "which went out of control Sunday would Indlciitu an apparent lack more Coltfi hns thrown moro m orning and fikldded off of In- of Intercut an d concern In thin RIDER touclnlown pnKscs (2111) than . Hrrntato flON flcvr>n infles north­ segment ot thu economy, and any other NFL quarlerback. east of Twin Falls. Ills comnanlon, Dclmacr B, SPBCTMUUUt! Baldw in, 3fl, b Iho from Olive Branch, wan nslccp In tho hack float when the accident occur­ red. llo nlno wns hnsp||allrc«wllnliM«>MV*t«N;' BUHLEY — 670-9073 ' . ANOEIS Rm* *r U U TphM tH M«l iliM nt A NEW 197t> MBRCURY W JaN E J a m s s e n NICHOLSON ONWllEEUB

4 ' FrMay, October 24, 19M Tlme!-N«wV; T*In_Fallj, Idaho 7 Mew Freshmen Country Ifals Miss Neistad, Tipton Wed =HA Members Make Plans For ~ WENDELL — The U n 11 e d Methodist Church, Wendell, was the | o t^g fo^he-Sept^3-wedr* Are Initiated Idea Exchange vldlng and rcccption for Marcia Members of the Country Pals • Ann Meistad, daughter of Mr. RUPERT — Freshman FHA - and Mrs. Ailard Mcistad, Wen­ epresentatives and new mem- Home Ejflensiofi Club and the Kim-Sen Home Extension Cliib dell, and B ill Tipton. Pocntello,' >ers were initiated recently dur- will furnish table decorations ._son_oLMr..at1d.Mrs._Hcnry_Tip*_____ : ng ceremonies at the Mlnico the .Nov. 10 Holiday Idea Ex-• ton. Pocatello., j High-School;------change at the YM-YWCArirwas--- ' Rev. W oodrow HdrrJs- offfidat- New freshman class represen- atives'are, Elaine Woodward announced nt a rccent meeting cd at the double ring of the. Country Pals. .g before a background of baskets artd Kaylecn O ttm an. Named as new chapter mothers are..Mrs; — Each member is asked to of white gladioil and red roses Elmer Plocher, fre.shman; Mrs. bring her red felt boots. M rs. 0cccnl£d_wlth pink bows. jeorge Abo, - sophomore: Mrs. M aurice-Ailon, Mrs. G ein Deb- Mrs. Gay Vetersen accompan* Eldon Westergard, junior, and ban and Mrs. Ernest Ihler will _Ied_Cynthld- Rolland, Buhl, solo­ M rs. Vern Hacljing, senior. _ make little Santas from baby • ist.- Tho women were presented fix)d-jars. The brJde, given In marriage roses as were cach new m em ­ The group met at. the home by her father, carricd a cas­ ber.. of Mrs. Maurice' Allen. ' with cade bouquet of Forever Yours Freshm en' were required to M rs. Uba E. Allen as a guest. red roses tied With white tuile wear aprons and carry spoons Mrs. Irene Childers suggested rhinestone'' an d white satin durinf' school the following day me group host a work, day next streamers. Her gown was-a as initiation.. month for the club scrapbook. cape silhouette alencon lace re- It was announced Mrs. Harry embroidered with mother-of- Susan Hacking explained what Sharp will- attend the state pearl iridescents wit}) Jlly point goes into a junior and chapter degree, and a film was shown Home Extension Council meet* sleeves, a sabrina nc'dkline and ■ ig as the d u b ’s delegate. chapci train. to emphasize the steps to earn­ ing the degrees. Suzann Bclnap The lesson, "Blender Basics," --- Her---s K o m a C rT l^ tH ' Veil was soloist, accompanied by as given by Mrs. Maurice Af-^ , of white .silk illusion was held Priscilla Belnap. len. She made tomato vegetable by a crown of roses and seed ¥ ¥ ¥ ciicktail, cabbage slaw, grated^, pearls. HOLDING THE CERTIFICATE of award ' for second place in the annual scrapbook con-r, potatp • cas.serole and peachy.'; “ Anna Schrenk. friend of the (est presented recently at the Hospital Auxiliaries jneetlng In Sun Valley arc Mrs. Lclha orange sherbet. Homemade rolls bride, waB tnaid-of honor. Other Home_Fund Fete Buttner, leU, and Mrs. Blanche Barnes, both Pin k la d le s a t Cassia M emorial Ho.fp}ta). There and coffee were served w ith the attendants were Susan Solasabol MR. AND MRS. BILL TIPTON were 28 scrapbooks entered In the contest, with Lost River, Arco, receiving first place award. above items to all present. and M rs. M elanie Dye, sister ■ (Leysoa photo) . Held By OES Those who prepared the scrapbook for the Pink Ladles of Cassia Memorial-Hospital were The next m eeting Is at tho of the bridegroom, both Poca­ M rs. Biuttner, Mi|s. Barnes and M rs, Lowell Hewlett.______home of Mrs. Ernest Ihler and tello. and Linda Bartholomew: the program will be "Christmas Hailey. the Rogerson Hotel, Twin Fails. Guests attended from Boise Ideas Exchange." After a honeymoon .trip to Yel­ Hailey. Jerome, Twin Falls. Po­ At Hagerman R e ta G raffe, nlccc of the ¥ • ¥ ¥ lowstone National Park, the cou- catello, Gooding, Glenns Ferry bride, was' flower girl. HAGERMAN - ''Home Fun3 )le returned to Pocatello where California, Wisconsin and Me Night” was observed by the Or­ Best man was Byron McBride, )0th are employed. ridian. Rush Party Pocatello, brother of the bride- der of Eastern Stars, No. 78 Roses Symbolize Eove room. Ushers were Darrel at a meeting conducted by Paul french, Ron Dye and Gary Jes­ ine Neyman and R. E. Neyman, Lovc^givcs. nothing but iLselft rose. W hat is the purpose of this imaginative substitute for a con­ Goes Western : _ ter, all Pocatello. worthy matron and worthy 'pa' and seeks nothing but to fulfill exquisite flower? Isn't the sim­ ventional vase to hold’two roses. tron. this giving. ple giving of its beauty its sole Cut the rosoB-to different lengths' — Alpha Nu, local chaptec^f Ep­ , Special guests were Mrs. Ha- silon Sigma Alpha Sorority, held Final plans were made for reason tor being? And although and insert them in a tiny needle­ xe1 Jenkins, grandmother of the So said one of the world's its rush po'iluck party, western the official visit of Eula Chll- all fiower.s express the language point holder which was first se­ bride ;.M r. an d Mrs. L. N. Erpel- greatest poets, the prophet of stylQ, a t the home of M rs. M aur­ colt, Kellogg, worthy grand ma­ ol love, doesn’t all the world cured in the bottom of the gob­ dJng, Bo^se, great-uncic of (he Lebanon, KahljPGibran. ice F uller recently. tron. M rs. Chilcott will m ake agree that first among lovers let with florists clay. If pos.sible, bride; Mrs. Johan Pollach, Twin Gibran is not alone in Unking Guests were Mrs. James Beal, her visit to Hagerman Oct. 29. is the fragrant rose? use a long-stemmed rosebud for Falls, aunt of the bride; Mrs. love with giving. Tho thought Mrs. Darrell Bourner, Mrs. Ray the Taller of the two flowery. Mildred Bradley, Alhambra, A salad bar luncheon for all has inspired great and,humble So inspired was"^Briialn*S Cra,wford, M rs. M ilt Horton, Here again, additional foliage Calif., and Mrs. Marguerite officers and members w ill be men throughout all history and young 18th Cer\tury poet John M r?. -Everett Lewis, Mrs. may be inserted to give attrac­ P atch. aM e rid ia n , both great- all nations. Its fullest meaning, Keatjrwhen-a~fTiend sent him Charleii Little, M rs. M arv in Tay- tive fullness to the de^gn.^ aunts oithe bride; Mr. and Mrs. hall. Mrs. Chilcott jvill hold her in fact, expands to touch upon roses that he wrote: * Mrs.. Fredrick Turner, Fred Graffe, Glenns Ferry, and school of instruction also a j the all creation. "W hen your roses cam e to Finishihg touchT“dro'p several all Twin F»lls; Mrs. Bob Craw­ lodge hall at 2 p.m. H clear-glass marbles Into the gob­ . Mr. and Mrs, Marsha)! Meistad,, Consider, for example. m e. m y sense with ford. Filer, and Mrs. . Larry Wisconsin.' Plans were also m ade to serve their deliciousness was let to add further interest and "arney, Kimberly. to obscure stem lines an d needle Guests for the reception were the annual Fathers and Sons spelled; The next meeting will be the recistered by Susan Cooper. The banquet for the Masonic lodge Soft voices had they, that with point holder. model meeting Nov. 5 at tho If you are the fortunate re­ gifts were dlsplaj’cd by Leslie Nov. 11 and Jobs Daughters tender plea whispered . homo of Mrs. Riley Burton. Autobiography cipient of one or two dozen ros­ Sullivan, Sherrry Row and Leah banquet for bethel No. 45, Nov. of peace, and truth and ¥ ¥ es — or if you plan -to give this Geissler, all friends of the bride. everything they hear and read. 26, when the Grand Guardian friendliness unquelled.” USE TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS makes her official visit. _ ^ The lines live forever In n u m b e r to a friend — arrange The five-tiered wedding, cake. NO LO N G E R FOR-FAST-SELUNG RESULTS (I'll call her .“Sue”) chose to Is Reviewed brief sonnet that Keats entitled the flowers In the p lu m p _a n d deccD-alcd w ith pink /oses and CONCERNED IN U A. Following the Tneeting, a s o ^ u ^ . m arry a man /or whom nobody simply: "To A Friend Who Sent natural style of the classical white doves and encircled with cial evening was held. ‘’Mayolayb — The Story in our family has an y use. He M e Some. Roses." Williamsburg bouquet. Start pin k ruffles, was the centerpiece Everybody has 'a problem, Merle Owsley, and Mr. and Family 'and Career,” • was in the service, went AW OL, In a lavish outpouring of nine with the tallest center blossom, lor the bride's tafiic. DTbHUNUR- VP»n? Fgr 8^ Personal Mra_£hflrles Robinson were In biography by Dr. Charles Mayo, CONSTIPATEDO ^ d finally verses comprised of seventy-two and proceed with gradually 1. ! _ ^ 69700, charg^ofcharge of the games. was reviewed by Mrs. Ver Cox The table covered with A B LE DISCI \RGE lines, the famed German poet shorter stems until you have DUE TO UCK OF FOOD ” white lace cloth., was arranged Los Angeles, Cal. 00069, and en­ at a recent meeting of the Lit­ BULK IN YOUR DIET ■ This didn’t set very well with Serving committee was com­ Rainer Maria Rilko sees the achieved a line that Is rounded b y M rs. E a rl 'Nielson, The cake close a stamped, sell-addressed erary Art Guild'at the home m y family because our .oldest posed of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil whole meaning of the universe loose, and free. was baked and decorated by envelope.' of M rs. Leron Arrington. Mr.s. BRAN daughter’s husband was' killed ^ ♦ V .Norwood and Mr. Albert Gregg. In a bowl o f rosesl Fresh green ferns encircHnj Mrs. Carl Rolland, Buhl. ' ♦ ♦ ¥ Garth Gallow ay, d u b -presi­ in Korea. Wo have a 20-year- “So muchl” he marvels, the base of the arrangement add! BUDS'' Other table decorations Includ­ old son who is now in Viet Nam, DAR Members dent, conducted the meeting. strangely tender. Where do wc another touch of beauty. . . ‘ ed silver punch bowl and cof­ and a 27-year-old who Is home Pictures Shown , Hostesses were M rs. Ted know of anything like this? Now fee .service, crystal candelabra after serving two years In Viet Crockett, M rs. Stanley Vanden- before ypu stand the bowl ol and-whlte tapers. Natn where ho lost a leg. Host Luncheon bark, and Mrs. Arrington. Mrs. roses, the 'unforgetable, giving Mrs. Carl Rolland and Mrs. Sue m ade U pla in that she Of Germany E ld e n ^ fls k e li cave the builded lynnd nil power nf g iving Look At This Storewide —Frcd^Gm(ferGlenn!?-]fcrrjr;^imt would 'never set foot In our F alls Chapter of theTwin . hi. Special“ ■ ■thought. guest.-j were The world and wind arid rain of the bride, served the cake. homo again unless her husband American Revolution held a . GLENNS FERRY-Bicmplnr M rs. Gordon Crockett and Mrs, and patience of the springtime. Coffee wa.<5 poured by Mrs. Dew­ is m ade welcome, too. Well, p.m. lunchcon at the Rogerson Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, met Milton Barrus. And even the melting,* fleeing, wifh Mrs. Elisabeth Pharrls rc~ ey Durfec and Mrs. Don Bukcr since we love our dauchter Hotel rccendy. The next meeting Is Nov. 13 forming of the clouds ond the wns at the punch howl. ccntly and the hostess presented more than we hatfe her husband, Tlie President General'.^ mes­ at [he home of Mrs. Charles vague influence of distant stars The United Methodist Church the program, showing her pic­ wo agrectl to accept him. sage was read by Mrs. George L. W illiam s. now lies bcfidlcss In those tures taken during a visit to receptlnn committee hosted the O uf oldest daughter says If Detweller. ¥ ¥ ¥ open roses." m m m reception. this terrible son-in-law walks Germany last summer, and tell­ In our own way, all of us can The parents of the bride were M embers contributed to the ing of her trip to her homeland. in while SHE is. there, sho will Am erican Legion M emorial m arvel with the pools In the SPECIAL hosts for a rehearsal dinner at w alk out. I know there is no Mrs. Shirley Williams-was T.F. Scribbler giving or receiving of a single Fund for replacing’the war me­ elected Valentine Queen for the easy solution, Abhy, but what morial at Sunset Park. rose, a tlnybouqiiet or a lavish shotifd wc do to hurt the least year. 'Fliere were four guests, tw n ^o zen armload of tho beau­ M rs. C. J . Sliga'r gave an In­ Mrs. M arlon Clark, Mr.^. Donna Members Meet tiful blos.soms. Marian Martin formative report on the Duck Michaels, Mrs. Donna Donahue, M embers of tho Scribblers F rom tho Society o f Amerlcon Valley Reservation, the most and Mrs. Mary Heidenreich. Florists, meanwhile, com es Isolated one...,ln the United Club are nearing completion of Patte/n D E A R U P ! N o one (not even The Nov. 0 meeting is an open practical sOggestlons for ways State.?. It wa.i c.stablished in this year's project. "Our Adopt­ your children) should dlclate meeting at 8 p.m . to enjoy and arrange thU flow­ whom _you Bhall welcome Into 1870, partly In Nevada and part­ _ ?' if V ¥ ed Child.” with tho October STEREO BUY ly In Idaho.------assignment.-, about U io. odale.H- er. your hom 'er'lf ypu hnvb c'hoseh A .single rose can-be-as-ap* Shoshone and Piute are the cenco and ffihturity of m an it to ncccpt a son-In-lnw for whom Nu Chapter pealing lo tho eye as two dozen. (rll)cs whfch live there. It wa.s was reported nt the recent meet­ you hove no use rnthcr than to One glowing blossom can be­ OF THE Y E A R ! ing nt the homo of Mrs. Rolxsrt ‘ ‘lofio’' vour daughter, that In unchurched un til ID18,. Now come an "arrangemcnt"~ln-=1t- there are Presbyterian and LDS Stansell. your rlRht. If your oldest dnugli- Meeting Slated self when placed In a bud vase groups. ' . ■ Tho cllm nx at Iho Novoml>er ter withes to w alk out, that’s GLENNS FERRY - Mrs. Vir­ and framed wUh-.salal leaves, Tljere are DOft residents Iri meeting will treat "The Ac H E R rlRht. ginia Jones is hostess for the More commonly known aii "lem ­ Duck Valley. Rivalry still knowlodged U-sefulness of the next dinner meeting of Nu Chap­ on leaves." flnlnl is carricd alt* DEAR ABHY: W Ists between the tribes for pres­ A ged." year-round by mo.st flori.sts. spends his ENTIR tige. ter. The Delta Kappa G am m a •Society, W ednesday at 7 p.m . In Each member gavo n satire Use a crystal goblet as an every xumm cr vi.iilluR with W,i The plight of lhe.se people Is on obesity. Mrs. Olivo Keilcy that young persons are not ac­ tho Koffee Kup Cafe. Hammett. mrents in E ifo p c , nnd he says gavo a few highlights of the cepted. Indians nre susccptlhle Mrs. Joan Allison, personal will continue to do no as IW L convention held in IxwI.s- to white m an's disease, and the growth committee chairman, ong as they nro alive. ton. M rs. John Hayes present­ averago life expecfancy Is Ai w ill present tho evening’s prO' For financial reasons he can­ ed a resume of tho luncheon nnd years, Rram. 'Hiis in a postponc In tho grade wator) heatlng\sy«temR are so 10-Yaar Wear Guarantea flchool annex. Traveling prices wayn uNed thu oxcuko that he quiet that It Is d iffic u lt to tell Excaadi FHA Raqulromantt had hny fover nnd asthma and wore won by m any of the mem' whore tltey are bperatlng.'. Ac* ONLY couldn't do yard work, Now ho hers. cording to the National Better * Choot* from for shotfl and prnctlcnlly Many civic projects were dln- lle alln g* Cooling Council, the SOLID-STATE C I outside, plnntlnR every­aissed hut were to Iw decidc'd heated water in a hydronic sys' •avarol colon thing ho can get his hands on. on at a Inter dale. Halloween torn is circulated hy a sm all • CatY‘ ia~or Is .10 — our daughtcr'H oru I Um • Bolld-Stato Amplll/«r and Tun*r • • Stpsrat* Tribi* Control . fiHrfl Hho couUln’t cnro loss ol)oiil • FM/AM/atoreo FM Radio • Concantric OMt/St«r«o Contrd Gnrold, hut it grlpen mo to • SpflclalCuilom-Mallc • Loudn«ii/aiar#o Dilanc* Tirrn niftkio fliich arTftorfln\ ii«' ------dlBcouljCJiana^c------^QJllXSH. neir, f kecp thinking what If Magic Valley Favorite'S • QutMy A-Spaaktr HER husband comes homa nnd Bytltm • Slldtflult nadio Dial PLF.ATS IN A W H IR L sees m y old goat looking at hnr MRS, P. FISHER W hirling plenis oro monnt for like she's a chocolato marsh- Aik about Zenlth'a •noltlng naw B-tiick 346 4lh Av*. I,, Twin ralli liollday danclhg, nnytir - — m allow Hundnol ilu 's apt S q , Y d , ■toroo lapa canrldga playar . iniinclhR, Sew thiH jihnpeiy, part Gerald's hair with nflhovcll C hincM CasBcroto rccipe. Just m all It to the Recipe ONLY ^ Tht quality gott in btfor* IA« nan* f9M on* Ncoopod princes in nllurinB Should I lot h im know I ’m 1 pound ground beef Deportment; Women's Pago Ed­ black, white or color. Jealous? Or should I give HER 1 cup chuppcd colcry itor, Tho recipe becomoa Iho CLAUDE BROWN'Sr;j'.r.«V«r.sv' See Zenith Complete Line Vrlttlea Pattern D4S4; new ffomo mtxhecly advice and toll 1 tahlcspoofj floy sajico property of (ho TJmea-New* atid O--- f Color “TV and nd S/ Stereos. Misses' sifcs fl, 10. 13, H , ll{,. her to put Grandpa In hin place? can enow...... - moln...... nnodlos1 ...... connot be returned,) Ifl. Size 13 (hust 34) requires JEAIyOUS 1 can mushroom or cream of OVER 80 ROLLS FOR VA ynrds n9-inch fabric, chlckcn soup Si}(ty-flvo ccnts in coins, for PEAR JCAI^USi l.et Gerald cups water jj YOUR selecti6 n ench pattern — add Ifl centft know you’re Jealoun, (He might cup m inced onion FREE IAS VEGAS for each pnttern for flrnt-closs enjoy 11.) But don't say any­ con l)con sprouts |l Why buy from imall lampio iv/alche» — buy m allinK , and Bpocinl handling. thing to (he xlrl next door. Why Dash of pepjier VACATION I from the roll and you can ica w'hat your rog Send lo Morinn Martin, Times* •]Mi| (ho old b o y 'i fiinT . Combine half the noodles with l| will look like In yoUr'home. Nowfl, 395 P olo m Dopt.^ U2 all nthor ingredients in a ono- ' AT West 18th St.. Now York, N. V. D E A R A B B Y: I hove been quart casnorole. Sprinkle rost of lOOil, Print namo addreqs rcoding (ho letters in yotir noodles on top. Bake uncovered ^JHEISEK MOTORS wiUi lip , a lw «hd *tyloj)Mml>er. column pro ;ind con"oboul sex in n a?S dogroc oven for 40 Now fail-wlntor pattern cot«< o ducatlon'In (ho puhUc schools, minufes, (l^or « varldtion, one ^aurfeBROW N^^ loR — over 100 suVs, free pat> nnd I think you have given tho con use tuna or chicken in I and 1 nlghh In torn coupon. dOo Inslant sowing |>etrt advice to roncerned nnr* ptaco of ground beef.) i Ran* »r Uh« Tah»« U r !•*! JlWlna IWQk'BOw today, wear tomorrow. ontB so far: "G O TO SCHOOL (Tho TImos-Nows w ill pay S3 A NEW 1970 MERCURY • CARPET IS OUR SPECIALTir $1. InHtunl faHhlon 1h«I c — whal- AND ASK TO SEE THE each week for tho best recipe 204 Main Av«nUe North nvwcai* nnswors. Bcco#aory, fig- COURSE GIVRN." Too many flubmltted for Maglo Valley FaM Do«i not (nclud* iraniporlallon 143 Molti Av«. «. fwj^n fall* r laod. ■orA’ UlMltJnly-li: T o U w lU lim to bellevo vorltes. U you hav* «'favorlt«| 1... 8 TImeS'Newj, Twin Falls, Idaho Friday, October 24, 1949 Mutual Funds INVF..TT OBOUPl Today’s Market And Financial Report IDSND S.« S... Successful iDsi’r 8.1J e,:o •prlcn 00 Stocks rund,.., <1 Livestock i^faih BJd Atktdlnv Pm ' »-RR IMJIIIIUtkl Investing NEW YORK (UPI)—Spread U«.<> ]M.«T 119.06 m ." W IN FALLS (UP!) — Pota. PORTLAND (UPI) - Cash • . ■ f ■ U9.tl 1W.71 .Itt.M in sh o r t tcrr rInf; reductions in short tcrmtcrrrInf; U or’McK*;:* grain, coast delivery basis: By ROGER E. SPEAR M#.t» JOO.U (L1S.M J«. to#s: U pper Vailfcy, Twin Falls II.U II.U J lUnck t.H fi.i interest rates and hopes fori “ and Burley D istricts: Demand White wheat 1.-15^ . a. — I— ------business? Shi dd 1 continue'hold* -atocks-higher Friday In-brisk - - '» 6.7« Cult B l...... only one with growing concern Russets-washedl2.1n. nnd_4 or.. White clab_no.bid_ . ' . ing-the-common-stDck2=H,^_ trading. ^ over the-aite-of Institutionnl-in- min. 100 lb. sacks U.S. lA 4.10- Hard red winter 1.65 A — Still In business and se­ Elecirohlcs and oils ^ were 4.40,- m ostly 4.-25-4.35. 10 lb. Oats no bid vestors. I understand there is a Study belrtg m ade on this sub­ riously overburdened' by heavy strong performers, while steels sacks mesh baled per cwt. U.S. •ley 40.50 ' I Cuit .SI IS.».».S operation.nl losses,'the com­ and rails sported some frac­ ject. What have they found? — I not- size A 4.00-4.50; moslly, pany’s- shares were dropped tional gains,------—' 4.10-4.40. SEAT T LE (U P I) —' Today’s from trading by AMEX in Janu­ CongJdmerafes also were on Onions: Western Idaho and grain priccs, F .O.B. Seattle, ■'a — Both the New Yorlt Stock «l Knlkr Exchange and the Securities Ex­ ary. Recent over-the-counter the upbeat in several instance: Malheur County, Ore. Demand Soft white 1.44 , , change Commission (SEC) arc bids were under 51.1 s(^ no oth­ but motors and chcmicals good' arid m arket firm . 50 lb. White club 1.47^ researching this question. A pfe er option for you than to hold were narrowly mixed. Oils sacks U.S. 1 yeilo'w Spanish 3 Hard winter 1.63 llminary report from thetormet what you have. In February the were mostly higher. in. and larger 2.75-2.90, mostly Corn 53.50-54.00 - reveals thbft.instItulions accoun­ eompany sold ,$27 fnlllion of fac­ Shortly before 1.15 P .M .. the 2.75. Two to 3 in. few 1.85-2.00, Barley 40.25-11.00 \XE HOUOirroN ted for 51 per cenLcf the volume toring receivables to a Talcott JIEL-dACketwIde indicator had mostly 1.85-1.90.'Whites I r r:ii.ooMis and 56 per cent, of the money National subsidiary. Talcott a gain of 0-54 per cent on 3 In. 3.25-3.50, mostly 3.40-3.50. wcr, corn . and loylxini tn value of trading on the Dig has agreed to tfct as the com- 1.530 issues crossing the tape. hltther There were 810 galni ' e ChiMjo'Doard Board so far this year. In I96f pany’s agent should its commer­ IDAHO FAL LS - There were ' declines. these figures stood at 31 pei cial finance portfolio be put un­ 5,430 sheep, 2,000 catUc'and 118 i 13 95 Mail I'd cent and 40 per cent. der new management or forceS The Dow Jtfnes average of I 7.TlMan 30 blue chip industrials rose Included under the rather into liquidation. \ . 4.49 to 860.22. ^ * ) btcemtxi tioit Fda 'jjMMe'i vague term "institution’' are: (To order Roger SptJar’s 48- was reported today. wnc«i. Volume of aTound 10.270,000 t increiited ipecutallT# pan Do»t Fd t.il ». bank trust departments, mutual page Investment Guide, (recent­ Lambs were steady to 25 cents 11 MeDon ' shares *fras runnbig slightly be* the com ■dnncc. Comm SSi'o^ew"' ...... and hedge funds, insurance com' ly revised and in its 11th print­ lower aild ewes were steady, ft aatocialcd wiih belter exp Cg Fund •.pa.l«.<4M(jy« Cp IJ.M li panics, nonbank trusts and pen­ ing), send SI with name and ad­ low Thursday’s pace, ______jff«i elevator hedjlng, cJi.. Fd i9~t« . » U'H 1; was announced there w ill be a Cotnml«tlon hdute loybcant demnnd sion funds. SEC Chairman dress to Roger E . Spear, Times- special calf sale Nov. 1- and Nov , more than tuffieleat lo. f ...... cap IM l:i« MORTON FOS! Budge testified before the Sen­ News, Box 1618, Grand Central 15. It hedginK ond ciuth. iprcadi Cap Shr. 7.M ,8.61 prwth .lO.SJ-I ate Banking Committee that in­ Stationj New York, N. Y , 10Q17.) here wai early demand for Cent Shr 1 3 .»U « I"c j.li . Choice to good fat lambs, 28- tejult of woploit buying.--'] :l«valor* CIIANNING FOS « « I stitutions hold equity invest­ 29; feeder lam bs, 27-28.50; odd ipllecl DtfrrinM on t »c»l» u ments worth over $250 billion. ruff feeder lambs, 26 and, down; R>8 » Orwlh MuOra Or 5,« ' Block trades"— executions ol Automakers light fat ewes,- 8-8.75; cannor go| MuOm In ID.O 10,000 or more shares — in GRAIN FUTURES ewes and bucks, 3.50-8, and good IE volvcd 293 miJJion shares last mouth ewes up to $20 a head. Open HiSh Low 'Clo»e ' IjTjNen r Mut 1.!.«II.M year, up 500 per cent since 1965. Hogs, e X t r e m e ftTp, 24.25; ...... 00,6) N.t WS 10.39 Il.a As a result the specialist — an Say Sales bulk, 180-220. 22.75-24.25 ; 220- ij«H 1,M mit 15.05 1J.17K®' • s r l.l'H !,« I.3»« individual charged with main­ 2-10, 22.75-24.25; 240-260. 22-22.75; -May 1.0 l.c'.l ■.Si l i taining an orderly m arket In 260-230, 20.50-22; 280-300, ,19.50. I.J6li l.JCS .U 1.3« S i ' FaU O ff S«t> •3«H l.HH • s ii ! designated slocks — Is finding 20.50; sows under 300, lS-19; 300- iis it Increasingly difficult to raise 330, 15-18; 330-400, 14-16; ovor Dec .1.15^ 7.00 7:« the capital required to absorb DETROIT (UPI) -"sales of 450,-13*l5:--stass, 12.15,-a-nd Mar.. . l.ll> n w i l l laree-blocks.-— ------1070 automobilcs-41ppcd-slightly boars,’ 9-13. Jul ■i.:9? riow 'i Cm sii-d 5.; ' The effects of Institutional during the second 10 '-.days of Choice g rain fed steers, 26- Sep • J.MH 1tSii i?>ii i a COMMOrWLT trading have been further ng- October, according lo the big i-e FO^JDS! 27; good steers, 23-25; commer­ .«’’4 jravated by the tendency of per­ three automakers. cial steers, 23-24; choice fat hei­ £ ’ •IS formance -.conscious fund m an­ Spokesmen for Ford Motor Co. fers. 24.50-25; good-fat heifers, i S Jul i agers to dum p entire stock posi­ md Chrysler Corp. r e p o r t b d • 23-24; com m ercial cows, 19-20; .67M .6TH - .a tions on any a,dverse news. Al­ dightly increased sales. General utility cows. 18-19; cutter cows, though the two studies will un­ Motors Corp.. however, said 17-JS; canners, 1&-J7.50; bulls, doubtedly substantiate m uch strikes had. hurt its deliveries 23-25; v e a r calves. 08-33: good i i s ; A. that was previously theor>’, un­ and had caused a drop In sales ' i.r«- -comp-cp—i.n-s.sT feeder steers, 28-28;’ medium i j i h : S i less some remedial action re­ compared-to“the same 10 days feeder steers, 25-27; Holstein Cnmp nd 8.M10,]* One Wm Nov Comp Fd O.MIC--;:ONell sults the small Investor will con­ in 1968:' steers, 23-24; Rood feeding hei­ J2opph tinue to be the "f a ll guy, Ford reported sales of -6R.609' fers, 25-50-26.50; m edium feed­ Ma"r 1 \ i - \ i \¥ cars and 18,379 trucks, during ing heifers, 21.10-25; feed inf t ill the Oct. 11-20 selllng^pe^odj cows, 17.50-19.50; slock steei Contrail lO.JS 10«) }?.*'“ i. r \ i 2.17* c„p u cbmpared to .64.416 cars and l7,- calves. 33-37; stock heifer cal- Cntcy 639 trucks in 1968. ves, • 29-32. an d dairy type Cwn Dal .11.15 13.7sS'"' " Jan s'.sz J'.IJ Cwrt DlV 7,:« 7.»Ej U-i-S Wall Street Chrysler reported sales of 38,- calves,. 28-31. El]' 546 cars, compared to 35,941 for- Msy «.';s t1.1? *!2S the same period last year. The O M AH A (U P I) — Livestock; Jul Ih DclnFd isisc Aug s'.ts t 8.5J S.-OB firm also" reported a record Hogs 7,000. Barrows and gilts Sn> r.M 7,St Chatter sales of Dodge trucks — 3,508 . _ _ l 5 . Dow** to' uneven; 190-230 lbs steady to 25 nr.^L com oared to the previous record Dec 7J-^» 73 JO t: n.*o ;:j ,;o nownt higiier; 230-315 lbs steady to 25 jan —^ .. Drtxel w-ie I}.! of 3,471 in 1966 and 2,918 last lower. 1-2 200-235 lbs 26.00-2S.25; Mar 77.-0 n.J9 ;n'ss 73:jjD NEW YORK (UPI)-Many year. 71.10 73 ’ft 71 M " stocks already have recovered 1-3 190-230 lbs 25.50-26.00; 2-3 TS.'O 73.MB ; General Motors, largest of the 71.00 n.«o ; r.V,*5 -a-good-part-of-thfelr-previous- 230-250 lbs 25.00-25.75 ; 2-4 250- Auj 73 60 . reportc. frooD Jj J* correction, while others still are 280 lbs 24.50-25.25; 3-4 280-315 TOM t;»,M M.MB ‘ 000 cars and 24,429 trucks, com­ lbs. 24.00 - 24.50. Sows steady, 0^. .;..|selling: not far above recent pared to 133,456 cars and 22,858 some weak to 25 lower. 300-600 'H ’ llows, Hayden, Stone Inc. says; Stock rd n,:o k trucks last year. A spokesman lbs 22.25-24.00. - ., ‘ i8'K3i;44 Price patterns fall for the most blamed the dip on strikes In Cattle 1,300.. Calves 150. Produce Prices >J*’ SCUDDnR FDS: part into three categories, Flint, Mich., and Baltimore, Md. Slaughter steers fully steadj;; I.Mues that have reformed a heifers slow, lim ited sales nt leaf S:m<3V. « 5* •■5P*e S5-» 35. base during the past few weeks SJM-O’y.l ehtd and then moved up through this steady; cows 25-50 lower. Small : ilniilp Ualtiei (SO...d-O'/ eS'/,: . i ; loncilonshorrn Potatoes, Onions 15J+ H feeder supply consigned for Frl c V.<\ baso" Issues that appear to c InF_.«,I» ».*? havo-bottomed-ouUiut:_arjutiU. _ r t m J R E g W 'ouclonr^lecfrTiTBir'C'li r.7»; irada 'a U49; JsM-A-m— lorsrinTJ .17 '■ withl»k Tv>n/tnrn»nmoderate onMend nr.' prime 1,150 .8 C CJ-87H. ‘"Sel Spe 17.» --' In the base-bulldlhg stage, and The following quotations ara lbs 28.15; choice 27.25 - 28.00; holeiala pclcei repotted by thi Sh Dean M.ra Issues which have rortvoTM Tovided from M urlas Brothers aao M«tcant||« levels where they can . be Commodities. pood and low choice 25.00-27.25. r alrndy: OJ T r ii; U icon ;.d Cap^ 1J.« Heifers choice 825-975 lbs 25.T5- considered temporarily over- ■ Molne Patatoes' bought." The best opportunities 26.50; good and low choi< 46^; medium! 4]; ituidar Nov. 2.35 2.28 2.31 — .01 23.50-25.50. U tility and con ■ROOsiAMSr 2J, for price enhancement arc in M ay 3.49 3.37 3.39 — .05 clal cows 18.50-19.50, few 20.00. hl»h I. the first two categories, ' the Idaho Potatoes Cannej- and cutter lC.00-18.50. firm says. Nov. 4.60 — , Sheep 500. Slaughter Inmbs M ay 5.42 S.35 9.39 >h.03 steady to-strong’-ewes-scarce, —Whether—the-markot-jR-now Chnicc and prim e shorn lambs witnessing one of those m ajoi l rallies that often comc along prim e wooled lam bs 28.25-28.75...... »0.7HO.M -- "at the tail end of a great I’olBtoei: Total ahl track (9;..upp|K, : ....STKIN ROF. m si boom" and which "can go 100 D E N V E R ( U P I) - T.lvestock; nod; mnrkrl nrm. points or more and turn Wall Truck lalei |ICo lb, Street rampantly bullish Ju: Cattle 100; slaughter cows ■ Nnrih Dakom roi sleudv to weak; bulls steady; ■rack l»i iuppi Friiir»q F Il.T before the bottom falls out” ( slaughter cows, high cuttei- and matkct •tcady, FRANki.lN whether It is seeing something yellow 'tpanUh utility 19.50-20,.')0; earner nnc' 10 CI’STODMNl more lasting and construction cuUer1(5;i0:i!);00r.'?lnitghtcrbulii depending on the economlb 22.00-23.00; W ednesday feedei flTtTn»Tln-n-nhcndr-lndiCtttoi cattle auction, around 1,450 head Digest says. The firm bollevca V kOlW CK AND C O . y sold: I'ccdcr .steers .steady to .'50 Edilcation the answer lies in wimt is done lower; liVlferH 50-75 lower: steei alx)ut Vietnom "and how cnlvc.s HlOOdy~'lo~l-.flft—lower' n>4i*;3 quickly It Is done". liclfer calvi) siendy to 50 low«ir Bills Noted 1 4.71 l l l- m lr r ,s(c«r.f. choice.'JlJ-82 7 Jb E. F. ffutton & Co. feels (hat 28,2O-.12,K0: standard to Roml the unusually large percentage 23.00-30.00; feeder lieiferi chnlce At PTA Meet (JUNITliO PUNMl gains recorded by low-priced 430-580 IbH. 28.10-30.25, fiOO-?.^ Ih, x i " flpeculatlvo Issues In the last 2C.40-27.C0;' gtiod 2I.70-2C.75, .SHOSHONE — Education bllli r #.»o ’( few acKslons should bo rtjgartled .Steer.1 choice 240.300 lh, .1(1.00- na.ssed by the lust Idaho Lc r Is- with some suspicion. W ith the 39.00. 300-400 lbs. 31.75-30,00; latui'ti were diNcu.ssi-d nt the heifers choice 270-450 Ihs. 30,00- 1(1] 10VAI.U list now more overbought than O Shoshone I»TA nieotinK here this 1)*0 I'nd » j|' i ’.u Ina n t any timo thLs year niu] also 34.00, good 27..W-.10..'i0; .ifork week, M rs. Ja y Towles, publli cfiws lolut good to choicq bred rapidly approaching the over Ity chairm an, .said 'Hmr.sJay, \'A '[ “trilNVn'ca^' bought condition Kcen in early COW.'I J1H5 per head. Siato Rep. Willard Ultlme llnrara 1*07.ra.:r Vndilil -n(>tt«-.TOOi-lvMroW!i-nnd-flilf. llutwtM..--f,4IMM44-2U,50; nnw» 25 hlfllior, U;s. Imps HWall^ speculative Issues .'‘appears to P Sijpt. ICcnncyj C rotheri spoke on 1-3 .100-400 lbs. 23,25-24,00, bo ft bit ton much Ino uoon." the oducutbrs'. point of view on Imn I Slioop 50; no khIcs. Tlie firm recommends waiting the legislation. State Uep, John for "some sort of pullback" (ieorge, I'TA leulalatlvo chali^ before com mitting new funds. an, nrranp'd the pnigrain UefrcHhments were served irln g tho social hour b ji room Many Investors holding bonds roprc.ientatlvcs of tho seventh whoso market price has.sllpiwd E > IKII U.U 11.10 ilock >phl, and olghth grades, under direc­ sincn they were purchased tion of Mrs. Hugh Keith and l!W YOMK (tll'D—WiK)l topi futurtL should consider BCllinB th( Mrn. Gilbort Plorson, huspllality and taking the loss as ... chairm en. itaiB *W(ml‘*'/uiut«* cft»ed I ' offsetting deduction ng«lnst lie lower, capital gains tax liability for andkcd c«rU(lcal«d ipol lopa |M,} titls tax . year, -according • to Former Wendell (Illll'caled ipol wool IIO.B nonil Doan Witter & Co, WomanjHohorcd- WENDELL-Mni. Glonn Koch, a form er Wendell resilient, has ed-'Alr-l'orce-wlfe^ DONT BE OLD FASHIONED tlitj year at tho Richards Oehour iMtrco ijniio In Mlshoru GET IN THE SW ING q her huiibund Is » chiip F O R THAT ,h*ew ASPHALT PAVINQ She Is the fornior M nrtina CATTI.R FLTimnS Hansen, ilaiigliter t>( Mr. ;ind Tlio following qunlntloni nro M rs. Illnior llanNcn, ond a GIVE A RING provldnL. from Murlas nrolhera mother o( fivo children. Chap­ BEYMERS CommodltleH wlrti by Rrx Ul> lain Koch h thi> son of Mr. .SAN I'RANCI.SCO (U P I) — rich and A^soclaipsi nd Mrs. Arthur Koch. Doth nro THEY WILL QUOTE YOU A BID Ocnlon K. Cancoll, prnsldrnt of H M i l.nw>rinKo Ch< graduntuH of. tho Wendell High Potlutch iMircHiH, Inc,,' suld 20,07 2H.85 20,0,1 -,115 School. , THAT IS' FAIR & QUITE LOW Tluirsility tliiit Ihe ciiiiipiiny has . . 28,00 2K,47 2«,fiO '•l-.ni Chajilain Koch has served nev- SO DO It RIGHT NOW applied for a IlHlIng on tho Now 2H,75 2R.(iO 2H.no -.07 n yo'oariPwUh tho Marino Corps York .Stock ItxcliaiiHe, I 20,72 20.55 20.55 -,12 urlnilit the Korean war, 'Ilie c BEFORE Vye [HAVE SNOWI I’dtlajch, which owns more pie livedliv e ’ nt • -Hurley • whore he than 1.3 m illion acre^ of llmbi'Y. Hcrvrd iis a I.iithorun paslor pri­ Twin Falls Markets Hind In Iho Untied .SMilon. in. presont tim n thorfi nrn approx], or to Joining tho Air l-'orce, cludilig oxtontlvo , lioldliiK* III ii\i^toly 4,0.'J0 btockholdora in the Nortfiern hlaho. In , tiirrtntly corixiralloii. WRUCK 1NJUBE5-*-- , IrnilInK CDiDnioit »n ilw J’olhiU’Jj l-'nrnslji bnfl 48 opora- unnUN (UPI)'W n/Rhjepn Call “ B|SH" BEYMER ' MJxort OMrn*!.'*,'.*.' 1 Pftclflc CoHHt .Stock Uxohungo. tionii In tho UtUtod Siateii and porsnnH wore Injurt^d Thtirflduy fiofl While Wheat Small 1 At ihn end of (he flrnt nliio South America,; Including nev- iio(tVur«)“ ’.',i2,ao whon n Pi^Hsengor train collided N ow ! For Estinmdte nuiiillm of thlH voiir' the com. (>rul sa\VmlllH n'nd n pul|> and wllh.,n luillcd freight train in I'lnioi ,,,,, paiiy had 7,032,1711 shurea of t>iicka{;o pliint nt l.owisinn niul orem Nnrilii ClwU tho slutlon.-4it Nauinbiir}], near ?33,1998 or 7g3'-22aa fiinull , m -jta itii , t^oninion stock oiilHtandIng, employH ovor 12,000 people In Hallo, tho Hast Gorm an now/i| I'Inkf ...... U(hl lilowi ) cordluK to Cancelli' and at llio lt« far-fhtOQ Qporntlons. agency ADN reported, | ■. ■ ^ ^ • f ..... - - -F rld a y,-O cto b e r 24-.1 9 6 9 ------*Tlmes-NBwa,-TvyIn FaIIi,'Wah® -

THE LINEUP AT tbe Twin FaUs facto^. Amalgamated ago One of the pliers tipped over, springing tbe boom which The damaged pUcr has W d repaired and was scbedtiled to beet cirop In \thls area has been harvested, according to Sogar Co. lU s long line of beet trucks Is waiting to be uih is used In stocl^lltng tbe sugar beets. So with only one pUer be back In {^ration today. About 15 per eeot-loi.tlio sugar Amalgamatod officials. . v ■ _.loaded..^.poe ot tte.two pUers at the factory.-A few d ay i In operaUon, trucks have to w a if a while to be. unloaded. ______, ■' ' ______Armour Plant At Nampa Along Fences And To Double Its Production CHICAGO — CatUe slaughter “wll! make our buyers more ag­ Canals will double at Armour and Com­ gressive in tbe areas they now pany’s Nampa, Idaho, plant ac­ cover, and we will widen som^ Certified seed potatoes have b ^ hanrasted at the PIcabo cording to expansion plans re-, w hat our procurement territory, ranches of Bill Molyneiuc, Willis CasUe^-and'Wayne Baldwin. vealed today by A. S. Drain, Many finished cattle are preS' Several hundred acres had t ^ n raised by the three ranchers. vice president and general man­ ently leavIng the'StaterTind^wi ager of Armour's Fresh Meats plan to purchase as many.of Bev Flora, RlcUIeld, finished threshing alfalfa teed L u tim k D ivision. them as we can for Nampa. and Is working on clover seed tlils week. > ^ Construction of the addition - -"We.wiil.add.something JiJce, w ill start early In 1970, wl,th 100 people to our force, and rjoHn'Dupperj' WchffeldlipIaHat JiaKw inpIefed'han^’of to ‘ ' a completion goal set Jot late this will push the annual payroll ^rey and .Fairfleld-hlves, and Is now trying to completo the 1970 o r early 197i: to approximately $2,& Riclirield hives' before bad weather sets Iq . Last year the first ■ “Right now, our aim, ia, to Mr. Drain added. heavy, snow came Nov. 15 and some hives did not get. covered raise our yearly slaughter-from To design the plant addition causing a heavy bee loss. Richfield’s first real snow came Oct its present average o i 90,000 io and plan'the work flow, Armour 16 this, fail and did not uiise any bee damage; Three R liM ^ : approximately 180,000 head," has ehgaged.the Bechtel Corpor- women have been the principal extractor’s for the'Duppers, ■Mr. Drain said, “and jwe will --- ■ - Ts recent­ break and fabricate at least ly have been on the local scene A large' pre-bufir ranch type borne has been movM ihom ' 100,000 of. them . This new un- to w ork w ith Bechtel personnel. Meridian to Corral for the resldebce o( Mr. and Mrs. Normaa dertalfjng tits Into our long- The plans are being dove-tailed Tate, TM farm ts owned ^ Mrs. Abe Leewen, Gooding, motber - rante plans for growth In -the with-present operations so that of Mrs. Tate. Mr. and Mrs. Tato moved to tbe farm last spriitf beef husinese. j. slaughtering will proceed with­ trom Ooodtog...... “ Doubling the slaughter cat out interruption .throughout the city," continued Mr. D r a I construction period. Named OfficiaV FREE LAS VEGAS DENVER.*^ James P.'House VACATION -tiljyan-Is-Studyingfc has. been named.public:relatIons laep-of. thft Aw frlc an N a. ----1 Cattlem en’s Association JL (AIJCA). i l H EISEN.MOTOBS Idiaho With! A Mission- In his new role, House w ill haVe responsibility fof all ,pul> MOSCOW— In 19M* ,Abdul ho would be the first. lie W atfons , acflyltles fgr the • majeed A. Ben Sa£d. a young Ip the fall of 1867; he i ^inver>based' association liv student on vacation- from tho up on the campus, and -.jdlng ANCA's naUonal maga- A MBW I WO MHCURY , University of Cairo, w alk e d concentrating on the-alfalfa zine, the A m eW cnn 'B eef Pro- among'9ie oHvelrfiSFofTT^rovir ■weevilnvhicrrlsTnserious'men' n ucer, -flHd- iti^ WCTMy-BgwiW? near Els home at Tripoli, Libya. ace in Libya as well as in Idaho. tor, the Beef Business Bul^Unu Bea_Saad smiles a lot, but he Ing throughout wasn’t spilling that d^y. ties In northern Idaho, he stud­ Thousands o f 'oiives hod ^de­ ied tho distribution and behavior cayed and fallen from the trees of;the alfalfa weevil. Last June, • before their tim e., Thoy were for his efforts, he was awarded victlm»*ot the olive fruit,fly, a master's degree, but, more which lays Its ews on tho fruit. importantly for both Libya and Idaho, he learned much about Tho derveloping larvae then feed MOST AREA SHEEPMEN htu e moved tbeir flocks to (all dlngl Fan Is tbe tlm «.^ year wbea the best ways to battle the at- PUMPS off the fruit. pastures, os shown here by thcj sheep grating In an alfalfa moved from the hKh couatry.to fall pastures faMagic Valley. --- UtenJhfltdfty. Ben Saad look­ falfa weevil. ed to the field crops iiT'the - "While -I“am -Iodclng.to_m; Tripoli area. The olive fruit fly home country,” said Ben Saad was old to Libya, but, among "I hope m y oaslc research wll. Beef E A ^ t ■ ro^o!!}n'awSiLM m the field crops, a new pest bad ■be a continuing benefit to Idaho, R ange~Bifll~Saie^et-0ctr^^^ struck — the Prodenla LItura the state w hich has been so kind'to me and where the an­ PUMP_. ' w orm ; F IL E R » M o r e than 200 range cattleman, and Jim Cahill, Wei- The worm atnrts on alfalfa, nual loss from the alfalfa weevil To Start bulls from Idaho, Oregon, Wash- ser, purebred breeder, then moves to carrots, cabbage, is about $12,000,000.” pepper, tobacco an d various oih* Now he is doing research ... Ington, W yoming and U tah w ill Pat Allen, Cascade, sale man­ er crops. In one alfalfa field, his doctorate, studying the In­ Soon Here be sold during tho 30th annual ager, sa)u tho Filer sale has Ben Saad saw nothing left but terrelationships o f a species of Filer Fall Ronge Bull Sale on maintained Its record of being scrawny, worthless stalks. Many parasitos and weevils. In about M ogle Valley cattlemen Inter- Friday, Oct. 31. the largest mixed breed range of the other crops were more two more years, he hopes to .itod In improving their beef bull safe In the Northwest and Sponsoring this annual event than SO per cent eaten away. ---- >lete these 'studies with a animals are urged to participate has lOng been noted for Its out* Is tlie Idaho Cattlem en's Asso­ Ben Saad had then compleled _____degree attached, to his in the Beef Evaluation Program, standing offering of top quality ciation. Tho bulls, Herctords, hts third ir In the study of hanie and return .to Llbva-to ^nsorOd by the Magic Valley bulls orexcellent type, breedlftg tlt*lltft Vnr>u»t^Hg«» thq]it w ill / ‘ ______Shorthorns, B lack A n n s , Red . JUltTITP-Bt-thvU"^ characteristics. elassK.lea- Cairo. He had j be behind the degree. This event vvill begin on _ . TVngus-and-Chftfolals, all nvrr 10 months and under 30 months more year to'Ro before gradu­ “ B en Saad Is a dedicated stu­ 0 w ith the weigh-in o f the steers. of age, are registered and will ating, .During his vocations, he dent, a n d it is such dedication Those interested in entering a worked with Libya's Depar<- as his that m«lcM for progress,” pen of five stcora or mans — be graded Thursday into classes ment ofAgrlcuUure, and, amon- said Dr. A. R. Glttins," head the minimum number that can of A, A minus, B plus and B th e deyasivaslat-lated orchards of entomology at the University be entered is five — are asked by Wade Welle, Boise.-extonslon onimal husbandman; Lawrence ., fields, he could see a ' g r e ^ a t of Id a h o .. “ Education Is id two- to m eet a t 7 -p.m. Nov. 3 In Bradbury, Chailis, commercial problemproblem fo fw...... r his homeland—tjow...... ^ way street, and this, student I*}?. Vocational _ Bulldlni to best to.fight the enemies of from Libya Is definitely contrib­ 1300 KimJjerW Road, Twin Fall the crops;. uting to it as weil as benefiting Comtpltmenn are wonted *0181. was when Ben' Saad de< from it.” at that time ond various plons elded that, after he graduated Ben S U d ’s research hosTfaken for the' event' N^IJl be discussed. in genorol agriculture from the him not only to many areas ’There are 'tV o requirements ’’GIENCOE'' liypRAULlC Unhrersltv of Cairo, he would in Idaho, but to Montana, Wash­ set by tho association’s directors r eveptUBliy^ffnd a| Way''lo take ington, CTregoo, Nevada, Arizona that cattlemen interested in tho adyancfed .iJtVdles in Am erica, and California.,He does not have program , should follow. ap9da|l}iing In entomology.and much spare time, botrwhen he T n w .a r e ; .... ---- — -,;.hej_llkcai;.to learnrog tha~latest techniques In does have - some,; —r-W alght o f e'ach a n im al .en- — <>eqt^ntroK*Thea ho woiild.Tfti tu rn W ith '^hls new knowledge m uW of America ai ne can. pounds and not more than 630 to h elp hlB homeland In the fight OiT week-ends, he. enjoys takini pounds for a ll British t)reeds agolnst.'the crop deitroyeri;- his fa m llv to nearby. (oreste< 1 crosses and at least 478 areas or to Lake Coeur d'Alene ids and not more than 600 8 MODELS DESIGHB) TO FIT EVERY TRUCK ivoriiiycinillng h n lu ^ ,, Ineludlngi menf Of Agrfcylture on a'^full* married In Libya, now have two —■Each > cattleman Interested Hlm6 ;t}o8lfl, becoming Director daughters: Lameei, 3, and Bel- m u s t enter a pen o f five, mt ~ Rollie W rick; Three Creek, • Body mounM ktoal or wood inllv of.rd«K«'i cil- canipus,’' ’:' V ' ...... v''-;-:-’-*’ , piV s ld e n t'o VI' f t»e^MIV a'lifOCtatlan^'re^UiSBlUqilfc •■BUWiailUII,'IO* IctiUur)* has become Ho h a d seen snow ln,I.e1vinocl minds all cattlemen.of the Nov. • No IndrMM^^i^ouMlhgtia^^ body Hyv/kxiown .for. <(t \t\m, and In Germany in JW , Ihe CSI Vooatlonal -^^n p jitib n tr o ir v l bui he waa hardte preparedXor hv»l . northern I(laho’a^unusually se* P.T.O. vere winter of 1966^. •’Wfiwere and TInMrandtie»*ri maWf outiir'fitabraautliat, i^alw .'ih*' m>» cac jlartod- J r .^5 imonj* "Qlenco*' M>»lriiu|lD'/,th»\n«tlort’*',hota^ . . for, »l) Injn,” 940 Saad>rec«]tM. <*SUU, Job* and Trttek«‘ thero-'^r®, WUMm ‘people,, to uc(c» J'.;be btHPM'Herei V,..... iK^inkiJA^^ Is'giiatf ‘ • - '. l a in Libya,;Antf T w i N l i i^£|jAR tS'' borne ^ our^agrlculture," 7 K l n ; . b . r l y • 10 Twin Falli, Idoho October 24 ,1969. Gooding FFA Member'Is iM^igie VaUey FARIIg W inner 0£ National A\vard GOODING — Dale Thomas, The P a.c5»c Region consists ot 4-H Scene _ son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Thom­ 12 western states..As winner of as,' Gooding, has been named the regional awird, he received recipient of the Pacific Retfon $200:. Date also w as' the state Local 4-H’ers I)|9nate Fair —•-FFA-Foundalion-award-in-agri. award-wianer... and: .received, . • business. plaque and 5100. ■ • - Premiums TcrCjfflprFund^ Dale was named winner at What started, out as .a-part- tim c'lo b (0 supplement his sum* the' National FFA Convention The entlre.membership of and Lassies donating their pre­ mer income on his father’s dal* . last week-ia KaMaj; City, Mo, Twin F alls County H-- H clubs mium s are: ry farm, tum«d intcf a fulltime have,turned in the1y pretniiim ■ Deb Howard, Carol Brockman, summer Job for Dale. The 1969 ■money from the. county fair to N ancy Brockman, Dfebble Bu­ iraduat? of the Gooding High he 4-H Summer Camp building chanan, Shelly Breeding, Scott Ichool sta rte d . in business cus* und, states Olan Genn, Twin Breeding, Charlotte Davis, Bar­ tom stacking hay in 1966 when F alls County 4-H’agent. bara Davis, Jim Morrison,. Lin­ . oaOBER 26 he was a sophomore in Good­ - The two clubs are the Foothill da Morrison, Wayne Buchanan, HOI^SI AND .HIDEt APPARtt; SAU ing High School. Lads and Lassies, Murtaush, Mike Toupin, Roy Toupin, Dee Adv«illMmtnl> Oct. 22 oi^d 34 Dale decided that along with and the Northvlew Livestock 4-H Toupin vid Doug Self. .AvOlanMrtt Harold.Ktoot and— helping his father on their 270* Club, Buhl. Mr; Genn said sev­ Members of the Northvlew Jot DuHtk acre. 35-cow. dairy farm, -he eral other Individual club mem­ Livestock 4*H Club are Jackie would establish his own busi­ OCTOBER 27 bers have donated' their ’ pre- Monte Bell; Steve Abshlre and ness. With aid from his father OEOKOI HUDSON nlum money.' to the building Dan Moldenhauer. he purchased a 1962 F ord two- Ad*#rtUominfi;p«>ol»tr *4 . Und. He explains the 4-H-£am- ton truck, a M lskln side-Ioader Audion'Mri IxU M int«n' , : . mer Camp facility 17 mites ^ d a “cherjy picker” baltf north of Ketchum . in the Saw- : OCTpBER 29- • ooth M ountains is about three- 80 Local HOMSR SOIOERS AND'-OTHEM He r^ted a tractor from his AdvtrtiMmonh Oct. 37 and 3S father to operate the stacker burths complete. The lodge^ hall, restrooms; four -sleeping ly Gnot Woiltm AlKtien S ^ c a and purchased a beet b ^ for cabins and the -cooks* and care­ 4-H’ersTo the truck to haul sugar jbeets O C T O B IR 2 9 in the fall, thus helping pay taker’s quarters are near com­ pletion at this tim e .- , KANOlfUTTBAir JClttTCHIN the cost of the equipment. W iu :: AUCTION.' — There.'Is an urgfe'at;need .. the help ot his 13-year-old broth­ Gel Awards Advortliomonti Octobtf 27 and 3t er to stack bales; Dale' made raise funds to construct 11 more AucllMMrti Wtrt, ElUn; W:oII . cabins. Mr. Genn said all -the a profit of nearly $1,400 the first Eighty Twin -Falls County . ^ ^nd M«utrwnItK summer. • - ...... lid 4-H’ers will be receiving hwards or and the c a m p is w itl.,_ . and m edals during a county- ' OCTOBER 30 DALE THOMAS At the-start of the 1967 sea­ son, Dale sold his first tnick debt. He .estimates the cost of wide meeting at 8 p.m; Thurs­ JACK AND ELUN BURNUM and purchased a home-built G R A D IN O one o l 18 lo jilor b u lb ttiat b n n fU rte d m , , ------B test----- at the Par* existing facilities at around $90,- day in .the Murtaugh Grange A^vortlsMMnti Oct. as end 29 Audlen*«n. Wart, Ellor*. Well, dum p rig on a 10-wheel truck ker>NeIson Bull Performance Testing Station, Goodings are these three graders. From left 000 and says about $30,000 more H all. - and M tiM ntnlih M iirtaugh fram e, f h e rig was a UlUni are Ed Koester, Gooding County agent; Fred Gilbert, Ralston-Purioa representative, and will [complete the camp, to ac­ Ole Genn, Twln^Falls County bed and a 20.000-pound w ind Ray Roberts, Wendell Charolals breeder. The testing sUtlon has been certified for all comodate 200 campers at any 4-H agent, said Ja c k Southwick. OCTOBER 31 with a H-inch_cable w hich pu^sh; breeds by the Idaho Beel Improvement Program and the University ot Idaho exteosloa one tim e. Buhl, vice president of the 4-H WM. WHiniNOTON es the loaded hay off the truck. service. : . . ’ ------M£.-Genn_lakes_ptlde_in. Buildcrs-Club,-wllUbe-master -Adv*rtU*mMirD«leb»ra9'and 3Q: Grange^^BS The outfit is powered by a )1alnlng that most ot the money ot ceremonies. After the awards . Auc]I6nt*r«>- Wort, Ellor«, Well 292'V-8 Ford engine. With this tas been, raised by people d i­ are presented to the 80 4-H’ers. end,M*»»mmMh Dale was able to stack 50^ rectly connected with 4-H club entertainment will be provided 18 B ^ s Go On Extended Election Set In the nlne-counN area. How­ by the Hansen Hustlers and NOVEMBER 1 Are Installed ___bales of hay a n d straw for o n o AND RUFT ANOEHSEN . a profit o f over *2,600. He found . HOLLISTER * - Stockhold­ ever, slrable funds haye been Psarjack’s 4-H Club. Refresh­ contributed by a few people sot ments will be furnished by the Advortiiominli Oct. 29 and 30 MURTAUGH-New Murtaugh that the skills he learned In ers of the Salmon River Ca­ By CrMt WoMorii Audlott S«rvlc« Grange officers who were not vocational agriculture under the 140-Day Performance Test nal Co. Ltd. will vote oh connected with 4-H clubs. FoothiU Lads and Lassies 4-H installed at the recent'joint In­ direction of Darrell Schnltker, Nov. 4 whether to accept or O u r goal Is, M r. Genn said, Club. NOVEMBER 3 ' to have the sum m er cam p fa. A ll 4-R club leaders and 4- stallation ceremonies at Filer, vo-ag Instructor, were Invalua­ The 18 bulls are on the 140- reject a repayment contract SAM. BAKIN . GOODING — Eighteen junior clllty complete by this time in..jH'grs receiving the medals and were Installed *during a grange ble in operating aild-’ repalring day performance test to see how .with the Department, of In- AdvorllMmtnh Oct. 31 and Nov. 1 bulls have been put on a 240- 1970., _ ____a m______„ r ^ a n urged_____ to’ attend this m eet vdth E a rl Yoi his equipment.______r i 'r ’ ______day performance-test at th e they-will gain on full feed^-Ross -terior, .under, w h ich the ca- Members of the Fopthlll Lads jcounty-vrtifc'i^ ■ m a^e tv as iristalllh'g One of'his most-valuable les­ Parker-Nelson B ull performance Parker, co-owner of the testing nal company will repay a . Installed . were. Mrs. Bryce sons, according to Dale, has Testing Station, near Gooding. station, said many breeders, ■©86,000 S m all Reclam ation B lg g e r ^ f f , lecturer: Bryce Big- been that quality work pays off. , The bulls, consl^ed. by..six both commercial and purebred, Project Act loan over a- 60- -gerstaff.-assistaDt—treasurer; “ D uring th e ’ p a s t two'.-years- of Idaho Chatblais breeders, were are seeking performance .tested 'yearperiod; - Harold Mehser. treasurer, and hauling hay, I have learned that sighed and graded earlier this bulls for their herds. ' M orris H u ffm an , general- H enry Peterson, executive com­ take a little more time :ek by Ed Koester, Gooding Next week, 21 head of senior, manager, said an informa­ mitteeman. Assisting M r: Young ittle more effort In doing .junty agent; Ray Roberts, bulls w ill come oft the 140^1ay tion meeting aliout loan con­ w ith the installatioa ceremonies your job a little bit better, the Wendell brewer, and Fred Gil­ test. H; C . (D ick) Nelson, co- tract and election will be -were Mrs.: James Kirkpatrick -ople will always be satisfied, bert, Ralston-Purina representa- owner ot the station, said all held at 8 p.m. Tuesday in' ahd Mr. and M rs.' ling on time and getting their tlve. 21 bulls have been sold to~ a the Hollister Grange Hall. > ? • _ : •hay uj) when they want, is California commercial breeder, -Wlth-thls-loen,-4he. itiis particular Breeder wAs in firm hopes to save water Grange member, was samed an jo b ." this area last month, looking lost b y seepage a n d to re­ h o n o r a ^ member o f vthe Mur« TTie'fact th a t h e had so m any Social Security for performance tested bulls, taugh Grange. habilitate delivery facUfties customers that he had to turn when he purchased the 21 bulls required for efficient A Halloween program was down several jobs last year Is at Gooding. presented.which induded a.pa­ Question Box -tlon o f the system. testimony to the quality of Both Mr. Parker and M r. Nel­ rade of 11 costumed children. D ale’s- work.- son note that the testing station Best costume was won by Jeff In addition to his hay stacklnj If you have any questions has been certified Jjy^the Idaho Breeding, Todd Petersen w as business, Dale owns seven heai about your social security, ad­ Beef Im provem ent P rog ram and second and Kristi Carrier was of dairy cattle and raises some dress them to'Jlm Davis, Box the Unlverslfy of Idaho exten­ third. State 4-H crops each year as part of his 1239, Twin F alls, Id a ho 83301. sion service. The station h a s Poems were read by K im supervised occupational pro­ been certified for all breeds ot Breeding. Todd Petersen a n d gram . My husband dle^ about three beet cattle. Ju n e Petersen. M rs. K irkjw trlck ---- jA flPter • reporter. learg ago. ^ ---- said another tost Leader Is Ori read a story. member of the crop lud^ng ____ _ „ possible for m e ...... „ ____ ing w uKeittber loam, received the-district Star drtw on his social security-whlle and ahvrbreeder Interested in Farmer Award and the State I am_stlll wrk|ng? __ v ______consignfng-bull-calves-ln-t h e JudgingXJiiit Obligation- FBTmer'Oegreer played -Jnthe ■^r your husband hadenough test )s urged to contact either school band and was a member work under social security, you Mr. Nelson or Mr. Parker. Mr. MOSCOW — • William Shane, of the varsity basketball team. w tiuld be able to receive wid- Parker stresses that assIsUnt state 4-H leader, Degree Given He also participated In the ow*s benefits evera m on th of iS-eUglbla-tcUsfiL^ni 8etYinB_o,n__^, Beftn Grwers contest andTls the... year..... as__ as your------earn­ test and a t the end o t .the !<.. will select wlnn,._ .. Involved In church activities. ings do ■ not exceed $1680 per day test, each ^signor will 4:H scholarships and, a« To 9 Grangers year. If your earnings do exceed receive' a' certitrcate fro m the Shane and 12 leaders frbm 11680 per year, then som e of extension service stating that states are meeting In- C _ B U H L - 1 ur benefits would bo withheld. his bull has-been-performance to spend a week revlewli of the Twin Falls County Po­ Ex- Gooding . j r earnings above $1680 which tested. records of m ore th a n 1,° mona Grange were given the do not exceed $2880, one dollar m embers. fifth degree cAligation during a of benefits is withheld for each From these records the Na­ recent meeting at the I.uceme Couple Attend two dollars earHed. Each dollar Special Livestock tional 4-H Records J' ‘ Grange Hall. above $2880 which Is e a r n e d Committee will - select : Receiving the obligation were causes one dollar'to be with­ H'ers to receive college scholar­ Ed Hejtmanek, Mr. and Mrs. held from benefits until all bene­ Meeting Slated ships and 60 to receive trips Robert Chandler, Mr. and Mrs. Grange Meet fits are lost for the year. As to tile National 4-H Congress. you can see. It depends on how LOGAN.- A special livestock The scholarships, ranging Randall Stewart and Mr; and conference will be sponsored by Mrs. Jack Honwood, all Lucame GOODING — At th^' recent much you earn to determine from $600 to $1,000, -Will be ooding Grange meeling Mr. whether you can draw widow's Cache Valley Breeding Associa­ aw arded diguing the in g r e s s ,: nd-Mrsr-W^-E?-Adams, henefUa_whlle you work. tion at 10 «,m,.Nov. 1 in the which will be held in Chicago and Mi^,' Louise Williams, Ijotn •USU-UnlotUIuUdlng-atLoAan. Mountain Rock Grange. were given special rec ov. ^ t o D ec. 4. Speaking at' the conferencd The charter was draped In by'master Ben Glauncr. I am working and have 13 __rdrbTj5TdahD-4‘H-mem- will be D r. R obert Bellows, memory of Mrs. Gortnide Far- 'Mr. Adams was named to the years until I can retire. We havf hers are entered In tho national Miles City, Mont,, on research Unger, Buhl. jffice of state Grange master at a menially retarded daughter 21 awards program. Those who In the field o f reproductive phy- Winners of the bread baking the Gooding session o f the Ida- years old. Is she entitled to an} have already won state>sponsor- c b e a | g r a i % and candy contest were’ Mrs.' ho'State Grango'ln 1930, which of m y social security? slology; Lloyd Schm itt, Stan­ ed trips, along with winners ford, Mont., potentials In cross­ Judith Galnforth, first; Mrs. Ef- ho held for 10 wars. He spoke ...... Yes. When you retire, tire. you can from other states hnd winners breeding; Dr. Clair Acord, fie Dohlquist,ihlqui second, and Mrs. briefly, when., fntroducjW, Mrs. also file for your disabled adult o t ' nationally-sponsored trips, Utah’s livestock specialist,' pas' grass (June grass), mustard, and shep- B ertha Til'Illoy; . , ...... third...... In bread Adams also expressed licr daugbier. Sho will receive an il be considered for scholar- turing cattle on alfalfa, and Torn m ustard iiindl baking, and Mrs. Dlancho SmithSmitI pleasure at fehewlng old ac- am ount equal to one-half ^ u r herdspurse, it gets most othpr annual Lasater, Matheson. Colo. and Mrs, Helen'Dietz, tied forflqualntances bnd mooting new monthly benefit. She would also shepherdspiirse broadleaf and grassy weeds as .well. firstflrcf and nnjt mnnn^A second ins A, all-couort sew* wore a^i’lillablo, they would cost It!) office w ill tell you It you' WAS awarded to R. A Mott and n com ic reading by M rs. K, T. ,1 -You;,can apray Princep anyllme. (your_weedy.alfalfa-into-pure alfalfa - . InR conlcst. Butler, nnd a talk on wiiat ro- more than social security con­ have enough evidence'ot"your AssoclatosrBolse. Plans cnH ,for . i?luns for the state convonlion senrch docs for aRricultnre by tributions. nge.‘ If morp* is hcede dr they a cdh>plellon of the 03,000vWinter'mbiav’^ again.^^rwiA^ were discussed. Mrs. Bryan county ngent Ed Koester. will help you get the additional foot reinforced concrete building lure carrieg Princep down into the soil —M r. rrva rjjcun. rixcnnyirr - r - ttp w *juF.br4r-W»r-’ Gflhy, A gJlr.1llniral.rhf;micnl V tumed“ from~«n Insuranco^con* to pick off ,wee* aa (hey germlnflto..,:,.” DivisionorGeigy'chemi TJje Novciphcr meollng w ill vontlon In PhlladQlphla, n poko [uuiiiiiiiinnuiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiluiiiiiliiu^^^^ - right thhjugh next-spring'and summer;- -MillHiverRoad, Ardslby,-l^^Vrl0502. - 1)0 iiold at the. Deep Creek briefly of his visits to tho re­ Grnngo (lall. ■ nowned nlghis In Philadelphia. N o t p n ly ’ does Princep get cheat*

, a c c e p t e d 3 Beef Breeds D r, Birdsall N. Carle, Twin Falls, has been > accepted for ; FOR ALL YOUR CHEMICAL NEEDS membership in the American* LIVESTOCK MARKETIN0 JIVSSN. Make Debut Internatlonar Charolals Associa­ SALE EVERY TUESDAY — JEROME tion, the nation's foufth largest beef breed, , Mq^ic Valley Growers At Big Expo • '"Twlh Falla783rB67r/': ' liatlve crossbred calves for view- COMPLETE ANGUS DISPERSAL I-AS VEGAS. N e v .- T h r e e of ‘ ig and Inspection by E X P O N orth Am orica’s newest beof udionces, , | f . Toisday,0<;fober28,;i9(i9 ; breed ImmigTAnts ^ Limousin, Augmented by a Joint breeds ' ' FOR^ALL'i^oi^^^^ Simmental and South Devon ~ display from Canada — pure­ 28 Cowfc — 7 Bred Halfam — 4 Hard S)ra —^ 8 Vaarling Bulla , will be seen on "Avenue ofjWe bred Angus, Charolals. Hereford Thia la a parrormanca taatad hard of Raglatarad Angua. Thay Breeds" during (he first annual an d Shorthorn cattle, from lead- will ba aold at 1:00 durlnft ragyilar Tuaiday Auction along with ' Inttfrnafjonal Caitlomen*s Expo Jnff C anadian breeders— E X P O ’s at tiifl Convention Center hero **Avenue of the Breeds" w ill,, Dec. 1M 8. present the wldesr array of beef | 65 Head Whita Face Stock Chviia, Calving now;' . **Thls w Jllb a the f/rst display breeds,.ever assembled underh (' f, ,710 Head,White pace PragTeatedHalfara. o f (h^ie,breeds at a m ajo r live- one ro or ' '■ , -V.;'' , 3'WIta Face.,Bulla., ■stock expos! Ion slnce-Uiey were .■ Jn addition to the above, Bran* fir st, In/rodMced^.Jnto ',K o ,r t h gu9. Charolalsi Devon, OaUpi,, PLUS ppR'ljSU^^ Amerlcfli" commented.' ChrUto* — Hereford,. Red Angus, Rod i pher Kochorf, executlve'P^) - Santa Oertrudls and Scotch ! IKB MUIR, MANAciiiB W4-aW’’y '' - ^ -«rof^PO^koehofHid(i0d-t> . In sddUlon to nurebre(ti;,twD,.. _____ O ’B "bo ulevaitl o f beef,^'.|ill . j(he;breo(tt LInouifa «n ence" was p^uced-to ahow'the: benefits of added plant food: in obtaining rhaximum- crop pro< duction. It covers the sources of primarjt plant food elements, m anufacturing an d the scientlfTc M ON m OU S NEW TRACTOR has ]ust been Introduced by Ford Motor Co. Ilita mode] balan’clng o f fertlllEerti 9000 is the largest in Ford'a history and is designed to ptill Itrger farm eqalptd«it.‘ Hie new The companion film , *'No tractor, which weighs nine tons. coatahu--« UO horsepower, turt>ocharged, diesel engine. Room for-Weeds," Is also avail­ Standard items are tachometerrbutQunent paBelllgbts, cushlonedseaU with back rests and able In 16 tn m ; color af^d sound : cigarette lighter. Options' Inchide a fully encloted cab naU ng possible an weather use.' Basla aiid runs H mindtes. It. em pha­ price la estimated at Ili.lOO: (UPI telephoto) ^ ^ sizes the beneficial effects, of proper weej!. control on < A TU T T LE a Ae \ Mmeber hiui'bMii sprinUlag bis ptitiires eovercd with kk. However the Ice melted later day wben ^elds. The Him shows bow .. entlfic research has„deveIoped iiuKl sparently left them.oo overnl^t reoeptly. And u a . U mumed np. This pw tue Is p u t of tfje^Bradsb^w n o c ^ 1970 Turkey selective- herbicides to control FILER ' result of coU morning temperatures, part of the paitnre wae a varied of weeds elow I ...... current trol”, from any county agent's log to the Department- - oVAgri-o fV market prices fo r Canadian OctobeM5eceml>er, 1968. Jan- Record Volume Of Crops office...... - , , , cmtural Development, UiUon Pa- wheat. This is in addition to uaiy-March. 1970 prices will av­ . Bull Sale in tlw Northwest.' _ Drud^ry of weed control Is cinc Rai1roand the leading export market for that needs attention. Whether average. 28,9;. du ru m 31.2 bushels com* Dfark Northern SPt^nS wheat the chemicals are selective or pared with 31.2 and 27.4; other non-selecUve. they work-b e s t 26.8->)i^heU'^oin from the U. S.- According to westernWestern Wheatwneat as Assodr*"" - when, soil, water and fertilltji --growth.— t t p M IW elgB' loatketing^' — irt b y The Ida ho ...... on selection — ,werA reduced— ^ ., an d use of herbicides fo r con* -hot, .d iy weather across th It Comtplsslon, the recent action bjt Canada frill cost the trol of such common plant p northern half of the C on Bel as dandelion, chlclmeed, d..... ditions indicated a prosp during August an d fay continued, U . S. iat least $10 m illion In yarrow, crabgrass A d quack* W heat crop of 1.466.947.000 bush' d ry weather In m ost South Cea- wheat salee dtirlng the next grass. The bulletin also lists in- —e is; d own tw o — ” ■ 4ral-St8te«. from last month and even per .The report lald summer fresh cent below last year’s record vegetable i^uction was e x­ pected to M five per cent be­ aggressive Wheat exporters, the wheat esUmate Included low last year and pproducUoi Wheat Commission said. Wheat C an our FREE soil testing 1,14&,076,000 bushels of winter of n onoiI tM ing OH t T>fAw Twwmhftf prices In the expected itiinpede part In the Installation ceremon------»iM carW #toirtrtSng»TilHho'd8faIliTiTW »'ll:»v«irTqm *:aofoTid- to woO foreign buyers. Next Spring’s Geramiinis _ were Mrs. Henry Dahlqulst,Iqulst, Richard Baum, executive vice emblem...... bearer,r,...... andi JMrs. r Pres­ tako tha'tampUi. Than ouj- trdlnad penonnal will oiilit you With a - MOSCOW **^ "Now is the time clean, washed, sharp sand, al< president of Western Wheat As­ ton Gentry, marshal. tailor-mada program . . . a CROP/GUIDE Plan for your farm,. You'll’ to for next spring') though y6u may use vermlcullte, sociate^ has been In Washing­ New officers Include Preston geranium s." states W. H . Sny-Sny Blthef* m edium m ust drain free­ ton. D.C;, conferring with U8DA Gentry, master;JHeniy D a h l­ gat ipaclflc {artillzar iracommandqtloMJor each field and each crop dor. horticulturist and landscape ly and not retain much moisture officials to determine how the qulst, overseer; Mrs. Lonnie arciiltcct,' University of Idaho. . because geraniums root best In United States can protect Its re­ Moore, aecretaryj Mrs. Harvey to reach your yield goali. It will aiio Include a^.rampIetf 'W M d and Ho {explains thot cuttings tak* a relatively dry medium. m aining Interest In the |38 m il­ Grindstaff. treasurer: Mra. Vio. en now should produce blooming Sterilise saw before you use lion Philippine wheat market.* Hltks, chaplain; Mrs. Lee Insect control program, to help Iniura tiiase godls. The CROP/GUIDE pJanta bj» lalo Moy. But Jf your It. The easiest way Is to moisten lecturer; Carl Hen­ gardening' schedule Is a. little sand an d pot. then heat In an drix, steward; W . R . W ard, a»* Plan'Ik,"lha bait way known fo raiie crops In your a r e a ." ^ d It's tight these early fall weeks, oven at 165 degrees for 35 min­ They won’t need fertilizing until slstant steward; Herman TIeder, the moit economical way, too. Be iure to get ypur^^REE soil taiU and don't worry. You can take cut­ utes, Snyder advises. , sometime In February when the gatekeeper, and Mrs. W. r . tings even after geraniuni fol­ ' Cool sand, then Insert cuttings ^ys lengthen and brighten. W ard, la dy assistant stewaiward. , a CROP/GUIDE Plan for your farm. Call us todayl , ' iage is touched by frost. Cut­ and tamp sand around them. Then U9e ai . -Mrs.______B. B. Hicks._____ C^reitM ru tings taken from foliage that's Water well and set In a light, my prepared soluble fertiliz­ ^ h a r d Morgan. Pomona; Mrs. damaged or reduced i>y frdst sunny place. It's not necesiary er. following directions c'a r e* R alph HosteUerl n o ra ; E . " . *-1. w ill Just fake iongqr to w o t. to cover the .cuttings. <}erifli* Hlcfas, exec^veoommltC Make cuttings'no more than urns contain-averytfilng. necet* J .Lata. In'March Is the time and Mrs. Gordon Hendrix,'wo­ three Inches long. Then remove sary for rooting, and don't need to tlp-prune or, pinch buds to men’s activity. chairTnan,' -... - -• enough leaves .ao ,,that the cut­ hormone.....treatmeats, Snyde; in^ce branchlness In the eum- Arrangements for the installa­ tings can be Inserted about two mer plants. Pinching later than tion were mad6 ^ Pomona -You exoaef more from Amtr/caa and you (|et H/ra Inches, deep in the rootlnj K ocMrs In about ihrei April d«laya flower formation. master and ,M n.; Ef ” ' dlu m , la a slx*inch pot, S weeks, ^ f n Uttt .ftjot* are % Set out when all danger ot frost Refresbsnenti m r e un< . directs. ■' to ^ In ^ long, pot-tho^ttlngs raction of M ra. L y le ;______.The best-rooting medium is In well-drained,gaidea loam. Mr».,SnpU J4rome w at« guest.

■■ ,L '

, ''lradueen detected this fali in a oum- engineers, each monitoring a on wheels," D. C. Haney, gen- article In a recent New Hoili[olland weight- and (4) reluctance -1 o critrcal'Iimclloft-Ot'the-conibtne cra|-manager.-IH-Farm^^uip- iJc w s ._ -- . >er of pasture' and feed lo t la m b s ...... move-and.kneellng_in abnorpia.I_ and giving early warning of po­ ment Division, points out.. '*ln ■ ;The artlde-says. according ^ ...... position^ Frank Smith of the National’nal Dr. Robert- Simmons, veter­ tential .operating problems.' addition to th'e power system Since the lambs -wlH respond Aviation Trades , Association, 1'?=’- inarian for the. Idaho Sheep . Blit the fanner doesn’t feel ■that propels it, the machine also to treatment, it is suggested that - crowded; -The -?^gineers”. are incorporates a material handling Washlngton. D. C., today, about* : C o m m is s io n ' said he has r e- celved a nombis'r of calls where when the disease is recognized •Uny solld'state devices Jn a sys­ system and a material process­ one or every six tillable acrcs .-j' he Iambs were, stiff and ex- the Iamb'feeder should call his tem developed by International ing system. All three arc under In the U.S. gets some kind of ' -• blbited.this condition some three local. veterinarian dr get in Harvester's Farm Equipment tho control of one man — the an aerial application-of mate­ rials each year. to four'weeks after the lambs touch with Dr. Simmons at tho Division. IH combines equif-'^ operator who,. today, finds Ida ho Sheep Conuxilsslon office with the new system have t him self more and more Isolated Carl Heimer, agricultural air* arrived in the stale. " . Tha disease is common and in'Bolse. - - • plnccd with selected customers from the v a r 10 u s mechanical -raft specialist for the Piper for use in- the 1969 harvest. functions for w hich he is Aircraft Co.. Lock Hav«n,-Pa., Used to harvesfa wide variety sponsible. Igh — one in every of crops, including small grain, -• “As the popularity of air-wn- ...... Ida, aircraft have com and beans, combines have ditioned, dust-proof cabs, h a s been used to map vegetation ^ndver before been transistorized, grown and as belts, chains; and and soil type and to survey When you start your pulleys have been increasingly crops for disease dam age. • shielded fo r '^ f e t y , the opera­ •AU told, there are nearly. tor has been cut off from the 000 aircraft providing custom FUTURE PLANNING North Side sights, sounds, vibrations. an< farm service In the U.S., re* even smells that once warned ports Farrell Higbee, Loveland, him to stop and m ake some ad- Colo., executive director of the Herd Figures ustment In his m obile harvest- National Aerial Applicators As­ ng factory., sociation. Remember CASH Purchases He says 2.400 flying services “ Such desirable im provements as power steering, comfortable which-operate them applied-65. per cent of the agricultural Are Released seating and cab radios also con­ C o s tle s s ! tribute to the breakdown in his chemicals used in thetf.S. last ar. Their pilots d id the job JEROM E — Ben Russell, unit communication with the ma­ ; little more than a mllli tester, reported that from the chine. ------S ‘ SPECIALLY DESIGNED- aircraft are being used for crop dusUng, Then It'* time to remeriber^your local PCA a n d - lf» - hours flying time. G o o d in g * Jerome ' Uncoln "Our solid state monitoring :1a 30 iainotes.as ■'groond team eoold-cover in 60 hours. Aircraft 'ai« findmg many othei speciallzed source of FARM (^EDIT, Dairy Herd Improvement Asso­ -•-J<*n Neace, B ell Helicopter agricultural uses such as seedlag, brush control ai^. aerial cattia *---- * stem will re-establish the Co.. F ort Worth, Tex:., reports ciation,''Unit No. 2, .there were erator's vital rapport with "Pay: Cash — Pay less'Ms a familiar truism. With 23 herds that averaged over that 93 per . cent of the U.S. combine and give him the kind craft Owners and Pilots Asso­ . PRODUCTION CREDIT FINANCING you cop pay cash 1.25 pounds of betterfat per cow agriculture work^fleet arc fixed $3.50 range than any other. for many western farmers and of sophisticated control required ciation. reports members of the The Iowa, seedlngs last war . and avoid carrying charges., service charged and high during the month of September. wing aircraft while seven per ranchers In recent-<^ars. and for agriculture in the space association fiy tbelr planes for cost farm ers Sl.5Q.an acre. Low* Herds In order of production cent now are helicopters. the aircraft Is-playlng a bigger Interest. ■ age,** H anty says. Among the latter are those fence inspection,'ion, crop------reporting,■’ galloiiage spraying to control al­ part each year. __arejkied; Composed of a dozen-magnetic falfa wcevl] was running at ■ Numberirfoltoxrtng names will belonging to \ Robert Wachs, “ b ra n d in g ’ their cattJe b y drop- The control of b r u d i Is a lead- .Regardless of what .you buy, use pCA financing. Come transducersr~or” 5cnsors,-- and sident of a~ custom service plng^a dye -oJi-them,-rounding about-J3.50-’Per—acre_lhv.lhe Ing.practice.ia:the_Great.Plalns be number of cows milking, -in, AetvtplkJt..over, yqujl.f|n_djus frie^lyo'nd under- ■some 60 or 70 transistors, diodes . jiness'named-“Arizona Heli­ up strays and flying semen northeastern states.' conservation program and many d aily average pounds o f, miUt standing. and other solid state devices, copters” at Chandler. Arlz. from stud to farm, as well as One advantage of the custom farmers report ftcreases of 300 and daily average pounds of fa t the system monitors such things Wachs is perhaps unique In the other more mundane uses. - aerial spraying of chemicals, in to 400 per cent in grazing as George Beer. 24, 39.8, 1-62; as rotation speed of shafts, vol­ Industry Jn that he gives his He says ■ agricultural aircraft the opinion of m any authorities. the result of ground moisture If You Heed Catlle Of ilny K iriiT Gordon Martin, 33,. 47.9. 1.60; ume of material passing through farm customers trading stam] have ail but mechanized the Is the fast-increasing scientific which has been released by I^rank Houston. 7. 43.8, 1.51; aU the combine, pressures an d tem­ for prompt payment ot the . growing of about 85 per cent know-how o f the flying services brush control. Jerome; Harold Pridmore, Rlch- peratures. monthly bills., “nie. wives of his of the rice crop in South Texas and their pilots. Aerial spraying brought _ Jield, 39. 45.2, 1.51; Scott G ulick, . From twelve strategic points cutomers are displaying a keen and large areas in Louisiana, Working closely with.chemical mesquUe kill of 50 to TO per Jero m e, 14, 37.4, 1.47; Ron and In the machine, the sensors interest In agricultural aviation and . have 'helped Increase the companies, aircraft companies cent recently on a farm In Ojt- G len Taylor, Wendell. 50. 42.4, transmit electronic signals con­ and. are among his best sales­ value of the South Texas crop and with research'and-extension toa County^ Okla. Last year in 1.46; -Don Thibaiilt,'Jerome, 54. stantly to a central solid state men, Wachs reports: along by some S25 raUlioh a ^c ia lis t of the agricultural col­ Maricopa County. Ariz., a heli* 45.2, 1.46. an d W estpolnt Hoi- anaiyier or ^'black box,*' These Texas 'now leads all states In year. . “ leges. they have become highly copter defoliated a 72-acre-cot-^ steins. W endell, 41. 42.3, 1.43.' incoming signals describe the specialized agricultural aircraft Crops as varied as. Midwest skilled in the safe use and ap­ ton field in Inly 45 minutes. • H e n ry Reid, Jerom e, 51. 41.e, actual conditions of operation with 853 registered, according and southern slash pine are now plication of the countless new Elsewhere ia .th e W est.-the 1.42; W . G . Prieist. ’ Jerom e, 4; throughout the combine. T he to the Federal A viation A dm in ­ being seeded by air — with chemicals .which have come on National Aerial Applicators’As­ 2ff.l, ,1.39; ..John .Webster, Je- analyxer compares this Informa­ istration. C alifornia is a close tho seed and seedbedding' spe­ the market sociation reports aerjaJ custom to m e . 33, 4i.7, L39, W alt R ine­ tion w ith preselected values, second with 839, w hile Arkansas cially prepared in advance. The custom applicator, rather setvice is on the Increase lor h a rt, Dietrich. 14. 40.2,: 1.38; which represent nomi&l opera­ is a distant third w ith 367. Last year, Iowa farmers tried than the farmer, is the special­ the control of corn roolworm, - George Cobb, Jerom e. 31. 42.1, tion. to determine whether the . From the Canadian Depart­ aerial seeding of both corn and ist in this a e rial >vorld where both the western and soutliern 3.37; Orville Mattlce. Wendell. various combine systems are ment of Agriculture comes word soybeans wiUi m ixed success. drift, atm ospheric conditions varieties of 'the .pest. 46, 41.5. 1.37; G a ll W Ullams; Je ­ working satisfactorily. . that a foam, similar to aerial Dale Hull, lowa state agricul­ and formulations can be so crit­ ro m e . 32, 40.4, 1.37. Any abnormal function In­ firefighting foam, has been, used tural engineer, thinks aerial ical. ' _ IMPORT CHEESE Bob Burks, W endell. 48, 41.6, stantly, lights one o f a series of to protect fruit trees and toma­ seeding has ^ t to like the prob­ ■ Acreage treated by aircraft 1.34; R og e r Freem an, Shoshme, red warning lights ori the read­ toes from frost. California and lems of uniform distribution of in California increased 26 per WASHINGTON — The Food 17, 38.2, 1.33; Ted Turner. J e ­ out panel in the cab a n d drc~~ Florida citrus and. peach grow­ corn kernels and uniform cover cent over a recent five-year and Drug Administration Is im-^ rom e. 113, 40.2, 1.33; R alph R il­ a red warning wand directly — ers have, of coursez3!rade-con- after seeding; period, according to the Cali­ pounding larg e am ounts of Im* ey, Richfield. 54. 3 9J, 1.90; the operator's forward Jine 6. sfderable use of heIlS>pters lor Costs for custom ;sprayi fornia Agricultural Aircraft As­ ported cheese because of pesti­ Charles W. Stone, Jerome,' 14, vision. A glance at the lighted the same purpose. and most other kL._. sociation. In- th a t:s a m e period, cide residue. ^ 40.0. 1.30; Nellie Lyons, ’ panel tells him the location ol The whirlybirds hover .over L applicatio n ? have been accidcnts involving agricultural Since the start of the year. ' 12. 34.1. 1 J8; Lee M organ. Ha* the trouble, and he can take a block of trees while their ro­ from $ l to $8 an a c re - chemicals wer&-«duced by 53 1.8 million pounds of Imported le lto n , i n , 37.4,1.27. en d Gerald whatever action is necessary to tor blast mixes the cold and depending on the type a n d difll- per cent. cheese—w orth $2.5 'm illion—has Powell* Jerom e, 31, 37.1, 1.25. correct It. When everything is warm air layers below. . ilty of the job. Probably more Brush control has proved to been impounded by Inspectors FARM and RANCH working properly, a single green Charles Spence of the Air* 3rk is done In the tl.5 0 to 5 a most attractive Investment Jn the Port of New York. ie l an d the Operating Expenses! l i ^ S l e e r yield and quality of the raw ___ problem faced by the en* Mechanical Harvesting Of Fruits And products for processing.'* Normal oparallng expenses related-to-your-.farm op— rineers was that of vlsiblli^ of Crosby said work was -pro­ erotion...^ .. m a^inery put;ch9se3„.lncluc)lng.autppi.O' Has Real he warning signals. A read-out ceeding rapidiu In the mecha­ biles and trucks. i . panel In front of the operator nization oI„C0Dbage haivra^g w ould.block his view of the Vegetables Is Seen As Future Necessity for sauerkraut and researchers ' Fertllliers, seedsrwater-and'taxes.’are-all -Items-that grain cutting mechanism and- are wprking on machines to har­ you can get'a loon for on your approved loan from Bay W indow to. meet the, world’s demands vest crops such as broccoli. mouie: p ______a side, i iiminataTe: bnssels sprouts. oEra'— ___ and FRESNO. CaUf. (UPI) — A ■ ...... ' -the panel m ig h t .go unheeded- and vegetables produced -i Slates which Is not subject “Work on the mechanical har­ strawberries. Progress has been live steer with a window In the 1'hese toons are payo\)le on annual Installments tqll-. Moreovei> "wim his eyes accus­ United States for food : to.the evolution'in mechaniza- vesting of all major fruit and sk)w in research on the mechan­ side of its stomach provides ag­ orod to yo u r farm incohne. tomed to daylight outside the sing is a tutu re nece "on of production, harvesting vegetable crops produced In tho ical harvesting of pears and cit­ riculture atudents at . Fresno cab, the operator might not be brought on by economics — nd handling," ho.said.__ _ United.States Jorproccsalng rus-fruits because of-the-per* . . State College .wHh first-han d --- DROP INTO YOUR NEAREST PCA~OFFICB, ' attracted fay ehytfilng but the consunter demand, an agricul­ Crosby gave his views on "the is under- w a y ," Crosby said Ishable q uality of t l ^ crop. knowledge of tf>e < ^stlve proc­ LET'S TALK IT OVER. most brilliant warning light In­ tural export said today. new look" in harvesting, which "In crops such fls sweet com ess Iq cattle. and peas, where mechanical "T he treii? towrfrd Increased side. Edwin 'A. Crosby, director of i^ switching from human labor use of fruits and.A'egetables for The 1,100-pound btadc angus to mechanization, in a speech harvesting has been practiced IH engineers solv^ the prob­ the agriculture division of the processing will continue, not ■teer appears to have suffered National Canners Association, to the 18th an n ual m eeting .of commercially for more than 10 no 111-effects from the operation lem by placing the readK)Ut pan­ only because of an increase in el above the windshield where It said tremendous advances have tho Agricultural Research Insti­ years, m o r e sophisticated which bared his Internal work­ population but- also due to/the been m ad e irt the niechoniza- tute. changes are being made in ings for inspection. c a n't obstruct view of the favorable economics and con­ tion of fru it an d vegetable har- The institute studies new equipment*' varieties and field School veterinarian Bill Smith ground. Then t h ^ added the red venience to the consunter. As vesting in the past decade. trends In agriculture and how ■ •‘.ion practices to Improve sutured the. animal’s stomach warning wand to notify the op­ the standard of living continue erator when to look at the panel. wall to a fistula cover with a to rise, m ore and more pcop “A worn bolt, a broken drive removable cap more than will placo'cmphasls on tho con­ y ear ago.' chain or a choked m ate ria l pas* venience of processed food," he soge can be exrwnsivajo a far- In addition to allowing stu- mec.at.l\arvesL-when-delay_caiS: — dentfl -a-unlque -inside' look-Tit mean crop losses." Haney spys. ’ “ In the final anolysisTTQfosb the digestive process, the port­ "This new IH system will make said, "the consumer will benef hole w ill eld researchers at- it possible for tho farmer “to from increasing mechanization tehipling to determine the di­ .. ._ costly downltme and to In agricultural production," gestibility of cottonseed products improve his productive efficien­ for the project’s sponsor. Ranch­ cy and the work capacity of his e r’s Cotton O il Co. machine. In addition, earl;* ’ ,. Of particular interest to the w arn in g of malfunction wii I tsear^hers is the animDl’s abil- Btlmulalo the preventive action I jiy to digest coltonseed meal (hat extends com bine life. end hulls. '’Today’s buslnessmnn-farmer Small nylon bags contalnlni different fo ^ products and tle< la a hitDily cost-conscious indi­ vidual who equates control, of t6 a rlaetio strip can be inserte< his equipment with the profita­ into the steer’ft stomach and lelt bility of his enterprise. We be* FUEL OIL ’ for 24 hours. Ilcve this monitoring system Is When they are withdrawn, the not only what tho farmer needs * samples can be studied to deter­ but what he expects from a pro­ mine which are the most di- GET ON OUR gressive, creative fo rm equip­ • gesUble. m ent industry.” i The IH development repre­ CHECK \ sents-a further step beyond ROUTE LIST : Plans For State "M onitor Control'', a non-solid state system using more con­ ventional saugca, warning sig­ i NFC Meet Noted nals and llRhis, and covering fewer combine functions. “ M on­ ; !■ WElfeit,!,Pl«m for th» itor-Conlrol"'was introduced by FU EL OH. IS . . W -♦ . SWteNFO^»pYentlon_toboheld (he company JI in Durley next month w re an* new'816 ana 019 com blhes and, > ‘ . nounced .during a 'r e c e n t Wen- marked the first commercial ap­ ; dell NFO mating. plication of a higher order o Joe Doramun urged all farm- combine control. Earlier, HI lc( • SAFE 1 ers to attend the convention on the Industry In development o Mov. 8 andialso to'take their the hydrostatic transmission .-fnaide-inflnltely-varloble . at the pDndoh>saPondv Inn. with reg­ control of grotind speed avItUs I>EliliDiniE^ istration aurpng at 8 a.m. . able for’(he firat time In a com­ Voting delegates for the con­ bine, vention wlllLjinclude M r. a n d Miniaturization of solid state , Mrs. Herman hleyera, Gooding, circuitry and tiovlces makes the a n d M r. ond M rs. Ole Klov- IH monitoring system practica moon. Mr, «/1*M m . Vern Rob­ for combines and other comple* f . : inson. . M r. and M rs. R a y Me* farm machines. In addition. | Provan Quality :Pro(JHct« and '^fvlea From Your__ Cord. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Rosen, is possible to achieve unusua Mr. and Mrs. Dale Durfpe. Mr. system relinblllty throufih fail and Mrs. Car) I>oramus ana Mr. safe features. F o r exam ple, aim* HOME OWNED AND OI>ERATED and Mrs. Joo'Doramui, ' pie loss of the green “go" light on thd road > out penoi would aignal any malfunction In the warning ayatem. Itself. The i Pptluc|c Planned some type of fall-safe'provision is found on airc ra ft a n d space ! KIMBERLY^Th® Worthwhile ehlcles. Livestock 4*ft Club wlK have Curron^y (he company'! ' B pQtluck l u i ^ r Saturday eve­ glneers are « t work-oii (h«.naxt ning at the PlAfeint View stage In devplopment of their ■ Grang* haU, monitoring concept, it will In< . The club to lead by Mra. Ola vol9e tying certain function sen- ' Butier, and m a . Calvin Goold. M>T$ In wUh forward control of crane inlcansan CUy. flMfwgiasa iie^r to 20 feet long and 12 feet h l g h .^ e a a r , All.mtmbera, !parenta and rola* the combine to optim ize the luir* (0 the Amerlean Hereford Aaseclatlea. a u haa bMn on tpp ot the building sinct HAZELTON 829.5974 , i -I - - M DEEN : , ilves ar« Invited. Hiera will be vesti rate. This w ill be a 'slnnl* ' It waallrat 'tflslalled. It was tainn down oneo before In U s i for cleaning. It alia takd ...... AMERICAN .PAU.8.ia6-.27»- ■. ; cpecial ootartAlimoQL gamej ficant further step toward a ful> again receotly for oitother c leu lo| Job. Oao workmaQ rides oa tbe ite e p i back «a U I •Ad Aedns.; Ix auMnated barveat. up.

■ 3 a Friday, N e w S e r v R e w i u Gattlemen

— ■ ‘■CatUemen all bver:,.iihe cbuntry.^can '.become price makere, not ,price takers. •>y utilizing a new weekly man market 'information package," announced Bill House, president of Ute A m «rica n National Cattle- men?s AssoclaUon (ANCA) and of Cattle Marketing InformailoQ Service, Inc. (CM IS). One of the nfttlon’s- leading cattlemen. House outlined de* t&!ls of the’ weekly service de­ veloped -by CATTLE-FAX and the ANCA. "The new wcekl' m air report which Is now avail able contains the latest weekly fed an d Tecder cattle prices, cat tic movethents, supplies, projected m arketing, t r e n d s; complete with CATTLE-FAX staff analsyfs of. the . current .—7i------market situation — all essential ' PART bl'. NEW It^U H^riiidepeiidiW M nt a^ • new pleki bath disinfectant. fnformatfon, factors and trends lod dock and new icalM and scale bouse. Next to the scale bousa that will strengthM the cattle­ men’s bargaining and net in­ come position in the market lers .In several countries. M uch p la c e ," ... Vir^a WiUiains’ Birthday Eurojpe Smd farm land in Europe hu kits ' TOP TIB(ffi BOB, owned by Grem Simon, C a h ^ , Kaiv. House continued, “Bona fide o f ;ralnfa ir but there; are-tTrnei— and rlddea by Lloyd Jacobs, Ukis City. Kan., took boaors as cattlemen can receive this time­ of drought Distribution of rain­ ly market analysis and informa­ BUHL — ^You^g calves champion Appatoosa sUUlon at the ises State Fair of .Texaa Observed By Local Grange progressing fall Is the>- problem. There are. - at Dallka rtceoUy. (UPI telephoto) tion every Monday morning will be weighed and graded when 'theji subscribe to'i,the at' the Ralph Baughman plans to use untapped tvater re­ farm, northeast of Buhl The TSth birthday ^ iv e r s a r y ed blrthday.cake by the Grange. sources. • , ■ weekly CATTLE-FAX report. A of V Irell W .-W illiams was cele­ Mrs. Robert .Rayl , was in I^Agci^dture special feature for cow-calf and WednesOBy mvrulni;.--- -—- brate by ipemljers and goest^ ^ tn e , pr^'gfam whichcl Larsen took p a ^ In the meet- Cattlemen Say No Apology' Stocker subscribers is a prac­ of the Mountain Rock Grange consi.._^ , welcome and BOISE — America.Is.still the ng or 400 entineers.;The pro. tical and effective feeder cattle This weighing and grading Is . par recently with a dinner and. pro- reading ( rr. W Ullams’ history pace setter'ln agrldlilturat engi­ gram.wasconduirted In.French, listing- service," -Housi ■t of the production b y M rs; Rayl'^_two piano sotos, neering and farm machinery but G erm an and English, simultane- plained. T lestlngrthe* Baughm ans stat Needed For Beef Prices ed in- 1965-,on their . Angus Mr. Williams was born In Sa­ " *• irk-Crawford, 'KUnbefly; EuroMarMibiintrieff'are-makitrg "W hen the cow-calf o r stocker cattle.. Weighing-the calves lem. Iowa, .Oct. 7, 1894, and and_ verses by.Michelle steatfy progress, D orrell C: Lar­ will be'Donald Toutz,' Twin ...... iamfi, Mr. Williams'* grand­ sen, irn g a ^ o n specialist, of'-the W ASHINGTON — 'JThe Amer? ernment price supports, the operator has cattle to sell, he came to Idaho with his parents can. as a subscriber to the Palls' County agent, and in 1910, where his father bought daughter.. and Christy O'Dell: University of Idaho extension River Conservation- R e s e a r ^ lean cattleman'-ls p|lud of the price'cattlemen receive for their weekly CATTLE-FAX m a il re­ Wade Wells, Boise, exten­ land east of the present- high a reading by Mrs. Lawrence service, sakl this; week =on his Center^ K im berly, Were re&d,'^ - fa ct th a t despite ever-lncreas-; product Is tlie price the consum­ school In Twin Fails. He grew Campbell, Jerome; songs by H. return from the" ing costs. he has so greatly im­ er is willing and able to pay port, list his feeder cattle with sion Animal husbandrnan, W. RIedeman, who accompanied Congress of Agricultural ^g i- proved his ■'efficiency ;th a t the the CATTLE-FAX headquarters. will grade the animals, along up here and In 1917, he Joined on the'retail level.” The cattle­ the M arines a n d 's e rv e d ' four him self on the guitar, and clos­ neers a t Baden-Baden, G erm a­ average'American can now con- m en’s leader, noted, ’There On that same day the cattle w ith other lo ca l livestock- listing will be sent Immediately m en. years, four months and 14 days. ing. words- by Gene Dillon, ny, early In October. DON'T MISS- ' sumealmosttwice as much beef seems to be one basic differ­ by teletype to the many feed- Grange master, ^ . as he’ did in. 3951, while still ence, though,, between the beef 'During this time he was In •There is 'great intei^st-In lots all over the country who Lunch will be served. All Special guests were Pomona ___ pa}ring\ppproxiraately the same cattle Industry and most other the Phlllipines, where, ha stood farm mechanlratlon,','. he .said, are„suijscrlbers_oL-the rapidly llvestockmen and anyone guard duty for a. floating dry Grange master Ed Harper and THEISEN MOTORS . retail .prices," aispoKesman'for ■s'epStihts” of.th e •‘^ n o m y p a n d ‘T h e tri growing CATTLE - FAX ^ LFM •Interested- in-the- b w f • Ifi-^ Mrs. Harper of Flier. . '. the nation's leading cattlemen’s that' is cattlemen cannof pass dock which was used -to' bring natltms...... _ eletype ma:rketlng network.” dustry are invited. IGRAHD 0PENIH6 - organization .told-, the' Subcom­ higher costs-of doing business the big warships In for repair. the United SUtes are prototypes It was the biggest one In the of labor-saving tools. However, mittee on SpeclalStudler ofithe on vto the consumer.’’/. , •. Howe said that the listing ser­ ■ . f r e e ; refreshments .; House • C om m itteeon,. Govern­ . McMillan concluded,''.The do­ world at that time. He also m any of .^the fa rm s a r e sm all vice Is somewhat similar to the spent some' time in Siberia' and Sheep U nit’s ment Operations;,-. • mestic beef cattle industry Is and much of the, work Isihaad ...... - ■' lued b y the was there on the warmest day .-.FREE VACATIONS ...... ; ' C.\'W.'McMillan.-representing dedtcale3 to, Ihe' continued pro­ labor, in .contrast.with mecbani- Elanco Division of'the Ell Lily of the year 'when' It wos 22 de­ ‘ . the ' Am erican National. Cattle-; duction* of ample quantities of Extension M tion In * Com a liv *^e-Fbr-Your»a!t Company, which has been very grees below zero. Meeting Set I m en’s association, told.the Con- wholesome beef at reasonable Interested in the .jtevelopment Larsea said Irrigation'is On his retuQt to the United I gressmenfssmen that, “total“ total domestic pri(prices. Cattlerhen have cQntln- an d use b y ‘-caUlem‘eo-.of-a na- celving more'attentloh^thi^i'te States he married Mabel Lohr 1r.' ;70V MoIn ' f— fbeef-itfOductlpnr-jias—Inora ased uall ■tIon-wld e - f eedei‘- c a ttlft iis ting Service Se^ts former years. He noted sp;tak.. at an average rate of .7.5 per and I.. - .. service. "Sira tirey p u i______t . a n . r AtJPocatellou c^ht '.annually since 1951, while the. urging consumer demand south of Twin Falls where they the cattlemen’s production, a»ts ‘This nevr weekly cattle .mar­ 3-Day Meet s tn i live. He teUs of the tim e POCATELLO — Changes In alone have risen at I6ast 85 per ket information servJci,” House in his youth when his father reduction and niarketing will HARyESTTlNE cent during the same time. stressed, “puts basic marketing MOSCOW — The agricultural purchased an 80-acre tract o _e studied at a regional meeting -nd on the Saim n Tract'fo^r "However.” McMillan; the as­ tools In the'reach of all cattle­ extension service of tlw Univer­ of the Sheep Industry'Develop sociation's executive vice presi­ NFO Plans men, and should greatly assist sity of Idaho will review its pro' 00* an d two mules. ment Committee at the Bannock dent, added, "cattlmen have them in selling their cattle — -rams and plans for the* future Mrs. Raymond O’Dell was In Hotel, Pocatello, Nov. 11 to 13. j()3t about exHdusfed Au the beef whether to the feedlot, packer, irin g a conference at the uni­ charge of the dinner and- Mrs. . W ade -WeUs, ll v e s t i^ special- pro’ductlon efficiencies -that-are or through the.public market.” Victor Nelson furnished three Ut >o( the University of Idaho Action O n versity, Nov. 3 to 6, C 0 . Young- 9«iMUkl hww many frt ___ available.-As il matter.ot.fact, arrangements 'o f chrysanthe­ extenslon^aervica, Boilse, said tb; strom, assMlate director, an­ f o r ja r m mnd if general pricT levels for live nounced today. mums for table decorations. Mr; day. that ■ representatives from r«r>cti.u—. . cattle-d6 aot'remalnhlgKer than AH-Sorghuffl- " Du«ng't8e thre'e^ay'meEtfjig -a-llght* IniermouotainJtata».wiU.attiBn< :>.'TAIffi'ADVANTAGEbp.'OUR they have been la recent years. N S t iS a ’i county^a^tfl and speclaUsU George Scott, director of produc­ ■ . . . : .-HIVVSHIPMINT',, .-iUStlN i tion n r the com mittee a t Colo* ir^uctlon .will eventually have __C0JINING.' Iowa (UPl)-The w ill discuss goala of the educa- n Be ri^ueed and,~lf thls'hap* tionat_work_and^8..mean9_ _of liT d o~ S «ti University, is plan- executive board of the National Farm Bureau Sets nlng-the;program. ------ms,' consumer food prices w ill Farmers Organisation (NFO) reaching them in our changing - ••PRIDE OF-THE FARM’^^ Potato^Crop times. Results M cM lllan 'S lain cS ^- ^O p e raOperaf- seaith .will be praenled at.t^jo holding action o n a il g rain sofg- —Speakers-will-lncIade-DrJffa StatelConfabjAt Ing...... ln th«- . free...... market...... ^s^tem system bert W. Coonrod, academic vice -sem in a r which— ^ hum produced throughout th e throughout tbe'.cotmtiyl'iThe con* ^CK-W AIERERSJ5^ as we do, w ith no artificial gov- .United.- • Is Estimated” president; Dr. Sherman Carter, rlnaDClat-vlco“ presIdent;~Dean Boise-!bIoVrl8-2t tinuIng-study-xrf-^tr«nds-|rH-tho ----■. C* « t h w i to u « h , NFO president Oren Lee Sta­ WASHINGTON (UPl) - The Joint-effort of the'cooperative ley said the holding action was Jiirh'es E . K r a u s .' and C. O. U.S. Department of Agriculture Youngstrem. Howard Tankerse- FILER-The 1969 Idaho Farm wool and'lamb'industry Is a Gem State’s Red made in an. attempt to both Joint, effort of the cooperative a contract ^ith grain,sorghum forecast the fa ll ]k>tato crop a t ly. Boise, leader o f com munity Bureau Federation's annual con- and resource ■'development, is ,cxtensl^ s ^ ic « aiid. sheep pro- producers and a . guaranteed 231.517.00 hundredweight, com- vention'has been scheduled for 8 1 ^ , . program chairman.. duccrii.'’speclalIsts'from several Gjover Yield price of fit.30 per hundredweight phred with, the 1968 production Nov. 18-21 at the Bolse-Hotel Agricultural agents and home in Boise. sutes will prasent informstloii..’ of the high protein feed supple­ of 230,924,00 hundredweight. T. Donald. B ell, head of the ment. ’ • ••'-'••n-*— 1. economics agents will also have Monroe Hays, Filer, president anim al science :4lep8rtment..'at 'Above; Staley said •4he current price T his esUmate was alightly be^ annual . meetings, and sfudy of the state farm tSrganlUtlon, JI^C^C jFanwr means of using computers in' a the Unlversi^ of laaho, w ill^ for grain sorghuni; which is low tl)e forecast made Sept. 1. said the-theme.of this year's S2)item for analyzing work in master of ceremonies at a din­ BOtSE (UPI) — The Idaho about half:way through its.har­ September weather conditions m eeting w ill be “ The 70s A various fields In extension ac­ ner. Crop and Livestock Reporting vest .season, Is sUsntly under were reported favorable. The Challenge to Farm Bureau.” Service ajild the IM9 production tlOO.iHe said the holding action, central and western fall regions tivity.. Program projection that 27’ of red clover.seed in Idaho was tho nrst of its kind spectflcail; generally h ad'frost'free wcath- iovolves many local cHluns in Featured Bjwoliera’ durM j^thfl — expectedTtO'bc-13;per•een^above ^ l inej •-at .pra iu? sorgtiuui, wii . er-inrthe-walttrSrowlng-raTear planning—and—conduetlnit-the ■last year's-smali’ crop;' ' • affect producers' in'^the conti­ during .September but in Mfine educational service will be the Haven SmItW ChalrmatT 6f the WASHINGTON,-^, U.S. hop , , , The total is estimated, tiow- nental United States.' , a frost partly killed vines, the subject o f panel discussions. American Farm.Bureau's Wom­ production has bMn estimated ‘ ever,- to be 46 per centvbelow About ;40 p e r'c e n t o f the na­ U SD A said. en's Commltteffr hnd'4ack An- 9t 41,481,000' pounds, down five ACETYLENE Wfi7. .... , .... tion'll graf? sorghum It produc- gell, communications- director, per cent from last Jreat and 19 T6tal production is forecast at ed in .the Texas Panhandle, a Tlis forecast ior, all iiotatoes F arm . Labor activities,- Am eri­ M r cent below ItfCT, *by the ’ b l/T F IT 1.5 million pounds, compared large amqunt In California.and for large production states In­ Gem Products can.FMm-Bureau Federatkin. Crop Reporting j* - - * tn with last year's revised esti­ the balance is scattered through cluded:,, M aine 30,340,000 h un ­ mate of 1.3 million pounds and out the Midwest and other grain dredweight, Idaho ^,400,000 J.9 .million pounds in 1S>07. producing areu. hundi^dwelghr, Califcrnli: 28,- Featured At The 1809' production is the Staley said (he holding action 491.000 fi'undredwelght and W artv second lowest on record dating was Initiated after meetings HYDI^ULIC JACKS back to 1010. with farmarsiln-all grain sor­ In fU m 27,852,000 hundredweight. ghum producing areas. He sal^ Grange Meet oct^n was taken becawe ALFALFA FORECAST ’ ' a il C K S E ST IM A T ED the er broller«type hatch totaled oT the Higerman at H,050 pounds; by the Idaho Ing'uaed to tiv.to beat.dovm 232 'million chicks; This was 14 Valley Grange. A potluck dinner C rop and LIvestocK Reporting g a in s , | SFIFO 6 members hadthe' had per cent abovd S6ptember, 1968, composed of Idaho producU was S , :;aO Ton,"'. Service. This-i«.-about 18 per already ma'de in grain aorghura the-Crop Aeportlng Board served...... ■ ■ >. • oent'above fast year's crop. bargaining.” _ porta, Pmduets. fnr,.lha UM» .motif

—A display of productf raised In Idaho, fresh and cahoed, was .1 4 T lm *^«vw /T w ln Folli; Woho Friday, October 24, 1969 7S^-Tlie Advocates^ , 2SL->World Of Disney 11-Mlsslon: Impossible - - -7B-Woria o f Disney 3-Miss}on: lm_possIbie • 8~World of Disney 9:00 2B-H aw ali Five-0 7SL—Retfospect , 3-H aw all Five-0 ^ Television Schedules 11—Room 222 , . Friday, October 24,1969 Sunday, October 26, 1969 8-Movle. “The FaU of the . 1:00 3B -E d Sullivan , • Rom an E niplre” ...... ll:3(>'8.m ., 2SL. 7B, 8 - A F L Football with the Patriots 7 p.m., 2B. 3.11; 8 p.m., 5 — Mqvie, "The Last Challenge,’ . 3—E d Sullivan 1 1 -G ld g e t ta an acUon .dram a with Ihe confri______a reformed’and Jets at New York. ' . . i „■ • -5—Ed Sullivan . S ^ u n s m o k e Glenp Ford,. Angie Dickinson! Noon, 2B, 3, 5, ll-N FL Football as.theT.OS Angeles Rams Bunflghter-ahd a-7oung-gunmanj-v^i«.iy - - — • 11-Ed Sullivan 9:30 11-News jjd J h M Everett .u r ia the 1967 movie which we, fllfced . -Jf-EBI . • 10:00 2B-News 7S^-Net. Journal S^News iO p.m.:'7SL — Net Playhouse presents “The Battle of Cul- concert celebrating the opening of Julliiard, one of the world's 8:30 2 S b - B lir Cosby , 4—Carol Lawrence Special loden.^thaJa3tJandjyar_fQu^..!n_Brjialn^ ^ , • most orestlRlous music schools ______7B—BlU’Cosby an^Tirever-Tyoiher-to-eat-the 3—N ews.- SP.R^Y RESiDUfiS“ -ON r— 8=Bnrc6sby stem end or calyx end.bccause - FRUITS: Is that whUlsh cast 5:S0 2 S I^ N e w s Town 6:00 4—F arm Report 4—Discovery '69 • 7:00 2.SL—B onarra ' „ 7SL—N E T Plavhouse remaining on fruits and vege­ rwldue tends to build up there. 2B-N ew s . . 5-MovIe. "The Ust 2SLrT-Science in Agri­ , 11—Discovery ’69‘. 2B=LesUe Uggams-- ■ ll-M 6vie, -“The Easy tables harmful if eaten? What’s CAIAMONDIN IS .EDIBL^: 7SL-Newa • - - : Challenge" culture 8-Vlewpoint 3-iLeslle U ggams the best way to remove'thls? Way" . .* • The so (jailed "miniature- of- . .3-News 7Sb-Week in Review 6:30 5—Sunrise Semester' 5—LesKe U ggams . I put.this question to a class­ ange” or calambndin (Citrus mi- 5-News 9:35 3-Tabernacle CKolr l0’:30 2SL-Bracken’s W o rld ' 7B ^B racken’s W orld 7:00 3-^Tom and Jerry . 5—Tabernacle Choir, , ' 7B—Bonanza 3-Movle, “Something for mate of hiIne,‘ Dr. James E. tis) is a fascinating house plant, . . 11—Get Smart , &~Bewltched 2SLr-Blble Answers 8—Bonanza 10:00-2B—Tabernacle Choir', the Boys!’ - ,, Dewey, speclaiist fn chemicals easy to grow. It Jllces a semi- 4—1 Love Lucy 8:30 7SL-NET Journal ' jl—Tom and Jerry 11—Bonanza.’ and pesticides at Cornell Uni­ 3—Face the N atio n • 2B—It Takes a Thief , sunny to light window, average 8—Land of the Giants 4—Death Valley Days 4—Faith for Today 4-:-Movle, “ The FaU of the versity. Dr. Dewey st«»tes that 11-Face the NaUon 11:00 5—Movie, "D arlin g ’’ I house tem perature (72 degrees S:5S 7SL—C om m unity Alert 8—High Chaparral 5—Tom and Jerry " ' Roman Em^re",. tho whitish coating ("residue") 4—College Football 11:45 4-M ovle, "T he Vfrgln ^ F). uniform supply of moisture 6:00 2SL-News v 9:00 W ackle Gleason 7B—Agriculture U.S.A. 7Sl/-:Firing Line , S^Face the Nation , ,'^Queen” .■' • you often see on fruits and vege­ and a soil mlxtuce of equal a-N ew s - 2B—M edical Center 7:30 5-iBatman tables a t harvest consists pri- 7B—K ing Kong 8:00 2SLr-Movie, "The War. of ■teWrS-i-lSsues aiid Answers paHf sand, peat and loam. 4—T r u th 'o / Conseq;uences .4—Lennon Sisters , 2St—Sacred Heart • mariiy of ciays, talcs and other . Here’s a recipe fof calamond- •8-College. Football - the W orlds’' • r . 2SL-Jo»» Pyne . 5—News TB-^Andy W illiam s • • 4—Dudley.'Do-Right 7B-M ovle, “ The, Ugly inert carriers -that are used in lai jnarmalade (vary your 10:30 2B—Dudley Do-Rlght 11-JuUa . ' 11—High Choparral S^Dudley Do-Rlght , American” - - ' — the-fow ' ' amounts— accordingly):-— Cook — . 2^ T r u t h o r .. . 9:S0 8— Room 222. 5—The Firstborn: Special 3 - Insight USE Tna non- down two quarts of the fruit,, . 8 - F B l , 1D:00'2SL-News 11—Dudley-Do-RIght 5—Eleventh H our 2B-MlMlon: Impossible FOR FAST-SELUNG RESULTS toxic nature and are nothing to add a pint of orange juice, some TSL^^Jigarl^lt Ouf 2B-N0WS 7B—F aith for Today 11-Falth for Today worry'about, according to Dr. water, and about four pounds 7B—Brady Bunch 3-N ews • 7:45 2SLr^From the Cathedral 11:00 2SL-M eet the Press Dewey. However, we aii like of sugar. My reader adds: "tell 5 —News 7B—M eet the Press to .wash off as much of the 9:15 7SL—Misterogers . 8:00 2St^-Cathedral of your friends If they have just 7St^NET. Piayohsue 2B-rGeorge of the Jungle residue as possible, but this Isn’t a few calamondin fruits ^on a « :W 2 SL-N am e o f tho G a m e Tomorrow 7B— Movie. "T he M on k" 7B—News 8—Meet the Press SURE' easy. tree, add it to your regular or­ ■ 3—Cathedral of Tomorrow 8-N ews -> 4-Dlrectlons ■ The reason? Fruit itself pro­ ange m arm alade. It’s the best S^Name of the.Game 4—George of the Jungle 2B— Hogan’s Heroes 11-News • 11—M eet.the P re ss d duces layers of wax and often you ever tastedl’-’- 11—Cathedral of To- j- 4 3 e t'S m a rt...... 4—Perry Mason 3-l-Thls Is O u r ,L a n & _ EVERYBODY TALKS ABOUT this covers: some of these resi­ MILDEW ON PHLOX: In late m orrow - 4—Let’s M ake a D eal 10:80 2SL—Johnny Carson 5—This Is tte Life - 5^BYU Football dues end that’s why they are summer and early fall. It’s al­ ~ FALL FERTILIZATION , - 5—Hogan’s H eroes ---- Moyle, “ Return of-the 7B—C athedral of Tomor­ 11:15 3—America’s Hym ns -not-«asHy-removed-by-runnpng m ost impossible’ to keep ^lour 11—Hogan’s Heroes .Frontiersman" row ■ water over .them or iightly phlox from getting powdery mil­ 11:30 2SL—A F L F ootball But Who Offers « :ijnishing. Dr. Dewey suggests 6:45 7SL-Frlendiy Giant 7B—Johnny Carson 8-rGeorge of the Jun gle 7B-AFL FootbaU dew on the foliage. Take a pair 8-*Johnny Carson adding detergents to the wash of hedge clippers and cut the 7:00 2B—'Movie, "The Last 8:30 4—Fantastic Four 8—A F L F ootball - ■3-Merv Griffin water. Alio, vrarm water will stalks back to the ground. Spray Challenge” 5—Insight 11-NFL.Football . . S^Merv Griffin PUNNED FRD^RAM aid. particularly if it is warm or dust som e M ildex, or Kara- , a—MovIe, "The Last 8—Fantastic Four . 'i.2B—NFL FootbaU 11—M ovie, •'The M an who 9:00 2SL—This Is ih e M s w e r enough to ' “ c u t" some of the thane or sulfur dust around the ~ Challenge" j:-NFL Football Shot Liberty Valance” 2B—O ral Roberts waxjj covering. base of the plant. Il—Movle. "The Last- 5-NFL FootbaU Whenever I eat an apple Then next, spring and earlu . Challenge’! 11:00 4-N ews 3—C am era Three 4—Issues an d Answers 7B^Figurlng It Out 8--- Bullwinkle (three or four a day) I always summer, dust the plants with 4—Here Come the Brides I1 :M 4—Mo\3e, “ THe D em on Noon 4—Insurance FUm polish it against my pant leg. covering both top 5-Cood Guys 5—Day of Discovery and-bbttoirrsldes of leavesrRe-- - T S L - - - ’^ P l a n e t " ------~ — ^4=BuliWirtkle------:— 12:30-+ -C am ^-<4~------1:00 4—O ral Roberts member, it’s easier to prevent 7:M7SE^ueny - 12:00 2SL-M ovle, “ Blood on . 7B-BuUwipkle tho Arrow” 11—Herald of Truth 1:30 4-H Igh School FootbaU ‘ FARM SERVICI mildew than it Is to eradicate 5—G et Sm art ' 5-Movie, “Wild is the 9:30 7B—Notre D am e F ootball 2:00 2SL-AFL FootbaU Resoliition_pn It. • 8:00 2SI/-Movle, “Moby Dick" , . ■ 4—M r. Deeds Goes to W ind” 2SI^Notre Dame Football 7&-AIT: FootbaU', DRIED ARRANGEMENTS: 3—Time for Meditation 8-AFL FootbaU ■; Here are some hints from a •5—F ilm Short 4—Movie, “Escapade In THAT’S WHO! iioads Okayed mother who has taught her 2B—Face the Nation Japa n ” children the joy of making wint­ A Farm Servlcel program utilizes time to the best ad­ Saturday, October 25, 1969 1:00 2B-Jetsons er bouquets. >-Jetsons vantage and produces top dollar returns. It It a flex­ By Grange “Gather milkweed pods and 7»-Jr. Varsity Quii 12:30 p .m ., 4, 7B, 8, 11—College Football w ith Texas Tech 8—A ndy W illiam s 11—Jetsons ible program that doesn’t commit you to a rigid palilt them w ith bright colors, meeting SMU at Dallas. . ------5-Mister Ed 6:00 5-Lancer ' ALBION — The Albion Grange or a touch of gold on the out­ 3 p.m., 2B, 3, 5—Pro Football will feature highlights of .last ■8sftO’2B=Julllard School - schedule and can take advantage of the vagaries 3—Hogan's Heroe*-i_ members adopted a resolution to side. M ullein spikes -can be week’s Mmes, both AFL and NFL. ' 3-Julliard School 4—Newlywed Game of_anJdahp spring. "Keep.Idaho Roads.Clean,” dur­ linted any color and used fpr 6:30 p .m ., 2SL; 8:30 p .m ., 7B; 9:30 p.m ., 8—M ovie, “ Tom 5 - Julllard School 7B—Newlywed G am e ing their recent meeting at tte ...door bouquets, mixed with; hy­ Jones." is taken from Henry Fielding’s lusty novel about an ll-JulUard School drangea blossoms. To preserve 6:30 2SL-Mo\ie, “ Tom Jo n e s " Grange hali. 18th Century casanova. Albert Finney plays the title roW with 4:00 4-College Talent PLAN AHEAD WITH cattails, dilute some vamlsh and 3—G len Cam pbell — --- — The .group votedJd6wii.thfi-refc Susamiah -York and Hugh Griffith In supporUng roles. 4:15 7SL—T ^s e um of N atural . . ' olutioit to Increase Grange dues, diF^'^tans~ in‘'until'they ab­ -----4—Lawrwco-Welk- sorb some of-the varnish, or 8—Lawrence W elk ' ---- History-^------4:30 4—B rady B unch apply It with a brush. 8:00 2St^Heckle and'Aeckle 5— Rocky and .his Friends 11—Lawrence Welk r) tute resolution which would ask 7Bai«edcle and ieckle 7SL=Eilm-Special for SI registration fee for each “ Some »ise h alm e t spray to 11—Bill Anderson Show •, 2B—To Rome With Love. ) the cattails'from exploding 8—Heckel an d Jeckle 12:30 3-H.' R . Pufnstuf 7B— Lawrence W elk 5.00 2 S I ^ u n d a y member attending state Grange 4-Casper - «BSslons. shedding the fine fuiz. The 2SL-Hlgh School Football 7:00 2B—G et Sm art 2B—Land of Giants Mr. and Mrs. Walter Amende ^rn ne a- ______■ " •• -Footb&ll ■4-l.and-of-Gii were selected as delegates, for preserving gourds also. There 5—Sunrise Semester 7B-College Football . 7:30 11—College Football 3—Bugs Bunny/Road the state Grange meeting Dec. are many 'seedVpods of wild 7:00 2SL-Here Comes the 8-College Football 3—Petticoat Junction Runner 6— Lassie 2-5 In Twin' Falls. Mr. Amende plants which can.be dipped or G ru m p 11-College Football 5-i.Pettlcoat Junction is roaster of the Albion Grange. painted an d,they m ake excelleni \ 7B—Here Comes“the ^ ---- 5=-Young“Am Orleans---- — 4^Hollywood,Ealacfi______J ___ ll-=iUssle _ ■ > _ 7B -W n d iCingdom-L Alternates ' selected were Mr. items for indoor arrangements." G ru m p • UOO 2B-Sklppy •7B— Hollywood Palace S-Wild Kingdom Phon._ 423-5586.. and Mrs. Keith Amende. • I ’d like’ to remlnd_our readers 11—Here Comes th e . 3—American Bandstand 8—Hollywood Palace Box 392, Kimberiy The program included, an ar­ there’s still time to gather and G ru m p 5-S.L.P .D . 8:00 5—C arol Burnett 8:30 5—Peanuts Special ticle about Columbus Day read dry plant materials found in the 3—JeUons 2B— Mannbc fields an d gardens. One-of-th(^ '1:30 2B—Wagon Train , 3—Mannix by Bessie Amende. and-Presl- 4—Cattanooga Cats S^WOrld Tomorrow easiest and .best ways to dry 11—Mannix • dent’s last speech Utled “Road 8—Cattanooga Cats 2:00 3-Fahtastlc Voyage _A w ay_F r0m _R eV 0 lull0 n," rrnrl them Is to. tie the stems to­ 5—Cartoons 8:30 4—C am era 4 gether with- r rubber band and 5-~Rolier Derby- 7B-^Movle, ‘T o m Jo n e s " by the lectifrer.'...... 7:30 2SL-Plnk Panther 2:30 3-Casper , hang the clump upside down in 8—'Then Cam e Bronson Refreshments were served by 7B-Plhk Panther 2SL— Inquiring Editor M r. an d M rs. M ark Bowlc^en. ■ the garage. ' 11—Pink Panther 9:00 2B—Gunsmoke Why upsidq downP^Thls helps 8:00 2SL—College Bowl 2B—Dastardly and 11-Gunsmoke Auction the flowers keep their shape and 2B—P ro Football . M uttley 2SL—Andy W r'':.m s prevents shattering. If you want 3-Pro Football H a v in g sold the:farTn,J,w]IL80lLthQ-f0lj9 ^ lD g i______3—Dastardly .and Muttley 3—M y Three Sons to curve tho stems so they'll 5—Pro Football New Dried 5—DastardIy'and Muttley 4— Movie, "Tho Trouble »• From Ambrose Distributing Co. corner In Wendell, Idaho — 4Vi arrange easier • for you, soak 8:30 2SL>~Wlld Kingdom. With Angels” 8:00 2SI^H. R. Pulnstuf ‘ atem944--hoi#ri.ln-warm_H[atei. -4:00.2SLrTrHigh_Chaparral_... ___ .:.&TrJackle.GlfiasflB--«^._ miles we9t — or from West Point Store, 4 rnijes north to Wendell- then tie the >stem tp a coat 7B=HrR7Tufnstuf“ Whole M Ik 2B— Lassie 9:30 8—Movie, “Tom Jones" Hagerrnan highway, then V^t mile north and“^S"ifnio^ast. hanger bent the shape you want. 11-H. R. Pufnstuf 4-W orld of Sports 2B—Tenelope Pitstop 3—Green Acres QUESTION OF THE WEEK: 7B—W orld of Sports 10:00 3-^Ncws W. E. of Twin Falls: “Con you 3—Penelope Pitstop 8 - V orld of Sports. Is Perfected 6—Penelope Pitstop 2SL-News MONDAY, OCTOBER 27 tel! mo what wo did that was 11—W orld of Sports 5—News wrong? I took some rose cut­ ' 4— Hot Wheels 3—Flying Nun Sole Starts: 11:30, A.fA. Lunch o n Croundii Watt Point Grange WASHINGTON (UPI)-Agrl- 2B—News tings and inserted them Into po­ 8-Hot Wheels, ^Twilight 2Zone cultrue Departm ent scientists tatoes lying flat to the ground. 8:30 2SLr^Banana Splits 11—News 4:30 2B-News 10:30 3-M ovie, "V is it to a announced Wednesd Glass jdrs were put over them. 7B— Banana Splits ilon of a new dried ...... - ...... 11—B a n a t^ Splits 3-News Smalt Planet" In two weeks I noticed fresh 5-News 15 HEAD, HOLSTEIN ■ - which w ill keep for more than a ireen leaves growing up outside ' 2B—Scoo^-Doo 2SI/~Movle, “Wutherlng Heights” year. In home refrigerators and he .Jars, b u t NOT rose leaves. 3— Scooby-Doo 5:0d 2SL—News can sell for less than fluid Flriallv I decided they were pp-. _____ ;20rTGood-Guy»'------latd ’’leaves. They continued to lardy Boys 3-To Rome With Love 5—M annix 11—Bold Ones The' department, which has grow larger and higher, and fi­ 9:00 4—Sky Hawks • 5-News . MILK COWS been researching tho nroblcm, n ally in August thej» overshad­ 2B— Archie S:30 2Sl^Bold Ones 11:15 7B - Jo e Pyne for 14 years, said the ntlik pow- owed nil the geraniums, petui\- 3— Archie 2B— Jackie Gleason ' * 11:30 5-W reatllng iACKIIt Holitdn cow,, frtih 60 day* with 3id tA B ii Koliteln cow milking w llh 3rd calf. G1v< det process Is ready for com­ ■ • S— Archie 4-Movle, "Burn Witch, calf. Giving B’ gal, per day. Ing 7 gal. per day. las and marigolds In the garden. 11—Jackie Gleason 4lh, u n i i O N Ii Milking .with 3rd coif. Giving 4 mercial’ development. 3—Good Guys B urn " HIARTi H olttiln cow, iprlngir, coming wllh I dug u p tho potatoes and had 9:30 2SL>Jambo gal. per day. Offlclala said they would of­ a total of nine healthy tubers 7B—Jam bo 4—Dating Gam e 12:00 8—Movie, “ Y oung As You coif, glvlno 8 0“ l. dov w h*" fer samples of the' product and DIBIs Holilain cow |uit^ frtth wllh 3ffl calf. ABUi Holiiein cow. ipilnger, .coming with 4th but no roses. Did the potato .11— Jam bo 5—Governor and J. J. Feci” ■ calf. W ill give e gal. .WllSn ftaih. full details on processing meth­ take nil tho life awny from the 2D—Herculolds W H in ii Koliiain cow |uit freih wllh 4ih calf ods and production .costs to rose.i?" 4—Gulliver giving 10 gat. par day. .and giving 10 gal. per day. any interested/monuracturcrs. First, let mo explain to our 8—Gulliver DOTi Holitiin. cow coming wllh 4th calf, milk* AUaiONERS NOTE> Motl all cowi are of Cache Dried skim milk for uso In cheap dried whole milk have 10:00 2 S^-Fllm 8tonei Ing 4' gol. par day. Valley Bieadlng ond hava bean brad bock Cache a fluid drink has long been a been hnmpered by processing 2B—Monkeee SPOOKSi Hol>l«lr\ cow, .milking with 4lh calf. Valley. A nice, young, .gentle herd. All cowi familiar dolry product.. But ef­ difficulties. • 3*-Monkees IMSTALLNOW! giving S gol. p t are Bangi Vaccinated. Breeding datei will be forts to develop a proctical and Spokenmen said the new 5—~Monkees :A1Ni Holitain cow . given day of lole. readers why you chose to root ,4—Fantastic Voyage Ing B gal. P*f doy. powder, pnckcd in Oxygen-free Y O U N O LIVESTOCK roses in a potato. M any gard- cans, was Bold In tests last 7B— Filntstones WMtE W E A Tie FEDMITS DON JUANi HoliteIn cow iptlno«r coming with KOUTIIN 2 yaori old, bongi vacclnaled ernsQ do this — Insert cuttings yeor nt about ’ 20.9 cents > a 8—Flintstones 2nd calf. Du* Oct. 36. Will giv* 7 galloni ' par day. and open. into a large spud cut In half. quart. Recent fluid milk prices 11-Fllntstonea ^ Others prefer to root them In fU U ri Holiloln.cow milking with 3nd calf, Giv­ HOUTIIN H liriR i 10 monlhi old. In m ajor cUlen have ranged 10:30 2B—Wacky Races HI^BOY mOKItTIC WATER F ^ M I . ing 7 gal, a day. 5 HOUTIIN’ H n m ii I'V o n th i old. 'lain Boll and place tho gloss from 20 to about 3S ce n ts . a 3—Wacky Races llA C K IIi HoUteln cow milking with 3rd coif. > HOUTIIN HIINRSi 3 mbniht and 4 monthi rult Jar over them. f quart. .6—Wacky Races Giving Q gal. par day. .o ld . • In your case tho potato rooted, . The-new whole milk powder 4— Bandstand m n s t i n t FIBERCUSS MIDOITi H oliltin cow milking w llh 3nd calf. H O U niN BUU CAlFi 3 monlhi old. sent out sprouts and crowded Is m ade under a vacuum and 7B~-Bandatand Giving 6 gal. par' doy. i HOUTIIN BABY b 6 u CALVIt. ' out eve;7thing around it. Next canned In an oxygon-free otmo- tfi-Underdog TMUCHS tssu n ctoaair year, try rooting your rosea II—Underdog sphere, (nslier w ittr ALWAYS MACHINERY MAl:HINEIlir w ithout n potato and see If your "Stirred, Info cold water, the 11:00 2B— Superman luck changes. Anywiiy, ll'n go­ AIU I CHAIMIRI WD-4S Uaeier with wid* front AUlS CHAIMIRI QUICK TACK adapter to 3 pt. powder makes a beverBRO that 2 S L - M o ^p , “ The La^rtees and. In A -l corfdlilon. Good rubber, h llc h . ing to be a tough winter and most people cahnot distinBulflh Breed" you con oat the spuds vou grew. naOUSON TO*30 nactor> recently ovethauled. I COW fTOCK TRAIUR. . from fresh whole milk," offi­ 8—Hardy Boya . . A ll new rubber, A, B. of Holbrook! "M y vinca BAUD HAY SUP. cials said. 11—Superman ' IHC Siring l i t Hay Baler In. good cendb*' 4 OR • OIDIII WOOD HARROW tICTIONt. vine Is Just as beautiful In my Tlie new procens was develop­ 11:30 7&-Navy F ilm tion, pro driven. flow er box as ever, and we’d ed in Philadelphia at the East* 8-Sky Hawks A lU t CHAtMIRS a-woy, 3>t|0llom Splnnar plow, ------HkB tft know how to save It MILKINO EQUIPMENT ...... Research lJ>bo- ll- T B A Quick faeh.' ; T-33, A.ca|i milk cooler, ilde entrgnc*. In top _ for another year, rfltory ...... - A'grlculhira — ...... D«- Tlis-Jonny'Qj ...... ■ oXuL. o ve r?” partment'a rescorch norvlce.. In milk coni^M llk'bucketi, iltalnert, elc, VIhca vinea, the kind florists the nnring o f, 1088 ofriclaln pro­ _ Jonny C — . HUT fUkMG MWS. Mmit 16 talkaB iif mIDr pci nloult ta allla use In cemet6rj4 urns and i^rch duced'the powder on « pilot 4—Johnny R yder Show HAY A STRAW boxes will lometimen winter OV' banls and sold O.BOO quart Noon 3B-^hattanooga Cats 3 c D f i r a o i N i i S T naTimi mins ad rac-sn seaud m u ' App'roxirhately SOO bajei 9^ 3nd culling itring er, if kept in the ground and equlvolertlB experimentally in 7D—Film Feature lie A lfa lfa'ho y. Approximately 300 bolei of covered with leaven, straw, etc. HOSTAT. ’l M t iM r lc c M t Or 3800 OTU hlsM ni H am IP t u u nenrby supermarkets. . r •'itrlnfl'tltd itrow. ■ ^ However, yo’ir best bet is to miutil Oil Iwnanillh 100* lutamtto itoH f. MAIITY H A lR lI trail mowfr, I1>e powder, in two - quart SUMORN 6-^rrhangon mka.lfl pt.'hitch, l>T0 take the ^ la n t In .before front equivalent cans, sold for 29.8 8—Smokey Btfar______4 UOS (oplimll Spiiig opcriled, ^]ust to Wl or Ml open . MISCEllANEOUS Slid start new onen from cut­ centa a quart, 4 cents per ile a rl/ nev/ portable air-compreHor,. 4 -w 1* tings. Take a ra ^ w and cut tlie quort Iwlow tho then current SSilSr ibllT. nb«8l>s> talilfcn. HiMlM otivlco door. Bilnrorctd bar, orid 3 'p t, hltchv > . . voir balUry charger.- 3 alectrlc fanceri. 10“ ,, vines Into pieces throe or four local price for fluid milk pack­ and a. “ fair’* retail m arK’Up. >|g«l eahlptt, R ifliciibli wtar plain.' CItaiiout drains. i IINOVATOR donililing of I ) cpIS ihai^ki'and table law ',with looli. I* inches long, or w K reve r Uiore’a aged in two-quart cortons. 0((t- Conaumer reaction to the test S m tS ALSO WItllOUt'IIEAT. 3 pt, hitch. , B w «ed«n wooon ,wheeli, 3 o r 3 kerotene ian> ciols said tVo (>owder price sales w as described as "h ig h ly m o DiTCH,ct^ANia. a pt, hi|ch.,,,, , ' , lem i. Volley Mound •eorrugalon., Weed burnaf. : ■ * Vhese root quickly «t a Joint would have provided a “rea- satisfactory.” There were many l> fiq iO N W ood, HAIROW and drowbar.. ,lo«v ft calllf brand,qt\d Iron. log cholni. H ^ . . .o n "nodo", Insert ths culling sonablo" manufacturing profit repeat purchases, officlala aald. S’ W HllUD rubber (Irad hay trailer. ' , frimmar. Qnoie gum. W irt itrekher.. E

CINCINNATI (UPI)-Gcorgc emphasize the need for belter Total Offense Record; "Sparkjj" Anderson, the Clncin* base running. ■ . natl Reds new manager, could vr think the biggest fault !n spend a lot of tirrie w orrying » baseball today is thai players he were that type. are not given propec instrctloa Anderson, at 35 the youngest In base running," he said. ISU TOPS Two Categories manager in .the m ajors, said he “It's fine to teach the players _boihcced^^by_commcnts thoso-things-but-if-they-doa^t- Kelly Is Healthy Again, JEleady: about his lack of experience In rcaiiy understand what they- NEW YORK (UPI)-Jcrry lim itin g himself to quarterbacklthan the* previous W eh for five the tpojors or^he” fact he is have to do. when they are on Dunne of Idaho Stale took one and he appears on route to a ganies set by George Bork of relatively unknown to Cincinna­ base in any-of a dozen different Vear'to study the rudiments of college division record In total "No^hern ...... Illinois In lOi . ti fans. circumstances . than all tha .offensive Tootball. Now he's offensive. ■ Dunne established a colle­ major league uniform teachlng’Is lost.’* ready to ‘ rewrite the retford The G-2 junior has compiled To Erase Unpleasant Memories doesn’t make you aiiy smar­ "I plan to emphasize this giate m ark of 78 rushing- at books w ith whQl he learned. 1,789 rusiiing-passing- yards, in ;sing plays In a- 4&-S6 loss tc By JOE CARNICELU i.ituouiiI season with WIIII 1,239 yards w rriii ill beuc , the Falcons’ vi<;tory. ter."- he said. Cincinnati just , as I have wltli , As a sophomore, Dunne jaKUS, five games, according to intana last Saturday, compil­ • ill the Cleveland backfield for The Redskins, the sixth best A'Elthcr-you. the m inor league team s I ’vo .played such positions as quar* U P i Sports Writer ’ statistics released Thursday by ing ' 478 yards. The previous rushing team' In the NFL, have you don'.t. I plan to be around a managed. •■^cerback, taiJbacJc, flanker an'd Leroy is National CoJIegiate Sports Scr- record of 77 plays was set by won six in a row from the long time and I'm going to be “I like to think of myself u c tight end. This year he’s and eager to wipe out some vices. This fs 185 yards more Joe Stetser of Chico State in Browns play host to the St. Steelers. Sonny Jurgensen will myself." \ ; student of the game, but I , unpleasant memories. won't Invent any new teach* 1967. Louis C ardinals in a key be looking for his 200th career "In my opinion,” the Thou­ Jim Lindsey ’ of Abilene Kelly. i}ic N ational F o o t^ Iques.-It’s a ll been d o n e _M o r« Century Division clash. TD pass against Pittsburgh. sand Oaks. Calif., resfdcht said, Christian, with 1,322 yards, is a League's leading rusher.^ me. Now we have to apply . Despite his impressive rush­ Rookie Terry Hanrotty. who "There's no difference between distant second-in total offense what we have learned. ing ' figures, Kelly hAd some ;ted six passes for 132 the m ajors and the m inors as Black Students Plan to Dunne, who has gained 1.32! ______and two TDs last'w eek, He,said he still has no plans unpleasant experiences with the far as the g am ci itself is yards through the air and 463 for changes In team personnel. C ardinals' defense last season. will start at quarterback for concerned. It's ihe ,'sarnl> game rushing. • "I have to look at the club Hull Watches In their first meeting, Kelly the Steelers, ; played, ibe sam e w ay.” Olaf Gunderson, a sophomore the way it fs now an d m ake m y was limited to just five yards Baltim ore w ill be after Its "The difference between the halfback at St. O laf.. leads the plans with these people/' h« in 11 carries while the Browns 14th consecutive victory over majors and the minors ^ is that Suit At Wyoming rushers w ith 1.067 yards in six said. Cattle Show, could manage only 22 yards on mes, and is ju s t six yards the Forty Niners (0-4-1) and in the majors you hay& better "M r. Howsam (general m»i>* LARAMIE, Wyo. (U P I)- i the ground in a 27-21 loss. personnel.” V , He said during a private ^^■hind the record pace set b; D allas seeks its eighth victory oger Bob Howsam) will main Willie S. Black, chancelloricellor of In Its^past nine meetings with Anderson, was named lajt meeting with the players and Panhandle's Jim Holder In 196_ In the second meeting be­ the deol for players if he feels the Black Students Allianca-at Gov. Stanley K.- Hathaway when he went on to a modern Hawks W ait tween the two teams, the the Giants. month to replace Dave-Bristol, they are necessary and I have —the~Unlversity- of Wyoming; another young and compara­ immediately after their appea­ c^oilegiate rnark of 1.775 yards, Cardinals held- the- Browns - to the-greatest-faith-in this man,** - said Thursday the university BROOKS, Alta. (UPI) - Bob­ rance before the board of Gunderson scored four louch- only, one touchdown in stunning tively unknown manager who Anderson said, "he makes great ’ would be taken to court' by Hull, the "retired” Chicago trustees the players themselves downs.* against Carleton last Cleveland for the second time, led the Reds to w ithin a deals." Black Hawk superstar, played Twins Haven’t bccause of the dismissal of 14 said they would "not play Tor Saturday to give h im 84 points, 27-lG. breath of the National League Negro football players Oct. 17. coach Uoyd Eaton.” tving Mike.Sallier of Doane .for the gentleman rancher Thurs-, Kelly, who gained 51 yards in western division championship day and wandered through this USE TIMES-NEWS WANT ADS Black's announcement, and a Carlson said the coaching the scoring lead. : carries last week in a 42-31 Seen New Boss but finished the season in third FOR FAST-SELUNG RESULTS demonstration march involving staff had expressed during Mark Steger of Cornell tiny prairie town of 4,000 in victory over Pittsburgh, will place. 70 students, came shortly efter discussions the day of the College Is the passing leader ankle-deep snow as he attended o ia. -rookie Ron Johnson of ST. PAUL.- M IN N EA P O LIS "Sparky" compiled an envia­ head coach Lloyd Eaton an­ dismissals a willingness to with 112 completions and 1,315 a sale of prize cattle. Michigan in the . Browns' (UPI)—Thursday came and ble rc'cord. as a m inor league nounced a modification of his reinstate the players if they yards, Ed Bell of Idaho SL is Appearing unconcerned about backfield. as Cleveland, leading went without a word from Bill m anager. Teams u n d e r ' his WE BUY, his rift with the Hawks; man­ rule that athletes could not would pariicipate in the'Satur­ the leading pass i^eiver with the division, aUetnpts Rigney. new manager of tho command finished first In their agement that resulted in his _ _participate in student protests day game against BYU without 53 catches an d B ill In gram of solidlfy_i^ hold with a victory Minnesota Twins. league four years In a row from SELL and or demonstrations. armbands.— But "he said~the C alifornia" D avis leads the "retircmenl"-at-the-start-of the over the third place Cardinals - The - Twins President-Calvin 1965-1968;------players would riot accept this. season, H ull said he expectcd Griffith announced earlier this He spent last season* as. a The 14 players were suspend­ punters with a 45 ya'rd average. (2-3). - V 7 TRADE to play hockey at least three week that he and Rigney had coach for the San Diego ed for w earing black arm l^nd s Black said the alliance would Team leaxiers include Idaho The Browns are , 7 1-2-point more seasons. He said he was come to terms and that Rigney Padres. in support of, an alliance protest picket the gate at the San Jose S t in total offense (510.8 vards) favorites over the Cardinals, not worried about loss of his vrould be the new m anager of •‘I’ve learned a lo t about GUNS against a game .with Mormon- State game t1iis Saturday and and forward passing (303.4), who arc having quarterback Alcorn A&M in total defense 100,000 a- year contract; with the Twins. baseball from a lot ofTpcople,’ o p e rated Brigham Young speculated the Spartans m ight problems. Jim Hart has been (71.5), North D akota St. ^n Chicago. However, Rigney also has to he.said, “and 1 try to apply all University. not cross the picket line. bothered by a bruised finger on RED’S rushing offense (391.5) and Sh Since Hull stopped playing and como to term s w ith the of it, bot I won’t copji ai^oHE Und?r the rule modification,' But San Jose coach Joe his passing hand and a bad T r a d in g P o r t O laf In scoring (45.8) ent his telegram to coach Tom- California Angels before he can A manager has to be himself.” which will go into effect with McMullen said his team would (Tiy Ivan, announcing “ as of this shoulder and Charley Johnson sign the Minnesota contract. Anderson's only majoi; league the 1970 spring training ses­ play, although they would weur lay I have retired from pro- has been ineffective. Rigney was fired by the experience • consists of ' one sions. players w ill be permitted multi-colored armbands to ex­ In other-NFL games Sunday, Dunne. Idaho St. • 3S* 1«» Llnd»»y, esslonal hockey," the Hawks Angels last May and had a year season as a second baseman for to participate in protest move­ press “our concern for Ahllcne Chf1»ti»n . M innesota is a 16-point favorite stcscr. Corntll Cell, lave not won a single game. left on his California contract. Pjiiladelphia in 1059. He likes to ments a w ay , from the athletic racial minorities.” ttxn. Auiltn ■ The b ig blqnd._winger, wear- over Detroit: Los Angeles is an field, Eaton said. LrdtUae,' Clarion si. ll-point choice over winless F«nr»rt ng a Stetson and sitt'ihg on Eaton said, he would corral fences like a lifetime Chicago; Thiladelphia is a 3 1-2- ,y M about vjoiatTon or the i-lrst an d m n A fter Row—- Culac wise and tho deferrad'-payments Minnesota, winner • of four conferrlne with noted civil straight since losing Its opener — rlRhtii— lawver— a n d - N A A C P to Mike Taliaferro for most of question,” he said. t he. seasoft_was-illircd:!_Wednes- for New York, will foce a ___ attorney—William-Waterman-of Dowmsn, *'It was what Wirtj: said he day by Boston Patriot coach was going to do With the money Detroit team that is without Detroit. He said legal' action Miller. pr»k« starting quarterback Bill Mun­ Clive Rush. Vtaion. Ab. Oirlitlsn ft *i and what he did not do. would be taken. T«u) orrtn* son and Mel F arr, the Lions* Eaton said the rule under The former Penn State >star, Vi; expect that something will whOTStarted:several -games for ,a.ho s.. ■* be‘ settled in the next‘week or leading rusher. — which the M athletes .were Tho Rams (5-0) turned In an the Pats during his rookie D .liw .c...... 8 iM i i n so—one w ay of another. W hat dismissed from -the team North Dikott St. * J mpressive team performance remained In cffect this season season last year, was placed on »(. out. ' . • 4lt happened basically was that a t rBir (SLO) fl hm i ast week In downing Green and the playera will not be waiver fast Fridiy' and they --- rd when I left Chlcago.,jny la\vyer, Joe Crowley, went to Greece Bay, 34-21. Roman Gabriel reinstated for the ren>fllnlng cleared Tuesday. completed 17 of 28 passes for ...... and, I didn’t want to talk to five Cowboy-football pames. - Rush had asked Sherman-to 197 yards and two touchdowns But at the end of the season ay with the club's taxi squad 'I the Black Hawk management fe .'aSlroudlbMn 'r S a without my lawyer, who will be and ran for two Tnore while _ l ‘cnch. c(\n.coTTie. in_indiyldually If .ho. didn't..5l8n'_with_anothcr ------I 101} «fl,! Larry Smith and Les Josephson and review his situation,” he club. But after reading a Occldcnul « lei II .M« J090 bock in the' next few day's. Suihlnc “I like to play, of course. 1 sparked the running attack and said. . published report In which Jack §now and Wendell Tucker r Mriimi coHid p lay ju.5t a.s weJl for "O u r position rcmofns un- Sherman critlclred Rush for were oustandlng as pass Nonh n»ko«» SU 515.000 a v,*ar as I could fol- —chanRCd," unlvcrsltv—nresldcnL j3CinB_placcd_Dn...waivers, the -si.-01lif_ . * ' receivers.------:------C«l J'oly (SLO) "^ 'jjo —rTfiron; {100;000rTo p ln y ^ c li'y o ir h a v e W illiam D. CnrLson said. "The coach Said Sherman was • JS4 30] I :u. Rookie Bob I^uglass handled Montana to enjoy it,-and-moncy-doesn't president of the university and through with the club. * Ltwicnc* tllS JUSII). the quarlerbacklng for the have much to do'wlth that. the board of trustees have no "Just the other day . struggling Boars, but threw intention to accede to the right here," Rush said pointing only nine times, completing demands" of the Black Student to his own chair, "and I paid four for 41 yards and one for two calls" to Buffalo and Warriors Edge Buhl iayvees Alliance. touchdown., One of the demands was for San rrnnclsco. ' Boyd. Dowler caught six ' imAiedlat9-roinstatc;menl. “ f helped him try to (opJ? fot* Knicks 112-109 passes for 100 yards as the another joh." Rush said, "but Defeat Filer Carlson said Thursday he felt Pnckcrs lost to tho Rams. AT BOB REESE MOTOR CO. he's through w ith us now,** "we’vo all made errors in this NEW YORK (UPI)-The Sar BUHL -«.Joc1 Watson romped A tlan ta, matched. Its ililnR.” - Ho- described. the Sherm an said, " I f . I (jot into a Francisco Warriors, forced ti for 150 yards Thursday nkht vlctoni output by beating San controversy . as a m atter ball - game this year I don't play without their leadiiii. when the young l^uhl Indians Fronclsco .for tl« second time The Latest and Greatest in Epreign Cars rerpomhcr It. If Mike Taliafer­ Invnlvlng a prenl deal of rebounder when Nate Thur this season iQst’^e e k , gettfng 'cmntinn, but explained that by ro had done, well, I wouldn't topped I-lier mond was' ejected midwaj ...... Filer scoredsee first on a 40-yard superb defensive effort from "erro/R” ho -meant procedural have minded.", through the second period rollout- by Cruz .but 'W atson rookie Jim m y Weatiierford. nctivitlesi such as not m aking Shcrmnn, in fact, did not see TJiurflday night, relied on the KCored (III a 35-j;'irtl draw play Weatherford ran 74 y ard i with Immpdiafcly nvailnble to news any action in the -pairlota .sjx clutch free throwlnr, of Joe to tie and Steve-DenniTrnn over a recovered fumbfe for media what was happening. s tra ig h t losses. • Taliaferro Ellis to survive a late New ihe declsivu two-point conver­ touchdown, intercepted a pass played every minute. Vori< rallj^ and defeat the and retrieved another fumble In When Sherman was plncpd on sion. 0 0 previously • unbeaten Knicks, waivers, Rush said he w,ontcd 112-109. Caps Rally To to see how Kim Hnmmond Ellirt hit four straight free performed at quarterback nnd tlirow.s In the final two minutes elevated the former Florida after tlw Knfcks, .winners of Sinlo .sJnr from the inxi sgund, There were just Defeat Miami five stralglit gam es, whowjJdn't Rush did not say whother he lead after the firat period, iiad had any plans to pla> MIAMI (UPI) — Veteran closed the gap to one point at 1 3 9 5 Riiard Ijiri-y Brown scored six Hamm ond In the club’s remahv 108-107 with 1:10 remaining. 15 united states when p in trt in a last period scoring ing ci^ht games. TTiurmonO, tho tallest m an in burst (or Washinj^ion Ttiurnday As for his "firing,” Shcrmaii uniform at fi-11. was ordered to niuht that pulled the Caps from said, "L really don't want to the dressing room by referee Jacob Beam^ a h)R-Dl deficit to a 102-02 leave Boston with coach RukIi ,Jake O'Donnell for protesting a TOTAL PRICE! DELIVERED over Minml. hating me. B ut the story Just personal foul call w ith 5:01 left fold aiy feelings, Vm leavJn« Hrown wound up wltli In tho second period. points hut Warren ArmKtrong Boston anrt that's tho|." started making led the Caps with 31 points, Sherman has not heard from IN TWIN FALLS helping fill the gup l<’ft ny the either .San FranclNco or Buffalo The first ahellfish purification injured Kick Harry, whose knee hut both have desperate quar­ plant In the nation was this Bourbon. will l>o operated on I’riday in terback situations because of establlRhcd in 1028 at Newbury^ Washington. ln)urleSi port. M ass.______National Olympic Officials Rccommend

^OHthJUl;yica-Bfc.Rannft(l Q vcr Ap airthei-Natinnol Olympic offi­ wuro not passcil, ithems as Olympic events. cials recommended, <>y a vo(o i'iitai voto .among (he fiO The IOC, whilff not reeoflnlr- Jacob Beam, a pioneer of 4fl-(i Thursdiiy that South delegallons present ut tho six-; ing tho assembly as an ufliclBl Kentucky grain farmer with Fod up with the high cost of driving? Drive on In and wo'jl show Africa lio liarrrti from future hour marathon susslon was 40 Ixuy, will ' l>o meeting witti you a way outi Subaru features Independent suspension, noiee- O lympic conipetllloii becauHo of In favor, six against and eight vlflually Ihe sam e gatlverlnR in muscled hands and amiUng eyes, * free body construction, 4-speed overdrlvo its (llHcrlmlnatlon n K a i n a t obstalning, ' their capacities as Individual gave it a Bourbon whiskey and dozens of other features. ' Nogroes In sports. .*rhe dissenting and nbRtnlning national committees. The assembly will propose to to call its own. Beam. A straight Tho Ponnanont General As­ nations worn not named, but Iho United StDlcs, West Germa- the IOC that athletes participat­ sembly of national Olympic Kentucky Bourbon so smooth ing In Olympic compeiiilon bO cojHimltees wJii brln/j tho ny, Holland, Canadn, and Swifzerlnnii wnlited out of an aiiowed to recofve pityment not and fine and h'ght>tastlng w< resolution, offered by liungary. Bob R»ei» internatlonnl gymnnsllcs meet In excess of their salaries |n ,bcforo tho-ex(icutlvo board of haven’t seen cnuae to change, their professions while training hos o complete slock of tho Iillornatlonal Olympic Com- In l.jublinnn last week In protest when Yugoslav officials and competlns in Olympic pla/ it, not even a little bit, in 175 inltten (IOC) In Joint ncsslon parts for Instant Mrvlce. refused lo allow South Africans Under certain circumstances •Saturday. years. Not the formula. K ot' to compete. they could* also rccelva money The n ssem bly exprossed ’H ie Joint meeting.- beglnnlni for radio and (elavision appea' the process. Not the taste. " firm conviction of Iho necessi­ Saturday, will make no deci ranees, magazine and Newspa­ W hy heck, to some of that’s ty of excluding tlm South sions. it vollBhcd." - M ay.’ an IOC decUlon to hold the Among other potentlolly, ex- orsanlxadon'* flnt, world con: 84 Proof Kentucky BtraIgM Dourbon Conference sources said the W hiil«y D ln llM and Dottled by public text of the rosoltillon wan plonlvo decisions tho assembly gress -In 39 years—{)rlnfllnii endoricd were a call for wide* together the IOC, the nalionol J«mei n. Dtsm DlitlllinK Co., Clermont, roliitlvely muted nnd musked a Ueam, Kentucky bitter Htruggle , wiililn the Tanfiln^ chnntcs In (|eilntilon of commltlocs of all 126 member assembly, in which a number ol amateur status and-tlw reten- nations, and 40 iniernnilonal sports -, federations—In Solla, )>Ia^ A frt^ nations indlcutod frowrwimtir^*~int>vcrnw»t7^tion, against mounllng pressure 'SUBARU MAKES SENSE‘ 16 cnmes-News, Twin Foil*; Idaho Friday, Octobe/24, 1969 ' . Archer^Ends Two-Month LStl-Aubtirn RMiy After 27 Metctunlb ...... Drov drfcaied M.|le Vtlify >. PodMon n,l delralril ...... dcIfdKd MBf. i{ew«>- lied San -43ayoff-To-^oot-63-A m d- Sears;' Stanford, USC Slate Crucial Test By STEVE SMILANICH rated Auburn, who haven't met battle between the two | point underdog, need a win to iil(h hondlcnp icsi U P I Sports W riter on the fdotball field since 1!)42, bowl hopefuls is one of several keep their post-season lir.pes renew their feud nt - Baton attractive contests on the alive. .Clicvrun_2}!5,^ _The_ Louisiana State-Auburn . sinim picUd i-T. Rouge, La.,-in-one of. college 5Che'dule,as-thC-C0llceians_hegin|_jn.kay.-Big_EiBht Conference football rivalry, dormant for.27 football’s' television games of the second half of the season, games, .sixth-ranked - M iss ou rP Nab tead In years, comes out of hibernation the week. The ABC television West Coast, Ro.se,tangles with Colorado and;illh- Saturday on the tujijiI_^_noisy network w ill carry the regional Bowl aspirants UCLA and ted Oklahoma takes rcna known as *nger Stadium. SAN FRANCISCO (UPl) —J by Tommy Jacobs In 1964 35-71. 6,677-yard layout V h I c h telecaet beginning at 2:30 p.m . Stanford clash on the-fa Kansas State, while'feature Big Ninth-ranked .LSU and 18th- ED T . • Masters champion Georse Ar­ and equalled by Tommy Aaron regarded as one of the be­ Stanford and the Indians, 10 games send Michigan State cam Mmc. Uoo( cher. playing for the first time in last year’s Lucky Open, gave long m unicipal -courses. A< gainst lovva and Indiana to ' in- two months on a coursc he Archer the lead by a stroke cording to a computer test, the 'isconsin. . - knows as wfcll os his own over former U.S. Open champ course played .a-shade'under Top-ranked Ohio State, seek­ '.backyard, l e d a blistering, Dick Mayer and Jack M ont­ par, the first time that has hap- ing its .19th straight victory, is charge ovec_Harding Park’.s gomery, who .shot-34H0 a n d J 2 i Bencd-^on_ a tour this year Sturgeon Fishing Is Suspended; a heavy favorite to . down Inland Fmpltc-drlfBlfd S lush greens Thursday with a 32 for 64s, and a two-stroke iince the Phoenix Open last Illinois,-and secondrranked Tex- - course record-tying eight-under- edge on Jerry Heard 32-33 and spring. is cxpccted to have little par 63 for the first round lead Bobby Lunn 31-34. Lee Elder and Mike Hill had trouble with Southwest Confer­ in the 5100,000 San Francisco Archer w as-am ong the early m atching 33-33 — 60s, while ence rival Rice. starters in the field of 144 but Salmon Possession Limit Hiked Open. Johnny Miller. Peter Townsend, Third-ranked Tennessee (5-0) Archer, hampered by tendoni­ his score held up ogainst-a late Bob Goalby, Bob M urphy. 'Dave i r . i BOISE (UPl) — The Idaho bag and possession lim it for injury and mortality of released s idle this- weekend; fourth- tis in his. left elbow the last assault by Montgomery,. Heard Hill, Tom Shaw and Dale Fish aftd Game Commission steelhead of two fish per day fish. The hook restriction docs anked Arkansas (4-0) has an and Lunn. , two months, rejoined the tour Douglass were at four-under 67, Thursday ended its two day or in possijssion. " - not apply to salmon and steel- :&sy test against W ichita State; on a course he played hundreds Lunn, another player who Twelve pJaj'er.5 were tied at quarterly, meeting by announc­ Stce]heatHa7c“defJncdTs”rnin- head fishing pear. sixth-rated Penn States takes — • of times befote he ever thought learned the game at- Harding -1. Jacobs and N«w Zealand' ing major changes in the fish­ bow trout, Saimo" 'Gairdne: M inor extensions of year >n Ohio ..{University; cighth- of being a pro. He ran down P a rk, had the best- chance to •d Quillcl ApsT B ob Charles while 17 were ing regulations for the 1970 which exceeds 20 inches in round fishing waters and longer -at^d.Southern C(\l^rnia is at 10 birdies and had two bogeys tie or take,the lead as he made d d«r»trd TUI deadlocked a t 69. In that last > 3.1. Royil e derr*ted DIu calendar year. ingth when caught in these seasons for some of all spccles home agafnst Geor^a Tech and as he made the.tour, in 33-30. the turn in five-under 31 and group was - F ra n k Beard, the t» Dfnnch l-i. rioeiiiy f>«i i The changes, .which w ill go waters. elsewhere included whitefish lOth-rated Florida (5-0) plays H e two-putted five other holes shaved two more stroke.? by aied Troy-tJtn. Lavnary J-1. year's leading.money winner. ito effect Jan. I, 1970, Jnclude:' Vanderbilt. . - -from 20 feet o r less or his round eagling the 10th. However, he Beginning on Jan. 1, 197ff. the ishmg on a portion of the — Increased possession lim it of Middle Fork and South F o ;k of could have been even more bogied the 12th and 18th holes nold P alm er, playing in his possession lirhit for Steelhead other big games, Notro »o. nici Chinook salmon and Steelhead the Boise River and a year- spectacular. to fall into a tie with Heard. second tournam ent since start- trout taken in the Snake River Dame plays Tulane as the Irish „ a comeback, and Uillft-neiiiliaiu, IJV. lilKh trout. round fishing sehson for- bull­ visit New Orleans for the first The 63, w hich tied the com- Nearly half the field was at ■erlcf, Dlitx-Welnhard. KCS. lUsb below Hells Canyon Dam and frogs in all waters of the state. tim e in 19 years, and Mississip* petitive course record set by even par or under over the 36- Casper were in a group jT'is le*m lerlM. ^Ili^Wdnhard. —Catch-and-release fishing for the Clearwater and Salmon tied -at 70 while P g X chdntpidntp all white sturgeon regardless of River drainages, will be in-, pi faces Houston in a night Luc°lTo*'^llonWri«'*'recei«i**"Au’’*S^ Ray Floyd was in an eve'h same award. sir« in the Snake River and creased.to four fish which ex­ game In the Astrodome. ’ rger group tied at 71. • Magic city teagu* le lower Salmon River. reed 20 'inches in fork length The last . time Auburn and Langdon't derealcd Kay't 4-0- Apollo Windsor-Led Unbeaten Raiders Begin Archer said his left elbow did Ina .defeated Bank ot Idaho 4-0. }’«r' —Barbless hooks (no more but no m ore than- four may LSU met, during World War II. not bother h im as m uch as he Co. defeared Young’* Dairy J-1. Oe: than 5-l6ths of an inch from taken during any consecutive the Alabamans won 25-7 against Slalf Oil WnlPw Mu»lc ■«-«, had expected. Treatment by High individual game, Fhylllf Drag. point to shank) for trout fJshFn] seven-day period. LSU team led by Stevo Van famed-athletic=conditioner-Her- IM. High Indlvtdual acilei.-Caudlne.Kln; on the_Middle_Eork of the_SaI The daily bag .limit will T .R H asS IC Buren and _Alvin._Dark._LSU. Tough PartrOf"Scliedule ny Schmitt of Santa Clara S». High acratch ream game. Langdon' m ain the same as it is now— holds a 9-.8-1 edge in the series. '•* High handicap -— --- mon river and tributaries below University on Wednesday helped don-l. High -atch ■ Dagger Falls (daily limit two two steelhead which exceed '20 The Bayou Bengals (3-0) are passes fo r yards and six By STU CAMEN a lot, according to Archer. cutthroat) and hook restriction inches in fork length. The Eastern Title favored by 10 1*2 points. Coach touchdowns. Daryle Lam onica’s ..... Langdon'f. UPI Sports Writer "It was one of those rounds," does not apply for Salmon and leason lim it w ill continue to be Charlie McClendon’s Tigers aro six touchdown p.nsses against Maile Valley The Oakland Raiders appear he said,, "where everything 1 Tyirr St. Dnpllst Steelhead fishing. 20 Steelhead over 20 -inches. POC ATELLO - B enny Wind- averaging 39.4 points a game Buffalo boosted is league lead No 4 JH-IH, south in excellent shape to make a! threw, like In a dice game, Rainbow under 20 inches from sor set a course record and led ;nd they possess ..defense and in that category to 17. He also Lutheran No. J 3-1. —-Bullfrog fishing year round. successful defense of their came up seven. I've plaj^d (eated Methodlit Ne these waters are classified as the Twin Falls Bruins to the ggressiveness typical of Mc- leads the loop in completions —And. whitefish fishing sea­ American Football League Wes­ better rounds but none where derrattd MelhodUt’ trout. first eastern division of the ;icndon teams. The home team w ith 105 an d in yards gai/ied Ijy son extensions. tern Division championship, but everything went so right. The new b ag and possession Southern Idaho Conference cross Tigers, running from an 1- passing with 1.425. 1 ' F ishing seasons and regula­ country championship. the toughest p a rt of • th( ‘ " I had some snap hook drives . His Jfmit for Chinook Salmon, effec­ f o r m a t io n ,'a r e led by left- The Chargers, after dropping ...... High handicap t( tions for 1969 will be in effect tive Jan. 1, 1970, will be two Running the hilly and testing schedule lies ahead. and -still I scored well.” of C No. I 4M. High hatiL..-, ...... handed quarterback Mike Hill­ their first two games to Kanshr through Dec. 31 of this year coursc over the Highland goll A tie against M iam i Is the Mayer, Montgomery, Heard ei. Lutheran No. J M». High Kratch fish per day, possession lim it m an. LSU is riding an eight- C ity_an d_C in cinn ati, won theii n aeriCf, Lutheran No. 3, 1913. and fishermen-were reminded coursc, Windsor, defending state ---- only-blot on t ^ Raiders’-tecord and Lunn -had, s im ilar rounds foiir fish but no more than four game win streak extending into next four to m ove back into owler'dflhe-WKltT-Terry Suill»aa. that the general season now ex­ two-mile--bhampiorv, won handi­ for their first six games—but d ay in whiph the-sun never Women'. Church League may be taken during any con­ the 19G8 campaign. all wer» played against teams title consideration. With Garri­ [|gi defeated-Mlaliu J-t. Dummiei de­ tends through Nov. 30. secutive seven-day period. ly in l^l’4p. teammate J.a c k once popped through a heavy Auburn, operating from an ■which currently owi a com­ son sidelined, San Diego quar­ ad Woodptckera 3-1. Moon Maidf de­ _The commission said new fish­ The season limit per calendai Coopef, ' a junior, was third overcast. ed Ramiett 3-1. inverted T-attack, has sopho­ bined 8-21-1 m ark. terback John Hadl - figures t igh individual game. Ann Lierraan. ing regulations .for 1970 will be car will be 10 salmon. Salmor while Highland's Cleaves copped Montgomery seemed to sum­ more Pat , Sullivan at the But the Raiders’ first tough aim most of his passes z High Indlvli- -• — ...... printed ;and available from lic­ nder 20 inches in length will second placc. Val England was marize tlie condition of the I. High I e, Mlgs.-IM. controls. But'the loss of Mike test comes Sunday when they Lance Alworth. the league’ ense vendors prior to Jan. 1, be included In the bag and pos­ seventh for Twin Falls. Gary urse best of all. .loon Maldi, Carrier with a knee injury will , facQ the Chargers at San Diega third leading receiver with 28 n >erJ( I. Dummlei, 1970. session limit of trout. Cooper 10th and D arrell Groves "The greens were super­ p,s; ■' (riei, Dum- 'The Chargers and Kansas City catches for 420 yards an d one Sturgeon caught in the Snaki 11th. -Also running but not count­ weaken RaJph *'Shug'* Jordan's touchdown. Hadl ranks fourth perfect,” he said. "I've never Until the end of this year, squad. expect to give Oakland . its seen these greens or any others fishermen in the Snake River River after Jan. 1, 1970, may ing in tho Bruin final points in_passine with 92 completions Tho Stanford-UCLA show­ toughest competition for the in better condition,” below Hells Canyon Dam and not be removed from the-watci were Jaji McArthur in 12th and _West4m crown,____ out of 171 attempts for 1,326 and m ust be released immedi- Bob BillinEton-in 15th. down brings tosether the * iBd-tive T P tossps. Dick. ■ the Clearwater and Salmoi It niock deffated 0*eo Drug 4.0. River drainages, have a daily ntGiy.m c iy rY Present re s c n t -retjuiandiis-regulations aiiow "A" total of 35 runne: partici- 'acilic coast's two top ollen- healthiest they’ve * been all Post of the Chargers is second erUon'a No. 1 defeated Big O Tire anglers‘ to keep sturgeon of legal pated in the event. Twin Falls sive players. UCLA, ranked No. season, however, and the to D enver’s Floyd Little in Itoyal Lounge dffeated Ail>ert«in ■ wound up with 32 points followed 5 and unbeaten in six starts, UCLA Rated 1 .3.1. Ulcctrle Eq. defeated De>l size (not less than three feet Chargers are hurting with Gary rushing with 386 yards in 73 or more than six feet In length). ■ y Highland at 56. Idaho Falls will rely on quarterback Dennis Garrrson, the A F L ’s second carries. liigh Individual :ame, Ooll llumberge During the past few years; 8rSkyline-7B-and-Pocatello-122.- Dummlt; while-the Indians-are- lai >erlea, Lynn Le leading pass receiver, sidelined In other AFL games, Kansas rs, lllBh indWlt: fr\vin Falls, and all othei led by Jim Plunkett,/ thtj- 539..tll»h itratch iame. M1.R Dtock. M McLarens the commission said, few legal w ith a broken collar Bone. City (5-1) Is favored by 13 over 1 Point Over sized sturgeon have been caught tearfis, now Is pointed toward league’s offensive leader./ Oakland, coming oft C inc in natr (3-3), New Y ork (4- OM. High h&ndieap team art in .the Snake River drainage al­ the state championships over 2) rates by 18 over Boston (0- Il'ock. JT99. High icratch tea Plunkett has completed-88 of Impressive 50-21 triumph over though fish, less than three Teet the Ann Morrison park course 6). Houston (3-3) Is a 10-polnt )I&K Block. 2307. Seek 10th 153 attempt.*) for l',237 yards Buffalo last week, has a return Stanford Cottee Hour Leagui in length and over six feet are in Boise next Saturday. Twin pick over Denver (3-3), SXIdrwa tlrrt o r “ King Plni and 12 ■_touchdowns while enRagement against the Char­ 4-0. Pin 1 abundant. F alls Is given an outside chance Dummlt has connected on 61 ot gers on Nov. ,16. and must still M iam i (0-5-1) Is six over Side Splitte: Tho catch-and-release refmla- of winning, but must beat both B uffalo (2-4). 107 for 1201 yards and 10 TD's. play two games ngoinst Kansas High ...... ■, -Sherry...... -nfldi - .. W in In Row tion for. sturgeon was establish­ Borah, the favorite, and Nnmpa, Kansas City has a scoi TS. High Individual terlei. Sherry Drldg- - The Bruins-are. 3-0 in leaguo - City and one’ against Now York. Stanford puts it.s slim hopes r. 4C3. Ilifili icralth leam game. oVd ed because fishing gear and seven-time state winner and de­ play and the Indians represent But the Raiders are-brimming settle with upstart Cincln- RIVERSIDE, Calif, (UPI) - methods now are- .iamci.%d< 3-1. I ty-and-Join. the Jirood .s t o c.k directed-fhe-Chlefs-to-wing-ovcr — Tho-Bruinfi.--who-have-ro]led .S16hTa“ der«rcd-Brair-n^ OOO’ tlmes'GrandPrti^rihfi-lOth dropped .a .26r24_outing-ta_tha— m er at ont Cincinnati, 30-23, last runnerup to Plunkett In th( I. ' M nrlo Andretti, the 190!) Indinn- d ’Alene, panhantlle regional in for the tying two-pointer after longue's top- receiver in Fred npolLs !)00 winner; John Siirt< week after building a 30-6 league. individiiol game, Jnan Sandaii, fisheries biologist who has just thn .second scorc. Bllctnikoff, who hi>s grabbed 31 who -won tfio Cf»n-Am flUo IRREGULAR7 halftlm o lead. In other Pnc-fi bnttles irilin .Sancloii, 913; Jim Mnrti»on. lompleted a two your cudhroat Jn (ho third Ncl.Wfi c/ippcd With rookie Jim Hnrrli winless W ashington (O-S) Is r 19fl(i: Dan Gurnejt, Indy runn ludy on Iho M iddle Fork . n 35-ynrd drive by sneaking for DUE TO LACK OF FOOD ” for the seoson w ith a knee surprise four-point fnvnrltc to up the Inst two yenrs, nnd Chris 10 Salmon, snys that of about tlio last yard nnd Bob Dodlno BULK IN YOUR DIET ■ injury suffered In last week’s upend Oregon (2-1) whilo the Amon, tho New Zenlnnd driver 52 per cent of all cutthroat hook dived In for tho conversion. With TRY^ Wilt-Lew loHs to O akland, veteran Jack Goltlen ncnr.t of Cnllfornln arc who pilots A Ferrnrl. cd last summer by some 700 two minutes left Dodlno went Kemp w ill start for| Diiffalo nt a n-|>oint choicc ovi'r Washing­ H ulm o nnd M clJircn showed mglors wore released to flglit in from the five nnd M ike Pow- quarterback agnlnfit the Dol­ ton .State nt Spokiine their supremacy In Tluirsdny'j his ncorcd tho two.poln'i phins, who are still looking for Outside the conference. Ore­ Battle their first win. gon State (3-2) nnloriiiliirt lltiili (4-1) of the Wesiorn Athlt'tk. Conference, OeorKln Tech (2-3) - Set Tonight Dolph Seen visits Southern Cnlirornlit (4-0- 1). San .lose State (1-4) plays nt INGI.EWOOD. Calif. (UPl)— unbeaten Wyomlnn (fi-O) Wilt Chamborlttln. tlKs, greatest As New ABA Cnl Stale R Angeles tnivel scorer In the histnry of the Frenno Stnle, tinheiilen San National BiihkPtbnll Associa­ n ifg o .Slain (-1-0) hnsiH tion, confronts his newest rival, Santa n arb a ra In a Saturday I-ew Alclndor, for the first timi; Commissioner night contcsl. EVEKTS IN TWIN FALLS In a leaguQ gnm e tnnlKht when DAl.tJ\S (U P l) — The Dnllfi! the Ixis Angelen Lnkers host Times noriiUl «nlrno(l thnt Jn ck D o 1 p li, Chronlcio, Twin Falla Now# and "Ha (Alclndor) hni quick director of s|)orts for Columbirt hands and good moves Arnii Idaho Evening Tlmoo. Brought nroadcaKtlhg System, would be the basket," the ll*yciir prof named cnmmlsslnner of the , "w Vrbr!T"B6rReese ■lonal commented about the |1 Am erican UuHkulbull Assock- million rookie from UCI.A. tUm next Wcdnemlny in L o s 50 YEARS AGO ' Chnmlwrlnin and Alciiulni Aiij/(tl(?s. W. Oavlt of Idoho, InVIng lhi (nlllotiv* hai athtd 'I >l/\ immcpnpnr . incctlnR.' i^Joch performed well ifflcliils would, nelthiir conllrm In a benoflt gnmu at Muntlcollo, nor deny tlio choice of l>ilph N .y „ I m Hummcr. to fHI tiKi poNf ivliJrh been ' Cham berlain brunhcd off the vacant since ncorge MIknr *- TROOPS lANDIO AT NEW YOIK TO TAKI HAND IN tONOSHORI- man-lo-man confrnntntlon parted oarlliir this year. MIN'S STRIKI . . . 300 rcgulnn undtr erdtrt !• "Sheal If N*t«v> the evo of fho long.awoilcd Jlin nord no r, owner of Iho >U dliiillon el MUi riorcnc* R«ti, ond •x<«l|«n> psrtroyal «f young a television pact for Iho ABA, 27,000 career polhtn who once Lincoln tiy J»i» Wllllomton, Ih* ploy wni piattnltrf wllh an •Imril which does not now have any (irelfliilonnl (Inliti. ccored 100 points In a pro game nu'tionnl 'IV exposure. said he folt lio bent Dill Russell For Iho rin l llto-man h ash but winnot In Iho long ditlnnu oporntloni couldn’t beat flio Eloston n Co. w ai wlnnir In d n ii B-] and Onr- ColtlCR.' nusflcii retired th|» NEW mllon In X la ii D.9. . . M a r afler leading tlm Celtics to Drood d lio oit hiu Klmtiody. School ad M iU i «u(i)od, S InfanllU 11 N B A titles In 13 seaNons. TO TWIN FAILS pocolyili «oiot. . "People wore .always talking About what problems Runsoll RYDER TRUCK RENTAU posed aa An Individual,” Ctinm- • Low est Ratcia ’68 i m p e r i a l CROW N berlain said. "1 wiis more • -Lift O nto floor ndnn, lull powof cinti fnriory olr condlllonlno. foftory Jnterosled. In th « pr^hlemii tlio • Now TriAjko (Ford wnrronty, wllh only 3<(,000 nclunl m|loi,_ Celtics poaed »s a tenrti. and C h e v.) "I used to beat Iho pnpts off • Ona Way and Local' Rgsflol!. In 100 o r eo flumes thnt • Q qod C o m m . Ratea 1 have played agnlnHt tlie BOB REESE MOTOR CO. Celtics, Russell • ftnny have VERN'S 76 SERVICE «bout-/iv«: J00_Bl.ck^3nd-Av.nu.-Soulh----- ^------Twln-Foll,- 8or-M5in~A> »;w:— time's.” I DOPO^ — C M IlY S|!.ll,~IM nR IM — SIMCA. . Friday, October 24, 1969 BRIDGE CROSS WORD PUZZLE % Jacoby Forty-Niners

BAD BREAKS MAKE going to comc ca5lly_fmm-tha^ . ACROSS ' _ ^ » a r t ----- FOR-eOOD-PfcAYfiRS---- oiam ond suit. 1 Gold'Waahins 40Fre« ____ entertainer Rccsc and Dormer point out • If he piits in enough study, : 4bonner*>»- .OMaleduek that, in rubber bridge, you he may work out some method 8 Gold____ 43 Corroslon- should play for your contraci. of throwing West in with a club IZGreelcletter resistant “ Jf it appcars-snfe-tlien-see-what: -nnd-forcing-a-diamond-lead-but— 13 Isaac’s son steel tfUte you can do about m aking tiie ■ all. that requires a lot of brain ■------(Bib.) ------440reragaln— hand against bad brcoks. On work and careless players are M Anglo-Saxon <6 Spare price of ihe other hand, if you need gocTd not likely to find that sort of slave 49 Legal 15 “The------of . rcRUlatkn breaks 'to ,m ake it, then place play. .7;3 Irlah>Amerl« Poker ru t" l i Cut of mea t can actress the adverse cards where you A careful player will slop be­ 17 Reward 82 Rake, os w ith 30 Summon need them. fore playing fron^ dumm>i to the IB M ouths , fo rth J > !a y i n g a t thi-cc no-trump. second _diamond trick. He will 19 Actors’ side 57 M arina easle 3 lR « U tc h South is looking at eight top- note that four diamond tricks remarks- 37 CatUim ea card iricks.'He can find a ninth are all he needs for three no- 39 Fish n e t Jrump-and_he .w ilU ce. that-the folssfpT... 41BxpUtes trick' in either--hDarts_or clubs- ■ ■ 2 6 P o p « -'----- — sweetsop------; but the logical place to go after play of the 10-spot frorn dum m y 44 O f sprite* • 28Seom er 61 Transm itted 4BAthenK it will be In diamonds. assures these four diamond 32&capefiro(n eZFemalesheep -- ^ ^ ^7-l-Br»«* Ho probably will win the first tricks.^ . 33 Marble IJOWN------secret symbols 48Notcoars« spade bccaiise there is little rea­ He m ay lose an unnecessary 34 Adam's wife INotamatetir ZODlstorted 501snot(dlaL) son to -hold off. Then he w ill trick to an unguarded jack in (Bib.) 2Z^lyneilan 21 Exp ert 53 Bo m go after the diamond suit. A the East hand but that.lrick' 35 Moccasin stone marker 2 2 0 fth e th ro o t 54 Exist cureless player wiff take his ace Xvill represent the difference be­ SeDeHnlU 3 Negative word 23EUclt SSCrowlikeUrd •rtlcle 2S Behind a ship 56 Mariner's of diamonds and lead a diamond tween three and fobr no-trump, 4 rrtilt 38 Morri element SAntlyM- 27Gundog dlrecUoa “ Io“dum>ny's kJrtgTEasnvUrshcnv -not-between three no-trump and ’ out and the careless player will down one. find that hl^ ninth trick is not CARD SENSE Q —The bidding has been: - N O RT H (D ) West North East South * A 4 Pass IV pJs •V 10154 PasB 1 * Pass ? ♦ K Q 1 0 5 3 4> K 96 You , South, hold: 21 22 23 WEST EAST ♦K876 VA2 4KQ4 4JBS3 IklOS 4>QJ9863 What do you do now? 26 30 31 y S 2 VKQJ5 A—Yoa mlEht make an un­ r 4 ^ 9 8 7 2 derbid of two spades or a a 4.Q1063 4>J5 overbid of three spades but, 32 33 SOUTH w ith >n alert partner, y o « _ --- -4TK72:, ... Bhould bid two hearts and teit- 35 31- 39 VA973 hlm that your minimum ♦ A6 has improved « treat deaL 40 41 4 > A 7 4 2 . North-South vulnerable TODATS QUESTION' West North £sst- South You do bid two hearts and 4J ! ♦ 2 A 3N.T. your partner bids three dia* Pass Pass Pass monds. W hat do you do npwZ 46 47 48 GO Opening load— 4,10 1 Answer Next Issue 51 63 54 55 66 w_ 60 62

■UlU JOS *"'** II H . Yovr Da\l/ AdM lf C«Wi JK . V A M fdIn o I* lha 51a,: 7 ^ o3 ; : : s . To develop meitage for Sunday, t9-J5»-42^ r3-74-7i ^T AU RU I of your Zodiac blrlhilon. KORMO 20 ■ I I *

3iK . N ■■ OiMIHI , lAaiTTAHIUI S£r'"“ liYJi" s!sr^ lOSiara -tOFoIlh 70|i'll s . ’. ' i ' ! eUM-3a-04. » IjaH’*'! 4JT*’ CANCIK CAmiCORH i a p r : 555; | r AQUAHIUI JAH. 1^'^ pSii? ||ll.

VIKOO - m e n S i i i . foS;;;,'',"™’

® u m > 1 8 TIm eS'New j, Tw in Falls, Idaho Friday, October 24 ,1969 — -Want Ads Deliver Results- But Every Want Ad UserTK nows That!

Holp Wanted Homes for Sal» riANO LBSSONS. bcRlnner nni termedlniv, OrsBn bvglnnrrt, -- BERRTS WOBLD, RATHER noyco Wllllnmi. 1705 Poplar, 733- JUST LISTED

STARVE ■ bedroom*; plushy cnrpeteil llv. A. Tho ' iRroom charmlnR kitchen, -opnruie utility room nnd at­ THAN tached BnrnRc; A«iumo large S li'i mor(gneo- SWITCH? COMPLETIi YOUR hliih ichool cdu- APPROXIMATELY 38 a c r e ciuion nt home In your iparo llmo. only Vi mlln from city limits, Need four men who ore llrcd of Diploma Awnrdcd. G, 1. iipprovcd. very good farm -land with tre- ill rnrnlnes nnd n limited (, slnsle. Leave. Immediately. HOME Permoncnl work only. Must be' sold Immcdla BENEriTS I-lrst time pver offered for a LOBE for those who reo(d and use TRAVEL Continental U.S., Alns- This 'eicRnnt homo has inn.u ka. Kowail. Pucrio Rico, with bedrooms,- and a coiy den. Thu REALTY chnpcroncd croup. spacious living room has u bca- Excellent.. carnl'ngs,.. t ranjporto. . utlful fircplncc. .The kttchcn Is n tion paid, Lxponsci advancc. •'Housowllc's droam come true. the Times-News Want Ads! ju ia _ 733-2623 Is'deslsned for pleasure nnd cl- ...... Renltar flclcncy. You will nlso like lh« Blulr Osierhout. Realtor 733-SOiS uppcalinR family room, iwo tiled Ireland, RenllOr 733-2340 „ ...... Deluxe Motor bathrooms nnd double gnrnpe. rcn Brige*. Realtor 733-6S94 Lodge. Be the first to »i'f this choua Hqoal Oppartunlly Employer roperty You will be Impresjed. f29.500. ■ S Opportunity Unllmllud . . OLD-FASHIONED I with ambition, ivc. pcrsls' c challcnRC HAMLETT commlsjiun for' ri'ght man. Apply IM REALTY e ; I North. Twin Falls. Ask for Tullo's. "OUR REPUTATION Parsonals-Speclal Noticos 9 AND EXPEr-"-''" "Yankee Trader" MALE ACCOUNTANT capoolc Of CAN MAKE A DI handling full set ot books. Uxperl- Please- call 733-40 NOTICE OP SALE OF ence.ln IBM helpful. WoiLCS de­ Family STATE PROPERTY TO BE pend on cxpcrlence, “Cood oppor­ SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTIOM tunity for advancement. Cnll 423* BARGAIN COLUMN The Stale of Idaho, through Its 5531, Alr._Wood)nniJ, or write Post D cpanm cnf or Highways, will Office Box T. KImnerly. .cyl“ tw6:bodfoom-famliy-nome ~ Want7A:ds^“ otter usL*d State properly for lalo located In Northwest part of «C public auction...... will Twin Falls. Clean nnd well kept. 3 Sedans J10.500. 1314 deeded ocres, con bi 8 Pickups, V4 ««'> H Toa train. Call collcct <213) 782-3310 choscd OS I unit or 3 sci or wcltc: VIVIANE WOODARD ones. 973 shares canal 4 Carr^allf COSMETICS Dept. 701H0, 14621 Owner will carry contract on Get THUS St. Panorama City, Calif, this thrcc-bedroom home located 1 Motor Grader, Cat. In Harrison School Dl-itrlct. Pric­ P r ic e d ^ WOO per ocre. 2 Trailers ed to sell ot $7,950.00. Shop 2 Rollers CITY Marshall nnd water superin- Cattle ranch, close-in. Has been I Sweeper tendcnt, for the City of Hazcllon, running 198 pairs, plus 225 head Results Numerous olhcr Items of road Make appllcallon In writ In R, of yeurllngs. Year oround opera- equipment, obsolete pans and S la tin g qualifications to W. W. nnd clean. Partially fenced yard. tlon. Due to health owner must •upplles. Junk baticrlei, tires Prcssey, Mayor, Haielton, Bo> Lnrge covered patlo. Three bed- sell. Price,-J09,7OO.-term* ovalU nnd scrap iron...... rooms, two baths nnd family ablp, Times-News SALE TIME: 1:00 p.m.. Tues- biz lllUil, |l> WUIIV ill room. Largo double RaroRC. All day, OcioOer 28, 10C3. service statfon. and deliver eonl. romlly typa homo tor J2J.S00. LYNWOOD REALTY LOCATION: Department e< House Includsd, year around lob. 610 Blue Lakes North—733.92U NUMBERS Highways, District No. 2 Head­ SlUvr Creek Supply, PIcabo. Ida­ GENT STATE REALTY Afcer hours: quarters Yard in Shoshone, Ida. ho. Phono 78S-27ia, after 8:00,788- 733-5330 Harley Maihers -733-8473 ho. Lou 733-221)1 Jack 733-3749 __ R.-J. ■Schwendlman-733-7100-, DIAL THESE SINGLE RANCH hand — year round ’Malloi^y 733-C377 ' pick 733-9003- INSPECTION: All et^ulpment Jlm 7M-454Q Dill 733-8023 MIDDLE-AGE home, clean, well will be available for Insbectlon ______Kaye 733-4084______T O L L F R E E at the above location. A detailed located, carpct, 4 bedrooms. 2 list of Items to be offered for 4S0 ACRES, lake frontage, 3 good baths, garage...... $16,500 sale may be secured by contact­ homes, good row crop ond live­ ing the Dep’nrimunt of Highways FARM HAND, steady employment, stock farm. District Office nt Shoshone, Ida­ closo 10 Twin. MAist-hSvo-^exp.crl- ...... «5,J00 ho. or ihe Main Office. P.O, Box encc, \vliH Irrlfiailon, farm m- .240 ACRES, Sell! 7129,' Boise, Idaho 83707. chlnerS' nnd livestock. 733-2071. tlful. 4 bedroom h OUT OF THE ordlnory, TERMS: The terms of tha unlUy 3.bedroom3.bedr...... hoi...... dump. Montn to t> 'weuKs nuui, aLDER BUT nicer tiBilrPom, 733-093r Personal checks drawn on Call Delbert CInmplft, 36(J.2m Of plus 13,500 terms, Real iistata Ser. 5 4 3 -4 6 4 8 Falli CourthouM!, Wednetdayi n. Vice, : 8:30 p.m. For further Information, 733-4030, Al-Anon 3rd inoor, 733- 1043- Dluo takes Blvd. North Out of Town Homos' 51 V/ANT tho bcil bargi PRIVATE Investigator—24 Hour Ser- homes — ucroiigcs — farms — CIIRUE bedrooms. baths, utility, In Burley, Rupert, Declo, ranches or business opporiun- kllchen, living room, doublo~Ba WANTED: Man under 35 .. . Itles? Please bo sura to call roRC, nlr cnndllloned, cnrpetcd, dairy farm. Coll Charles Peter- but ullltiy and I bedroom. 'xl ' Dime-a-line ;* Paul^ Norland ______HOME. Confldentml m-SflD2. 100 20 caro for unwed oxpeclunt moi/icr*. C, LO O N E Y , REALT OR corner Jof. Loti ot Horaite. Al} Pox N-IP, c.o Tlmes-Newa. elecirlc home, nns yenr old.'In (208) 7.13-4081 .Bellevue. 7B3-410Q. Edna Irish ...... ; 733-0882 6 7 8 -2 5 5 2 Both V/lckhiim ...... 733-3470 Benefit from dima-a-line classified advertising, COOKING and dorm mother o ••Member of Multiple Listing" ents wanted. Coll ofier S:00 Farms fo r Sale by selling ihoso ~nb longer used (or netsdcd) — -21IB. THE New modern way lo have FULLER Brush needs mnlo your own'home. Investigate EXtELLCNT 820 Items around the house that are collecting dust. Jn_Weadell, _GQOdlng,„ nd I Cainudy~ot“MoselTo’rSalbnTA»K ...... -excius... --- loolrirnKo“^rag5rt5a’«moTlTrattlc"ortho-barn- Hagerman, Jeromo INTER..STATE HOME repreientu. tlves,' See our fine line of Llndoi Cednr homes. .Swiss Villa Dovulop. rig h t noy/ . . . Turn these Items into C-A-S-H i-OR SPECIAL Beauty Caro - Bar- ment Company. 733-0710, or Oerie . slock rnnch. Richfield barn Jaspers, Lots Cambrel. Ask shares nf walcr. Two tho easy, economical way: Advertise them in 5 3 6 -2 5 3 5 about our specials, 733-3030, Ad. llcipklns r>4:i-4U43, home, only (21.000. kins neauty. 1520 Pnplur. !XI>EHIKNCE1> AUTO SALES- THREl; BEDROOM, full batli up. " the "Yankee Trader" column of the Times- News man. BIr volume denier wlih hljjli- atair*. a tiatit ilawn. Carpeting, Baby Srttors.Chlld Core 16 l|f ncce^tedvllno. Excellent faclll- RiirnKe, <400 equity nnd nisume Taylor balance of OI loan lo qualified W a n t Ads . . . for just a dim e-a-lino. In F ile r, Hollister. )\osersoQ CHILDREN’S VILLAGE, 401 North Locust neai buyer.....— ^53 8th Avenuo North. 733- Agency Jackpot, Nev. Stale licensed, dlmctidlmctor Ruby iln Ital nnc: klni. Nursery — pre-klndergart pension Member of n — divided classt salary to slari. Top c Twin l-nlls "Ml-S" .■iervica 8 26 -5 3 7 5 Dnnnld Taylor, Urokvr

MinlmumjpacQ 13 Words Farm Work Wanted NUW . TKLLEVHL In - modern-sub. ... RULES& JEGULAT10NS FOR CLASSIFIED Bo sure to order your afl MANURIi SPREARINO division. Three hedrnoms, iwo LUO^S CU.STOM I'ARMINO buihs, living room, fnmlly room, 85 ACRES on the ecpnomlcnl ten-day dcnihio carpnrt. Totnl price $:io,23o. rato. When your ad gets re­ W II.L CA Ull l(ir Inlnnt nr pre-trlint i'ller, .120-4703 Down paymunls SI,ORll, Cnll 733. TDDAV5' Uesl Huy; WeD-lm- ADVERTISING IN THE "DIME-A-LINE". COLUMN 2HIII days. 733.B400 evenings and nriived With a 3-licilrooni lintpe, sults you mny cancel It nnd CUSTOM SWATinNO Sundays. Klaclilne shed, iliirns, , 733-S024.' 10 ACRES rluil man, small family, wants A rral hnrgaln at *10.7.10, Cnll h Loll and Found fnri'man Job iin calllu ranch, I'-x- dhiu Kdoi.nlck, 733.72117, (i ' FOUR-nUDHOOM nliler honio. Each soparcite advorliscm enl m usi contain used Help Wanted 18 jierlencud In fiirmlnn and entile, Innd lays well, family nrohnnl (iDii wnek) Itrnwri nnd wh Kxcullent ri'furunccs, Call eve. (tftlcn of Idaho, 7:n.07in. nnd berries inrdcn sptu, gi ' • merchandise to be sold forhss than $100, (lerman Slinrt h*lr. B yenri o DINO - DONOI nlnws, fl7H-3IOT or 4:iH-S,lH4. tiulldlngs, |6 aliarei Twin i'l 2 llruwn leather collar, i l i reward. CHRISTMAH snlllnH stnrls tnrly 733.H3.W, CUS'I'UM I'LOWINO, wltli r wlihoi Two.hudronm lionie, larK" llvlnu water, wdndeiliil view nnnr i with AVON — »>i>in tor yimr rnciM), rnrpeted a n il drapus, u l l l i - nri. »m,7n», Owner anKloiis, Ad w ill oppocir In tlie "Yankee Trader" •Lft.STl VT, Chrlltmni In apiire tlnm neiir ynur - m a in fliior. OnrnKo nnd r'or Thole nnd Otiior I'nrm and homo, filori now. Call — 7B.74I3 • '(K )^ Call l i i i n i r r Cooper, Ranch t.lstlniis Call: a Dinio-A‘L1ne ,classilicoilon. or wrJio Mrs. Phyllis Mnlnturf, r L a n d Office of Id a l m , 3 RR.2, Aviin MiinaKor, Kltnhnrly, CUSl'OM lluyliiK. swntlilnR, halliiK CHARLES P, JfAWKER - -i| siarliliiii, cnrn, iirain nprayltin. S'PliCIALI Will tra.l« rniil TWIN FALLS REALTY Porsonols*Sp0cIal Notlcos 9 nXPERlENCltn vliir lirotlinis, 32il.M(l5 or 320- Ad must contain a minimum of three lines tl.B new wnVr Itent In :i hodrixmi htiiiie. Ccirni’r was 733-3nfl2 days ^-fljn.5n35 evns, •rclio nnd lienllh nqiilpmcni, iiii AUTO MECHANIC luHlDtt nnd WIsrmnn, iminnro » 4» per day. ' ______^ bike, luntinHe Tdller, hrit vihrn- GUARANTin! plus commlrilon. 000 III tUO mm1i(iiimli>ima, liiirj. Priu'iid al (inly 1112,(>i'~ '' wnoil fliHiis, siinin cnrpi’l. On liifHi- nrs Rualiy, lluhl, B4!l>‘ MEN AND WOMEN lilt, Ufi.fioii ur ll.mw down, *^0 iwr nliiHs, Rt:i-4IHU, Hun m«niti and il% Inivrnit, lir liti' n43.4IMO, AKmicv. Y33-3Hin, ' . \. Call the T im e s -k ^ s Classif/ed HOIU.IILLIfTOl ()urd«dr«(i...... Niirsiny sU)i;k. f'loyd tlitmliTol «'civ»irril iiiillidwlth iit'iingn, fnni’od out liulldlnys. (Irowlag grain, TTMmnf i:«i;iier lui,.UJtl Uoruli Avuiiut> Cnll iicans, nlfulfa and ..haying . NEEDED . 733.'HHII0, . ,f______n(^iu» of iiasiure, Prko(l,f at Ji Di^tm enrioday: I.Al>Y wolild'llkn a joli lit In i^arlnK for eldnrly wdman or i IT'i' 0\^inii"'i(hiiin liodniiimr firliiki snn.mto, West Isml Ileaftv, II... full liasi-iiiiinl, lnri|n feiicml back, West Mnlii. Plume fl4:i-440U, Ken I.(Its of fxpiirlniirn. n41.4nflll,____ yard, Price, till,Aon, 0.10 Ni)rili fntlarsiin, liniker.______/n'!wmri” cr-,iiovruR.nsr"i‘'frn ir; l.in.-dn. 7:i.i.ln3o, ^ iiOtJTIlHIirii 'rw( IlnrUnr* Okolhorry, 731-4lfl3. KnARFl~Jiitti:‘l<~ licilroom, flr’iT. rijiiin liuiiie, inni'liliin slied NOW rred ..... , grnnary an' ...... Cdiiil/liinilnii Business Opp 30 733-0931 ...... Iii>dii>iinis, 3 flro|>lai. ,, nxrullniil Inrnis, Cali llarahi l{(i'liii rnc tirlini, hatlis, lieiialirnlly ly, ■«3.a4t»i or l.nnd office r O R SALE riirpitloih Ainirnltnd valiin, U:i:i Idaho, 7:i:i-ii7in, Aldiir l)rlv«i, 120 ACIIH farmT"! Or Lq(\ho J .boiii(xjMi, foniied yard' FOR NEWSPAPER wlih lull finlshnd hnsemeni, Price or use these TOLL-FREE Numbers: I O, 1, lliilll, S4n,(MK), titoiikmnn's Kenlly, tioo WHUoy’n Drive Iim . K'lulli Lincoln, .lernme '324.4N4ni 'noVlo'ey' i'niiTi, ■'8211.08^4, VIvinn In Buhl, Castleford HMAI.l. ,...... I.uclininn, 324-437H. Kfltdhiim, Idnhs ' IioidA (nr ante by owner. ,|I4I| nih MOTOR ROUTES Avoiuio West, Priced lo sell, 73J. CmCKl'iN. .aml_ jlnlry, 77 7.1H1I, B«tulpped f(tri30.o7240. eil family room, 3 linthi, gnrnHa, In Wendell, Gooding, l laaorman, Joibm* no'imlnt ildlnK, |I4,000, asiiime i? T 7 :a m w~wiiirpi.(irm itiiiiiiiHnM «■/ -- 73i.3M*, /nlr 3 bedroom home. Good cheap inorl|inHs*, trust deeds, 1', O, Iloi fnrm close to nnodloR, Priced foi 5362535 TW IN FALLS TIMES-NEyVS BIT, fiurlpy, Idnlio.' (inly 145,000. Schmitt and Mufflav, II34-47HI, tioodlng, Idahn, on ^Hun^^«|lay Knntt, I'hurig 7211 A|sumo O. I. Umn, 7.13-OllJl, ' In Filer, Holllstor, Rogersoni Jackpot, Nov. ■mall home In Twin I'alli m mVtely 40 nuia 'couiiii land, rnHo,' feafled yiirif, T.13-'JiaT, l^n^pA/niPnl, tVendeK Rent- 3 2 6 * 5 3 7 5 . ______7 3 3 ^ 3 1 TllRttK flKnuoOM-hnmn-m-Nnritii mw1r7nr.ini;rr7(Mirinm^^ east nnrl nf oily, I'nmliy room, Jlos Q-3, iM» o f Tlmet-Nawl. two mapUoM, IH bsilit^ 7M-a0fl«,

:,;\i Friday, October 24 ,^969 Tifnes'News, Twin Falls, Idoho- 19 Wdnt to Write a Best Seller? Place a Want Ad and Then Answer Your Ptione.

Farmi for Sale MobMg Hornet Homes-Unfornlshed Farm Implementi Pets and Pet Supplies 110 Appl. & HH Equip; 120 349-acre rnneh wllh 13# hcK USED FARM EQUIPMENT I coUi. sire — Can' ranse rlRht. 180 acre* Irtlaate. GATEWAY ri — Duberry am C A IN ’SV 650 FORD, new paint I. Or trade for cattle ...... -OUb trader wllh 1 Schnauier punpy. ...»..... - U SED -, sere ranch. 160 acrti irrUr and.backhoe Shot*. See Will Moore, Jnna Ti ,tu. More lnn(i to be developec CEMCO beet harvester, i m er Court, Ketchum. weekends, oi Kl head ranira rishl. will »ui * MOBILE HOMES •’ model UT;ekdays. call 878-8177 Durley af Furnhore & HH Goods 122 REPOSSESSEp APPLIANCES ^ .pori 3 beai Marlette — , Mnsnolla Tamarack — ColumbU IIESSTON 5<0 3-row beet h»rv«»- (reconditioned * guaranteed) .. Jairy wHh Grade A FOR SALE OR TKADU: Hcjllslefed SPOT CASH D IS AC, 80S males. Pomeranian and Chlhua- For Furniture . A'poTlanee# i,uou.,.Corrnls and bnrns In roo<1_ .♦ .t r a v e l .T RA ILERS Two bedroom mouern homo wcit ot Things :of Value ■ FRIGIDAIRE r150. 733-7070.______' FRIGIDAIRE 40- electric r *f- PICKUP COVERS nr «3.52i3. 1 liESSTON 280 windrower • TMRUH male mlnlaturo poodln CASH rOK Used furniture, i m U ------Sheep “ poodle, ha ances. Junk. We do upholsterlr.. Winnebago — Sturclj'-Bllt- ____ _ allochcil RarnRe. lull h ^ ' ’ *120? ^ ^ /orage Jiarv«Jer, palrlne. »avrr Furniture 733-40>0. FrirGIDAIRE 40'' electric mi'nt. lOM niue Uikei. 800 UWUS. I n ^ r r s u ble oven ranges . . . I ...... ACHES, 3 bcclronm home TRAVEL TRAILERS AND M m g wllh Curl potato bar- . . oi> and RarnRP. clojc-ln dn oil _ will »how Sniiirdnv nnd Sundu rrnl protr PICKUP CAMPER TWO BUDKOOM house near i! . 54J-40!H. 8 cu. -ft. thest freeier ... 4d. Oi.iy j:2c,ooo. 03 JD combine RENTALS Easty spin dry washer...... L & N REAL ESTATE CO. 80" Howard rotavator ■ Pets and Per Supplies 110 Numeroui Uied Plowi UKnTANY SPANIUL. 3 yeari olC Shopping Center. GATEWAY Female. Guaranteed point and r< stones, rebuild nnd r-,.— CAIN'S GOOD 1‘ORTY «crei. No bulldlnit», . VALLpY FORD MARION TANNER, Mfg. Sewn mile* Twin Falls on 135 Main Ave. E. Livestock W anted ^o^tll sldf. JIB.500. 29 per cent TRAILER CENTER ' & IM PLE M E N T in. 324-l!223. Addison West 7.13-24J0 bent. ISI Bamage; Twin Palls. 43e POODLU Uroomlns — stui IDAHO HIDE tc TALLOW cellenl condition. day. gua 733-0017 M usicot InstrumenTs ' 124 00 0 AtHliS. Rood land. Modern Home, oi>i-;n d a ily : 8 a.m. to 6 p m. DEAD ANIMAL PICKUP lee. See at-M ji Y Electric, duiry burn, KiaflnR ' llicd, OI*^N SUN.; I p.in 10 6 p.m. TllRl£[i bedroom __ ROQd locat nimd Spinet —~ -Ptlbn* collect 733-C.139 Main Ave. East. 733-8212. I-VtiNlNGS BY APPOINTMIJNT — Rood I..... - -cnial reti--- sood corrals. « norlh, 52.^3. Kimber niuiier 4 ru\T potaiu dcvlnvrs. jcromo. 324-21-' SPORTSMAN, purchaa lilR Sa' r Music. Twin TWO uedroom I No. 70 Curl patato harvcsier. AKC German Shorllt-- - ..._ V UAiny I-AKM wanted to bu MOBILE HOMES 1 No. 1 Curl J’oiato harvester. becomc acquainted before season ______Autos for Sale 200 Autos for Sale Don -Mcl-unand. S25-5003, Eo>e fo r Trqd« 53 CIMDliRl-Y: Small after.6 I Inrm in Kimberly PICKUP CAMPERS house on CenierPtr Heavy Equipment 92 I hpuie. four beif. furnacc. $43. 423-5154 SALE; DODGE CITY 1 MIchlR.* KIT CAMPER _ loader, model 175A. . bn larce c 440 'Dicivl loader. 1 Garde Service . l>nrlii Supplies Rooms-Boord & Room 76 Price* — Hnlr De(illnj;s Denver , compivssor.- wllh - Serving Magic Valley tftiliT bousokccping room*. Cflmcr. J3000 eniifJie. J D-S Cat Ipj.,—. . Loti orid. Acreage ■ — i /Center’ Hotel. 203 Shoshone Strvc with U duter. Make offer. Call / South. ______Kctchum, Idaho 72I3-S771. afivr . TIIE u n i t PROFIT 0£A1£R JKliS in- Jiluu grasi pati UENTLEMliN: Clean, warm, 5:00. AnENTION HUNTERS! ms. I-urnlsIica huusv. all BAKER’S ■ 121 7th AvenuL- North. Hay, Grain and Feed 94 '68 Imperial Crown >60 D o d g e ...... $185 CLUSli IN. clea.i. privuti unti 4-door sedan, V8 engine, outo- Air condliioiiing. Day, wc VANTEU TO RENT: IrriKated 4-doOf »edon, full power ond fac- MOBILE month. 137 4ih Avenug Nor 107*0' BUY NOW & GET A lory oir tondilionlog, foclcry war power tteetjng C ACHlis ovcrlonHlnR hniike Htvei Ciin>u:i. {--anlasllc brick home HOMES i-OI{ ONli or jxio, l;»rKf. roniy, wjlh .only 24,000 actual Loaded witn - nppolnimcnii.— Ac« Hciilly, 7n3..Vil7. '68 Chevrolet ...... $1S 95 KUUM $1895 ..UHliS. beuutHul view. Tbree '67 Dodge ... Comoro, *-eyllnder engine, siond- cdroom brick rambler, nppll- NEW GUN FREE Coronet 440 «to .. V8 . ■ntcs. family room, double nor- ord ItonimUtlon. Drive' a iporty ,Re. Ace Realty. 733-3217. KOO.MS: .- gine, ouiamoiic tranimliilon, powei eor ond slill gel ecenomy. ONLY TWO iieering, leol nice, I ACRiiS, new 4 bedroom hom9!8 900 BALE^ o^f_^pctt straw for s New Yoiker ^-djor, full fjower, Buslness-Office Rentals 80 PLU S FREE (aciory o>r condlironlrtg, eiicelleni power steering and bfokel. CO.MMliRCiAL property off c SIMPSON EKY PLUSH RIFLE condition. ■ rstalc toward Jcromo, 600 SQVARU rUET, tally carpci •66 Chevrolet...... $139 5 lew both directions. 678' -reJrlgerutlon. nnd air condition A n lth a l't 100 1963 INTERNATIONAL ...... $595 '68 Chrysler BelAir 4-doar tedon,. V9 Mgln*, '. 324-55rKr' MOBILE HOMES and indlvlduul r;.s Tt.rceil air ht COMMliKCIAL UUILDINO 1 -Clobe-Realtyr733-2023 orsre at UtTll-lClAL U> Y y t o n pickup with V8 P LU S FREE Town and Countr/ wagon, 440 VS automotic trontmUiion. .. • "1 Office- or retoil I proven sires. s hlyliust type enRinc, 4 -speed trans- -kji SHOTGUN Blue Lakes Boulevard N'>rlM. rodudlon sir n .ill ___ engine, aulomalle ironsmliilon, fac­ t Incntion In towni Vo il-l-JCE S” *C E — new. North U mission. Rood tirei. tory oir conditioning, power iteef- '68 G T O Pontlae . A. .» $ 3 9 95 ible. Phonj r36-24B7- Ceef available. Buhl collect. 543- Lakes, coo square feet fully c <)102; Jerome, 324-2C52: ShosiioRo. Ing, power brakes, extra rtice. Hardtop coup*, V8 engine, oyto- ' peted, and privuta bath. Cont 880-7587: Uurley. 078-0253: Hazel- 1960 INTERNATIONAL____ ...... $550 Vaeotlon Property 58. Globe Realty. 733-2623, • moilc trcntmluion, power steeling MOBILE HOMES _1£JL829.5302...... '60 Pontiac . ; ...... $295 -----vjLLA VILLA in IhoI----- ...... ■/ beau-SWISS . OM-ICE______spa . _____ble on Klmhqr- %-ton pickup with good PLU S FREE and brakes, foctory air,' sharp. K n a p h e id e fla t b e d . 6 -cyt., RIFLE Calallna tlatloir^agon, VB anBJne, tiful Sawtooth Valley, often choice - Road - d Nov.:mbcrN< 1st. Good IocB' C attle 102 buildiDf lou, low down payi X n. 733-3965. . _____ 4 -8peed. good tires, outomotic _ trooimistion, " ~ > '6 3 F o r d ...... $ J 9 5 fcasBitable terms. r oMnfoyni — steering and brakes. . -— ...... -,1 of fine 4-doer sedon, V0 engine, outo- ountaln eoblni, Call Swiss Villa. Farms for Rent ----HOT 966 INTER. TR AVELA UL .... $ 159 5 I3.Q71C. or Gene Hopkins g43.4C45. Order no ...... V8 enRine, 4-spoed. Cbstom ^5 Oldsmoblle Delta ------delivery, choice Holstein calves, 4-doo> hojdlop, V8 engine, outo' H & W Interior, mochanically Rood, s»m u i u u i n - bulls, or heifers. Western Live­ malic iranimlnlon, powft steering Real Estate Wanted 62 TRAILER- SALES stock Corporation. Rupert. ' clean, '66 OldsmoblU 98 .. .$239S wTn T buy : ho. 436-GOOl, or O. J ,, HaHarris, and brokei. A Chryller; trode J53 Overland top Holstein da|ry cows; goo( Grqnd Pil*. H. Twin Falls, Idahi unit milking machine with Bi V8 onRine, 4-speed, rear hitch. RIFLE- ___ . ring and bTotetT foctory '6 0 Ford ...... $2 85 ~ f 1 c.Q Tlmes.News.______- - mntlc. electronic pulsutors and ..... power FROM OWNER fi ilr tondlllonlng, engine completely 2-door, V9 ahglne, stondoid Irons* 1958 GREAT LAKES, 10 „ „ , BO ACHES FOR rent. Good soil. 3-HP pipeline pump. 300 gal. bulk 1951 INTERNATIONAL...... $1295 bedroom, storm windows, air Good dairy bnrn. 3 bedroom mod- tank. See at- Cal PouUon n ' tebulll. m litlon, tuns extio good. dltloned. including 3rd bedi..... ern homr. 324-2400.______4>^-mlles’ Gast. of Gooding o % old RF-192 tandem axle dump PLUS FREE and porch addM on. Very good Shoshone Highway. D34-4840. truck. 450 enRlno. 5 & 3 SHOTGUN C am pers. Overall condition. Excellent floor Wantod to Rent trana., 12 y a rd d u m p bad a n d hoist. 15 PICKUPS AND TRUCKS Plan with larno picture windows. crs, weighing from 1000 lu 13: pounds. Lots of cloae-up hoKcr <2.500 firm. D. j , Wllhlns. 034. nnune, I ' '64 International 2-ton 000l-daysr034-48la evenings,-Good, ~320-5132 0 P. O. 851, Flier. for snie.' or trade., Can Flnanc 1957 PODGE .'...... $495 '63 ^fievrolet lag, Idaho. EuBune Hughes. 32j.24l>. ' 1-ton truck with 1 6" duals, P LU S FREE •A-fon, long wlde-plekup,—blg-4 — V8 engine, 4-spead-transmission... MODERN 20' liold Arrow, at Slut ___ welRhlnR 315 V8 enR lno, 4-spood, Ions RIFLE engine, 4-ipee'd transmission, com' • speed tear exie, tong wheel lO'^’ self-contained In Llgh^ Industrial Equipment 89 pounds. 300 head steer calv... Lake's Trailer Park, 733-2013. weighing 3P0. 100 head heifer frame; clean, runs Rood. merclol tires and wheels. calves weighing 320. Will sell Any 1962 INTERNATIONAL '64 Dodge '65 Ford F-700 2Vi-leh Apprtmontf=Ft;m}»he ---- ...... _ J _ * • • • 1971 WOODLINES • ) IILAI) 0/ mixed stock cows, all i^-ton pickup______and camper PLUS’FREE" — W-fonr leog-%vU*-pZetup,-Vfl-»fli — trucfc;- HrV8 arrived — Oood selection TWO bedroom furnished apnrtmcni. ireg. tested, to calve February. glne, 4-tpeed tiontmlislon, trailer 3-ipeed rear axle,. utility room, washing facllitlus, 120 head mixed slock cows, with shell. V 8 o nR ln e , 4-speed, . f^lFLE Cnmo In and browie aroiinil, cleiin, Near school. Kimberly, 423- knives al side. All good aged. radio, good tires, very clean. hitch, runs good; J34.5470. M & D SPORTS CENTER SiOO. TilltEU ROOMS, utllllKei fuinlshed. CALVtifi:, From. Colorado, i ri?n; 1953 INTERNATIONAL ...... $695 •67 Dodge '64 ChevVelet I24B Ulna I.akri Norlh , Ideal — Vfton, long., wide pickup, A-cylln. Weekdays 10;00 — 7:00 Completely redecorutci USED INDUSTRIAL ilsteii., long wide '/, -lor pickup, b)g-« colluiio girls ur adult I. 733-4823, T u T Sit4 I, nu. R-190 truck with Rood 405 PLUS FREE der engirt*^, 4-speed Irontmlisleo, EQUIPMENT engln*, 4-»pe*d ...... Closed .Sundays -ov^nlngs...... enRine, B-speed, 2-spoed. 10.00 ' RIFLE 6-ply tires, trailer hllch. STh n ONLV—Slnglo bacfioltrr upart- --- Itaby nnd patiurs calves most new ASOxIA 4-ply llres. Reel • CAT MODnUD«.lonilcr.ll3D(k a o o d " t/res, clean, runs good. ment, utilities except lights — Jor-sate.-All kinds.. Phon*-U4-4I03 •6a_GMC_. floodi prefer middle age working a«nll*> • IHC MODEL TU18 crawler 324-4028, Jeromi 1.963 CHEVROLET ; : . '...... : : . $1095 - aoj 5lh Avenuu East. wllh doxer, *4500;. PRUSH or Spruser cows or haliers. y,-fon, long wide pickup, 6-cvHn- ^Ml' HUNTERS, camp FARTLY furnished...... • CASE Model W7 4-wheel.driva auaranle«d, fiuy or lr*d« for 1-ton truck with duals, R oo d PLU S FREE der engine, 4>speed Iftjnsmlulen, '6 6 CM C kitchen, bedroom, buths. Adults loader, SI0.500. .. beef. Hap or Clydo 6-cyllndor engine. 4-speed. SH O T G UN whliewdll flies, Holler bitch — long wide Villon pkkup, 250 A- no pets. Days, 733-0031, avenlngi, . nuhl. 843-3825 or • JOHN nP.H-RC' 450 crawler ...... ■■ . A R oo d one. ' ' paint, . cylinder engine, 4>ipeed tranimli* loader, like new, 110,000. JI()lt.SUS, PACK llOltSUSi lion, new tliei. Shorpt S'” ioir.i:niiiu|iiea| - • lilC TDO crawler irnetor wllh — _rciU._.I3ull»_lQ_Iloan, -all_ kinds! rampcf-irnlJer, One' yrur old. '66"DodseVi-ton doter, f3,S00. C D C C C U A T n i l J Your choice of Wincheifor. '66 Chffvraler E( Camino »:1,2IKI, m n 7-jft-n»ll. Kelthum. m .lOMN DEERE 840 - scrapcr, long wide pickup, VD engine, 4. 10,500. s j s s k t k . . rn tt JllU IU U n: Motion 200 12 aaugg or speed Konim litlon,6 ply lirei V8 engine, oulomatic (ronimliilon, , Dulfl nurfee. tt30-22U3. Mobilo Homes 64 • Four JOHN DEEIU! BOlO Remington Wingmastcr 12 gouge pump. lioller hitch. factory air and exlia nice. scrapnrs. 810,000 in tl8,500, lil.l. (Jlt“ THAI)!’, goood Holstein UI-srAHtS Uiichelor tipurimenl.'All • Pull line of new John Deere milk cow. 3 yrars old. Will irade AAarlln',22 cotibor automatic W IL L BUY OR T r a d e utlllllRS except lluhla. RtasnnBble, Industrial EqulpmBnl, hoRS nr pigs. 32fl MM. fnr gnocj . 312 .4lh ' rifle. IN KIM llliRl.Y. • hASl! model 8.10 JlackhOft, FREE RIFLE: The Pickup Campers 14,250. VBob Reese's r.i>. Kimberly. HOLSTEIN jielTcrs, ....u-,„u in.,, Little Front' ELLIOTT’S *--- yacclnalrd^ 82!).SI04, afnsr Dealer W a l l e r H b u s c s MAGIC VALLEY »Dodge City tOOKINti for an aparimonl LEO RICE MOTORS holiao? Call Quilinl. 7:13-21)40. oOO Block Second Avenu* South Goodlni, liliihn INTERNATIONAL, INC. OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 7:00, Apartments-Unturnlshed 71 Farm Implements KENNY MOON • WINN ELLIS • JOE BUTLER TRUCK LANE WEST Lnvrly twD-huilronm apartmenl. 7 3 3 - 4 2 6 6 ALWAYS Air conilltloiiod, cnrnetcil, applU a irtsoys, 14 Holstein. D • BETTER BUYS anccs, laundry faclllllca. / LYNWOOD M A N O R / USED • Lakes Norlh 7«3.3(IB* MAGIC YALLEY, ONli OF Till', nicest two.lmdrooni inarimenis In Twin Fnlla. Drapei, ROSS IS FORD - IS POMTUC MOBILE HOMES htnpt, appllancna, carport. Wairr. BARGAINS MAGIC VALLEY , Mablte Homes •nllailon riinilslierl. No neli. Trnvnl Trnlirr . Motor homes irlvu hy 140H I'lmwnod rlnln aU mites west of Wen B Pnlnit hrn ral 7^3.M7I ilayai 733-H34S TRACTORS V;i3ni4i USED CARS , On j-u h n is h iu ). 3 I ...... ,kLL trnllnr ...... - -- FARMAIL 360 disiat S S DIRECTORY Kuirhum, nuw carpet thnniKl'O'H The following core have been throunh our complet# l«i:Uidlns kitchen and ••••ihioiim. XT 190 renev/ dept. & are reedy for Inspection by the moat Doiibla storm windows, CbII 733. Below you will find many servloeii avalltble from Masic Valloy Bush {llacrlmlnate of buyers.,^. ' s MOJ, artor TWO IIIU>l«UOM uiiartmnnt avail...... joih, Water, lanl- JO 70 HiA sI ncHMCfl. 1.00k under the town In your area , . . coniuct pne of thcne firms ivM IIUUOY ilrenlwixKl, yj n W>. niahod. Call for showing toe the flneat ia aervJco and CHEV. IM P A U HOT. CPE...... 2 5 9 5 .0 0 Wrm, t)nly m.noo. 733-4.10], -7M' CASE 3U-B, gns , TWIN FALLS 1968 lEMANS coM v ...... 2 9 9 5 .0 0 I»l(AH|j New TiiiS Niimnil. Co, self conlnlncit. balh ..i|i1a rliisnl aparn. alnepi l>, CASE OC w/loociir ASIROIOOV SIPTIC YANK SHV1CI tv 43 VACUUM ClIANHS 1965 aUlCK WILDCAT 4-Dll. HI.-AIR ...... 1795.00 I 'liioo n.:ioio, Hiu)Ott, ii------lnillvl.1i.nl — (Jrcmpi Irr JO.i'll VHNUS III' X BU*. J.lietlrnoina, FARMHAND ISO |>«ai linrvetler K I'y ep|Hiinim«iu, .loiinny »>.«• lines end eepllc tunk cleentni. 1 96 S C A D IL IA C SEDAN DEV ILLE-AID ...... 2595.00 u»nd unndtllon. Only |2iS0. Jet...... in>Tni,'iiu'lll'ln ran*«ir carpnrl. jtlea *o f Hoover, 1'H{m"«mi"M rby locallnn, Call 731-tl22l> or 733-7087. ; Uox H i, »un Veltay, T2S-S124. Alio ell types o( excevitlloii. John !|24.5I2I. Severn! good disk liariowe A. lUken. 7aa-a34l . ______Vneuutn cleenore, W« servic* «ad 1965 CORVAIIt MONrA ...... 1095.00 /O llOOtvf^JIca repair all mekei, A toi>d lelecilr- '. IlllKl. Insulate 01 rebuilt .vacuums. W a o u u ... 1964 M ERCURY M ONTEREY 4,-DR. HT...... 1195.00 Hotisei-FurnUhed Clsaners of I.loho, Corner ot Ulue ?2I133^II| 1X1. 2278,______{T3~ ltl.AllO»ATl'. inJHNlHHHI) J>run- Lekes and 2nd Avenue liast. Call 1964 FORD CUSTOM 4-DR. SEDAN ...... 9954)0 liirnishnd lionift for tent. 1830 Hait REED-tractor CO. Cravens^fyer Hervlce, 73>-:»Cta. 73J.IOJ7. Will nonaldnr «l#llvsrln|. IJ.OOO! Hevl.urn. Adiill. n jy , No l>cC 1964 F O R D 'R A N C H E R O ...... SICK BOOhntOUIPMINT 1095.00 k‘ X n ' #iUHl)AH/:lili "'rnn *00.0. 1964 FORD CA LA XIE HDT. CPE...... 1195.00 w. UoMallior hllch. »3,w». J tr J .I. CASE SALES CIUAMIC Tawo ilusiiital beds, wliool rlialrs, iHUKOOMtl, lim I 1964 COM ET 4-D«. SEDAN ...... 99S.00 ■iine. 3>4-a72IV______I, llurnoa Rrally, irX ltF H W citA V au', tl.lf coiiialn « SERVICE j e r o M b 1964 PONTIAC EXEC. 4-DR. HT...... 1195.00 Bd. Hna nt 730 '■unrls# Nnrlh. 133. tD fX M . olia "653ro...... Rail of Uliy o/^,f(imb^rly'fleod menl, erulclies, walkers (or rent •17fll aflar fliOO / ' - MIlKINO.-IQUirMmT ^^963 PONTIAC EXEC. '4-DR. S E D A N ...... 995.00 r '• / 733-5543 CHJROMACTOJ Campers 63 Campers .pJljMli^e eervlee ^ Alio our larg* taloctlort of (urtli Wnehti... r — UflKD ()emci> tank type beet 'hDtie' 7M-474J. hervesters, I Mnssny I'erHusiin 07 UVwVri‘«\'J»roiT>e?'*a4°-4Ssfr Lolo Modil'PICKUPS All PricadI T> M l '' 4-wbeel drive dieiel irnrtiir e<|itl»- peoi)lsr ...... Insure’ 7:i3-flOM 7u.nnoa — iio *_m DIRECTORY ADS . . . CUKI., iKitaiu comlilne. iierfo) v allb y Tnur. sunvicit , A N D W A N T AD S ALL TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS condition. Very reasonelili 0«a Telephone Yellow I'aie* ROSS LEE fORD - LEE PONTIAC OUJ, P«ul. Dos Pbono 733-093L 114 STOCK make* warm frlende,^ BEFORE Y O U BUY UOKTINO n’XTUUCS . at REpyCED PRICES 2fH0URf^ ,: — , Como to JEROME ■ m s f w e r l n R l e r v i c e . T t i e a d v « r t l i ( ( ! t ^ T r i U b e o o t t f MMAn ■ ^ ; ;■ ■: — v - - nilUrin. .A.tills.in Ave. K.______to call you. If the tejephbne ol any ndVftlW tcj Ir this MAINHNANCa A »lfAH>t> D IR E C TO R Y h nfit tjnsworcd, fltol-TSa-lMer. Tele- •'fliocKi iiniB oeAttpjN.WACic.VAiirr* j^hono Answering Service 1q Twih Fa^.VDay or SPORTSI^N'S LODGE Vn^is,^ •snftelt*f*«pV/l5d V ‘fh o u M n d OPEN BVBNINO* '2 0 TimeS'News, Twin Falls, Idaho Friday, October 24, Have Btems You No Longer Are Using? Sell Them The Easy W dy -W ith A Want Ad

'T" 200 Autos For Sale. Muslcol InslrumenU 124 Miscellanoous For Sale T40 ! Sporting Goods Accossorici &. Ropair 182 Autos For Sale 200 I Aulos For Sale .200 Autos) For Sale M iW YamBtitv plnnci; ;jicd piunos; IfiLoAnlNC TOOLS, tump LOIS, 10.%7 »-ORU, 4.clnO r. VB. 5.1,000 nctUAl pack sailillcs, ilutcli oVens. Jlcep- PKUi.^CASON SUI'liR SKI SALli miles — like new inside — 4 new li<-aci», Hiirt~i iKii;nr7:Dnicri:—- iy^“ rnipeu«if“^ee‘^^^^ W ^ lc . 131 Shoshone Norm. Sims, nmmunltlon. slovc*. 1 n n- iltiiiid ni'W 1070 models — MIR terni, gun rnckj. Red'* TraainR — No tindes — V.x. P o » t . ______nitiplc: XXXL -Invelln, JIKO.IK). R adio a n d TV Sots Hlue Luslrp will Write NOW — CuMom Punliiu- I.UI-; PONTIAC Iftlil COKVAIlt Mon/n coupe, buckct - H(.U...... Its, 4-*nced radio, heatur. Runs USliD TVs JfiUOME II, $r>oo. Ask for 'Mike. Phone ,WANTUU;_U(iod,.U3i;d-0Uir nietal c GMC TRUCK.S - ' IN JI'ROM E ■ ■ ROSS I.Ei: rORD, 1ST. .UCTION rrcnnclllloiicJ t'HATHUK.S; tleiin duck (ciillirr buckii:’‘'iiom»!'sljo' S.’ CHISHOLM Brothers, Burley, vour E H i n i r B ^ . . -nd'W nnd color. Tcrnn. fiVr pillows. Poulirv Supply ::i >nuIlioi'l2Pd Humbler dealer .for Wllgon.PiUM, 7n.V614n. r>ih Avc. 73:i-.iifi3.______Cas.^ln. Mlnldolia counties. C7R-53(i4, U.siiD inrRc •crccn color TV. only llKMOVli- cxcess bodv fluid wll Snow Machines' Kvcrgrcen Hrlvr, lili CON ITNEN l AL; A-1 condition, »Hr>.tl5 n t' DI.ACKKR Appllnnce rL U in ilX lablets, only $1.00 r i U IfiU ...... — .Sportsman's Lodge. Thousand &- rurnlture.- Twin- • Halls.Halls 733-1804. and.hoist. Inspected, good condl- Springs,- Hagprmnn. Idaho. Snowmobiles^- - }C7n. 07H.347.1. Hurley, USED CAR SALE Misccllanoous Wanted 141 Ki'.l J.'OKl) Hiinncr. uuti>ma.._, . G oo'd'Thirigs.»o Eq| ' ^33 Mii)or miinufnciiirtnR ('.'niiipanv er strcring, brake*, radio, rarpot. 277(i, OUROUi< Orchurdurcnurd uit open letictpuoiic public pick*picK' CASH l-Oll SiCi: has opening throuRliout Idaho for log. .Sacrlllro. t279:>. nuhl.'M3.fi'.!80. ISGS OLDSMOBtLE Toronado. alt. Ing.inf» Mclniosli, .InnnlhnnJonalhnn. IJnmi'R.Homes Copper, Hra<«. Aluminum, Radl« aica dlstrlhulorj or dciilcr.<. 9 povivr. low mileage. Make offer., These Cars Are A ll Reduced Even More On red nnd Bold Dtllflous. Your con ■tors, Dalterlrs, I'lc. model*, IntluilliiK wide truck and 1001 cnUVHOLET ion pickup, II, K07PEL CO. paint, 4. speed transmission . After 733-1022, ______tainera. Circenrldge r-'nrm. HIrIi riicurs. Rvpresiintullvo In area ‘Wbocl. 734-2304. wiiy *4 'Soulh 10 Orchard Drfve, ______1S2 2nd Avenue South this c4 mlla to farm. Open 1:00 Jeep, Cl 3U. Excellent coodltluii. ranty. Offer. 733-B733, p.m.-3:00 p.m. wcchUay*. all dny , ,Snake RIvTir Auction, 733.7734. COM1-: ...... - -...... - - - Call 7iM-2S0S, evcnlOHS, loni. 0 CYLINDUH. Chevy II Nova Model Evlnriidc .Skeeter .Sno.Mo. hard top, good condition. Best biles at UUD &■ MARK'S, your 19.V-, ONE Ton rord, stake btd. new KED Delicious. Golden dcliclous, V tires. Good -condition. offer, 733-6034, • 1966 OLDSMOBILE _ Miscellaneous Scrvlco 142 Evlnrude and Mcrcury dcftlcrs. Mclniosh. Jonnthim. Rome benuiy 11CT2 DIue-Lukes North. 733-1104. 4W-40 JATALINA Pontine. NCW.tltr; —^Dynamic 88 4-door Hardtop Caliente 2-door Hardtop applra, Orr Orchnnl. 1 mllo North. TAXIDliRMY. Snvp that trnphv bird new scat covers. Runs good. S22; Green Giant p l ^ H.uM. Itlt^ho. or onlmnt for a lifetime. Ken Tay­ 120-IC31. • All power, fully equipped, factory Automatic transmission, power tteer* Phone r.4S..',olO, ■ lor. 733.43R8, ■’Boats Sale 1BC4 CHEVY II. 2 ooor seoan air conditioning. ing, radio. t^ESDlf------stsndard.transmlsslon. Clean. S4B3, Phone 733-4120. ______. 1 . WAS 52195 WAS $ 1 6 9 5 Fuel dnd~W ood -CHRYSLER- bucket I-'/RtiWOOD In Ciisy f(i tiirry -. Boati? and Motors • bundles. Delivered wllhln cJty. Call StAr c r a f t b o a t s a n d I T 'S F U N I9GS CADILLAC Calais Coupe. 733. 1 7 8 0 E.O.M...... * 1 3 6 0 . after 2:00 p.m. 733.ISS5. . i-o l d is g c a m p t r a il e r s 1R24 — ask for VlrgH.______JEROME IMPLEMENT to use W nnt Ads. lacs VOLKSWAGEN, fully equipped, Phone 733-0931 good tires, clean. 733-1359. Heating_Equipmont_____ 1 j ^ ------and M ARIN A ... T966 OLDSMOBILE^ _ BUP ‘ 54n-con. WANTED:__ ___ Ui ------iiiokermutlcs. HAN. NER FURNITURE. Twin Kails, T o t o n a d o — Sp&clar Deluxe Motorcycles »______1«0 Fully equipped, factory air condition­ Automatic transmission, power steer­ ilONOA 1005 250 Scrambler. Rebuilt Sporting Goods motor, overbore racing pistons. ing. ■ ing, radio...... -iTON automatic. 16 Bu.igc, $250, 733-7792 after 5:00 p.m, ^ WAS $ 2 8 9 5 WAS $ 1 6 9 5 . hours; b y chanco e model 11. excellent shnpc. Phone 19ca sUiUKl X6, 250 cc. excellent .Marthnlanes, Corn.. condition. Phone 733-0151. USED CAR •lond C Jerome. 324-273C, ■ 733-3884. CVCnil\RS. THINGS NOBODY else has — E.O.M--.■■■•-^2360 E.O.M: . . * 1 3 4 0 want*. Pete Johnston. 30-1 South Autos For Sale 200 Autos For Sale Washington . (Airport Road); 733- 2345. LIQUIDATION SALE 1966 MERCURY COMET 1966 MERCURY MONTEREY • •SALLyS :Afi{lqoe».-«S-sm- Chairs, tables, rockers, beds, desks, trunks. 4-door Sedan 4-door Sedan china cabinets, chandcllers, dishes, The Price-Fighter is having his stock liquida­ S tandard transmission, racjio. ' Fully equipped. KED Bnrn China, ironware. Quali­ tion sale: A lkof these used cars have to be ty knowhow. Reflnlsh-rcpalr furni* WAS$13?5 X! WAS $ 1 6 9 6 • •re. P.; miles Washington .North. JENKINS'QUALITY sold in the next 10 days. Liquidation prices ANTIQUE curved glus» San ta--- -are-in effect and the Price-Fighter v/lll not c». Cedar chest, tray table. -m!i- cellaneojs. Pocatello. 23I-1&46. be undersold — E.O.M...... :.. * 8 5 0 EOM : *1070 Miscellaneous For Sale 140 1966 CADILLAC 1965^BUICK 1965 OLDSMOBILE FREIGHT DAMAGED D e lt a 8 8 CARS Sedan deVille, radio, heater, full power, air condition­ Electra 225 1969 N E C C H I 4-door'hardtop. Fulty equipped, otl power, 4-door hardtop. Fully equipped. ing,white wall tiros. SEWING MACHINES WAS $ 1 6 9 5 BLUE BOOK ...... $ 3 3 2 5 WAS $ 1 6 9 5 EeautKul jofiS Nccchl. zig xng October Specials! ■ewlnji machine. Complete in bcRutllul console cabinet. Wal- E.O.M. * 1 3 6 0 E.O.M...... * 1 3 6 0 nut finished. Cabinet Is slightly LIQUIDATION .... * 2 8 6 3 •cratched. Machine is brand new 1965 MUSTANG...... $1495 and (ully guaranteed. Machine darns, embroideries, rnonograms 4-speed. VS. brand r 19i8 CHEVROLET 1964 FORD ■ and does many single nnd twin paint job, good tires. maR - ziecdle patterns, buttonholes and wheels, real stnarpi 1967 BUICK El Camino Custotn Galaxie 500 ' sews on buttons. Regular rctull. Automatic transmission, power steer­ 4-door sedan. Automcrtic transmis­ *209.95. Wc will accept J72 or 10 Electro 225 sedan, V-8, radio, heater, fu ll pow er, air payments of $7.20. No Interest or ing,- sion, power steering, rodio. carrying ehargc. Picaso call 733- . .$1395 conditioning, white walls. * • 2044. 1965 FORD . . . . BLUE BOOK ...... $ 2 8 7 5 WAS $2995 , WAS $1095 .^ .------Qalayie DOO-XL 2 -doer— — E.O.M. T r T m s a log trailer.’, inudu from LIQUIDATION ...... * 2 3 8 4 truek chassis. Excellent rubber, ---- . Box 298. Glenai Herry, 1968 CHEVROLET...... $2695 U EliP your carpets ------ABBIE URIGUEN'S •plte coastnnt footsteps of B.busy Caprice 4-door hardtop. Loaded family. Get Blue Lustre. Rent with accessories including air 1966 FORD MONDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES clcctrlQ ihampoocr SI. Crcena- conditioning. Thundorbird, hardtop coupe, V-8, radio, heater, full HLERS Instftlled while , . power, air conditioning, white'wails. • “ THE IRON MISTRESS” ...ill. Com'fUrte muffler lervlcc, In. __BLUE..BOOK ...... -$2535- . . _ _ IN COLOR ■ eluding custom duals. Abbott'] ALAN LADD VIRGINIA MAYO Auto Supply. 305 Shoshono " 1968 PLYMOUTH ..... $2395 Fury ill 2-door hardtop. Radio, heat- ei*; aQto, transmission, sharp. . MONDAY NIGHT 10:30 -CHANNEL 11 “Vessional resuiur neni a. Clarke LIQUIDATION ...... ® 1 9 1 1 ahampooer with companion wet vacuum. Oanner Furniture, 733- K2I. 1967 FALCON...... $1495 PIN-UP lomps and floor lamps, 1964 DODGE Hardwood round table, light wood. 4-door statlonwaRon. Radio, heat­ 1964 OLDSMOBILE 1963 RAMBLER Lovely mirror, radio. Misceilan- er, V8 ongino, auto, transmission. 880 statlonwagon, V-8, automatic, radio, heater, air 98 4-door Sedan 550 4-doot; Sedan ■ - ; -eoua..Utm», 733.77nn. ■- conditioning, white walls, excellent condition. ' ItOVAL all-electric typewrltei All power, fully equipped, factory air Standard transmission, with over- 1967 CAMARO ...... $1895 BIUE-HOOK-.- ; ...... -.t .-^ $ 1 -1 2 S — d iivc icjdioconditioning. WAS $ 1 3 9 5 WAS $ 9 9 5 . Slioppinc Cenler. LIQUIDATION ...... * 8 7 1 fng "machine: "oij# iarga .m eul ...... ______wardrobe. 73.1-6071. E.O.M . . . * 1 0 7 0 E.O.M * 6 5 0 Wn-fe-raid hydraullo Jack. «t a I~ hotfs Aulo Supply, S05 Shoshone 1966 FORD $1495 South... 1965 DODGE 1969 OLDSMOBILE 1969 PONTIAC • X IZ LlNOI.liuM rugs, a«nrlc(l Coroncf-stationwagon, V-8; automatic,- power steer­ ■ - - Delta 88 ...... - ...... Grand'Prix '...... allernt, tn.05 in SR.OS. flANNHH f urnliure, 733-H2I. ______ing, radio, heater, white walls. Full powered, ciir condilioning.'’" All power and .pir conditioning. Et o n E j a US. sulicasvs. trunks, BLUE BOOK ...... ______$ 1 3 2 5 WAS $ 4 1 9 5 WAS $ 4 4 9 5 drum sets, gultari, Red's Trading 1966 DObGE ...... $1295 I Polnra 4-door. V8 engine, auto­ m atic transm ission. 2-tono, LIQUIDATION ...... * 1 0 6 3 E.O.M...... * 3 5 8 8 E.O.M. . . . * 3 8 8 0 Drug. . .,t;j'O jjy rebuilt Kltliy Va lmns. lOT.on, Sea Western Auln for any DODGE and nil vacuum repairs.______1965 FORD ...... $1095 1963 FORD 1967 1965 BUICK ’ brnW^aTway bod for reiil. |\tH) a Country sedan. Radio, lioater, ' . Polara 2-door Hardtop L o S a b r e -- - iiunnor rurnllura, phnna 6-cyllndor. stnndard trnnsmisslon. Stalionwagon, V-8, radio, healer, white walls, white •'-■^•iloot ledcin. All powor, (nclory ol( tond, 73:i-H2t. Fully equipped, air conditioning. j economical family wagon. color. WAS $ 2 3 9 5 WAS $ 1 6 9 5 BLUE BOOK ...... $ 7 5 0 'YANKEE M A rM Y M O R E LIQUIDATION...... * 5 2 8 E.O.M...... * 1 8 4 0 E.O.M...... * 1 3 6 0 , USED CARS AND PICKUPS 1967'OLDSMOBILE .TO CHOOSE FROM 1968 VOLKSWAGEN 98 4-door S^dan TRADER" A utom atic lrcinsml:>sion. THE PRICE-FIGHTER All power, factory olr cortditionlna. Dime ■ a ■ line WAS $ 1 8 9 5 WAS $ 2 4 ^ 5 SHOP-SWAP .-SELL GLEN JENKINS E.O.M...... * 1 5 7 5 e.o.m...... ::.*2160 1968 CHEVROLET NON . COMMEtlCIAl |a DVEKTIS< CHEVROLET JOHN CHRIS' 1967 FORD lm pal*)^-door Hardtop INO BY INDIVIDUAL! ONLY, Phono 734-2450 T w in F a lla 601 MAIN AVE E. 733-1823 Galaxie 500 4-door Hardtop Autoincillc transmission, power alocr- F-ully oqulppod, factory a ir condition- A(dvortlf.omontB ni ii a t iriQ, pow er brakes. t Ing. Ijo condnacl in inorchnncllso MolllnR for WAS $ 2 5 9 5 WAS $ 2 3 9 5 leas ihnn $100...... All advertliomonti must E.O.M..: . * 1 9 9 0 E.O.M...... * 1 9 6 0 meature throe linot ' or m ore. 1967 FORD 1966 BUICK ; ______L.TD_4-dQQr H ardtop ______R iv ie r a PER LINE SPECIAL VIoyl lop. oil power, foctory air con- Tuliy equipped, fciclory dl'r condillbh- PER DAY. 10c d lllo n ln g . log. ' WAS $ 2 4 9 5 WAS $ 2 8 9 5 rn:AiTiTMn:~n7TiTi,' g'uini, i i 'r ^ now, i |i|i.kii|ii., Aiilioiiilik li'-liloln Mill,,, tvii.ii[.'if,i| < E.O.M...... * 1 9 8 0 E.O.M...... * 2 3 7 0

J 9 6 6 CHEVROLET , 1966 OLDSMOBILE E ild'ruilN , nirldrf' lift' Wlm hti.lp't PCYMOUTHS - BiBcayno 4-door Sedan Delta 88 4-door Hardtop li^ljBiiKo.^lWK^Itenilili'k, jaK'ild’i '6 9 V6 epglno^ slcindcird tirinsoilsslon. Fully equipped. Sa~]^7i7rNH‘‘Hd~rr;rrni'M~i'«^^ ^ 'WAS $ 1 1 9 5 ■ WAS i l 7 9 5 Wc'./*'"* MOST WITH AIR CONDITIONING 1'fill fiAl.KY (Inn wrll'lMTiKir'i mnro with' Appaliiosa horsa E . O . M . *850 E.O.M...... * 1 3 6 6 S ItKl.7,13.,’I I ft ______ITi •r^HT^Diay, J2ll a mn. I'TiTl iiiicl lecoml cultliig liny, l>liona,7.i:i- all at SPECIAL PRICES! 195'9 PONTIAC . WAS $ 3 9 5 Catalina 4-door Hardtop lO’’ CUArfHMAN iiiiila »BW, con nliito wllli slailil, A-l coiidllloi Autoniallc transmission,, power ttoor- i ’n. 7a4.2iin, Ing, power brakes, ■ , ' E;O.M...... * 1 5 0 ■ Worth Mol^'snil f<'.r‘ l'^»,''” all -----, 7:n.2403. TWi) Miiildeil Kim siiuW llics, - ...... I’flni IJI 1>|DC«. 7:1:1- WILLS MOTOR CO. R iMliAd, IW . l . i l , I " i : ■lieed ilvitrn !147 4-linrrol, rum ABBIE URIGUEN I Hooilc «ll)fl. 7.11-77M nfrar flirw | i i USED CAR d e p a r t m e n t b' X - • OLDSMOBILE- BUICK wmTN• Uooil -Bnndmon.-78.'MKini.7m?7mi...... TRUCK LANE WEST, TWIN FALLS ______PHONE 733-7365 MAGIC VALLEY'S riNCST — IDAHO'S LARGEST OLDSMOBILE-DUICK DEALt-R i»?mpnnTF{ sol .^•^ 'inrogntnryiF. 733-8721' *' ...... : ‘ , ....TWIN FALLS ■ lotr«t blndlni. tlk « now. 733-77«. • ■ ^ ' Friday, October 24, 1969 . Timas-New>*Twlri Falls, Idaho 21 Here Is a Real Business Builder . . . Advertise Your Service in the ^ a n f Ads.

For Sal*— ------^ 0 0 A u to i For Sola . Au>oi For Sal» . 200 Auloi’.For Sal* 21 200 Autos For Sola ' Aulos For Sot* ^ AtJtot For Sot* ______200 W iiTAL pick-up cover. O' .. . . WORKMAN CASH FOR CARS — ~Any'mBke— 18Q2 CHUVHOLET W ton plC 6 X 4" wlde.'i hat window*. llt» Any model. Dlicount Auto Wreck- Long wheelbase, wide box. . — a-(oated. Dodt«-^|ilctuu|U.WoodaA -BltoTHBRS- ~yg .v AtidUou " Avenue M‘*it;—-73^ Iniernnllonm pick-up cover, #• x 1823, ask for Larry. 5‘, Al>o 1037 Plymouth Savoy, PONTIAC—CADILLAC }0Sa OId«moblle. IMS Mcrcury, 1D39 KorJ {lat head motor. M li. GMC ccllancout car p1>rts.. Will sell as li or trade (or calvca. Can Rupert. Idnho______«G-3i67 -- be-soen at {{unt-Caoal Company Homing.______SEE NUTTY NORTHROP ■jDfl DUICK Rlvlcra, two door. buck, WEHAYETHAT et tcati. Power ilterlns and I970VOtKS • brakei.' also power window* and ■cni. Good tire*. Good overall con­ at Gooding Ford USED CARS dition. Will consider trade. Call DEALING! FEELING! W-OCCS, after ,5:30 p.m. or w«el<. For NEW or USED ear*, trucks Is Now Selll^g^at Your^e Motor Co. • ends. or pickups. Guaranteed to save CATALINA 2-door FmFdiop". you money. Phono 034-447H, 1961 MERCURY ...... $398 Gooding or after hours B37-4447. j^ower sceering, power brakes. Au- 1968 CHEVROLET 1 9 6 8 FORD -doop sedan, runs excellent, fully tnmatlc. heater, radio, Pfestone. 2 19;o Inspected. 733-40S1 evenings, B E L A 1 R TORINO COUPE . equipped.- Come In jntLTesf-Drive One Today Sunday. _ . ______W E BUY CARS 4 door tedon, 8 cylinder tnglnt, 390 V-8 engine, A speed troni- , 1907 GKAND PRIx, Mlchelln tires, radio, heater, automatic, w hile. m illion, rodio, new while sidewall » - stereo tape, automatic transmit- O R EQUITY lldowoll .tires. , - llrei. 1961 CHEVROLET ...... S395 Sion. 2S.000 mllos. Excellent condi­ tion. Call. 32<-24CJ, Jerome, after 4-door sedan, radio, heater and auto* 519^5 52295 matic.'Reduced. WILLS CHECK THESE UTEST TIUDE4NS! Chuck bradiha\C7~wedpor sedan, radio, heater, power Hordlop sport coupe, V8, 4.»pe«d FORDS PONTIACS . brQkes._a9Q.V.8.enoine..two-tons ing, power brakes, white tida w o ll- ___ steerinR,.power brakes, automatic and Iransmlnioo. 1 point, while sidewall lltei. lirei. clean. Speciall ' MUSTANGS FIREBIRDS i $1495 ~ $1495 1964 CHEVROLETIMPAU ...... $845 n095 *895 FAIRLANES TEMPESTS 4-door hardtop, VS. radio, heater, ' - < COMMERCIALS, power steering, automatic, clean. 1953 CHEVROLET TORINOS CATALINAS Speciall 1962 FORD Goloxia 500 4-door, V8, stick.shift, n«w paint. y,.1on pickup, 6 cyllnder molor. 1968 CHEVROLET 1965 CHEVROLET GAUXIES' BONNEVILLES V&-TON PICKUP E L C A M IN O 1964 RAMBLER'AMERICAN...... $598 CUSTOMS: Long wheel ba»e, wide box, V-0 2-door sedan, radio, heater and au- *175 GRAND PRIXS ■ngit^fl, turbo-hydromatle Itonimii- ' tomatic. clean and excellent transpor­ *495 Sion, 650*16 6-ply lifo*. tation. ^ These Cars Must Be Sold This Month S2195 SI 295 YOU CAN--^ BEHE^AT’ 1959 l^lTERNATIONAL 1959 CHEVROLET -K -lo n -pickup, -6-eylinder molor, 4-door .ledan, 6-cyllndtr inolort SAVE AS MUCH AS...... *1200**** 1961 CHEVROLET j j • ' Long wheel base pickup, 6 cylinder engine, 4 speed transmission, 650x16 6 ply tires...... ;. $895 COM E IN & SEE WILLS MOTOR CO. *195 *195 USED CAR DEPARTMENT ROSS LEE FORD - LEE PONTIAC RICE CHEVROLET, Inc. MAGIC VALLEY'S ^Frucletane-West------733-7365- BEFORE YOU BUY 324-4612 200 South Lincoln, JEROME •Dick Boyd .... 733-0542 Steve Miller ... 733.9639 ^^UREE-MOTOtCO. 644 Main Ave. South 733^9.i; ^ • Come to JERO M E^ See the — ED CHURCHMAN Dean 'E a r l____ 733-8108 Louie Sliman .. 733-5198 CLARENCE FALLON "BiGGEsr unie deaier in m a g ic v a il e y - FRANK SHEPPEARD * Don ...... 733-2820 BEN ELDREDGE DALE SORENSON. JACK COX

_____Autoi For Sole .__200 „Autof for Sola _ 2 0 0 - . - A u to f-F o r S o le ------2 0 0 — A u to * F o r S a le ------200 ...Avto»_for Salf__ 200 Autos For Sole 200 'Xt^s For SaU AutQS fo r Sale DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY». FCIITTHEISEN^OTOR^GRAND OPEKINGf

LAS VEGAS VACATIOH ■ JUST FOR TAKING ONE OF OUR FAaORY CARS 1969 MERCURY MARQUIS 1969 MERC COKVERTIBLE FOR A TEST DRIVE Thai's rlghtl Coma fn, fako a losf driva fn on# These exotic aUtomoblfes were espocfalty purchased from of our factory cars and wo’ll give you a Froo . the factory for Thelsen Motors to help them show durfng Beautiful, exciting colors of your choice^ with power .steer­ thoir Grand Opening that they ar'dthe easiest place irf the Vcicalion Cerllflcole wiilcli entillos two people to world to buy a car. These M arquis^ door hardtops have ing, power brakes, white side wall tires and the factor;^ war- ylnyl tops, power steering, power tSrakes, factory air condi­ lodging accommodations for 3 days'and '2 nights. antee. Now's the best time to buy a new car and savol ' tioning, and In the mo^t beautiful colors you can. imagine...... L This vacation certificate can bo usod for Las Vog- Still they have the factory warrantee and are ready to go. as, Rono, or Loke Tahoe Vacations, but, does not BEAUTIFULLY $ Include transportation to and from rosott, nor SAVE PRICED-AT'ONLY... 2 9 9 0 does It Include food. OVER 1 8 0 0 1966 1965 1967 1962 1963 1965 CHEVY 4-DOOR OLDS^CUTLASS^OUPE PLYMOUTH FORY” FORD FAIRLANE MERC 4D 00R KAWASAKI Power steering, power brakes, 4-door hardtop, full power and 4-door hardtop, sharp, red, SEDAN automatic transmission. air conditioning, . neat. SEDAN M otor Bike $55700 *895“ $,39500 /, >388" *500~ $200"’

W E'RE TAKING IN 1962 1961 1967 LOADS OF CARS \ 1964 CHEVY WAGON FORD 4-DOOR CHRYSLER WAGON FROM OUR NEW 1970 MiRCURY pR AU D E R MCRiuRrXOUPE Automatic transmission, Air and all poyvsr, nice. Air and full power. radio, heater. Automatic, V8 SALES - COME IN Hardtop Sport Coupon Loadsd. Autottiatio,' Parklaho Cleart illeni yourself QET^kM ’262" ' i 6 r Make Offer LESS THAN WHOLESALEI '870^ *1365?

THE EASIEST PLACE IN THE WORLD • THEISEH MOTORS . .TO BUY A CARI ■ ■ ; 701 MAIN AYE. lAST 2Z TImos-Nows, Twin Falls, ldaHt> j', -Ffidoyi Oc^oBor 24, 1969 .

This Sunday at the Fun Spots < OCTOBER.:26th

GALLOP AWAY WITH ONE OF THE HOTTEST 1970's ON THE ROAD. Register free and often at either Cactus Pete's or the Horse Shu Club and save your tickets. All tickets previously deposited are Etill good for th is b ig give-a-way a nd will remain e ligible fqrall future awards. ______

Fantastic Kew Personality in the Gala Room IKE COLE • • • BROTHER OF NAT KING COLE Steve Carroll at the Horse Shu The Outsiders at the Gala Bar

I , RESERVATIONS REQUIRED FOR OALA ROOM ohows ovorV Frldoy ond Snturdny. Show TimoB: Fridny ond Saturday nro ot 9:00 - 11:00 nnd 1,00. The Gnln Room la opon from 6:00 to 8:00 for thoQQ not wlohlng to mnko roaorvatlons in ndvonco. No rooorvotlono oro noodod for ehow# ovory Tuesday, Wednoodoy ond Thursday. Four Fabulous Buffets Every Week! ★ Seafood Every Friday Night CHICK-A-RAMA ★ Beefeater Buffet Each Saturday SUNDAY -Ar international Buffet Each Wednesday

CHICKEN CO-COA DCVANT , Gourmot food nt Its flnoat, just $27Q[X por porson STUFrriD CMICKEN BREASTS (hunler stylo)

BREAST OF CHICKEN ENGUINE

SO UTHERN f r ie d C H IC K |N ROAST R O U N D O F DEEP '' Fried Chicken Dinner Sunday SALAD BAR.-PASTRY TABLE, etc. at the Horse Shu Club : .. . for just s V,.. and the horse shu ilu b , ' , ' ______, ____I „ _ ' ______' _____L .' ___ _ ^ ^ ■

' v WITM ALL

UFE IS A GRINDSTONE. AND WHETHER IT GRINDS A MAN DOWN OR POLISHES HIM UP DEPENDS ON THE STUFF HE IS MADE OF.

-Eriday,_October_24,_J969. .Xwin^Falls, Times-News Religion^oday-

By Rev. Lester Klnsolving

The flames that swept through New York Presbytery and the Je ru sa le m ’s A] Aksa M osque in Rev. Harry Dorman of the Divi­ August threatened for a while sion of-Overseas Mlniiilries of to set off a, far greater confla­ the National Councilbf Churches gration. The ashes weren't cold continually attacif Israel, 'And before Arab leaders were blam­ such denominational journals as in g Israel for the fire an d call- Presbyterian Life, The Episco­ ’ing for vengeance in the form palian, The Lutheran and The of a jihad, a holy war. United Church 'Herald continue Had this call been answered, to publish Oie bitterly anli-Isracl the' resulting w ar would halve' -writings of-the-Rcv.-A.- C. For­ been about as ill-founded as any rest of Toronto (and, currently, in history. For Israel had about Beirut). But they deny equal BS much reason to set A1 Aksa space for opposite points of . ablaze- as the Italian Govern- view. When the Rev. Karl Baehr ment'Tourist Bureau would have of Garden City, N.Y., submitted to fill in the Catacombs or to a rebuttal to one of the Rev. blow up St. Peter's Basilica. Mr. Forrest’s articles, ho re-, coived a n acknowledgement Arrested and charged with ar­ from Elson Ruff, editor of The son was an Australian Christian, Lutheran, that began: "Dear D e n is,M ic h a e l Rohan, a sheep- Rabbi Baehr.” — APPEARING-IN-MBgIc Valley churchcs next w eek are these four members of the Antioch shearer identified as a member ■_of “ The Church of G o d ,’* Unit of the Covenant Players, a naUonal repertory group, which travels throughout the na- B u t perhaps the m ost prestl*._ lotion glvlnc performances. They will appear Sunday morning at the Burley First Methodist 'a .vague designation.. (In the gious- o f_aU ,, onti-Israel-clcrgy Church, Sunday efrenlng at the'Twin Falls First Baptist Church, Monday evening at Filer- U.S.' alone, there are'eight de­ is the pastor of Washington D. Methodist Church and on Wednesday evening at the Gooding First Christian Church. nominations with this title.) Ac­ C .’s N a tio n a l Presbji'.er- cording to reports from Jerusa­ lan Church, the Rev. Edward lem, the accused took a literal, Le«-Roy-Elson*______and personal view of St. Luke 21:24 and-other Bible passages Last mjonth, in his nine million Covenant Players To Appear--- ^Family Night- d o lla r chTlrch,- D r. Elson, who which indicate a return of Jeru­ Ascension E p is c o p a l salem to Israel and the rebuild* is also Chaplain of the U.S. Church, Twin Falls, N^ill ing of the Temple as a sign Senate allowed the press attache In Magic Valley Next Week nf the'Jordanian Embassy. " sponsor a “family night for - U N IC E P ” m T iiu ts d jy , bC'— sheepshearer who, at this deliver a slashing attack upon The Antioch Unit - of the group includes 8:30 ai\d 11 a.m. . Writing, is being tried, was said Israel, as well as upon what ginning at 7:30 p.m. in Rhea Covenant Players, a national Sunday in the Burley First Auditorium. to have been trying to clear he called "the Zionist-dominated repertory group, headed by Bob Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m. the ground for the rebuilding. U.S. Press.” Dr. Elson’s congre­ Fish, will appear in- Magic Val­ Sunday in the Twin Falls First Homemaile Ice cream and After Mecca and Medina, A1 gation includes eight U.S. Sena­ ley next week. Baptist' Church, 8 p.m. Monday cake 'V/ill bo served and Aksa is the third most venerated tors, Chief Justice Warren Burg­ The schedule for the traveling in the Filer Methodist Church, one .of the classics of the Moslem shrine. It also appears er and J. Edgar Hoover. sponsored by the Filer Minis­ film world will be shown. ■ to be peculiarly flammable, hav­ terial'T\?sociation, and 8 p.m. Laurel and Hardy’s "Air • ing been ignited a number of Power 0£~ Wednesday In the Gooding First Raid Warden.” times earlier when the area was Christian Church, with tho under Jordanian control. Nobody First Baptist Church coopcrat- Cost for the evening will blamed anyon^jfor those fires, Ihg. be $2 per fa m ily , or SO cents nor didX;hrlstiarneaders accuse God Subject Tho actors also will appear per individual, with tho net the Arabs of“setlinR the ex­ Tuesday at the Mountain Home proceeds going for tho Unit­ tremely damaging blaze in the Air Force Base’s "Clergy Day” ed Nations Children’s Fund. h ig h ly venerated Christian O fX ecturer for all Magic Valley ministers. Church of the Holy Sepulchure Chairman for the occasion Founded in 19G3 by Charles M. is Mrs. Robert Musscr. w hen it was in Jo rdan ian terrl- A Christian Scicnce lecturer Tanner, Hollywood screen writ- tory. used a description of surfboard _er, .ihe_CoY.cnnnt_Elnysrs_mndo_ _n_The,publIc_is cordially in­ riding in X‘wIn~Falls rcoently their first road trip to Seattle - vited. reel’s earlier and repeatedly to illustrate how men m ust learn in Tho group now has spurned offers to help provide to .unite themselves with the several touring units and has security for Ai Aksa, such is spiritual power of God. given 3,000 perform ances in 30 the dOBrcc of A rab bitterness William Henry Alton, New states. th a t no, one should hove been York City, was the speaker. He They played before both the surprised bjv their furious reac­ addressed a public- mooting on American Baptist Convention tion to the burning of their •'God’s Power at Hand." The and tho International Conven­ shrine. event wos sponsored b ^ tho tion of tho Disciples of Christ What might have disappoint­ First Church of Christ, Scientist, ^hristian Churchcs) in Seattle ed, ev.!n angered, numerous Twin Falls. Jews was the virtually complete “How docs n surfer ride the Mr. Tanner continues as dlr’ec- silence of Christian eccleslnstlca* power of the wave?" Mr. Alton lor and writer for Iho non-profit who, almost to n man, failed asked. "When he sees a wave FRIED and nonsectarian organlzntloru to point out that there was little approaching, he paddles vigor­ Rev. Dr. R. Eugene Crow. sense In the Arab accusations. ously In the direction the wavo ‘ former minister of the Twin Pope Paul VI'S, reaction was R EARL SORENSON CHICKEN is going. When the wave reacltes Falls First Baptist Church,' to write the Islamic summit, . . . U.the newblshon ot the him and lifts him to its crest, serves on tho ciRhth-memlwr meeting In Rnbat that "the rep­ T w in Falla 4th W ard , LDS it's a matter of his staying at­ * National Honorary Advisory DINNER resentatives of the three mono* one with the wflye, and letting^ Board. theistlc religions nhould reach if carry him. He nev6r breaks There will be no admission For llie parfect dinner after chutch Agreement to recognize the b« tura cmd *lop by (or ’’Smiity’i tho relationship of rider and . chargo for the Mngic Valley un ique and fiiicrcd character of Soulltarn Fried Clilckon." Tliere't wave. O therw ise, he’d fa ll off, performances, but offerings will the holy places, and Jerusalem Sorenson Is get knocked around and go no* nollilng (Inerl Or porliapi you'd in particular." 1)0 InUen to help defray ex­ enjoy anollier lelecllon from our where. penses. If this meant that, Moslem "Our great need Is to move wlile cltolco of complele dinneri countries should for this purpose Bishop O f splritwnrd; to become ntluned In nddlllor] to our doiant of pan* cake and wofflo vorlellet. rccognlze the Jew ish stnte of to God, the divine principle of 2,200 A T F E N D M E E T Israel, Komcthing the Vntican' all reality. Wo must discover SP O K A N E — Somo 2,200 people hns never done, it could t>G n Fourth Ward what It means to 'awaken spir­ from Washington, Idaho, Ore­ n ils WEEK'S WINNER v nlun blc HUpplemcnt to Iho pcr- itually and to ally oursolvcs with gon, Montana and Canada ol>* eniilnl Papal pleas fiSr pence. B i l l P u llln n . EnrJ Sorpnaon hna been spiritual power’ , , . this is served tho "Changing Trends in InNlead, it appears to bo JuNt 2 4 6 ,Von Surer? fiu.Htnlncd as the now blHhop of getting on tho wave." a ClmnglnR Church” at the pro­ Offer Good O ct.'2^ lliru 3 0 ' another siinKesllon for (he Inter- Mr. Altpn la currently on tour vincial religious educntion con­ nallonnll/.ntlnn (if the holy city tho Twin riillH 4th Ward, LDS as a member nf the Christian gress recently ut tho Spokuno of Jeru salem and lucks any spc- Church, at a recent meeting, Science board of lectureship. Coliseum. ClflCN. 'ITio po.sitlon of m an y Protcn- Wl'ihop S(»rcn»on’fl’ new of­ tnnts on Isriicl nuist be oven ficers nro Billy Emcri)on Ucrry, m o re jiHllini? to Jew s. F or if fln it counfCTOl-V'KHrl D . I,yonn, SUNDAY; Is rael Is outvoted 20 In nno In ficcond cnuniiolnr; Uriel J. Sim- S . S c h o o l . . . . 0 :45 A.M, mon!t, executive Hccrotnryi Alla W o rs h ip .. . . . 11:00 A.M. L. RIchnrtlKon, ward clerk, and Gospel Hour . 7 :30 P.M . C liurches, whore it has mi repre* Jo h n H. Connolly, nsiilNtnnC sontntlon whaiever. ’ , , w ard d o rk , . Penlflcotlul, TtlnltnrUin, EvnnQollitlc. Spltllunt. F urther, . 'tlicro ore numerous V lilt u i llili Sunilo/. ItBor ''RLVIVAUIMl;''. former mliisliinnrles to Arab RelcnHcd nn hiNhop of Iho KTFI, 9 a.m. Sundu/, ward WMfi C]au(lu Brown Jr., jtuidflItuulfl who ft)rniform nn ap eloquentolnquent nnd ’ , '' i^IdoHprend ncl^irk for Ariib w'nlong with his counselors. ---- nrop«rfltidft^«5h-<»f*itTirtntnnt:----J*. -34tt-Atfdtion A v . Wait; tliQ PrcHbylerlHM-foundod lo r nnd clcrlcn, J umh M cB ride m>d.-A}Ia . liJciiarJi;ui).__13Juhup.- OPEN 7 DAYS —AmtiHcnn“UnivcrsIly or Hetnit. - • __E1RSI. ASSEMBLY OE 'GOn___ -HouisramrcMfnrr-piii— Strong Arab nupportorH llko Drown has txcn bishop of thu N . L o cu st a* S h o u p Av®. E. T win Falla, Idaho rniDAYi a>90 am le 10 pm tlio R ev. Iltim phroy Wniz of tho. ward for tlio pjjst nix years:

2 TImo8-Now8, Twin Falls, tdalio .Friday, October.24 ,1969 ‘ ' t ' V: • . Christian Church Began In T.F. W ith 48 Members ,__ Today W ith All Faiths Presents

REV. DONAU> L. HOFFMAN one’a faith In Christ. bapUsm Pastor, First Christian Church h y immersion in water in the E--- a rlyl a ’ 1905, Christian ’ Ufccness o f Jesus’ d M th , burial CHURCH OP THE WEEK ChurchChurchjieople people began meeting in and resurrection. To all w h tr Twin Falls, la the fall, that obeyed these commandments year, they built a frame church God gave the seal of divine ac­ ceptance and salvation by the matlon. They also met with oth­ o n Second Avenue E as t a n d or* er religious groups, slating that ganlzed a coneregation .In No­ gift of each of His Holy Spirit. Special Coijvocation Set These people believed there “ We are not the only Cliristlans, , vember with ■» members. - but Christians only.” The coflgregdtioa built a n«w should be a proper distinction between the Old and the New To all this the local 'Fir^t, building on the corner of Fourth , Christian Church a g ^s , con-- At T.F. Adventist Church Avenue East and Second Slreet. I Testament, the latter b e in g C o d ’5 covenant with man­ tlnuing to be an autonomous and East, dedicating' It on June 12, new A special convocation will be Council of the General Confer­ kind, containing what men must free body, though some congro 1910. The present building locat­ gationsI in L______Idaho and_____ throughout ______held in the Twin F alls Seventh- ence of Seventh-Day Adventists, do to be saved, to'conduct the ed on the corner of Sixth Avenue Day Adventist Church,- begin­ A potluck dinner is planned at affairs of the church and to the nation recently left this 15&- . North and Shoshone street year-old movement to form an ning at 8 p.m. Friday with noon Saturday. At 2:30 p.m. Sat­ North, was dedicated on Oct. o rd e r their lives. They rejecled all human ecclesiastically controlled na* Elder C. 11. Hamel, lay activ­ urday, a sacred musical is plan- ----» r i9 2 3 .------creeds-Bnd-eccleslastical-'orgam--- t l^ I denomination ' ities leader o f the. Id a ho Confer- . ned under the direction of Elder ■ The present minister, Rev. izatlonsirationa andand practicednractipprf localtfvni au­«iw ‘ , church participates -cnce of_£eventh'Day,AdvcntistSj__Kenneth Brown, pastor of the as keynote speaker. Donald Hoffman, began here on tonomy, or self-government,' in one of the largest national ■ Jerome district. - The special convocation will F eb. 1, 1958. A new assistant, with only Christ as the head religious conventions, the North • A 3 P-m. special Gospel hour Stan Howertoo/ came this post of the Church. — American CHrlstlan Convention, conclude with a special rally at , is planned w ith personal experl- 2:30 p.m. Sunday with Cajy Eh- September. They called for Christ - like w hkh met this past July in De­ ences'bcing related by the Ia>i The congregation now has ov- living on the part of each fol­ troit, w ith over 37,000 registered- lert, conference publishing sec­ members'of the church. Spcclal • e r 700 k jc al m em b ers. It is jia rt low er. Rev. Hoffman has been a retary, in charge. • ■ . guests will be assisting in this of a religious movement known They proclaimed the necessity guiding member of this conven­ A special Sabbath scho6I pro­ special program , includifig^ D r."^ variously as Christian. Churches for xmity (not union) of a 11 tion since 1952. It has no contro*i ' gram Is planned for 9:3,0 a.m. P a u l Neuharth,* M.D., from o r C hurches of C hrist; .the larg­ Christians, believing that return­ over any porticlpating congre­ Saturday with Mrs. Ij:u LaVal- southern California. est religious mwement ever to ing to the simplicity of the New gation or individual. lee as director. The ll-a.m. A t 7:30 p .m . Saturday, a spe­ begin on American soil. Testament church would brinff F irst Christian Chruch fs con- divine, servicesjwill have Elder cial film will be shown in the George W. Liscbmbe, president In the late 18th and early I9th It about. While practicing au­ servatlve ln its-bellefs, accept­ Magic Valley Adventist Church centuries, there were a number tonomy, they fellowshipped with ing th« Bible as the inspired of the- Idaho Conference, as School. of smaU, sporadic movements others o f like beliefs in state- word of God, and surrendering guest speaker. He has just re­ Then the rally Sunday will turned from Washington. D.C., made by p^ple interested in and national meetings for the to the' diety and lordship of concludc the activities. The nub­ establishing churches like those purpose of inspiration and -Infor- Jesus Christ. Where he attended the Autumn ile IS invited. ~ they -read -about-ln-the-N c.w._ T estament. The maze of differing relig­ ious Ideas, the jumble of man- mode creeds imposed by what ---- hnUftUf'H -tf» h e tyrannical ecclesiastical leaders, bothered jttiese pioneer Americans, since “ i they could find little of the then modern beliefs in their Bibles.

be their only rule of faiJh and Christian nracUce, their ‘main princinle_oi. cxistence-as-aepar— ate from other religious bodies. In tlie New Tcstamonf, they be- Jieved tijerc was a norm for the chur.ch of the first ccrttiiry A . D.. an d they believed this should be the pattern for their' I they restore ns nenrJy"nrfy ns .possible that church in all of what they ______11 eyoci were 11s_ e .s s entin 1 s. Th:se Incfutfcd~l|jc n h rti o •'Christlnn'’ or "Church o f Christ." There were two divine • ordinnnce.i: Baptism and the weekly observnnco of the.i.ord’.s Supper, They believod Cod laid down the conditions upon which, He would save men, following tlieir surrender and obedience to Hl.’i com m ands. These were faith in Jcsua Chrht n.s Lord and Saviour, repentance. — a complete change of min'd and heart, nn open confession o f

FESTIVAL SCT CASTLEFOKD ^ .A Harvest' ' H om e F estival ha.s been sclwd- ulcd for 2 p.m. Sunday in the Castleford First Baptist Church. TH IS CHUR CH B U IL D IN G , leeated oa the eoroer ol SlzUi Church congrc£atlen was orgaoUed in IMS with m member* Guest speaker will be Dr. Way­ Avenue North «o d Sheshono Street North, wms dedlcjiied bv ship of 4B people. ’ ne Roberts. Ibc First Chrtstian Church member* Iq )»29. T b « Christian

Tkeae Sponvora Make T hh Supplement Posaible—Tell Them You Approve

TWIN PALLS, SrONSORSt ROtnrSON-OICNCNAIN IN fU IA NC I Y(mj( Orldga To Saturlly Sln(a 1904 332 Iliird St. E. Twin Falli — 7a3->07« TW(N MILS SANK k TRUST CO. Serving Moflle Voll*v Cot Branch** at lyowood ond Klmbttly

TWIN fAtlS MO«rt/A«r HIRITAOt-MANOt W illiam Dol« l^ln■cM>n Manngtmtnl 590 Fll.r Av., W. — Twin fa ll* ~ 733-90*4 VIRN'S UNION 76 SIRVICI Spaody Satvka W llh A S(»ila Mam Av*. W. ± Twin Ta\l, — 733-94^4 TWIN rAUS MALTY & INtURANCI KNNY-WISI DRUd STORt 1211 Fll^r Avo. E. - Twin foiU • 733-093t CtcMflO e. Hon«y, Jr. • 7330662 KCN'i ' m AONAVOX H0M« RNTlllTAtNMINr CINTIR Salat & Sorvlca ■ n o tNSUIANCC 420 Mciln Ava. S, - Twin FalU • 733-2233 Gilabllihvd 190S 236 Main Ava. N. - Twin Fall* • 733-1979 Mr. and M<». Carl W. D«ro ISO S«. E. - Twin Foil* - 733-3000 ftlD'S TtADINO POST Wa Uuy S«|| & Trcjcia Oui>l

C liilillnu'D . Poiarian, Owner 340 Muin Ay*. S. • tw in fa ll* - 733-1719 OK TfRI ITORIS nnsT rioiRAL sa v in o s a l o a n ' association \3' U>c6ifbii» To Sufva You---- ...... - .....- voico-auiu)M »-sum Y._ OP TWIN rA lU Everyiltlng To Build Anyltilng S«rvrr>a MosiG Votlay f«r S3 V'tara Twin folJ* . Jatoma - Botlay , Friday, October 24 ,1969 Timoa-Newa, Tvt/|n Falls, Idaho 3 T.F. Cliurcli Hosting Panel O n “Youth, Drugs In T.F^’

“ Vouth and Drugs in Tw/n ' w lil be o pportun ity for those at* Falls” will be the subjcct of tending to ask questions. I panel lo which the public is He said the panel is being nvitcd at ■ held not Just to expose-the prob­ sancluary lem of drug use but to acquaint' Methodist Church. ______. youth and parents with the re­ ■ Special resource people at the sults of s uch use and the re­ meeting will be John Satichcz, sources a v a ilab le for help. — former heroin user now with' Some of the questions to be the Teen Challenge Center, discussed will be the significant Phoenix, Ariz., and Rev. John cnuscs for youths using drugs, Swank, director of the interde­ the roIe of parents, scliool and nominational center. church and-why convictions are Local participants on the pan* so difficult. cl which will bo moderated by Legalizing of inarljuona also Rev. Keith Maxwell, associate w ill be. discussed, as well as . pastor of the host church, in­ w hat citizens can do to stop clude Probate Judge Richard the flow of both drugs and liquor - Reed,—Richard Baun,- dean-6f — into Twin Falls. ------students at Twin Falls H ig h Rev. Maxwell noted that a •School; State Patrolman Chet documentary film, “Youth In a Hillman, and Dr. Harry Brum* F ix " show ing w hat happens to i>ack, representing the parents. youths who get hooked on drugs, Youths of the church also will w ill be show n a t , 7:30 p.m . for participate.In the program and persons wanting to come a half Rev. Maxwell stressed I h e i e hour early. Missionaxy To Korea W ill _____ PARTICIPATING IN_THE-I>ay_o*-RecoUecUoa at.lbe.St.Benedict Priory were, from left. Father Slmeoo Van IXsVord, Mrs. Sharon Walker, president ot tb« Twin Falls Speak At Special Sex*yices Council of CalhoUe Women and vice chairman ot tho community affairs o{ the deanery, and Mr^. WjUlam Last, Jerome, past deanery president and diocesan church communities Special missionary services she was in K ore a. She witness- commission chairman. Idaho Council of Catholic Women. Father Simeon arranged the meet> will. bo held• Sunday~ • at two ed tho anxiety and tension In ing which was aitencfed'Y^i Catholic women from Twin Falls, Hailey, Ketchuro, Buhl, Jeromo Twin Falls Churches. .free South Korea at the time and Shoshone. ’ The services will be held at tho North Kdrcans sent agents S:45 an d 11 a .m . in the F irst to attempt the asstissination of Assembly of God Church, North P resident P a rk , o f the free Re- ' Locust Street and Shoup Avenue public of Korea, and when they Statewide Area CatlioKc Women Attend •nptiiCftH thf» rr>>w fiBH IIS*; Church. 178 Pueblo. Miss Carlow will show slides Clergy Day Day Of KecoUection In I'.l''. Guests speaker will be Marg­ of the negotiating site at Pan* aret E. Carlow, who has been munjom in the Demilitarized Catholic women from Maglp itles included H o ljt Sacrifice of a - m issionary w ith the As- ?un(j' and of the work in the Is Scheduled Valley attonded the Day of Re­ the Mass an d instructions o{ .semblies of God since 1947. churches In South Korea. She- collection for the South Central women's role in todny’s world. Until 1962, she was activ'e in . show~postshow~posters, curios and MOUNTAIN HO ME A IR D eanery recently a t the St, A potluck luncheon was hoted Japan_wh_ero_sho p_ion_eered four J^ e a n d rw s . FORCE BASE — A statcwide_ • Benedict Priory. by Twin Falls. Jerome and B uhl_ ConducLing the c.ycrit w w o m e n . new churches, taught Bible Tho pnuhll^ u b lic is«« invited. "UJergy Day" will take place ______“7 school and worked with the at tho Mountain Home Air Force tiier Simeon Van DcVonT 'omen from Twin Falls, Jo- ^ Japanese In publications for the Bnso on -Tuesday. ------rome, Buhl, Shoshone,_Hailey— ~ 7^^^^i°n“l'“church. ■ ______-—and_^K c‘t-c-h'U'm' attended the From 1902, until March. 1M8, TrT addltton—to - th o reltelous--- event.''* Men’s Council To discussions .scheduled, Idaho ~ Mjuii^ter Is Plans wercjoade for n mar--- clergymen will have the oppor­ rled couples retreat that may Meet Wednesday tunity to, view n Ktatic displfly of be held .sometime in February., the McDonnell RF-IC and the Sjjcakcr At Conducting the retreat will bo --WENl?ELL-Jlm-Mon^,-Gm.n- ' . Rt. Rev. DamIon_j£ntnca._OSD,_ abbot of the Mount Annie Abby. cll-of the Wendell United Pres-• 'I'liose interested in the retreat byicrlftn Ch\»rch will meet nt TuUlng pnvt In tl\e ncllvUlca Qiiu-ch Meet .slunild contact M rs. K cnaetli 7:30 p.m. Nov. 2 in the social will be tho Covenant Players, n hall of the church. nntioniii tourln;; dramatic.group Stan Howerton, assistant min­ Walker. Twin Falls...... from Los AnRclos. ister of the Twin l'all.s F irst -Mrs.-Hclcn’ Hcnrtcrsnnrproba:----— r ”,— ^ Chri.stlan Church, was jjut'iit FOOD EARMARKED lion officer for Twin 1-iills . Chupliiln Donald Culles, pro- speaker at the recent C hrlM lan County, •will sponk (o tho Kroun officer for the nffiilr, snirc exiicci- ' llnijHO w hich Is located Plans were discussed for'the World Relief have ciirnmrkcd in Twli> FallH. Tho men nre be­ ed to participate.______annual fall bazaar, t

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WISTMN AUTO ASSOCIATi STQRI STfNtINO JiWElRY CO. WILSON BATIS APPLIANCe STORC, INC. Tim tninlly Sloro & Cdtcilou Order Cmiter ■ Quollly • Inlogtlly • 5«tvlc« Mdytoo . Motuircli • Phllco • Klithen Aid 333 Muin Ave. C._. Twin f u ll i . 733.47<<7 A r jDroms < MAOIC VAUIY REFRIOIRATION SERVICE i IIS ShglhoiM SI. S- Twin PulU • 733.503) M A Y ItlCTRIC CO. Conui.orcUil • Ketldenllol I RCA • Whlr(|>oo| )l»e A|i|ilkincai Addlion Ave, E. • Twin FdlU . 733-4964 *^TANDARD riUMDINO SUPPLY CO. AA) Muin Av«. E. . Twin Full* • 733-U212 Ciaii* FUlutfli & Hflolinu • Koy Ho|>|>er MAICO MEARINO AID CENTCR 23) LoitluiKl Twin Full* • 7331U40 MACIt'S BOOTS A REPAIR M oit Retpecled Name In Hearing Since 1937 WISTCRN MUSIC CO, 165 Muin Ave. W. . Twin Folli • 733-7330 Lnriy Muhlcr Tony lomu lUiml Ctolied tlooti • Clioke of DKUO STOKI tw in folU ChuM>|)lon( ------rick.up li-P«llv«rv Sfitvice-Anywhere In------2 )0 Moln A vb, S, • Twtn fsilll • /s s s-ia?., MOlASSIf lUPptY-CINTM - ' * . . ' r—li. A__ ro< .i'nrkhed Slock Food Ivor SM 371 Sunrlie tllvd. N. — Twin fo lli — 733-3302 MAOEl T(RB C -. ) 39 TJiltd Ayo. N. • Twin (U Kids On Goodyoni Hum Any 346 Tliltfi Av«. C . Twin rulli • 733-04 11 002 Shoilwne 5i. W.— ■ Twfn fo lU — 733-OOOI Iclolio'i Mon Coinplele Stio|>plno Cenlor O ilier Kind Blue takei Ulvdrf. Filer Avo. . Tw(» Folll 4 TlmoS'Nows, Twin Falls, Idaho Friday, Ocfobor 24 ,19,6?. j Religious Writer Expl^ns — Today-WitK-AIl Faitlis —^In Tribute Ancient Custom Of Tithing

By LOUIS CASSELS . can,” remembering that 100 per A PORTRAIT OF SERVICE UPI Religion Writer ccnt really belongs to God. This being the season when ThlSTnay be sound theologyr" But it also can bo a convenient churches canvass their mem- ^ ^ r s .fot. pledges' of“ financial rationalization—for .giving sub*.. Support, it seems appropriate to stantiaily less than 10 per cent. say a fC'i/ words about the The argument for tithing Is Worlcing W ith CMLdren Is Main Interest ancient custom of tithing. . threefold. ----Tithing -means that you set aside 10 per cent of your total ...... O f K enneth Himple, New M inister In T.F. income and say: ^-Jthe time of Jesus, tithing was "T h a t part belongs to ‘ considered a basic duly o! Comparatively new to Twin Falls church. Connie. 7, who attend Washing* It is not necessary that all o^ God’s people. The Prophet Falls, Kenneth C. Mimple camo Pastor Himple was born on . ton school. a person’s tithe be given to a Malachi felt so strongly about it to this area in December, 19C7, > Jan. 16, 1928, at Spokane, Wash., Recreation plays on Important church. God's work is also done he said that a man who gives QS pastor of the Tyler Street and spent most of his early life part in the l^imple household in the world by hospitals, less than a tenth is robbing _ _Baptist_ Church, which belongs in.the Seattle area. He was ona. as-well'-as in church-activities.- schools, orphanaEcs, old folks’ - G(xi. to the Conservative Baptist of 10 children and has an iden­ Pastor Himple plays tennis, fish­ homes, foreign mission ■'socle-' Jesus certalnljt never ‘repudi­ sociation of Idaho. tical twin brother who also is es, hikes and goes on hunting ties, Jnner city centers and a ated the idea of tithing. He He entered the ministry at a minister. trips. Y ou w ill see h im .w ith host ofolher agencies that may urged men to go liie second draw their support from-“Red m ile, to d o cve'if m ore than the the age of 22 after graduating While attending Sunday school .other adu lt leaders of the church Feather” community* chest from Multonomah School of the during his senior year in hlyh taking tJia.^ypungstcrs on fish­ law required. drives rather than church Bible in Portland, Ore., in the school, Jie recbivea Christ as ing and hiking trips. Second, tithing puts giving on pledges. an orderly basis. Unless you spring of 1950. his pfcrsonal Saviour. Through He was active In the summer The Important thing is that the encouragement and efforts resolve in advance that G ^'s In the past 19 years a * a CBA camp work at Warm Lake you make' up a giving budget of his Sunday school teacher, near Cascade, where.he directed „ „ „ tenth comes off the top, you’ll pastor, his greatest interest has which reflects your conscien- never be able to "afford” been working with children. In ho went on to Bible SchooLand— —the junior.camp-during.Uic.wcck— tious convlctions’aboUfhow God tithing. There'll always be'somie “ one year alone, he conducted trained for the minlstiy. of July 7-12. He also» served as would like his 10 per ccnt other need for money which ■ While attending Multnomah camp teacher and made hand- 16 vacation Bible Schols whose distributed. School of the Bible in Portland, .crafts for two of the three seems, at the moment, more attendance totaled'about 1 ,100.' A convenient rule of thumb, pressing. In addition, he has worked and he met W illa May Reed of Paul, cam ps. used by many tithers, is per and they were married in Sep­ Pastor ______„ 5 Third, tithing brings great directed youth Bible camps dur^ cent for church and 5 per cent tem ber, .1950. on the board of the CBA of rewards. Tho most important ing the summer months. The for charity. But the division is rewards • are spiritual, of children’s work in his church They have fo ur children, Car- Idaho and is 'secretary*treasurcr entirely up to you. coursc. But a large number o f is active, including the boys’ leen, 15, who attends Twin Falls for the Magic Valley Evangd- High School, Larry, 12, who is ical Ministerial Association Of course, it’s also up to you tithers have discovered—to ond girls’ AWANA program whether you tithe. a seventh grader at O’Leary which he helped start last yeor their own surprise — that they a n d Sunday evening yo uth pro-, Some church members say Junior High, Bruce. 8. and in the. Twih Falls area. also seem to get along better, g ram s. they don’t approve of tithing in a purely material sense, than Pastor HImple’s ministry because it’s a "mechanical’^ they ever did when they were started in D ecem ber o f IdSO, in approach to giving. They say too "practical” to give God hi« logging and fishing town of it's better jn«=f t n a n ymt----full tonfh. outstde ot Angeles. From there he served in the farming area of Nyssa, Ore. The thi«l pastorate wa« Play Reading Paul Bible Club . with the American S u n d a y School Union in tho Seattle area Visits Hospital ond following that ho- went to Planned At PAUL — Recently 14 mem­ —.Lewiston where-hc-servcd-the bers of the King's Daughters Cottonwood Creek Community —Bible-Glub of the Paul-United— C hurch______— T.FrCIrurch Methodist Church visited the In all these church areas, Pas­ geriatrics ward at the Rupert tor Himple has also served as ’•What Do the Lions Eat hospital for an hour’s program. a substitute teacher in the pub- When Daniel's Out to .Lunch?” Rev. Alice Mac Woolley, pas­ -lie sehoolsi Ho hns been active a modern play reading, will be tor,. Is Instructor for the girlfl in ‘1-H 'work, and served as pres­ performed by the senior high group and Lucillc King, daugh* ident of the advisory'council to youth group of tho Twin Falls ter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth youth for all of Nez Perce Coun- Baptist Church at the'8:30 and _ King, presided at the services. t^. Ho was active in the'local services Sunday. Tlie' group sang religious songs, —read-fleripture.<»-and-some-poct— The play takes place in a officer oiyvUie state com m ittee. ry. Miss Woolley delivered a Whilo serving ns pastor in tho pizza parlor and deals with re- latlon.ships between youth atid jnrssagc and olfered the prayer,- • Seattle area, he wos named.na­ Sponsors assisting were Mrs. tional handcraft director for va­ ao worship at St. Paul, Minn.; Springfield, Others portlclpatlnR In the leader at both services. 111., and Omaha, Neb. 8:.10 a.m , .scrvlcu w ill he Cla>( Ushers will bo Mike Durgess, It was n t t})ls tim e th at ho Asher, Hcrlptuce reader, and J a c k Ezell, Dave Molyneux, worked on' a committee wliich Rochelle Wing, who will provide Jeanne Norman, Barbara Smith produced vacation Diblu school guitar accompaniment for tho . and Julio Massey. Tho Junior material for teachers and pu­ final hymn. choir also w ill preseht an an- pils. Tlie same materials wero Jane Willianis, Debblo Rob­ tliem for Ihe second service. used this summer in the vaca­ erts, Mark Uurns, Susan Wil­ Tho public Is invited to both tion Bible school In his Twin ■ KENf^ETII C. HIM PLE liams, Paul Sharrui, Janis Biggs services.

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TWIN FALLS, SPONSORSi MAOIC MtiSIC .TliB V olley'i Only Complsio Venilino Servlca n i 2 Olh Ay*. E. — Tlwin FolU — 733-2306 ------STA-WIU HCALTH JOOD STORB ' CROWUY PHARMACY 399 Eo|llanoup Av«. e, -rf’ Twin Toll* — 733-5000 Elegant Tortralu In Nuiutol Or In Block t> W lillt 133 Mnin Av«, W. — Twin Follt — 733-5064 1900 Elliobcih Blvd. — Twin Folli —. 733-0403 MASTtR SPRINO SMVICI, INC. •TW IN PAUi ■ ' 407 £. Main — 670-0660 AUTO PARTS, INC. DRIVB-WAY MARKRT 2019 KImlMtIv R(i., • 733-7A1I 90S 2nd Si. N, — Twin Falli — 733-30S1 3037 Klmb«rly Rd. • 733>2«U MONTOOMt^RY WARD SAUfS AOCNCV L. V*f>«mon Convenlani Catuloo‘ Sltopplr>g So«tt You JAMCS MOORR WEU DRIIUNO .Tlma.ft Monby KIN'S MANUFACTURINO A REMIR CO, ■VIRTON MAHRISS FACTORY toulw Marih, own*r ' Repair Of Coiivat Coodi & Plattlc Tro<)ucti 936 2nd Avo. S. — Twin FalU — 733-3912 ' 17^6 Kimberly R -T w in FalJi — 733.3320 237 Main Ava. E.'— Twin F«IU — 733-3

BAKRR't MOBILI HOMIS COHTINENrAt OIL CO. ROD BERRY MACHINI'SHOP Inlebrlly It Our Chief Slock In Trad« 3 2nd A y., — Twin Foil* — 733-7311 Co«\pt«l« Job 6hop 412 AdJlion Av». W. T«ivln FalU 733-9900 coco-cou lonuNO' co. < . .' u Ralph L Smlih, Ac*nt • . . S0S3 KImbarly Rd. — Twin Falli 733.2304 Fridoy; October 24 «1969 T(mei*Nflw«, Twin Fall*/Idaho 5 Magic YaUey Directory Qf Church

aiURCH OPJJOD ■LUB LAKES UNfTEO PENTECOSTAL Adana and F. SIfMt TWIN FALLS N«ftk Bill* LftkM Boulevard. DECLO HAGERMAN Mtaala wocaWp R«d«f ______B»V. M. Old*...... TYLEK STREET BAPTIST ST. PAUL LUTHERAN OIURCB m TyU r St. Rev. KcbmUi lllnpto IM Ave. £ . aod Adama ~ . Joba Fme. p«ater CIIURCtl OF UIRIST CASTLEFORD , 2M> FUer Av*. E. B«aa)* J. WUWbcfd, CTUCfUrt Falber BemanI McBrid* FIRST BAPTIST NIntli A«r. C..4UKI SkD^M SC E. Btv; JuDies O. •Dd Chatlct E. Craves FIRST CHRISTIAN I BAPTIST CHURCH eilUBCII P tI^E BRETIflteN Mt ShOitaOM SC N. K«v. Dould L. Iloffmaa. aiuBCii OF citsisr rutor, 11. J. C «n^dl Sr. _____ LYNWOOD.CHAPEL._ . . ____EDEN ' Mnawm 0»Ue aad WUIiam Prtc*, FIRST VNtTEO PENTECOSTAL UN FUer Av«. E. Rev. D. L. Mlk«( HAILEY TUrd 9

FIRST CHURCH OF COO 2M Quincy St. COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHUBCn £usai«M^ COMMUNITY CHURCU FIRST BAPTIST d lU R a i piiOT 'assembly o r COO b t Ave. E. aad Buehaaaa Na^Xoeim. aod Shoup Av c m BLISS Bev. Robert C«opec Rev. U I. UiMuce HANSEN PEACE LUTHERAN KETCHUM CtlRlSTtAN'SCIENCE S«T. Tbmai D. JehntlMl CLOVER TRINITY LUTHERAN EASTSIDE SOUTHERN BAPTIST BUHL 2MI Elliabeih Ulvd. . MENNONITE OIURCU Hobcrl SchreckniberK FIRST PRESBYTERIAN.CHURCH Firth Street Corner ot Slxlh and Main. Roydea W. Sebweltur, paMer Bi:ORG.\NIZED LDS Rev. David 1;. Turnniire 2in EllutKtb Dlvd. f U t t L. II. Fullmer, pulor FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH HAZELTON IKoaUwDy and Poplar aiURCH OF THE NAZARENB ri&sr UNrTED o ret iirfji in ciiRiyr Hev. Ilarrle S. Voun« Yakima and Firtli Street Rev. Jack O. WeUer FIRST ASSEMBLY OF COD 7ti ra«l l.ocux ' UNTTED BAPTIST Kov. I’hllllp U. Hilliard Mal/I and Park Avenue Loren Blades, paalor VALLEY PRESnVTEUIAN CHURCH KIMBERLY ~ UNITED~M17niODI5T' CHUnCII UNITED MCTIIODISr *^Hev.*c1uon”vJaIlmM'* . Firm and Union Streel IMMANUIvL LVTIIKRAN Rev. Elam Anderaco HOLLISTER — CHRISTIAN ClIURCir FIIKK WH.I. »AITIS*T CHURCH GOODING 141b Mtcei and Truck Lana Hev. Jack Johnaoa

HOI.Y TRINITY EPUfCOPAL CllUnCil FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH NInlli Avrnue anil Mnple Stleel FlilST DAPTIST CHURCH Hev. John Wallace______-JEROME- IMMACUIJVTR CONCU'TION CHUItCIt 1M« block on Poplar Street Key. T. A. Heeran METHODIST CHURCH III Mulh Uuchanaa CIIHISTIAN SCII’NCB Rev. John N. Uarrabraodt OUK SAVlOH I.UTHKIfAN 8«C0CI

MimiODtsr CHURCH FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH - OlUe WrltM,*t>a«(ar THE HEORCANIZED CIIURUI OP JESUS CHRl.Vr UF LATTER DAY FIRST aOUTIIERN BAPTIST !. l.lBC«ln'4n4 Ird S SAINTS CaUfantU Street aad BUaa lllihwa/ Uv, CutliTS KatiMj —Fn4 Ko

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MKTHA CAMPtCU QoolMy U d lo i Waoi Including Fomoui PiPPtHTMl O Kothmoor Una On Tha Boulavoni In ly n w * BOYO'S CUANINO A U U N O IT VILUOM m Mdln Av*. E. — TwloFfllU — 7 33-3049 AS6 Miiln Avo. N. — Twin Fulli — 733-3630 MAOIC V A U ir CHRISTIAN SUPPLY SI6 OnelcJo — — 436-3203 FIclura Tromlng — ChiUllon Suppllat OI All Kindt . o v o u r STUDIO U l Slioitiona 51. N. — Twin ra lli 733-3677 Family Portralli — Waddlnga— Ptctvr* Framing lunMY rooos 1063 Dlua Lukoi Olvd. — Twin Folli — 733-7110 HAOERMAN, SPONSORSi Homd 0< Duduel J'rlcai Blua Lokai Shopping Carxar — Twin TolU DRPOT o m ilii TURF CLUB iOW ^S AMtmCAN SfRVICI Ol>«n 34 Hoofi Supinr Club Fof Piod\Kl( & S«(vlca You Coo DapancJ On MAOIC VAUIY CAMJ VISION 545 Stioihona S. 334 ^M i Ava. Moia To S«o On Cul>la IV Haoofmon — 037-4730 430 Main Avo. S. — Twin ru llt >— 733.6330 O IM STAta O tl CO. *RADY.TO.POUt C O N C tm CO. Our rual Makai Wonn rrlondi ’ ^ MOORI 100 FARM, INC. Choota Tl>a C»iu|th Of Your Oiolra n i 3 lllohlond Ava. E. — Twin rail* — 733-3962 • PIIISONNIL SlltVICI o r MAOIC VAllSY Choota R T F Conciala — 733>S933 l(ao«nnan — 037-4SV& Tllvoto Einploymattt Ayoncy — Sarvlca Wnli iiiioniity ■■ KIRKMAN DROTMIRt SUN VAlUY STAOtS ?24 SI.oif.ono SI. C, ~ Twin fo il. — 733-3562 SICRBA t i n INSURANCI CO. Oiuriar Seivica AnyHma, Any|t|uca OWSUY OROCIRY •.Tflghjat. rtBtflaign'.' ______aiuxUi ritoupi .nnHcimL,______Hafltimon..-;.fla7.-.a C Sim t Kh tad ClulftlkB Way. Rev, Joba SlncUU following Friday's publication. CHURCH OP ClIRIST • 4lh «re*| uul H Slre«t TWIN FALLS EICHTII WARO Brv. Lccaard Hanold too Hanlaoa St. BI>bop Andrew E. Lartoa TRINrrV MEMORIAL BURLEY ------EPISCOPAU-CHURCH------LDSXhurches, Sttlb BOd 1 Sk Rev. Fred Plekctt ASSEMBLY OF COD ISIt Albion Avenue METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Diane RiumU IIEYBURN SECOND WARD H and

CLSNN9 FCRRV Wa RD BTJRLEY~STAKE riRST BAPTIST CHURCH IM Avenue and Elreora AvenM. Flltb and Alta Streetc ALBION Biibop Keanelh A. Browm. FIRST WARD Rev. James F. lleit IZM Miller Ave. > d PlekeU, Blabop Fraocli E. Ham. Bllbeff GOODING WARb! i m South Main. CROUSE CREEK WARD SECOND WARD BIfiMp B*bby Utm BWff*. '* in t Normal Ave. HEYBURN Lyman MarUndale, Blitep ____^Cassia_East_Slake_ THIRD WARD JUIOV^-S wrtNRsS ' p. C. Paekeit. BUbe» rt«M

JEROME si'CONO'WARD -Norman NI«lMit.-Ble^ IH UbcoUi 81. N. BMbop X^erguKW tf. Camp , K iaim i WARD MURTAUGH MW Notmal Ave. DeU Waddmipi, Blihe* WENDELL WARD 700 Idalw »l. N. Bleitop Kuloo C. Chandler

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TIm comblooilon o( Duliiayi Footli and Oico Drug oouloi u iculy ONL SIOf> bMOl'l'ING CLNILK . , , uiid ul| uiiUoi orio luof. W« (loubl lliul tl)S ilioppori wlio uitf our teivkoi louluo ihut lliey tuivo Ilia o|>|o liundiod or mor« emptoyesi Ihni oia n>oml>ari ol out iKilft ui« iiiotlly lioiiistJwneii. limy |uiy ui do oil loikt who own p(0|iatly. Our woyo iculei for your convonlonc« Iniuis tliul llioiB eiii|>loyoo» uto tiblo lo l>a .reipon* Quollty ll pcitiiiiiOMi;l In w IkiI wa oHar (he folk* ilhia cllliani und t>o(Ncli>ulo In iixiity civic (uncliuni. wo aro opon BvDi they iiuiy bo. In lu cuio will ws luctllica c)u(illly Tlio »Brylcii», oHB/od lo »lio;if>or» iifo (tio»>y vica II uvu|II»d Itiel lluit you inlleci IliU pnd from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m . liBia IIkii) |o luive lo yo Irom ona iloro tu iinoihor lo pricle liocnuto moio ilcul urg" lo lupply yoof n^9,di, Sundays Friday, October 24 J 969 Tlm ««.New», Twin F allijdo ho i; 3 tablespoons meUed butler ■ 1 tablespoon soy sauce Cook beans for only three or Fish Stick Casserole For Big Hit four minutes as directed ' oq B i g family, little family, they should never be refroren. package; drain. Combine with frozen and canned Ingredients though some folks will have it vegetables and soup; pour into couple or "swingle” . . . there’s called for, including of course no other way. A quart of shuck­ If you’ve never tried ctams a buttered 8x8x2-Jnch baking many an occasion when the

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YolJr Bank Cards PEPARTMEHT STORE Welcomed In fho lY N W O O D Homemakers Need Versatility Wise Use Of Today’s homemaker Is a versatile, energetic, creative, modem Credit Is woman. She must be in order to survive in this age oif computers, space travel, and worJd problems. - A former Mrs. TwJn'Falls described a representative American Sound Advice homemaker as "a person who Is able to cope with the many .everyday problems. • During a hectic day of taxing children, To use credit wisely, be sure teaching a 4-U' e^du p, -washing. iro n Jn g rle n a m g - fo sm all chil- you know how much it will cost. rfreh’s'needs and working in civic affairs, she is still able'to That's a tip from Mrs.' Lucia - smile when her tiusband comes home and announces, that they Wilson,* assistant ho m e ecb- have been Invited out to dinner.” nomics leader of the Unlversity- Today’s homemaker Is, as the name Implies, the maker of. the of Idaho extension service. It is home. She can’t do It by herself, but must be the main coordin­ sound , advice at all times, she ator of all family activities. She must be the peacemaker in said, particularly just now when family quarrels altt^ugh she may bo' involved in them too. you may be shopping for fall Because today’s busmess world is more demanding of the hus-' and winter supplies.. - band and father, another of the motlKr’s responsibilities may be ■disciplining the children. She m ust do m a n y things weft, dividing The "Truth - in .1 tending” act her time, energy, and interests among her famUy, herself, and that went into bhcct July 1 ' others.------' -...... - makes it easier for buyers to find”Out the cost o f”chargc-ac- A homemaker's role Includes that of a nurse, a chauffeur, a counts. It requires firms issuing teacher, a mother, a chef, a,gardener, a seamstress, a hostess, credit to give the details. The and maybe even a bread-winner. She is a help-mate to her. hus- law applies to credit cards, ' . band and inspires him to do his part well as a companion, ifa)her‘ revolving charge accounts, and and provider. She must encourage him and stand behind him in installment plans. all he docs. She provides the proper environment where the chil­ dren can develop high values, learn to respect others, and believe Lenders must state In writing the total amount charged for in God. She practices God's Golden Rule and in an inspiration to credit — except when selling a all who know her. house — date the finance charge Today’s homemaker must not bo discouraged by the many begins, annual percentage rate, stumbling blocks along life's road. She must have faith that number and amount of pay­ . today in a wonderful day to be a woman and a parent and tomor­ ments, amount charged for fail­ row w ill be a n even better one. - ...... • ure to meet a payment, penalty charge for prepayment of the A woman once expressed her gratitude for her career as a balance, and adjustments In homemaker in this way. "I thank the Lord humbly and with all credit when advance payments my heart, for-the best career of all . . . for I am placed where are m ade. I may serve, every moment of my working day, those I love the best." Many thingsJn today’s world may be distasteful to You ore entitled to this Infor­ her point of view. But today's homemaker should be able, to mation before a transaction Is .keep current of the’modern w av of liv in g w ithout lowerJnt? her completed, Mrs. Wilson said. standards. ihnf if monthly statements are sent, they must The primary responsibility of today’s wife and mother Is toward show the annual percentage rate her husband and children. But there are many other needs for AUCE M. REED and the date on which a pay­ the enthusiastic, ageless homemaker. She can hold a full-time Extension Home Eccmomks Agent ment must be made to avoid job, give time to numerous community service organizations, a late charge. work in her church and political party, and include many worth* - . while hobbies andTkcHvltles in her daily routine. Because of the Increasing life cxpentancy of men and women it is necessary for ' Home Placement, __ hcr_tQ:bccomcJnyolved In something worthwhile other than the ifamlly. A woman can find ways to express her individual talents T ODAY'S SM A RT NEW Jand still be l^ughtfuj and devoted wi/e and mother. Shovi/-l=le]d By STYLES REQUIRE SLIM The homemaker’s role is more Important today than ever be- SH A PESl — fore.-More and niore-we realize that the foundation of our nation is built on the strength of today’s families. Therefore the home­ Tocal“Wbmen — maker must bo well informed and have a workable understand- Tho Home Placement Show -- lng-Of.many_things,_She must be a _ g ^ manager, a wise con­ -Wfls_held at_the_home of Mrs, , sumer, a* counseling service, and an Interior decoratorto Victor Nelson when members- name a few. — of tho Magic Valley Salntpaulia In addition to being well-informed, a homemaker should have Club , met recently. ccrtttln personal qualltios. She should be loving, patient, under- Mrs. Sam Porter nnd Mrs. standlng, sincerc, iliougliirannd'truthful;------— —Nelson-were-oeting-judges-a-n-d— iromemaklng requlres;^a cheerful, wholesome attitude, a re­ Mrs. Carrol Utley and M rs. R ay sourceful mind, thoughtful consideration and servico.- F lk o were co-hostesses. A homemaker is really a moulder of destiny; fasltrbnlng the Prizes were received by Mrs. lives of her household, ihnt (he world of tomorrow may be a Alice Prescott nnd Mrs. Leo belter place In which to live, Gepner in the artistic class, and Mrs. Pike and Mrs. William Chancey In tho horticulture class. Roll call Included tho names Blc;(iDP Woman Organized of the entries brought by the meml)crs. A lesson on arranging THERE to comply with the home w as IS First Homemakers Clubs given by M rs. Nel.son. AN EASIER WAY A birthday nnnlversariV gift/ HAILEY — Mrs. Walnoh Dy- leaving her with a small son. was received U i^^s. Eveiynl Ingtim m ust hold some fiort of Forccd to support herself, .she Paulsen from ncr%ecret pal. did several lyiws of work, serv­ Mrs. Alton Williams was a ■ record for work with homo dem­ n demoHBtratloh 800N1 onstration clubs. ing as (he first woman lire . aucHt. She ha!( participated in this guard on the Deschutes National Serving from the silver ap> project of thfa University of Ida-- *- Forest, out of Dend, Ore. Then pointed ton table wero Mrs. hb Iixicnslon Service for i h o she worked us ordinance super­ Prescott an d M rs. Alton Wll* past 23 yenrs, organlr-lng the viso r lij various armjv hnNcs in llam s. flrsl liomumakers club In Dlnino Oregon and during World War A tour of M rs. Nelson's green- County 17 years ngo nt Gannett, II spent two yenrs in the quar­ iioiiso wns hold .after Ihc nicef- RENT WAUTON EXERCISE EQUIPMENT and Inter the first club In llniley term asters du|)urtment of t h e Ing. Thu next rneeti^ig Is set f<>r whicji Is still thriving. A ir Corps. Nov. 10 nt the homo’ of Mrs. Slili nlHo has inuKht homemnl;t- While she was office manager Lylo Weathorhle. • SPEIO BIKI Ing HklllH in 4-H for m any years for the Arrowhead Kreight Lines » aOUIR MAJJAOH an d noJofl Iho r IH s »ho lnn«Ht Jp Twin J'nlJs she mot and mar­ now are In collogc, nr married ried >Elmer Ilylngton, a widower cither side of the hOnreo yeors. She has snguaro cactus nnd thoy have Tt»ey now have a mobile homo' ■ BOvcral' fflcturo' trainoB m a d e CALL U S T ODAYI asHisicd In the ho m em nkfng nn(f which they leave nt Mesa ond arts nnd crafts projects for the fro m the pulp of t^lti p|cture- spend their summers in their csque typo of cacti. church women. homo at Ilalloy. Instead of Slio also has l>ecn active in The couple Is leaving soop for toachlnR arts and. crafts during 'their winter homo and momhorn the Grange for 30 years nnd tho wlftter, Mrs. Byiagton now bolonHH to the Neighbors of of Iho Wood River llomemokors attends clas.mt in Mesa. She has ,cluh, w hich selecled her, 'Will — W oodcraft__ a n d __ tilo___ll9f>^H«h_,.~-takan-l«U()ercratt. and is CKPCe- . Lodge, - bo looking forward, to.thclr._rc- tm m FURKITURE ially Interested la ceramics. ------1 . ------— •Shu wns left a w idow Ifi years tiirn next spring when she will ago when her hushnnd, Herbert Tho pottery which Intrigues demonstrate tho n^w arts nnd 121 2nd Ave. W . Francis, a nirnl mull carrier her tho most is tl» Indian wetl- crafts she has learned during '« t R aaver Creek, O re.; djed dlng Jua which has spigots on Mio w inter. Her Work As Home Extension Agent Is Useful At Home

SHOSHONE—Budgeting, sew­ because of the time element,- ing, cooking and homcmaking but also because it's better for in general occupy the major us. Too many people go to an part-of-the time'for countless early grave via the lemon mef^ housewives and motKCrs.f- For ringue pie method.’* ____ , M rs. Ja y Fowles. Shoshcme, the__ The pioneer tralt-of stressing l.incoln - Dlaine • Camas coun­ the clean plate is part of her' ty home extension agent, there home management policy since is m uch interweaving of these she has neither the time nor___ ingredients between her home inclination to prepare something • n d job. different for each member o f "Everything new’that I learn the (amily, — ------ean-bc-applied-to-my-home Hfe — M rs— Duaine-Helsley,- who Is in some way. Many times I try , taking the sewing course Mrs. out a new technique or suggcs- Fowles is teaching, is* another tion on m y fainily before pre­ example of the homemaker who senting it to the public. Taml. works fulltime.and.yet.managea our second grader,' has a new to do all her own hou^woric, dress because of the clothing canning, interior decorating w orkshop I am teaching as I whpc maintaining a family life am using It to demonstrate,'’ whfch includes camping trips Mrs. Fowles said. with her husband and boys. A native of Woodruff, Utah, The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. she grew up In Rockland, and Helsley, deputy audltor-cleric was graduated from U tah State and recorder In Lincoln county, University. She had taught home has worked much of her mar­ Mils. JAY FOWLES, left, extension home agent for Uneoln, Blaine and Camas counties, ' economics in Oakiiy, Hailey and • ried life and practices the econ* C apital H ig h School In Boise. discusses patterns used at (ho current sewlns workshop held In Shoshone-with Mrs. Dualne omy of home canning which Helsley, one of the women taking the course. Both women, who are full-time working moth­ After her marriage to Jay R. amazes most of her friends. She ers, represent the efficiency and good organlxatlon which goes into making a successful home Fowles, Oakley, she has contin­ cans several hundred quarts life for a family with a working roolher. ued to work much of the time. each year. The vegetables come In addition to her profession from the garden of her sister, giving her new methods of Mrs. George Todd, Wendell, and One night, for example, they house on Saturdays and In pick­ tim e. hom em aking, M rs. Fowles says the fruit usually is picked on put up 4S quarts of peaches ing and canning fruit. But their It may appear to be efficiency a side benefit is that her three a family outing project. She after work and were through . biggest enjoym ent comes plus to many, but to the typical children, Jason, 13; Tamara, 6, readily admits that it Is family by 9:30 p.m . — through music since Mr. Fowles- working mother, this family co- , and- Inez M argaret, 3, have cooperation which makes it pos­ Mrs. Ftwles says her family is a vocal soloist and his wife operation is just a way of life . learned to become very,^elf-Suf- sible for her.to manage s© well. also Wbrks together in cleaning accompanies him most of the and.rather a rich way at that. ficient. They know if they-wait for ------to-do— may—- . not get done. Each' of the chil­ dren has his own chores and daily tasks. Mrs. Fowles says one of her greatest helps as a working mother is a knowledge of nutri­ tion whjch helps keep her family HOUSEWIVES healthy. Persons with good nutritional habits are more resistant' to dis­ ease and bounce back quickcr w hen they become III. she MOTHERS —elaim!r— The-home - ccc siiy.s her fam ily eats i with few gooey treats, ' Grandmothers Clock Design =^AGceDts=RoQmt BRIDE^Oi^BE^ Adds Sparkle Clocks continue to be works of art but they are now designed to mix with n room’s decor, add COME TO ANDERSON npnrklo to o well turned out home, and still retain their mnln function to keep an ac- curato count of time, according LUMBER AND MARVEL to tho National AnRoclatlon of Furnlturo Mnnufncturern. In mechanlams, grrindfnlher and grandmother clocks are AT OUR NEW COMPLETE mill either weight' or chain driven or nro spring wound, M a n y hnvo just iho Wcslmln- fltcr chimes for tho quarter, r LINES OF . . . liour.i and tho Olg Ben strike for hcHirK. A few have triple chimes — Westminster, Whit­ tington, and St. M ichel: some * Pyrex & Corning Ware * Club Aluminum Cooliware * Rubbermaid Accessories: stove ' huvo sim ple two-lone chimes. Tndny'n customer hns n hig advuntngo In Hok-cllon, hi>w- , mats, cutlery trays, disli drainers and trays, laundry basltets, drawer organizers, space sav­ ever, com pnrod with the shop- ■ centur' IKth Ccnliiry or er units * Cleaning Supplies * Small Kiictien Appliances * Kiklien Cabinets * Light­ Colonial styles. She can chnoso from French, SpnnlHh, Ilallnn,' country F-ngUsh, moV others produco only wall ADDISON AVE. EAST 733-2910 end mnntel designs, - 4 ' KEEPS ITS SlUPE • toning more important than latex foam cushioning never The growing popularity ot ever. Because ll’s completely spoils the tailored, almost trlni-llncd modern furniture resilient, never hollows out, architccJurp' ’ of modern mokes Iat«x foam rubber cush< and always keeps its shape, sofas and chairs. :&ldl!l

STRIPES ENCIRCLED: New at tbe Home FumIshy|Market Is tbe dramatic “Show Stopper” rug In a six foot round. Its diamond s t r ^ edclrcled inside, % -high pUe border. Tufted entirely ot Allied Chemical Corporation’s Caprolan nylon. -antl-therefore-com^teiy-ing set u p a study area by Fail finds modern rising In making a desk of a door with Importnnce as a design trend n washablo plastic covering, set — and again, tlicro are ut- on top two metal filing cabinets Icnst two kinds ■ of modern —o ne for each. furniture 'styles. There's mod­ An iny Matthew Sergio, iiead fectly a t JtoHio In any .ipncc- or Macy‘5 decorating depart­ age dwelling — on earth or on ment In New York. the moon. Sergio uses the basic dny bed Space-age' modern u.«s ap* and toltle grouping designed by p ro p rla le mQlerinls, Huch as Sim m ons but a>

irprlse lO thbse who-arc' confirmed stainless flatware us­ er's. D iit sterling’s still far and away the choice of brides, and T/VURUS THK BULL, Cancer the Crab, Leo the Lion and signs of the zodiac arc offered frM by Armstrong, malccrs-of it continues to rate high as an Arles the Rnm arc plucked from (he sky to become designs wearathoji carpeL_ anniversary' and holiday gift In indoor-outdoor carpct. Do-lt-your&cU patterns for all 12 with women who arc slill add­ ins to their orlginar sets. The reason for the loyalty of th e contemporary woman for Be Real'“ Star” Decorator, Use Zodiac Signs In Carpet the flatware which wa.s the sine qua non of her mother and We all know that the common which will amuse friends who around her neck — the portion As to f junior, that Impukive grandmother has much to do cold is causcd by bad aspects comment on your ftoor...... of the anatomy controlled~by — -young man will someday rr:l up with the new emphasis on tex­ of the constellation Taurus. It was once commonly accept­ her sign—when visiting stables, living in a red and white cc'Huge ture. Of-all metals,-sterling is I beg'~your -pardon?- ed that every person and nniion dowhouse.s, cellars, and low in Padua. Italy, and — :ilas — 'by far the ‘‘softest" to _th«^ —You mlKliL.havo-bcHcvcd-thJs_____fell_under the Influence of _a_ rooms. bold. It's In the stars. touch. Its liixurio'us feel is fh had...... you been born '*500 * years ago certain zodiac «lgn' for good 'or tunc with the almost sybaritic when astrology held sway over • ill. Ench zodiac sign governed quality of much of today s home ' Hpeclfic parts of the body and ftirnishinfis arid tahlcware. Even * tho courts and classrooms of- Europe. You would also have was responsible for Illnesses in - lt>! Instant ndjustmcnl to worm- known to blam e quinsy, wens, those zones. Y ou could even th and cold greatly adds to the OUR A N N U A L --- pleasurc-of-eatlng;------and- oUicr—awfitl^^alndio»—on— the sign of the Dull. according to his signl But whnt about keeping ster­ T«hliiy, astrology Is no longer For Instance, dad, who is a lin g clean? cry its detractors. 1x;o, must l>e tall-and powcrful, The answer comes from women considered n .serious science, but (here are interior decorat­ have piercing eyes and o ruddy w ho've-|e«rn«l tiiiit the best coinplexlon. If your lion is mid­ ors Inking the ancient cull very, way to keep their sterling Iga- dling height lilt'd wt^ori- glasses, trous and shining is sim ply to seriously indeed' This fun fnd is leaving its Imprint on many well, you should have aiinihcr use It every day. It's the way, look at that birth certificate. too, to that eveniual, .sought- facets of moflern culturc — homo' furnishings; loo. . Mom may live in Heartland, after pathui that occurs only U,S.A,, but New York is really on mucli-used silver — the kind .Signs of ihe zcxliac are even her scene, Tho sign of Cancer IS IN FULL S W IN G displayed In mvseums. m aking their m urk on Indoor- rules over Ciotham and 2-1 other Even within the sterling fam- ouidCHir carjtet. Custom carpet cilles, IhcludihK Venice, Algiers, I II y.. . Itself, . texture... . aboimdfl... • * 1.... . ( .... I i.«. , Insets have teamed up with and Istanbul. Come In & See The Values Offei'ed A m on g (he m any patterns which nsirology for playful flo»>r de­ Wo already know that daugh­ arc available today, there are signs lliiit anylK)dy can do, All ter. tho 1'aurns, is subject to .■veveriil distinct finishes avail­ you nceorary anr- "Nowadays many grnndpar* clijiracterlstlc highly polished, cnta must look after (heir young mlrror-llke surface, outd(K)r c a rn et.' Tlio package Free Cider & Popcorn can bo obtained by wriHiiR to grandchildren because so nmny A ll In nil, Its easy to n e e l>arc<1ts w ark," Llobing oxplalivi there's contrast to he found In tho com pim y In core of Zodlnc cd. “When the chlldrorvnsk thqir every area of tableware loilay. Palterns, Ijincastor, Pn.. 17fi01. . Also, bo Aucu„t» USD the ri|{ht grandparents questions concern- And lls nover heen more ex­ ing sexual matters, the old peo­ citing. challenging or fnnl typo of indwr-nutdoor carpet, V ^ M 'i’ho Inscla vAirk Iwat w ith ciir- ple arc Iv'ft with nothing to hhjv" , p4!t mado by nio needlepunch, M any prL-dlcted It would fail LOTS o r BAT IIT U nS or l>ondef your inset project, is being asked (o m ake it a tho more than )1 mllliun bath­ 'n u 'rc's n lot of m arvelous non- permanent part of the adult cur­ 204 Main Ave. N. Phone 733-7111 tubs In this country. Ncnpio <;onncclcd w ith the zo

Timoi-WwsVtwl^^ r^alls)'li5^Wo F fliia y ,’ O ctober iSt Hansea Woman G raduates From . TOPS To KOPS H A N S E N — M rs. R obert Nfv- eo, T./in Falls, a member of the i!im and Trim TOPS Club, la tyrlcaLof the typc of people jrou meet In a group, whose m emlrrs are drawn togelher for one com m on purpose only, to lose v. ight, or keep their pres­ e t weight at a minimum. A proup of this type covcrs a ll t' -03 of professions, and the m e m b jr s arc surprisingly com- • pallb!-. Often times, if II wore not for their co m m o n desire, they would never meet, and thereby lose o ut o n some Inter- , - BStini; friendships.------P erliaps not so typical, she Is ore who has reached her goal end L--como a KOPS; which zn e ar' that she has had the will- power, with TOPS help, to lose Bie c'tccss poundage and has - Ic ^ I', off for the allotted period In orc:-r (o g radu ate to KOPS. . She Va'? become an inspiration to the local group, even though the h" ! less to lo^e than some ■ot the rest. She proved that It ca n b? clone. M rr. Ciarabell N iv e n .Is the wife cf a farmer on ,Addison Aver'-?, who also does custom _ f a rm-~-7. Most people in this DISPLAYING ONE OF her velvet liquid embroidery pk>> to represent their chib in this year’s homemakei ^ area !-)ow“th a t i r i s n ’t so easy , ----- turcs-ls-Mrs.-Jack-(Poggy)-Jardlno,_I6I8_ThIrd-Ave.JE,^Mrs.____Mre._Jardln_ei^s_plc.turgs,_ahovw>_hcrg,_h^c been « I display a 'armor’s wife to stay on Jardlne was chosen by Omlcron Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, several years at the Twin Falls County Fair.

_ iaincd on quite often to help drive traclors, trucks or run erra''c!'i for h e r husband, besides “OmicronTAAr^ C00k i’'3 for a hungry family. ISFew H om e F acial Her only real hobby, she says7 b .v'v i"g . She loves to do this•r Jardine Has and rows for her daughter, gran^-’iughters. he_r.mother and "Lifts!’A ge L in e s... . some friends. She also embroi* Many Talents ders Leaulifully and crochets. Mrs. Jack Jardlnpr a member M rs. N iven w as born In Mis* of Omlcron Chapter of Beta Sig­ sourit rrcw up and attended ma Phi, is a woman of many Face Sheds Years... 8choo!s in Iowa. She met her talents and interests. hush--'1. and was married there Even tliough she is a working in 1C"7. and then came West, m other, site still finds tim e to Lidolcs Younger... first (0 Wells,'Nev., as a bride. pursue some o f her own Inter- — M a n y o f tho residents’ thcrc,-In-.... 'ests: Shc“ nuikos“ ncuriy~all her dian-. n'-d m ix e d , were entirely own. clothcs and those for her Not Expensi'ce new tT her, and their strange daughter. cttit>”’?s were frightening to her M rs. Ja rd in e Is employed as o tf ir r t. _ a bookkoeper ■ secretary at -----S ln r ^ n h e —vrag—Jusr“ 1 7"w h o n ~ Shane’s—Fumlturer-In-thc-past— “ Thc-?/rrf-D<’inrhnfnc‘faciTiHrTrowkmJWTr— is, nem'ly~«^'crj''TiiT5ininr • she v's graduated from high she had a dance studio In Duhl oyer most o f the w orld for the happinesa who uses 2 n d Debut is so ple.ised with fcho'"’ she h a d to w ait a year, where she instructed all types ontH before she was allowed of ballroom dancing, os well as it brings to faces tliuc can't and won't her new looks and the new compliments to tcr-r-h-schoo^-then-she taught tap. Jazz and acrobatics. Danc­ acccpt age. Used nightly and in thtf ahi receives, ahe remains loyal to a fev,’ ;-:ars before she was m ar­ in g, she say.s Is still one of morning before makeup, 2 n d D e h m 2tiH Delrnl fo r 'keeps.' I f yon are at-the ried. her m ain interests. helping her husband A.s a homemaker she enjous attacks facial lines with a barrage of 30 mark, but not much over 40, gee fn hi- ' 'iHiness n,Titron the farqi, working on craft-projccU. She . cRective moisturizing wKtcIi score* a tri­ 2 n d D ehul (w ith Cl-'.l'' 600), three dollara ahe I'-, n homemaker, and her has made velvet pictures with umph in your behalf during all ttie w ak­ for four-ounce*. But if you're hpvering horn" ' 'loWs the,-lovt»-she has liquid embroidery which have for It. M is attractlvolv de.Hlgn- been displayed at the Twin Falls ing ho»irs following it» use. Called a at 50 or more, gee double potency ed w ’*h h e r own colors and County Fair for several years. "Home Facial” in aom« countries be­ 2tid D fbiU (w ith Cl-'.h* I200),.fw e dollars M rs. Ja rd in e al.so enjoys decor­ Idca^. .^he s till does > her own cause it Is applied lightly with a circular for four ounces. Use the 12(X) itrength eanp'-'-! nnd h a s . procc.iscd 27 atin g w ith flowers, both artlfl- , .plntf-cLmlncemeat-as her lat«st - . clal and those out of-hor garden. fingertip motion, a liq u id Face I.ift in at any age, if you are in a hurry for proj.-*. In additlon-to sewing shc“ also others. M any call v<> family always has projects rar<’ ’'MRhters reside in Trout- which Involve all of them. Itight WITH CEF aale, Ore., near Portland. •“> , ino\v she, her husband and their Iwo-ycar-old davightcr and 7- year-old son arc imttlo feeding ^ A ■ ■ O O N D ommur r o n m o t h b r .CZF^M I.IPTAUER SPREAD four mothorlcHSt puppies and ev- I cu ■ L-rnnmed s m a ll curd cot- oryono takes his turn on this ' tn"o cheeso detail, JS-etn Soft Whipped Dlun chopped chives boritliu; nm l wator Hkllng. 1 tcnr-(xin dry muHlard M rs. Jard ine is tronsurrr ,of 1 tc(i" imn finely clioppwl B ela Rlntna Phi, ann('(l chlvoH or parsley FOAM ON FOAM IJcfit logcllior cotta«B chcesQ TIjo newest duvolopmcnt.. m nnd ‘'oft Whipped Dlue . Don- Iwddlnp, coMHlriictlon Is n founda­ net r^rrgn rln o u n til ntnonth. tion of urethano foam topped by LYNWOOD SHOPPING CENTER Blond.in chlvcfl, dry mustard, a comfortable, dust-free latex capern, carnway HCcds and foam nil)l>er mattress. niU caycnno popiter, Clilll thorough* foam reiilacement for tho box Jb r . - -Iclcly cltmlnates Wlion ready to nervo, ahapo “^ n y w irT p a rtfl tfiat c a ri’brnalc'^' mixturo Into a mouiul. Garnish dow n o r loosen, and makes lx)th wfth chop|)cd chivos or choppcd parls of t!io bedding uot equally parsley. Makes 12/S cupa. durable. Cottage Cheese, Herbs Are Blended For Czech Spread Nowhere in-tbe UiJted Slates Whipped Blue Bonnet. Desiga. Is the culinary effect of cthnic ed for large-family-style cco* 0Rd national backgrounds more jibmv. the new margarine evident than in the Midwest, combines th e '‘ fam ous buttery according to the "American flavor of Regular Blue Bo& •Cookery" edition of Time-Lire's net> the spread-ability of “Foods of the World.” M argarine an d th e extra serv* In the Midwest, where Imml- ings of the whipped type, its m tio n Is fairly recent, and the makers tell U3 Soft Whipped ■ different groups have settled in . Blue Bonnet Margarine spreads well-defined com munities; O ld "32 children further" than or. World food favorites not only d in ary m arg arin e on sand* survive’ but flourish.. ’'Guaran­ wiches, toast, waffles, and paa. teeing .their survival," say the cakc^. authors, "are not only the love Czech Uptauer Spread is and nostalgia that go Into their traditionally served with fresh preparation, but the superiority farm bread, ham slices, {jer­ o f the “ American” ingredients kins and onion rings;. It may %dth which they are mode.” be served for makc-ypur-own ■ " The Ctechs,' w ho' seltletf ■ in sandwiches at any hour, or as rnany. communities throughout a canape spread w ith cocktall- the Midwest, have given that size rye or pumpernickel or area a number of distinctive seeded crackers. dishes. Among the most popular * * of these Is'Liptauer Spread, a INSTANT SEATING blend of cottage cheese, herbs, Here's a s im ple w ay to ge chives or onion and other sea­ extra seating space for famili sonings blended with margarine and recreation rooms. Cut a which binds the vorlous ele­ two-inch thickness of foam rub­ ments and makes them more ber to fit the top'of an old spreadable. bench, low chest or trunk. Cover This recipe makes use^f a in vinyl o r a n y other hard- margarine that's new to super­ w earing. m oteria l, an d you’ve markets in this area Soft got an instant sofa. Cut-Cobking Time in “HALF or more with air PORTABLEA m ana^

A TVnCAL LOOK FOR Magte Valley’s winter senson ts shewn by Connie Orown as she _fiports j» ski _.swcnter_and. panls .ojHfU, .acccnteil_wllh n. light, bui.warm.-Ski,jacket fromJ*ei»._. ncy's. The oulilt Is set off with high, black leather boots from Chuck’s Shoe Department a t lUc MuyCulc Shop.' T^eas Jb'or Sewing Notions ' By JOANNE SCMREIBER thread of 100 per cent polyester knob ripper — a little plastic l l i c next tim e you're crulNing which is dcKlgnod to any­ knob on the ripper ■ prevent# • (Icpiirlmcnt store, plan to thing from vinyl to nylon jer­ tearing the material. sey. npi.-nd i> little time In the notions Finally, to organize your ncvi scction. You're' .sure to find all To 5CW an absolutely accurate sewing aids, w u’ll need a new khuK of Intere.stinR UHCful and seam, there's a maBnetie seam .sewing box. Choose a traditional int-orJiHis Kcwing ulds — little guide which clings to the bed wicker basket, a fabric-covereq' eii(li;cts iiiiendL'd'to moke your of the m nchlne without !'iiu're .ihortrnlng iVilnps, Inoli fu r 'I'niunrs Ilvin-Ald. It's • llai piece of m ctnl, stralttlit on uiul cu rv tn l- o n ’the olhcr, luuihcd In i-lj;lilli-liicli cnl> Ibnillon'i up to fmir. inches. 'I'lirn Ice Cream ^enagerie Is • (.'iirvcil hoin ovor the curvotl ecl|{i] or II ^(nil|{lit hem over till- stnil|;)il (.'ttom Ice cream cone. Uso •|t<'nt which fuscH hi'iiiH an d fac. A new twist for two old fav­ lie t rings for eors ond rals> Ask About Our Easy Credit Terms IriKH In posHlon heat nnd ' orites — Ice cream nnd pretzelH, C for eyes and prettel stick ro anpllod, noiltCN of- ,U«o bard frozen Ich cream , , pieces for the moulh. I lnctvwl(l(‘ ruyon Irnn’On sciKip and decorate ipdcldy and Pretzels with Ice cream hnve uiie on bu lk ytoil) tape for uiie on bulkytoil) sprvn at onc»l(’, llc x i- u ic c . tf. tf. If. criiin binding, (ray flnvvcrM and CAT: Place 1 scoop Ice oreani |tr«'fti U-avivs a/jainr.t n tn v r net on a sniiill plato uslnil pM'izel ■ PRE.SnUVU TRU’ MAI'S « r f (Iccprnllvo and pra< tlcal, sticltH for whiskurs, eyes, noso Keep the maps nf your sum­ Cniilfi nnd C lark ’s n«’w Dual and cars. m er trip for remembrance, Duly tlircnd has a Diii'ron cnrc •ru U T l.i:; Pluco 1 scoop Ice PasW thom to a screen or a for «'xtra stretclinhllliy with crcaip On a small plate, Use wall of your rumpus rounu Pro­ knits, while American Thread pretzel nii{{|(6ts- for feet nnd tect .with nhellnc sprnyecnt her lunch hours at home wRh D ebbie. “My working has made Deb­ bie m<»f6'V capable and self re­ liant,” says Mrs;-Daiss'. Sl\e is NOW AT CUSTOM FLOORS very cons5tentious and calls the offic'e "'Jiyhen she arrives home afte r school. M rs. Albert Ga- bardi, who works at the Dalss insurance agency noted, “They always have time to talk to Deb­ bie. even if people arc in the office — they' never shut her o ff.” Mrs. Dalss has many hobbles, calling knitting one of her favor­ ites. "This is the flrst^-ear my — daughter has had a ready made coat and my husband bought his first car coat last year. I’ve olw.^ys knitted coats for them before,” she said. She has also made several nf- ghnns and-enjoys knitting things for use as gifts. She is currently

ghin which she hopes to finish this year. Of sewing for her daughter she nays, "it's one of the mogt satisfving - thiite I’ve ev.er done-” “I'm a firm belljver in home mac’c soap.” she says. "I can m ak e a' fifty-gallon dru m of soar> for about three or four dollars, and I'Ve boon making fni- t.1 n r 15 yf>nrg "______When the soap is finished she erlnda it so that It look.t Just like commercial soap powder. She enjoys all aspects of — homemaklng-CspecIaUy _cooking Bohemian food. The Dalssos live on a farm where they can raise their own meat and vegetables for freering and canning. ----M r.t. D ais's—feela-thnt—many- factors enter Into child raising. Love, religious training, a know­ ledge of right from wrong en­ abling a child to rely on his own conscience, the ability to . reason must be laught a child as well as including the child In family activities and work. -Since IXbbic is an only child, M rs. D aiss feels ]t Is im portant to Invito other children her ago and get a fra m e d \^rk o f a H . (o visit thefr home. She aJso takes care of three nieces and CASSANDRA nephews several days a month, ^ 9 5 80 she feels “sho has a small SQ. YD, S Q , Y D . hand In raising them.!' n o ’ *12” The entlro family enjoys going (Installod) (Inatoiledr' tip In the hills .with thelr cam per for hunting, fishing, or Just re­ laxin g. T hey a ll love . hunting ChooM either Cassandra or El»tlon-do«p-pil« shksa of and . are looking forward- to long-wearlntr Du Pont nylon. Both ofTor the maximum In easf 'phca'sant season. cars and luxury feel, at very aonsibla prices. . . . nKMyiUnToabvrirxte^orUirgtrot ''Nar* Doth ■ mother and daughter A nd they como in 41 colora-from soft and subtle to w lH and Cassandra or Klatlon. IP pletures to chooM t/SSC share the hobby of mAkIng ccra- brilliant'' AciualslM XS'x»*.Offer expires OetoberSl,1099. mica. Mrs. Doiss has her own kiln nnd they make many cer­ Then choose a palntinR reproduction from k ffreatart amic items for gifts. She also collection. A Rembrandt. A Picasso. A Renoir. O r any of 12 other > makes ashtrays from hoUles _m aaters that appeals to you. noting that prune Juice and wlno Each canvas is varniahed and mounte^ on a custom crafted . ^ ttlo ashtrays are tier fovorito. artist’s stretcher, then handsomely framed (28* x 20'), These flne reproductions actualJy look like n hand-painted oil.’ ,, SOUNDPROOF PADDING W hy put off carpeilns, when you can have two works of art for Carpet is an excellent acous­ the price of one-a Digclow on the floor and a masterpiece on tical material, soaking up air­ borne sound, muffling foot.itcps, - the w M l ond ollmlnatlng nolMs from dropped objocta. Used with an •pproprlate underlay, . carpet can virtually cUminato un­ wanted flound. Rcceht tests fihow th a t n 3l-ounco, % Inch foum rubber pad ia most efficient for reducing tioine In a hom o or FLOORS apartment, outperforming much heavier underlays of hair, Juto, ONE MINUTE EAST OF SHELBY'S ON npongo ruW)or, or rubberized '-ADDISON AVE. E.. TWIN FALLS hair and Juto. Unwanted nolso' Is becoming such a problem In cities Uiat' many apartment . houses rociufro tenants to car­ pet thelr floors today. Ranching Wife , Kindergarten Gets Exercise , Teacher Goes Herding Cows „ T(d Sqhooi, Too GANNETT — Mrs. Harold (Dorothy) Drussell gels to rldo G O O D If^G — M rs. E d Christo- horscback every day when she pherson is a Gooding kindergar- takes the cows to the lower I -ten tcacher who Is .going to- crt- pasture, a milo away frAm“the— _Jl7tfee.parttim,o_toJurther_hc£.QWa_ DrusscU's'neat whito home on education. the Base Lintrr Selected by the Gooding civtc A rancher’s wife, Mrs. Drus- club as their homemaker, she scll, who was cboscn by the operates the ABC klndergartea Wood River Honicmnkers Club, here where she was previously not only is adept at homcmak* employed as a teachcr’s aide ing- duties, but when needed, by Mrs. Darrel Schnitker, for­ •do e s'th e irrigating for her hus- m e r owner. .band. She attends College South'- Her talents run to many kinds ern Idaho one night cach week of handiwork and in addition to where .she Is beginning h er edu­ knitting she has made many cation to become a certified Hems from -liquid resin and teacher. works with—copi«r. Most of The mother of two .children, these she has given to lucky a g irl, 8. an d a boy, 6, she relatives and friends. . has always en}oi^ working She has presented many orig- j . with children and while in high Inal and unique ideas' for crafts school taught Sunday school. Af­ to members of the Wood River ter she was married she baby­ Homemakers Club of which she sat in her home and worked Is vice president. with the special education class, The Drussells are members of in the Gooding_ Eiementarn the— Sawtooth Rangers Riding school. club. The Drussels suffered a trag- . O n e of her sj>ecial students edy in their tamlly. a year ago in the kindergarten is Bobby w hen tbeir- 20 year old son, Sewell, 4>/4, son of deaf parents, A- Koss. was killed when his-hors©..... Mr. and' Mrs, Robert Sewell, •i!6fl'Wmi;him. Another son, Ken­ w h o com e alm 'oit d aily to ex­ neth is in his second year a t- pand his vocabulary. BoiseState College.^ Their daugh* M rs. Christopherson is secrfr er, Rt^Ilis, is an eighth grader DISPLAYINO A FEW of tlw ____ tary of the Gooding chapter o{ and their two small sons, Zane Drussell, Gannett, wbo In addition to . .. . . ___ . _____ the March of Dimes, superinten­ 5, a n d B radley, A, are at home. on their ranch on (be Base Lloe. She made tiM heavy worsted sweater for her I dent or the Sunday school at "Wo are thankful we had .the pUique with pussy eat and du ppv for ber two u m all Bang. The r - - • - - -gppal Chu Rots to-)ovc and tiiiioy fui tlie ■ ^ " _____ ' — ( velvet eivec aand n T fra(ramM m e d 1to______u antiqueI frameI she says Is “hers." Most of her prcsidilent of the Gooding Dance 20 y e a rs" M rs. Drussel said. : work is g iven to f r ie n d and refaitlves. C lub .

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FILL THOSE CAVITIES When the little ghosts and goblins call on you . . . don't make more cavities. Fill those cavities ARER THE GAME with the nourishing goodneWof Falls'BrahH Rot” • Serve Falls Brand hot dogs . . dogs. It’s simple: just cut Falls Brand hot dogs in­ roasfed, broiled, baked or to small bite-size pieces, brown slightly in two boiled. Fdlls Brand Is the tablespoons of butter and serve each with a hot dog that tackled the toothpick. Falls Brand hot dogs - the trickiest- All-American flavor. treat of them ail. It’s Readers I'ifiott/ Hickory I- Who Do Best Is A d d itio n To Jjn School Paneling World Students who get tfie best K notty hickory h a s ju st been grades nnd learn the mosl in added to the Old World lino o! college arc usually the ones who antiqued decorator plywood were library users in high paneling to extend home dco*. £chool. And the high school orating possibilities. ’ youngsters whoaise their librarj» the most arc those who got-the F acto ry staining techniques, habit in grammar shcopl. applied to tho natural beauty oC hickory, have' produced a mo* '•It’s no wonder, then, that dium-toned panel with a dis­ most educators agree that you tinctive crisp look suitable as ai need a good library to teach background for tho bright new reading today," says William J. colors as well as the more tradl» >Vorrcll, founder of the P ilgrim tio n a f hues, acco rdin g lo G-P Book Society which was formed designers. ■ 1 1 years ago to promote good reading. Hallmark of the line has been “ Today’s ch1I4rcn need more the unique aged look of anliqucd books thart ever. They arc inter­ impressions in tho wood’s sur-- ested ii) more thmgs. They are face to suggest the warmth ai^ » being encouraged to probe deep- heritage of tho old world. Jy and to think critically. Thbre The new 4x8-foot panel pro. is more to learn today, and sents another dim ension in taste* there are more beautiful and ful living. The line was first important books for children to introduced last spring in ook, read," Worrell said. ■ pecan, cedar and birch 1^ He notes that in schools to­ Georgia-Pacific Corp. day, young people arc being urged to supplement their text­ Knotty hickory* like the pecaa books with biographies and fic­ and oak. Is protected by an tion, with tall talcs and legends. especially durable velvet sheen "Science tcachers introduce REARRANGING HER FIREPLACE mantel as she completes one of her home redecorat­ finish called Acryglas. The 3Q- good informational books along ing endeavors Is' Mrs. Charles (Rose) Mattlce, Twin Falls Goodwill Club’s outstanding step process protects the w o^ with textbooks and classroom -homemaker for this year. Mrs. MaUlce’s favorite pastime is redecorating her home. fro m most household stains lit* discussion,” he said. "Poems, eluding alcohol, hot fat, lipstick, are being read, and folk songs fingernail polish remover and are being sung for added ploaj crayon&.in addition to providing sure and appreciation. Reading Redecorating Is Avocation Of Woman maximum scuff and wear resls('< lessons go beyond the school ance, says G-P. readers and. children eagerly It takes a Jack-of-alMrades to )nd orndor. i deUpht to Mfltticft T<»vnro nnd Is very g oo d _ ..-Eor-the do-it-yCHirsclfcr. m n a t_ -seek-' ■ ^ t hey- i ...... > i y l ^ DC a ; ul homemaker in with . and_. and their ages are to assist his wife with herm any dealers ca rry detailed instruo< nnd library books.” spaced enough that their ac­ home impro'/ement endeavors. _ lion brochures in addition. M * * * this day and age, and Mrs.-... —Chuck (Rose) Mattice certainly tivities are varied," she com*. Mrs. Mattice has served in lead­ factory-finished moldings, col­ fits this description, m ented. ership capacity of several local ored nails or matching putty Gooding Woman Mrs. Mattice’s h u s b a n d clubs, and has been active la sticks-for those final "profo Mrs, Mattice, chosen as the C huck, is co-owner of Kemper- various local charity drives. - - slonal" results. Goodwill Club's outstanding homemaker, is the mother of Is Carpenter three and certainly lives up to _____ GQOPmG — M iaJm nlll.Lo- the club’s decision. Her primary per, a Gooding housewife, is — riTCTfCSf is"her fam ily/uhd'her considered a lody carpenter. home is proof p o s itiv e . ______She not only has built the cup­ Her handiwork and skill have -^olctFashion OriqlnaVs boards and china closets in her been amply exercised recently kitchen, but finished the upstairs as she has just completed • re-' and service porch in their home. decorating her home, choosing MADE lOR-EACH OTHER Her son's room is upstairs and wallpaper, paint, carpet, etc., she-has constructed built-ir^ that give a cheery welcome to___ Bridal sets for her and coordinated wedding bands study areasrthesfofdrawcrs, nil.'Redecorating sounds more bookcases und clost'ts with chip* like work than a, pastime, but- forhiniTT^with the IboICoftogetheimess that ^reflects” board nnd bicachcd chipboard. Mrs. Mattico goes about her the romance of young love. See our wide selection Not contcnt with all this con­ chosen avocation like a real pro. struction, she finished the room "llomemaking is a full time of unique diamond bridal set designs today.______— wilh-cornieea-for-the-windows.— — job;*Mvirs7~Mnttta r~statC(ir " M y~ Mrs. Loper suys she has been family comes first — then ac­ engaged in carpentry for about tivities with clubs and lodge. 25 years and enjoys it. In fact, I am not nearly as. iter other hobbles Include active in two of my favorite making butterflies of crushed groups as I have been in the nlnss und resin, and hanging past. When my son plays ball lamps of resin. This homemak­ 1 want to watch him, and if er, selected by the Rehekah one of the others have spccial I.odge in Gooding,'also crochcts, school or social functions, I knits, sews and collects goblets, want to be a part of them." ■ fiiemwiirc and dishes. "My children,. Mark, 1C, a She also belongs to.the Good ■ ’Sophomore; Ricky, 13, an eighth Neighbor .'ub ifnd the Christian grader, and Trudy Ann. 7, a BEAUTIFUL Church ini Gooding. She hns two sons, age IB, at SELECTION hnnu', and 2.1, a dlsiihk'd veter- . an of the Vietnam w ar now sla- Volunteer Work tlonc'

Useful Onion W A SH IN G T O N (U P I)— Volun- nURMNnTbN, VT, (UPI) — tecr workjs as much iin Ameri­ can tradition a.s politics und ai>> Tlie Icgendiiry onion of the past pie pie. why do busy women Ih Mill a l)it inagiciil. gel Involved In volunteer work? The onion wiis the symbol of unity, olernily, iiiid intiiiiirliilKy, .Tile l-i'denil Ihireau of Labor It is also .siiid iimIiimn hn ihnl Stati.stlcs suys a .study showed diseases and even cu icd bald- that .1H per cent of tlie women volunteers simply wanted lo "The onion today Is still « help peiiple, a specific organiza­ hit nuuilcal In the many ways tion or a community; :iO per it can be used," says Alme Cof. ccnt expressed a "Hcnse of foy, nntrltioniKt at the Univer­ duty" to their conununltlcs; 30 sity of Vermont MxtonMlon Ser­ per.cent said they slinpljk enjoy vices. "ItH uses nuin e from dips doing vol^inteer work and gaiti to cnsseriiles; from saliids to self-satisfaction from it. m ain too much for r--- ^ t lw : metal — any kind. Including outdoors nnd then get 1(Mi warm ■ cold — nnd yoti love to wear Inside, Select clothes with re­ tito.so very " In ” cni)<)n earrinitfli movable Jackets nnd nweatera put dear null polish on thu part for more indoor comfort. Also of thu earring that toiichcs the experim ent to find lUjuld or enr, It will kevp thn acids in tho cream 4 form Of nntlpersplranl See the ringleaders of a Jewelry revolution metal nway from your ears. for additional protection. COOKING and^ SAVING GO TOGETHER! Your Family Eats More For Less With Buttreys BUDGET FOOD PRICES (Budget Prices Are Low-Low Shelf Prices That Are Jlere To Stay! Anytime You Shop)

We extend this invitation with complete confidence that when you m ake a searching comparison, you’ll decide in favor of But- trey Food Stores! AU the features you like about modern shop­ ping are now yours at Buttreys low Budget Food Pricesl

~Witn659 "S Q ttre ^ 5 fam ous quality . , . q uoMty- that's fully-guaranteed on everything you buy at Buttrey Food Stores . . . excellent meats, in­ c lu d in g .U S D A Choice Beef-.. . . fresh-from-the* oven baked goods, with oyer 20 varieties of bread alone . , . and a world-wide selection of fresh, nourishing produce. We'ye built our good repu- ~tation~~for~sincere~service . . . by-always-trying-tb- please you wlth^ extra little things, like a courtesy counter for your convenience . . . constant at­ tention to cleanliness . . . and courteous box boys to ease your shopping load. We testify that all these impprte^nt shopping features are still yours at feuttrey Food Storesl_And we further state that-any day you shofra Buttrey Food Store you’ll find low Budget Food Price tags on every itemi Weigh the evidencel We feel sure you’M judge In favor of Buttrey . . . "the complete food store"! You be the judge of . » . BUTTREY'S "BUDGET” FOOD.PRrCi T, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Weekdays (“Bonus Specials” Are Weekly -10 a.m.-7 p.m. Sundays Specials For Extra Savings!) CHECK OUR AD IK ; _ WEDNESDAY'S TIMES-NEWS for "SPECIAL VALUES AT LOW, LOW PRICES" - - FOR W OM EN WHO LOVE TO SAVE!

Features In Our Store That Invite You to Our < ) Store For Truly “ One Stop Shopping" are — V f o o d s t o r e s P • Grocory— Name Brands at Outtrey's Budget Food Price* • In-Sloro Dakory for All Occasion! • /VToaf Doporl'mont— Doslgnod for your Convenlonco • Prodoco Doparlment—Loaded wJ»h Top Values • Courtojy Counter— for 10c Money Orders, Chock Caihing, Comploto Postal Service. Idaho Power ond Intermountain Go» Pay Stationi Artistry Of Rupert Woman Displayed In Many Ways RUPERT — There is-no-sub- la k e them to the fairs,** she slilulo for artistry in ihe home, said, "and just raise" them for one quality of Iiomcmaking that our enjoyment;" may be displayed in nearly a In R elief Society. M rs. Me- -4.ir\illion different ways. Williams has been called upon Mrs." Clifford (Jennie) Mc­ to demonstrate painting and Williams, reproseniing the Rup­ pio making. She is the mother ert Second Ward LDS Relief of a daughter who has three Society, makes the best of her crown children and two grand­ artistic abilily through sewing, sons, special to Mrs. McWi^ painiing, flower arranging and liam s. cooking. Onco a professional Textile painting Is one past- cook. Mrs. McWilliams has timQ of M rs...... M cW illia made a number of pies worth---com'plelely absorbs talking about in her time and is and attention. She explained that really an accomplished cook. sho has unwillingly been retired Better known for her flowers, and so must spend all day alone Mrs. McWilliams raises over 100 while her husband work.-;. There­ varieties of Iris in her back fore, sho has m a n y hours to yard, all of which arc hybrid. spend w ith developing h er home- During the spring and summer making talents. seasons, she "lives in blossom” Probably 100 'various items ns each buds and blooms and she >has palr^ted aro available ut her home smells sweet with th'o m entlo ftasT 'lhe word. H er the fragrance of the profession­ work includes tablcclothes, pil­ al arrangements from them. lowcases an d .scarves. She also crochets edgings on her handi­ She is often called upon to,. work as well as doing some?>c- arrange flowers for various casional tatting. Sho even dis­ community and church func­ covered placing small tatted tions, but especially loves to en­ flowers on paper creates lovely hance her hortie with them. stationery. " B u t I 't be bothered to Another innovation In recent .....— * weeks has been-a-closet de- ordorlzer made by poking whole cloves In crab apples and cov­ ering them with net tied with Cookbook- ribbon at the top. Mrs. McWilliams, whose home

-Is Available- with her handiwork to keep her­ ■ Great restaurants cookbook, self occupied an d "o u t of ml9- U.S.A. is a "now” book, brlng- chlcf.” , ing logother .the two .m ost talk- cd-abouc topics In cooking cir- • cle.s— gourm et' an d convenience. It Is «hi creative and coopera- . Panty-Hose tivo eff6rt of Campbell Soup } CROCHETED PILLOW ease sho has made Is held by Mrs. CUrford McWilliams, Rupert, Enthusiasts .who_aLso made Uie Christmas floral orrang^ent aMier side. Her home Is fllkd with the Included arc Barbetta’.s.Barbetta’.-?. New — _ ■ _ , . prcHiucis of ncr arusiry, jrom textile paintings to occasional tading. Sne nas even placed _York; Justlnes,_ small tatted' flowers on stationery for 'spcclal effects. She hu~or(cn demonstrated both her A tlan ta; BrcnnanV«i. . Or- TtyNew Bikini artistic ability and pie making for the Relief Society, leans and Houston; Tlie Drake’s The cling Is In for fo il fash­ Capo Cod Room, Chicago; ions. T o ny’s, St. l-ouis; an d Trader '•For the belle who wants to -VIc'sr-San-FraTOlsco-imd-lS --- ^,Wc—“ high—hTBh--Tinrrki:;foiTota- Other. . . cities.---- _ Bruu,...„Egrooming on or off ou campus, a.mpo=. .a SOndwicK , . 1 ^ ^ • smooth,rrr'iir“£:if'isrss? Ions, unbroken line is Making » • I ■ _ iis- OUR A N N U A L

up" steps of these famous re- -- _____ to the female con­ W hen fa ll creeps up o corn , cipes. They have dono it by tingent who prefer the social substituting Campbell's expert­ socurlty of n girdle Is Loop-the- certcd groan arises across the land from children because it's ly seasoned, .double-rich soups • Loop, Burllngton-Cameo's now" "that time of - year” , againl for gourmet sauces, delicately stocking with little loops knit seasoned stocks, flavorings and in the top (welt). Flat clasps Mothers too join the lament, for to them back-to-school means aspics. Economy of tlrtio and attach tlie slocking to the gar* effort for today's busy homo, ter tab of any foundation gar- the return of ' tho little-old- IS IN >ULL SWING \ m aker, w ithout d etrim en t to 'ment, thus eliminating garters sandwich-making routine. the flavor and Intent of the or­ an d gorter bulge. This fall Loop*. ]f you arc one of tiiose m ut­ iginal dish. tho end result. the-Loopwill come in an opaque tering.mothors,. try. Uicsc-new .. JCome in & See The.Values Offered ’ n»e cookbook includes adapta­ style in 13 fashion shades and Ideas, fro m the m akers of tions for soups, m ain dishes, a support stylo In 6 flattering "Glad'' Sandwich Dogs: nauccH and salads, ranging from shades." One day when you are in a tho simple, hut hearty, Mexican For panty-hos« enthusiasts real "sandwich-making" moo<>. Color TV & Stereo insplrttl Ajlmndlgft Soup from Vduauthere i.-jIs ua new iiuw hiklnl uin iiii panty iiunt;,hose. line , up - thoso bread . slices i - Sonoc Pico’s fo Northstwr Inn's tho fir«-wlthout-scaioa..l.ThC ____ fioverol elnbiirntely 'elegant Deef Wcll- high Bide effect i.i achieved by W nchos. S lip the f nlshcd sand- inuton. a new knitting technique. No wiches Into Glad Sandwich Ed so it has special affinity for ho refreshing (oo: no early- fo(xl; Unltoil States, France, F all's cllnjw , .shnky^Htylo.s. morning lunchlmx rush and sand­ Oi'nniuiy.' Mexico, Spain nnil wiches will be deliciously‘fresh Iinly. Othor dhihi's arc from and cool at noontime. tho MUldiu I-:ast, Im llli, Chinn, Modern Design Your youn/'steiv will also en­ Japtu),' Hawaii, Deniiuirk, ling- joy tlie.se new ifLst.'Atoii three hind and Hungary. Uiiig, bill earve((T on thu siihject later in sic, nccepted look. Romance of lend lls personnllty to u con- tho hook. past eras inspires Me«llterrn- leiniK)rary — or out-and-out Cii'fiu roiilaurants cooklxxik, n(‘an, but now ii modern ro- iiXKlern — tleeoratlng Bchemo. U.S'.A, Is avallahW) in hanlcover Ntralnt enters into tho styling. M ore fo rm al styles — Kith at bookstoros and In softcover The- ornnto; decorative look reniiiry, for Instance — have a 204 Maln'Ave. N. at ndwstamis, of M ctlllerrnnean mixes por- flair for mixing, too. ^ ^ 4 rdtihc ' rtltldil;'Oiloblit'zV,1969 dren at the turn of the century ' of any value,” says Mrs, Whit­ Buhl Homemaker Of 71 Years Gives «s compared to today she quip-., m ire . , , ped, “In. those days children minded the parents, not parent* She feels that many'of today’s minding the children." problems are caused by parents Aciviee For Today’s Generations She fcela it is " ^ r e dlfWcult who don’t care where their chil­ to raise children today with the dren are, as long at they are BUHL — “It seems to take they noted, mail was delivered town kept money In a trunk and problems'of drug addiction and " -out of the way. Until children •norf lime taking care of mod- about once a week and they all you had to do was write a other .major problems facing to­ are old enough to take care ern {^itfsets now, than k did to learned w hat was going on note to obtain a loan. They day's youth. She noted there of themselves the mother'should do tl:3 work then,” says Mrs. aroun d the ' c 6 u n try from a thought nothing of taking in a was no generation gap notlcable be at home making a home for Wollcr Wayne WhltmJre,, who— Weekly newspaper. The most , stranger for the night. between her daughters and her­ them, unless she must support raise; her family at the turn o{ popular mode of transportation* • She can remember getting out self. although she was sure they the family. in those days, was a "lumber of bed 'to fix supper for a •did have their own ideas. In recent years Mrs. Whitmire - w agon.” passer-by in need of fOod and The Whitmires have been ac­ has taken up makio9 ,quiits and “People have changed tre­ lodging. The ''foot-peddler'’ was tive members of the Buhl First silk topped afghans and bed­ that m any mendously since the years we a guest, to k>ok forward to as Christian church for many spreads* as a hobbyv . Both she years of homcmaking experi­ were growing up. In those days -- he-would -pay- for-his-lodging - years;— “Parents - should take and her husband en]oy garden­ ence l:chlnd her, she most cer­ people trusted each oUttr,”'says with one of his.wares. their children to church not send ing and raising flowers, and tainly qualifies as an outstand- Mrs. Whitmlre._^'6 can remem­ When asked what the main them, and they must live their they are proud of the vegetable ^.Ing Ixriiemaker. ber when.a banker ln--a small differences were in raising chil­ religion a t home If It Is to be garden they raised this year.' Mr. and Mrs. Whitmire were married just one month when .M r. V/;«itmire’s widowed mother died‘ ;aving four small childrcri, ra n g '.'3 in ag e from 3 years to 15 jc.rs. Tne children made . their l-.ome w ith W hitmires unill they ;::came of age and wore m a n ;: d . Tl.cv farmed In Texas until 1901 v.hen Mr. Whitmire devel­ oped "quick consumption” and it w:;s necessary to move to a differrat climate. The family made the Journey from Texas to N;.v Mexico by covered wag-- • - on. . - ■ W hen asked what hobbies she had while raising her faniily she replied, “Hard work. I never knew what is was to buy a loaf of brcDd — we had hot biscuits every morning for breakfast.” Md, t food items could only be prepsrsd for one day at'a time sincg there were few methods Of rc'.a.rdmsL^ilflB(.'.. Duiiiiu_: summer months milk was-put in n --nn of cold water and cov- ercd uith cold wcl clothes and BtorcJ in the dirt cellar. H-. 't* w ere raised for meat slncc J'.e p o rk could be cured to last !';neer. Beef was sometimes- Used but had to be canned right awa . ....Common^“iHJlchcr practice in those tscll !1 -arts o f the m eat to other fa n r :; :s so It would be u.scd quit!:‘.■.'.y. Each family took turns pro' '; .jng the beef. ■‘V.*.*-• w ere -happy even wUh. - a n 11,?_ioconvcnlcnce. We stayed honi ? with our family. I never hod n b ab y sitter in m y life and I had five babies,” says M rs. W h itm ire. “ 1 made all thc'clothcs for

She r . inlnlsced alrtut one Christ- ; ma.s v.lten Mr. Wliliniire was out cT work and she made large* ■ rag wlnR up, recalHnp that In tlKwo days the church bad Koparato doorwnyfi for the men otid women, who also sat on fisparato sides, with the chil­ dren I'.nd young, people occupy- Inn tha center acctlon of pcwa. Btitli -woro brought up In strict roll{!lou(i hpmon, and rained Uiclr own faniily In ll>o flame ^ atmoHphero. In rccalllna iheir own youth Buhl Jay-C-Ette Believes In addition, to - the ,two oldk boys, the F ields fam ily includ< Janie, Becky and Billie. Ka, Community Work Important enjoys children, a fact obvioui If you ever drop in at her house. B U H L — " It 's necessary for, has been active with the Jay-C- Many tlmes^the greater shon . the fa m ily to w ork an d -play Etles for eight years, holding of nefghborhood children ar< together as a unit and to par­ most offices on the local level, playing in the backyard or io ticipate in community activilies serving a r slnte district vice;, h er living room . F o r severa; in order to broaden one’s out­ president and holding several years when, her own children look and make the community state chairmanships. She Is also w ere pre-school age she ran i a better place in which to live." the winner of two Key Woman babysitting service. ' says Mrs. Jack (Kay) Fields, awards, the highest honor the K a y lists reading as her fav^ homemaklng representative of club can bestow on a m em ber. o rite hobby an d Instills ihe love ttie B uljl Jay-C-Ettes. Kay feels that if it's;important of books in her children. A floor The greater part of each for a w om an lo be interested to ceiling wall divider bookcase, weekend is saved for family ac­ in community, affairs, it's even b qilt by her husband, is literally tivities which include camping, m ore im portant for a m an to "packed" witH books as are sev hunting and fishing or just visit­ be interested. She has worked- era! boxes, causing Kay to say ing friends. Kay noted that plan­ with her husband in his various laughingly, “I could open my ning for fa m ily activities is es­ offices in the Jaycces and has house as a- public llbraiy." pecially important for parents given willingly of precious fam­ . She also enjoys canning and who are actively participating ily 'time for civic projects. In freezing and was delighted with in civic or service clubs as they addition lo civic activities she her peach crop this year, she must often spend a good deal has been active in the Buhl likes cooking and baking. Keep, o/'time away from home. Moose lodge. in g a fa m ily o f seven as weH Kay works a few hours each Much time has also been de­ as the neighborhood chiU'ren in mornmg keeping the bo<^ for voted to projects benefiting cookies, keeps her fn the kitchen. MRS. MARION WARNER. Hcybura. made the teardrop her husband at his service sta­ children. .She has served a s a Although housekeeping is aa shades on this pole lamp. Her husband made (he frame and tion. Their two oldest boys; Ron­ PTA room mother for eight essential item for any homo she poured (he dyed rcsin into the molds. She uses her taleot nie and Johnny, help out at the: years, was a cub scout den maker, Kay feels the appeal^ at making artistic creations for prizes used during contests station when needed, making the mother lor two years and is ance of the house is not the of (ho TOPS Tips the Weight Club. business a family affair. currently leading a Bluebird m ost. important part, it’s the In keeping with her feeling group. This past summer she lo ve an d w arm th in the house Imagination Replaces Posies about community scrvke, ^ y and a' friend took six Bluebird that makes it a home. For This Heyburn Homemaker HEYBURNHEYDURN — Mrs. Marion burn City Hall. Besides serving (NNyla) y ln) WWarner' arn er' tliouRhttlioueht she in this club, she also is worlc would/ould tecl,icc l, "stupa’‘_bisplaying■'stuiJi5. Mrs. Peggy Clayville, During times when Mrs. War­ Declo, a flower official of the ner'over uses her eatin g ability fair, talked Mrs. Warner Into and is required to bring home -Headquarters competing and she won her first and display a three-foot high blue...... ribbon...... With a tittle.. confl-...... painted wooden pig named _..J— .-dcnce, she-entered every-year____mcralda,_ she _hides._it-in her______J=bR, ALL MAGIC VALLEY_ . ______since and has walked off with shubbery. several- blue ribl)ons, including Helpful Mr. Warner will pull Bcsi of SIiow the past, three the weight,gaining symbol out HUNDREDS OF PATTERNS FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE years. One yeayshe won-Best— —of-the-shubbery-and-display-it of Siiow plus Arrangement of for all the world to see. . . . WO Irivife you to drop In and b'rowso the Show. •ofound . . . you’ll be surprised at the very "I have won white ribbons and a few red ones," she said, "but largo selection avoilablo . . . many pat­ most limes I receivod blue." Pictures terns ovaHablo in open stock, Mother of f I v e children, Mrs. Wii'mcr never used much time COMPLETE DEPARTMENT —for—hnbbiof^unUI-aftor—her—chil JD£fclouse_ drcn wore pfctty good sire. She ------♦-ON-OU8-MAIN-FLOOi? ------knits for them and still sews for her daughters and grand- . Are Valuable children. For many years she cITd do (oxfiie pfilntirig. but gave NEW YORK (UPI - Snap, all her wilrk away to friends shots can be used to save time,. HOUSEWARES monc\( and energy In case of and roinlivcs. - ' • ALL NAME BRANDS robbery, accident or tax loss. Since starting flower arrang­ • CLUB ALUMINUM , ing in 19.W, she hns extended One couple, for example'’, her tnli'ius to inaking nntiqued faced with proving claims re­ • • • REVERE figures wlili wire and papier sulting fi;om a fire w hich gutted • MAGNALITE one wing of.thcirhomc-produccd- niache. Her products are dis­ • NORRIS WARE played in gift shop.s In M agic pictures of th o Jn te rio r n nd ex­ • TEFLON — ALL TYPES Valley. It takes her a portion terior before and after the bloie. of five days lo complete a flg> ll ie Insurance' com pan y a c- • CASE &HENCKEL CUTLERY 'ore. cepted ttie snapshots as evi­ • WISS SCISSORS W hen she looks at objects, she dence and promptly sent tham always finds herself studying it a check. COMPLETE DEPARTMENT for shape, and- pattern. When Authorities suggesl these steps • DOWNSTAIRS GIFT SHOP therpole lamp shades wore oul,- to..be prepared .for_a.-CU taatro-... she and Mr. Warner made a phc: set tislng dyed set resin. Tills —Take a complete photo- lamp-is the firsl lhing lo cateh ..Brnphlc inventory of youiLhomc. a visiter's eye when entering —Photograph each rooom from GIFTS the Warner lu)me. four illfferent angles to include • COLORED GLASS furnishlnns. Take close-up shots Tills fail her giirden didn't do of especliilly valuable Items, • COPPER PIECES wi.’Jl, so uscil m ore imng_ ioo .'i}w such as antlnues. • BRASS ITEMS Iniitlon than flowers for [ler fair Beaurifut and practical, Froozo If, . —I’icturc the exterior of your cook In It, lervo In It — carries a • CUT GLASS displays. Driftwood nnd papier home fr o m ‘ nil four sides In-, inaehu la a favorite for her a r­ two year replacement o uaro n lo o . • WOODENWARE eluding landscaping, trees, rangem ents and hnr hUHl>iind driveway, fenccH. • SILVER PLATE joins her in the hunt for Items —Write the date, - place, nnd work with. • STAINLESS STEEL (0 price of purchase on tho back SOME EXAMPLES OF PRICES D iirlng one trip, she had her • HUNDREDS OF PRACTICAL of photographs showing expen­ husban d clim b over the swift SAUCEPAN oo GIFTS o r ALL TYPES flowing .Salmon iUver, dangling sive possessions. IV^ qt. . . R«s. 7,09 ^ 4 .0 0 —Color film will help show on a tree lim b In qu effort lo StCIULET oo break off a green fungus cover- tho tnio value. B " . . . , 1 0 .0 0 ^ 9 * 0 O .C(I hranch. Heing an electrlcinn —Sioro snap^hols in n safe- SKIL.i.ET «o OO Call Us Collect nnd polo climber, 'l\e felt right deposit lx)X or In u fireproof 1C* . . . R«(C. 13.00 ^ 0 . 0 0 container at homo. ut homo nnd didn't mind hiU Othor R«v«r« War* with 733-5477 fillin g the request, — ICccp your nnapshotu up to da(o. Similar Rttductlon* M rs, W arner's ability Is nn> If ll't pn •mtrgoncy tural as she has received no training. She use» her talent for W1.SF. P R n C A U T IO N the enjoyment df others and of* tcntim es m likes prlM s usetl dur­ If there Is a deep-well pan in ing conteslfl of TOPS Tips 'Ilio your kitchen range, Ifa a wise Weight club, which named her prccAiUloa lo keep an inch of PRICE HARDWARE CO. h om em akor. witter In thu bottom , 'ilm t way 147 MAIN AVE. E. DOWNTOWN TWIN FALLS 'lliQ club organised May 20, there will i>o no dan g er of ft 1068, a n d its mectlnka arc held being ruined if tho burner Is Tliursday afternoons Bt tho Hey. turned on by . ____ mlatako. vf urlniil iiwl' nxh'tiO iruner, o trowel or grass you will with a tool having bare cine hand-saving feature to shears, you won't become as motal handles. If the grips are look for' fn hand tools (s cleon, lired usfng a hand todl with WnyJ, 2t^ur h ands w on 't sm elt or cushioned grips. As much as you some sort of extra cushioning as become smudged from th€ir use. DISCOVER ggipsl THE YEARS AHEAD SWISS SEWING AAACHINE

-Tho Elna supdr outsows thom-olli Sows ovor a hua- dred different stitches, om- brojdery'as well as practical stitches. Has a built-in blind- hommor. buttonholer. Drop- In to p lo o d in R b o b b in . N o at- t o c h m o n ts or^ c o n fu s i.n g set- tings. Electronic controls lota y o u s e w slov/ly w ithout stall- IT LOOKS SMALL In size, but this piece of white Mexican InR, oven,through thick onys contains items gathered from various parts of the world. te rla ls . Mrs. Blanche Wilcox, holding the onyx, has served the Hey. bum LD5 Ward Relief Soclcty ^ years. Heyburn Woman Collects ■. Rocks,. Artistic Items HEYBURN — Mrs. J e _ (Blanche) Wilcox has a sheet from Texas; a rock picket! from of onyx' containing items gath­ the LDS Temple site at Jackson ered from all over the world. County, Mo., by her nephew, --- Her hobbv of collecting rocks-— • Jay-Dee-McKendrlck. .. and other artisuc items, startW O lUma iiiulude snrj l l— roefas in about 19K and she developed brought back from VJetnam by a “V/ilcox's Disneyland," as the her son. Max; a large sea shell neighbors call it. in the Wilcox from the shores of the Black yard. Sea In Turkey, from another Her friends and relatives are son, Don Wilcox: an oval pol­ eontinimlly, sending her items ished rock from India by Amos fr o m various places in the Jordan; and a little deer from world. She received so many the State Fair in Washington, smaU~Hcms~arid 'a!ra'ui~Ot~los- .....“ SenfbyJjcr-grandson.-ErJc-W ll- Ing them that she made a scen­ cox. ic arrnngement on a small sheet People come from near-by of w hile MeJcicBn .onyx, which counties to view the Wilcox yard - ehe-Rot -from a m an in C ali­ which usually contains a new forn ia. addition each year. At the end ■Placed on the sheet Js a pbs- of each summer season, Mrs. tlc container of dirt which Mrs. Wilcox begins planning what she M y rtl? Lott brought hack from w ill m ake the next year, Hfll Cumoroh at New York; a Mrs. Wilcox has always been tall pijce of driftwood was pick­ active In church and civic or­ ed uo at Lake.Louise in Can- ganizations and retired In 1960. •3 a bv MfsTNOrris-JlfrtffenrsIs^ — ^MrrWilcoxTTtinrtHn-19&2r-Slnee- ter of Mrs. Wilcox; a round then they have kept busy In ^ece of driftwood was from the the church, in their yard and FOR DRESSES & SUITS Columbia River In Wnshlnnion, giving service to the Cemetery iven her b y M rs. ,Sarah Wal- Board, wh/ch Mr. W/lcox ha.n ger, a sister-lii-law. been a mcm)>er for several DOUBLE KNITS Othsr Items Include small sea years. ‘ WOOL - ORLON - DACRON POLYESTER shells which Florence Clnrk,, . She .has hcfcn a m em ber of Texas, brought back from Itnly; the Hcyljurn LDS Wrtrd Relief three olives which Mrs. Wilcox Society 49 year.‘> nnd has .served got from the old mission in Cni> in many canncltics Including 30 STRETCH PANT FABRIC Istrano;- a s m a ll brown rock, years as visiting tcacher. - W* wrry fob*k from tho Potlflc No»thw«it'» Itorflnn manulaclurflr of iw ia tttft.'tw lm iuIT t, ond atrefcfi w«or, at we(( a t cha pitterni to mako rh« faih/ani ora octunlly iltowlng In llmt of>J »«» hex» BOiy U It lo do-ll-yountHi______“ POWER-NET” OIRDLE FABRIC SToll 'tlio d o l'ilio* foo ’ lo*'* eomfojt or loo loo»o lo do itwir |ot)7 You can elra iCanpa views she has given for so many Gamma, The Woman’s Society different groups. But she is also of the Methodist Church and the known for her marvelous cook­ Kimberly Ladies Pioneer club. “ S E W O N KNIT — S-T-R-E-T-C-H C L A S S E S ’* ing. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas and . Before she retunred to teach­ their daughter, Sandra. can>e to ing In 1S56. she catered and Kimberly In IMS from Nebraska . odiy-IO'undaciland Iniltucllooi for profoiilonol wotkn At times her kitchen would have .and built their home on a farm tpocially iilactod tORibook It yourt Iroo ol cliorga for futurv r Che af/imn and appearance of southwest of town. you atlfoff (n on* of theia courtat. Coll til alwof if todayl ft g ou rm e t’s haven . When she resumed teaching, the catering Another of Mrs, Thomas* In­ tapered off, but there are stlU terests is making felt, birds limes when Mrs. Thomas can which make dellghtrul Christmas bo found baking coffee cakes, tree .decorailons. She has made carnmcl rolls, Danish pastry GO 50 far Ihls year. an d m a n y other goodies (or var- She In still in demand for re- iotis occasions. views and gives several each SKINNER SEWING SHOPPE Since retiring from tJ»e Kim­ y e ar. Somallm es who'll vanish Your Authorized White and Elna dealer berly s ch o o l. system la IMO. behind a closed door for an hour New & Used Sewing Machine Sales Mrs. Thomas has boon busier o r 80 to prepare a lesson for Complete sewing neieds, m achlne parts and sorvlco ’< Ulan ever. Her kitchen continues flomfrt^MTtanfzatloo, H er fa m ily to emit tempting aromas at un­ rosIgn<^ly walls until she’s ^ IN THE SAVE-ON SHOPPING CENTER expected moments and her fam­ through nnd can Join the every­ FILER ond ^FILLMORE ST. 7 3 3 - 5 5 4 2 ily knows a special treat await* day routlnq again — until the n e x t lime;, ’ TlmeVNa^VTwHn Fdlfi, tdaho ' 17 P flo ol ^»[lt>l niw T ,tv /tiH - io iiii‘i Jerome Lawn Becornes Puppets Fairyland

JEROME — What docs the could be combined with it. all the crises. A tiny prop can antiquity but the actual source b&sarrc, fads a n d Cults o f today. average homemaker do with her The puppet needed to be hand- be mislaid under a thimble, and of th« puppet is debatable. Maybe a sojourn into the land heart and home when she has ■crafted b ^ the children — he strings are forever entangling," Puppets have entertained of Make-Believe is a very real no children of her own on which needed costumes and stage ct- C on e said. throtJ^ the m edia o f com piete need for children and should be to.lavish her love and attention? .feels, background music, songs The children model the puppet operas in Ilalji to the crude encouraged but also guided. Mrs. R. J. (Gene) Reichhard, and dances, lighting effects and heads of papier m ache. The bod* Punch and Judy type shows on "It remains to be seen what opens her home and her yard miniature props — good stories, ies arc made like a very limber Euroixian city streets. It is said effect, if any, the puppets will lo the children in the' Jerome plnys and poems ad intinhurn. rag doll or with bits of wood that the marionettes were ban* have in \h© lives of the chll* area to m ake, design and plan Finally, after an outdoor per­ hinged ■ with scraps of leather • ned from the church at o n e drcn involved, blit one fact is shows with Marionettes. The formance in a wind storm, the ■ or felt. Gene does most of the time for their presumptuous au­ true; they have provided hour* children'come to the Reichhard - puppet needed, a better stage costum ing since tedious atten­ dacity. . These, no doubt, were of harmless fun and cj:eativity, home, inside if it's x:old and' . and of course, dlways, an audi­ tion -must be paid to the sm all­ the earliest audience offenders. A fortune can be amassed, lost, stolen o r spei\t,.but happy m«;m* wet, outside in.lhc "Fairyland ence. The stoge, too, demanding est details. When planning the-stories or orles are impervious to anji such Garden" if il is warm. a project-for' lhe children, was "Loose buttons and,raveling plays to be presented. Gene ■ catastrophe," she added. especially designed and built by edges can be literally murder \ says, "We plan to confjne our TTiey bring their lunches and And you know,-when mother* her husband, Jake. It is sturdy to a m arionette," she notes. puppets to fairyland where work from dawn to dark. She and fathers of these puppeteers laughingly says It started out and portable, permitting the No stereotyped script Is used Goodness most grophlcally tri­ puppeteers to "tour”. which would stifle the Imagina­ umphs over evil and selfishness attend a performance which is to be a two hour morning class the cuimlnation of a summer’s once a week and grew and grew The touring group 5s «Hed tion of the children, b u t -because is never really rew arded.” the ‘'M mi-M instrels” {ind they this group’s quick-witted a d lib­ hard work and planning in this until she almost had to arrange In summing up why she felt have performed for nearly 1,000 bing sometimes gets its mem­ beautiful yard known to the pup. sleeping quarters for the ones . the need to open her home and youngsters and adults. bers in trouble, certain guide pctecrs as Fairyland, they come who didn't want to quit working garden and heart to any child Saturdays The "Mini - Min­ lines have been established. aw ay feeling a H ttle . less tired to go home to bed. who would come there. Gene strels'* meet at the Reichhard One rule of the puppeteers a n d weary, fo r the ha'ppiness said, "I believe that everyone She never throws, anything home to prepare their shows, pledge is that the puppet must of the puppets has a way of - iS' iM rn with a wistful desire away — buttons, snaps, paper* make puppets, listen to records never offend his audience. As infcctlng parents, too. clips, bits of ribbon, scraps of or stories, and discuss ways to a part of their research, Gene to be a s ta r in som ething." Gene and Jake are members cloth — anything might be need­ improve each performance. tells us the Jerome Mini-Min­ "1 wonder If this could be of the new Music Club started ed to costume a puppet or serve "A truly polished performance strels have found out that pup­ a psychological reason for the recently in Je ro m e , a n d hope* as stage props or scenery. wUh the difficult marlonclie pets have been guilty of offend­ countiess organizations with fuUy, • the puppets wjU avail They hold the puppet shows may never be accomplished be­ ing his audicnce throughout the their varied offices and stations themselves for a program in on the patio of the Reichhard cause we can never anticipate ages, and they date back Into or the less constructive, even the near future. home and the musical accom­ paniment is heard through the . open door of the hous«-behind. Following the "production” a Wur Is made of the '‘Fairyland Garden” otherwise known as the ‘RAMSEY'S Reichhard's beautifully land- .scaped a n d attended yard. There are pine trees and brooks .and a frog pond In which can be seen Three men In a Tub. ^ a ge- which becomes the home of the witch of “Mansol and Gretel.” Gene’s freezer is alw ays full Custom Upholstery of cookies and other goodies “ for you never know,” she says "w hen the puppcteers,-;will de- • Custom Furniture Rebuilding cldc it’s snack time or another meal rolls around before they • Cust<^ Quilting Service______CoiviE IN a n 6 s e e ..... ~hnvo finished 'iusfone more lit­ EXAMPLES OF tle detail' and they ‘don't want • All Styles, Period or Modern to go home just " OU R W O R K • -According to Gene, her enthu- • Widest Fabric Choice in the Area .siasm for m arionettes stems from her avocation — repairing, costuming and designing dolls, nnd her former vocation — mus­ ic and teaching. She discovered her first string puppets accident­ Custom Awnings ally. They were left in a trunk in the Moscow Junior High ----School—hy^-fiome—forgotten—but— r • Awnings and Door Hoods^ tnlentcr’(^-tlniHl« was on - preparing nnd staging musldul protliicliiins an d ivlthough she • French Swag hn«I worked olght years' w I t h hundreds of children in nccumu- • Austrian .Valances__ ; latlng material and cxnerleiicc neei'SHury to prepare this paper, • Roman. Shades^, she dl organize flome experim ental classes In numic appreciation for the very \ young at the ranch away from (he distractions and Ihlorrup- tions that so often Interfere with fiuch classes. m d e i ^ ”Tn- Introduco children to op­ era, 1 could think of no better way than having them drama* DRAPERIES - UPHOLSTERY - AWNINGS tlzQ with marlonetles Iho well loved folk talu opera ''ilanspl 236 Main Avenuo North, Twin Full* Phono 733-1979 and Gretel." For three summnrn thin class iicemod to-have the most ap. peal; In fact everything eluo' ---- rF '^/m r*‘Tiow?:TCi'Tn-rsnr,-ras?\r-' -PrTcTffyrOffStS'r 24 .1969 VI! c'iub! .iv jH - iv in il ^-5¥l, '■I Fashion Focuses She’s Toj^! Just Ask The Kids On Elegant Children h*vt a way of gath- __erinriTkt certain homes in their Drapery Fabrics neighborhoods and in the Lawn­ dale DftVe area, all of them • The oncc’upon-a'timc woman congregate at Pauline Meyer- who chose drapery fabrics and hoeffer’s home. window treatments as an after­ Mrs. Meyerhocffer was chos* thought In the decorative.plan en to represent Junior Club in is "long-gone” . Thls fall'a new the homemakers edition because woman has emerged who is ex­ of her way with children and acting in tastes, demands more bcr special dedication lo her character in colors, and who own family. . considers windows as areas of Pauline and her husband, Jor- creative design. She mokes ryi who is dean of admissions them first in her focal decor­ at the Collflge of Southern Ida­ ating scheme. ho. have four children — Ter­ So thinks A. W. Metzger, man­ esa. aO; Christopher, 9; Steven, ager of decorative fabrics for 6. and Jason,. 2. Nearly ail of the fiber glass division of PPG . their free time is spent wilh Industries, who says that the their chifdren and their outside pattern of drapery buying has activiiioS are also concerned been gradually cnanging over 'w ith their children. Mrs. Meyer- the last two years. Women now hoeffcr is den mother for a Cub seek and get more fashion in Scout group, is an active PTA colors, greater performance in inembsr and assisted her hus­ fabrics, and more perfection in b a n d this sum m er in the Knot- workmanship. hold baseball program. She has More anff more women are also taught Sunday school. choosing made-to-measure or Mrs. Meyerhocffer believes custom draperies rather than everyihing revolves around the ready-mades for the broader home and her children come range of tcxture.s, prints and first. She said she wants lo colors that are available as well spend all the time' possible at as the high quality of workman­ home wilh her children until ship and couturier, effect.s tliey they reach tlTC' age that they provide. They arc more inter­ have all developed their own ested in deep colors, the bright- outside interests. She said their 'er and more vibrant tones that family • • accomplishments are can be used to give a dramatic most important. Each tim e foeling to windows. They aro someone in the family has a creative and -individual in ap ­ special achievement she makes proach. sosking elogance but ex­ a framed memento. Somedav pecting prncticality as well. she^ hopes to have an entire w all To meet the demand of the covercd w ith the' plaques. m ore .icxacting -woman, 'm anu- Even with four children, Paul­ "factnrrrs—of—fibei— glass—drap­ ine finds time to sew and can ery fabrjcs are introducing a ■ all her own fruit, vegetables, complete new line of fabrics in jams, jellies ond relishes. This colors as shocking as shocking year she had her own backyard ■ pink, as verdant as a spring garden. green, as hot as a flame color She makes nearly all her own and as deep and dramatic as _____clothing, her dauphter’s and her purple and black. another’s. Pauline explains her - The-'new-affluence'In-tnstes— mother has paralysis of her and the more exacting stand­ arms and requires special made ards for drapery fabrics reflect the growing new trend toward clotl'.ing bccuase'of this. _MRS. JERRY MEYERHOEFFER, Junior.Club’s homemaker, cuts out dress for her m aking windows the most im- . Mrs. Meyerhoeffer also h a s mother, M rs.' Meyerhoeffer makes nearly al! her own...... clothing...... and a ... . 's for her m oth­ m ade the drapries for her home. portont element In the decora­ er and daughter. In addition to her sewing, s‘ie also cans all her own fruit "and'vegetables^ tive scheme, a guiding point for She laughingly remarks she has and tries (o make her homo a -special place for her husband and four children. now made drapes for eight dif­ other fabrics and colors in the setting. ferent homes they have had From" afterthought to focal since they were married. first, the pendulum has swung She ablur.s, or tension courses offered here. The hnnd.5 are Renerally the watched hair strokers or bead driest pari of the body, accord­ In addition lo her homo Inter­ twisters. ests, she also finds time.to help ing to Pnc({uin chcmlstH, wiin : YOU CAN PLAY THE ORQAN TON|GHT! Hands are alw ays In full view, explain (liut dryness occurs • her husband with his work and and any symptoms of neglect — be-involved-in-clvic -projccla.. first where the skin is thinnest. aro"giaring7'HnndS"thnt‘ Iook“i M rs: Meyerhoeffer is now vice jOther ilfln sidh nrcas ' t h iTT" — WITH-THE- president of Juntor Club and will if they never do a lick of work - -si,buld -be given particular at owo their beauty not to idleness. tention wilh faith ...... serve IIS prtsident next year. but to very aciive work and of hand crcam and lotion ore. ' AMWING NEW care w ith cream s ond lotions, in this order, tlje lops of the manicuring and other protective fuel, the bnck,s of your hocis Consider Many measures. % an d your cII>ow .h. If you w ant to get compii- Any sludunt who turns I li e THOMAS -ments pn your hundti. they-hud Mges of h hook or Inkcs notes Things When better be smooth and noft. Hut ill class is cxpcrlcncing friction chances are, If you are like ORGAN and abrasion of the skin nimpiy most American females, your by touching and rubbing .paper The M ag ic Color-Glo Buying Fruit skin Li dry and w ur hands chap o r pen. TIiIn contributes to skin easily and quickly ot the flrat Keyboard ■ ’’ ’ Tttor© B T e"oth«r.,things than dryness and discomfort. The ex­ 8lgn-i of cool weather. price thut should be considered perts suggest that hand cream In baying perishable fruit, Ihc Dry skin, like the common £n[ov pinytno a Tliomo* Orflon — i IqI'* f'wn fUU day bccout* only applied regularly helps protect o Tlio...(it O.ocJ'i iIm COLOK CIO KEYDOAfiO Ihot Ha'Ol up to county home economk:s agent the skin and also helps restore •liow you •>no]» O>gon Inilantly . , . all your (uvorllt longt, arrived for several varieties of exiwrts'a'dvl.He, The Pacq'uin people also rec- ,Muilc liitaU Ota oarci ond contain summer crppa. It seldom pays Rough handling when you biiy Qmmend keeping rich hand aaty Iniliucllonl. Iliom ai Organ* a>« avollnbla In o wiUa lalactlon o( to buy porlsnable (rult just be­ fruit causes spollaco and waste. furnilu'a ilylat and’ fln iilta t . . . OA* U jutt l anloymant, oiclar your Thomai Orocin w llti tlia '.'Bof’J B *'” cause the price appears to l>e Titerofore, the price Is higher. places, using them especially af­ "I'lnymcila” faolurei Includail lliat f>ul 15 diflarant diyllirni a n j tO a bargain,, she flold. Tli« loss In h a n d lin g ia passed ter washing hands and before odJaJ |iaicuition„ln>l'um anli o l your Even with the most modern on to the consumer. Don’t pinch, retiring. Try to weor loose cot­ handling methods some products squeeze or Juggle. you must ton gloves at night while you decline rapidly (n quality, even handio fruit to gel an Idea of sleep, after mnssa*lng han d s COME IN TODAY while on display In markets. Its quality, be careful to pre­ generously with cream. Keep Sometimes this off-qu«Uly fruit vent brulscN, Ax a rule, buy nails shapely and smooth. for a Free Demonstration can be bought at a reduced fru it th a t is m ature , ripe, well- E veryday hand care in slm- price, but waste in preparation colored, and free of buises, skin le, not lime consuming, ond. may offset .the cash saving. punctures, and decay. r K; is very habll-formlng. If you Fruit of large bIm may appear Refrigeration makes it M: ' are kind lo your hands, you to bo B bargain but La not al* ’ Bibl? to keep an adequote Bupfl will get quick rewards. You will WARNER MUSIC CO. w ays of dhe tUshest quAlity. The OQ hand, but never buy m ol have a most basic feminine at­ 1 3 3 8ho«hon« St. No. fruit m«y be entirely tinaulted th«R you ca n ,loeep an d use wlif traction —• soft, appealing honds f»hon« 733-7603 tQ your purpoae. o ut waste, even U Uie price 1 thot m en wiir admire and want Select fruit fpr eating quality Sow. h.OU SI.L. 1 l\ _ Frldo^, October 24 ,1969! Timei-N«w», Twii) FolU, Idaho 19 THIS CHART shows the' source o n the beef carcass for the more populat beef cuts. It also shows the cooking method usually used oh each cut for best results. This method of cutting is called the Chicago style, the Western style or the Standard style of reducing the side of ~begl~inta~ uulB for cooking-ond-eating^ Tender cuts come from the muscles . which were least used by the live animal;, less tender cuts come from the most*used muscles. But all cuts m ay be m ade tender by proper cookery. Home freezer, owners or ^locker renters often can make important savings in their food bills by purchasing a side of beef, or o front or hind quarter, having it process­ RUMP ROAST PORTERHOUSE ed all at once and storing it in individ­ CHUCKROAST ually wrapped packoges until needed. (Braise or Roasf) SIRLOIN (Broil or Panbroil) A N b HOW (Braiso) (Broil or Panbroil) TO COOK THEM ONLY U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE ^ E E F rates the Tablerite® label!

AVAILABLE _ OMLY AT IGA &ROCERS!^ THERE’S AN IGA STORE NEAR YOU

BUHL — Erb Broi. KIMBERLY — Parton't Foodlln«r BURLEY — Clark't IOA~- MURTAUOH — Thorn*'* CAREY — Don't Food Bank OAKLEY — Clark'* (or Shopping FAIRFIELD — Morfccl Baikct RICHFIELD ~ PIpor't Shopping C«nt«r OOODINO J. C. Palnler RUPERT >-Food1dnd.lOA , HAGERMAN — Ow»Uy’i Morhal WENDELL — Caih Orocvry HANSEN D aw 'i lOA ^ TWIN FALLS — Ea«t Sfd* Morhttl > Marty's lOA

Tfmo8*NowB, Tw/n Falls, /daho Frfday, Ocfobor 24 ,1969 f[lday, Oclobor 24 ,1969 Tlmot-Nnwt, Twin Falli, Idaho 21 Pick The Hairdo That’s Really You Women Update By JOYCE GABRIEL o f h air — is “ In ." waves; barretts accent side- Which hafr style is the best? Job Potentiqi NEA Staff Corrcspoodcat The long, thick mane has^one parted OF upswept hair. And, of That's the beauty of this beauty curly and wavy; sI\ort 'hair is' course, the scarf, this season’s era. Pick the one \hai suits you . COLUMBUS, OMo (UPI) — NEW. YORK (NEA) - Fash- bobbed; medium-Iengfh styles all-purpose fashion accessori<, is —think in urms of where you M o s t women who return to col> toiTs regimented days are over. at home on hair. go and what you wear — and hug the head, then flip out in lege after graduation do so eltiw^. The "One Look" seasons are curls at the chin. that hairstyle is the best — for With short, bobbed hair, the passe. The frcc-style era has Falls, wiglets ond hair-pieces you. er for personal enrichment oc replaced them. Clothes nre mod­ cut is the thing. Once styled, it- are intertwined to create the to update their employment po­ eled with a Thirties,look, a gyp­ will need only two or three clips gypsy look — long, straight hair, or cellopfiane tape to hold side tential. sy air, a casual mood. with several fake, braids wound ARRANGE ROOM And beauty has taken the and nape curls in place. through it, and a scarf used as The‘first step-in arranging Mrs. Kathryn Ashcraft of Ohio fashion cuc. Hair — oil kinds a wide band across tho forehead, - a room is to decide what aclivi- Statr University’s School of • tidng at the side of the head. fles will be held in it.'according rr- RESTORES BRIGHTNESS - Hotfie Economics said a recent ------SDAP IS “PAINT^ to MAgdalene Pfister, University survey showed a majority of ing the last few seasons, ore ' Applying vinyl siding to a of • Nebraska Extension home women graduates were interest­ •‘PainUng" sidewalks, pofch • back to create curls with stay­ house instead of*~rcpainting is furnishings specialist. . Croup ed in returning for refresher steps or fences becomcs a fas­ ing power. Curling irons also w ell w orth consideration by furniture into activity areas courscs and graduate work la cinating occupation when a child come in liandy for a curl or Jiomeowners. Vinyl siding never such'as study, conversation, and' tlieir profession. has a pail of thick soap or de­ wave touch-up at tho end of needs pain tin g. R ather, it is rccreatlon. A test to help deter­ tergent suds and a big paint­ the day. quickly restored to original mine how satisfactory an ar­ •‘A significant number, how­ brush to wield ill any way he Hair ornaments add to the to­ brightness by an occasional rangem ent is. is to study how ever. preferred to lake couses chooses. This game will keep tal look, too. Flowers lace curls scrub down with detergent and the furniture has been moved such as drama, art’and music * pre-school youngster happily and braids; Jeweled pins and water — an easy and inexpen­ for conversation or games after appreciation-for •'their own eo» ew hilc. tiaras pcrcH on 'a mass of sive treatm ent. guests leave. joyment," she said. USDA Stamp Mom’s A Cop! Good Homemaker, Too Means Right Whether or not It’s a woman’g world Is stilt an unresolved ' Percentage statement, but Mrs. Lylo (Non- •cy) Trueblood, a young Twin • What’s in a package of mixed Falls housewife also has a very nuts? ,interesting Job, w hich is def* initely in a man’s world. To carry the shield of USDA ■ Mrs. Trueblood works in the the assorlm ent must- have the detective division of the Twin right percentage of each of five Falls Police Department, and kinds and the quality must be as such works closely with four . ■ high. With-Halloween, Thanks­ fellow officers, a il men. giving and Christmas coming, While most of her work is - that's something for buyers to secretarial, Mrsi^ Truehlood is be aware of, says Mrs. Jay in the know on cases oh which Fowles, home economics agent Uic dctectivcs and juvenile offi­ for Lincoln-Blaine and Camas cer arc working and occasional­ counties. Quality counts in nuts ly assists officers in cases in- as In all other foods, she re- . . volving women. m inded. She has been a member of The Consumr and Marketing the police force for four years, Service of USDA Inspects nuts' starting out doing clerical work at packing plants. It secs that in the traffic records depart­ shells are clean and unbroken m e n t. ______and checks kernels for' sound­ ness. An inspector also deter­ mothers, Mrs. Trueblood calls ■ mines the quantities of almonds, on her family for assistance filberts, walnuts, pecans and with household duties. Brazil nuts in each packct. To “Lyle’s just -really great — be U. S. Extra Fancy or Fancy he pitches in and does whatever grade, there must be no less I don’t get done,” she said. than 10 per cent.and no more A prime candidate for a copy 'th a n 4d per cent of each kind of to the "I Hate to Cook Book,” n ut. Mrs. Trueblood likes other You may also find mixed household duties much more nuts labeled U.S. Select or Com­ than cooking — but even though mercial. Qualtiy requirements she works five days a week,. fo r the.se are not as strict. The _-She_and—her ..hugband and two — . nuts may be smaller and the sons, Larry, 7, and Steve, 5, mixture maycontaln as little as cat a homccooked meal most‘s five per cent of one kind. Pack­ every night. ages of these nuts may be label­ The' family enjoys being to­ ed USDA inspected, but they do gether and spends many a free not'have the grade shield that day camping and fishing. The • Is an a.ssurance of high quality. Truebloods also are ardent hunt- • ers, but so far the youngsters haven'fbeen allowed to partici­ daughters at the University. pate In anjj hunting outings ex­ cept during the pheasant hunt­ The night before they left, ing season. Bette laughingly said,’ "If I --- Th(L.family_also_cnjoys-rIding--- were smart I'd stay right here cycles and the four often take a f hOmer W e havfc“ ehough off for the South Hills or other brownies, cookies, candy, carrot points on a free afternoon. cakes and banana nut loaves - Besides keeping busy with her to last our family until Christ* MOM’S A COP — StevM Trueblood, S.JTcH, alid'fils older brother, Larry-7r. holding (ho fam­ - m a s .” ---- Job and home. Mrs. Trueblood ily pet, Tuffy, arc two'of a few In Twin Falh who can claim thls.-Thclr nlother, Mrs. Lyle Is president of Sigma Chapter. (i^ancy) Trueblood. shown here reading to t ie children, works in mo detective division of Whether it Is helping a friend, doing the laundering, serving at Beta Sigma Phi. She has held the Twin Falls Police Deparlment, Mrs. Trpeblood has worked for the department for rout* this position for two years, since PTA or being a hostess, it Is years and has been president of Sigma Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, for two years. the time Sigma Chapter was all in the day’s work for Bette formed in Twin Falls. Claiborn, a homemaker from As her president’s project, K im berly. Mrs. Trueblood has chosen i Inteirior Decorating Flair Mrs. Claiborn (stance at tho newly, opened Harbor House. Members of the Is Kimberly sorority have been colIecUng H Help5 Buhl Woman’s Home • - Ite m s- fo r use a t the home an d are eliciting assistance from BUHL — Many women look .ngenl, and their two sons, Rod­ .'Homemaker SPRAY COLOGNE local residents In the project. through home decorating maga­ ney, 13, and Brndley, 8. Al- EVERY WOMAN ALIVE zines wishing Ihelr own homes tlu)iij;h DoniCa is a meticulous KIMDERI.Y _ The spucteuj could look a picture from the houseI;ccper, ihe fam ily ■•lives"’ country home of Mrs. Jack Clai- LOVES CHANEL N° 5 m agazine, but M rs. N .R . (Donl- In Ihelr home. born, wUh Its. flrcplaces o nd Hard And Fast ta) Mnson’s really dues. When asked her. Ideas on child Early American furnishings rc- with a definite flulr for inter­ raising .she said, "The most im- fl.eds a charm and homtness ior decorating, Mr«. Muson porliint thing for any child is iodlcatlve of gracious family liv­ Rules Deleted turns ideas into realities. She rcll^'ioiiK train in g." OecauKc ing. -» A #• I lists *“V; collecting and rcfinishing ■ ■It, Bradley iiriuiiey jhis nienlaltynioniaiiy retardedremruuu In lier inodern kitchen Bette \A/ltr^ ir<2kC antique furniture as hei; hobby. jjhc Ims two sepnrnie plilloso- Clalliorn nrennros wholesQme.. ------Shc-and“her-husbnnd7-Budrnave—;—MiiPTTnrrmsink'phlPTTnrTiMsTnlV- clfirdfai^__ ----- hearty meals needed for a grow­ Just com pleted rcfliiLshlng "Wilh Bradley, we work with ing family or whips up some When you hang groups of pic- ‘ oak table and three chairs, him M) that he may achieve of her .specialties such as her tures rely on your eye. ndvlses A fourth chair was found re* whiit he Is capable of and love famous chocolate cuke or an Willma Shyrnck, home furnish­ conlly. so her next project is and accept him as he Is.” npple pudding with brown sugar ings apeclnlist of the University alreiidy In' llie making. Another "Kach child must l)0 treated sauce. project was the refinishlng of of Idaho Extension Service. as an Individual able to express One of the most active rriom- an ttS-year old bedroom set far* Don't worry alwut right or his own Ideas and l>e Included bers of Ihe Kim berly L ad le s - wrong arrangements. her son, Bradley. Thu bed was in fam ily convorsiitlons anil Pioneer club, which named-her - • -There lire-no-hnrd and fnst - made with square.ualla.______-projccis„'nicy._jilso-_nccd_cn*_ -ihelr-~r« Sho also has made several r. rules. About the only thing you coiiragement In their own ac- cr. Mrs, Claiborn came lo Mag­ candlesticks from old liible legs should bo sure about Is that tho tivllies, IDlsclpline should bo. ic Valley with her porents, Mr. ant} enjoys rcilolng antique pic­ • iM ttom cdHcs of pictures on tho firm, but flexll)lc enough to ac­ and Mrs. W. R. Allen, wlien ture frames. She works parltlmo lowest row arc In a straight cept the fads and ideas of tho fihecn an ac­ cialist, It Is n good Idea to try She also enjoys golfing, at;, since her m arriage lo M r. Clai- tive m cm bar of Iho Twin i^iHs born 22 years ago. Aclivo In tho piclureti on the floor before though sho doesn’t play as often ■ County Ciiuncli for Kelardcd you put them pn tho wall. Put as she—would like. She noted the community, both sho and children and tho Good Shonherd her husband have been co-nresi- them on iho rug and movo ' Hint "everyday" cooking was Home auxlllnry, a I.utncran them arounil until the arrange­ tho household chore sho dfslikcd- denls of ihc LIT, of whicii sho Spray 0.00, Refill 4.00 home for hiUHlicanpc«J children lioldn a life membership, ond m ent plenses you. Personal ant- tho most, but she loves to en­ at Terra Bella, Calif. She lin> tsfaclion is Important because tertain. they are co-lcader.s of ifio F u ­ also assisted In any possible ca­ ture Livestock 4-M club. 'They - It in you that >vill bo seeing Life' at homo revolvo.s around pacity at the Hafiter Scats cent­ have worked In this group nino tho pleturos moat frequently. To her husband Bud, an Insurance er wliere Bradley was u sUident years. niajco an’orrangcment, you mny for three years. start by nutting one picture in hang tho bottom eilgen no lower • Sho has been active In com­ In addition, Mrs. Clailwrn be­ CHANEL tho middle and plnolng others Uian tlte m ark. munity affairs, serving as Jay- longs lo Magic Star Chapter No. .around it. Or you mny atArt You can use paper patterns C'Htlo president.a« well os hold­ 80, Order of Eastern Star; chap­ «t ono ond of the ares and work to help gel your grouping from ing several other local offices. ter D of Iho PHO Sistorltood toward tho other, door to wall, Cut paper the size Sho is also a m em ber of Ihe o nd Readers’ G uild. j s, M for holnht, consider heads. , of the pictures, ‘Mark where tho Country Sido Circle social club. Recently business for her hu»> [ iHilvii, 9 0 -■‘lult-Bit whore th® hooks will so and tape tho paper Sho is currently serving as band necessitated a meeting In • ( to the w all. If the setup ,secrQ|ary___ -...... of Omega...... Chapter,...... Spokane.,So.the trip was sclipd- 1',‘iV t h * top of tho head. T o avoid doesn’t suit you, you can change Beta Sigma Phi, whose mem- ul?d by way of Moscow so that neads knocking agnlnst tlte art, 11. For flexIblUty and froshnesB, ' hers selected her to represent " they could deliver homemade 144 Main Ava. So. and to prevent Interference with . awHch picture# from ', time to them as the outslandlng home- goodies sent by various Maglo the effect the pictures produce. Ume.. . 1 " . m aker. V alley residents -lo sons an d 23 \ W l The Tape Totals Are Always Lower!

OUR EVERrOAY WHOLESALE FOOD PRICES ADH UP TO A LOWERJOT/ ■ ■ BREEZ-WAY WAS PLANNED TO GIVE YOU THE LOWEST PRICES POSSIBLE - NO FANCY FRILLS- NO STAMPS-NO CARRY OUT t ____BOYSjSi_THE_LOWESTJ>RICES JN-MAGIC-VAlLEYl- WIDE SELECTION ★★★ TOP QUALITY, TOO!

COME SEE FOR YOURSELFi

BREEZ-WAY market Kimberly Road in Twin Falls Jerome Family Not Only Collects All JVP®s-Of-Antiques, It Uses Them * By CHARLOTTE JACOBSON start with the Idea of painting longed .to her mother-in-law, Jane’s picture, but when it was Mrs. R. J. Frceeman to be used Timcs-News Corrospondcnt finished, there was an unmis­ as a hope chest for the Free­ JEROME - The Boyd Free­ takable resemblance. This m an’s only daughter, Jane. Mrs.' man family not only collccts frame was found in Boyd's sis­ Freeman then wonts to find antiques; they use them, study ter's barn. three more trunks to fix for her them anS' know th<> historical three boys to use as brides* value of each one. She has the trivets, hbout 56 in all, ready to mount bn some boxes. V ' - .. Mrs. Freeman, known to her kind of board to hang in the Clocks, carriage' lamps, horse friends as M. J., was chosen dining room. The bottles grace harnessesr sleigh bells—pottery as a rcpreS9ntatlve homemaker shelves in a flooor-length window ■ by the St. Benedict's Hospital beside the doorway to the patio. guild, for whom as scrapbook One trivet Chris found in the the best part of going into ihelr chairman she won a state award Shoshone dump, is-, called a home is that there isn’t one eight years In a row. Hoj^-cll H., plain; the oldest triv­ item anywhere In the house than “Our.family has lived with et is one which belonged to one of them can’t tell you about; old things and have been aware George Washington thcj» bought where they found It and why . of them all our lives. Wo take at an auction while in Maine it is considered antfque. ; a keen interest in finding out one summer. Upon being asked'how to go V about them . I guess that’s bo* Even the patio is a work of obout researching antiques, causc we have two history ma­ art, incorporating the antiques Mrs. Freeman said there are ' jors in the family,” Mrs. Free­ found by the Freemans. T he publications of antique.and col-’ man laughs. , • ■ . floor is of Oakley rock; "We le c to rs ite m s ,------— The Freemans and fhefr four picked rock for ages; tons ot "The field Is endless; there "• MRS. PAYE COLE Is bolding a little nlghtsult for a baby children take excursions to rock,” laughed Mrs. Freemon. • -fs always something that opens The patio couch Is a buckbo'ard, ^whlcb is “guaranteed to get her a son.” Tbo suit original^ • ghost towns in Utah, Idaho and whole new areas' to be inves­ was purchased for one of ber frieods with the same guarao- Nevada, old mining camps in refinlshed and cushioned fo r tigated,” she says. comfort. The coffee table is an tee. The friend later received her first son. Mrs. Colo has the Sawtooths, and even the Sho* iron stove bottom. These items For instance, she had some — — lost 157: pounds .40 get > soa. She previously lost 6S pounds shone dumpground* has boea came from the Gerlock, Nev.,' marbles they found in the old and gave birth to » daughter. the subject of their searches for old.items of Interest. desert area. There Is a statue Horn Silver Mine ghost town of St. Francis, made by MJ, in Utah, she has 'to find out . They look for anything, brfng about. Her grandmother h ad It home, repair it if needed, Mrs. Freeman standing in a shelter made by Chris, her son. lived in the town of Frisco, the Young Heyburn Expectant and use it artistically and inter­ town near the .Horn Silver Mine, estingly in their home. Hanging on the dining room wall is a plaque Mrs. Fryman' so the^i were especially Inter* When they lived at Thousand made of some Union discharge, ested to see" "what they could Mother Loses 157 Pounds Springs on the Snake River, papers, the family found on the find there. - they explored the Oregon Trail Oregon Trail. She was forced She said this town Is In • HEYBURN ~ In 1963, Mrs. weight loss would take ire of finding arrowheads, mortar and to do something with them as - gulley and the water washing William' (Faye) Cole dieted off her ailments. pestles, pottery and manv other the paper was falling apart from down all these years has washed es pounds and within a few- She started rldlng/a bicycle, itcms~"discarded bji the pioneers the hard use resulting from be­ away the soil In the graveyard inonlhs became the mother of worked in the garden and -even on their trek westward. ing carried b a c k »n d forth to and the coffins are lyitig on « beautiful baby girl. Mrs..- F reem an thinks the school by the Freeman children. • top of the ground.' . ..Now, in January, 1970, the whole • thing started with th e U nder the p la que to whfch the There is antique coJlecf/ng for Coles are expecting another she would call or friend on- finding of old bottles. Trivets C ivil W a r memento- Is attached, collecting’^ sake ond there is baby. Mrs. Cole started working . the telefAone fot^ords of en- became her main interest and Mrs. Freeman has placcd an . antique collecting as the Free- • for this moment In 1967 and couragement one more from there the field becomes antique shotgun used on the man family collects. They live has since lost 157 pounds. They endless. The more they find, the Deadwood, Idaho, stage. with and love every one and ■ :onsld— . .. —m o te —there ■ is ■ to—learn.—^ c h - ---As-one-looka-Into-the-TV-roora- — tho-Freeman-homo-16-not-only--- eri'ng Uie “extra"effort" in the 157 to live each hour, each day and item creates a new area of In- from the living room, one can an interesting place to visit, ft . pounds lost, their friends feel each week as It came. terest and research, hardly see the television set for truly reflects the "home and they have earned this honor. - Her husband was "just great" xhe Freeman home reflects it is covered by Mrs. Freeman's family" atmosphere'which can •■Actually.” said Mrs,- Ctole, . . .n p p - .n ^ e r.c p m p la in c d o r.c om *--- tho-interest in antiques and the latest project. She Is refinlshing - be created by living with and **we would like a son, but would mented about his wife s shape. ortistic ability of MJ and the ond lining a trunk which be­ the artistic use of ontiques. When things would get real . . . be just fls happy with another re.?t of the fam ily. A.^ one enters tough, the family would eat healthy girl." the living room It Is h ard to what mother ate, or (o make It The Coles have another daugh­ decide Just which arco of the easier for her to get through ter, Connie, who they adopted home Is the most interesting. the night, M r. Cole would undcr- SPECIAL PURCHASE in September, liM>3, just a few Is it the walnut commode, ob­ tained In Dolse, w hich com e a cafe for supper. . C ole, who claim s to have from on estate in Walla Walla, '— the-most-patlent-ond-consldorato- The hum orous Incident hap- FACTORY CLOSE-OUT • pened arOuHa~ChrlstmnrrtImtr- jygsh.? Over it-liangs nn-ornatc husband In Magic Valley, gained after Mrs. Cole had lo.st so much gilded, beveled glass mirror and JOO pounds the flrSt year after upon w hich sets a gone-wlth- their June 20, 1959, marriage. weight. She bjcnclied her hair blond and .she and Mr. Cole the-Wind lamp. Her doctor put her on a diet strirted to go out Koclally. Or is it the brickcd wall with two months before Connie was Mr. Cole, however, bcgon get­ Franklin stove fircplnce In the a d ^ t e d . ting the reputation of a "step* corner of the living room? The CoCole fam ily felt their lives 10 per.” It seems ihiu no one, not Tlie family collecied the ■ wore really full and comnleto bricks for ihe corner fireplace , w ith everything going for tliei even their close friends recog- ^ . j j i i c d "M t . Colo’s now w ife,” and M J said her friends couIdnSt HOGVER - ...... -xlng ce­ g lic got so .she . -...... anccs. ment on' the living room carpet. over and pick up objccta On the Mrs. Cole has changed In bolh Around the stnVe are m any VACUUM CLEANERS' floor, .ihe couldn't stand on a personality and appearonce and items of note: The bottom of chair to get in the cupboard, UPRIGHT & TANK TYPE has learned new habits so she n scale, used for a woodbox, she couldn't cross her knees and w on 't slip buck into her old from a ghost town In Nevada; her little girls had to sit on Ihe problems. She hnn found new the pin’ to a end of her knees instead of « AT PRICES SO LOW energy and ambition that she on'Hio hearth ------... "normal'' lap. . before thought wos impossible. T ra il below Pocatello. TJte mon* When chest pains siaried, she She can see a whole new t(4 clock, which belonged to Mr, We don't consulted her doctor and he told world out there that needs to be Boyd's grandmother, still in h er because of high blood pros- dare mention Bure she had^ to do somethlnR discovered.- *‘It Is a world that working condition, hanging on I have never seen fwfore," ah© the wail, A Delft plate bcsfdo to save her health If she wanted said, "U makes you want to try II. A toothpick holder, dating them . . . to raise her family. everything good there Is to try 1802, belonged to MJ's grond- A fter she lost al>out 30 twundn, — every sport there is to take mothor. With toothpicks In It, she joined the TOPS Pamper Club In Joly, 1007. She attended u p .” . It resembles a porcupine. Besides the 187 pounds she every meeting and went through Or looking farther, beside the has lost, she has gone from a front window; a fern stand from actual tnental and physical suf- >46 dress size to o H. Although Layaw /oy ..ferlng to lose her extra weight. Walla Wnlla, East 1-oko Stylo her baby is due in just three fo r When others were eating tasty doting about I8B5; w ith a beau­ m ore m onths; she Is able to dishes, Mrs. Cole wos drinking tiful rose Mednllinn bowl about C hrlitm ai wear a ploin H thot U not ice water, chewing on crushcd 00 yonrs old serving as a va.se $ 5 .0 0 WILL HOLD 50% maternity foshlon. flitting on It, Ifils bowl belonged Ice or during periods of sheer' Her weight problem Is not desperation, would "chow heck to Mrs. Boyd's grandmother and licked and she knows it's « chal< originally sat on the back of out of piece of cclcry." lengo she will always have. Out SALE! USED & TRADE-INS At one time before her dieting, a bar in Park City, Utah, where with her husband and children, she tipped the scales at 207 and miners threw pennies Into it for friends ond TOPS Club mem­ the orphans. All leadlnK names Including was dlRcouraged with the bers helping, she believes she 00 thought of having to lose over She said the bowl wna In per­ Hoover, Kirby and others will keep ‘'losing" and remoln 100 pounds before anyone would fect condition when they got It, aa low a s ...... • i o A "w in n e r." but while being used In an ac- even notice. » ¥ ♦ She went through periods of Jivo family home, It has a crock dlkourogcment, exhaustion and F U a F L fN O in It from being knocked from during one oftornoon of strenu­ Have a nirtg with fur this sea­ Ihe table. ous exercising, . she literally son, if.vour budget doesn't allow A bove Ihjfi. table an d bow l Is VACUUM CLEANERS •'crawled” from her exercl» foi' (he real thing, “fake It” with nn ovat fi'ame which originally room to another room. Uut she vests, bags, hats,, skirts, held- 'a ' concave mirror, Mrs. OF IDAHO refused to give up the atrvSAle, dresses, pants ond coats in Freeman has paln|ed a lecture 2nd Avs. E. and Blua Lakes Blvd. N. ' .jemembertng the words of her zebra, leopard, mink, rubblt and of a mile girl and put It Into doclor« who pointed out that a la m b . tlie frame, She said she didn't Carrying Mail, Decorating Cakes Occupies Homemaker GOODING'— Working as a event was her h e r parents' 2Sth substitute lura] m ail carrJer and weddJng anniversary. spending three days maWng However,-«he has stopped this •large decorated cakes for spe­ "hobby” the last few years be- cial occasions are among the .cause her boys participate in accomplishments of Mrs. Lyle sports end like to have her at­ Thomas, who was chosen by tend their games. 20(h Century Club. In 1966 she became a substi­ In the past 15 years; she esti­ tute rural carrier for Harry mates she has made about 600 Vaughan who' taught her . "the cakes, most of which were for ropes" on the 75-mlle route. She weddings.. These usually took said,she was looking for some­ three days to prepare. The first thing different to do and "it cake she made for a special. is a challenge which has turned out to be fun.'* Like many farm wives, she . Irrigates, drives farm equipment andrheips with the milking in Misuse O f the Thomas’ Grade A dairy. One of her specialties is teach­ ing new-born . calves to drink Disposer Great from a pall and raising them UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. without their mother. (UP!) — Joseph A. McCurdy, The Thomas family attends extension agricultural engineer the Lutheran Church in •Gooding at the Pennsylvania State Uni­ where she is a Sunday school versity, says misuse is the teacher. greatest cause of premature She_points out she would not failures of a food disposer. be able to accomplish as much McCiiidy-gives-these, hints fof--- ns-she does w ithout the cooper- safe disposer operation: » . •—Refer to your unit's service BACON AND PEANUT- manual to find out what it can BUTTER SANDWICH and can not handle. ■peanut B utter ■ —Mix fibrous materials, such Sliccd Bacon as cornhusk$ and peapods, with _Stuffed Olives . . other kinds of food wastes and Buttered Bread feed them into the disposer Lcttuce gradually.-- -— — f-uii'wiviiPan>broil baconu u w ii aii\t tmd Uitii.tdrain “IT'S FUN TO LOOK up things In the Bellevue library,” say the children of the com-, -After the waste is groun* --- v?c11. Crumble and mix with munlty. Rose and-Tom Bergln, children-of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bergln cheek out books let the unit run with plenty of' chopped olives and peanut but­ rom the librarian, Mrs. Ralph Griffin. While she has no children of her own, Mary Griffl^ f cold water for at least two min­ ter. Spread on bread and add a and her husband In a sense have all the chlldrco in the village and cherish them. utes. leaf of lettuce. —Bulky food wastes, such as citrus fruit skins, watermelon TURKEY DELIGHT* -- rinds and corncobs should be A large sUce ol coW turkey Bellevue Librarian Opens Commercials cut or broken into small pieces breast before going into the disposer. A slice of colby cheesc ______ially-n...... -DooFS-To-Village^Chilelren----- —EorJiy^Are bottle caps, paper, string, glass, Spread thick slices of French chemicals and solvents do not bread with butter, top with B E L L E V U E — Mr.s. M ary majority of people are, like the Profitable fall into the disposer. Russian dressing. Add turkey, Grirrin insists she is just an Griffins, held in the rcspect of Byr GAY < PAULEY —Grind all food in cold water cheese and lettuce. Serve witli o rdipary person, but to the their fcllow-citizens, that they U P !I W1 om en’s E ditor only. • potato chips, pickles or olives. children of Bellevue .slie is an feel they are not news. NEW. YORK (UPI)-When a exciting lady, who, as villitge •boby earns more than its llhrai'iiin, guides tlteni in cxplor- parents nnd, a little old lady in . Ing new worlds of knowledge. her 70’s earns-more than her iiLT gontle sm ile and under- Care Given sons, you might wonder what O UR A N N U A L atnnding heart go with them on the world Is coming to. all ihoit' journeys. While she hns • But this happens in the world no cl;lldrcn of her own, all the To Furniture _oX — television--- commercials— —Chtiariii oniiis quiul viIi« kc r where a top talent can make hers nnd she and her husband, fro m *150,000 to J175.000 a year. Ralph, cherish them nil. Is Important It's enough to send each of us -She first started working as Care given to furnlshlnj-s is scurrying from hoasehold and important in prolonging life and lil>rari:tn as a scrvice for the office right to talent rcpre.sen- getting the muximum use from Belllevue Civic club, to which tutives like Richard Voights .she belongs and which group each item. Proper care is neces­ nnd Marje Fields. Who says sponsored the library. When it sary in keeping furniture looking that you and 1 can't .soil soap began eight years ago, the new and frobli, even after years and toothpdstel IS IN FULL S W IN G small collcctlon of donated of use. But hold It. First off, not books and those purchaKcd with Here are some tips In caring , everyone doing tite sales pitch Coine In & See The Values Offered funds raised by the club's proU the Amuricai) I'urnituru Marl’s for ^ampoo, pet food or cereul w «»—housed—in —ft—im a ll— the American Xurnilurc Mart’s gots Into fncomo brackets D IN EH E A N D mom ih the basemutU of the 'Iltime DecUraimB--|jTrni-L —eomparftble-to-tlmse-of Yoiiih Center. Book.” tion presidents. More, likely, the Four years ago a small li­ —Avoid exposing wood sur­ average Is 510,000 to *25,000 a year. W ell, that’s Btlll w orth mnNGTKJDWTDEPTr brary building was erectud on faces to extroine iieot, cold or (second floor) Main street and the library now hum idity. deserting housewifery or the atenographic pool, you say. is supported by tax ninnoy. She — U»c only the polishes recom­ keeps It open fro m noon to 2 VolghLi and Pields say It is a mended for furniture. A self- lucro tlve bualness. B ut brea k­ p.m. nnd 7 to 0 p.ni, Wednesday pollshlng floor wax, when used ing Into ic is a little like making ..and from 1 ta.3 p.m . Satur- on furniture, will soften the dajtH. It on Broadway. , ... finish. "The competition is enor­ A nd always' during- these —Avoid exposing Indoor furni­ mous," said Miss Fields. "An titnns there Is n ri"0rl(iii);s to tho Wood Ulvor — !.iiinliuitewiitur with a clean, lalent agency, then with an nd e r ," Uut slio nnd her luishiinil, Soft cloth. Do not wet Joints agency casting talent. The - who Is entployed by this county inasmucli ns glued parts n)Iglit desire for acting arndually liiuhway doparltnonl live the become loosened. Work fast, on f4»ded. qiilet life of n Hinall western u smiill area and dry < ulcldy. But the one thing that puts town which has nut yet heon —C a r b (» n tetrach oridu Is the commercial nalesnmn or ’ toiiehcd b y ih o nmOnens of mod- hn rm ful ti] {(ju|n m lfber pad­ w om an there In the Nrst place ' ern unrest. ding. Alwnya usif fritlihlly on Ix a talent few of us have— that 204 Main Ava. N. Phone733-71Il A n d it Is bccattffc the .vnst the uurlace of fnhrics. for ucllng..

\36 o/flihfc*4*i9v»vVrWin^Pcm»i)Iddl,o ^mia^'X>at6boC2M9A9 IS

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aM A iiiM oas^ WE CARE ABOUT YOUR FAMILY. . . and we know you care about nutrition, selection and economy. • _We sel IjonlyJU.S. Q.A.Xhoice_B_eei.,_pjD_Lkjand^ lamb trimmed right to assure flavor and elim­ inate waste. Fresh fish, and locally-grown poul­ try, too. -^<3urprodaGeis-guaranteed^resh"X3r^T3r“rnD^ ney back. • Baked goods are fresh daily in our own in­ store bakery! And-our-deIieatessen4s^specially-designedJQr_ , , busy homemakers like you. • Low prices and friendly service always! *JUST ASK YOUR NEIGHBORS!

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Are you one of those house­ When storing food in yo ur re­ wives whose fam ily hat* dcclcJed frigerator, never let two glass ft would love to take o week-end bottles stand side by side with­ trip or vacation in a trailer or out a 'Separiitlng buffer o f some cam per? sort. One hint: jysu can use a If so, you'll want to know man's worn-out stretch sock as something, about p a c k in g , a buffer, wrapping the botllcs ciolhes, food and other essen- ' in it. Not beautiful, but very tiais before - you set out. It's utllltorian. dirrercnC from u k in g care~ of Try to pack the rcfrigerotor your own house"Or apartment. solid, so the contents won't bounce around when you go over More and more people are the bumps In the road; ta k in g to the woods in recrea­ Dishes can be a problem , too. tio n a l vehicles. Sum m er is tiie Store them in racks with a pil­ most popular time, of course, low or some sponge rubber W- but growing interest in skiing tween the rack and the cabinet and other winter sports has cre­ overhead. Rolls of paper towel­ ated a winter use for these ve­ ing also can be used to hold hicles. too. dishes in place. L ast >;?ar more thon -100,000 Use plastic or wood hangers recreational vehicles — mostly — clothes fall off wire hangers trailers and campers — were when you travel. b u ilt com pared witi> only 130,000 Finolly, before Hubby pushes five years earlier. - the starter button check to see Trailers, which may have ei­ that no knives, dishes, toilet ther two o r four wiiet:ls, are articles and similar items arc hitched onto the rear ol a car. lying around loose. and pulled; campers, w h ich ^ . X. ■>(. don't have wheels of their own, ore slid onto the bed of small pickup trucks and are transport­ Spare Machine ed as an integral part of the . iru c k . - — From Mothers When they start taking an in- 'terost -in—these—veliicles.- m ost- --BURLINGTON.-Vt. (UPI) — - fa m ilies prefer to rent. T hat of­ Dishwashers may save mother ten stimulates tliem to- buy at but who'll save the disiiwasher a later date. from mother? W hen you're renting for the “Disijwashers aren’t miracle first time and preparing, for m achines; tliey have to be help­ your first trip, perhaps these ed,” ^ .says F aith P rior, home suggesUons on packing fro m economist at the-University ol Harold Henry, vice president of Vermont Extension Services. U niversal C.T.T. Credit C orpor­ “ A ll the m anufacturers e m p h a­ ation, will be helpful. HThe firm size the importance of proper financed the purchase of all , loading, adequately hot water, types of, recreational vehicles. '-and; the corrcct dishwashing de­ The basic point you've got to tergent.” remember is to balance the ve- Dishwater should be hotter hicle^-side-to-side-and-front-to— —than'your'hand'can'iaker'Aboui" UM artist, Mrs. Don (Judy) Atkinson, chatrmon ol the K olcht^ SuiTVallcy Ub- • rear. Don't dump cyejythlng in M5 to IGO degrees is best for rd, holds, a tissue paper collage done by one of her pupils this )^st summer. She one ,ccifically vy article In an upper cabinet for disiiwashcrs is the o nly 4e- can act like a hammer on a . tergent to use in a dishwasher, rough rond, knocking the bottom* “ Dther detergents cause suds to ren Can Oyercome Inhibitions out o f the camper's cabinets. build up and clog the machine, Pack your ciolhes and gear Mrs. Prior said. into fibcrboard cartons and thon “Dishwashers work best wUh ainting, Ketchum Artist SayS slip the cartons into the over- conditioned soft w ater. Excei>- —tionally-hirrd“WUtcr mlhfirai dei“ — '‘fincournBlng er. when she asked the class on (he_ floor, mimickiofl; their w ill stoy In place while’ you’re posits leave film and spots oa whnt they like, to show motion and speed in . “mother, busy in her-adjoiiiiuu rolling.along. your dlslies,” she s aid, . ble limits, gives their work,, ho produced one of studio. : to express their the best. ities," says Mrs. She siiid the children especial- Lkinson, Sun Vul- ly like sputter paintings'whore they used straw s to blow tlie New-Fangled ktkinson, w ho Is different colored globs of paint Ihe Kotchum-.Sun over their pnper, and on each bixird of direci- other and (heir lencher, too. Version Is ANNOUNCING A >rovo(l iier tliciiry "A fter they had i)lown to their • hi .summer u|M>n hearts’ contcnt they studied tlie NEW WINXIiR TIRE. .seven weeks of dcHlgns th e y had created nnd Old Favorite 2 h(‘ld at the li- each one toln •'n artlc tt Dread Ptidding” Is me,am to him. Thu hoys w6re 'n “ rllsl hcrseW ...... & ”ncw-(u»isted" vomion u( a genarations-old favorite. taiij'ht some .ID- Inhibitions. The girls' -Jl^his-lujjt) y-rccipe-t pre.m themncives---- -nin the' r'ui'iins, clnnanim t aixl all- . laiifth at thein, but (lie hoys Hpicc so often founii In bread could care loss," she noted. is .so rohtriclcd pu(l)ii:i;est accom plishm ent of the is Koud-for them nia nartlctt pcam-tluv^^—been— (hoy lik e ," tin; —cniirsp -wnK ' lhDt the children added, Wo think you’ll-agree 1 actuullv thou|>h( tlioy wlmc ca()> si shi) nave each thnl thu HutiUu fhwor ivvsvl II. siiect of ordl- ahle 01 doing soniethlng which added moi.stiire are welcome as­ they hadn ’t (liojiKtit tlwy coiiUl ipcr iiiul as.sort- sets. do oeforo. She felt ahe had gain­ hri|thtc-si colors 0ARTI.ETT BREAD PUDDING ed (heir completo confidence .she gave i.lu'in 3 or 4 fresh C alifornia liitri- through the painting medium. words, huch as lct( pears Currently she i.s busy in her o o o o f v c A n ’ "nnnie" anil ]A »;''p lem on juice hnmu stiKlio com pleting com* tliom to choost' 2 cups dny-old broad ciihi'i missions for paliKingH and also a thoiiglit nictnre Vi Clip m elted butler or working on original skctchos for A ll Kuvu Uien^. m nrRnrlnc rmirals on the walls of the now ^ ^ ^ ’•.SPOLYBLAS was amuzhiK the Yf cup sugar nursery at thu Sun Valley hos­ • Widnr llitm «l*n(lQrd winter llrai OS llicy prodiic- ‘A toas|>oon .*ialt • Lqwur profllo Htvai •Ulita'rida pital. ‘A teaspoon ground all-splco 9 B ) allio',' she sniil. Another asslgnmont Is doing • t’liiiind for tlm opllon^l lattalUllon of Safaly tiio children to tonniioon cinnam on the interior decorations for the H|ilkn Bluiln* , *43 re (;ood lit an y cup raisins new Alklniion M arket In Cilacoh- A • 1'olyu.t.ir conJ body and fiIior|I«ii knlli act ( »:o helps over- toKullior to ll|lit •qiilrin for additional dro 1(1 bl square, which will recrciilo Pare, halve and core pear«; hitliins. the Old Went. cube to m a k e thrc« cups, Miic H ho afraid 1m • a *2 •hiililoi llrei prohlbllsd In italei ot I‘or Mrs, Atkinson, nninting with lemon Juice, Mix bread Ark., Tax.. I,a„ M l«i„ C*. ft lU w all th ln « wroi^B. all . Is not only her profcHston, but cubes, butter, flugar, aalt am) . vns Mcrilihle. .so also n happy meanr) of expres­ npice.i. P la c e on(}-tulf of the wo M0W6Y DOWW WITH APPBOVED CREDm > go nhond and sion for her three children. A bread cube combination In but­ waate«l to. I.at- visitor to their home on the tered, shallow one and one-lm(f of n in ' quart casHcrole; top with pear.H. TIRE >rrs O U T F IT raisins nn

This statement Is literally true. Because of the newer methods we- use to build homes V O l^O can put you Into your new home in MUCH LESS TIME and'AT MUCH LESS COST. These are NOT pre-fab type homes . . . VOLCO has the equipment to build you most any typel o f home you can choose from the hundreds of plans w e have available^. You can vary the style to C a t a l i n a , suit you and we still can save you thousand^of dol­ lars. FROM A SMALL COTTAGE FOR THOSEWHO ARE THINKING OFTHEIR j.want-to,be in your new FIRST-HOME . . . TO A HOME OF MORE ELABORATE-STYLING FOR 3 for Christmas see us THOSE W H O NEED MORE ROOM . . VOLCO HAS"THE ANSWER. W e us^ o n l/ 'fhe FINEST MAfERIALS INCLUDING kiln dried lumber. Trussed roof system Spacious rooms Pre hung doors Hardwood"floors Bonded shingle roof Lifetime siding Quaijty workmanship throughout Plumbing installed - • Electrical system installed And many other features o f your choosing

LET V O LC O 'C /ie C a re ^ HELP Y O U W ITH THE VOLCO BUILDERS SUPPLY PLANNING TW IN FALLS JEROME BU R LE Y 1390 HlRhland SIB Woat Main 3 0 3 N. 'O /erland O F YO U R 733-5071 . 324-4321 6 7 8 a a e a "EVERYTHING TO BUILD ANYTHING" N E W H O M E Cookie Bars Are Treat For School Days I t ’s that t/m e o f year sgafn? Back-to-school and the beginning of another harvest season for the California raisin industry. To celcbratc these two occasions in “ A-pJus style, we suggest trying a liand at our easy lo make, easy to tote, Ciiocolate Rafsin' O a t Bars. A minimum of w^rk involved here' — sim ply sandwich a de- Icctable ichocolnle raisin filling in between loyers of an oat, butter, brown sugar and flour ..mixture. After baking — cool, cut and they're ready to go. Being good packers and keep­ ers, these hearty cookic bars are ■'ideal for lunches and

to add this rccipc to your year 'round repertoire of favorites. When packing tliat s ch o o l lunch, don’t forget raisin "little packs.” Bursting with vitamins. “ rtiinerals and natural' fruit siip~ ar. these miniature morsels are quick energy snacks anytime, anywhere. And while we're talk­ ing about raisins, rest assured this juar's harvest in the sunny San Joaquin Vallevj of California will bring us plenty of the mini fruit to enjoy all during the coming year. CHOCOLATE RAISIN OAT B A RS . It 1 (15-ounce) can sweetned condensed milk 2 (1-ounce) squares Unsweetened chocolate 2 cups C alifornia seedless ' raisins SPECIAL TREATS for special occasions. Try tbese new . and,pretzels. A mert^ menagerie of Icc cream anImaU' and 1 cup butter suggestions for ft new twist for two o)d ravorltes, kc cream funny faces...... I ’/n cups brown .suRar (packed) . .. IVa teaspoons .vanilla . ______2 cups sifted flour *4 teaspoon salt Pressure-Cook SHellfish For True Sea-Fresh Flavor ■/3 teaspoon soda 2'/e obtained froien. ' F resh hard- or soft-shcU crab* % cup mayonnaise — bi««*-flour-resifte.d-wllh-Kalt-and__ ------SAVOIUL-SHRIME______-' -cup-cmii-^uuut:cup_chlll^aucfi______soda with oats. Add (o creamed “ BUI a i n b o often, shellfTsir i"c u p ■bdnnrg-watef----- :----- loses Its distinctive sea-fresh fla­ S alt 1 • Hcup minced celery mixture, mixing until crum­ cup minced green onion bly. vor in the cooking. The tendency 2 teaspoons lemon juice or hrim p 1$ .to couk it too long >ln Km vhiegar 2 cups boiling water 1 teas|)oon liorseradlsh Pack half of crumbly mixture Salt and pepper (o taste Into greiiscd 0xl3x2-inch pan. .' mucli witter, and texture as well 1 small onion, sliced . as delicacy get lost. Mix all ingredients and chill. Cover with chocolate raisin filN 1 bay loaf teaspoon black pepper W h ic h is why the pressure P lunge crabs into boiling wa- 1 tablespoon caraway seed. Makes about one and three- ing. Sprinkle wlili remainine quarters cups. criimhly mixture. Buko in mod­ cooker is fo r cwiklnjs shell­ ler lo cover. Remove crabs and 2 tnblespoons vinegar fish. Tor the very sam e rea.sou PInce shrimp on' rack with- TANGY CAPER SAUCE erately hot oven, .175 degrOGS, thut it'.s great for cookliij; ven- water in pressure cooker. Ad CI.AM S • -U'.*! -bi(;{!er-lhim .iilif fi shioned- -Shrimp, slciuncr clams — you'ri;_ _Mrs^ Jay _rowles, county home cream; stir In seasonings nnd maiires.ses, with kliigsi/.ir. a n d In for n great flavor surprise econoirilcs iigeiU, “ SoTt shell or I.lttle Neek'clamW cnpers.’ Makes n generous, cup, • <»ii't*nslzo n m d c h 'best Hi;llers. when they're pressure - cooked. 'Ilie tiest cuts and how much Salt H- H. I'luns are afoot to drop the old NL'n.s|£o the (itnplu two-pcrhon shell call for no miiuites at ail a USDA bulletin that cun he on rack wlih water la pressure water should , ronjovo skunk lIUlltrUHH. — the InHlant tho pressure reg­ obtained free from Ihe county cooker and add salt. Closo cover odor from aicar. fvloilcrn mnttroHseH have ulator begins to rock, they're home agent. ' flnuioih surfaces — no m o r o done I When you buy a whole car- ttiniiig huitons to poke the slt!e|>- Since it's so fast and easy casH or a side, Including IhiIIi cr,. lixtra-thlck layers of pad- to pressure-c(H)k shellfish, you'll fore and hind quarters, you get dinj? ninko them softer and hnve lo satisfy your creative tho whole range of cuts, hlgb YAMAHA mnn; comfortublc. Tiekintis ore w ith a Hiince. (P lease, ust and low priced, and some you prettier and nuire colorful. leiiKin and butler for Ihc lob- might nol nornuilly buy, surh an I.niex foam riihher miitlresse.s flters iiixt c la m s !) Two eandl- l)rlsket, shrirl rlhs nnd shank. ProfosslonnI quality fiiill the now, m odels, he- are C re a m y If ynti tUw'l m v lliis wide i>s- at fnmdy pr/cos ruur.e they never nei-d to ho Chill iinil Tangy Caper Sauces. sortm ent wVTwJff'Pdlls; IdaJio .’Trtdoy, Oefobei U4i}W69 Thrifty housewives buy Falls Brand Boneless Hams for the ecorn omy of It . . . there Is absolutely no waste. Smoked to perfection, your h a m Is tasty and so pleasing.

Come out and see us sometime . . . we welcome your visit. Bring . your friends with you. We want you to see how clean our plant is.

Falls Brand Meats are packed with great care by the experts at Iridependent Meat Company TWIN FALLS, IDAHO '^ F rid a y , Octbbof ili969 .jTJtViD|i-Now», -Twlrv.FQll»/,Wqho Lamb Chop Js More Powerful Than Karate Chop For Women Br* PATRICIA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPI)-Males. according to funnies and telievislon comedy, carry around pea-slzcd brains. That makes it easy to lead them by _ the nose. ____ - -'r. Males, according to females ' militant about gaining ' equal rights, rculre Iiaratc chops to bring them Into line." Nix on either view, purr founders of the Pussycat League, which prefers to iuve women talii to males in soft gather than shrill tones and - treat them as love objccts rather than hostile competitors. “We believe that the lamb chop is more powerful than the karate chop and that the way to achieve a better society Is with men not against them, Jeannie Sakol, one of the league’s three founders -said In a n interview. • Miss ' Sakol belongs to Mensa, the society that admits only geniuses to membership. She said her IQ Is 192 She is a New York ad agency • UNUSUAL-AREA'RUG, made by combining thcce, Icoo, consultant on the sexual alti­ tasselcd, hexaRonal nigs, provides a siunning baM for ctegant tudes of men and author ot a dining In (he old world tradition. Hie rug, made of Allied new book, "Gumdrop, Gum- Chemical Corporation’s new Source fiber, has a subtle shim* drop. Let Dowir Your Hair" mering quality thanlts to the fiber’s unique ablllly (o reflect (Prentice Hall). Producer Da­ ' Slid refract light. Highlights from (he e'rystal chnndciler vid Merrick describes it as overhead create a fascinating interplay of light and shade "se.xy. witty, incisive.” effects on the rug's luxurious pile surface. The other pussycat founders ore Lucianne . Goldberg, a magazine writer and former - Washington lobbjjst, and Joan Happiest Mothers Have Had Elbnum, Harvard Law School graduate practicing In “ New York. The average age' -of founders: . Over 30; average Careers Before Marriage dress size, 14; average height, AFGHAN*i;^D SWEATER-are some of the results of the tr__' handiwork ol Mrs. Robcrt_Wcbsfer,_oI_(hcLCrestvlew. com-_ PAUL — ■ Some believe that work as well as drape makinB- “'S, "“‘t munlty. She worked for the Kansas Stotc University Exten­ many of the happiest homemak­ as part of the extension priS , Sal*"! said pussycats sion service for 10 years and alsp (aught school before sho cram. Nearly all ot the drapes believe in soinc ot the causes ers nrc those wlio were first was married. She represents the Crcstview Extension Homo* succe.ssful in careers before In her home are a display ot militants .advance, £Ucli as mokers Club. they became wives and moth­ her talent. And Tracy has never abortion reform and day-care ers. Mrs. Robert (Lvicille) Web- owned a "storc-boughf dro'is centers for children of working _s!cr_of_thc_Ci:eslvit:w_Communl;. as_Mrs._Wcbsicr-has-kopt-hor----motlicrs*-BuUlheyJwon:t-use.tho- .ty is one such person. In hume-sewn clothing all of her shouting, sign-carrying way to Representing the Crcstview ten year;!. advance these causes. Extension Homemakers Club, A sm all garden n ear the Wcb- Ratiter than hit legisiatoisT OUR A N N U A L • Mrs. .-)ycb5ler,.is -the .mother .'ster homo produces enough a'Cr- over- tite head w lth-propaganda of two children,‘Tracy. 10, and etahicH to last (he fifmiiy and pound their ears with shrill B arton, 8, and bcllcvcH In spend- throuRh the winter and Mrs. chants, pussycats Intend to . -Ing- • ------...... 1hlF~------...... --- -nrgu'f------across ...... maker. hns not iilways been she cares for the Rround, plants doing womanly things for them. tl\e wlfo of a farmer In a rural It, and then cans the produce. , “U .will bo much easier to community.' This year clone, she has can-' approact) them while sewing on Prior to mcjvinR to rural Paul, ned about <100 jars and filled a button or shining their al>out 11 years ago, Mrs. Web­ her freezer with vcRctables shoes,’’ Miss Sakol said. 'ThU HffiNKTStll ster attended St. Mary College, from the garden and fruit from 1« the pussycat way.” Xavier. Kan., where she re­ the fruit trees nearby. She also "You become a member by ceived her bachelors degree and bakes all th e fa m ily ’s' pleji,' simply deciding to bo ono,*^’ IS IN FULL S W IN G wns .working toward her mast­ cakes, cookies, hamburger buns, Miss Sakol said. “No dues or er's In iiome economics. and all other nccessory bakery fees.’’ She worked for the Kansas goods, "partly because I enjoy Miss Eibaum, the lawyer Come In & See The Values Offered State University Extension Serv­ it and partly because [ beUevo founder, says,ilt makes sense. ice for ](f w ars and also taught If you are a iwmcmaker, you've " 1 never won a case in court flchbol in iCansus, having been got [o make every dollar wearing space shoes and a ^Wrn and raised in CIcvenworth. c o u n t," fln'a~rV"“ MOHAWK CARPET -^!njrtiy'ftrroT-“ S1fc'niWed‘Wcst~ “ P^HrWcbWr-^lrnrbm'W-irr-’’ ' ' X* pussvcat luIrK (ll/I,1(1 fliA and married' Mr. Wclwier, she volvcd with homem iikinR tlie "Looking, cooking and smell­ wns named tlie first president past II years thnt she has hnd ing good (or men arc our major of the newly orRnniied Crest- no time to think of outside in­ responsibilities and the result is vlew Club, and Is now pul)ticlty terests, slmrt of helping yearly more equal rights for us," with the harvesting. chairman for the Rroup. Sho » ♦ ♦ aald sho has renmined active "If you are a mother with In the oTRnnlzation, Imth for the young children, you have a re- nervloo it provides her as a sponslbilUy to tho.se children, at More Doctors •• liomomnker, and for the fact least through the school aRO , Jt ].•) the only existing orRnhlza- ycnr-1, that If a problem nri.ioH, tion that holds tlie people of you are there to help," siie said. A re W anted the co m m u nity toiscthcr. "I think n girl should do what During her time in the nren, she wnnts to do before hnvlitg BERKHLEY, Cnllt. (UPI - Mrs. Webster has l>eon cnilcd a rnmiiy. If'she wants nn npurt- An cxiwrlment in procollogc scf- upon to JudRO needlework for m cnt, sho sitould m ovo Into one onco eomo ‘T h a t’s tlie beauty of an ex­ At the University of California Free Cider & Popcorn (UC) this fall. economics fluid, she explnined. tension club,’’ she said, "l>e- With the Crestvjcw club, Mr.i. cnuse It tcachc.H a hom em aker Tito Iwo-yeor pilot project w'lll Wcl)H(or has parlicipaled In the how In do things thnt she can l>o evnluated for uso In 13 public Jeromo County Fairs, wlicre the do at homo lo Ret rid of her higli schools thrbiiKhout the club lias had n iHXitli for the '' drive "to do something.’’ , United Stnte.H. The curriculum past six yearH. Proceeds from H- ft- H- will eventually bo avulluble for the booth and pri'niitims Imvo CAUPET NEEDS ATTENTION ftatlonwiil^ use. l>een used for ciunm unity nurv- It mny surprise .you to know The VIomedlcal program Is ex­ ico. tiuit nbout Ifl pounds of dirt pected to reach juniors ond lIo m cm ak ln R talents are var- and Rrimo collccts on the living, seniors whose nptitudo scores .led wUh M rs, Wel).Mor, wlio on- room carpet every hIx m onths,' show n cnpabllUy for coiiego joyti ovorytlilng from nnrdcniiiK 5|mt cleaning nnd lig ht touch- work, but'whoso nctunl academ­ to sewing and cqoking nnd even ups with nig ahanipoo on a fre­ ic perfornmnce may have fallen uphoistorlnR, quent haHln go a long w ay to- short of m eeting collDgo «»< Z tH Main Ave. N. Phono 733-71X1 Sho haa Ins(ructe

Downtown Twin Falls "is owned and operated by C. E. Wadsworth, Sr."

Petersen's qualified staff of . . .designer^ includes: C. E. Wadsworth, Jr., NSID, a professional 7--- member-of-the-National Society of Interior Designers. Helen Nebeker, a fully accredited Interior. “ Decorator“WitKTfiany years ot experience

Chester Ball, highly skilled In draperies, upholstering-and refinlshlng.

^ ^ ^ It's easy to achieve distinction of

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DOW NT OW N TWIN FALLS FURNITURE ■,-a T H E STORE THAT SERVES VOU BEST among. Lamps, whether floor standing or table-modds, are In­ creasingly dramatic la their concept. Into po lish^ steel, cur* Modern Is Big News In Furniture ved floor lamp, may b» direct descendant of the old reflector, Now that we have really en*' inate, there Is a growing fas­ the young and mobile took In the body's curves, usually looks but alt resemblance stops there. tcrcd the Space A ge, it's com- decorating. Clcan-lIned Parsons cination with undulating, free­ like It was born, rather' than It’s a good looking and function­ plbicly appropriate that the ex* form chair shapes. tables are often used os desks, monufacturcd.' al lamp, made to be displayed citing news in furnituc is mod* buffets '3nd occasional tables. These chairs are made of Modern designs and’materials proudly —> rather, than hidden In ern design. • Old concepts like etageres or Words nice contemporarj* and m olded jplastic or tubular steel. are readily accepted in tables a corner. A paddmg of foam rub ber Baker’s racks have gone mod­ The entire range of fcmlture modem may still frigliten some and other furniture. The glass ern, 'too, when m ade of _ steel stretches o ve r the mold for and chrome coffco table has be­ and accessories, in Oie thodom people, but rising sales of this and plexiglass. style of furniture indicates that ^ comfort, and over the padding come a standard ey^n In tradi­ idiom , -brings a new freMom wc arc beginning to occcpt tho goes the taut upholstery fabric. tional rooms. W all_unlts^and- --- There are manjj wen'^esigned and design excUemcot to our The chair, designed to support homes.______airy, spacious look of the new . storage cubes are malnstavs’of modern accessories to choose design. Even In upholstered (uinilure, which shows the slowest change in public buying habits, there arc interestmg developments. Since a sofa remains the major investm ent in liv in g room furni- • ture, styling tends to be on the conservative side. But modern touches are beginning to appear es. Legs an d fram es of chrome steel are popular replacements for tradinonal woods. And (here is a whole range of new fabrics . NOW like man-made suedes and leath­ er - like vinyls which weren’t even a part of tho vocabulary . —live-oF-4cn-ycat One thing that hasn’t changed Is the d urability an d com fort of u m n o f w a s h o a y latex foam rubber cushioning. Foam rubber is ju st as long-last- Inp as it ever was, and till needs YOU*VE NEVEH no pillow - plumping. HoweVer, modern methods of using foam njbber have changed, too. Many BAn BEFORE... (oam rubber cushions arc now wrappea or "c ro w n ca” -for a thick, opulent look. And there Is ~ontj/'from an entirely new way of using foam rubber, too. -GENERAE EEECTRie fm^IOTO Tcxlay. modern c h a lrj are be­ ing m ade In other than .stand­ ard shapes. While tubs and clubs and wings still predom- VERSATRONIC'WASHER Requirements with exclusive^ MINI-WASH SYSTEM Giveh For VERSATRONICfmeant "fin* tuning" wash -and spin ■ Good1-ighting speeds — any spoed from “ hand-wash" to very vig­ SH OSH ON E — "E y e s like it orous! Ample room for Wlion you use lam ps that give everything In tho g ian t 18* piod light,in-the right plnccs”, lb, capacity tub. states lionje agent, Mrs. ‘ Jay I'ovvles. . Q-E't MTnl*Wash* Tor reading or study It ls best system will caro for u p to __prin/lfliv l hy hiilh__((____ '2*/i'lbsrotTjroblmTrlJ^r tliere is a diffusing bowl under ... nuisance item s... del- the shade; IGO-watts if there in tcates...woolens, Nomoro DO bowl. hand washing! Tho most satisfactory lump has a shade open at the top Mlnl:QuIck « C ycle...of­ io light *walis and ceiling and fers a complete Mlnl-Basket wide enough at the bottom to ’ cycle — fill, wash, spray spread light over the work area. A good shade Is llght-colorcd rinse, spin, fill, rinse and and white on the Inside, dense spin - In less than 10 min* enough ao )r litm p thiU’s that particular load. Helps ellm* down." Bleach and fabrlC'Soften* alwvc CV& 'level behind either Inata water was\el •idc of the chair. •r dispensers. Soak cycle, extra ill^ h ' ■Intensity lum ps, polo rinse, cold water wash. l«m|M, bullet lam ps and goose- aren't suited for rending Total Laundry Convanlenca for 1970. Start onjoying It today-yqu owe it to yourself. other close work, 'Hiey often , c«u!io glare nnd sharp tonlrnsts. ' Tltey are useful as sotirces of (fldlrcct light, Ilinlcatakamlhit QUAUITY QENERAL ELECTBIC APPLIANCE SERVICE li«inMrMrourt.l>phoM Wlu'n HlKippIng for new lumps, ttie home agent Htntcs. ('h(’e .>i|«'nt imiIIhUI(ir each year. Other menv }p«ral»r EVERYTHING FOR THE HOM g’ tors t>f (Im family will find it Iweh, ni*r, Bufl«r • •. .far INTCRrilM •Rc’ful to keep hullons, buckles Phone 733-1804 TWIN FALLS . aad Jowolry siilny and pn)tected. W E t e O M t SENIOR CITIZENS

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LYNWOOD SHOPPING CENTER OPEN EVERY NIGHT

Gold Strike Stamps, Too! Dessert Treat Is Winner .Chocolate 1 o V c r s all favor moist, luscious, cliocolntcy-rich brownlcsl And they're sure to J I C K V cast (heir winning votes for Chocolatc Cherry Fudge Des­ sert. T his dessert, the ^people’s choice" by popular acclaim, has L iill^NSE e a base of fudgy chocolatc brownies. • Tho -tustc- Icinptlng topping is whipped cream with tender miniature marshmallows, ’5 n o *25 jewel toncd maraschino cherries and a new note >— intercstlnQ Winners Posted Wed. & Thurs. sHvcrs of chocolatc. . Register All Week Free...... Cliocolnte Chcrty Fudge Des­ sert lacks ahd tastes like a com­ pany dosscrt, but it is' so simple to make with better than ever Betty Crocker rudge Brownie Mix tliat you cnn serve it any night for family dessert. Here is the recipe as de- ve!o;wd in the Betty Crocker Kitchens. CHOCOLATE CHERRY FUDGE DESSERT 1 package (1 pound G.5 ounces) fudge brownie mix ^■•cups-chitled-whip|)ing n u a in 2 cups m in iatu re -marHhmal- • lows cup sliced maraschino chcrries, well drained 1 envelope (1 ounce) pron)cltcd chocolate --- Bake—fudgy—bm w n ies—ftS—dl---- reeled on package. Cool. In - chilled bowl, beat cream until stiff. Fold in marshmallows and cherries. SE_read_ evenly over_ ■■“lirownics.^Dnzzle chocolate over top; swirl over whipped cream. ,. Chill. Cut-into-two-inch-squares. 16 servings. * * Know -Know s For Bedding Listed By Authorities M attresses la st so long that mo.'sl people don't get to visit the bedding department of their local stores very often. So here are some Ups on what to expect w hen you shop for n new mnt- (ress — so y ou'll be a know- know, W hen you buy a bedstead, the ' [t? n^f inrludcdi

foam rubber mattresses. Twin size a n d double beds us­ ually sell for the .same price. . Queensize and kingsizes nre •more oxpensive. Ui'dttinc mnnufnc(«rers design a nuittress in 'a certain firm­ ness. using a particular ticking, padding and constrm'tlon. Then they nuiki* the nuUire.ss in nil different .sizes. A ll latex foam rtihber mattres- ses hiivp sm ooth surfaces, with no buttons to snng or iM)ke. ‘ ___ Soiuc___liuicraprinji. smmitli. too. To'save money, cut down on fnncv tickings and othor frills, Hut Insist on fundanienliils, such ns n(k'(|uiite size. A kingslze mattre.'^s Is exaclly the size of two twin bcdn puihed lOROthcr. It Is iho only hod-for- twii llmt gives each sleeper suf­ ficient rdom, ncciirtiing lo lid ­ ding InduNtry stuilles. You can benil or even roll up « latex ftwun inailress, That makes l( jxsrfcct for kingiize, ■ince It is easy lo fit through diMirway.H and u » stairs. You enn flrtve 1)V buying the fouM nch . thick fm in rubber mattresses. 1 1 >ey use less nu»-, ' terlal than thicker unlt.n, nnd ' cost less, But they offer tho flame fenturcs, comfort, nnd iH'nefllH. rftoK^or"nt?w“fnnm-on-fnnm— ensenibloH — a latex foan> nib- tK*r m nttrcM re.Hting on a ure- thaiHi fo am foundation. It Is n rc a t (enm — noisclesB, dust- free, non-nllorgcnlc, extremely duroblc, n« fldurpomcily comfort* •t)le. Look for aaIca, floor flnmplcs, •n d sense bedding It o n s a r e ...... '«very now and then.

^ 6 Tyln Falli, Idafw Octobor^^4, 1^96? S e h th e p .

W e're serving up the most wonderfully wearable looks in rnqny a season . in a dazzling selection of. _____ , Dresses ★ Coats ★ Suits

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DEPARTMENT STORE Your Bank Cards Welcomed Iti the LYNWOOD “Togetherness” Is Important Young Homemaker Combines ••Workrng together as a family Home With Business Career is most jmportont,” Mrs. Noil Olmstcad stated when asked FILER — This busy young this fall was a'hunting expedi­ w hat constituted a hpppy l»ous»- bomcmaker combines caring for tion to the South Hills on v/hlch hold. a home and family with a busi­ they took their horses along for •*‘Nell and .I enjoy working — ness career, and still finds time riding and bringing out the deer. yes, and playing with our four to accompany her husband on They enjoy camping, hunting, children, C aro ly n , 20; Brent, 14; ■^r-favbrlte c a m pin g an d hunting- fishing — anything to do with Rosalee, 13. and Jeanine, 10. We - trips. outdoor life. have a cabin at W arm ’Springs, — Mrs. Don ^wder,'»hc Filer A family project In which the for-example, and all of us look Civic Club's candidate for out­ children can share Is caring for forward to the time we can go standing homemaker. Is a chart­ the tropical fish in the large there. In fact, it’s' got to the er member of the club, has aquarium which they keep In point, the children 'don't want served as president and is clul? - their living roqm. Mrs. Louder’s to come homo after a weekend secretary at the present time. own personal ta>te for hobbies . thcrc.r* She has successfully, worked runs to miniature pitchers of "A family fun outing we had out a schedule which enables which she Is starting a collec­ this Rummer was when we went her to have time foe cooking, tion. Many have been given to to the South H ills to pick choke- sewing and cleaning for her hus­ her by friends who know she cncrries. We picked all w« band and two children, a certain is collecting them . needed and when we got home, . amount of leisure for hobbies She is also interested In an­ Rosalee wanted to. make the and- entertainm ent, an d still tiques and has brought home jelly, you know, she did a very work five days a week in the several blue ribbons from the good job of It, too, and we were courthouse where she does cleri­ antique tiepartment fo the Twin real proud of her.". cal work and bookkeeping for Falls County Fair. One of her These- are ju st tw o examples the county auditor. prize possessions is a- carnival cited by Mrs. Olmstead re- Mrs.- Lowder leaves her son, glass bow l as carnival glass Is ' cently. Her definition of a good D oug, age 4, and daughter, Nl- a magic word among collectors. homemaker and a happy family -colo, i 3i-at- • ■ ~~ls-nonmich-diffcn;nt~froni;-thnr ijomc years ago, a neignoor Twin Falls In the mornings and gave her a handmade doll of mosfmothers, but-hcrtincere picks them up there after her cradle, well over 80 years of and honest approach to today’s— working hours. She arrives age, and -this she treasures living Is most refreshing. home in Filer In time to have along with a handsome piece The objectives of today’s a hot dinner waiting for her o f Flo BUjc chlnar-She and her homemaker- from • Mrs. Olm* husband, who is e‘‘mpIo>Td at husbimd plan to refinish several—^ stead’s point of view includes the O. K. Tire Shop in Filer. an education for her children, This young wife and mother pieces of old furniture when —financial and emotional security,____ likes to sew, both for herself they find the time. love and respect between fam ily_____[ :_and_her two children. She also The Filer Civic and Home Ex- members“and a'common faith enjoy.'? w orkm g w lih paints on — tension Club stresses community- - for a., religious background. "It textiles. She- finds pleasure in service and participation for its is im portant in this day and cooking for her .family and for members, both collectivelj; and Bge for a youngster to be able friends when they are entertain­ as individuals. Mrs. Louder has to make decisions and taught ing. In the summer the couple . been a leader for several years the proper way to approach va­ has a small garden from which of a 4-H club called "The Mix rious issues,” she stated. she freezes and cans vegetables n’ Stitch Club,” As the name She stressed the need for edu­ AN EDUCATION FOR her children, a common faith for a and fruits, although as she says Implies, she teaches the group cation for today’s youngsters, religious background and love and respect between family some of it is done in "midnight of girls correct m ethods o f cook- noting a high school education members,were listed by Mrs. Nell Olmstead as goals she . cann in g.” •ing and sewing. Isn't sufficient anymore. “If a strives to achieve for her family as a homemaker. Mrs. Olm- She is musically inclined and * * * college education is financially stcad wos chosen by the. Twentieth Century Club as the plays the piano. When she was . out ,of the question, a trade unlt’fji outstanding homemaker. in hig h school, she played In WAX THAT 2IPPERI school is often the right an­ the band and was in the school Sometimes starch in a newly swer.” she said. drill team. . - washed cotton dress causes the M rs. Olmsteau- some of this food, they wouldn't huntlnp wilh her hushand and ' tv-bar that entire time. Open on by very Impressed, hut we en­ sons lo he their ccK)k and says Tuesday aflcrnoons and Wed­ Come in & See The Values Offered joy U.’’ she snid laughingly. she's noi one for packages for nesdays, tho bar does got extra M rs. O lm stead, a m em ber of anything. volunleor lielp those days al­ the Sham rock Club, Uulies of "There was not much money though M rs. Fulw yler is tho ' n iks and llUie Lakes Country In the fandly.w hen we got start- only l>enutician available. All Cl(il), finds tim e lo do a hit of .cd,” sh" explained, "so I began of her services are volimleered, _____ golfing In ihe sum m er luul cur- by c(«)Uln^t from .scraich out of wilh thi! guild purchasing the renily is piirticIpntii»R in flower- • neeeHHliy/’ ecjuipment. CHAIRS orriinitlni; classes iii the YWCA. '■ Ilavlnf' lieen left a widow at >/■ H- -Y. an early age, Mrs. I'ulwyler obtained hi'r license and worked Phone Firm- as iK'aiitlclan lo siip[V)rt her three smair chiUlren, Aboiit 20 EVERYTHINfe years aj’.o. however, she. re m ar­ Returns Ring ried and "a(5 for l^ipi-rs In Rui>- or (liiy 111 .SiiiitliwO.slern Hell 'IVl* ert, Shi> dill, however, tnalio cphonu C o., out cam e ii plati­ custom drapi's for Individuals num diam ond r|ii)|. In hiT tionii' for about 10 years. * Band Instruments " I (ipL‘ii(!(l th e ' eiivi'lope and • Tiirough m any of the n riiw- * Hi-Fi & Stereos the rlni; Just lum(>lcd nut,” suid Ing-up years of Ihe young f a n l t ^ Mrs. I'ai I.aii/;sdorf. a clerk. ly M rs. h'lilwyler did ihe c h il­ * Ktli'Sfereos ■riie check which lu'comjNinled dren ’s .sewlni! anil pa.niies on the hill luul ring was traced Ihls bit of ailvire lo other home­ * Records & Albums to a .St. Louis customer. makers, "Don't let your daugh­ The ciihlom er loilil ..she had ters con you Into nnwlng f«)r * Sheet Music Free Cider & Popcorn removed her rin g ii.h nIio was them Inslead of leachltig them Wrltinit checks and did no| ml.ss . to taiw," YAMAHA PIAItlOS It imtll'iirier shu had mailed 'riin atna/ltig Ihlnj’ alHXil M rs, her paymentN. I ’ulwyler'd honjemiddng id>llily if. if. Is her buditellng of Ihue lo gel , MAKR.S FLOOR ATrRACllvE everythlnii done. Oespiio ihe If you have house |o sell, fact she spends moi'o tlinu cook­ iiuvlng Ihe floor.H Iu<)l< atlrnctlvo ing and sewlngthan many home­ helps. Sliollac l» a popular floor makers, she always has ilmo finish. Apply two fresh, tliln tyviro a week to "set up shop” coats of pure, clear shellac, al- lit tho hOHoilal and operate tim towing oaoh coat ui dry heforo one-man Ix'atily bar for iho applying Uio nuxt. gerlalrlcii ward. je s k s y listening •.. I

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4 0 TImos-Nows, Twin Falla, Idaho Friday, Oclobor 24 ,1969