yiagw J att^y\s~MunTp \ elvs^ p er f

E vtn 70th year, 305th issue • ‘ TWIN FALLS, IDAHO 2 5 ‘ ccrner dttivtrv

By United Press International The Forest Service said the blaze had spread northeast into Fires sparked by naturp*'and man.blaAjenedg>ore t>ian 30,OOQ- - I at, least 3,000 acrEs i aiTps nf tinihwr jn northern Idaho arnl western Montana by spokesinan said while the blaze repiauied steady in Montana, it Saturday , and threatened more harm despite the presence of an was spreading rapidly in Canada. arniy of firefighters. The nearby Kook,oo Creek fire burned B-tO acres of timber but The Forest Service’ said close to ffre lines tt TOs"i)riy W tnties from the CSrlbou on 13 major bliizes and scores of minor fires in the Iwo states, Ridge blaze, though. backed by use of more than 330,000 gallons of chemical fire Fire crews were also 'battling the 1,200 acre Tri-Creek blaze retardent. east of Missoula on the Lolo National Forest and a 1,300 acre fir^e Cooling temperatures further a id ^ fkefightsrs in handling tn the Snake Creek area and another 7Q0 acre blaze, both.pn the . what has been tenned by the Forest Service-the worst overall "Bitierrobt Natlonal T o f e ^ o f Western Montana. fire situation in 20 years. " , Three other fires totalin)} around 1.000 acres also burned out of Four' 25 man crews, 21 smoke chasers and 8 supply and control late Saturday. ■ -(Cnminacd'wip. gi------TEENAGE VENTRILOQUIST Runnle fiKircirhation officers have W en SSnrDy the Sawtooth Forest to help fight the Montana and north Idaho fires. Help was Piercy, 13, and puppet "Wlnohell” exchange -also -sent by the Shoshone District, Bureau of. Ijind jokes Saturday evening at Twin Falls Clinic and Management, but the number of men was nOl disclosed. No Hospital as Danny Brinkman, 5, watches from crews were sent from the Burley BLM district. his bed. Piercey, Twin Falls, entertained the Cas»<»ia ^either BLM district nor the Saw°tooth forest reported firns .Muiiaugh boy at' the request of the boy's withirT their bounflaries Saturday^ mother, M(S. Donald Br nkman. Danny lost a queen L a d w i s h leg-tn a farm accident Thursday. CHoic officials However, the job was far from over Saturday, as at least 10 g e ts said he was in “ satisfactory" I'onditlon fires burned out of control, spreading needed-Jirj; crews thin eho^en - - Saturdayr-Danay-agkod-it-hc-could nee Pieccey- over a liirn«-arcji "Wlnchell" after learning they were Aiiionglhem the F’rewitt Creek fire near,Helena, Mont., where RODEO (Jueen of the Cassla- visiting in the clinic Friday evening. flames had blackened upwards of 5,500 acres. Between 500 and County fa ir Is Hejen Pjrke, 18, 550 men were manning the fire lines witli the assistiince of 100 Malta, chosen Saturday night. Montana National fiuardesmen. First Runner-up was Terri To the northwest, the Caribou Ridge fire burned unchecked on lyiodey. 18. Burley; second the U. S.-Canada border oh the Kootenai National Forest where runner-up was Cacolyn Hurst, 1,740 acres of timber were desroyed^ W;~ TJeclo; and Miss G em rights p a n e l f i n d s ConRrnialitv was MelodI Walker, 18, Burley. Miss Pakre \ ...... will represent Cassia Count> in the Miss Rodeo Idaho contest next month at Twin Falls. sex bias in C S l ^ a s e - taught Glasses with_iowcr enrollment and attiMlinn rates \ • , ^ By BILL LAZARUS equalling those of her classes. . - ' ' ■ Tlmes-News writer . .Backing its decision on probaTile cause, the liK r .Saturday B oard plim ning . .-TOCAIELJ^. .lllSjdyho Humaii Rights listed these points; in brief found probably cause of sex discrimTriirlionln "ffi'e longnsfaiSainf ■ ‘■— 'rht attrltltm rates- tn the,"complBtnant‘s-+¥««ch eta»ses- Terrill Castaneda vs. College' of-Southern Idaho case late were not out of line withJhoseiaother language classes. C otirl uplMild.s fr e ».e ori^lioyf Saturday ■afternoon.' ^ o lirt action It was the second time the commission considered the issue. Castaneda) was Informed that her work was not satisfactory WASHINGTON (U P l) —The U. S. Court of Appeals refused ■ Tlie commission bad previously determined probably cause prior to the non-renewal of her contract. _ . Saturday lo exempt 100 West Coast meat wholesalers from the ByDAVID^EO from Kramer to' board ' on Jan. 13 this y e a f^ u t it decided to reconsider the Issue after — That CSI terminated Mrs. Castaneda solely on the basis of beef price freeze, ca Ijng it an "entirely rea^haljle" way to Tlmes-News writer chairman John Streiff. the College of..&uthern Idaho objected, stating it had not been her FrencK classes without regard for the English classes she keep prices from soanng higher. . TWIN F A L I^ - The Idaho Ijcwiston. representC(J at that hearing. >------. taught. ---- »\n emergency three-judge panel upheld a decision by the U . S. Watef“ Resource Board" Kramef said the points Mrs. Castaneda first filed charges of sex discrimination with — That ajtjigugh .CSI did not subscribe to the American District Court in San Frpncisco, depyiniJ the exemption IIW R B ) agreed to court action woUrd be those raised in thfe the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission in April, Asso(fiation of University Professors statement of principles requested by the Pacific Coast Meat Jobbers Association. Friday to try to resolve some of court case to be filed in district 1972, after the CSI Board of Trustees approved'a decision by Dr. regarding timely notice, it did not give the same-amount of Tlie two associations had accused the Cost of Living ^Council the legal questions surrounding court. The Idaho Supreme James Taylor, CSI president, to deny her reappointment as "-itetlce at termination of her contract as was given male teachers ICLC I of 'arbitrary and capricious action” and of exceeding its the proposed Swan Falls- Court is ultimately ei^ected to assistant professor of English and French for the 1972-73 term. whose contracts were also terminated in the same time period; lenal authority m imposing ceilings on beef prices until Sept 12,^ Cluffey project. rule on the proposed project. resulting in a disparity. The EEOC referred the case to the HRC in January this year. Members directed board - -xSome Of the legal questions She charged that the college's denial of her reappointment on The commission now ■shall present the coilene wUh a attorneys to file 8 complaint ui pari of burd«‘r raised include the granting of the basis of the high attrition rate in her French classes was not conciliation proposailo be drawn up within^a week. Fourth District Court in Boise tC Miilluur d u u Ti. >9)------special privilege,^ ^ and . legitimate” She eifiiffiedin^iffTBflcners wtto -were cegJiBenffeii'’ _ .. .(ASUNCION, Paraguay i^UPl I —Paraguay closed a portion of against Ijoard .secretary Don immunities to the' I WRB and it.s border with Argentina Saturday because of what the Kramer. Castleford. who power company, and the govermnent called "terrorist" elements on the Argentine ^ide refused an earlier board seizure of private ta^Syers' directive to forward an land without due process of law Ilcn rI .specialist said ‘fa ir’ application for the project to in the execution of the pt"o]ect. P a n e l l a c k s f u n d s the Federal Power POCATteLLO — The Idaho Human RIghU Commlsslon'wllI cease to function BOSTON (U P Il -D r Paul Dudley White, 87, internationally Coinmi.ssion In his letter to Streiff, If It does not receive more money by Sept. 30. known heart specialist who attend^ President Dwight ^ Kram er, who favors the Kramer wrote, "In view of the proposed power^proterrtn foregoing, must refuse and hallTyp** of dlsprlmltaatlon ohargw , an«t------ftTTt----- f r m r — r j— f w»K>v« aI bUx>d-dol on the .brain.. Miuthw^stgrn- Idaho, refused to---- lo.refiisf to RxerutC whlch may take those cases to court, was funded primarily by the Idaho that so don I iniss More than 24 hours iifter the hour operation. White was follow the board's direction by the joint application between l.«glslature with $14,500 (or the 1973-74 fiscal year. ouf on those tn the still m the recovery room at Massachusetts General Hospital. prior agreement to permit the the board and Idaho Power Co. Mrs. Blough said the HRC Is already operating in the red and won't have Magic Valley statli'-s-court system to rule on for a Federal- Power enough money after Sept. 30 to pay Its attomey-dlrector, who investigates C'»»nrnd Aik«*n d ie s " the questions on the case Comnu-ision license until the discrimination complaints. Swan Fails-tiuffey would be issues as above stated have “ We're going lo have to find money oi-vre closeV^she said ./'There'jusrs- "S A V A N N A H , C a 'U H Il - Pulitizer Prize-winning poet developed by a joint venture been passed upJTn by the Idaho isa't jnough money to pay the investigator. Without the attomey-dlrector, we Conrad P morjung al__lhe ‘ S te a l" from a~Setter fu n d ^ state agency w lil^ 'a l^ o bas civil rfglits Pequop Summit interchange : TcTWartJlngWirStar-NewTr responsibilities. about 22 miles east of here WASHINGTON — In a decision with major unplications for (Continuedon p. 7) Hex l«iWTence' Graham. 18, national security, the Nixon administration has ordered a Di iiiiU . |>. 2(1 Sandy; Utah, and his passenger radical overhaul of the Central Intelligence Agency's method of Charlene .Sturdy, 16, .Salt l.ake "analyzing and evaluating foreign intelligence. City, were both killed when the According to authoritative sources in the intelligence French Irigger third N -blast car ran off U S 40 at high Editorial, 4^ 5 Sports. 23-27 community. William E. Colby, the newly installed director of the CTA, has reacheaTi ^firm decision" to ahollsh the Office of WEIJJNGTON,New Zealand explosion came Sunday. New France's tests have drawn .speed Farm, 22 Markets, 21 National Estimates, the elite, 30-man office that since 1850 has (U P !) —France exploded the, Zealand time, at Mururoa Atoll, protests over fears of fallout A .spokesman for the Nevada pcep^red the top secret and definitive national intelligence third nijclear T)last in ^ its 720 miles soutlwast of Papeete, from at -least half a ttozen Htiihway Patrol- said the car Living, 13-18 Valleyr 3, 19 estmiates — the pap>ers upon which a suceession-orpresidents controversial 1973 atmospheric Tahiti, the,site last month of nations, includingj'Jew Zealand, flew 100 feet through the air off W sed crucial potiey-decision. testing settfa flver the South FL^nce's first two in its Australia, Caaada,Sw^£nMd .the Inlerchange and struck a John WrHuJzenga, the agency's^iirecfor of-nationaJ-MUmates- Pacific, New Zealand said current series. Ttie size of the Japan, and resulted in a block wall on the roadway T-I% Phones and chief of the CIA's intelligence analysts, resigned from he Sunday. ■ explosion and the source of the severing of relations by Peru. below. (O r use our,loll-free lines) 'agentr)" at the end of June He will not l>e replaced. ------Government sources said the information was not given. The car was demolished

r Nixon speech convinced only handful^ poll says

^ ^New York Ttmei ^rvlce - PfwtaenTs sG&menf tfiaf civa' rtptS--ahd proteSIa" coiWiileifs VH i'ioiis aspects woiJd be rfluH this is a vaUd reason for.ruot turningpyer theJapes? " 41 per cent helped creat^the atmosphere that led to the Watergate crimes, W atergate ancf other governm ent corruption. ------yes; 51 per cent no; 8 per cfenttioopinion WASHINGTON - About 44 per cent of the people wboJRBtched— -'niesunrey was conducted by telq>hone Thia-sday night from ■nje Gallup ofgantiation said that' 77. per c«iit .pf th o^ - "Do you think he should turn over the tapes? 56 per cent President Nixon’s WStergate a d * e s » on television Wednesday a nation^ sample of 810 adults.On a santple of that size, contacted saw the Nixon a d * ^ on television, an unusuaUy night foOnd the speech “not at all” convincing whUe 2Tper cent according to polling expert, the margin of error can be as njuch h i ^ rigure that indicated a strong lhta-est_m_thetijpic. - i a » « -CBHCnidea ir w »s “ cwnpletely’' M nvlndri^ T p s r e a n a p points either way. PoDowihg the tiiajor -que^ofw and the responsesr - p r o t ^ h elp ^ create the atmosphere that led to the Watwgale according to a Gallup poU commissioned -by the New York - "D id PresMent-Nixon’s ^>eech increase your confidence in rituation. d ^ o u agree or disagree?” 28 pir cent agree, 58 per , the Tinies News Service Public opinion is con slder«‘ particularly important In the ; the Nixon adminlstraUonwTiot?” 27 pet- cent yes; 66 per cent current phase of the Watergate scandal becaue President cent disagree; 12 per cent no opinion. _ ■ . Other l^hlights of the poll showed that half of those who . no; 7 per cent no opinion. ■ . - “ How convincing did yoa^nd,Pr*sident NUon Nixon's aSdress, a def6ii£ of his' Oonduct in the matte;;, was . — “ Did xbu believe President NUon wl^en he said he had no watched the address did not beUeve the President’s statement , Omtpletely convincing, q a i t e ^ . « o m e ? ^ t j j j o t a ^ ^ designed to appeal directly to the people i-ather than to the- invofv^nent (iithe p&uiiiing or coverup of Watergate or not ? that he had no involventent in the planning or covenip of the cent completdy; ITpercent cjnitra lot; 25 pahcfAt sooMwhat, Congress and his critics. per______a cent ves; . CASO per cent no: 12 per cent ffiAnnininn.no opinion ------over up» recwdiaga rriated to the case to ,ihe Watergate . Turthcr, optnloc sampling, by memliers of Coi - “ President N f a ^ ^ i d h« HaamA luriiHl ovi commlltee and Ihe CoirU,inidiW it»pert^ dlsagiwiirltt now In recess, may determine how hard McLeansboro, 111., to Gaphart He was bor^ A p ® ITH W l, in .^oshone Oct. 1, 1901. He has' - Born Dec. 1, 1896, in . H^ was born June 12,1S91, at The cellar was destroyed but and Mina Stallings Bailey, he Basin and attended schools, lived in Bellevue foHhe past 43 Kearney, Mo., he was p^(^uce Roy, Utah, and came to Rupert firemen saved a truck parked moved to Rupert in 1918 from there and in Springdale. years, where he has worked in brokA' for Max Herbold in the in 1915 where he had lived ’ inside. Damage ^vas estimated - niihois where he farmed untiT He married Neva Yearsley the mines in the area. He Rupert area for 14 years. since. at $10,000 to $15,000. Adams moving (o Pocatello tn 1931. May 28, 1926, in Burley. The retired in 1963. Prior to that time he had been On Oct. 29,1913, he married said the fire may have been He married Daisy White July marriage was later solemnized Mr. Ivie married Victoria . self employed as a potato and Hannahiowen at the Salt Lake startkl by children playing flight is to, give a quick look at HOUSTON (U P I) —Skylab’s 10, 1898, in Hamilton County, in the—Logan, Utafi^ LDS Sheldon Oct. 18, 1924, in Heber produce broker in the - Twin City LDS Tabernacle. He with matches. 'sometMng that’s hap^Jfening," astronauts Saturday televised 01. After her death he niari'ied. Temple------T ' City, Utah. Falls 'area. __ . served a mission in the .cenjjral Shortly after : that fire the birth of tropical storm said Elean. “ Whereas these WiUie Ann Trammel in 1912.' Mr. Payley had- lived in' -Survivors, besides his wife. H e w ^ a "45 y e a n ro n ib ^ r "sfeles-^arid w as'aTngftTw ^ - sti-ted,.MOtHer“nre i e s l r p y s i .. Brenda in lhe-(JuM-of Mexiea photographs getbacK in dnoth- She died in 1956 -HaybuTD-ft^ ~aacying - in-. thr.ee diffe caot jwtmg.^outl)iilIding3.,-a chi£iten 'ahU' pTaitfiW~KTTjeam UHrtr. -^rmonmariirt«ejrwon"tTj(rany^ He is survived by two sons, J. He was a'member of Ibe LD& districts. He was a men^ber Of coop ai^d straw pile at a home jnoce_ pirtiirp-i nf__ i t — —good. Church and had served 'as' ^the high council fo r the alwut three miles northwest of wHH^aye ^gappeared from the • Sundfiy. and Roy G. Bailey, Rocatello; secretary on the Heyburn and Donald Ivi^, Fairfield-, two His wife,. Florence,-died in Minidoka ^take. - ' i Jerome. City firemen also ' Alan Bean, Owen K. face pf jth e f^ th .” ' three., jtojKhters, Mrs. Mina Ward High Priest erotjp. and daughters. M rs. C.lenn 1965, . , . ______• - - Hfc- served on th^ . _ Gari'iotT and Tack R. I>Dusma, ■'It'looks like it's just Wing Jones, ghoshone; Mrs EHeii vvaa-also-aetive in the Seouting (Phylis) Ste&na, Bellevue, and ■ He ia survived by two stster-s. Service Board and was acting - Damage was estimated at - - .. showing the bencfj^l-s of manned born out here' in the Gulf,” McTee and Mrs. Fay Irvin, program. Mrs. Richard ( Margie) Banks, Mrs. Clare Anderson, Arcadia, chairman for many . years in ■$5,000, including about $1,200 spaceflight, interrupted their Bean the television both Pocatello; three sisters, He is survived, by his wife, Spanish Fork, Utah; four Calif;,'and Mrs. Helen Whitner, Minidoka County. He was a worth of antique harness. day off to photograph the showedi the mass of clouds and Mrs. Jennis Corey, Pueblo, nine sons, Fred D. Daylgy, brQthers, Frank I\;ie, Twin ^ JWohte, Calif. ^red farmer. • - ■ tropical depression near: Cute . ai^ nnrfi»nt»i “Vmi jjeeibe Colo.', Mrs. Nellie D a vis’and Tinton, La.; jaclt L. Dayley, Falls; Joe, Mike imd Jaried j-iServices will-be at 11 a.m.' He is survived by his wifeT. that later turned Into the circular structured pattern of Mrs. Ellen Christensen, both Kent,' Wash.; Norman E. Ivie, aU Bellevue: six sisters, Monday at the Rupert Elks Ethel; four sons, LeR oy I second tropical storm of the an embryonic tropical. storm. Rupert; 12 grandchildren and Dayley,. Albion; David L. Mrs. BeMie Graham, Utah; Lodge under the direction of Garner, Provo, Utah; Dean We’ll try tp keep an ejiel-on-it- 1' 33great-grandchildren and two Dayley an<^ Ray S. Dayley, Mrs. Mamie McPherson, Charles A. Park, exalted Elks and Dale Garner, Rupert, and HEAR I, Although grgu/wl controllers for ypu on a day by dajf basis, great-great-grandchildren. Seattle, Wash.; Robert F. Alaska; Mrs. Galena Beecher, ruler, and Rev. Fr, Fred L. LoLand J. Garner, Ashton; —askgd-.the pilots only to titke not jifll£jyJieftLU-ia =BhW’ Mrs. June Dixon, New Pickett, Trinity Memorial four daughters,- Mrs. Afton still photos of tfie stonn, developing as far-as S] More Clearly -10r30~a.m. W5n^ay at tKe Thomas E. Dayley, Bj^^ey;' Meadows; Mrs, Ellen-Lawron, Episcopal Church. Baker, and Mrs,_Delma Dean, MiSsibiT Commander Bean in-. ' Intcnsttyiscortcerned.’- Henderson Chapel tn'Pocatellp. Daney K. Dayley and Scott S. Glenns Ferry, and Mrs. ■ Burial in - the Rupert both Burley; Mrs’. Selma fisted on television which Fllght Director Phll|p ; ,C. Burial at 2 p.m. Monday in the / i n C H U R C H , Dayley, both Heyburni thrue Martha Kaufman, Twin Fallsi Cemetefy:^ ' . ~ • ■, ' Jensen, 'Rupert, and Mrs. ----- showed the swirling "^wJndjr “S lraffer^ tKe-lelevtSt?^ Rupert Cemetery. daughters, Mrs. _J-ucilIe' 28 grandchildren, and 10 jgreat- . Friends may caU from 9 a.m. lx)rraine Andell,TVovo; five ’ expected to reach hurricane such things hurricanes ia ^n VnViTHE^OFFICE Brower, Hailey; Mrs. Eva grandchildren. . - to 9 p.m. today at the Magic brothers, R3y ’ and 'D avtd " : force of 74 miles per hpur eaf ly ^jventual goal of space{ljghtlb6t Jean Smith, Owasso, Mich., Mr. Ivi^ .'w ai pcetfided^ in Valley Juneral Chapel. Garner, Ri^)ert; Jerue Garner. ■ VlNCROyVDS Sunday, may npt always be as gpod^ and ‘Mrs. Connje Brown _ d*??!? _ _ ly,______one sister.__ Memorials may 1>bjnade to Emmett; Delbert Garher, ______:"W e’ll giit iJt with ijoth' biKher^lyinfjljmellitepictitc^ .. / a t , H O M E ! ' ■Blan^jjj _ 0ah| tiu'ee Funeral services wUrwHI 'be tKe'Elfe 'NSional'FoundaQon, OregdnTi ~ ' Ve'fh" GafrTer, ■rt - Ijecuttse I -think one of the ' 'They -show the over4^1 brotHws, Ivan, Hai5H ,a n ff-3 T u «3 ^ ,.aL 11 .a.ja]Lr3f, the the Arthfills Fo'undation or the.- Washington; one sister, Mrs. V a t a - d i s t a n c e advantages of manned space- picture for belter weather ■Ernest Dayley, all Burley; two ' Hailey Ward LDS Church.' American Cancer Society. Eddie Bowen, California; 49 forecasting,” he said of the accident sisters, Arenia Burgess. Interment will be a "the ______grandchildren and 64 great- ■ /t v a n d r a d i o ^iBut they Surley; Elvina OSS, Bellevue'Cerrietery. grandchildren'. ’ with the remarkalfle - don't get the detail:all that we ' SCL(yra|>s Oklahoma.. and 35 Friends may call at .Bird „ 270 m ile s '’ injures 2 „£)rtha Hoskins Services will be at 2 p.m. New U.S. Patented' grandchildren. Funeral Horne HairgyT”^ ' Bean planned Sunday to.-t^st Tuesday in the. Rupert ■ Stake A iiieriraiiiN iii ___ _ -iO— aon. ,7a new type ot Hying devic^Hiat"^ BURTiKY~ A Burley man GOODING—— conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Tuesday and at the church E. Christians£n^:;rffictTrtnTg: DitedtenEof looks much like a saddle w(th and his wife were reported in t)rtha W. Hoskins, 79, Gooding, the Heyburn Second Ward LDS until funeral time. Interment will be in the Rupert r it e Jet shoos Instead of stirrups. He good CQn.ditioh at Cassia ♦ will be conducted at 2 p.rri." Chapel with Bishop Lund Monday at the Wendell Cehitme ter y. INDIANATOI.IS, Ind. (U PI) controls the device by wiggling County Meriiorlal Hospital Hearing Aids Christensen officiating. Friends may call from noon The Southern Christian f ^ead- -his toes to fly up or down and Saturday following an accident Methodfst Church by Rev. -Interment will be in the B^in Aii^ela Allison to 9 p.m. Monday at the Walk = =hi|p:tOinanpiivqr his bQd|{^4f||^ s o u t h - »« t ^ Kiipeit --?**£iday Edson Gilmore. -■^^■-^^4irship^ n ferunceTSGIiC » Ct'metfiti'. ^ for y ard, or bttckward. r; - evening.’ ------FILER — .^gela Allison. 11- ^ ^ d a y TTttlCized Sen. -Eltwanl- Friends may calf at Payne BdrialwiU^ieintheWendeUvH’iiD®''^!**®'"® I S ! MAI C CL _ " W e had a good busy (liy According to Idaho Stiyte year-o'ld daughter of Mr. and Cemetery. - St . ."‘prior toThe services at the Kennedy, D-Mass,,.[ur,^gre^‘_nt' MortuaQ' Monday afternoon Whtrtvfff back|foi^(j norse it \ prob “today.” Shaffer -said.!^ili‘“ a Police Officer Richard Hovell. Mrs. Joe- Allison, Filer, died Born-Npv- 28. 1893, at.Zillah. <^l¥,rnacle Tuesday.- inu atl'Ainericamifni award to and evening and from noon Ilitco Otftctionjl Heinni cm briefing, ';‘We "have a 'full Jaines W. Miller, 71, and his Thursday evening at Magic Wash., she attended Coetir------h«lo.you heif fnoi# citirly Juit Alabiima Oov. George Wallace, until tim e of services on .science day again tomorrow.” wife Ruthilda, 69, were injured Valley Memprial Hospital after d'Alene and Tiyio Falls schpols FOCUS on tht iou/)ds you m»n\ to although Kennedy actually did Tuesday. h u t lAd OtuctioflCai b«l. Mr,Si M ill**''frn m —tjiere In -i?7T------'— —Helen-“A41t30)Tr'—4augnt«v “73TTJ55;; the vehicle when it rolled, Filer, and great-grandparents, — liSiXN-FAl.J^ — Services for opportunism in the United ly night, Since then ^he had been She is suvived by one J34t )3»h Mr. and Mrs. John Hagler, Harold L, Carlton will be at 11 ^ t e s at a time when the~crlsls ing to Twin Palls Hovell said. He sa)d Miller working a t 'a drive-in and daughter, Virginia Coffman,, Burter - a m, Monday at Reynolds in our nation demands electoral reports, the apparently did , not see the planned to enfer nurses Southemland, Ore. Gooding; two sons, Leonard 678-9312 Funeral Chapel’ 'with burial in , ______was._ taken, pickup. Iru c t slowing down in training this fall at the Funeral services will be Hoslins, Elko, Nev.. dnd Paul Sunset Memorial Park. —;—IwiUi-raclsiiv, poli4;»statism an ^ ^1^4 p.m. ThuFsHayaint 8 V -Idahn conducted at 2:30 p.m. Monday Hoskins, West Yellowstone. ERNEST MICHENER mob rule. |day. are pending, Hovell said. Falls. at WlUte Muit^jaiy Ginpcl by Mont , IC-grandchildren and 13 She was a member of Rev. Willis, Blair. William great-grandchildren. Idaho p;alls First Lutheran Heaps, Filer elementary , sphool principal, will speak. Memorials may be made to Church-. th^ Wendell Methodist Church. Magic Iqilley Hospitals She is survived by her Burial will be in the Filer V- parents, Jerald and I, Jean lOOF CerVietery, Friends m ay call at Thompson Chapel - thts^ "♦fnivn- rinii-.^ ('iiNhiji M fiiiurlul Hadford Metzger, Idaho Falls; - The family suggests one sister, Mrs. Mary l.eavitt, memorials to the Primary afternoon and evening and Ad.mlltcd <■, yarbroughf all Twin Falls; A d m itte d N«l^ich,Conn,; grandparents. Children's Hospital in Salt from 12:30 to 1:30 at the ^ Mrs. l,ee Hlivon, Mr.s Mr.-). (iary Dickard and Bryon Francis Farmer. Mrs J, W, Mr. amlMrs. I,awrence Sewell. Lake City. church^^n Monday. Russell Ulunilun, - bulb K im berly ; _ Miller, J, W, Miller, Mrs, Roy Emrpett. and a grandfather, A tlunkins, 'M m . ticorge I'abk) Hiojas, Burley; Tonya Estiln and ^ndra- Jones, all C. Radford, Bnhl. "IT"'.' B razzell, Clyde Dickenson, Bruns, Cooding; Dave Burley ; Mrs. IX'an Mimsun and Funeral services.will be at 10 I). R. Kiiiffen Kelly Ilepnor, Mrs Arnold Carrigan, Wells, Nev , and Mrs Hod McKay, Paul; Mrs a m, , Tuesday at the Idaho R U P K K T - Daniel R, -brother, William Kniffen, Kacker and Mrs l.arry l.illian Perkins, Hazelton. Bud Scovil, Heyburn, and Mrs, Falls First Lutheran Church by Kniffen, 68. Rupert, died Dismissed . Jim Rigby. Malta. ^Rev. Karl Schmidt, Commital Oakland, Calif., four Mark Maxfield, Klla Norris, Dismissed services will Ije at 4 p,m Friday in .Minidoka Memorial grandchildren and four great­ Hospital following a sudden grandchildren. r Mrs George Staudaher, Mrs. Elizabeth llenwood, James Tuesday, at the Buhl Cemetery SUBSCRfPTiON RATES Ciary Dohse and sun. Darsi /Simpson. Cody Anderson. Tony -under the direction • of Buck- illness. He was preceded in death by Miller, Mrs, John Angell and kluzman and Mrs Gordon , He was born July 1, 1905, in five brothers and one sister. THrTTMES-'NEWS .Sulliveui Funeral Home, Idaho son, Irc iif Cierharl,— Mrs., I.iike, ;ill Hurley; Mrs .lames ■ K« II8-— ------PpiiiitCllQ.___and -ittendcd ■■■■ Funeral— mreS— mfl— schools there'and m Tyhee. r*ut iOA»«o FJwin Kear.sley and daughter, Armstrong and son and l.ynn conducted at 10 a.m. Tuesday He married Mabel Potter in By Corr<«r Mrs John White, -Mffr. l ^ Carnahan, all Heyburn, m the Joseph Payne Memnrial . M on th niiven, Mrs Harold Poole, Charles’ Burnett, Shawnee B rie fs American Falls in 1&27 and the Chapel with former Bishop (Doily 1 Sunday) couple lived in Malta until 14 Kenneth Scherbinske, William Mission, Kan ; Mrs F;idon Harvey Wight, Malta, ROLL ENDS!!! By Moil TWIN FAI.US - The Kooky Madron. Harold Fortner, Mrs, l.yda Jr , and daughter, Declo years ago when they moved to officiating. Interment will be in Paid Udvorlc* l^naj-d 'Vincent, Mrs. Arvel Births Koolwms 4-H Hub members Burley They moved to Rupert PRICED TO CIEAII I Ootly A Sunday i the Gem .Memorial Gardens, McBride and son and-Freida A son was bom to M^ ■*nd held a brealtfast for their a year ago, I Month *3 00^, mothers Thursday at the Twin Burley 3 Month* S8 SO ^ ea ren gen . all Twin Falls. Mrs Dean Monson, Paul, and a ’ Survivors include his wife; All Sizes — All Colors --- 4-# Mr. and Mrs. Juu _ t’aTTS\ Park, t’ookies were one son, Dee Kniffen, Frieflds may call at 'the brought and auctioned ‘to the 1 V«o» $30 00 Hinton and Mrs. Dean Fife, Rigby, Malta Pocatello, two daughters, Mrs. mortuary—Monday afternoon M o«l wb4<«*pi*on> « *p4*d only mothers. * ______both Hazelton; Tony Martinez, Jerry Cutler. Fort Hall, and- and evening and prior'to the ■ ■ ■ I S q . Y d . Mrs Kandy Bean and son, Nila Kniffen, Pocatello; one .services on Tuesday *0>n#d Mrs Henry Mothershead. Roy B r ie f TWIN FALl-S - Grace A Albright and Mrs. Harold TWIN FAI.I.S - The 6 to 1 4- Dean. 90. Rupert, who died GREEN RUBBER BACK Reg. tio.oo . . . H jle . all Kimberly; Ralph H Club met at the home of John Wednesday at, Hazel Del, Sulirviiri. Wendeir; Url Winkle Thursday to pla_n Manor-, Twm Falls, did not die 12'xl4'5" $CflOO ' TIMES-NEWS Hrutsche, Ketchum; Mrs, county fau- decorations an^ of complications following an SUBSCRIBERS Richard ViinZShte. David card and clip lanibs Treats injury as stated in Friday s GREEN RUBBER BACK Res >100 00 . . D i r I «inRley. Ora BuHerV Mrs, Alla were served by Renee Slotten Tijnes-News According to the Coll yOu' CoMiVf and Cindy Baxter was a guest. director _o{;^_urses at the or ih * Ttm#'k N «w t I’altner, Frank McBenge, 8 'x 12'Patterned S^EUO Coleen Ann Rienstra, Richard The next meeting wnll be Aug manor. .Mrs Dean died of Buhl Coil1«lord S43 46 48 21 at 8 p.m, at the home of Bud natural causes The Times- ORANGE RUBBER BACK Ree. oo.. S 3 Bwr4^y-ffup*rt^ Lemmons, baby boy Fischer Fuller, News ri’^ e ts the error. Poul OokUy Norlond 6^0 7SS3 ;uid Steve Pastroo, all Buhl. 1 Roll Only Rtl«r - Sog»r ton>Holliit* J26 S37S Mrs. Grant Johnson and W»nd*t^ Samuel Jones.- ‘ tiotiT Rlu nlluuER BACK iieg . M.33 . . . . w i q . y d . Coodmg Hag*rman Murtaugh;Mrs. Roger Ward and William Asbm-y, both COM MUNflV Jiu»crt.JnaLLais!ixMcCalLi^ Mrs Van Seb ek er and OR^ANGE SK9RT SKAG Ret. mss.go ’IIP datrgTrtef7 T la n s a r and Etta Mat Parker, Parker. 12'xl2'3" SDflQO B ir th s DEEP PILE SHAG Reg. mib.m...... QHT Daughter were l>orn to Mr. ' 2 a d u l t fUNERAlrCHAPEL and M rs. G ary Dickard. 1 Go.hI.•’g C ■' •■’V A D D IS O N a v e n u e EAST Roll 150 Yds. $ 4 S 5 Kimberly, and to Mr. and Mrs. c o m p a n io n TWIN FALLS, IDAHO * Moqo'i'Q-' Russell Cole, Twtn Falls. ORANGE SHAG Res. ‘ 6 . 9 5 ...... ^ y d . ------PHO NE 733 4 9 0 0 , - Ylintrfoha ttriaortlil - SPACiS^ ”i DoTofTieo 423 S40fl Jeiom# Dismissed s«hL» *20“ C*iaftotTc B<*»t 4T6T Marie TelTo, Frank Maricle, K .’^q H.ll . . We take thought 6f’4he fam ily ’s w j IIS u|M3^tnU TVttll <1 SPEC Iti ORDERS wilillfl 48 HGIIIiS! Mr% Arihu' all Rupert; Thomas Bellr^ o tompanion tot every wish;- irmluBing''that of W© Have Our Own Installers Moo^n TtI.oM 010? Burley; Kenneth F«Uon. Boise. ate fogeth»r. We offer a choice judicious economy. Serving fden Ho/clton xrf ffot moricer, raliod morher LOTS OF ROLLS IN STOCK! D ivie D>von or private above-ground burial all faiths. Sho%hon«» WMnOjAVE MONEY--$g.., Thorn* B86 jm i------B r ie fs Pouf D. Revnolds Son Voll«y Hoiley Wood Teffy Compb«lf '> 7B8 463^ TWIN FALLS — The Twin Falls Canelery tes’n bprm gdole n o wUHT O ub-wifr m szio F i M i in % h79-TXf77 "BlH" M adlond, iPir»s^ tm d tAgr. ~ Cnrntkr.BrbmoVh" : meet at 2. psa. Monday at the ~tKjme or Donna-fcanting^— ' ' 43S Main AvenuiTtrTwIn foils SHOSHONE. IQAHO 88i-7774

f ■ . . V - Sunday, August 19,M973 TImes NeWs/Twin Falls, Idaho l '

TWIN FALLS - The Twin Mrs. S ^ rg e Ross w d Mrs. H. f'.aUs ;i)upUcate Bridge Qub E. Burgess; second were \irs. met Thursday night.at _A. J.-Meeks and Mra. L. M. Cook home' ~ ■. ■- ' ■ i laBT tHud wei e Mus: Beverly • lWtime>-s were Mrs. M. D. Cuppette ¥nd~MrsT “HT, M .' TWIN FALLS - The Twin' — Hartruft, ^ d - ,M r s . - P .. F.' Wy rn ff___ FalU rit)J-rnim<'irMnn>4ay m ill . Ransom, first; Mrs. H. E. _____ Etfst and-west-ucinners were “ hear the third and 'ntial equal .' to one resTdenTia] iiurges^, ana Mrs. • a;, t - Mrt. D. I^,Hans(J'IIl atid'Mfs."'' readings of tjvo ordinances that household’ In computiivg Russell, second; L. E. Hacfi A. V. Williams; second were set up ne^ ifoidelines for out- mon^y charges' (i.e., each and Howard Tucker, third, and Mrs. Floyd Broadhead and ;,Bf^Ity ^ water and sbwer fnobile home would pay one- tied for fourth, 'Mrs. J. Mrs. M. V. Cook; third were hookups. haif the monthly residential Kingsbury, Max Hogg, R. J. Mrs. R. K. Williams an^.Mfs. The proposed ordinances will rate).' Sass and G. R. Burton. A. i : Johnson. probably come to a vote Another proposed ordinance Winners of the YWCA Pool The _ Monday Afternoon following the readings. to b eliea rd Mdhaay s6ts up' Players Supervised Bridge Duplicate Bridge (^iib met al Under the new laws, lands policies for leasing, of public Mofiday afternoon were Mary the Episcopal Qiurch. granted the hookups must be right-of-way for _ private u?e. Roth, first; Cora Bodenstab, North :South winners were annexed when they hwnmp - — C »)inoilrnpn wiH also . st^'ond, Luetta McCollum, ___Mrs^ A. I.. Johnson «- ** and tTiia.Mrs. IV.R. - adjacent to the city. The out-of- consider a conditional use TIurdT andTTorence Andei-son, -R; WtUlam&rfthrtr Mrs. A. V.. city utilities will also be zoning request by Gem State fourth. > * Williams and Mrs. J. S. defined as fsurpliis capacity” Restaurants (Burger Chef) to s a d d l e s Anyone wishing to Improve Feldhusen, second; Mrs. B. E, allow drive through-windoHt- their bridge playing and Standlee and I.. M. Hall.;third, city services are "in service at the corner of bidjding is invited to participate and Mrs .J. M. Kingsbury and jeopardy." -■ ■ Wilniore Ave. and Blue Lakes in bridge playing Monday, 1:15 Mrs. Don Jacobson were fourth. The third readings of an. Boulevard Norlhr—^ i. s t o l e n p.m. at the YWCA, 1791 ordinante establishing new .'TTie council agenda also lists Elizabeth B lv ^ You do not F,ast-west winners were Mrs. Earl Nielson and Mrs. J. T. sewer and water rates for the following items: TW IN F A LLS - E. have to have a partner to play. Shelby first; Mrs. G. B. mobile home parks is also on — Issuance of proclamation Morgan, Rou^ ?, Twin F t ^ . . The Magic Valley Duplicate Peterman and Mrs. M. D. the council's agenda. The commending George R. reported to Twin Falls si eriH's Bridge C ^b met Wednesday Hartruft, second; Mrs. Roger ordinance would switch mobile McAdams for courage and officers Saturday tha homes frgm cpmmercial to afternoon, at the Episcopal l.ewis and Mrs. Lloyd efforts resulting in the saving saddles, valued at about Church ; on Blue l.akes Kempton. third, and Mrs. Tom were stolen fropi his prope^y. I^ew aide post Boulevard North. *‘ Marzocca and Mrs. M. Hogg, According to a sheriff's 'N orth andsouth winners wre fourtti. 4‘H group meets office report, the saddle^ wpre C APT. Clyde N . Carlsoa, right, congratulates stoleiVBOihe timeit) the Hst |wo First Lieut. • Dennts K. Hendricks, left, on F II^ R - Los CabaUeros 4-H progress of the club ^ d plans weeks. club met Thursday at the home for next year. -— '' Morgan descrit>ed.one of the JE M lneer Battalion, U.S. Army Reserve, Twin of Mrs, Cora. Seaman. Linda ■ Proceeds -of the baked food . saddles, as hrawB„ with a ^ r k Falls. First Sergeant Albert L, Hoover, eenter, Dean, vice president, _sale, Prjrtay' will gn In fhp padded seat with a dow le .holds the Cnmpany giilrinn^lHynrirlrfcii offi(Jall> cBndacted the~meeHngrDavid Filer Swimfoing pool. ^ciKcli ;in plaTnl lealfieic. took over-ar company cominander ot Aug. 1, Seaman, clyb jjresident, is on Members decided to wear dark saddle was almost new, he fold but had his.iirst day of full command Saturday. tour with his cRiirch.choir. The green checkered ties at the deputies, and valued at $165. Although, Company D is officially a combat flaii pledge was, ted by Cathy- The second ~s4ddU , Morgan o tair. company,ru\e meu receive much Ql Ihelr Dutt and the 4^0 pledge by said, was brown with a ligtiter trainiog helping out on local construction Sylvia Huddleston, Refpostaients were served padded seat, double cinch |ind oriented civic ;«)iorks projects. This weekend the lyirs. peverly M a^p and by Beveirly Mason ^nd her O n r plain leather. He valued it at company Is working at the Taw-Wa-Kawnie ------^------Campfire Girls camp in the ISouth Hills.

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"rDevoted To The Citixena Magic Vajley ' Under The R ug—priuiks And Cops ( about------lTieT:Wef-ofT)pHcfe-^ld^he^"^®? ®:?y Br-drunlHying“pirtne— look-^icR otner_ihah ^^BVBry'^tcphotiCrit^wontd^tdlSe'^— We»f*ro ren”"PobIIiRer -~Today'^rra~thIiikIng^ 5 8 PHONE 73i5-093l.l with bun. H ^ ^ d he wished he Everett-BohiTi’s clothes. hadn’t ,jeen B d im in a inng^___^ srfdewalk V h !5W-„L o m m y friend When they took him upstairs. . 41dn^ have tadeaLwlth-drunks - I'm thinking abojit dr Time. He Used to set^ him— th on prih igh t n a v e ^ 'W an He'sardf^fi<®pn -wa8nH noticed- eolleptlc. or a diabetic^ “ Don’t sick.at_T at all^ ine ------— MW A long time ag(rIigQt a b6x 6t; Tlie poMeC;^ on a . wish: Cops aren't doctors. Cops clothes taken off a dead man, a said Bohm was fished out of copssal^)5sal^:?S " We Ipow this guy.” Someone else- said he- sjaw' do certain things over and over drunk,''a man I knew. the weeds t>ehind the Reno , Bphrn going througli the too. 'A {llthy sui^ a few odds and Club Wednesday, at 10 p.m. Todd C ross^ was in jail Oiurthouse on the way to Jail. . Sq tod«y I’m thioldng about “ ends' * a d d ^ up. The" "man"' •when t ^ brought .Bohm in — - He said Bohm looked bad. but Everett Boljrn'’ s clothes. I’m drank himself to death.'It . was A friend oLmine said he saw at the city police station. They sick? Drunk? Drunk-sick? It Student Clothes thinking about drunks and all in the smell of the clothes, the cops arrest Bohm. He said moved Grosser out and put w ^ hard to tell. cops. All the contempt cops On Friday morning Aug. 10, the cops put Bohm’s arm in a Bohrn in his cell. Grosser said get, all tlie contempt they give Everett Borhn fell out of bed. hammerlock, dragged him Bohrn was sick, couldn’t stand “nie sheriff said Bohm was back,— W ith schools about ready to open For girls, heavy cosmetics, low- and died — on the floor of the across the cement and" threw up and coughed all night. H e ^ *given * * ’^" permaldehyde to help Said BohiTtJm±beeiridrin»k' fm "W m --w jth —the— DTs-. -Before- — 4^thi(iking about-th» other— : throughout M a^fc'Talle^. U>ere ^s- te rio the car. H e^id“Briv«ite pension It is one thing to be casual — it is It is a field, it seems to me, in OthcE.unhappy Stories have distortg^ picture of a program goes to mark-up next month Undershirts . under them), sweatshirts Or _im. a has been made, fn House and^ Senate I.abor Committee last . On the matter of yesUnj,- for TetirfefillrfV problems of ^ job- jack«ts with ^ajnesi of gfings or matter of vital importance to Senate hearings for, modest'' year was told of the plight of example, c o m m lfe records hoppin worker. pictures, shorts, sandals without back and fend off the rocks which millions of American workers. federal regulation pei-mltting ^ hundreds of pensioners of Horn . .indicate that at least one-third Bracy D, Smith, speaking for w ill Ije thrown.our^ay. Private retirement plans considerable flexibility. No it Harda'rt of Philadelphia, _of the major funds iilready socks and cloalod sh(M>s th fi_ iL S. Chamber of have become so much a part of ■jcase at all has been made for which went bankrupt in 1971'. have provisions at least as Commerce, has voiced a the nation's economy that they the _ extrem e reform s The fund lacked sufficient generous as those that would sensible warning. He, is seenvalways tohave been with _ (Jemanded by Ralph Nader ^nd assets to meet its gbligations, be ' provided under pending agreeable to a flexible vesting i^, Yet the first such plan was by Michigan's Sen. Philip Hurt, and the' pensioners lost their bills. Only 23 per cent liave no standard and to further created by American Express GrantedT the record tontains monthly checks. vesting. The rest are in fiduciary safeguards upon less than a century ago, and as a number o1 personal stories Still other human storfes between. pension trustees. But, he adds, reoerttly as 1U50 fewer than 10 ttvai _cgrry aw emotional -arise from the aspect of A I jb o r Department study of million workers were wallop. There was Stephen •portability." In pur restless plan torminations between 1055 “ legislation that attempts to make the private pension. MR. SPECTATOR participating In them. " Duane, who worked 32_jiears and mobile society, fewer and 1965 found that only oner’ , system risk-free is misdirected Now it is estiniatecl that 35 for an A & P warehouse in persons tenff to work their tenth of One jjer cent_ of the covered employes had suffered and would weaken, not million employes, more than-a Jersey C ity, and Murray entire lives . with a single strengthen^ the system." In thlrd_ of the loliil labor force, Finkelstein, who worked '2 0 company,'" They move after from "financing failures. A A n d w a y W e G o this, as in other difficult areas are covered to some extent by years for the Andrew Gellei" eight or ten years, and in most system that works 99,9 per cent of legislative concern, the rule 200,000 retirement plans. The shoe conxp'any in New York; cases they cannot lake their of the time is not a system thar should be to do a little first; plans have coinbmed assets and Ins Kueck, who started at pension rights.with theii). cries -out for radica] and then, after reflection, to do vanously estimated at $160 tp " 18 with Anaconda Copper and It is impossible-trot-to—be fongfessional reform. a little more. $200 bilHon. They represent the worked 30 years in the sensitive lo these accounts of The problem of "portability"

ANDREW TULLY

The Penny D readful Tradesm an

recommended____t h e WASHINGTON - These "KOiTgeHj Uiat dismantlenjent of the "national days, the penny dreadful the Justice Department, and to a lesser offense in exchange Plea bargaining is also tough -—suggested that fighting crime for leniency at sentencing on the victims, if that matters arsenal" of privately owned handguns, estimated at a his praise for any U.S. was also an important time. Assorted judges and any more. As the commission’s whopping 30millipn. It urged the government official, lest the problem, lawyers claim that if' the report put it, "W e should not conflseatlon of handguns by dawn'bring word the guy has Richardson was not practice.'jwere abandoned the settle for a system which stati authorities. It said by been indicted as a common endorsing the 293-page nation's Courts would be simultaneously deprives the 1983, possession of handguns footpad, but I'll venture a quick document in toto, but he strangled by the calendar load. innocent defendant of the should be prohibited for all kudo for Atty, Gen, Elliot seemed to agree with most of forum where the prosecutor is persons other than policemen- Richardson's comment on the Its recommendatthns, falling Obviously, the need is for compelled to prove his case, more money for more courts, and military officials, and_ ,cos!_i!f flghiing crim e...... the^ findings “ the most and the public is vittimi^.ed by judges, prosecutors and_ asked ‘'a. b a n ' on -the' ■ ^ Rirharrt^pn~had just received -1 irnporlant'^ report oh ' crime •exrrasrve leniencj , , ," manufacture anrta.sale-iii,.^ a national crime coiiunission’s control ever compiled in this At a n y rate, the argument “ levels The commission's' revolvers and pistols, recommendations, many of cou n try." In stressing the that we the taxpjiytfrs can't I say bully for you, National which would require the importance of spending money, reoort noted that in some courts afford the prlcft-of protecting today more than 90 per cent of Advisory Commission on spending of huge sums of on law enforce'ment, our live^ and limbs is criminal convictions are Criminal Justice Standards money. A reporter asked moreover .he was dismissing outrageous in this era of swollen obtained by permittinn- the and Cioals, I say bully and good whether the recommendations.3 the spacious argument of many buckets. ^ seem to get up the offender to cop a lesser plea. It luck 'but 1 fear the chances of were unrealistic from gl—4egal '.‘eicperts’’ that courts and rfougHfor practically is a practice that has to make this recommendation financial standpointr'- lawmen are already too busy to everything else, including the h a r itsu ii TFpttreplied,— —on- any—mor» criminal— cxime more attractive.for .tJlg— illegal bombing of Camtwdiai------aUT.YlYIfie the onslaught of the professional criminal because gun lobby are roughly those of was Defense cases. subsidies for multimillionaire It tells him that if he's caught Harvard University hiring Secretary and Secretary of This argument has been ■ farmers, " and college tuition the prosecution aird courts don’t - H R , Haldeman to teach Health. Education. and mounted in defense 6 f so-called -for hippies rriajoring in haye the tune or the manpower governmental ethics. We are Welfare he had been granted plea bargaining, a process by guerrilla warfare ^ Meanwhile the corrOnission still a nation with a frontier has bravely tackled another mentality when it comes to facet of crime prevention shooting irons, and Congress GEORGE C. THOSTESON, M.D. which is sure to bring howls has shown in the past it would from the politically powerful as lief enact an honest gun- National Rifle Association. It control law as cut its own pay. The D octor Says

Dear ^ Thosteson: Would booklet on it'’ What foods are"' vitamin ■K’’ BERBr’S WORLD you explain what a spinal tap is best foe b et to e a f’ — Mrs. O.-' and what after-effects it has"’ R H, Dear Dr , Thosteson: I am 30 - Mrs. C. S, It is a common virus disease and had a complete A spinal tap is a procedure that affects large numbers of hysterectomy three months -by- wnich flum Is srithdrawn young people p n n tipal eileg~ T»gti~How come I havenT gone” from the spinal canal through a is that it oHricas them listless through my change of life yet’ bollow needle and tired until the disease Yqu said it occurs at once. I It" can giv'e extremely bums itself out — which in time do get n'ervous at times and valuable information in certain t( does:— There--^aan be easily upset but I try very hard Faster mail service. Mr. latest pickups — no earlier than conations. Are there any blood complicaUbns. including U) be calm I take no hormonw. SpectBTCT'^'reSilizes, is realTy' " 5 ^ p.m. for the last one of the d^y ( cells in the fluid, indicating swollen lymph glands, and My doctor told me to avoid important. And there is a lot you and usually as close to 8 p .m . as hemorrhage or injury to the occasionally involvement of discussing my operation with folks who niail letters can do to possible. These bo)ces are in bigger brain? Are there cells such organs as the Uver. Other women because they can help this situation. For intance. you towns, in business areas and also in indicating the presence of There are no -special fo o ^ give you all kinds of emotional that help the can use Zip codes^and voii caia find frant and around post offices. infection, such as meningitis? - Pressure of the spinal-fluid wholesome , bolaaced ■■ -Wise-doctoF._So many^wild- out (without niuch effort) when is And if you are interested in ,can be measured. Changes in- of rest is necessary. and fantastic .stories are " the b€sO>me fo p6^ maiiir things airm ail, then remember to the fluid can indicate the effect Yes. I have a booklet: bandied about, that some 'W ell, the post office is once more post that letter in the special of such things as syphilis on the "Mononucleosis. What It Is, women feel miserable just doing JSQmething to help. If you^ ^rm ail'boxes^before 4 p.m. daily nervous system . Chennrtcat Wrat Tcrt)o.*"-Se!earT)r.'rliOsteS5n: would i r , "com]5Iele ‘ hysTerecrOmyT’' - — '‘two” starsr And the ^tars-mean- rm its way that'evenlng. : ~ , Ontytr^nall aiuount of fluiiS IJC" aiTTigiirtjrgrre r'cromaic TKarstnrTeavsrTHTunaBre to ' s o m e th in g . Now don’t say we d i^ ’fte ll you Is withdrawn, usually a age 92, vitamin E, along with answer iks well as I'd like to. A one-star box means there at-e and look for the “one”, and teas^on fu l or less. her medicine for hjgh blood "Hysterectomy” ' means WUhdrawint; more Wiav (five pressure phenobarbltJT ^ ' jwnuval QLihk irteruL Thia^ "‘two’' star boxes and tlie special — pjckapsFiFt & ^ T n T 7- o r - la te r. the patient a tem porary 4lnniglit the mixftflre of does not cause menopause, dr -There are Sunday and holiday Airm ail boxes! headache cheniicals might b6 more than change of life; — collections, too. These bojxes are she .can handle. If it is safe to If the ovaries also . are located along busier streets, in TODAY’S CHUCKLE: Dear Dr. Thosteson: Oir give her vitannun E , how many removed, that’s a different daughter - has ' h^d onitrm ay she hare? — Mrs. G. matter. Removed, they cease Trtany shopping centers, a t a ll self- Summer Is that time of year S) im If NU, Ik . mononucleosis. She is still pale S. , . ^ supplying the'hormones that ^ Acrv|ce i»totary entefs-and in front— -^heh^the highway authorities close and thin. What is Ldon’t see any hanirrH>ut— m y have httgn TTirnhhtng theregiUar roads and open up the 'you tried to 'communicate lelephohic^lly’ with me o a ----- C- O poet-^ic^ — tnonomideOSisT How_docs JL. wh at are Ton trrirtg -to Wtli anridial removal. tMs Ir Jhis iHt»noon7^~~ ‘ ■ - . . ------T h e n e w tw o -s ta r b o xe s ^h a v e th e — -d e to u ra ^ f------— affectjthefatKlrrDo yOThaWii....»cctmiplHh~~t>y s H (lin g ^ a « r~ li6 n p than gradual. J/ By 6. A. (GUS) KCLKER are .out in the open^ so. to speak. ^whlch is mighty slim considering "This we have been doing since not be available when the cold EdUori Times-News Officials of the Idaho PoWer Co. October 1972. In July one-half of the weather eom es/’ tho nffirial Kaid| — — One uf Uiesiet tng‘'

— it has just been “ yoLi give me so •serious power sTtiiatipn was include the provision of some 1 _ e v e n 70. It^ ill be better than not The . alternative -to -starrt^ many kilowatt hours and when you looming for the region, million kilowatts of ' this having any heat at all. The critical conserving today, with the hope need it then you give them back.” commencing this winter and interruptible power. In simplest period will be winter, but get used that we can stretch our power But_ now the problems of extending into the late 1970’s., The terms, B P A has the right tp c u r t a il to the "cutdowns’’- now, B P A supply until Mother NatUre electrical production — and prediction, though^ indicated a part or all of this low-cost energy officials plead. intercedes. In short, we m ust letup meeting the spreading demands — power surplus off55^0M kilowatts whenever it is necessarv. “Every watt-hour of electricity, op the electricity throttle — the ^i'-weuse today is a watt-hour that will tank’s nearly empty.” I

Geotherm B^l Testim ony r f i • . Eilitor. Times-News: ' mineral resource. This position important to Idaho and her 1 i m e s - P ublic F orum ■llie following ii< a-transcript' i-was established by the passage people. If geothermal energy is of the testimony I gave befpr« -of—the national Citothermal neither mineral nor water, niembers of the Water and Steam AcfofjDec. 24, 1970, and then Idaho, and not the Federal I'ower Subcommittee of the is presently being ehallenged government, should regulate Interior Committee at Idaho -in the courts. Congress shoul Its use-and development. This J’''0 llS' and addressed to amend the law ^nd adopt a local control is highly desirable Honorable Krank Chui^, position siinilar\o one taken by at a time when the people are C hild.Support V iew Not G ood Conduct chairman; y ' ( Idaho's 1971 Geothftrmal /tct. becoming more aware of their Mr, Chainnan, Membefs^of-thA That is that geotherm al surrouij^jjjgg and t h e ,. ^bcommtttee: energy Js "sui generis,” or a governraeq,cL.,.J3ie, state “KaitorTtifier-Tvett^— ■— “Manyran ftml-worlrwhere and— E d i t o r , .... -— arKl»oF -th e.- •■ T My fljiinr is JoluLPeaViiy and. ,.thli^tunio.itJioiLCl^,liUiiisisii- - gowrranent-cairbe-mtjchtnorr “ It's interesting to read th e____My ;tSfi(lrng is that it when a man can't. Child. It seems to be a'n established abi)hshinenl of capital 1 in an Idaho State Senator far ITloro reasonable approach, adaptable and creative than a views on chltfl support - takes m ore than - one support and welfare contradict fact ihat seven peuple< entered puiii.shmeni— oo matter how . repreg.enling District 21. in aom*.. sites, tha mulli.li-iaysredbureaucray1ayeredbureaucrayhead' hei - -expressed by Su)>day last's consenting 'adtUr to make a these r l^ s * they seek, and T the DefiibcTatic' ^^politlcal hideous the crime might BeT OTd wrty-.ii^£ffi£rmaLjeiaijrcaiUna»J^-quartoW}^BS^^ II. TT front . page '^artlcle. .. I ’ve human being, so merely to say don’t believe that'^ fmr. I ’m all headquarters ago we were Minidoka found- in conXunction with Idaho and not the Federal watched my brother pay it for thatmnnmii iilfilwrong' I line" tT~ lor Woinen’s'U b , so let's do acquired or tried to., acqmre involved in a war that took waiter. When these, sites are government could receive ------about-thirteen yearST and get half wrong. Child support. It's. away with those imfair child informaUon that woiijd hiindrprt<; and- royalties ana revenue from T~ support payments and welfare' supposedly help or binder the thousands of American lives Crisis I think it is a wise water cafry ^he ear^^s energy these develoments. In a state I ’t, so I ’ve some solid views administered t<< be sure the rolls. With more divorces the respective political parties in monthly, cities were burning national policy to develop a to the surface whe?e it can be with two4hirds o f’ its- land of my own. money is spent exclusively on problem is going to worsen. their campaigns. Surely, this and riots were common multi-source supply of energy. used. In this case, the owned by the Federal Child support starts at the the children, the taxpayer is With higher prices and taxes act did not demonstrate ethical occurrences. Crime of every Certainly geothermal energy is goethermal resource closely government, and therefore not ^vorce, bat that doesn't mean going to get soaked good. If the problem is going to worsen. conduct nor good t>pe was rising faster than a largely undeveloped energy resembles the water resource on the lax rolls, this certainly is all other bills ^top, A woman, policed on a state-wide Jiasis With )65,000 a month floating sportsmanship. However, upon ever before in the history of bur source and 6 ne with great rather than a mineral justifiable. even if in flagrant) violation of BotsrState College would have around ^for_ temptation to examination of previous nation and in the words of (xitential for clean power. The resource. Much of the private .jand her marriage vow^ always ii to be converted to a prison. dissatisfied wives ^he problem campaigns there exists Ciovernur ( !eorge Wallace, i^ atomic "energy"comifnission Idaho's greatest geothermaT within Idaho was patented after - favored by the courts, so will I .sympathize with Mr. is going to worsen. ■sTrtreTarmaj, . w ideh'ce" m ar was Eel'oinlng almost ' couTrdo a great deal of good by potential, however. will 1913. Many of the southern gel the possessions but not the Galley. He's probably the most I. —1.._ II.. - led lo • iiiipgssible to prosecute a unjlertaking a rejsearch project probably be developed from Idaho farms were patented bins. Oh, the gay'll get hij-cw, -to- solve-- V’^-'Zequally unorthodox . ^ tiv lli«s crim ing. T/et us l^ k again, wilh,the objective of findingjjut sites where the earttr’s heat is after thiSTlatr. D esw t Entries, problern? By making crimmaFs the guns, his clothes . . . if he's Attorney this county's e w by over-zealou5 members of a ^ i s adminisIratiQn reducedto aU it can about geothermal found, without the waler. -Such nur WQrId.Wac II and.Korean out’oMiiuiPwlioTt nply-ran’t lUcky. H? won’t get the had, and'Tn'his dedication'lt the party now pushing so a fraction a decade, or more, of energy.. sites could be fouijd throughout veteran homesteads, are a afford...... that smacks of children. Get to visit them must be rather difficult to.have desperately for a Watergate ■'admitted .South F^ast Asian However. I still have two— Wahor'Biere is an abundant good example. On these lands, .eighteenth century debtor's Sometimes. And pay money publicized the fact that out of purge. war, our cities are no longer areas of concern, 1 feel the- evidence of very recent the m ineral rights were prisons. By leaning heavier on which hopefully won't end up in 100 men he should arrest 64. Or, Despite loud and Incessant burning and rioting has ceased. State of Idaho should have volcanic aartivity throughout reserved to the Fedej’al the taxpayer , , . that I a bar or in some other guy's percentage, wise, 586out of 880 screams that they have been The FBLrepM^ mJiine_oIthis. absolute freedom to monitor all the region. It is certainly not gpverrirhent. wouldn’t advise. Oi— tiy—the behalf. And the other bills.' to 'be clarified as good, violated and trespassed and y?ar showed [hat major crime fa c e ts o f the project. Special hard to imagine layer ol very If geothermal energy is held simple and expedient means of Emotionally, he's at ebb Ude, honest, hard-working felons. their pretense that It is a was down 1 percent across the attention should be given to hot dry rock. In these cases, an to be a mineral right oMrely nipping divorces in the bud at a crucial point In his career. The Judge further unique occurrence In politics. nation. The presem environmental safeguards with outside source of water could because a Federal law says so. whenev er possible, thereby maintained; "In is is a big they would find, were they to administration has made more particular concern, f5T 5nr~ be pumped down a drilledJitilt these■ [ir'Operty owners ' eliminating the problem. Or by institutions leB him he's a bad socio-oconomic situation which search their memories of the progress toward world fieace underground acjuifer. An to make contact with heated, hav?Tiad an extremely valuable eliminating marriage as an risk'in our credit-oriented has developed during et them add to their long list IS essential to have at least a AKC should be required to resemble water resources, but should be corrected. to get hitched and less to and presumed, 'on the orowT. could go out part-time and earn of credibility and fair play the two party system Kegardless follow all rules, regulations neither Is it a mineral Thank you gentlemen for get unhitefi«d, and less So here's this fellow, for the fifty. Now, if you peed fifty, following; -aames of people of ilie party accused, or iind laws of Idaho as should any resource A far better approach your time and the effort in profitable for womanhood: dastardly act of loving and you've got to make sixty-five or voted and counted who had accusing, It is not for the wpll-' other good citizen. is to assume It is a "sui generis' coming to hear us My second concern lies in the mgrrying a woman, who's seventy so uncle can have his Of course, some lawyers been dead for inany -years, being of our nation lo tolerate or a thing unto itself John Peavey Federal government's position probably worked hard and share, and you then get might have to tighten their ballot boxes disappearing this-.t>'pe of drain on its "The implications of present Rupert that geothermal energy is a contributed much to society, "jlimmed into a higher, more- belts and there might be m ysteriously and precTncts economy and pre^Mge Federal attitudes are very who's Just handed over hll his ruinous tax bracket at year's layoffs at the welfare agencies, that tallied more votes than Sev^en men entering the stuff never to use it again,-who end, you also pay the expense but this country's strength has there were registered voters. . U e rn 0 c r a t i c p S' r t y has liills to pay and no credit, of gas and food necessary for always been in Its families., not The man who suffered the headquarters did not cause a who's .kids’ attentions have the maintenance of extra work. mail expressly illegal according to close boi^s— and happy I n P r a i s e to pursue this soegp,l4j^_arepusto^^ ,Jng..Jjombi^, but. 1 never ex­ ___ illustrious President has done lower our standard of living to___ 'marriage . l^dy in a darJc^i^l/alknragen" made me extremely proud of issue; so desperately are a&a pected to run into a-AVatergate have ffotfiiiig to hide . . . I s o m e jl^ g _which the theirstnr«nler to do^t^ and be confused I cotne__.stotiorr'tivtpusl¥.r wffltlMNatiMibebeaM. _ unknown, with ttH>s« who co m m it capital —L.’ Patrick 'Gray, form w' : ^ . . ^Jiin F k ] ^ . . - . ' acting bead of the FBI. be­ fflyingi tiriwwUr*’’ "not crimes and have mpyed for gatiou. ■Vebuhnot” out of what we^iidw Jerome , ' j (cjXHcigo^uSTIflief ' center ot me j scandal?— a-.ta!y 4lwiigiun-ii 11 J4do.000 ITT pledge to'sijpport Nixon's eagerness to have the miles from his home a rs ^ n the crucial quesUon of Nlxpiifs : W l/^IfiNGTON V Strong the impetus behind ITT-aided settlement of government, Clemente, ihe place where lie involvemerit, if any. antitrust iiultr against the the San Diego convention bid. JRepublican convention held in 5^ m em oran d ^ wmqh clrcumstairtial evidence efforts to locate'the 1972 ■Thescandalfir^^xploded ip- his "luckycity” of San Diego “ alluded to discussions was married, a city that examining White House. rairatMTtwldent yixon may Republican-'- national cohglomerate. February ^ < .vith r^ as-frequ en tly aUu^ed to. historically had favored him rtles — some of which have te piersonaUy'■invjoivea ai staff members of St)eclal wjth lopsided electoral been wi*hhfil(^ — 4t-ia— ^ ^osecutor Archibdd Cox are publication by "columm sfJai'lr Titag “attention was paid to it. ti-- !■ Andersofr ' of a memo, T h e Beard-Hume 'agreed Qpon ends' in Jhe majorities. not possible to know what the aware • of the . evidence (2) itT 's ,$400,000. pledge - purportedly written by then- suggestions of Nixon's resolution o f the IT T cja e." President knew^or did'about linking Nixon to the gffair. . espeoially=-at the time 4t was- ITT Washington lobbyist Dita personal - knowledge of and the case.' ■ but Ihfcextent to which thiey are made on May 12, 19V1 — was a r'^ea'rd, alleging that the ;involvement in the scandaJ referred to the e *is tM (» of a pursuing it is not known. vital element in San Diego’s $400,000 pledge had- "gone a seemed too 'fantastic to' lJJ~~Slune 30,1971, memo from Klein n e w Cox investigators have asked ability to bid on the convention. long w ay" towarA-obtaiaing taken, se'riously, Mrs. Beard to Nixon's then-top assistant, one key witness about Nixon’s ( 3jl From start to finish — favorable antitrust decisions. discounted the memo and H. R., (Bob)/ Haldeman, Irtterest In San Diego's 1972 •'setting forth the $400,000 fror? April , 1971, to July, 1971 N«oft-administHrti«n;7ttfld; ITT Ihexonrunittee spent most of its convention—bid,— Rep. Bob — the progre^ of §an Diego’s officials have consistently time sifting the possible arrangement with ITT j" ^Wilson,J-Calif., hut ttoy hav£„ y setection - as conveiitien .-aite (lenied iHFconnection. ' Viivolvement of others; Snrfacing- g t— not talked to others, including closely tracks,'chronologicalIy, During Senat^j.Judiciary However, on Aug."1, a secret meltorandum, however, senl former While Ho.Use aides^ pporters and. Con^essioif^,,-the progress that ITT was lk« FUN SPOTS Robert Finch and Herbert Cotmnittee hearings ' into the White House memo was government, tonstruction con- ITT^ ^ffair, then-Anderson uncovered by the Senate Investigaors scurrying back making in achieving a if Hit BAI.TIMOREf UPI) -Feder­ Klein, telephone interviews through transcripts of the 1972 settlement of the antitrust suits al investigators reviewed Vice tract^Agnew agreed early this as4 ociate Brit Hume-lcsIiUed Watergate Committee which established. - : Senate ITT 'hearings. Out of against it. The Justice President Spiro T. Agnew's week to'bpen his records to the The International Tfl^eljlione that Mrs. Bearc ski a evidence existed that these reviews, plus interviews Department ^ d challenged its financial records Saturday, investigators, claiming he Mitchell said to her on May 1, could "directly involve” 'Nixon COMING Si Telegraph Corp. sauidal , with key participants, comes, .acquisition fil.l.he Grinrtel apparently 'yyaitinu for the would be found innocent of any 1971, that Nixon had ordered on the antitrust side of the- consists of still-unproved this explosive . set of C o r p .CanteenCorp.of Am w ica, fNT^RTA«tNT!! Justlcepepartmf^t to decide if . v^ongdotng. charges that_ib^: Jiistice him to- •■ni4 kc-a reasonable scandaL conclusions; and the Hartford Fire the material should bie taken U.S. ^Attorney G eorw fleall, Depaftment agreed to an out^. settlwuent” of the. antitrust The March 30. 1972. memo • (1) Nixon was-eaeec-l2. be insurance Co. before a _grand jury probing who has been directings the of-court. antitrust settlement .suits^ was written by then-White alleged political kickbacks in grand ^ury investigation since A u g ^ ; last December, said the Justice his home stjAe. A u g u s t 1 9 The records, reaching back to Department must approve any___ ■ 1967T^en Agnew took office as indictments "other than those m i n e r s JOEY S!LVA Kovefntic^^ .Maryland, were of arnuline criminal nature-" e x - a i d e r s SHOW copied ' Friday-rJii. the vice “ I think you can assume^that C ASAdR AN D E , Ariz. ( UP1> ..a water pip^irij.an e: [resident’s Washington office an investigation relative to the i^c.scue workers worked reach the trapped minerrf;Wlt a tlie cause of the accident. ^ d a safety employe said he A- Hecla spok«sman^ert were alive. face masks to filler dust and • K O Y Baltimore . Included were check-_ -Kiehai'dSon tOW reporters In ' underground, but Hecla Mining ______bach, said ____ _ Two other employes suffered that oxygen cylinders' were .stubs, bank s U le m e h ts "lM WashinUtt>'n PYldajthat he had Cu.-ulficials would not~disclose i ) R f l S K Y f deixisiiiun lui7IK^Tim?-tWdayoperaton slewed m inor -injurieu . and -another . jitatiunetlaLviinuus points, buit, iricome lax records. b r1eft^_^new on th* case ex-aide John O. Ehrlichman ;,ny signs of success. escaped unharmed in the cave- it was not kjiown whether the Attorney General Elliot h. "because I Ihought il w.as jhe "Has not tellliig the •>■“*** . .. Pinj|CountVsheriff'sofficers in. ______~ ' two men were able lo reach the -IVt'hjird&un and Henry— & ---- mily fuirected to act soon. .serving as government minis­ FUN FOR KIDS ters have refu.sed to resign and upeiLthe wii>' fur I’apadupoulus ^ QFALiAGES- B L U I “ 7 _ to iipiHiint a new l abinel under BOISE tU P l) — Idaho will receive $243,344 as their share in a new priMiiier Mfednesciay — Thursday — Friday — Snturdny funds from federal l^ d s managed by the Bureua of Uind l’ap |)rcm iers and 10 m eiii- leases and sales of pubuc lands during the six month period end­ Ih-is of the original inilUarj ing June 30. j (imiiniltec «hich staged the

Filipino insurgents quelled TWIN MANII-A (UPII -The back- .\geni y i PNA i quoted Brig, surrendered JAA«S COBURN bone of the insurgent move­ Gen I'figenio; C Navarro, He said the latest re txl killed r ; INEMA 7^ T O D A Y AT ment In the southern pari of the coilimander of the second t)> Sciimd ('iin.stal)ulary' /one 1 :00 J:00.S:00- Phlllppin/r's' main island of constabulary lonv. as saying soldiers was Kranci.sco Porteiii. 7:00.9:00 P M l.uzon has been broken, mili­ that since inarlial law was' lc>;al .sec retary of the Ciim inu- tary authorities said Saturday iiii[X).se(l last .St'pl 2,1. The iiist p.irt\ of Ihe Philippines They also said the legal apparatus of the ih.ssident secretary Of the Philippines nioveinent in the llecol region Ttie government announced in Manila that [*resident Kerdi- ComHiunist parly has been I In southern Luzon] has been MONDAY AUG. 20th killeq by Constabulary ( nation­ distiianlledanddi.ssidenl activi­ n;ind FT Marcos Sanirdiiy 8:30 A.M. — Joromo al pol Ice Ifroopers, ty has been rcduced lo a t>are ( reatcd a rehabilitation council Jxmlar Possw^ The official Philippine News m in im u m ' and three floic provinces in the H o rs e S how Navarro s;iid his men have troubled .southern'Philippuies to- accounletl for 242 insurgents rr^rtnrntian of peace WEDNESDAY AUG. 22nd and order and .six'lal and •ind gave the followm^i ,break- lOiOO A.M .— Queen Conlcslants Horsemanship Conlesi Rfii/i soalis nkiwn 54 killed, four woWided, t‘^^tIli^llllc■ clevelopiiient of the 4;3rP.I*l.-GH )(ND OPINING PARADE fiO l aptiired, 81 arrested and 43 area all Mexico Parade Hieae is: Ricb Htrili{(-Uiilio^teil Titire {8:30P.AAr.—RCA SonctionatTRodeo MEXICO CITY (UPII •CAUts one r a a tevani ■fwm folU County Sheriff Poisse ^ in s fell across much ’of THE CHRISTIANIA Queen Contestants Slexico Saturday sending rivers surging through villages in R o p in g Ac* summer flo o ^ that have left RESTAURANT loo.obo pers6 r\3 homeless. Government officials said THURSDAY AUG. 23rd "million.1 nf rinllara',1 in crops. 8 t30-P:M.— RCA Sanctioned R6deo dams, bridges, highways, rail­ G iii*fiarr«l Roeing^Cosh-Pwse^----- roads and homey - liay c* bw»- - destroyed by this weefc’s-flood - Mbiint®ai5K*rTTf Po$$o« watcrstn a-serm-state area of QUEEN CORONATION central Mexico. / The officials, however, re- FRIDAY AUG. 24th ported wo fitjoff deaths so'^ 8:30 P.AA. — FAIR AWARDS PROGRAM far—teen-ag'ers swept away.by In the Rodeo Arena raging-rivers in the state of F re ^ T o THe P ublic .- Coahuila. W m y Troops andTfed O oss SATURDAY AWe. 35th ~ workers provided emergeiTcy 2^00 P.M. ft 8:30 PJA. — Wood Rlv*r help, temporary shelter and Vs. Eastern Idaho medical d i s t ance throughout - State Jamboree ■iWtlooct fe»nr — Gbveminent officials said Nayarit, one of the worst-hit ^ t e s , was one-rwin< hnmpfpW ^IFKETCHOm%SEilV ATIONS 73<.338a ■1T- . .J , .?« - -• 7 w T i i T e ^

-tConttoueiffrom pTTT legislature ■filTef , a ' hr ings cases to c o i^ ‘ ‘otil:^is a l rnvestlgfition, accorHIn^o. w aia> HRC d,toiflton ■ las t reaert ." iBhe aaid the -Mrt. Blough: could ask the governor for supporting a student’s right to commissloh only has had to She said the HRC is the .ntost

operating. high school. lo trial since it was organized its type in the Unlted'States. . ■ I think the legislative iUd not' Mt5> Blough. said such a in 1969.-p„ The next most poorly fond^ . PHNOM HENHtCPff* - want to give it ^.enw^h funds rsgCQUping for a. fuU ^ale requeat ,waa,’*hardlv viable.” •We vlork quietly behind the state conunlsslon dealing with Cambodia ’s top piflltary m»n foM>twratton n o us tfeoaustf or scenes and ^hat^ how we're, civil rights— said ibturiluy he Inienos to a?li partly because of the restricted ...short of Its Americaji T a k -' amount of money available for our controversial nature,” effective.;■ she saW. , operating budget for this year, the-United States taresunie air aefgKi^sT* emergency use. ^ \^rs.-Blough said. — If t|ie HRC folds at the.end of ■ she said. strikes if the Coimpunists UPI coirespondent TCiSmeth- , The chalrmffh said September,, Its fed eral' ignore the Indochina peace T . Eriglade said r e f u g e who Earlier this year, the emphatically the commission cdunterpart. . the Equal SWIMMING POOLS agreement,' had fled to Phnohi Penh'frernv legislature Had appropriated a ffw ip ts to bring Employment Opp'ortuhlty M ^, Gen. Sosthene Fernan- the einbattled countryside were J17,500 to the HRX. U te r,' reconciliation, not Conimisslon, will take over Its ^ N D SUPPLIES I I iz, chairman of the Cambodi- drifting back Saturday to their ' j3,00b was cutr from this controversy. duties. Such a- transfer would S E E D I Joint. Chiefs of Staff, said, appropriation' by ' the- Mrs, Blough' saia the HRC not be beneficial because the ruined, or deserted villages GLOBE F K O C O . bo\vever, he’d keer F.F.OChas an 18-month backlog Truck lon», Twin Fotli 7 33-117 } even if the Americans turn him ^uthwest of the capital. of eases currently under duwii^/I must ngm,” l i 5 -saW7 ■ Kielff'reporta told of a sharp "I must do my duty." skirmish at dawi) Saturday t^^aihesvflle "If the Communists doni near Chambak Meas, 10 miles respect the Paris and Geneva north of the capital. Newsmen agreements I shall go back returning from the scene said uncovering dupes , -again and ask for American the government trbops ran into bombing to resume,” the 49^ stiff guerrilla opposition when GA1NESVII.1.E, Fla. (U P I I money freeing,them from the year-old general told UPI in an they tried to link up on —The conspiracy trial of the worries of Holding down regular Interview, Highway 6. Two government Gainesville Eight, In weekend jiibi. ‘ F'ernai)xlez,4»ointingom a lull soldiers v^ere reported killed recess, is a spy story told by In New Orleans, for example, in fighting around capital and 10 wounded in the c l ^ . governnient agents who duped the VV;\W niemtierShip at one Phnom Penh since the bombing “ fem an der,' iii his Tnterview,- their'frfends. ^ — point •was—reduced--to -threer— ended three days ago, said, Bridge Ensembles: Bcautrfillly 3e- admitted asking Saigon to send The group is accused of Two of the three were FBI ■Themnifary situation is much sii>ncd double dccks o f deluxe plastic over South Vietnamese troops plotting to violently disrupt the' informers. better” and "the enemy has ofCambodian«thnie<)r-ig4n—the GOPcdnventioh that dominated" " Kour of the government's coated cards, score pad and hand- suffered _ a defeat at our President Nixon last siuunitjr eij/ht witnesses so far Jjjtve hand^” ^—__ ^-called Khmer l^om —but he_ some pencil. "saia he didn't know if anyTiad for a second' term, testjfieir'th ey'’were~15anr-to- Field'reports said govern­ beerrsenl.- One-by-one the government re(X)rt to police and the FBI O p«n ment troops have run into little ■ "I'h ey arp very good soldiers ^ PBHPUME BOTTLE rccovcrcd from sunken witnesses have- sone to -the— <(«mla»,4Mn inetedtHg-Nw'— M o n d a y oi^sition in pushing ^ e Italian liner Andrea Kqria Is sniffed by Barbara stand over the past three w-eeks York. FajjetteviUe../\rk^ New ^ S fifpital's defense perimeter out and I ' have asked the I b j o j t Rodocker.'Vvlle of oiie..4^-dlyers,-tbf see if any to reveal how tlioruughly the (/rleans, NJjjini and Gainesvil- Firidoy . O P E N SUN. to around nine miles from guvvrnment ^to send them/’ fragrance remains after 17 years mider Atlantic FBI . penetrated- U'.Fla. 1^HI5 . JlJhnom Penh-, The Communists B^rnandSz s id . ^ ' JNIoht* Ocean. Treasure e.stimated at $2million was left siinctiuns of the Vietnam Invariably, vqien asked Row -P had driven Ujabqut three piiles South Vletjiam^however, has in suuluuihulk after sajvage attemEt HjiajuiUeit -Veteeuns--Against th« W ar- ■iimdl, tlmv -w ufi* --iiaid,—th e y " of the city a.s recently as two dcnIelI"Vlet Cong charges that uff because uf bad weather and rutted interiur of '■ l-V-VAW I have an.TO’OFed. " I don't re- wutikii- about. 10.000- HW t- ■ shijJ. 1 efliu snlddlvliling syst)?ffl iiii'a wurts iTiiH" llired infonners posinu as pT'-"—^ ^ — ' ' Some diploniatic observers, "volunteer” troopS to plans are being laid for "Salvage attempt on SS war protesters, they bi-caiiie ,S

P o ll show s P resid e n t’s sj^eech “ • • ‘ ‘-r- ' unconvincing to m any hearers

(Continued Irom p, 1) rtepiiblicans, 112 per cent fountf ' A spokesnian for the Gallup 'I1it' .\iig 3-jJ (wll iiji^h ow ed A»— ^-.expected, more the President completely organr/.ation .said the finding 'that 'ili per cent lx‘lieved that L A S T B t G Democrats than Keput^licans convincing, 18 per cent quite a tJiat 50 per c'ent did not believe lYcsulent ' Nixon stunild l>e found- the l*resulent not at all lot, 24 per cent somewhat, 23 I^esident Nixon's as.sertion of impeached and conipelled to i-iinvincinK. but the survey per cent not at all, 'and 3 per non-involvement in the leave the presidency, an would indK-ate that the cent had no opinion. planning or cover-up could not upward trend since late June lYysident failed to convince'a Among -4X-mocrats, 7 per tx! compared to,.the findings of when 'the figure w.as 19 per c(inSiion;i!ly lo -the i*rcsi(lent's .somewhat. 55 per ceyiLupt at ak-sed specifically in regard to spcecti came fr]bm the south. R < ‘d all, and -t per cent had no Uie Wednesday night .speech ___- . , . . rOl------opinton—‘-”' “ ““"~ lloweveir, a r^guTifr Gall up Umse polled in the south, 52 per _ Among inde[X'ndents, too, poll, based on in(erjVie\s:£_iyi^ji__c-nnl, nmd—Hiey Ix-licved the b o b a r d the l*resident appears to have 1,435 adults between Aug .'t^, lYcsldCnt when he .said he hud 111 a credibility problem. Of those showed that about Ihree in no-mvolvcment in the planning polled, 13 per cent foufid him every four people believed the or cover-up of W atergate completely convincing, 12 per President was involved to >. Nationally, onlv .'18 p

o f S i i i g o n . r ommmilst u-uupsnadftn:d~a- barrage of mortar rounds and rockttts Thucsday night into government positions along the city'.s western and southern defensive perimeters, killing a one government soldier and I’icllire- H> -ofMM. Ittiiip- lo ix'drooni imh lra>s l« iliniii^ wounding four others. Five soldiers were reported - -el*.: ^irapcN. rar|)«-t«. wiillpii|>ric«-«l a( IreiiH-ncioiis sa\inf’s. K fiiifn ib e r ■ attacks against ^uth Viet­ namese defense camps eight (ii<- opporlttiiilv l<» -ave lik'^ (his 4>ii iht* n»veHl-qiiRHiy home fiir- miles west of Hue and 16 miles iii»liin*;s in M a^ic \ a llr\ ciinu-s but onc.c U >«-ar. south of the capital. The command spoke.sman reported 50 Comirrunists slain in abortive attacks Friday against three government out­ posts in the Central Highlands. F te d w in , .^Rie-spakeanon catd thrae- ^!o^'e^nment .soldiers died and A ■*' .M 'h SIX were wounded during the It'!'' 'j ' u f's ^ 'u' day-long' attacks near the

nrovincecapital of Kontum. 1 vV 'tn y > ju If If. -m

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Try the new iijnn S M B r a n d GovKuc*’rn* ana ' r y a P .1I' VQ C” Copier $ 2 4 OO

■V- LYNWOOD sj^bRE

M e t f . Through Thun. '^OPEH: FU RN ITU RE . Bank Cards’.and Charge in the Elk& { Accoiih^ yyelcome ' Downtown Twin Falls 3 m OPEN FRI. NITE TILL 9 P.M.

Fin.ch-Brown Co. Leather refers (o uppcri' ~ Downtown & Lynwqpd ^ 129Q Addlion Av«. Eoil ' ■ -#l». 7 4 3 ^ 0 ^^— ^ r . Thlies^*w»r^fWhHW»..:ualfio' -bunday AUguM

'le g i^ tu r e .'wiU -ipass a -state-- the activities o T ^ e Tocfd gov-" lanif tui* plHnT*‘" e — emmwit agwwtw , and Uic ted- us a lian'a in laiiJ l!ia< pltuining;— eraL i^gvuriunent catl IKlp b> acres but Was contained early acres-before being contained ■ , (CoBtlnued from p. >) But your locjsd gove«;nmenta beiiig a catalyst and gtiide. but - V - ______*_ sometime Monday. He Mid the '^-“iiieanwhilev " the— major- nftiatTOafce the priinfr^ofeci^w^ "■-"agaaon o{Fwfaat ~~ will hap­ -O neljather-fife, the' araani. ^n^zar Creek fire was the hi<{h- exactly -the case in centr^ ovw the uses of Bear Lake^, pen In the development of B e v . emphasis ,.ln , northern Idaho caused Cougar Creek blaze, priority fire Saturday in ^ e thing ■— the future of Bear 'was aimed at the Cottonwo<)d he said. Lake Is yours." had blackened 400 acres of Nezjierce National Forest- Montana Saturday wh^rfe .Lake belongs ta the area resi­ Creek fire which''liad firefighters were battling to dents. Idaho Gov'. CecU D. Andrus Leiand Christenaen, commis. ... . timber uriiiwr nearIicni the u.c south,avuu. fork of- bccauscitW8Sdcstrpying-high- tJacligiied:9.i«5a^pUfi^. TnViT-oh W-~ eantrcl a 40,000 acre rnHge.fire- Mate on Nezperce Indian land near Miles .City. ' govemmentplanningmejuis.t}L^ ducted the first m eetin g^th e Nezperce forest. attending a hearing here Fri­ valued at Twefl over $600,000, day listened to the ggvemors of freedom of action of the indivi­ commission. A Forest Service spoltes OurislCTMn said, “ We are , The iBull Creek fire on the was controlled Saturday, but ranchers were attempting to . Utah and Idaho and represien- dual and the local government said, though, he expected the starting late here—five years nearby Nezperce National not until it bad destroyed 2,040 control -the blaze relying tatives of four federal agencies will be lost in a maze of state fire to spread to at lesst 1,100 too late. BatAve Can still control Forest had blackened 4.200 acresiof timber. heavily on the use of chemical tell them that the “ decision is and federal dictates.” zoning and land-use plaiming Thei^Fprest Service said the fire retardent. yours.” But he said Utah, Idaho and before things get out of hand. fire situation is considered so While firefigliters in 4Jtah Gov. Galvin L. Ramptorv the -federal government don’t "W e see here federal, state, critical at this time in the twa northern Idaho and western N e w s l i p s said, “ We don’t want to conrte want this to. happen at Bear countyandcityofficialsmeeting state areas because fire crews Montana had their hands fiUl in here and dictate how to run Lake. together in one purpose. We - are faced with battling several Saturday', there was virtually your affairs. Sen .James McClure, R-Idaho, Lodge burns _ _ can solve^qur^ problems with Wfferenr^ftres -on numerous' TKr.-ftrE-^inrtisityTj^r-eastern gaid, •■■Thpjiliitfjican coordinate: POCATlO-LO, Idabp (U PI» - Fire roared Washineton. Jiis kind o F :x )o p c r^ ii7 ’ ' Uirough the Elks Club here early Saturday , dfslroying most of the foor-sto/y structure. Thirty firemen aud eight trucks battled the names through the night to, prevent the Blaze Use your credit every time you buy! ^'''■frooi spreading to other downtown buildings. The fire broke (Jut about 2 a.m. and an hour ^ and a half later the flames' licked through the riMtf uf the building, creating what Hill railed a "chlmniy effect,” whfth tarried the blaze — 4 - (hriiy^h Iht* lour floors .aiid basement uf'the 6(t- j year-old strutHure. ‘ iflll said the'blaze apparently started In the : SIIIIIM-MIIMIIAY <'enler-of-(he bulldlngron (he seeuod;floor. The rause was not Immediately known.

A dvisors’ proposal HOURS: 9 TO9 MON.^ SAT. - 12TO 5 SUNDAY o n p l a n ^ a ^ t e p t e d BLUE LAKES SHOPPING CENTER V-,. T ffTWrALLS ^ Hesource Board members subjects such as 'w a te r accepted the advice of their management, ■ water quality, professional staff Friday and recreation an4—irrigation. It -adolpted ' H I' apprsach . to woulcl gcnera(lly not- discuss SAVE Over 25% produw a Statejiyui^r Plan by projects, specific areas or 15.0Z. VASELINE January.' ____ L-ific. prQ ^IIIS." It WQUlll. Meeting in-Twin.Fallii at the " however, “ d’einonstrate U) the I N T E N S I V E ■ Blue Lakes Country Club, publjc and to federal and stale CARE LOTION MALTED MILK board members accep^d u agencjes the general coul'se schedule that commits tfiem to that the Idaho Water Resource •• Noil (jft'.tsy solltMIS t.isi BALLS an Objectives Report by April, Hoard an.ticipates,it will Liike in nr tjfy I skif^ 1974, iind a finafBasins report to n (1 uC ti II 'subsequent • Vj'G a l. S iz e , by early 1977. stiidie.s'.’ ' The - objectives report, according to.“ the .'Tccem- ' The appfoach adopted by the board wa.s one of six presented mendtaion of the staff plan­ R e g . i l . 3 7 ning Kroup at work on the by Uie sliiff Liisk force. SAVE 20% Su^iis FaUa-Giiffey 3/PK. CRACKER JACfC • Triple-pack o( popcorn and peanut qandy • Don t lorgel your (ree prize in eve'y box' u c(m rLiM :tiuaO K'd (Continued from p. I) je a r’s appropriatiops, but only Board membefs Scotl Reed. (I 12 per cenl ovei'all Lncrea;.>‘ C'seur d'Ale;ie and Franklin because'of expected culbackv-, 'Jones, Boise, as well as in federal funds for the yearl Kramer, opposed the" board's beginning next July 1. SAVE 19% efforts to go to court to force Some of the federal funds SAVE 32% Kramer to file the applicatifln. acted La diaappear.froni Uie - r 2 0 ^ 0 Z . ______Both Jones and Reed said after IWRB’s budget were for a T O - P I E C E the vole they • oppose the Farm, Home Administration- WINDEX" A S S O P T E D project. contracted study of water and CLEANER Board members also sewer needs for several Idaho M A R K E R S E T approved a proposed 1975 fiscal counties. The work on that Non-slreak cleaner '' • f m e I' IU-* 11M' Mu} year budget of $828,966 for project is expected ^o,.Jai;„. With Arnm onia'D■ • (\llOtftl srl I'lf 11) presentation to the state completed this year. Famous glass bottle- • -iK legislature at its next session. The figure includes $757,666 in U Q U iD state general funds iuid an antii^ipaled $71,300 in federal PUMICC CRflYons funds. r BARS h KEHV T(Cei«K T—Bifci S A V E ^ S ^ said the budget would permit 1t€AaOVBOGEV=1- an expanded program by BOWL RINGS!! LUNCH PAIL & VAC-JAR authorizing four-^lew staff No Acid . . . Harmless!! • Non-break wide-mouth 8-oz vacuum bottte positions in addition to sc\*en • Steel lunch pail m iDnght tun styles ■. new ones authorized and .funded by the legislature last KREFT winter but not y e L fille i______Allred said the budget would lA N m SUPPLIES 151 Austin Av*. 733-8523 be a 51 per cent increase in TWIN FAILS IDAHO general funds oyer Ihe cuiVent

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ST>ECIAl WffTCt!

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SAViE 51* on a Pairs SAVE 1 0 % DOUBLEKNIT BRA m i s s e s ;SPO RT BRIEF • Popular styling .n macUme washable nytort LACE NYLON PANTIES • Gentle Ime-tree support tor casual wear ^ Misses' briels ond bikinis m pastels • Assorted pastels white 32-36A 32-380 • Choose white or tashion colors S-I^-L-XL j • Etdstic tegs and woist All 8lios ' i oso) < • Reg. J1.87

REMINGTON HIGH SPEED 22 LONG RIFLE XARTRIDGES • 1 0 0 t o a b o x S A V E ^ 9 ^ • Develops higher speed and' greater pow er Electric Alarm Clock • "Kleonbore" ^m ing ^ Lux electric. 4-5/8x3-5/16x2 5/8" SAVE 28% 20-38*8 $ 1 0 0 PAINT ROLLER « TRAY * 0 0 AH.rsal* • Seveniinch'wide rolter with safety-hook pan prlc* $2.88 • Re-use—or |ust_^scard after one use! lo •»« Reg. ‘ 1.2^ v i s i t s

By BILI^ LAZARUS - Mambert’s V “The Elements of Timrt'i'iews'wtiter ' -Conununicationa^ 4a- a general book W: ATSIiinBeH' practical cliaplert in^iiaiiig^foprcs'oiiTi^p^ jninister and eomputtr Expert — has come to person'el qualities, workable objectives, . Twin Ealjarhrvisit his brother Larry. . analyzing audiences, and handijng detait. — a man of unusually broad interests, "1 make my living dealing' with ignored hM authored books on^communlcations and the I infornlation," Mambert said, maintaining that unconscious in addition to writing more than 200 although the knowledge he presents is not new, technical computer pamphlets and serving as a it is not used by today's generation which has minister in the Riverside Baptist Chlirch in been beaten down by "the system." Washington D. C " I deal with the spiritual and religious as well Mambert’s philosophy centers arond "a new as the recital." Mamberl said. He jnaintained - frontiersman/^ thaT the fii'st Step for thelnarvldaH ttirthereata ------“ I hive an articulated C9 mmitment to helping - of the ^tritual is "self-e^amlDaiion-,’ ’ including the little man get out from under the system," delving into one's unconsciousness. Mambert said, defining (iis goals. ^ In "A Trip Into Your Unconsciousv^^vhich he- As a "child of the ghetto” raised with a co-authored, Mambert said that he depicted the "depression mentality,” l-ambert beheves he nature of the psyche or soul, and showed how a has a solid background for helping to bring person can discover his unconscious mind by individualism back to society. . examining his dreams. "Thank God the school system didn’t Even though none of the books information is interrupt their education.too much," Mambert new, Mambert maintained that "the total ball of said referring to his children whom he took out wax is spectacular ln~thrsense th ant' teaches orscTio^ people to lead totally spw-taoular lives''^ - Instead of schools, Mambert maintained that He said that through self-examination he he attempted tb give his kids a real education, . himself has "learned not to be afraid of Just as he has attempted to educate the public anything." with ______;______Refeixing-to favxjrlliiijooks,he..aaid.. "lV^v~' M part of the education, he took the kids to own." He maintained that his most important • George Washington University in Washington, credential is that he has brought '‘2000 people D. C;, on a "crap detettliig; tnisStdn.’'- T l^ • from deteat to victory with my package." purpose of the mission was '‘to show how much Mambert will be in town until Monday, iind — . — there is In the average college hopes to speak on the radio party line show - curriculum." Mambert claims that his book, while here. He said that on rec ent travels he has ' on communications iy moretharrequivalent to-a <■ appeared on radio aml talk shows around the four year college education- ' country., ' • ------

G ohda residents protest

su lfu r dioxiH e em issions . . j * ...... ■ SODA SPRINGS (U P l) ^ Residents of the said the proposal was notan arbitrary decison, small community of Conda testified Friday that but was basfd on ' what available data and they would be .unable to live in the area if a PBofessional Judgment indicates is necessary nearby fertilizer company increases sulfu and practical to protect the environment.------dioxide emissions into the .atmosphere. Dean Cowley, plant mana.^jer (or the The hearing called by the Department of company, said total emissions will have to go up Enviroftfljental and Community Services was ' to some extent if another acid plant Is built. designed to discuss a proposed expansion of the' In response to a question by board member Agricultrual Products Corp. at Conda.' John Squires, PcK-atello, Cowley said he was KIchard Torgesen, Conda resident, told the 65 "unprepared lo say whether the company would .iKoplfiL attending the meeting' that care how big agricultural products t>ecome or air pollution control standards how much fertilizer it,.produces, but - ' Business groups from neighborini; emissions from the plajnt must not be allowed to communities endorsed the coni£iin)''s request . .. ------fop-eitpansion- on-^hp-gr«mrts^:thtr‘«rcon' The company is seeking permission to build" ' unpact. an additional sulfufke acid piant that would A number of those testlfyinf’ noted the increase fertilizer production EJ' almost 50 per shortage of fertjiizcr throuuhuut the country cent. iind the role tlie company plays in the ecunomy Officials frdij) DECS said the department is of ThT area proposing'That the health board retaiij'the . jiqulres'saiil at the-hearing that the board has present allowable emissionj-ates providedhy an tafcen no position on the recominendallon of the earlier consent decree .signed by the company, DECS' sU ff to limit emissions artheir present Al'E lguren', assistant ,iUiiiiiiisti atur at DECS,— ------— ------

. about the cost of electric water Heating

(Based uponjifiatlng. 1500 gallons per rhonlh)

lo h o d y knows t/n/tr fn ))n li/ 's c.xacl u'ntiT hcaliiijj: a.s il \ ;Li ii‘s from day to day and month Lo ijionth with chanj^ing hot \saU‘i' use. 'I'hc facts b d iiw art' hasini upO'n a Univfisity ■of which— that-tttve <»f 1500 Kitllons would i-c(|uii'i>- •t:!0 kihiu att-houi s of ol(>rtrioity. FACT No. h In 197'2 Idahd P^l\^(•r'.s avera (;e residential rti.stonicr used Ofs kil(j\y;utf-hours uf clec- ■ tricity |(i-r riiunth $15.37 SOURCE: Unlveral^ of lllinoit Service efflclency iatl* at «ub- mittad to the U.S. Senate 4n-e FACT No. 2. National Fuels and Energy Policy If he (liiF iiuT haVe elertrtr Avater heatinjf, •tudy in 1972. - regular 32.00-60.00 % ------. .. , thereby removtnK_43Q JtilQw;^tt=JitmfioEu3£. o f f ______„ JiiAbill for the remaining 488 kilowatt-,hours would have been $n.44 polyester dresses IT^nt FACT No, 3. suits by famous makers Thi.s make.'? the clifTerence in < ust fo r heat- City qnd casual jpoks from fall collections by very fam ous inn 1500 ^'allons o f w a ter S3.93 m okers. Select ygftr favorite fosHions from sm artly styled- drfesses, jocket dresses, pant suits and long dresses. If The above coatt are eompllad from Idaho Poorer Com­ you are a size TO, this is the sale for you. Lim ited quanti­ pany'* Schedule No. 1 a* filed with the Idaho and Oregon public utility commlaaiona. . fies. The Pacesetter Shop.

ON THE MAGIC VALLEY MALL. Shop dolly 10 to 6, Mon. & Fri. evenings til 9.

Idaho Power Company I

Th^ ehergy you need for the fif^ you lead X M E B O N I ■ • i • Yd Tlm«».New^f5. ■ p e e s © er:

which is Infested wiUi rats, 'i t c ' TWirJ FALLS - “ Pled ir\ndthf human ^ a u s e of hla mobUlty. Piper" will t)e present! ■Comlmunltv Children’s Thegtrft. In coordination i^tlritre Oct. 5 and 6 and 12 and 13 at Colorado ,at a Childrens FALLS though the mayor falls through -eoHege-efrSotrthera-Wahf)-* -Q’-l^ary Jijnfnr High gch w l.- Tbeatra A ssoc iaUonj; reg ional j— TSinTKflUa- the' j^rch! - ^ "Three hour course, coflsumfic MrF IBeverly StruglU, cotafereneft whef^rrhfi; AKOftr-a ^L_ senlor high school students wiU ^ When th& town is reaBy aopllances and welding, is dir'ectdi-, • saltTtryQ,iifa w iirb e • special exhibit award. throw the-eouocil out, thp Pied begin Mon^lay. . offered In addition to held this, week In two sections. According to school officials, Piper appears apd i^ids the . vocational orientation and Tryouts for the adults will be senior students will register village of the rats. The selfish exploration. held at the Idaho Power from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday, villagers refuse to pay him for A girls’ gymnastics class is Auditorium Wednesday from 8 juniors from 8 a.m. to 4 D.m his services and |je leads the being offered for the first time, to 9:30 p.m. Interested persohj Tuesday arwi sophornores 8 children away. It is only when according to Bob Donnelley, who cannot make it th ^ may a.m. to 4 p.m. Wedne^ay, the people become unselfish, athletic director. A ^ u t 450 call Mrs. Sturgill. 733-8999, and Fees are payable at the time by carirtg for Willi, the only S tu d en ts have registered for a ask for a special audition. _ nf registration and include rpmaining rhi[d. that the C(WEfducational"class-ln lifetime “ ■ Children’s" ~tryoiits" w ill be­ " “^udent activity ticket $9^. children are returned. , sports, Bonnelley sajd. held from 10 a.m. » ,noon and annual $6.50, class dues, $1, The play contains comedy NpW teachers a f'th e high from 2 to 3 p.m. Tuesday at locker fee - JI and athleUC and action-as well- as pathos, school include Mrs. Jocelyn Mrs. Sturgill’s, home, 567 Polk Mrs, StrugiU said. There wiU Clow^rd, English aiid - St, - Thif-li ^ New courses include multi- •be dancing and music as well journalism; Mrs. Lyn Correll, The cast calls for six men occupational training, a co-op as Homer,, thi rat, who was . % 1 c l th « 1 0 0 Spanish; Martin Curtis, and six women, 10 children training work program constructed . by Ethelda S electricity; Jean Fagan, ■ and on^ rat puppet, who w ^ PATTERNS between f o in m unity Crowley when the play was g; French; Jim Ferguson, one of the original cast mein- To Choot* From At businesses and the high school, given eight years ago, chemistry; John Gibson, bers In the 1964 production furniture rcpiiir and fijiishlhg, Construct^ from the lining agriculture; Bill Ingram, U.S. of the Pied Piper of Hamblin. PItOK M la. . co-cuucHtional one of an old coat, silk stockings,-,-^ UJ * ' history; Eugene Jflreks, mulU= The story centos aroluict, semester courSi) ethic furniture lacks and glue, g 9 ^ COIUCT ■< occupations; Blaine Moyer, Willi, a crippled, orphane

______CINDERELIA- GEtS-GQO P GRA Pgr ■MUD-CHEESE^ VEAL STEAK > lb Troy

FRESH FROM QUfl OWM OVENS! TALKING PRODUCE rvi 'r 'M iix'i ni< *»’t In*! U 'm C« b Wr 'n-t ((niti © 0 -© 'M In' 'V« 'f 'k 'V C»'r«< IM TVl kt '-HU tMMtj IkJl

e O M B T O TH E CABER NET!

LABEL Ji'S I.CL. 10.) v\ ” i' partY. m 'scans sepffcafe?*'* vintnei coiois iA,.-; j.- .j .;i boi^quer PULL APARTS g'ay and •iangnj "O S ’' -fJ-iiJ swe^le'> m pin‘1 c^at'ts'’ G U o Y o u r F o m ily A S iz e s 5 ! J S M i S w o o t C a b e r n e t Cove'f c S u r p r i t * I 2 a 7 8 “ r? 0 0 % ACf:lan' r ] S 00 BANANAS I'lnilera stijrt (S V 'io Dacion' HUT IMVESs^, 3-,’1 VOfyesler. 50% c o l l o n j 12.00 . Etiervescence vcs; 12 0 0 Try Ejt]^ Oporto Ombre pia"^' In A Culled pd']t , 2 0 0 0 Fruft Salad I Jacket, 2 5 O Q zn ; iBotn CABBAGE juKruns ONIONS y«Uow» htsft 2\. ^7bflii 5 9 “ l*af tur*’’ LtnUCE0> ^ *a ICE CREAM PRODUCTS MAKE US YOUR PICKLING • DRUMSTICKS^-..... SUPPLY HEADQUARTERS SAHM cHES.,,-. ..59- • SIDEWALK SUNDAE!." . 59° mm BREEN SPRINGS ; PEACH CREEK WINE \ ORANGE ICE 2 for 45° Every term they give big and little s^ter the latest looks, JANET lEE. A *>al E y Opjrn«rl t oi fo r school (and play and partyir>g, \ o o). LbokiPW>~ o> TK U rS n K ^ BtMMTOim THE I.D. STORE — DOWNTOWN PICES EPKCnVE AUG. 19^20^21. 1973 r Sunday, August 19, W 3 . Times-Newsr Twin Falls/ Idaho 11* ,TZ''

f t

a t e n a a ^

/ > o f € v e n

— ■ -— -Augv.19 F ILE R — Good Sam Gub Rally, Twin Falls Coleman County Fairgrounds. ' Aug. 20 ^ ^ BURLEY — a ty Council meets. “ G(X)DIN5_;^jCitj'Council meets. KETCHUM — City Council meets. PLASTIC SLEEPING TWIN FALLS — City Council meets. SUN VALLEY — "Children of .ParatUSe” movie, Sun Valley Creative Arts Center. TABLEWARE 4P Aug. 21 - - - BAG i JEROME — aty l^ouncil meets. 4 place seTtmg R UPERT — City Council meets. A A o d e l 8 1 2 0 A 6 1 5 SUN VALI.EY — a ty Council meets. ' JEftOM E - Citizens study of local I??' goverranent.6:3irpjn. Wood Cafe...... R e g ^ - r Aug. 22 JEROME — Jerome_Coiinty Fair. BURLEY — Southern Idaho Resource 17:50 Planning Development tneet, 8 p.m. Aug. 23 m - f - . -^WENpEU^-;^— raj^(^uncil me«t. ------BURLEY — Cassia "MemoriarHospitarboar^ Is ' meets. I______Sept 4-«______TWIN FALI.S — Twin Falls County fair. Your Choice COBILCaB

^ B I K E B A G S Holds Books or Notebooks T ruck roils into f ," Reg. janal n ear H azelton: For Those $| HAZELTON t- Atxjut 400 canal road adjacent to ■ bu$Bels of wheat "drowned" Interstate 80 N about five miles Roasting Ears th if week when a 10 wheel east of Hazelton when about 100 tc iw driven by a Hazelton feet of the roadway caved in. are* farmer’s wife rolled into Jler trucli rolled into the thaXooding Canal. ____ _ canal, becoming qujnpletely Iflfs, I^'Roy Kehwalt was submerged. She was afile to drijlng the truck load of climb from a window and VAPORETTE Always Sharp Jaaf^tftd wheat along__Ui e _ ■ swiin to ahnre,. her eyeglasses intact,'' ^ I t W P o t l T t according to her father, Theo 'r f man K. Knighl ' The accident was THSEGT pleads investigated by the- Jerotw D e lu x e County sheriffs office and the TSriN FAM-S Jack H. oaniil company, KnlgW said. Krijt, 29, Twin Falls pluuded ATLAS irtnocent Friday in Fifth of the world Oislfict Court to a charue of raj^, t l Kills Fites; M osquitoes ‘9.95 Value l^pft entered the plea before Judge Theron W. Ward_ He .Other Insects 177 _r-— lieu of JS.OOO bond. Kraft was arrested on July 18 ' after he allegedly entered the SMALL ADS *1.79 $ 19 home of a'Bleeping Twin Falls woman on the night of July 15, DEMANa- each and, holding a steak fork at the ATTENTION Value woman's throBt,'forrcd her to \ UI' A \ \w\ hav* intercourse with him Taasfmoster Chrome BRUSH & CRUMB S " Since you can't go aixxjnd saying yoirte terrifjc, WAFFLE BAKER . fo F -y w T R A Y ^ E T 1.98

O n C a m p u s o r Value O tf Campus _ Toastmaster Automatic C R A Y O M S ^ Counffy Sot likes *ho ollhanc:' (hic of a ^ T E C T R i C sinking c^d . ih.f t jacket porlnefed Box of 8 — R6g. 19‘ . 1 2 * men5w©of plaid tfou E G G C O O K E R ond a rod ond M o d e l 6 5 0 1 white dotted shirt Box of 16— Reg. 35' . 1 9 * Reg. Box of 24r^ e^ . 45‘ . M6.95 . ftiti'i...... '''t ' W e b s t e r ' s 5 0 0 COUNT CNCYCLOPEDIA OF FILLER PAPER Bes4 Bet, College, Wide. Typing DICTIONARIES 130,000 entries

' 7 500 SHEETS *1.69 *24.50 Value Value

N o . L - 2 ( r

K N IF E S E T S •L Reg. *^5.00 Y®i#f Choice j: 39 Bank Cards | Welcome -High Qucjllty m U A G LYNWOOD Drawstring— 40 Colors To Choos* From SHOPPING c e n t e r '\ 9 9 . ^ V o l u e : ^ In The^iYntroml ' 12 TItnn-News, Twin Falls; Idaho . Sunday, August 19,. I?71 TF musician gets scholarship

in.^any aspect ot thM ldijyad; the-aSTce band « 1250; T W IN F A tX S =2 DaVT

c n Sears M 29.99 Dial-Easy Machine Our Big-Screen Portable Our Black and White TV paddles. Bioger than ever. Bigger, A saving machine as ThtsiiIaclrantfiwWt®'------^ EwnalThis low pwce, i Teatures famlly^tze, thidker, chunkier cusTiton^crepe easy to use i2^inch3iagonai - I. soles and heels Any way you want ec^i as ib name. So 19-inch diagonal— measure portable with T w o -to n e . S ue d e s S uede and leaffTE^i measure picture, solid-state/tube type combinations. Colors, coj9 rs, aftd ligtrtweigtit its ideal fbr the student #1030 ^olid-state/hibe-type chassis. #50J^1 -m ore color. Try Itiem tw e and now. chassis. #5103 SHOP AT SEARS Am rSAVE SEARS-KNSC SCABSmUMO fAUS SLUe-TWIN FAU5 SCARS-CAUIWEU. Daily 9:30 am. tilt 9 pjn. Oailj »JK. till 9 p JH. >0ail^9;3(U.m. till 9 a.m. D«ily9;30*JR.Iill6p.m: S e a r s Tuw.*idS*Li.iillSiun. ■ iiAinlaytUlfrnr^-.. Tun.. TAin.. S«L till 6 p.m. Moa»rtFri.li«9pjB.- b 'ion GuaranieeiLaiLXsmr Money B oci J a j MRS FAYE SHARP, manager ol the Twin T ^ ls CoiwKrTffl^gn 3ho¥v»-fho-board o f ^ numbers where' canners begin the process ol lood preparation The nvmbers are ■ -V used in idenh/lcalion ol tols which are l^umbers game ■" canned and picked up In a one day pro- - ct?S5 Over 4:000 cons are processed ol Ihe kitchen in an average dqy. Mrs Sharp said

H A R R Y SH^RP runs ~fhe se a ler ol the . eanning kitchen__Sharp heggn w ork at the O p e r a t e s * cooperative follo-wing his -retirement from y^-j—luuning He and Mrs Sharp clean up Ihe se a le r ^ place'’ on Tuesdays. Thursday^., aryd Satur­ days-to prepare lor the^Monday. Wednes day and Friday canners Gan kitchen runs full stQam ■4 TWIN FAIJJS ... The Twin -Ditkl Wise, presicienl; h riirtk . I-'hIIs Cannint’ K itciien .'is WattDn,_ Kimberly,' ■ vice .. aofflung , stearo prevident,- -Mis.— , Lhis sm mner- stjiretary -treasurer; Asael Dilworth, Hansen, and Alice — The kitrhfin, a xonperative Hlne; locaked south of Twin Falls on • The • canner brint’s Blue I^kes Boulevard, is open everything," Mrs. Sharp said. Mondays, Wednesdays, and "W e just supervise. If we’ve Fridays by appotntinent to never tried cannint; the area residents. According lo product' Before, w e’ll do it manager Mrs. P'aye Sharp, anyway, and see how it who has worked with the works " kitchen lo r 12 years, over •JOOO 100 Items jire canned ^"regularly at the kitchen, and fish are processed each day by th e re is StorStJe space for 250 about 80 canncrs Liases of empty cunsJiere.". _ S ix emplnye-s assist canners Mrs. Sharp said ''Just last LLOYD NECSCfN lorm'er~TwJh~Tolls City in the processiny. The kitchen is w«ek we bought 120 cases. This Sanitalian inspedor, novr--works at Ihe run by a board of directors, Ls a v e ry bu.sy y e a r c o n n in g kitchen Here he inspects o pres C ooker sure cooker nearly ready to open fach ol the kitchen s 10 c o o k e rs holds up lo 216 inspeeted cans. Nelson said Alter the product is co o k e d It tok.es about 30 minutes lor Ihe pressure *o-g& down in the loj^g»cookors.

7B(lr can I , AIRS JOYCE JOHNSON spoons the last of her corrr rrrfo the 76fh can A^fer cufftng It o H the eoiy'cn home, she worked all day at the kitchen to process Ihe vegetable The kitchen is open to public by ap- paintment Lanners Janng /hejr._own lOOsL ~on? s^ s oning s . arrd aft ktlchen locllHlei

^Hand stamp^ed

YVONNchlNKE. b Uh L. Hamps her cons*^ MRS OOROTUY DieRKERjssr^bs out a » - of groan beans prior fo taking Ihem hSme . kalilorwhlch will hold to 40 pounds of from Ihe canning kitchen O ver WO pro-:' iLettle ' vegetables or hull- She Is one of six can­ ning kitchen amployes w h o assist custa- ^ . duclsi ranging from' co'rn^lo oysler stevu^ :^tCIIl.]nnd-iutlnieQtt„qrB-CO[inBd. al. IheTk itchen scru bbed ~aC7rr»g.li»

- I U Tlmes-New*, Twin Fall*; ld»ho Swday. Apgutt l». 1973

U supposed to have bid and NORTH II made six against a dian>otrB -*-KQ lead. VA«« South won in durDnvtanil led ♦ A7 a club to.his ace. Then he <»K 1087 5 2 cash^ the king of iiearts; con­ WEST E A S T tinued with the seven and fi­ ^JPS43 « A 7 6 nessed (Jiimnny,'s eight. This yi042 V 5 3 gave him an extra entry to ♦ K J IO . » Q 9 8 5 2 dummy.. 4 9 6 4 ♦ Q J 3 - Now he ruffed a club; led a SOUTH(D) trump to dummy's ace, discard^ « J 9 5 2 ed two diamonds and two V K Q J 9 7 spades on clubs and wound up Sunday Only r m . 'losing just the ace o f i ' ♦ A Quite a play If it reajly came r o m c f f i V off, but West could have ruined Non«^lnerabI|? S v l ^ a i ^ s We»l North \ East it if he had been clairvo ya n t A ll he had In do was put his 10 of hearts on South s seven Pass ' 2 2 0 %_ oh Pass 4 That would kill one entry to Pass 6.V ' ' Pa; dummy and make it impossible Pass for the cliib suit to run m time to get rid of both diamond los- Opening Icad-rf J ..ers. ------(NEWSPAPER ENTERPHiSe ASSN By Oswald & James Jacoby For several years the Am eri­ W*CmDSe/t^e4^ can Contract Bridge 1-eague luisxajit'djlirge sums for char­ Ttie bidding has-be«n i MR. AND MRS. H. bOUGLAS^ HlU. ity by means oLcwUiaent-wide West N orth E a it games They are conducting one this Dec. 14 and hope tu Pass Pass make It the most sucves.sful in^ Pass 1 4 Pass V- Pass ■ fITStBry ...... " rPam ef o^/Vofnei^ •ass SV The hands lor the game are ’ ass B V -I Pass ■' dealt by com puter and as a Yuu.Suuth.hoJd- result they riin the gamut from -4 A 4 4 A K-J » t- pa^ scores.' easy gam ^. tough Whdl do v(i« ifefFfde o f HrH— : TSrarns~wrfd Trcaks" and ahy■ thing else you see in your regu­ A — Just b id sit spiMtcs II ) d«r partner holds the king of tpadrs a« parents on Aug. 18, honored the lar games ony ol his kinm he can still bid srv- couplB man their, fctum from Today's hand ia u trttle from the spring game were united in marriage Aug. ' their liotieyTiiooh in Canada. TOUA VS gtJEiiJlO.V- - 11 al 4 p.m. in -a-^gapden ^The bcide, a ^adiiate of ■ Most South players arrived You hold this same hand Your I ceremony at the home of her. ._Jwifi Falls High' School, at lour hearts Five heariji,. made easily; mostdeclarers jjarlner optns one spade What do Lparcnls. received her B.A. in h i^ r y who did not get a diamond lead you respond ’ The bride is the daughter of education from Idaho ^ t e managed to make snx. One pair Answer Monday Dr and M rs: Oeorge W. University in 1971. Prior to Warner and the bridegroom Is teaching social studies In the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dietrich this past year, she was Z. Hill. Itexburg. einployetl— at— the.: State The double ring ,<;premony Department of Education in’ Licensee i$sijed w{is jjerioriuedi by.Bcv^Robert,^ JBoise------TW IN F A L L S Sixt&m Carolyn A. Falea. Patricia g ! f1.. Viui Nest; F irsL .United area applicant were Issued Hunter, and Nina Joy-Mtirray, Presbyterian Church, Twin The bridegroom, a graduate cosmetology licenses this week Burley; Trudy R. W inter, Falls-, before a section of of Madison High School, by- the-Occupational Ucense Hazeltoij; Sherral L. Jackson, natural - grapestake— fejieing.- -UtHtburg, r«c«ived-M s B. B. S. Bnreati ■"I'of the" Idafitr—Heybum; Carof A7-Petterso^ Garden trellises on either from Idaho State University in Depaxlmfnt .- of Law and Sally Weatherwa'xi Sundaylinly end of the fencltfg held January of 1970 with a major in ' Fbforcement. Jetuime;- Nancy S. Yearsley, Sunday Only Hrrangements ol aster, blue marketing.’ TTie licences were issu^ as Ketchum; Georglanna Men's Slacks pom p()ns, yellow marguerite The couple will live in Burley a resjilt ol a state board Hendricks,Kimberly; Barbara All Foptlockers daisies, white majestic daisies, where the bridegroom is a examination'June 18 to Judith Hilterbrand, Rupert; Valene blue sea foam statice and sa l ^ inan with Ihe J. R. Dimlop,' Corrine Geiger, and Benkula, Terri Forbes, and 1 5 % oH natural green foliage. Siiri^^'Cb. 15®/«b off t linda lx)uise Thaete, Buhli Carol L. Priebe, all Twiri'Falls, • Straight S flare , The pool In the background • Plains & plaids Hcvd plyi^od ' was decorated with floating • Short & tall tr o m e s ----- — • white water lilies and redwood • Sizes.30 to 40 waist nicjule plated planters of mi^jed summer h a rd w a re ? flowering plants...... ' leather handle J Given in marriage by her wild colors Tather, the bridb.wore a^flbor-^ NOW 1 ^ ■ -^.-length ■-rinrwn"^t«BtOWa ‘ ~oT'- ' organzd and VeDise lace. Matching'^acfr daflnodthe emnmcrbund— vmist)ttfne -The- R«9i 13i00i ■ NOW long puffed sleeves were trimmed with lace matching the detail on the wide cuffj.The , short sweep train and skirt wefe edged with lace. Men's Her waistlength, waterfall veil was held by a headpiece of Fashion r Venise lace. The bride carried Men's Knit a European style bouquet of Belts stephanotls, baby’s breath, * 100% leathers ond Shirts peach SoriTa roses, white *. Quri)est quality m arRuer^ daisies and natural » AiT siz^ ovailable • 100% polyester Hr«»n foliage. •' Fashion colors • Button down ond Jewelry, worn by the bride • Placket front •was an heirloom Cameo and mother-of-pearl pendant ^ 9 8 _ 7 9 8 belonging to the late maternal grandmother. Mrs. John N. » Barber of Exeter, “Neb. Mrs. Joe Hackney arranged l J ; the music for the ceremony' __' ;m^tl^e reception on the lawn. The bride's table was skirted , with white embossed Dacron , over a q u ^ satin anct was ' ' graced with an old fashioned garden Im ket holding flowers . similar to those used the ! brulc's bouquet Fresh flowers Boys'>y J adorned the white wedding cake Tube Sox Boys'Ski Serving at the bride’s table: • 65% orlon acrylic" Sweaters t were Mrs. Martin Huntoon, 3 5 % n y lo n • 100% acrylic — sister--<*{ the groom , Ixis ■ • stretch terry • Alpine designs • Angftles; and Karen • reversible stripes & , • Long sleeves , Popplewell, ^'iler, and Phyllis s o lid s . •Stanger. Boise • irrzei 5, W, I • W o s h o b le { The parents of_, the ^ bridegroom were hosts tor a 4 * rehearsal dinner in the 6 9 • Roundup Room of the Rogerson Hotel , The bride's • parentswCMhostsfoi^asuppei^ ■ party for out of town guests and . ! ftiends at their home foUowtng ! the wedding and reception. The liride revealed her plans at 3 prenuptial luncheoti at the I horfie of Mrs. Alvin Jenkins W aist IW atchers ------^ -witlT M rs. jceilh ^ Jacobson^ -Women's— — r assisting. Mrs: David A.- Watch the girls in-Pandora double Knits of Aorilan, Girls' • -Mcnosky entertained at a tharspron raoy-elastic waistfcafids. f a n c y ^ • garden party with Mrs. Dwight JVesf Tops ' I Peckhardt and Mrs. >Iorman Striping the waist left to right; the varsity Bikinis . and Bikinis " : Thomas as^sttng, and Mrs. jacket topping oft a perRy patch pocket dirndl skirt. • Soft, smooth nylon • James Nafiiger hgstgd «- Or. pull-up pants ptmctuaTed with a fidwery tricot : • Buy these os a set • Fancy open work I brtinch vflth MraTaharlM A. • Bandana & blue jeon shirt of polyVcotton. Underscoring everything . . s ty lirtg • PerkinsX.'and Mrs. David V. s ty le s ribby 100% Acrilan turtleneckers. • vDotfble fabric crotch : Fliraisd as hostesses. • Bikinis for all moods • Polyester and cotton Honored guests in • S. M . L I attendance were Mrs. JETm a~?Tu e T H a ti r e T r , / granSnbOi& of Die groom,' 1 - I Rexburg; Mr. and Mrs. Martin SKIRT ______. * 1 2 ® ° Himttxxi, ; Arnold JACKET ...... * 2 4 ° ° Berber, Obertin, Kan.; Mrs. Sterling E7. Barber, Clear PANTS ______;« ^ 1 6 ° ° i L a k n ^ w a i.M £ . and Mts. Ed Open Open ■vlBoUUltdri and Pat, B l a ^ e , TURTLENEGK,..; . . . ‘jJ V®** Sunday Mon. & Fri. w a tc o m e -- l^ to 5 Wa know what yQU’re 'til 9 J,

1 4 . ' ' * • . ■ W l. Tlmes Ne'ws;^wln -Rjlla, Idaho jj. .

_ may .react with/the acida ot ' waste ingredient®, time and Wanda Adams s ilts , causing uiideirslrab|e mb’iiey.’’'^ ^ ‘ ^ u r r e n t c^or changes in pickeU. Mail questions' to: Helen To Insure ■ good • quality Walker, Home. Service The increased ij^cest in Shriveled pickles mav be products felTow rMomihended Representative, T d ^ lP o w w ------in -PT4>cedu»e». QiiM a ted ■ or ■ Co .. p n. w/n. Kame Tood prftsfirvmon this p« iisp7< hy•^tlw'mT^'^^^lliTt7~£llg^ careless canning procedures Idaho, 83301. ' TWIN FALLS - Wanda with Sc^tt Smith and c'eus^d some or vinegar added Ip Adams and Uane ienseirweJe ■*TOgn(M-de'CfiihfU'go as ushers. united in marriage. Aug. 2 in Penece Brighton, the questions. For exam ple' — Pickle products require heat 'treatment to destroy the Logan, Utah, L £ ^ Temple. bridegroom’s sist«r,. wds pickle products'; they add ^______Cranr, mterest to meals or snacks. organisms t'.iat gaiise spoilage Bnmn iriitritivp antii d to...... inactivate erizvTTies that . Mra. Emma Adams and the g^eataunf' to 'thieTjrldegroom, BACK TO SCHOOL value, contain little or no fat may affect color, flavor andi late William L. Adams, Twin was soloist. ahd, except for the sweet type, texture. This is best achieved Fall^ and' the bridegroom’s The couple was honored at a are low in calories. by processing the filled jars in parents are Mr. and Mrs. reception Aug. 3 in the Twin' Some common causes of poor a boiling water bath. Russell Jensen, Kimberly. Falls Third Ward LDS Church. SEWING quality pickles: F’or heating-pickling liquids The bride .wore a fKor-length The bride’s table ' was Hollow pickles may , be use utensils of stainless steel, gown of satin with miromist covered with white lace. Guest caused by faujty development aluminum, glaSs or unchipped overlay and a lace bodice. The tables were c o v e r t with white of the cucumber, or not enamelware. Do not use at SEW CIETY FABRICS satin with blue net overlay-and dress, featured long puffed processed' soon enough after copper, brass, galvanized or sleeves with fitted cufB. were centered ».with ros' picking.--Select-firm- - iron- utensil6t- -4hese—metals candles on cHaijtipagne glasses IS A PLEASURE The bride fashioned her euoumber-S;— brine -within -24 tied with blue ribbon. fingertip length veil and she hours iind follow recipe closely. carried a colonial bouquet of The wedding cake was .made Soft pickles are catrsetf by -^VERYTHING’YOU NEED red roses and white carnations. by Mrs. Alden Arrington, bacterial spoilage. If the brine Ogden .Utah, aunt of the bride. V e w s Maren Rose was maid of is too weak during curing or if The cake was built wdjh four IS IN ONE PLACE honor and Necia Jensen, sister Uie vinegar concentration is tiers and featured a cascade of of the bridegroom, Ciftdy MR. AND MRS: DANE JENSEN too low, bacteria may grow. blue roses down the laygrs.and T i p s Arave and April Johnson were Use pure granulatekl salt. Do LARGE SELECTION FABRIC a bridal couple on top. bride's maids. ‘, - jw t use iodized salt. Use a high- . Mrs. Harold Tjarrison, aunt Preston Stani?er was best grade cider .or white-distilleB of the bride, registered guests^ ALL THE LATEST PATTERNS vinegar 4-6 per-cent'acidity, Gail Sass, bride’s sister, and (40-60 grain). Teachers vie ^ y rn a F r^ ,J y id e 's cousin, TF pair weds THe I e ST IN NOTIONS & TRIM NEW YORK (U P I) - The were in charge of the gifts.:’ ^U.S. Office of EducaUdn ■ Mrs. John Morgan, Mrs. AND EXPERT ASSISTANCE Norman-ArringtnnandMrs. (USOE) estimates that compet- Brighton served cake, mints, In N^v^dd rites ing for the 1.9 million teaching •gtvm ^ugr".1~by -tlict }r tde‘s vacancies qdcurring between Tiuts and puncli;------7 T'TWTST’ FSTXS' - Mickie Breakfast set——— parents. The wedding cake was ^ 1 0 to 6 1970 and 19W are more than . The bride's friends gave her Skeen, Twin Falls, and John. .W. SHOP TWIN F A IX S — The annual Big and Little a kitchen shower. . McClure, Boise, were married served by the bride's sister, S U N . l ^ t o 5 two million' new teaching Sister breakfast for Twin Falls High School girls - 1 The couple now resides in July 21, at the Golden Wedding Mrs. Donld (Unda) Hanson, graduates ahd between -Twin-Fa1l3-whero the bfide-is— ^apelT-RenThe couple plans to attend the -late -Mrs.—Ruth McClurer groom is stationed with the U. President, whu may of the next decade. Information at 733-7102. Utah State University this fall. Boise. BLUE LAKES SHOPPING CENTER The double ring ceremony was performed by Rev. William D. Peter, Reno. The Pro|ect planned r bride was given in marriage by her father, and Wore a gown of s u p p ^ TWIN FAL1.S - A new fund 29. Tickets will also be Chantilly lace with a chapel . raising project will'.replace the available ^ p t. 10-15... in the • train and five tiered skirt.Jer ._TWIN FALI^S -- Vishnu . Ljmwood Shopping t o t e r . silk illusion veil was held by a Campi2370 Royal Neighbors of Introduces to $puth Idaho Junior Clut>s annual “ Tour of Homes." From Aug. 22 through Sept. crown of miniature pearls and America met for a potluck This ■ year a child’s play 15. tickets will be available at crystal's. 1 picnic supper Thursday house win'be gTveri away. The The Merc, Buhl;''■McGills ' MiV.- Jack Holbrook, San evening at the^home of Mrs. Diego, Calif, was matron of Aimae Bryan. d e v o li SPORTSWEAR playhouse will be displayed at Children’s Shop, Jerome; MrS. Bryar^s_daughter, Mrs. the'“Twin Falls C oi^y_Ealr. Krengel’s, Twin Falls, and honor and Jack fiolbrook was f^tn® quality.04 prices Edson’s in the LynwooS, best man. dthers attending liOrctta Stone, and children Sept. 5-8. It will b

take a Devon doubleknit right into fall . . , go o long way with the smooth fashion look of pofyester‘ doubleknit, Devon designs this pantsuit duo with the look - a hea dTeeirng~of7aTr^

ca ia lo t o » they ore beowtiiul. In rich brown with harmonizing print blouses.

Laft, tunnal b«lt jocket. -33,Oa;-with motching ioihtoa. elastic-bock. zip front paRJsT sizes 8-t6. 14.00; pblyesfer blouse' in sond/brown/rusf, sizes S-M-l, f4.00. Right, ;k>cketed jo'tket, sizes 8-1,6. 19'.00 wi«h pull-on pants, sjzes 8-16? 1 lively print shirt in w hite/brow n/rosf. sizes S-M-L, IS.OOn,

Alsd avoiloble: cuffed pdnts, __ , . Front’pljjfit skirt, fj.OO -nmM.New8, Twin Idaho Sun^y. A^u«rt», 1W3 ‘

By TERRY CAMPBELL stuck w d never did gist there." BraM drawled, “iTwy waa a- Mrs. Bud (Esther) Fairman. school, t>ecause a h i^ sdiool Shihgletown. C^Uf,. iand cainlfe^ writer' 'Mrs.- “Board “ SBid— tB«“ - wanting^ to rb u ^ ' K^t<^unvconiiiieBted—Oft t>^^»as not^astabiutted^. Haiiay^. tu Jtet«:lium ^nthJ»ia_patentar- KETCHUM . — Cara were • Ketchum - area «was sparsely Brass also said that his ^w n 'ln tte 1920's and 1930's,v until the late 1930’s. ____.when, hft-was. abf years old. fatbw- -The oldeatr— resMent-- lliey -settled near-the^ood- favor of fiorse drawn sleds, Pacific Railroad purchased school section, in Elkhorn lived'at the Philadelphia and represented at the reun^n was River bottom and later owne^ and, at tinies, the only sign of Sun Valley. Then she said, which was' purchased last Idaho Smelter, at the brbjv of Jim McCoy, H ^ e y , who will the present Reinheimer horte, life In town' was an occasionaV^ “ Growth came in in leaps and summer by Johns-Manvllle Warm Springs 11111, where her be 99 in Ctotober. He was south of Ketchum. -^ ^ tra y ^ g. -b»unds." and the Dollar Nfountain Corp. father Was resident agent. In accompanied by his^aughters. A teamster, McCoy hauled Those were some -iof the However, she s a l d '^ e felt to> over $1 mulion. 1929, she moved into town! RflSa’ Sftilth and Mary MurtisT^ w e and frelglit tu a n d -trom reminscences about an earlier that the growth was presently Brass said his 'father had -It was a qulei’-little who reside with him. Stanley and h au l^ ore from Ketchum as about J30 town "getting out of hand. I believe bought the secUon .for |10 an mountain village,” Mrs. McCoy was born In area mihes...... residents prior to 1930 and it (the area) is overbuilt right acre, but returned it to the Fairman said, "with an influx their descendants participated now." state when he found "it was ot siunmer viktors.” in a reunion and pollack Another reunion participant, cheaper to lease it from the Guyer Hot ^ I n g s , she said, luncheon. Organizers hope Richard Brass, Caldwell, state than own it.’’ was "the elite entertainment the reunion will beconie a recounted the sale of the"^Sun Conrunenting on the sale to place" and resort operators regularly scheduled event. VaUey land to Union Pacific. Unior\ Pacific and the met the trains with coaches. Th6 Latiago look of ^Jdis fatheTj F. Brass. hpd_ ^baequant de.vfilopmentol-the>^— Katchum-realdents' put their - Hailey, responded to a question Twned tKe -about 1,000 a'cr^" Sun Valley resort. Brass said, cars away for the winter. City HancTTobledXea^ about what early Ketchum was I,ewis ■ Ranch, primarily ■I don’t like it .personally."- streets^wereiiever plowed out, like with a Short statement'—"' '■located near Trail Creek. That However, he’ said, ’ h e r e ’s Mrs. Fairman said, ^ e said " by Pierre •'nothing.’ : ■ land and land homesteaded by no doubt but it’s helped the residents traveled to and from Mrs. Board was born in the Qriffith-Wilson brothers — state and the area.’ ’ Hailey on the train during the Hailey onJVlay 25, 1891,.in 191^ a tofal of 3.32Qacres,— was sold Brass said the community winter and a one-way road was a!f a bride, she moved to her to Union Pacific for $10 an originally lived on mining. "By maintained from Ketchum to hu-sband's homestead at Warm acre, Brass said. the time Sun Valley took over Shoshone, ■Springs where he operated Brass said that in February, there weren't but 250 people in Mrs. Fairman said she went Hoard's Sawmill. 1936, Averell Harriman sent a Ketchum. The town was dying to Boise for four years of high OldoKi i*<‘xldent "W e rated. R ip ley ’s one man'fri^ to on the vine." school and one vear of business RKPRESENTING TUB. OLDEST resident tim e,", she said, commenting the pnoperty before the durlnf; a ri-unlon (or Kftchum residents prior to on the similarity of her late purchase. l!i:iO l.s Jim McCoy, Hailey, who will be 99 In husband’s last name and is That year. Brass said, the Octobcr. McCoy came to Ketchum when he was profession. snow was "clear up over" a Once, she .said, the road up pole fence, “ 'rhev really fell for mines. Warm Springs "got so bad-we- 'th a t,"T ie said. phdncd a cummissioner tp — When asked-why the owners c I^nd A Park for the annual picnic. Chapter. SIIOKHONK Tlic annual Hand Club will meet Tuesday Itoyal Neighbors are invited. The group will hear the North Sho.sHonV Homestcader.s at 12 ;iO_p.ni.-in ^he C ity park B o n n ie ’s AAUP insurance plaji Bank Cards and Charge potluck dimier iind. meeting f(ir a p ic n ic . ’ ' ' . TWIN •F'AMiJ - Julia Ann S/%LOI\ O F BE/\UTY di.svussed by consultant Sam will be held at 1 p rii. Aug, 26 at Ma.s,sey, a 1973 graduate of Feafurng the mow blow cuts and combs, Accounts W elcom e , Mormino. the .Sho.shonc City park. ' TWIN ,fc’ALLS The Twin Falls High School will permo lasHes and piggy bock p^rms. The chapter met Wetlnesday Tliis •.nmu.-tl event bcg:m in Swinging Sixties Dance Club enroll at the College of Tdaho. Excellent coloring, fosnionable styles. for an annual piciuc at Twin - 1957. htrid- in S«*pteiiil)er that . plans a potluck picnic Perm Spaclots: ’ J Kails. Caldwell, in September, Opeit Friday Nite year, then set for the fourth 'I'hursday at 6;30 p.m. in the accordihg to Hichard Winder, Reg. $ 1 5 .0 0 ...... N o w ‘ 11** TOO n>f 1 A •Sunday In Augu.st-since Tily Park 'rhose attending are director of adini.s.sions. She is Reg.$17.50 ...... ’ Now»13“Now / 1 O • - 146 ElmSt. Norlh Till rp m lloiiic.sfeadcr.s' came to the S oer*‘iaipieH a.sked to bring table service the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reg. $.3:1^00 . . Now Lynwood ft Downtown North .Sho.stiune area in atxiut and a covered dish. Guests are John C. Massey. 193C and tliere were around 60 iiicluol t welcome families wlio came during the TWIN KAI.I.S Hie Twiii- 10-snccceding yrrtntr—^------■ jaa^cTCrjiter of the National TWTN~I'‘AI.1.S - The Senior ___Ashort business meeting will " Secretaries .Association .W ial (iroup of the First be held after the dinner and conducted in IT fa '1 1 o n llnlTPrt Methndist Church will prizes will be awarded in~past- Ueretnonies Thur-sday night at - meet Werinesdayiat 11 a.m. for years fur special type the home of Mrs. Ksi|ier Bopp. a ixitluck,dinner meetinj; at the . fecugnition .|- New members are Mrs church. Marlyn Clements. Mrs,

.HAVE A HOHSfc I OH SALE’ Patricia Bradbury.. Mrs 6 «ig e r r icier s .»r e look^ in g lor h im m Patricia Kasttr, and Mrs. Jean the ClnsMfied Ads To phace your t»d d ial ;J3 0931 Hughes. - Sunday. August 19, 1W3 | Times News, Twin Falls, Idaho 17 Books added to rr:tF=Eir..

. memoriai to Other new fiction books Conrad Wagner announce the Tamml Chandler, the following added are "The HoUowTHillsT’" engagement-and forthcoming children’s books have been Stewarf, and "Kinds of Love,” mairiage of their daughter. ’ added to the Filer ^Library by Sarton. Nonrfiction includes Cindy, to John Muirh^ad. son her parents, grandpvents, and ; "The Politics of Lying,” Wise; of Mr. and Mrs. John FS. irdtttivaa; " ------^— — ’ ■Fnemy at the Gates----- Muit-head. Buhl. "P rayer for a Child,” Field: Battle for^St^ingrad,” Craig: M iss Wagner is a 1972“ •‘Norman the Doorman,” “ Mafia, USA," Gage; "Seven graduate oLBuhl High School “ Come Again", felican,” and Years in H w o i," Chesley, and and ~ attended Idaho State "Turtle the D ive," all by "Christmas Card Magic,” . Univecgity, Pocatello, for one F^reeman; "Frog Went a Thomas. year. Muirhead is a 1971 Courting." Langstaff; "D ay of Library hours are from 3 to 6 graduate of Buhl ffigh School Winter,” Miles, and “ Rooster' p.m. Monday, F rid ay and and. attended the College of Crows,” Petershiim. Saturday. &uthern Idaho for one 'year.- ^ will manage « Kimberly r^nrh. where the couple will reside. An Aujgiist 31, wedding is M agic Valley Fav^orites planned. Clf^DY W AGNER Week's Recipe Winner . e n g a g e d Brunch held CINNY SOUTHWICK Boj( 6 7, Route 2, Kimberly ' TW IN F A L L S -T h e Coiintry TISSUE T F m a n Women's Club met at the home sterilized glasses. Tastes like BEE TJE LLY of Dorotha McCracken fresh fruit jelly. h o n o r e d . 4 Roll Pack Wash and boH a pan of beets 'Wednesday morning for a The beets may be diced and until tender. Mix together six brunch. frozen for meal use later. TW IN F A L L S - H. G. cups of the beet liquid and two The bflsiness meeting was (Chick) Hayes, longtime Twin packages of pectin. Boil one The .Time*-Newa will pay tS conducted by Mary F>arks. The Falls businessman, was minute. . . each week for Magic Valley next meeting will be held Sept. 3 $ .iianaE£st_on.his flo^ birtlyjay. ^■vnrltiia.. H .-yJU. have ■ ■19 " with— thtr~pla(,'ii— tu— tjc- Add seven cups sugar and favorite redpe, Just mail it to Saturday. announced. - ’ ' - boll 15 minutes, or until it Jells. the— iteclpe. Department, His son, Earl Hayes, San Remove from'heat and stir In Women’s Page Editor.^The Jose, Calif., and daughter, Mrs. two packages of raspberry, recipe becomes the property of Shirley Hickman. Marogo, APARTMENTS! Luxurious or econorhicdt • .-yoo U find them ail Strawberry or cherry flavored the TUne»-New8 aqd cannot be Calif., and their spouses are Jn- »he CldSiified Section Turn soft drink m lxTTounsio^Ba:^ .'itetumed . here for the occasion, b a c k n o w BUTTWYS DELISHUS" FROZEN ORANGE JUICE •; : r I • ■ *,

2n HUNT'S YELLOW CSUNG J»EACIIES

n e a . CASE OF 24 ...... DEL MONTE YELLOW CLiNG PEACHES

2 9 oz. Tin CASE OF 24

SADDLED A most elegant drench coat, beautifully styled in soft cot­ ton with the look and feel of natural buckskin. Creamy Sbearling' warms the big shawl collar, big fat cqffs circle the sleeves.

RP A M n S l E A L O F APPROVAL iJrS. No. 1 For animal'lovers everywhere. A sluhning_{joat, that spores H O N E Y CHUNK the real, but gives the look. •• ■\ Glossy leather-like bands curve DEW down the front,j:lrcle the waist. Hoods slip into pockets that BOtOGNA tilde in the'senm. ~ - MELONS L b . * 6 5

Your Bankcards Welcome. Lynwpod. Eci S.T

18 Times-N«W»V Twin Falls, tdaho-Suri^y;-Auau«t^l»rl^ -‘- ^ ^ f* J e r o m e g i r l s e t s

' . • -V The School and is attfendtog Idaho- A Dec. 29 wadding Is t>lanned =engagem ent and. fw t^onjing State University as a at ' the. ‘Jetsme Fir^t-- groups Presbyterian dhurcb. Edward Houston is announced * by her grandparents, Mr. anr the Most of the African country Ev^rypnc i» cordiolly invited Valda Hen group will b ^ ln at 8 p.m. Sept. of Gabon's 103,346 square miles T ER R Y H U E Y Pastor J I Took«r«ley 13, O'Leary junior High School' are denseTfoplCHt Jungle. . e n g a g e d . 1 ^ Tattersal I wed " n? UAZKI.TON - Valda Dawn bride were ushers. Hensley apd James A. ..Jonna Manning, Tatlersell were married in cou.sin of the bride, was flower Au(< 3 rites in the I.D.S Church, tjirl andj .Shawn,Brixey, Filer— Hazellon. cou.sm -of the bride, was ring ThTf (‘srerrronywHspprfDrmed iirjirpr;------by Bishop John OWeberry Dunfta 4jiw.>e was organist before an arch flankod with and Cynthia Poole was soloist. baskct.s of lavender tjladioli A reoeplion was held in the and blue carnations church following the The bride is the daughter of ceremony. The bride's table ?Hr and Mrs. -Kljswortb ■: wns-covered with a lace , Hensley and the'brid'egrootii’s tiiUecloffi over taffeta-. Iti was— parent.s are Mr and Mr.v centered with a three "tiered Arthur Tattersall, all Hazellon weddinti cake decorated with The bride, (jiven in niarrlaKC white frosting and • pink, by her' Qither, wore a long lavender and blue flowers, _ white gown of .silk ortjunzii over white doves and wedding bells. taffeta. It featured a square It was toppecf with a miniature neckline and lonn bell sleeves bride and groom. The cake was trimmed with embroidered baked by Joan Hite, Kden. lace. The skimnnHjBce in.scts- ' j ’.iverta Manning, aunt of the with the back'being accented bride, and Alvonla Sellers, by a lace bow. Her ellxiw cousin of the bride, cut and length veil of illusion net was 'srrveri the cake. Kdith Kay, held with a cap trimmed with aunt of the bride, poured seed pearls and sequins. She- pi;nch. The gue.st -book was carried a txiuquet of pink roses attp^ided by .Sandra Kytle, and baby's breath, with cousin of the bride. Gift table -Jatcm lcr jiniUJiliii; _ribbon attemlwnta-wefe-Bdna Guretoftr- streamers., — ...... »■ r r - aunt of the bride', Genna Her- jewelry included (■ureton. and Wynona Turner, diamond earrinjis borrowed cousins of the bride. Gift frej^her grandfnother and her carriers were Robin and great grandmother's weddmn Haady liruey .^nd Debra banb. ' Cureton, all cousins of the Unda Robinette, Hazelton, l)ride was maid of honor. Kathy Hensley, .sister of’ the-bpwie, Pie bride was honored at and Claudia Hammond, Boise, showers given by Wynona _BistecuiLthaJicidcKc.uoin^W£CC— ■l\ujier "and liada . BolbineUe.^____ . bridesmaids. - The bridegroom's parents Steve Black, Edeft, served as hostMl a rehearsal-dinner at best man T?mr^atTfrsair-^ Uie VaTIey’ Cafe jiTTTazellon^ cousin of he bridegroonj. Out of town guests attended George Himimond, brotber4f>- f^oni Wa.shint^ton, Boise, law of the bridegroom: and llaiiey, .Stanley~’flrace, Twin Greg Hensley, Brother of the Falls, Rupert-imd FalK'

SAVE50% . CUT ^21 SAVE ^25 $109.99 M en’s or W om en's 10-Speed Bike Regular $1.99 Pacesetter Bath Towels Regular $ 5 9 . 9 9 * 7-inch Circular Saw And Wrangler is doing sotnething about it •Wide assSrtment of brilliant colors 2-HP saw develops no-load These lO-speed touring bikes in rjacquards, stripes~amJ prints. speed of 5400 rpm. Ball and feature stem-mbunted gear Thpy are ttiic l^ looM d and made of lt’» Uue. Nuiit* vi^u can uct tJ roller bearings Non-glare shifts that are always.easy to 8 8 nnciivety .ng absortienr 100% Terry Woth. aluminum eear housing. High 8 8 reach. They have center-pull little Qif l » *i>Ortivv^a« N Ovif impact motor housing and han­ brakes and even a rear carrier fTtooey'j ^Ofth loo' 8 4 woven iiM »v t*' Regular 99c Hand Tow el...... 6 9 c dles. 'Price in Spring 1972 3 8 rack! #47302-312

a n e n t o b O \ . Peeul^r 59c Wash Cloth...... , , 4 9 c COItof^ BK'«’ I f»n.i slvi-vf turtlenec^i mp it marMir>r able 50% cono'- SOhd fib knii iBUje, retl ptnW tnirqunrtv nrtvv green v./vs J 6x

SAVERS SAVE^2 £f/^(?f5flW W W f5pec/3/ , $12.99 All QIass 10-Gallon Aquarium Our $6.99 Antlqii'ng or W obdgralning Kits W heel Aligrim ehtand Balance Spet;ial

H your {ires are wearing unevenly, now T a M n S T M ir water fish because it's iMdw IS ttie time to re-do that tiand-me-down jnu've been waiting so rs the time to have them atignrt and corr6sl«Q:fesistant to salt water. m 9 9 bal»K*d. H increases your cars 9 9 Polyblnyl edsif^ helps protect against long to do. One kH does up to 1W sq. ft. Dries quicJily Wn painty odof. . ^ Kit stability and stops unnecessary wear For Both • 1 Chid in g antFnicking. 7 4 on your tires. MOST CWS. '

SEARS-TWIN FALLS SEARS-CAIDWEU ] V SEARSrBOISE _ SEARS-MMHO F A R M & CITY Daily 9:30 a.m. till 9 fljn . Daily 9:30 iffl. till 6 p.m. SHOE'AT SEARS AND SAVE Daily 9:30 a.m. till 9 p.m. DaUv 9:3flL*.m.' Mon. at)d Ffi?^l19 P-m. ------I T R B lu T ld k j| 8 .T M v d r N ; s m M ^ t i i r e5 p.m. rues., Thuifc Sat till o p.m —S»liifaelim GuatmUttd otJYour Monry~Bnrtr - ijTues. and S a t till 6 p.ro. Sunday tijl 5 pJ^ TWIN FALLS ^ - ^Supaay N0Qniiitsp.m. S«e^-Neoplillif-Skp-m.-- -.SindayJWMjnil-SlRJS^- .... ___ I. ' ...... ' j OWEN DAlLY^-9,-SAT«flDA^V 9.*^- AMOCO,

t;-- <- -V*.* JEROME —. All. Jerome Karen. Couch, Chanpber of held at 2 p.m^ and 8:30 p.m. resident^ are reminded'W don Comnierce. Saturday. The'lamboree is an Western Hiitls for tVip .Ipminp ___.Sharon’ navi«i Mi-t-i tHah/^ mtras,tate. contest bgtwtgn the s e x b ia ^ Fair-which opens Monday. will serve as marshal for the Wood"’ River Jamboree AssocTalTon and the Eastern (Continued from p. .1). . . ■ , . . Monday's events include a parade which will begin at 4:30 Idaho /Vssociation. If CSI refused to sign the proposal the conunission will conduct Junior Posse Horse Show from p.m. Wednesday. Prizes will l>e 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The seven l*eirgoers will have much to a putiUc hearing on the case, ijrobably In Twin Falls', to paid for floats with best parade see at the fair.t>n display'in the determine whether It wants to take the c^se to -eourtrIf the queen ' contestants, their theme, posse, marching teams produce building will be commission slwuld conduct a public hearMg and again find parjjnlp, and members of the and novelty entries. community exhibits, farm probable 6ause, another reconciliation effort effort would be fair board will attend a special Inunediately following the dinner Tuesday tveajng at the parade, the third nuiral, produce, ceramics, hobbies, madelaefore the case would be^ken to court , handicrafts of convalescents Sfltiirdav w, 'Wood Cafe. The girU' will be designed and painted by The commission - sassina- ..waa cloaed to public- and shut-ins, and '"school discussiori.'Mrs. Castaneda appeared, but no representative of judged— at- -that— time— dn members of Jerome Art-Giiild. personality and appearance. will be unveiled at the produce work. ___the college was present...... - ' ■ FVedGraiit, attorney and direttor for the HIfGrS®id®edHSy~ building will hold the woroen's in consideration of the Castaneda case by the commisson horsemanship Wednesday sponsored a similar program niorninn at the fairgrounds. for the past two years during 'open class exhibits aiVd tlie art resulted from a-heavy backlog of cases, numerous complaints, a Queen contestants and their fairtiine, display. Flowers and small staff to investigate those complaints, and the heed for conunerciaj exhibits will beln lengthy analysis of.background material sent by CSI to support sponsors are Pixie Barnes, 'Hie codeo, t(J be presented Hank of Idaho; Dawn Wednesday and. Thursday the produce building and in the its Dosition in the matter. j ThP H R r u/armnsiderlng more than a dozen cases durmg ito . lUtihts. will ftialute top ruliTs arniorv. . ______— Future Farmers of America . Saturday sessipn in Pocatello. The commission adjourned and Slaner, Independent Meat; and clown acts. 'I'he new q\je,eji will be crowncd Thursday and 4-H Club mcmt>ers will Trtil meefagain in about six weeks at a site to be announced. Ik-lte Will, Jerome Recreation Cventng with Patty Sonnlchsen, have exhibits, demonstrations, Mrs. Castaneda has maintained In previous statements she '.'Vssociatiun^Brenda Peterson, last year's queen, placing the •style revues and contests in had carried a heavier class load than some fnale instructors who Jerome County Mounted their departoient!^ ■ Home were rehired. She also claimed Ihe college employed far fewer .Sheriff's ’ Posse; Nancy .Ann tiara crownHin the new queen. A Western Jamboree will be economics style revOTS'WlU tw women teachers than men, and that disparities existed between • Acotl, Tiuer Boosters, and held 'Tuesday and home the salaries of men and women faculty memliers. econom ics judging anfl Dr. Taylor said in a letter to the HRC in.february the attrition ikilion^tTaliiJn contests will be r «tff in hffr i'nn«|iinlly Kfmvv and with limited Bellevue man on \yednj-‘:^ay. ' enrouinent her continued employment could not be justified. He livestock judging contests wrote the commission that when Mrs. Castaned% first came to for quality and fitting and ,the college two years ago, 27 students were enrolled in her showing of horses, dairy, '.'.elementary .and intermediate French courses. In the last on probation s"wlne, sheep and lieef will take semester-she taught only eight studentMnroUedin elementary up lliu riJ a y ^ d T rid a y and be French and none in intermediate French, he said. " ft«I,K 'T '= ^ l7 U i District'Judge"EhaHes Scoggin thursd'ay ciimaxed by the awards TheCSlpresidentsaidornT^S'peryeaJ^difference-BXtstBd- withheld sentencing and placed Richard Dean Barkes, Bel|evue, program at 8:30 p.m. Friday between the salaries of male and female assistant professors on two-year probation. A fat stock sale will begin at -during the 1970-71 school year and only »135 salary difference Barkes had earlier pleaded guilty to a reduced charge on the noon.Saturday. during the 1971-72 term. He said that Mrs. CasUneda had count of delivery of a controlled substiince. " consistently been given- poorrattngs by the academic dean and In a second case Thursday. Judge Scpggin wiUiheld - had been given repeated warninKS that unless the attrition rate sentencing and placed Joseph S. Brody on a one-year probation in her classes lessened she would not be rehired. after Brody pleaded guilt to a reduced charge of possession of a ■ Mrs. Castaneda tiad earlier denied she'had been given such, controlled substance in connection with an alleged Incident April warnings. A TOP 4-H horse showman at the Blaine B lam e county fair at Carey, Bill-Bennett, 13, son. of IB, 1972, in Ketchum. ^ 'ithc^ing 'niursday on°^a motion of revocation of probation for “ Mr.and Mrs. Aarl Bennett, Carey, stands with Bruce A . Gill, Ketchum, was continued to allow the defendant to h'ls yearling. Amigo Skipper. billow man attend one qunrter-tjf-college. - - r r: - ' ...... * Blaine County l>roseculing Attorney Stephen.\V. Boiler, had , B la in e made the motion to revoke Gill's probation on a charge of ' .Ixjssession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver ■fri ..CamaiN. W endell Banquet sot because of a later charge of second decree burglary. ■ __ - Gill has been placed on two years Jlrdbation with a witliheld . E lm o re sentence on the first charge May 18,1972, after pleading'^uilty to _____ , KILKH - The Twin Kails County Fair and the second dt?gree hurgtary-ehttrgo stemmtflg-from-aft-aHcged— C j Q O d i n g h us rm tte Rodeo board wrti hold its annual publicily incident Sept.’ 20, 19'72in Ketchum. Gill.waiiJieatenced to serve 45, Je ro m e bjinquet fur all hews media Monday at the days in the Blaine County jail. M a g i c Kogerson Hestaurant. in a fourth case, an arraignment hearing for Allan L in c o ln 1’his year's fair theme is "Senior Citizens Mendenhall, Preston, WaS postponed until Sept. 13. Mendenhall .^liaidoka Our Golden Heritage." was charged in connection with the alleged theft of a motorcycle T w in F a lls WENDFI.I. - A dozen or Special'guests at the banquet will be officials July 7, 1973, in Hailey m ore W endell firs t and .second of the Standard of Perfection Polled Hereford In tjie separate cases, Barkes, -Gill and Mendenhall were graders m S gtaj^to walk up to I^ow and tiie Register of Merit Qualifying represented by public defender, R ^ r t Korb, Ketchum. Brody a m ile a n A T l^ iS r f t 'f ^ C'atch a Sunday, August )9. 19 ?3 ______Hereford Show.Mw vvell as the lliiw ro^eo was represented by Craig Sorerfs^TT^WJRTlIll r XT scH bol b u s ' iT“ 'sp?a aT ‘ “ tyn’S ‘ ' ‘ '■■‘prorttftW'amtTafTilval'^owTwr"'-*—'— . ■~Tfjr”« a f r “War-TetJresented 4»v- -each, case-.by. pr.osei;uling-» tumaMunds-areirt-builtfi— — - ^tQCjreyBffller - ..... Acrordtng-to Wendett schoOf- JJUHLEMiCKITCHKI 4. Ijwrence I^Rue, the . . . tMMuunniwI______Shoshone hires Scdimty far resiMam^e students to homes on dead^nd^ roads. BURLEY — A Hansen man was released from the Bufley city l.aRue .said the ISP considers new principaV aide gets Jailon *1.000 bondPridaj following an arxest w l i e r that day for backing a school bus Into a resisting ?n officer. private driveway to turn SHOSHONE — A new principal has been hired for Shoshone The feTony charge was filed against Joe Rogers, 39, following around too dangerous a High School. ' an incident about'1.30 a.m. Friday. Rogers allegedly tried to maneuver with the bulky buses James Clements, who will replace Jon Meeks, coines here new post prevent Cpl Alan Smith from writing a traffic citation for when children are aboard from the Hillside Junior High School in Boise, according to Supt.' SHOSHONE - Mrs. Rogers’ wife. He said to meet ISP Kenneth Crothers. . “ J' “ i . _ Charlene Critchell begins her Reportedly Smitli asked .Mrs Rogers, who was driving a car directives the school buses Uements, 28, has a, bachelor'a d«?gree from-the University of new posjtion as extenyon home in which, her husband was a passenger, to come back to the - must have turnaroundi which idahaand a master 's degree Irom the.CQlJegf of Idaho, __ police car. As Smith was entering the patrol car, Rogers enable them to circle while He Is married and the father of a.9-mqnth old child. economist Monday for Uncolo. Blame and Gamas counties. allegedly aooroached him-swearing and threatening to icill remaining in forward motion Crothers said the school board has issued a call for bids for A native of Jerorrre, she Srnith. Rogers allegedly- kloWod Smith twic® in 4he groin before In a special meeting Friday fuel nil for The first grade rooms. received her B. A. degree in another officer was called to assist. Rogers was then reportedly night the-Wendell school b<)urd They al.so approved the Title 1 project for the 1973-74 school home economics at Idaho State subuded by the officers with a billy club. instructed bus drivers to pick year, which includes the hiring of'M rs Alfred Kristal -as a Univer-sity, Potatellti • ill 1972 Smith was taken to the hospital for treatment and released to children up on he first day of remedial or special reading instructor. and has seven years of 4-H his home Friday morning Rogers was also taken to the .school, Aug, 27, at th^ usual The only change anticipated in the reading program for the experience in Jerome county. hospital for examination of a head wound suffered in the incident points but to drop thiyn off in ensuing year is for Mrs. Kristal to work to a greater extent with .Since her graduation she has tHJt refused medical iiltention the evening at the clo.sest point the children in their own cJassrooms done substitute teaching in without., backing the BIgfork, Mont', and has done K ll bo«»UL.jA:j|i.s turnarounds, have not Ijpen secretarial and sales work. built KING Hll.l, - The King Hill (Irange produce booth received acres burned .Since June she has worked in a the grand ciiampion ribbon at the F,lmore County Fair. Judging IjRue said three dead end 250 Kallspell. Mont , bank roads are involved He said no was Thursday afternoon. Places high Mrs CYitchell, who replaces accidents have occurred as ' BLISS ( UPII — A 250-acre fire burned Friday night 10 miles The Mariposa Grange, Mountain Home, received second place Jeanene /\nnest, Aug 1 to yet ( H(>SF:N FIRST ninner-up in National High west of Bliss. ' and the purple ribbon. accept a graduate teaching The Wendell Highway School Rodeo queen contest Saturday In Ogden, Shoshone district Bureau of I.and Management fire fighters The meeting of the King Hill (IrJnge was canceUed this week assistiuitship In North Dakota District will rail ii Kpeci^ Clain Was Hetty'SchncU, IS. Roficrson. Sabrina were attemplinfl to contain the blaze that was reported at 5:30 tiecause of fair activities Master John Da\-is was in ebarge of .Slille'UniversIfy, will have her meeting to see if the .Schmidt ol Texas was chosen queen, \fiss p.m brush was burning, but the cause of the fire was not known the farm producer for the fair office rn the linroln county turnarounds cart be built tiefore Schnell is daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Public relations officer Wallace Fixsen .said fuel TStWttfons were very high due to hot dry weather courthouse, Shoshone Stale fundM O K ’d .school starts, ht^'added Schnell. Pir^R - Merle Allison, Idaho SUte Parks and Recreation lx>a^.member, has announced receipts of state money for the Filer swimming pool and Bock Creek Park. The receipt of W.627 40for Twin Falls County for development of of the Rock Creek Park was a grant received from the C onsum er co-op sets egg pfoject Department of Interior's Federal Bureau of Outdoor Recrf^tion, Pacific Northwest Region Division. The Rbck Creek project has a total cosl of *54,000 and is,, By BILL LAZARUS fall harvest season co-op members will go out to glean potatoes Meanwhile, the ^biggest problem facing the C'0-»)p DOW, scheduled for completion sometime in Uie spring of 1974. Times-News writer in the wake of the harvester-By thus gathering potatoes at according to Thaelcefi'is capitdl.:^he *10 membership fee from The artrount H3.ST2.09 for development of the Filer TWIN FAUJS — Unlike the weather, which people talk of and almost no expense and using a storage bin, co-op members will 38 paid members Is not enou#i money to errabl.^ svrimming pool , will go toward the *83,500 project which is now do nothing about, folks can do somethmg to lower food costs'and be supplied with spuds through the winter and "definatcly b ^ e organization to carry-out the-majvy projects plawtcd completed and in use. keep them lower. a lot of money over the price in the store." Thacker said. Th^cTcef Ropes the' group will be eligible for some mmted Such Is the ontlook of Kin Thacker and 38 other piembcrs of ■But saving momjy is not the sole purpose of the organization fnndiirg fruin the Office of Economic Opgprtunily . He t>eljeves- the Magic Valley Consumer's Co-op. "We're trying to revive here the old spirit of neighl)or help that onc6 the poultry project tjegins this faff^TT will tirlng in Thacker.Jirho has been acting chairman of .the-co-op smce its - nei^hbr to make a better life for all of'us," Thacker said. additional cash. > ' sprctiting three months ago, was elected chairman fof » yoar - ■ TTiaekcr envisions this neighbor helping neighbor pro jc ct«t-a - “ ■Manpowwr^' he safd, facA t w b lg-£pro M «n^ p t - ^ ------wc^ldyTOieeSngTKursday night. soale .of great m agnitude-.lnjn)eri!;^ of Hye io 'le r i.y e ^ s we-vejtad quite a bit-<>T{0*p«ratloBira.vulmilEer help.^ ' ' ‘Our lo w range goal is to combine production witlv the selling Thacker hopes the co-op. with most of the low-income local Thacker describ e the co-op as having a -slow, steady growth - . of food." fliacker said. "We have been buying wholesale and people belonging'to it will t)e producing and supply 90 percent of rate." he said besides the 38 paid members there are about 70 to _ selling to the m ^ b e r s , but on that basis we're not going to Its member# food'needs. soother people who have been associated with the group-at on t^ ., make too much Of a savings. We have to go further back.'" He hopes that the group will hbve Its own ranch of 500 to 600 time or another. Going further back for the Magic Valley co-op jpeans going hvestock. one of the largest retail stores in towrij and perhaps i-t___i_ ____ ^___A.:__ ' "T~.._'"Trrr:rr:r:5~— i --- He mentionedUiat^ 12 new members paid their joining dues at back to (he soiL It even me^ns going bactf to chickenfeed, branch out into constructing co-op housing. the weekly meeting last Thursday and predicted lOp paid according to Thack^., x ^ , The Magic Valley' Consumers Co-op was an ou^rowth of 6 members by the end of the year. j\bout 12 people ^ e now’ - One o f the C(Hsp*s major projects this' fall’■•w^H='b^-«gg ^ n p -sshich was ti^ n g to implement such long, rtoigt goals of spending two or three hours each G'nljehalf of We orgam zatioiu. . production. Dennis Cahiil, a co-op member, will be growing and Uie Coinmunity Improvement Association. Dissatisfied WtJrihS ' b e raid. - formulating feed for the co-o^, Thacker Said. As a| supplier distant plans.of CIA Thacker along with five other m&nbers _ ~ I n the m oltrefen t weekly meeting Thiffsday night at the St. CAhiU will supply the ^group with fw d at a contract-price decided to “staft a little closer to home," with "little things’ E^dnards Catholic Church school ttnilding -co-op m em be»» substantially 4ower than-nonnak------r- 41ke-a food-cft-o^ The co-op will then buy year old h ^ to lay the eggs. “We’re In the spring Thacker and the others initiated ,a “ food and_ elected the group's t»w d of directors. B o?rd ^m bw ae«ed were Jack Clark, Tom Costella,^an WachsUtter: Ken Thacker, - going to come with a producing-hen at alMut half the cost of garden" club to assist people in developing [gardens for food Katy Hieb, Nancy Dennison and JbAnn Craner. raiiihg chicks,” Thacker predicted. growing, to serve as a swap center for tools, and to buy, food The emf result of the-poultry project. Thacker believes. Is that 4tems wholesale for its meSiibers. ' ■ ' Besides Thacker, co-op officials elected by the board, were Tom Castello, co-chairman.' Katy Hleb, secretary, and Jack the co-op .will beableto supply its members with eggs priced at Three small gardens were developed, by the club airf their Oark, treasurer. All positions are for a ope yearlterm. .:SiO«nt8adozra." n:p5rtBennore, since the group will be producing, products-beets, lettuce, radishes and . tomatoes among other About-^ hgmjuid one telf, after c^|Vs stowjn^^M^ USlu i»wn iB o a and hmitfng QpnJtens “

20 - TJmes-Newi/ Twin Falls, .Idaho Sunday, Avgost 19; 1W3 National Temperatures ------JUgll JU>» Pep. , Atlanta ;pc 83 71 .ii ------^------'BB'M . 7 “ Boston r M 66 .... Buffalo pc BO 65 .22 Charleston^.C. pc 90. 75.1.12 Ctiiragn p r...— H O , 7a. .... Columbus,0. c 83 M . Denver r 91 61. . Des Moines pc 93 71 . Detroit c' 83- «4 , EU Paso pc 61 : Houston pc 88 74 ,01 Indianapolis c ■64', KansasQtypc 68 Los'Angelesec 81 6 3 _____ Memphis c . 90 70 ..1. Miami. Beach r 86 79 ,10 Mpls-StJPaul pc 89 71« New Orleans pc M 78 New York r 76 67 Orlando r 93 -75. Phoenix c 111 83 Pittsburgh pc '• 80 62 .35 Portland Me cy 810 61 Portland, Ore^c 77 45 Raleigh c 78 69 1.94 Richmond pc 78 70 .36 St. Louis pc 90 65 Salt Lake Q ty c 94 65 .22 San Francisco c 61 52 Cnottia P —Hg. ____sn Spokane c ' 73 43 ■ MUPf’LEy REALTY and Insurance agency a i r weather for valley ■ Tampa r 92 77 opened this week at Wendell ^»lth‘ ceremony. Washington c 79 73 .26 Wichita c tU right). Other participants were Mr. and Mrs. Twin Falls, northside,-. Camas Prairie, Hailey, few showers or thunder­ highs were moStly in the 80s o p e n N Robert Muffley, managers of the agency (at Bvrley-Ruptrt areax ' lower Wood River valley: showers. Mostly fair w^ath^r and 70s. Temperatures had Twin Falls left) and Jta Muffle^ (right), fathet-oj^Rol^rt MosUy fair today through Mostly fair, today through today -in-^; ■ Idaho apd cpo^led^ at Jgast_lP,lefcregs in Muffleyr ■ ^ ^...... —■ - • ’ ' ' Monday ' "wrtlT IffTIe Monday tjHle teipperature eastern Oregon. High~ “SDuthern maFo an3” I f to ”2!T temperature change. Highs change. Highs both days 80 to temperatures Saturday were degrees in northern Idaho. Temperatures both days 85 to 90. I^ws tonight 85. Ixiws tonight 38 to 43. considerably coojer thanfoir Extended outlook for Tuesday '48 to 58. Probability o f ^nopsis: the past weel(. Highs in the low Tfirough Thursday, sunny days High Low measurable precipitation Some moist and unstable air' 90s in such usual hotter spots and clear, cool nights. Highs In Yesterday • 80 50 E a r n i n g s today and tonight 1 ^ -th w 10 moved into southeastern Id ^ b such, as- Ontario, Ore:, and southern Idaho 85 to 95 with I.ast Year 87 54 _per cent. Saturday with possibility of Mountain Home. Elsewhere lows 45 to 55, Normal 90 51 m a r k s e t

b y f i r m C rop guides M nt fu tu re IDAHO FAU.S - Roueri Brothers Ccf, reporfed record sales and earnings for (cl NewHouseNewsservice in the case of wheat and 49 are frequently substituted for responses thereto. the fiscal year, ended June 30. — WASHINGTON — If you million for soybeans. Officials 'beef, if tlje price differential liie single-minded effort to Not incomo for fiscal 1973 H igh auto sale ^ want to know what is going .to had been hoping the latest ■ gets’ large-, the price of beef curb inflation lies tjehind the rose to $1.34 inilli'ori, cQmpared happer^ -to the economy six or estimates would show ."an would be affected', even before extreinely tight-money policy ■vrith -|r82 in Townsend, iChrysler .Corp. auto which it^ sells through periodic crop reports. There will be many factors experts see a definite linkage lower rate of ri°e in the widely concede the dangers but seem the prior fiscal year. uhairman, says there will not Dodge dealers. determining the trend of along these lines: watched, politically sensitive willing to risk them, because The effective tax rate in be much of a drop in new-eat Chrysler said it has tteen business activity, but f^w will A »,c4 l,ly ‘‘super" set of consumer price index. Because continued inflation is even fiscal 1973 was reduced U> 35 sales next year from the record plagued by labor difficulties percent, primarily reflecUng outweigh the size of this year's harvests could break the back wage .rates in so many riskier than the dangers o f sales being racked up this y e ^ . caused' by an organization harvests of corn, wheat and of the current upward spiral in, , industries are now tied to the recession. Thus one ™hiiihsr,JamsUaL'iL credits called the W orkers Action ■ Jim n seod^- ..afiCAianit . ,a t , floybeonoi At' ony-tat«tpJha i'»-i^ - ijidex through-cost-o^4iving->—-developmeni ent that might-maka-— ■ . Movenienl^ Townaend. 'i^aSe'off~ hofc'fiHrv r' ? frozen french fry .p o t»to fa c llU ^ ^ '‘'^y^‘" ’'; VULLIAM UKDCKS what a n o m t^ of economists- Ul\T ziutTwtj wt tuitrncrr ^ esealatofsr^more sedafe wiSt- : n a q [fe a : a characteri?gq WAM as^ lieft- 'nt Rir^lnnH W nahlniltnn ______aeSCnbtjd the ------N j i S i k ---- r r - ^ . — -in— government—■mnent— and - private—pn cum, - wheat -ana~'aTiar~ Dehavior would mean le^^. before^ a recession is Sales increased to ,36.59 «dm inlstratM n's Phase I wing radical organization industry have come to believe, soybean nieal — would lower rapid increaes in labor costs of (nevltable, would be evidence million compared with $27,85 'V program as a which would Hke to shut down ' , In their view, it is not the production costs for cattjp, sq , mqny manufactured that food prices will stop ------mlUlon. Buccess’?-^ and=..:added-_ the_autOr ifldust£}!>” ! oversimplifying much-to- say and hog and poultry-feeders, products. "spurting-^^ RoBers Brothers Co. is « he hoped Phase V will thaV fe a llv blE crdpa. __ They wniilH .step up hreeding Rig harvft.sLs in this country This is where those crop. leading food processor and ■neon -tm e economy. substantially larger than last and"enlarge their herds. would makeTTpesslMefOr-the forecasts can be significant. developer and producer of Next year will’ be a “ very .^ear’a — could go lar to head Jliere would be a 4«asonably- Umted-StateSHo^supply foreign Forecasts- o f super harvest quality- vegetable seeds: good ycar“ for the^ountry*s Pea^ hntii off.^ a, recession in 1974. quick price response in the demands for American Farm might be enough to induce the' Production facilities are economy, Townsend predicted, c h o s e i i Conversely; only modest case of- chickens, eggs and products without resort to federal reserve to hold up on located in Idaho. Washington. adding that "interest rates will prices ftAil increases in harvestings oyer hogs. Supplies could start embargos or allocation. The further tightening. California and North Dakota. iiKxlerate over the short 1972. or no increases at all, tioming to the market in U.S. balance o^jpaym ents would enhance the likelihod of greater numbers in three to six.^. would herofit further from term.” SPOKANE - Prices have a slump. months. As they did so, prices such sales abroad, and the (.Tirys^er at "some time in been listed for Aug. 9-15 by the DON BROWN'S b y R & T of chicken and pork would start dollar would be strengthened,, Uu; future" will ask for auto Pacific Northwest Ppa This is why many economists were so disappointed at the to move down. Because these A strengthened dollar would F m i d H n n price hikes beyond the G row e r s ___and Dealers SAFETY SERVICE .. TWIN FALLS ^ William O.. latent— govewimeat crop tind to r e a s ^ e the credit- Tncrca'seSTnt" “already f»ai Association. JledgfiS has jieen. appointed estimatea released last week, cofitrollerS at the F ed eraP rw }u «*t«l tOipovep4b« costs of Quotations for that period, ‘d e 4 *lares vice president ^in charge of TTie estimates — assembled Reserve Board about the need federally mandated pollution the previous w eek) and the internal operations,at the Twin from i;eports of weather 3 MV men to keep tightening money to and safety equipment, comparable week in 1972 Falls Bank and Trust Co, conditions, acreage, planted, shore up the, recently shaky Townsend said. include Greens 15.15, 12.20, dividend His appointment was. etc — forecast record dollar But more important is IJoth Townsend and John 4.75; yellows 11.351 11.(X), 44,40; announced- ^ Curtis Eaton, harvests. pass tests what better -behaving^.-price ^latiaa m 1 TWIN FALI^ - A third 0 blacks, 8.60 , 8.60 , 3,35; lentils. HI c c a r d , C y s 1 e r ’ s presiilent and chairman of the But they now seem hkely to uidexes would mean for the quarter dividend of 10 cents per 21.25, 21,00, 8.55, president, expressed hope that board. fall ’short of early projections TWIN FALl^ - Barry K. Federal Reserve’s concern ^hare, payable to shareholders 4 1 7 M ain E 7 3 3 - 8 2 13 preliminary findings this fall W-. Hedges • has 20 years of by 220 million bushels in the Hamilton, Twin Falls, Ronald about inflation — and the Fed's of record June 28. was declared of a National Academy of experience jn auditing., c& a of com,-'17.millinn hiishels Dee Osterhout. Burley.'. and_ by directors-t)f --tnvesttjrs- 'Sciences reporl'^on pollution B t i K i n e K ! ^ operations and automation Gary Van Komen, Filer, have • ••••• tiaaaa*********,********************** Mutual requested by Congress will with the Walker Bank and passed the Idaho certified I For The Most Wonderful-Sumnper- • L. T. Dolphin. Twin Falls, prompt the delay of upcoming, B rie fs Trust Co,, Salt l^ke C'ity, R ider hired public accountants' representative, said the stringent federal auto pollution He joined that bank as examination. ; Time Comfort, The Year Around 2 JACKPOT, Nev, -Gen, Fred KtWG HILL — Martin current dividend is derived standards which will require messenger in 1951, advancing The Idaho State Board of C. Fuapel, Jr,, has been Woodward has been hired by from the fund’s interest income controversial catalytic to vice president and manager Accountancy said the next appointed director of personal the King Hill Irrigation district and dividends. It amounts to a coverters to be put on autos. of the computer division in examination will be given No«. total > distribution of an^ publi(;telflJiona.by. Cactus as ditch rider for the east end — The convertcra will reqinre 19667 He left Walker Bank-in 7, 8, and 9, in Boise, Moscow, approximately $27.5 million. Pete's. Inc' and Cactus Pete’s of the district and along the use of lead-free gas. and 1972 to become president and and Pocatello. Applications The 1972 third quarter dividend Horseshu Club, Jackpot. Shoe-string Woodward Riccardo said the cost to the oil manager ^ the Western, must be received no later than was nine ^ d one-half cents per replaces Uoyd Mcl^ean who industry of developing such I Bancorporation Computer Sept. 10. at the State Boar^l of share. . _ 'PAtJl, -j^A citizens advisory died recently fuel will tetal billions of dollars Service Corporation, Salt Accountancy office, 817 W, Hamer H. Budge. Investors board has been appointed^ to V ■ ' V which* will be passed on to City, . , FrankTin St,, Boise, Mutual president and a former assist Idaho Bank arid Trust Hedges attended Weber Idaho judge and Congressman, consumers. Co. in as^ssii^ eronomi^c and TL^o7coIlege'in''cide'n'and S i l v e r t^l-ysfer ^ill doesn't have operating conditions in the said the fund has row paid 131 received a degree iif business N tA r ’rO W " U P i' Har>d» and Mar LAY AW AY consecutive quarterly a domestic subcompact car Paul and Burley area. administration, management,, I ouri' *■ iJown 0 6 I like Ford's Pinto and YOUR c m A T dividends. It is one-of the seven Members include chairman economics and accounting Investors Group mutual funds Oievrolet's Vega. The two CHto Steirrtrink, Chall Allred, from Utah State University. He TRADING . :NOW-//V7EF77»ERM Electric: POST for which Investors Diversified executives Said ^ (Chrysler William Beck, JJerman King, is married and has two grown RED'S 2 1 5 Shoshon* St. S. Services ( IDS) provides doesn't plan to build one either, J^fnes H. Roper, State Sen. children. investment advisory and that it will continue relying on Robert W. Saxvik, and W. G, i H O T W A T E R H E A T j distribution services. its compact Valiant and Dart Strasser. Aide nam ed T— ’— ’— ’— I— ’— ’— ’— '"TP WELL DRILLING WITHOUT PLUMBIIiG AUO.ir,l97) POCATELLO (UPl) -I Gary Dow Jones Average H, Qouig, d-irgctor dj fjpgpcial -a^mDUSTRIAtS — m

ater sealed-i'n perjfaanently-naver needs refilling, anti- Sfreeze protected. Peimanently installed for entire Homes, Sapartments, etc. ATso portable Iheimostat controlled -fw odels for aiwgle oeld reem pioblems^------* The Healthiftstr The Safest as I ' well as' an Economical Way To Heat Your Home or Office SENCTKJRTIIEETHUCHinENO. E-344M S— — — i i — •■fj tow hav« fuM alvclrtc K«a 1ing •tory-wtty ChrouQbout lh« n a tion »rm findino •l*ctrtc wtttwiut T» '•oTeii^riiT»7* irt Wfliamfl >«atad at tttcf* aurprisinolv • j io«* coat. T^ara (■ no coat or oblioation. of ceurs#. Your ...... Phon# N(^ ______

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k lM B E R LY — , Soybeans, surveyed by J. N. Carter and Multi-set irrigation•Iga - anH hUbb new glamour crop of I d ^ ~ D . 'T. WestermanhTTUtBer automatic. cutbacK tirigation agriculture, will Be>potlighted researchers rjesenting: reports will be demonstrated. Qf Monday at the Aj^cultura) will-bft j . LT Wrig^^, M. J. special interest t o . bean created Its own runs tnrougn natcnenea. ^ Research Center here. Brown, J. A; flondurant, ^ w e r a will be the plots that here of trying to "get the cow.off the range” -and Joining the Columbia River Compact js not the ^ __ Farrriers’- vlglting the Brockyav and C, W, Robbins. ’ r ^ y e a within-row irriftation using a fllin presentation to accShipUsh the Job. answer, he added. -research lacilities of the On thebilus toitf, vuiiors wiU ' at ptanting-niHe:------Allen Getty, Clayton business man, told a Jim Bennetts, Challis attorney, said that University of Idaho m d the U. see results of new procedures ’ The water requirements of Joint meeting of the Salmon and XJiallij although he despises federal control, the answer S. Department of Agriculture designed to control potato major field crops will be - Oiamtiei^ of Commerce that the film attempts to the salmon problem may rest with federal will view varietal trifds ,of 'blight, noxious weeds and the featured in reports -.and in to show that streambank damage is caused by ctfntrol of the fishery. soybfeans and other crops. Western bean cutworm. An demonstrations. Elaborate catfle and the only solution is to remove the Bennetts also commented ' that Custer Co. An informatioh'packed 'antiiwUution device — the scientific equipment used to • cattle. would like to stay with the area'with industries program for Monday afternoon sediment deteneion pond — will measure the use of water Ijy Getty labeled the film a "down and out lie” in.common, not be set off with “ Snake River Jias been planned. From 1 pjn. be on display. bean crops will be displayed. and said 'it is “ detrimental to oiy ecopgmv." potato I fdniia, " under any tiew legislative .- to 4:3Q pjn., Important topics John Emerson, Salmon National Forest Teapporti6mn«?nt.~ in soil, water__and__plant alprviiWrresppaeaT)y r Getty^saltfthatljeca — Tnarragemenrwtirbe presented iMUe with the chwge that the Forest .Service 13 of the national Recreation Area ^ 4n. a growers' seminar, l^he^ against private industry. PQncemed about loss of taxes." event is spoosored by the Jerome firm closes “ In many areas there is overgrazing on Bennetts said the tax base seems to be coming University of Idaho JEROM_E_ - Sullivan^ April of 1969 they opened a Streambanks. I can show you plenty of down and that there probably will be a lot of Agricultural Elxperiment Music store in Jerome will store in Twin Falls. It yiU examples,” he said. , i ' private land purchased through the NRA and Statipn, the UI CMperative J close this month after 15 years remain open. Mr. and Mrs. Getty said he ct/uid show areas where there mining claims over a period of time. S..-_..J. . . . Elxtension Service and the of operation. •Dave Montgomery have been “ could have been better management" and Getty said Platz’s sl|de presentation was of USDA Agricultural Research Gene’ Sullivan, owner, said, managers of the Jerome store. added, “ where have you (the Forest Service) the Valley Creek-Stanley Lake area and begins ■ Service. - _ . he will close the business or. • been all these years.” ------by showing wild game caujjht.in fences, then, M arshall J. Lebaron, East Main in late August or Elnuraon saidiie was not aware of what Bill Sush green foliage in_June, and then biurod dry superintendent of the early September. - JiAaiNS? Platz, Forest Service fisheries biologist who area in September and finally banks caved off u n iversity’s branch The Sullivans opened the POST "because of cattle.” experim ent station( at REDS produced the film, was implying but that “ he is Jerome store in 1958 and in technically more qualified tb know degradation Getty said it was his opinion the erosion had Kimberly, said farmers W E B U Y , of water quality." been caused by high water. He added that t ^ _ interested in research The dinner incctinB here Wednosday night film, pranantatinn nut in the hfrglnning~ ftirtter-anff-E-ggi ___SELLond-. drew 40 persons and was arranged.Jav the.two,- :..‘ii>poaliig.Jgncfia..hec T R W m r chambers to discuss problems in common, tjame then implying fences are needed to and listen to repprts.--from € HtCAGO(UPl)- olesale Getty also was critical o f -the newlycceated- protect the streams froih cattle, so the only prominent researchers. selling prices as reporti Sawtpoth National Recreation.Areu, saying-that solution to get rid of the fences is to get the cow — Bua-r-tott^ -^of- -research-^ as far as dollars and cept-s (joes Ijelow .Stanley off the rmge^ ' ! facilities will conducted Butter: prices paid delivery ’ 71SSh^tiMHM5».S. 'th e (:t8hoiny is basiedo'n salmon fishing. He suggested the Salmop chamber invite throughout the iftem oon,' A to Chicago up 4; 93 score 79r"* He said that if low water conditions had not Platz here to show the film. "I'm sure the pr<>^am indoors, with experts 92 score 79; 90 score 79. existed enabling fishing on-the early sahnon run Forest--Service is implying something by reporting on current research, No egg report. the area “ would have gaught zero ffsh.'' Showing the film. I don't like it. Someone is jis planned at 1 p Jn. and again He said that Oregon is not concerned with the footing the bill forM rrP iati. Hei?outHo get the _at_,__ mid-afternoon to future of Idaho’s .salmon run since ihal state has I'ultleman off the range.” " D irect bu ying accommodate the large crowd'* e x p e c t e d . PORTION OF purchase Of 35,000 pounds of Lebaron is schedule's to’ CORN SILAGE dressed meat Is examined in Nkw. York City's report on hail injury of beans. HAS MORE NUTRIENTS AND IS Bellevue H t^ital butcher shop by City Niti-bgen management in sugar ^AORE PALATABLE WHEN A Dem ands Purchasing Commissioner Marvin Gersteln."He beet production jsUI be bought meat from 55 steers directly from Texas SEAL COAT OF ranch. Gerstein said price was about 12 cents a dom inate pound ' cheaper than if bought through Giiain middleman. (U PI) PORTLAND, Ore. (U P l) ..-^.. MOLASSES Cash grain cte pintos 17.00-18.00, 14.00-16.00, 9.75- 10.00; Idaho pintos. 17,50-18.00, in full operation 14.75-16.00, uom in il great Special O ffer! Lifter/Loader!! northerns 23.00-27.00, 20.00- With the purchase of' our good conditioned 22.00, nominal; small reds BOISE — Small grain .southwest to just i)eginning in 18.00. 16,00-17.50, nominal, harvesters you con recondition your choice ' harvest is In full operation this the east. , pinks 18.00, 15.0O-18,O0;\T0,25- " 'weeVr througJiout - mantT ^ T^»p&^ato<^fop, HwmgfrtBtep - - • ■Wcb rDBlca; g r e a t , with chain & parts at V j price. according to Crop Weather, a than nohnal in the east, is northerns, no offers, missing, MODELS'64 THRU'72 PRICED FROM . . . publication of the -USOA making excellent growth. In nominal. Statistical Reporting ^rvice. the southwest 50 per cent of the Washington Small reds 16.00- All ir rig a te crops made fields have turned, wiUi_some 17.25, missing, nominal; pintos excellent growth and irrigation •vines dying. In , lhe_ 15.50-16.25.14.00-15.00; nominal supp^ are expected to be .southcentral area, about 20 per pinks, no offers, missmg, - adeqCilter't^oHTLrrigated crops . cent of the fTelds have started nominal. ' W - * 7 8 0 0 “ in eastern Idaho made good to turn, with 10per cent turning, growth. Some insect in the east, the state's largest . infestation is occurring, with potato area. ' ' .\ldo plan« - little damage reported. Second cutting of alfalfa is Check on our new 3 row about 60 per cent completed, 90 'Idaiho vifiiil ^ About 40 per «en t th » per Tn ■ffie~s6uthwesl. 80 BOISE ruPTt - Rep ofvai state's winter wheat is tank beet hofvesters^ per cent in tne southcentral ’ Hansen, R-Idaho, iaid Friday harvested;'corhbihihg is about and 30 per cent in the east. .Sj'cretary of Agriculture Earl 25 per cent complete in the During the week.TIre’ slate Butz iuid his top staff w ill m ove ,,e'asi. had cooler weather, . With the department of Agriculture — Uw4p«Bilii|; (If Uarley ts ovcr war-ml»g ■ Mn -ftid operatlOfis to the WESlem „ PUWIERS one th W complete. In the Thundershowers in the United Slates from Aug. 24 to • southwest aboufr^O per cctI of southeast of the state at the- •Sept. 2, . . ’ ^ ' the barley Is harvested. 30 per Officials will visit Arizona. beginning of the period Aug . '3- 0 ^ cent in the south central area, 10 brought one-h^f inch or less Colorado. Idaho, Montana. ^ » ^ YM l AUHSJfEMS: JWCES!! and about 20 per cent in the 0^ precipitation-' to most Nevada. New Mexico, Oregon. ^ eftst. Spring wheat is 15 per stations, and lighter Texas, Utah, Washington and cent harvested, ra g in g from precipitation to the south Wyoming. Though Butz does We are now taking orders for fall and spring sprinkler installation 70 per cent completion in the central Idaho not plan to visit Idaho himself. a.ssistant Agriculture N ew and U sed Potato Filers and Bulk Boxes secretary- for conservation, research and education Robert W. I.ong wiir arrive in Boise Idaho f^ls sales Aug' 30 for a two dhy visit NOTICE!!

display strength Produ ce Prices Lockwood Corporation Will Soon Be Moving Into

IDAHO FALLS - ’Fefeder tt>w ^ tX); jsows under 300 lbs. 53,00. - ^ ,^-crTT?------~ Their New Building, This Will Give_^Us More Ro^ni Uunbs were T.OT higher, fat. lbs. 51.00-43.00; 330-W0 i: HA _ M.w ii.i; LtO-3J)&-^hi^)eF- - J? b steady to strong at Idaho- An estimated 879 head of •A jtr' -n V ) fS 00 r t K T* V i T9 ?0b SO V M » 9S w f r - T i / f sob ) j A redTor Repairs T Livestock Auction Inc. this cattle were sold' with choice .upl' -- week. grain fed steers 48.00-55,50; f ■•e pOKrt><3 ( K < x e \ ie d lo a f 75 . I 7 i t>r*gie An estimiated 6,380 sheep good 46,5.0^9.50; i> SO •* «i fi «o pouno Stop In and Look Us O v e r !!! aO J i t o 100 p o u n d nere.sal4^th choice fat lambs commercial steers 45.0&46.50; A tOVT-iO B 4S.00-49.7a; good to choice fat choice fat heifers 48.00-51.50; lanibs ^.0(M7.0d; l i ^ t feeder good fah heifers 46.00-W.00: S”FiW ESt IN THE HELD ^lHnlsrtt:0(M250rheavy feeder commercial cows 40.00-44.00; J lambs 39.0CMI.OO; odd rouirh 37.00-40.00; cutter ^ cows 33.50-37.00; canner»31.(to- feedeinam G s^.O O dowi^' £at-ewes 16JW7.^0r^inner .33.50; bulU 43.0047.00; veal ewes and b u ^ H.SO-K.SO; calves 59Jm-64.0b; good feeder ORt»dRATION steers 53.00-61.00; medium LOCKWOOD young ewes to 49,00. feeder steers 49.00-52.00, u An estimated 222 bogs trere Holstein steers 48.00-54.00; -w id-i*itb-m trem e 4op 60.^6; ■ k j o od f«sdiiig~4M )to«—47,00- lydk 210-220 lbs. S9.0&«Q.00; % 0 0 ; .feeding cows 33.00-35.00; m m 22»44S Ifas; 59.0040.00; 240-260 stqcki steer calves 66.00-75.00; PH. 436-4701 -W.O(M».W; a»MOO:Jb». 85.00;, dairy ^ (q ig ^ s e .O O ^ m Ati^ckwoodrW eThtnk"yOt»trSCflAEmiNG,^PE€IAt* ■ " . ■ I — I I '■ ...... ■ I ^ - I - I. . -i|p . .11 I. ■ ' —T~f- - " ~ r r r ~ T ii~ t i - .t- Ha’ll t r — ' ■ • .S ' ; TSunday, Auguath»8r-1M3. T imesrNew5r:tw'lhiEalTi,-lii6~‘ i3~ T iv o a r e W Tiaron belts'704, S € t^ Colts ed^e Lions _ teams live— SB T E C O int i n t o u r n e y 32-28 on late TD — B a n k on base ah^ helpid tag Rogers rain storm- and featu i^ pre­ MEMI?HlSrTenn,rUPI)— ei^ht yards to’Charlie ^n d w s Aaron hit his 704th career ,;^ith his , second lass in six game festivities on the' field Fullback Don N otU n ^an i ■ airt 51 y ^ s to A1 Barnes after LEWIS^fON - Magic homer and establ^ed a nfew ^ p is io n s . jind appearances by Warren smashed one yard for a the ColtslJGeorge Hunt opened Valley’s entries in state m^jor league record for ex^a Foriner Expo CarL Morton Giles, president em eritus of touchdown in the closing , the game with a 3^yard -field- d u m a m e n i minutes Saturday night to give base Bite and Ralph “ L ea gu e^ g o a l, had dwindled to two by two-run i^ ^ er' ills 1 1 th win against nine president Charles Feeney. the Baltim ore Colts a 32-28 pre- Saturday nit^ht but will B a ltim o r e b o u n ced b a c k w ith Satufflay night as th/ Atlanta season victory over the Detroit defeats. The Expos managed a two s^ ond ^ rio d tQudtdovKna" Braves spoiled the Montreal - ■ MMtraal definitely be down to one U 0 R 3 . run off him in the sixth inning a b r h M ab r h IX Sunday morning. on a one-yard run by Don EqKM’ fifth birthday, celebra­ on Ken Singleton’s infield out ■ G a rr r i S I 2 3 D a y Ct •'4 0 0 0 Nottingham's run cam e after L w m ID 4 0 0 0 l^oli is 4 12 0 • First FeUeral-Shuffle'lhn McCauley and an eight-yard tion w ith a S-1. vic t o r y ; ------rookie Bert Jones' which scored Tim Foil. ItgWasI|; E v a n » t o 4 0 I 0 Patrly If 4 0 10 pass from Jones lo McCauley A « r o n If } I I 1 Singleton rf 4 0 0 1 and Depot G rill-Turf Club, the Aanm, who nieeds only 1 1 Singleton’s 85th runibatted"fcof I drove the'Colls 80 yards in 14 0 0 0 0 are«<»en rt> 2 0 10 if ^e-two teamj from the and a late 44-yard field goafby-" hoiners^lo surpass Babe Ruth's the season. B a k e r qt 4 0 1 0 Bailey 30 3 0 0 0 plays for their first pre-season Johnwn 4 0 0 0 Allen 2t) 4 0 0 0 district, have a loss each but Hunl gave the Colts a 1-14 career.record of 714, connected The game fin k ed with only win lifter losses to Pittsburgh D > e li c . 3 1 3 0 Boccabeiia c 4 Q 0 0 halflinieedge. Cavanova c 0 Roger) p 2 0 0 0 will m w t Sunday morning with hi^ third homer m three three umpires- after--plate -^0 0 and Atlanta. Perei ij 3 0 0 0 ScoM p 0 0 0^0 the loser going out. Paris- 1 31st of the season umpire Paul Pryor injured his M e r lo n p 2 0 0 C Detroit had grabbed the lead Hunt opened the third period J N ie k r o p i 0 \ 0 CulliganiBank and Trust was 28-25 on a 15-yard s c o r in g toss »;4U >g«r9r-w >tl>^- - fo o titU h a ,6i»tfa-inning whan hit with hjs third field goal of the Alluila 090 MO OTO— } : Mtmson tiirEwl n ig ffi^ a~ft-yHrilnr- .t'iil n atrCTf- 4 a» jw.- the eighth. i by a foul tip off the bat of Hal -M s in s ir ' ,The Northern teams w as^l,37B th extra base - Breeden."Terry Tata m oved in LOB Aliania ^ Moolrva McCullough-in the fiftal period narVowed the gap' to ^ 2 1 e a r ly IB Foil. Oieti. Br^Men HR Oarr i9l dominated -the winner's before Balfimore's winning U tofAlVon's career, moving from second base to handle Aaron (jli SB Garr in the fourth period on a two- bracket with the split of the old * lheS9-y«uscdd slugger into first ip r «r bb to d r iv e . yard scoring run by 1 -an d ry. d u ties. M o f lo n M M 9 7 3 11)4 powerhouse Post Falls tifam, The lions grabbed an early ' place «head of Stan Musial on T h e g a m e , a tte n d e d ,bj[^ a J N > « K ro 2 I 0 0 0 < Hunt's fourth field goal, a 37- aoo*rvl.4 2 now both from Coeur d'Alene, 14-3 lead as quarterback Greg yarder. gave the Colts a 25-21 ^■«Tl-tin»Bst. capacity crowd of 25,t)Si,''Was” S“ana B'CafronCellog 4-3 ■ — WROUCHT IRON HAMDRAflS^ ^ OTOS" of l^wiston eliminated Paris- BICYCLE RACKS IRVING, Tes^ IU P I»— entered the gam e at came on a 24-yard field goal ^ Culligan 13-2 late Saturday n,*] Staub^h, displaying the form the start of the second period Toni Fritscl^ in the opening n igh t. ------UTILITY CARTS ' usej ito carrjf nall,-iii to the with Dallas-leading 3-0 and in - -period -.and on. a. .two-yard =C:t; ENCiOStiRES; PATIQ PQReH^ROOMS S u ^ BOwI litletwo 3>ears.ago, his brief appearance he TilT ■ touchdoWrt“ pjrss' frehr ’CTjig ------Depot Grill-Turf lost to oom pleted geyeri of eight passes- M ik e M o n t g o n ie r y witl|i a 52- Morton to tight en d iiU y Trujax ' K o g e r s J6-10 jn its first ganre^ to r 156 y a r d s a n d tw o to u ch ­ yard touchdown pass and then with less than five minutes' to then cliniinaled Bronco Hull . COM PLETE D O O KENNELS downs in just one quarter of tossed a screen pass lo rookie p la y . 4ind Nielsen's North A^nerican work Satiirday night in a 24-H runningback r^esStrayhdrn who After^Staubach retired for the' -of Boise by 11-6 a n d 13-3 co u n ts. Steel M anufacturing exhibition win over New Or.^ turned it into'a 45-yard 'score. night, tne - Dallas offense FUTILE CLIMBING of the leiue is made by (ean s. The Gowb

s i g n d a y s Little lifts Den vet LUBBOCK, Tex. (U PI) —A change in administering the national letter of intent, which has come through the urging of by St. Louis 38-17' many football coaches, will be in effect next year, according DEN VEHi UPi>— Floyd Litt­ down. Jun Turner kicked a H- to Dr. J.' Willianj f>avis of le, the bowlegged all-pro from yard field goal, the fourth Texas Tech. ■ ■ Syracuse, cam e off the bench to longest in Bronco history, and Davis, who was inslrumentW score a pair of touchdowns in added all five extra points. ‘ in creating the national letter of . ;the second half and" spark the - I{oOiUe.Johh Hufnagle ended in te n t s o m e 10 years ago, made, 'D e n v e r B r o n c o s to a 38-17 Denver'!; scoring on a 54-yard the announcement as chairman preseason win over the St p a ss tiiB r tty V 4/1 Hausen in tlie of the steering com m ittee of the -L^idr^dinals. closing minutes. ‘ Inter-Conference Letter of frf" >44ttle,vwho camc on in the St Louts scored tw;ce late in tent. ^(larter when rookie the second quarter on a 16 yard "Effective next year (1974) Otii . tanstrong twisted an pass from veteran Jim -Hart, there wiH be two national lei ■“^anlcfaf^ptwred on rtins on ^ Ix who did not play at all in the of intent signing days," Davis and yards to lead the second half, to Marv Owens said Saturday. "One will be for — Bronciiy-. baek from- a 10-7 -ami an etght-yare third round now sets the stage for a n d th tis fa r 19 c o n fe r e n c e s a n d ■■ Automatic Picture and Sound Stabilisers SatUft|«y-idi)ii to retain the showdown battle with Herrera 5fi independents subscribe to its world .filin g association for the undisputed crown. (Keyed AGC) c o n t r o l." - vefifoa of the ___w o r ld Telescoping VHP antenna . ~ liantainwelght title. otTuxtiaeHtUx-. C L I P A N D TODAY Detachable bqwtie UHF antenna rei, Mexico, stunned Pindar- Convenient carrying liandle S r ig n t VS the -iuatl su it' ^ LEARIU M N C O M E T A X Beautrfulty styled, ligfitweight. and eaiy lo cafry. thffl dropped him for the full COURSE model 5009 is ideal anywhere —home, oHice^or oountsdth a crushing left hook school . . . and is just one of the many values in U> Referee George TO EARRI In ■ t o e * viewing you'll find when you shop Magnavox 1 Latka collated Pinder out at A -.'r-, s I • • C M n «f ^ an4 dw* 3 :W ofBtethird round. r ,.. ,s\ / . - c • CwWeali ewrtid lee* eedu^ L t n ^ ' California rules, -a c 6 mE j^^...cliscpWr the diflerence wafcRing a -----ENROLL NOW T abd U>e VM'’ . . ... even .thpogh ' -s H l',r ST; 'f N:<, C1oss«s Start: Sept. 11 _ «ndEamonica tossed a With 800-tneter specialist one in fencing. gold medaK.No. 1 , at least six-yard pass to Bob Moore for R eg. 8.99-to ,H .9 9 Yvgeny Arjanov leading the Naturally it was the pixy­ maintained its basketball pre­ the score in the opening period. faced Olga Korbut who dazzled way with a stunning come- stige with another one-sided The Ram s' only score of the the packed house at the rout of the opposition ~a 140-34 froin-behind win over favored gymnastics competition. day came in the third quarter M arcel Phillippe of France, the decision over outclassed Por­ on a 17-yard field goal by David Drcs-sed in turquoise with her Soviets again dominated at the tu ga l. R a y . . S Angeles drove to the pig-lalls tied back in matching 1 0 But the Americans were I>enin Stadiujn track. Oakland 10-yard line but could ribbons, Miss Korbut took her Arjanov raced past Phillippe forced ' to share the cage gain nothing in three plays and with atx>ut 200 yards left und second gokl medaiof games spotlight when hordes of & viet had to settle for the field goal. \ ^ y winning the women'.s in- Jews at a nearby arena were won by a yard in 1:46.8. A pa ss in te rc e p tio n by J im m y dividual combined event with denied"BdiT>issioR to the Isfael^— —H rio d -jjo in H -o u t-Ia st-iiu l . < FTITi KKlSnnfiTiTi n B3 p o in tf Cuba gam e, wuii by the Cubans— suddenly lOund myseii m me And in the fencing, the i field goal of the game. The le a il a t 400 m e t e r s . " sa id 81-63. Raiders had a first down on the P h illip p e . "th e n I k n e w I w a s K u ssia n s m a d e it a 1-2-3 s w e e p The overall medaliT r a c e ; DKTAINED AND RESTRAINED Fred. lx)s Angeles three in the final m the women's'Individual foil d o u b t, d e a d . " however, has beyond I'atek, bat in hand, is held by Manager Jack period^ut had .ta settle for a ^ v c n t . bec-ome a one-nation affair with 'ITie other Russian victories M< Keon as third base umpire Ijirry Barnett other nations lo field goal, “ the host Soviets’ closest gold went to [jony-tailad NadozhdTa— — Cht^J'Pli: t r i e s to pahn Piitek. H<>-waii ejected hy plati crack the gold .^ilurday w ere -=Oi4-vtetory kept Oakland medal pursuers being Italy, Kolesnikova in the wom en's 400' tunpire Art Fruntz, hafltf on hip, over a strike B r ita in an d (,’uba - -F in la n d , K r - a ^ e , C u b a . yujJQS-. H it t e r s .(.52.D s e c o n d s ), V a le r y cull. iL l'I telephoto) ...... ______The Britons got their first lavia and Britain—all with just Ponent it has met in Meadow Stable trainer I.uclen Native, the .3-1 early favorite^ Trowd in New York ^iate call to make li '24-7. I'he the games, was totally over­ l-iurln wttjMlrew the horse's wa^injured In the morning ^nd history, watched Mul-Ke^- take Redskins got the ball on tlie matched against the Por­ tuguese, whose tallest player' iiiiin e frum contention, ea.sed Knightly Dawn was a late SPECIAL John .U iPijIdlls Tttdroff two Bills one yard line lifter a bad Uie wtnmiiji < olt mt^j the lead .scratch, yards in his own end zone and- snap^r«in center on-a-Buffalo , was only li-foot-3. CTTeriepebroke out first from run it along the sidelines for a----- punt atteiiJJU and Duane 'Oie,tree like Toui.Burleson of past thi-cpiarter Hiilf and was OF IH E "The .starting gate and alternated TD. , ■ , ' ' 'niomas ran it in on the next North <''arolina State, who now maiH' headed, although ftil- fKlints iflL UlSL Ihr*^'*' liiwi-d t^iscly forthe rest of the for the lead with Annihilate , 'nft'TTfe’dslrttTytbolra-lT^MM* — ...... haa_J51_, +Vrgus«H- toBKwl a 5 i - y « « l ----- g^m ie.s. haiLa,!!■.< :i fi.VlH'ii/iy o n 'ffie ------•^:m reU irned" the rai^-T^r[nnifraTe- 'Km ljr ^ _ nn a y a r d fip M gn n l h y .C lir t ■___pjiss tu J. P . Hill liHe in lh