Crimirinals ..ElectionsE — ^ f r ^ JmiB _ , ’ — ~ ^ h O w a n ts I a-ieciiaNZ iutaiion nasn-X — fowrt in taiks [w fiSaE eSfc- xJiahce.; :1. grim outlook' Head th e1 !supplement ;ays — Bl. ■------T^frtoday^s l^Fniies-News--— m ...... “P s

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TWLN F A L L S -G oov. v . John Evans, m sM I flexing the muscle of o( Democratic — ^ foor peace Party regulars; led challcngerchi Phil I B att In a random teleplMiphone survey of ' l Survvey Isrcjrael has to limit ' Magic Valley voters lastlastweek. ^ In a Tlmes-News straitraw poll of 313 ■ s oovereignty v claims ht-counly area, residents in the elghtn I— -’3 i , resuults K , By JOHNJO I MACI J;A N ’ those who intended lolo votev — 301 — > favored the Incumbciibenl governor • 101 yalld resp o n ses | t \ Chlcag'cago Tribune over his Republican lieutenantlie gov- ^ H ' ^ VASHINGTON — Morocco’s King . e m e r by a m argin of; 50 percent to 38 < 4 | | j 5 - ■ , “J ^ • •'> “ WAS ssan said Saturday lhat despite percenC with 12 perciercent of thofe H assai responding undecided!d i a l the end of 3)* ■ - 50 j M -■ 0 ^ U.S.). ut urging, no m ore A rab states wiU mally recognize Israel'unttl~lt“ last week. . 38 ' form al Although only 4 perclercent of those , L» ‘ limills its ll claims of sovereignly to Ils who volunteer^ respcsponses to our ' pre-l9Ct-lOC? borders. J e d ______.______.1 2 . _ loncthclessrHassan-Indicated-he------surveysata'they'dldrdnofintend-to ------■ ■ B -"S ! j ------None s optimistic Uial negoUaUons on a vote, 32 percenl of the thi 442 people ■ \ OF I called preferred noto t to ^ p o n d ...... - 9 U & ' broadlad Middle East peace setUement — —Some-clted-'^rel-bal•ballot” reasons n \T...... can1 bebegin. He said Iwo days of talks------s . : , ween an Arab League delegation, for not responding, otheIhershungupor' K Ec ( betwec Ich he headed, and lop Reagan Indicated that they dIdriidn’l know any*. _ j s (D ) 38 tllli I 'l l which ^ ® al , ministration officials including the thing aboul the races,t, andai a couplc of 'I « V adm in i(R )* ■ 48 ssident.had produced a "friendly" the persons said theyey weren't citl- J _ presidi zens. d e d . 14 ® _ fe atmos]nosphere. Counly clerks In thede 1M agic Valley n "^ 1 -. •: U.S.J.S. officials callcd on Uie Arabs 6 ® I": 1 f 1 between a Ihlrd ___ ... ||< ______du rinring g Uie m eetings lo m ake a have pr^icled that bet mairpliblirdeclaration"as-a-group and a half of all ellglbl^ble voters will formal I . Percent of 301] Mgnlzing Israel’s right lo exist, cast ballots in the generneral election on ^ t i K . ' H ** m r - Has:rlassan, speaking a l a n elaborately N ov.2...... l j j I g ^ __p^ c c nt the 1 those respond- , ^ R)______3 9 . . ^ S I Almost hair of .all th eraton Washington Hotelr said Uie------lng, 49 percenl, indicalIcated they con- “«■"* Sheral i f I* abs want to live In peace wiUi ------Bidered—themselves— R^BWlCanft.^------— Evans (D)'1(D) 21 r .. A rabs id for 25 percenl '-M—— Israel•ael. Diemocrats accounted f g . Batt(R) 5ted ? r •Otherwise w e Nvouldn’l be h e re ,” of our re^ndents and.od, not untypical •fiSWS' "0^ said, speaking French Uirough an for I d ^ o , 26 percentnt iof the voters . _____ U n d ecid fii • " “ “ I Independents. |||V Lerpreter. indicated they were lnd< But he said formal recognition of ______' V/lthln thftgp mpmlBmbers_of the m m __ rael cannot come without com- D cm Q oatlc P arty rc]represented In r S i l i omlse first '6Fthe tyaelis, wlw ' ' our siurey, Evans le MitfchelKIId ed 48 requ*'fquirement is Uiat Uie "borders Those tabulating thee surveysi noticed • * ^ H becorw im e what Uicy used to be.” He said, "The occupied territories ------a couple of Interestinglg ppoinis. ||H |[ I U n d e c id e He V haveive lobe evacuated." First, a lol of peoplMple offered a n ' a I opinion on lhe B all-EviEvans race. Sev- After Uie press conference, Arab ^ “ ery indlcated that-thehe contfoversial------dlploiiplomats said Uie Israelis have to ' 0 ^ aandon Uielr claim to sovereignty,- - ' comle book was, as; oneon Republican \ abani put 11, “a disgustingg Uthing ... Batt • -• ~ .1 n W illi; 3t necessarilyt pull troops and set- : Should h av e sloppedill." it. In all those r :R) 17 tiee rs out of Uie occi^ied zones, before . cases, Evans gol theLhe nod, Among ' •, - ■ talkUks s can begin. ' J o n e s (R)I d e d 19 The Arabs said Uiey are asking Uiat • - • ■ tlfose who mentionedled the right-to- — le Israelis e n ter negoUaUons on Uie ' work issue. Batt wonlth lh e vote. ■' ® : Undecide U ieli A num ber of respond')ndentssaid they nal sta tu s of Uie territories wlUiout ______. . were disgusted with/llh the entire recondlllon— ------t ".— The Camp David accords of 1978 campaign for govenx:mor, Indicating ■ ' 2 2 aU for-Palestinian autonomy In Uie that the race had gottfotten away from ‘ , ‘ 1 ccupled territories. wlUi Uie lands’ the issues and into mud OCCU] ' ^ Young(R)lm 27 talus to be determined after a five- ., Second, the racee . between'U.S. I • r-- ■ statu ear transitional period Uial has not Rep. George Hansen.n. \a Republican, - . y e a r — Joe WillieId e d 50 et begun. Prime Minister Menachem and his Democraticlllc challenger, > ; y e tb legin has said Israel will assume Richard Stallings, w.was almost a - . - i ' Undecide Begii overeignty over the territories at the stra ig h t-p a rty vole. MostMc Democrats ^ sovei whooffered commentsnts haled Hansen - endcn d of Uie five years.------r..,...'.. i ^ _ Hassan's remarks Indicated that, as • as passionately as the Republicans ’ gton (Ind.) 50 xpected. Uiere were no dramatic w ho com m ented loveloved him : T he expe ireakUiroughs In Uie Arab-U.S. talks, ratio of Republican1 toU Democratic brea ^ Moon (D)R) 24 lu t Uiey also indicated Uial Uie A rabs voters In this race prolprobably will lell B u ll ^anl lo move toward negotiations, IhestoryasaresulL ' , Miner (R):ld e d 26 md a re willing lo give serious consld- Overall, Hansen ’led let Stallings 48 ' • xatlon to Reagan’s Sepl. I proposals rcent. with Re- . . * — Incumbent - p ercen l to 38 percei ' i A-i Undecldi o r a1 )rtiad;Tiegotlaled setUement. publicans favoring Hansen H( ^68 per- Bn HHBEI ' Hassan said the Arabs came here •See SURVEY ool30 Pag e A2 w)/w>ra A sawirrji withviUi tw o docum ents. R eagan's plan g M B g a andmd their owi'^dcclaratton-froni_Uie__ !'ez sum m it of Uie A rab League in - B ru c e* arc ie^.feptem ber. He said Uiat now n Id bewi ‘b rid g es” m usl be.bulll between .Uie Survveys ar: ' ' Chisholn:y, SO eaderss shouli ...... _.‘‘brl' tors a rc inherent m e a ns ,1 the numbers wc ^vejop*lop^ population under M25 respond (6 per- two.wo. t w i n f a l l s - A «oommehtalor greater .11 ins Some of these factoi jot even be clc ^ to Uie totalsils oni cent)', compared totb what we should Isra Isi e l h as publicly rejected Uie once said, "A poll Is nothingr more --any race U n d e c ldadi in a ll suiTveys. m ay not oreakdowns only ElectionIon Day. ______have had (17 percecent), and wc had RcajReagan, propo^s. But Arob sources ------than-a-still pltture takeiiken of.fi m oving— s h ^ d ■."'ir'.be ______^WeJcept.dctalledbr iltl t ii^ n te n d to — ------about a-Uilrd-morore people In th e __ ^said_laid Uie Arab League delegation was o b je c t." B ut ou ia- among those who said • higher Uian Uie ' Readeiders should also beware: ththat ovcr-50 category rcrespond than acti.* old'duiing told Ihls vlsirUiarin-prtvate— With that admonlUorUon in mind, let Uons thei of vote, which was far h turnout. Among -• thc -rcsicsults from the race forr, tttie oily are.rppresenteited in Uie popula- _ IsraIsrael has a more flexible aUitude. ^ error. In | oa anticipated voter tu the reader beware. I to answer our Disirictlet 25 House scai, belwe•ween tlon. In addition, &60 ^rceht of oiir mrvey of v o ters' full demc T alk in giie tc ■ Uiose who declined I T h e Times-Nevw s u r g^giitnff n num ber ChH s TTolklnglon and Dtinna Sco^ tt, respondents were female:fe 40percent etlng^Bst-week— req>ond« «iF— q iip tiim n . wp fatfav ii S c o tt (R)Lhe of them do not inlencnd to vote. SUll. h a s too0 0 few numoers, omy iw i were male. : fiood from.Tuesday throufough Thuraday response! they would vole' ^n d ertents, ' lo be considerdered I and during Uie Magic Vj of more people said Uii during the evenings ar ■ U n d e c ld oso______^.statistic 11 Is a We polled approxoxlm alcly 0.5 per-— _____------r-tifiyoWFriday,-haBlt8lIts lim itations ------thc-U m e md___thanprobably will do f ateautrooo names J wn T h a t, coupled wiUiUl Uie. fact Uiat s tra w/poll. p< cent of the csUmdi mpifriing! ^ th e fact as do all surveys. bangewlthUme,------^WeJuJia d ab o u t a.UUcdof.Uie-VotI/otIng-..listedinthc tclephon ■— — W eesllmateamarglirgin of e rro r n o — telephone ------voter preferences cha Business C5-8 C l a s s i f i e d ...... C 8 - 1 2 1 0 €Fat3 slim ehla n c ^ ing^crricite_.J- I d a h o - . ------^ . ^ A 9 M a g ic V a l l e y ...... B l - 4 5 0 win control of the SerSenate, mont or New MexIsclco are vulnerable. ^ ...... ■ ' . UieSenr.than 7 perccnL That meansi and call. That would lndndicate a possible To nocrals musl*hold onlo sealseats in - The more llkel:ely . event, the UPI PP e 6 p l e ...... AIO “Democrats appearar to be heading foundice ' wlUiln a 14-point spreadavor... p ic k u p ,d f five o r sixsi; governorships Demo' ...... M aineine, Montana, Nevadaa and survey showed,, Iis Democrats will SS p o r t s ...... ^ . . _ ^ C l - 4 fo r m a jo r gains In coiconlesls for gov- Democibe consldereda toss-up------lajor, fortheDemocrats. races, eight are-r^irglrglnia and capture Republlubllcan'- gain a seat or two’olntbeSenaler'Hiey I \ emor, but lO dayss beforeb. Election industrour margin-of-error calculn-veak ‘ — O f Uie 33 Senatei i V a l l e y L i f e ...... D l - 8 “ of Uioae s eats se a ts In Califomia, Connecteclicul, must win five lo'3 w rest conlrol from’ ^ Day seem to be /afalling short of econoirhemselves have a margin of too close to call: Fm'our W e a t h e r ...... A 2 isouri and Minnesota pluslus one Inldng (xmlrol of:Uiefi SenateS from Uie ...... WlUiIn p a rt b ecause we didn't do; linea fine now Democratl'itic an d Uie oUier MIsso' BO Ifinone cbSnger^. more.rc.-W hlle.D einocrals a re not now, DEMOCR|RATS6bPa^A2 . ~'^Stiriday 'S Cros8,wor^ AIO ^ l^ubllcans. N0V.2.m ographlc breakdow n of Ute;rala - four Republican,-so dento

------...... 7 " ' ■ 1 A'2Timo9*NDwa. Twin Fa|lB,iB. IIdaho Sunday, Octoborior24,1882 - Sooviet ecconomly in dtiump : - p i L a t e^ . j i e w s COW (UPI) — Official flgurtjures Westem experts sosay productivity of Eicctilectrlc lty '' ■ w as 997 bHiion__ j A-alt-hours,l03pcrcent of’th e ISfii ; JS “This programm Vwlil be carried out not with xl S aturday In the officiflclal labor — w hich meneasures how _ef:__kilowall .'AcJd discover*ire d in ey ed ro p s re ancl coal w as 539 million tons. ___ o g ainst !mst Breit. chairman, of . th( ip e r P ra v d a confirmed Sovieviets --fectively.the aycragcgCWorkw Is doing .. figure. 1 _ WASHINGTON (UPI)PI) — 'The Food and~Drut g a g S jercent ow f theppevtou&marifc------4 ministration Saturdoyy Ifound a "strong suiutlor;lon" of <50.000 In Frankfurtfurt. I of their economy, Soviet Industry isi to cope with a - «,.ll held steady at 456 million tdns, ; a botUe of Visine AC eyed in Dortmund hydrochloric acid In a I ^edrops. 100.0000 V workers demonstrated in em analysts said the Pravtavda decline in growth1 ot1 the Russian. line million bar^s a day, lust; ; used by a woman who>0 ccomplained thot It bumcined her and 70,000 In Nurcurcmberg to oppose Cfiancelellor Helmut was in line with figures5 theU speaking population. lenlhs of a percentage point over . e y es. _____ — KQhi!s-caU_/0Lar n wage freeze and ctlts year.__jrhere_were_brigJiBht.spots ln_the ______TDTTSpoResman Willltllll^ G fl^ sald'th'erc'waslIS ajijgh— benefitB to combatibat-rccord unemploymenEoC™ s = = “£ jndustrlal~productlon”growtiiwtng— 3--rnonm T epdm ssueuedl^the'Ccntral— — concentration ofthe acidcld Ih the'botUe. and no Vlsin , a rote of 7.5 percen■cent. .7 percent-com pared w ithh 3.4 3 Statistical Board . of0 the. as.S.R..... - But.out other important sectors of the ; Fairfax Hospital o[(l<)fllclals said Debra Hill.. :30. of T he p ro tests werewei held under the slogan, “ t last year. The plan target;t forfi especially the energygy sector. economlomy were down. Includltlg the; . i b l ^ transportation sector, ■where' Rcston. Va., was treatec^ed at the emergency ccnteIte r lote j^qw — Oppositlortion to Social Security Cuts is 4 percent. Output of naturalal gas totalled 386— troublei Friday for burning eyes.es. after she used the product . m ent Insanity.” her key factor, productivityIty of billion cubic metersirs. 108 percent of .__outpul)ul n Ith e drops, ond found them2m lo \x It was the firstrst time the powerful union,n movement was also below expectationLions; w hat It w as a t thele same point last jierccnt;jcnt of w hat it.w as in Septem ber . “more acidic than wasvas common In eyedrops.";, ’ Judy Challenged the: newnc conservative governmiment. which lg a t 2 percent. year. 1981. Abbett, a hospital spokeskeswomon said, came to power* OcOct. 1, and could signal thehe end ot ihe _en>»l"e' ------— H iU 's-eyes^'w cre bujmingandred." m MsrAbbettr«• couhtr^slohglalx The results were in«inconclusive, as the test wswas nol A member of' Kohl’sKo cabinet w arned th e ununionagainst — — designedforeyedropsrslsrshefiaid:------istake^n-making-a-hasly-y_rtftpklnn tn __ ___ Officials contacted_ th« tte police, whq^.sent the dndrops to oppose the govemiEmmenl. ' u r v e y - th e FD'A'lrTBalUmore! forfoi fuflhercxam lnallon. "The union shoshould take care nol to adodopl a policy umbent Ronald“Brucc~traiied J »Contiaued trom PageAl led Etonna' Scolt. the i Republican Incuml -opposed to the Interestsjntc of the m ojority of wiworkers, who *C< llenger . Donald .-Chlsolm,_the-— o-21-percenlr-and-Democratrats-— Party candldaterng Independents, Stallings5 leled pcrccnl undecided,I He led on all The two of thent over theh e International B ridge onlonto the 3 8 rcscueced from b u rn in gg b o a t Among istioned votere on four ballot n by 0 slim m argin, 44 perccrccnt ballots, beating Scotott 45 to 31 am ong questio banks of the Rio Gramrande.Saturday. The accldeidcnllert FRANCIS CISCO (U PI) - Thlrty-ei£Jlght pei^ns to“3rSc un- Republicans. 53 to1 191 among Demo- proposjposals: ’ three people deod. pcrccnl, with IB pcrcent ur early Saturday from the burumlngSS-Ioot crats and 54 pcrcerent to 17.percent • On Initlotive l, lo increase the Witnesses said thele truckt plunged over thec Ibridge rescued car id. .vonr-old pleasure boat. FinalFit Ista, 37 m iles off San f.ul.ulsOblspo. "“ ““ i, >e of am ong Independentit voters.^ cuircnirent residentlol property-lax, , ra ilin g to th e banks GO» f< feet below, killing the 24-ye finally, there was the case c yoar-oio yii 4.15 a .mI. . Uthe FInallsta radioed thallat Its engine I^eroy. the present altomemey The breakdownm am ong Re- exempim ptlon to a m axim um of $50,00 o r ; m an driving the truck.k. fire and that one of Us pasfissongets had .general, x r a t s ond In- . 50 percent, p en 35 pcrccnt favored the ; Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, who(ho were ™ "' ll. who is running on the GOISOP publicans. Democ Two women from Nu parent heart attack, vin Falls County measuiasure, 20 percent were opposed de of the bridge w ere throw» n n l o t h e s u lt c r e d o n o p p a r vs. Democratic , challengenger dependents In Twii w alking along th e side ( s later the Coast .Guard dispzpatchrfth^ Se'tHI srcent. respective- andi 45 1percent had no opinion, ; was killed instantly and theheotiior \ Mitchell, for lieutenant gov- go\ w as 47,24 and 29 p en banks. One woman wo; helicopters andid ti then sent a C130. a cullerc r and an Icc • On Initiative-2 ,-to allow the, died later Ota NuevoiLoredohospltal. fji . ly- in most of the remainlnnlng The only other 1race to demon- directect sale of dentures, 47 percent T h e tw o'w om en were Identified as Joseflna SarJan Juan breaker. T h e n s h in g VKvessel Marauder heard thelie Flnallsta’s :ket. strate such brood*babased support was werere inii favor, 21 perccnt were op- d eB ald eras. 60. and BosElosa Cozares Fraga. 53. /isibllity” races on the tlckc •eported it w as only 10 m iles s. aw ay and In u ie ro w c ters. for stale treasurer,er. where Incum- posed« d and 32 perccnt w ero un- ; Mexican authoritiesles said the truck's driver.er Julio message and repc w ere a lol of undecided voten occuplK! sleM oIlheslrickiickenship. . But theihere arc a lot of undcclde:lded bent Morjorie RuthIh Moon, a Demo* decldei:lded. L u jan o of I^ red o , didId rnot see the'autom obilc oc< On Initiative 3, to prohibit the m J cS By5;28o.m.allall 38 aboard the F Inallsta w(were removed voters; inIn this race - 40 pcrccnt. OnlOnly crat, probably willII be elected to a • On by a family of Houstonlon tourists stopped o t the Mt to various Coastost Guard craft or the Manirauder. They ^ and sixth term. If the: sstate follows the Legistjislature from enacting any law customs station on thele ende of the bridge. I races for state auditor an were transportedted to the San Luis ObispoI aarca ond the district;t court Judge were theree cas some trend as in thele Magic Valley. thatit \would prohibit the use of h e a rt a tta c k victliIctlm was hospitalized in slabible condition. miinyvovoters who have not madeleup u Moon led RepublIbllcan challenger nliclea:lear power as an electricity tw o The (Ijast Guard Gu said that four hour alter the tholr mhninds. DoyleMlner(}4percircent to 17 perccnt, sourceirce wllhout a non-binding advlso- M o n ta n a p laiane crash kiUs t vote of the people. 45 perccnt were raslied in original radio> messagem the FInallsta hadad completely ay led Mitchell among all a with 19 percent,It. molnly Re- ryvotc DILLON. Mont. (UPlJPI) — A light airplane eras favor, 18 pcrcent wero opposed la Satur- burned and wasnIS ready to sink. vo tersi byb 39 percenl to .21 percenccnt. publicans. undecideerj ------In-other-stale-raraees.-Republican------and57 11 led Jim- Jones led IDemocrat J.D. • On the, constitutional amend- IDead are Florence:e~Goody < of”MeIrose an d heher son. -M srP ac= W=M andraxwsTS-crancc ScofIrof leld o f. i ,-tnnlng’s office.1cehas becnjammed.wlth.cononsituenls ancl_____p ercent. uc-lndustrial*revenue-bonds,—40------wIlHIn lieriay’s o w n p artjrththey e ------morgInrwlth~24'pciKsrcennmdeclded;------issu c- Dillon survived. clly employeeses 1lately. But the big attraraclion is nol “Bulwl sure. and Democrat Joeoe Williams.-the— percenrcenL-aicre_lnJavor.^.l2 percent Beaverhead CountyUy Sheriff Rlck U ter salsaid the Kenner city polltljlitics — it's a Ms. PaC'M an videogamvl e.___ eith e r li liked him or weren't sun s 49 incum bent ouditor.r. led Republican opposejosed and '48 percent undecided. ______Cessna 172 went downm shortlys a fter daylight a sjthefqu^r tl; lanning had1 ththe Rame installed in h is offiffice this week Ixroy ihop» - challeneer-Nolan VqungV 34-perccnt — w ere looking for elk. lo d isprove a colleague's co: conlenilofnhelj-^amos are a ------perccnt- to 18 pcrccnl. withIh 48 percent un- The plane apparentl>ntly hit a downdraft or stalleille also hold the key Scofield walked to aan nearby ronch to rcport thele icrash. fjrain i slicUIL*: ______D emmocrats o hold leads — hut a 1 0 -2 4 -8 2 f’On'ome free — in the nation's t' T w in FalU. BurJey-Ruj:R upert, Jerom e- ’ • NATIATK3NAL WEATHER SERVICE:E FORECASTF to 7 PM EST 10 ______la c c e s L IN ew 5 5 5 ^ ------Ooodta««re«:------loody w llh slight ^ ‘Q r \ York. G enerally partly cJood .dley, \ chance of showers lodayday and Monday. ^ y . I-osA; Angeles Mayor Tom BradU H ighs n c a r th e m id coss andar lows (onlght / BOSTON a Demcmocrat. holds a dwindling» leadIc V \Vil JI^*POL>3--YpS orney ' \ roLOWBW ’ 4010 45. 7 - o v e rCCalifornia a Republican Attorn Camoa Pralrfe. Hailey,iey._ Wood River . . ^ ral ^George DeukmeJIpn inin Ihis . \ lo become the nation's fliflret ...... - -- - W W k \ valley : flm ' CHICAQC? P a rtly cloudy wlUi slight sli; chancc ot ^ ^ electeded black governor, liss® '""-** - showers al times loday'a am n d Monday. • w York Lt. Gov. Morlo Cuoiuomo \ Ulah: ' SAN*FRANC13CO:^^ Fl V D E N V E fn/ 2*-' 30.00 New ' N o rtb e n N evada aod Uial 1 a stiff test from drugslcjslore \ today In northern \ r* fa ir faces £ Scatlcrcd showers todi m Lewis Ixihrman. who) hhas \ —i l — ------[rTvacu"""' Nevada, while Utah shovhows widely seal- - , n*s tycoon 03 ANofetea ^^— i / j \*j^A N T A ' >ent Cuomo by S7 million, le re d show ers loday andxl ppartly cloudy on ' outspen ______’5 llilnoinols R epublican Gov. Jan*lames 3ST^‘ • M onday. HIHIGHEST "— DA Synopeto: TEMPERATURES N f X Thomnpson. pj once considered higllighly A large low pressureire syslem In the i MIAMI vulnerairable, now appears likelyJly to ------^ ^ 6 0 ___ . ‘ 0 r \ ' \ ^ ORL^EANS Eastern Pacific continueslues to push bands 60 •' tu m blback one of lhe Democrac ra ts ' ca RpV viJ or moisture acrossss the Pacific ^ , LtOtHO — ------^ * 1 biggest2st threats, from former• SiSen. »o»v,c' ^ Northwest. A band of sh

^ N e w s Member,«r, IUnllwl I’f w Inlcrnallonal | ( p If you h av e a1 ncnew s lip o r w ish to ta lk toI &som eone in the editorial departlartm ent, call 733-0931 belww een 9:30 a.m . j I ______Circulation-iicm tKnt>pr. i Audit BurtauofCirculiillon —I •______,___ and_5:30_n.m^m. weekdavs._Ask_for Ihtlie appropriate ve your paper by 7 a;m ., pieplease call If you do not receive; l a i u i ------th o n u m b e r fo r yo u rr ai a r e a : n i F o r lo cal newvs s ttips ...... Jo n K in nnney, city e d ito r- Jerome-Wendell-Goodoodlng-Hagerman lly E verllt, a sst, ^ H ^ y i h e m o s i ^ * P 678-2552 ° r coveragee requestsK . orK ell> L i ------Riirlpv-Ruoert-Paul-Oil-O akley ______cllv editor______H | p circular, the foFollowing 2 ------Buhl-Castleford Marv Clemonsns, sports'cdltor ■ ■ cjrapery . S. ^ ______FilerrRogerson-HollisU lster ■ ____ enings Loravne Smith. 11lifestyles editor I ^Ky^desiSQ.s_and_^I ■ ot^arrive:_j ____ -- —items did not T w in F a lls a n d all oth<)ther areas Editorials, lette•tiers Stephen Hartgen,.m:managlngeditor fa b ric s ^ Aluminor lal^ T V ------BUI Ostendorf,-*f.entertali^ent------■ ■ O T T O M S ...... Circulation phonesI areor manned-Between v rnano-a;mr' Friday Special? ^ 2 5 % O ff ^ ' M agic .Vaiiey"” only. - . To report lateate news and sports resusuits only, call ..._ . ^ 8 ______. K H I IiH J uaow .... — SutaorlpUaa R ttm . CllyI boQMboc (kuvtry - 90( per week; Sut 733^)936. week; Oally >ad Sundayr 1tl. 1 per week. Rural motor rtule adaySOf per week; Dally aad Su«t rpiM taKhnaee (avallahU nnly.wlSS^'^A dve^tog - W e'slncaraly apolpolbglzaand delivery U DOt maloUlaed)Bd) •— DaUy aod SuDday. t month n.:f3.3S;SaoQtha If you w lsh tO0 piplace anh’dveritSemcntTcacaIi-73J^)93TT^- - mootb t3«3; 3 . hopa-thia d i^ s notI liInconvanlanca >16.U; e roooths <0.10;; »13 nMoiba WJO. Dally ooly. I mo ext. 267. p y f* : • mooU»$U.S8;«roooU>i|BI « n io : 13 nioctbi 146.30. Stndayy ody.oc 1 roooth To p la c e a ClaS£lassifled od you, our valiiadil'cu.aiomera— c ------— —. n .e s ; a mootht >7.«S; ( macmootte 115.90; n mootlH C lJO . spedaiitucjeaiSpe t o buy a dlsplo;play ad ext. 265 I ■m INTERJORpj a ad K rv tce m « l^ le. M.40.«ptfroao(b p for DaQy and Sunday. ' , For a correctlo’tion on adisplay ad ------ri_ __ ext.213 . - n * l ,TwtaFaiu,io Theadvertlsinising directo r is Bill B lake e x t . ^ ' U U\ m FifJE FunNnuRE • I Tb8Tlme»-NewttfpoblW«Ubed daUy at t n TUrd Street W.. T« ■ - &G/F7S ■■■ I lainchecks willHI b(9 Issued ^ • S330I by M agk Valley N ew « fp^ier^ loc. Secood 734-9374 ' ^ ' iMbUcbed. ' * *I ______*’ ______...Sun(mday. Octobor 24.198? Ttm(Ttmos-Nows. Twin Falls, Idaho A-3 ~ ,

O ’ N es i i l l o i p s t a g e s — J i e n t ]r i i f c r i l X) ’ N e i l l { n g ^ a S r aaccident ■ • BEDFORD HILLS.. N.Y.N. (UPI) - I Ireatmcimcnt. hospital spokesman thc shootinf; Armandundo GalleUa issued a brief ■ — Pnllof» .Snfiirrtny nilwLUi .m^ntpnnflr^in^Hhat thc actross . sultry movie actress Jencnnlfcr O’fJeili accidental bul said thchey were sttll had beeibeenadmilted, 4 He accuseused Reagan of throwing . unsure howltocciirf^r "Ai Mrs.Mr John I/jderer was admlUed By JOUN F. BARTON le hospital with a gunshot wound . United Pre^Intcnwtlon'to o l ‘■mllllims.otof people out ot work as "There was no attemptipt on h ef life,” - S ..to the hi ______part_oI.a_d;3C_and_ls_now Jn_fnlr______W5SHINGT0N — ks to the wealthy while Illlon.*' the spokesman said.______SpoQker-ThomaB-OiNci: -----portrayal of-a seductresss&-ln thc-movie— f l u K i conditio President Reagan lo Ui(thc punch on denying ^W e basics’prllfe lo thoife “Summer of ’42." telepcphoned police 5.-Reiss' said the aclress Is a gun -the. iwlion's airwaves,es, Saturday who need lh^crlcans to slarilart changing • wound in Ihcabdomen at her spacious might h - economic credibilityy for h is ' program, his ranch-style home Fridayay night. I somee urunknown purposc and unloading Reati'an’s "unfair” is'lo build some fairness policies on Elcclion Day, firsl step is' Marilyn Reiss, spokesesman tor Ms. n when the accident occurred, ------“Stay^e^coorsc?; O'Neill -Into 11,” hl as O s a l d . ------O’Neill, said'the a?tre;itjss' manager------«• - Mississ O’Neill married I^ederer In asked, using lhe GOPP sslogan dur- The speipeakor said although^ husband John lycdcrer wasw at home at \ I July’ I97a. She.has IwO"children.------)romlsed during the pres- st unaware thal ee. 14. and Reis. I. , ing a nationwide radiiadio address. P™npmpntgn not tn U.SC a thetim e but was ol first ----- hfs^feiiad-beeasbat__ native of Rlo de"^ Janeiro, she I to curb inflation, top red-lnmorc-than-15 fllmsrlnelud-:.--— ----- change.” rewssion t .“John didn't even know kr anythmB — starred O'Neill one-upped th(thc president odmihistralration otflcials are now had happened until heI ssaw the police M "The CareyTreatment" and “The - — by-relcaslnghls-lDemO'mocratlc-.“ re— tJo Ithat^ ______care,"^e said. "He’sj-a'UaRkct-caro— { icarnallon of Peter Proud." jothers me,” O’Neill said. sponsc” to R eagan'sr weeklyw{ ra'dlo That boi right now." ■ ■ W ' '■ "•'-Butat hher most ffim'ous rolc wastlipt jefore Reagan th <10 ^ < officials who speak so xidental ruling n i of theie ccool, elegant older woman'who address three hours l)ef( Murphy said lhe acci easily abouout rising jobless figures jced a lonely adolescent boy in ------spoke. - - was made after investig;igators spoke to lifer O ’NclH and husba:band John Lcdcrcr carlrlicr this year ^ O'Neill, in his debulail as the Dem- realize theie Ihotrbr that lies behind other peoplewho w(erejlnlheO'Nelli's Ir “Sumirmmerof'42." aped his radio • those figurearcs? Bo they understand Westchester County_hon:)me at the time. They wer,'ere summoned lo the homeleb I y • chAMmr . t>iA hncpitnl whoro Shele had h made her acting debut in ocr'alifc respondent. tap( I starring opposite John Wayne In Friday night; the unhappipplncss they are cdiising, Hc would noi elaborate.I. Mt, Klsoisco police, who received1 11 the she underwent ‘ sur?irgcry. authorities 1970 ste nd^lress In Boston Fri 1970 Paramount Pictures film. Reagan gave his liveive from the .of self-respecl they are He said police had noilol been able to Initial calcall from Ms. O'Neill. said. Hospital offlclicials said she re- the 197 ntlal retreat. Innicting?1? talk lo the actress, whcho remained in mained In the. hosospllal’s intensive "R lolxolxbo." - . ------Camp David president!: liss O'Neill also worked as a ■ - "It's a frank admidmisslon thc ^ thehe good of our counlry." stable condition at a Northern Aulhorllorllies said the bullet appeanjarcd care unll but her ctcondllion had im- . Miss inding to any- said, "we w need to tind out what Westchester Hospital CeCenter. to havee eentered h^r abdomen, passiassed ^ved ovemlghl. SheS was initially screem}enwrlter and producer, and de­ speaker Is not respond led sportswear marketed as Jen- ' thing lhat may be a part| of the Is wrongI vwith current economic Bedford police foundd the actress in Ihroughh Iher body and exited throui•ough llstedasintalrcondlldllion. signed she arrived tor niferO'rO'NelllSeparates. president’s agenda.”” O'NeillC dide po c es amand wc need to set those a second-floor bedroomm of hor home., her back.ck. Shortly afler st Chris Matthews said,lid. “He’s re- policies rlg^•Ight.” spending lo the presi'iisldent's eco- During; tthe posl-elcctlon con- nomic program." gressional s 29, O'Neill11 &soid, "I would like to sec e w s t a gj e o f “s ft i r u g g l e ’“ Said O’Neill, “Thcs ReaganR pro- ^oth partier "Temperporary Solidarity Coordina'latlng __ The union appeal,al, tthe strongest call for protest in important, because2 theI people Id Congress should cul ground leadership calleiled Salurday for a "new staj;tage Comml^lon" and, ghglvento western correspondi)dents more lhan 10 monllunlhs ot martial law,-called for an *' themselves know it Issnot nc fair.” some of thcLhe $1.5 trillion earmarked ot struggle" with strikekes and mass demonstratior•ions Saturday, 8-hour nationwidec ststrike followed by mass street niiitary. repair the social leading'to a general strltrike next spring in a lx)ld newne “Since the pressunsures so far have not Ixjen enonough demonstrations Nov.4ov. 10, the second anniversary ot O'Neill said as a candidate, for the mil f the outlawed Solidarity union, ed to create 13 safety net.3t. and ‘'reform the Social challenge to the milllar:iry regime. to ium back the authUtning his weeklykJy five-minute reality Is a lot better. Bad as existed, but declined to give details. mcmlMJiiMjrs and thclr property.;. C Con- ^ ^ \ V : _i_ ~ riTrflfT _nririri>jW intoito a partisan currenLurunemployment Is. In most _ .Hm Moltnn. whQfl_has.b^n a fmntntifitlnns followed when shcrllerlffs ----- ^ le c tu re - 10-days-bcf(acfore-Eleclion—Individualial_cascs._lt’s_a. temporary spokesman for the non-church nc resi- deputiesles began Invesllgallng * Day. Reagan said thehe “biggest and " problem.”1.” dcnts'of the Valley,-sal Is-a t'therequcsts of othbr• MlMira- , ______1 -Largo } -SoIoction of-Fako-Fu-Fur ------^ — 2 croelcsnnyUi"of-all-ill-is-thc-doom------Reagan-Qn-lists-the-other-iimythRii—— —lhatone mombctof.lhc illcy residents:------= ------0 ----- Z-pcddllng argument.th;..that thereJs no_, .as:______Healing Church had been I killed and . ' September - 1981. one churhurch 1 S tritrif^od T -Shirt Zend In sight for Ihlthis bitter re- -Pofen! ■ four depUUes had tieenen injured - two- ber was killed and lliree othersotli ^ ense SPgnrtlnR increases ------by^{pcr-fire-and-tw< logging K nits ...... '>ci.*ssloir’ . being a1 nmain cause of projected 3d—whcn—a—dynamite—Ix) T:!/ "We're not out offth tl: e woods yel. deficits, i . did not Involve shooting ded in a oa.m. when dcputic ■; bankruptcies and dealtdei with soar- ,c relief f]' is anolher cause of arrest • warrants on two church- log. unemploymenlI Inll a different big deficitells. "That just Isn't true.” memlxjrs...... " the presliisldent said. He said his He said two depulliltles had tried to i V o)U) i you k n o w . BERNINA-SalesiA Senitie _ "m yth.” M l )akl*y Av*., Burloy ; M jng hard fight, stration's tox cuts are only make the arresls FriFriday night, but JEWLOCATIONi 1234 Ookl "‘i t ’s been a long Jniled Press Inlemalional Houni(Man.-rr1. 9 AJM .4PM ..S •: going on for much loilonger than the holding tax I rales even against were met by the Rev.V. Frances Thom- By Uni nd it isn't over "bracketet creep caused by infia-, • as, who told them, “ You can't lake f*' . - ■ 'm ■1 last'two years, and 1 average man is coverc<>rcd by > ypt,” the presidentent said. "Dut tion. any of our people.” An i Jl 20 squaro feel of skin — 33so.uare sq 1th and courage —T[;o-a[Midmlnlstatlon has causcdI ' Mellon lold a Tucsc;son radio station about 2 > thaJiks lo your faith more lhan 11 takes for an averageavc to_see the truth "a lot of oi hardship” by cuttingr (KNST) by telephone,le, "The deputies feel mi . x .an d -yQur ,abilityJo_! lan;--, — ' bchlhd lhe politicalcal fairy talcs, federal, social s spending. Reagan1 are here, escorting people]?< oui of the womar > Ajnclca is on thei rc road lo lasting said “we're we' doing everything wc; valley. They are out;utside ri^ t now. : > rgcbvery." can toI ccut waste and root outt wallingforuslolcave,/e." : > ■ The address was3S ' only a.slight cheaters,'rs," but that the budget ofr Melton said thalIt after Friday > variation of speechcj;hes^e has been the Depiepartment ot Health and1 night's confrontation,»n, chureh mem- W • niaklng around thetie nlitlon in do- Human1 ServicesS< is "bigger than atI bers roamed the are;rea. He said four TW IN FALLSLS’’ ; > fcndjng his adminisinislratlon's eco- anytim1 e!C in American history.” vehicles were stoned,j, including one of ___ his vans. PROFESSIS I O N A L SHOP I

TIMES-NE\AEWS ______CLASSIFIED ADVEVERTISING I, w PHONE 733-03-0931 i:.-! i. - i i ; ;■ ! I i U BORKOW I. hiN E X I START — EXPiRA N D — RELOJCATE TO SKI WINTERIZIZING KIMBERLY PRCROFESSIONAL CEIENTER SPECIAL.L Kimboriy, Idahoiho at Contor & Spruc'c o S t. -SERVICE AREA OVERR I6,000 APPRECIATIVEI PEOPLE $ < g ^ 81 8 ' V ^-BEAUTIFUL NEW BRIClICK OFFICE BUILDING t ^ ______. - lANBlORB_fill FINI!NISHOFF-SPACE ----- „ S A y E O y E R; R $ 4 OF YOUR CHOICE TOID YOUR SPECIFICATIONINS . _ < -ii ;paco.Avanati)of^:.FaiFamily Physician. Votn. |- llR . CHRiSTIENl I- - -fi _ • _ Pianist - Tea< ^ iINIQUE AND ACCULAIMED LIMITED : b.m:,‘m.w If you hovo youo u r s k is _ , p‘ARTNERSHIFAPP f l 'PROACH TO LEA{tSING wintorizod : by Novi o v o m b b r ...... Plano Perfdrrr 15th, wo vtfHI ongrovo o ki- : SPedagoclogy . G r HVES BENEFITS OF01 OWNERSHIP iono lino for you>u a t n o A tc o p lin g p ia nostudonfs o s — ------~ ^ U | | ' ' Ichargo (on skis800 L- B .y . Hours:urs: Monday-Thurs. & Sot. 9 -6 ; F rid ay 9-9- ~ ^ ijSrlnJormoHon.PUP U o i.C o ll . . . - Comm. BrokorofleCo.o. P.O.F Box 4127, BoUo.ldId. 83705 _____> 3 7 8 -4660 In BuB u r l o y . ______• ------. ------A-A--lTimos-Now8rTwln Falls,3, IdahoId Sunday. Octobor24,1982 -7 ^ M f i it o n I zp F S WiniamEHwHoward WlDlam'imCBlakc Publisher AdvcrtisTtislng Manager

— Stephen Hartgartgcn GaiyLlL N d so o HI- oiein-the grou Managing EdllEditor ' _ C to laUilaOoo Manager _, _ ___ WMEMQRH w m AMIHKDAWINItiDA MlHEPWDAPPEWDftAD — Bfa

T he electionjn contest for iegisiativiive D istrict 24 p its an e:g)erlenc.ed liincumbent Republicacan, Noy Brackett, against politic;tic^ novice DJana Vanan Hooser, a Demo* cratrW e preferfefBi:ackett. The contestst for Twin Falls Couijiinty commissioner, d istric t 1, h aIS s Ri epublican Judy Fellelton of Buhlagalnst - D e m o crat Alvi'Ivie Johnson. We preferer Felton. • H ere’s howV wew see both races: _ rsiiNifi. D istrict 24,4, Brackett vs. Van HHooser. Diana Van IS Hooser has been b< active on the •Buhl B Planning and JW l' , — Zoning Commmission and in the EBuhl Business and Professional1 VIWomen. Qhf ■ ■' B ut beyondd thoset] contributions toLo the community, we impared to that of think her ex|experience pales com Kf UP'(OUR m i n d —- D O V O IV Brackett, a secsecond-generation randicher who has been in ■WANr-misT' the Legisiatunure eight years, J Brackett is chairman of the povowerful House Ways D i c k W e s t ______and Means CcCommittee, and part•t of the Republican leadership inIn the Legislature, whwhich Magic Valley ______legislators havlavea way of assuming,g.______: ______He is activeve In the cattle industr)try and understands S h a keij s p e a r ee,aU -siwelHhilot en d s V the agricultuitural needs of the di:district. He is con- I n l ______servative In hihis views and support!rts the Reaganomics___------^WASHINGTON—C-Calvin Hoffmanrauthocol—1------Marlowe was still11 alivea five years after his repeputed upward to what thejthey were before."_____ ap p ro ach to finfinancing^ "The Murder of theMMan Who Was Shakespeare,’’e,” m urder 1M583. TharBarwoUianricastTJhysIcally-i iy.place____Q. I didn’t ask: for a stock market prediction, sir. I • what-your.personal reaction would • W e like his5 approacha to taxation,I, which^ is to consider claims new evidencee iuncovered in England' him In the time franrame of some of the later wanl^toknowwhs r sales tax as a financinJing measure if more supports his thesis thehat Shakespeare's plays . manuscripts. be. a tem p o rary si 1. Give A. " la m lied lothto the stake, and I must stand the without specifically actually were wrlllen;ri by Christopher Marlowe,!. A. "Butthlsdenolinoted a foregone conclusion. ( state revenue!lies are needed, but « I'm not enough ofaia student of Elizabethan drairama m e the ocular prooft)Of.” course.” designating or earmarking the taxc tito a particular fund, toevaluale Hoffman’sn’s suspicions. On a pop quiz.iz.l Q. Hoffman alsoso Vwants to re-open the tombI oiof Q. I wasn’t askingking you about Reaganomics, Except forr 1his occasional tendeilency to doze during . would have IdentjfledKl Christopher Marlowe as> a Marlowe's patron,in, Siri Thomas Walsingham, tcto either. Is there anytinj^lng else you wish to say in is served, the Magic fictional private’eye} ccreated by Raymond locate a box thal. mlmight contain conclusive evid'Idence rebuttal? legislative sessessions,. Brackett has UIgrace.my-causeJn5peaklagfor rm s reasonably well, _____ — Chandler___ . . of Mar4ou'e!&aulhoi ______A.i!LllUe£haUl£ ______V alley and hislis district for four tern “om 's, myself. Reputationtion Is an Idle and most false , h ’permitr’w.e'see^o— however, that expertT^lmimonv i A .“ 'niattakesthi> the rea^ n prisoner. Poor Tor and assumingngTils age and health" on the subjcct could bc! Fnlv»rsec------A "Mpfhnnip.sla. of the Buhl Planning secretary George Reeeedy. to gel a lol off his chest,!st. result." ubllc discussion was dangerous. ; tywide issues,;s. As the chairman of 36th government, andmd IUiat ways should be found'-to-: i v > years, she has had has written a book abcibout Lyndon B. Johnson. Recleedy He pulls no verburbal punches on the nation's 3f and Zoning CommissionC( for two j . cai;slla"memolr"aiand many of those memoriesIcs president, dcscribli•ibIng him as “a bully, sadist.I. 1lout divert reporters’rs’attention. i ■'•1 extensive expe:perlence In land-use Issssues. . obviously were very/painful p for him. It could havav e------and egotist’-whoseose ambition and pcrsonolity.vy w as__ "Our relationshinship became more and more .c ------“ S h e h elped ac create a plan for Buhjhlthafdidn’t rezone’ been called "Feelingsgs." form ^ under Ihedle domination of a strong stemm lenuous.espcciall;jiallywhenltoldhlmprivatelyi — a g ric u ltu ral liland, but which resijsulted in new ordi- Johnson would haveve haled the Reedy literaryy mother Reedy calhailed an “ unrelenting snob."•“ *' 1, Iftuaght Vietnamim \was going to be a dlsaster;,"'I^y^ asl," wrote. ' n a n c es for zoning, zoi subdivisions,, mobile-homer parks catharsis. Nor will oth)ther members of the Johnsorson myself, am glad1 to get him out of my Ifie at las family like it. , t Reedy wrote, Reedy left theie J(Johnson White House but rem ain ^ and the BuhlI aiairport. , on fairly good terms.tem Later, however, he w^rtie' She is famimiliar with the proce;:ess of applying for LBJ comes off as a toweringI political figure on “ I do not believe:ve anyone could be happy arorouna “The Twilight oflloflhePresidency.'’abookhe’ ’ -which-many-commununitiesLSlcug^e, and . . ' the landscape of Amciicrican history, but the accen:entis . him for any lengthJth of time. But I would be ver: Insisted was notQt alabout Johnson. In the book he grants wlth-w ■ •■'onthe negative In ten:rms of his personality and; _ __happy to see himn ^back In government—In a luhl develop a g ran t to3 iim prove stre e ts and ‘ . ___that^'evensomeoineone who Is absolutely bananas- sh e helped Buh conduct. position where heie"could c pick up the loose endsisasnc could be elected."xi." ■ ‘'T w ater lines. did in 10S2 and inn IS19G3 (years.when he became,'J^iH— ------Apparenlly, lhalthat did ll. Johnson took It HeseesJoTinsonasiIS a paradox, as most close / leader and president), and W( She has beenlen active in Republicanan P a rty politics. She lass of contradictions. He Senate majority Icj personally, anddneverspoketoReedyagaln;' ne *• ' observers did — ama; ggp them into a unifiedled whole.” has a high1 Ilevd of energy, and a we think she speaks of the tall Text:xan as paranoidal with a dee] although a reconclonclllation seemed possible when ’ demonstrates:s ai feel for the non-agrljrlcultural portions of Inferiority complex. He said that Johrohnson was abusive and "crucuel even LBJ died In 1973.73. th e d istric t sheshe would represent, suisuch a s th e College of Thebook. "Lyndonin B. Johnson — a Memoir"'by b; ■ to people who hadid Nvirtually walked the last mlnllefor Whenever Reed;eedy feels too harshly about his ’ ' | Tiat him.” Many timesies Reedy did thal. former boss, hesae says, “I can always go back to the'!'* Southern Idahaho and some residenential parts of Twin George Reedy, Nlcmanan professor of Journalism s M arquette UniversityIty. ' Without naming]ng names, he refers lo Johnsoison’s era of McCarthyDy aand the 1957 civil rights debate and- F alls. Of Johnson. hewritJites. there Is "no doubt about}ut his womanizing patterItems and speaks of his "boudw lo make our form ot and that in the WhiATille House tensions mounteded Helen Thomasascoyersthe ci White House for United, government work. Thrhis Is an art that has been loilosl between the presidsident and the press. Johnson:in had Press IntematloniZonal, r

n e s K i l p a t r i c k

G o n ^ iituUon lIfa ssm Ithrducg h fie x i'ibUity,,, genuis C embers, _ B y such devio!vlces as the legislative veto, it is _WASHINGTON.'A - No4obnepaldmuch o ______saS uprem e Court whose mer !atgam e ofth(le C onstitutio ^ngrc£3 has usurped Uie powers o f :; attention, but In Its licctitctIc lo fldjoummenl ^ ; - The grea on S been nominated by the preslcsident and ' ~ ^ id that Conii ;nate did at least one confirmemed by the Senate, areeffectl':tlvely- ap r^ id e n t.Bit. By withholding appropriated ‘ I three week ago. th ?gy t]the invention lhat It Is'dlslresslng. lo'putthe'iile matter mildly, lo superl^rlatlve struciureTKe'foundlrding fathers put und^taistand what the great ^ m e Issall'^bout. i -genius, UieB biccntennlalbl< commission will have^: m et laPhiladelphla Inilhesummerofl787. lh< .• discover dl how poorly Informedned our people are, logeUi:ther. Consider, if you wiU,, Uithe threshold The gamiame Is all about power—how:# you get Its hands ’ull.full, Our most recent such _ z~ on, organized to celebrate th e .' . The instrument was ratif:itified the following nple,-as people, power,•, h(how you hold power, how yotou exercise commission, ( strain American Revolution,Re^ had more colorful stuffr' sum m er. The first 10 amcimendments, spelling Constitution O but also on thee hihistory and the wouldid be represented In the Hou£ouse,andthe power,•, btbut most of all, how you resU a granting to work with.Ith.IHseaslertocelebratebatUes ] out a Bill of Rights, werc>re added in 1792. sjspirit of our nation's charter.er. A vague notion staleses, as stales, would be cepreareseotedlnthe . power.Tl*. Tbe Constitution Is al once a 11, lhe commission would persists p< that “all men are erecrcaled equal" is a Scnaltate. Without that provision,I, Utherewould. andaholbolding back. At every point: aat which a than to honor!nor Ideas, but the ideas entrenched • : Under the Senate biil, ll Btltutlon—theideaofiimlted-^C be charged with "harmornonizingondbolancing constitutiohal « assertion. Itls^i Is widely assumed haveB t been no Constitution. Now,;w,200years powerlsi* is delegated, we find a provlslIslon fixing in the Constlti nt,theldeaofpersonalfreedom-f- :> the Important goals of ceiceremony and ththat the Constitution may be amendedi by later,r, wc see the compromise stilstill working its limits.. BecauseB< of this intricate bral•aking govemmenl, I , celebration with the equajually important goals ‘ m ajority vote of the people.i. WWhat percentage politictlcal magic. system,n, ourc Rqjubllc has survivedItwo t -are ideas fortror the ages. *1^ deserve alllfieL -;::- Ican m uster." ______of scholarship and educatication.” This is exoclly -— of our pMple understand thehewrltofhabeas \ \ centurlearies under national governmerlentsthat"- tribute we car as It should be. It wouldd b

, J*• X ___ 1 1 - ■ Evans* m o n eg y r e c o i will bring In S18.G million if - Alvie Johnson wiivins support H Henenever, at any point, conckineci[ted poaching independendence hail 1 Heaven's next bestistglflto _ the sales tax wll in anyr way,V but singly said that: tbthe trained that of lifefe ands an immortal soul! ” implementedd JaJan. I and only $9.3 million if __ ^ ortof Mr. Alvie e x p eIs ^ should do tbe arresting anand that ToadlslnIslnterested observer. It mighth tseem ImplementedApdApril I. And all the time we are ounty conunisslooer,— ■ — should!d be dooc-withsomfiilegrceeofethlcs------amusing.0 ; to jwar pollUcalJeadeisp^>clalm _____ walting..we are ]poylng Interest on the money------__ Dlstiitffl. ______------Lfoun Mqli»Hf»rnnft fhplT-^yo{|^otl w to local control tjut-to usjs-votors ___ borrowed on1 thelhe hondjnarket to cover, the—------Mni^Jfinsonls a conservar^Uve Democrat I character to be very distasteistefuland Itlsacynlcinlcal ploy. There appears noI Intentionlr cash flow probleoblem. who tbe value of a dollardol and would ■ degradlidlng by Intimating that be!wasa w] for the part:arty-controlled Le^slature to give * John Evansislstoomuchofapolltlclanand Is __ _ biihglnfloog overdue twoim^mrty system cf ■ poacheiier ^ criminal and wouldI slshoot local unitsItsof c govemmenl the means wwith not enough ofifaleader. a I goverrinsnt to Twin PallsIs County.0 . someonone if he wei^ put on the ^x)t. t . which toI do do their Jobs properly. We doron't LARRY D.'.HENMAN HI MrrJb{inson gels our voteotes and merits hav(ive known him for many yearjarsandl appreciateIte beingi forever treated as niclice, but TwinFallsI y ours.^- ■ ' think Mrs.M Rock degraded her^lf;lf imore than not qulte_brj_bright step^Jiildrenof the— ------M H L ^ MRS. HAROLD>LD LANCASTER _ H —— she did:d Mr. Buhler with ber vlsciot:lous ...... "I.«^slatu«:ure. Let’s show our proclaims,5^1 Re-electiotion has plusses TwloFsUs .-,i^'3p,V ; y m suggest!sti 0ns. Perhaps if she kneww ilthe man as l independendence Nov. 2 by voting for Chriiris ThislsanunsjunsolicltGd report, *^a farce” B do, withIth his integrity in upholdinglg tthe law to Talkington.[ori. He’s independent. R eflectinglg hasht its plusses. When an Dallas verdict “a Incumbent seek;eeks re-elcctlon, he has accepted - On bearing the-veidlct on^.DaU^lnowCO .-.Bl the polnlint that be would not let anyolyone with him EUGENI^ G . STACEY (hech'Qlt^i’cso,esofhl3posltlbnl.MoreoYerJiie_ . . say, "M orderlswldec^'limlnldaho." Justbe 1 9 even asIS much as throw out a piececeofpaperon ( TwlnFall•’alto . : tbcpubjibllelands, least of^[a canmorbottle.-l- o -----^ ------■' exlstingofjloj^^ alreadyhas the need^— _____—— 1-^arc.ycuidU-the pcrsondeatlead ao they can' t— ^— o M — ^havet)et>een witEWmln the«utdooraorstooinany^^ tvanSris 'iJ too politl^I experience and'md "blolo^cdl’’ advanta^bf . testify, then plead seir^cferifenserwhatafarcel— there. No extra time or effort will — nd I've known ali my |aB times totc believe your line of garbajbage. Gov. Eva;vons has once again shown hithis lack o[ h av in g been the: I'm a natlveof Idaho and I d to meet those challenges. Du'llgetastiffer IH iwou:)Uld I Ike also to add that wherhentheperson leadership!lip In his method of dealing wlti'lth the . be consumed to life if you rustle cattle, you'l who tunms r another one In whatever penalty than you would iffyoumurdera yo /erhis revenueshcshortfall. Allemalely,ly, a first term official would have human being. After oil cattl whowh knows Hawaii bosti soundlegaladvlcerJim-JonJones is that-----t - i T ------" Is either)errelevont or truthful, but his man. cxtenslviilve political experience has nc Jim worked for three yea;/ears as doubt taita u ^ t him that It Is most - 4WVAYS TRAVELL SERVICE le^slatlve assistant for SenSen. Len i • dlfflcultllit (0 respond to such attacksBin ir BohlnciThoBBon Twin Falls all 734-7805 Jordan and knows how loohaveahigh hi the last>t daysd of a campaign. igleglslation batting average in gctUngl — ____ Underer.the circumstances. Mr. tant because ' I r>n‘g rgluptnnpp to cgmpnrpThe IHp • — mxrst of the issues tbe attontomey ------lenc? of thetwo candidates mustmu ...... ’ g^netail candidates campaipaignon ' beseenan as a confession that even his require legislative approvaoval.______k------ow n cons >nslderable skills in advocacy-loy------__ _ __antnoLaiLadequate to the task of makltiklng ___ Jim has built up a succSi5^ful~iaw ines'..quaIlflcatIons appear practice and a lot of .that: pnpractice has ^ ^ ^ ^ B equal totto those of Mr. Williams. been In courtroom worit H( good reputation for beinggan ai excellent IK ^ - Jim JoiJones has shown Idaho all the ' courtroom lawyer and woul/ould ------JONES J.b . WILLIAlAMS publlcrelrelations that money can buy;'uy: . ■ certdlniy represent the stat^ t e well In . J.D . Willi'illla'ms offers Idaho experlenc[ence TSsilSBSiMi - ______rc q u ii^ b^ y the Sunshine Law since refrain from "attackingigJ.D. • thatmoniloney canno* h»Y, 1 Trintuvihn 7^ T contributor[orewho gave foO wi5t^ llSfW.- votersiP_choo6eJ.D..WJlllamson— to "------wWlff ------IdaholBnext-altorrteygergeneral vrauld— The],sHnalhdlcated lhat'423 M iT D ^aan thus dlspsplayeda Nov. 2. bave to deal with water law Issues and contrlbulioilions had been made betweenn delicacy In these matterersth at— MICH^HAEL HENDERSON Jim has strong credentialsals there too. May 10 andndSept. 30. My expendituress apparently is not sharecYxl by the Haileyey Protection of Idaho’s water ;neral election amounted to ure.JIm iroilEh — Jones will do the job Idahoj ' which wasIS far,f far. short of the . LAmDNOH preposteroirous $200,000. plus, which This is a1 paidJ poiitical advcIverfisement. s u t t Senator, Dist. 25' Wllllamscliicbargedlwasgolngto ...... ______. ______spend.Pororall-1 the demagagory.-lt-noww ------Reprinteced he.rewlth..from> TheT M inidoka looks as ififWiiiiamsisgolngto V C ounty N ew s by Don Chis^isholm. A nswers money;y claim outspendmI me on the general election, ree that for the most part the I feel d few commentsiare an In order I do agree ® A4-THENEWS.Cc3ciobcr21.1982-Rupcrt. Idahcaho ______with regard to the columnin vwritten by spending' issueis: is irrelevant. Oct.I7I?sue However,*, Uthe Issue of whether or not a n Bruce Hammond In the Oct M in id o k a C oljn ty N'Jewse' lOSSIGNOL I of your paper. candidatese should disclosc a socret v --- i |i position totto the voters Is certainly_ x t lg n o l ^,Fli3l,‘lfie issue is not sosomucuproor- n relevant, O p i n . C halo l l s n g a r S k l ...... Cton on right lo work but, ra .rather, JIMJONI)NES ^ - Saleilo m o n 626 oii^enpos^ and honesty. I ha' have Jeromee ^ H Blmndlng (with brakai) ...... * 9 9 ” I disclosed my position onI ri(right to work C o mn m e n t s and Mr.'.Willlams shouldJdothesame. dc \ 9 Noro rd lc a InPrestbnonJuly3l, 1082,82, he WllliatTtms gets backing J . : Puiij l t a r B o o ts...... * 9 5 ‘*1 adm itted that he had a posi ______In ateceicentletter.totheeditor, EF'Scott — right to work and that he hi Harry Delli»Hoan choracterized Keith Pol«> l « i ...... * 2 I ~ I d i^ o s e d that position “pri■privately" to Hpark's eaiearlier comments on Jlni Wo;'o x , M o u n t d niim b ttd r people In Franran k lin ~ :------Johes’slaclackorexperienceimaw r Chis;holm I s E n g ro v o '...... M 5*" I County.iHe received the•AFL ^cult but critical dcc lg judge, particularlya popularliar judge. Therefore, he has an obligaligation to |X of turning out a silting il ts an especiallyy hard-choice becausc someme of lhc issues have beenn l i f A disclose bis position to thehevoters. \ 0 7 * cloudcd so much th:thai it isn't easy to see who wh is scoring poinis. andd W S ^ n d , I h iv e fully disciIsclosedthe /- bccause'both arc brighi c6ntributors wiio bave finaJnanclally Chisholm wins in lhe ll most important category,iry, however. H e is the moree ( 1 [ m TALK TO OUR EXPER►ERTS. supported my campaign.n.Tbe T qualified candidate even e though he has neverver sal on the bench. He Nowton's Sports Contorlor Is Twin Falls’ONLY ;R for Rosslgnol and disclosure of contributionsonswent V fineHQuSE PLAZA Hunicy y ) ■ has served in public: capacitiest as Minidoka Coulouniy Prosecuting Attorneyy ■ AUTHORIZED DEALER I . beyond that vrtilch woulddhave hi been ^ and as legal counselsei to lhe city of Rupert,rt. Dui mosl o f his exper- , ( ^ 1 Nordica. Wo oro TRAINEINED by tho roctory to fit you right. AND,, onlyo Nowton's can ^ ience has been in prilavc n choice to make inI a judicial clection'.''Judgescs' . ' : a Sal.: 9-9 Friday J 9 orc not often opposeeed in this-district. For theie majority, experience wilhIh ^ B r the court system is nilni and its workinw are mystystcrious. It is frustrating foror —n 'lT r ii ■ manytotryiodeddctc between these two men. B However, ihe maruin ihts community trustedMl on lhc bench for manyiy ■ ■------■' sllwood,'wanted Chisholm t| M years, Sherman Bell' 1 tp succeed him when he ■ S sS fT H retired and he ojniiilin i)^ lo support Chisholm,Im, Those of us who have 9 not made up our minjinds mighl well consider defei:fcrring lo the opinion pf qur_ 9 fortncrjudgc. - —n88Blo*Lal.ak»sB lvd.N ; Twi I ...... ELM. T w in Foils 733.8371

■ i ---- A-aTlmeft-Nows, Twin FallJalls. Idaho Sunday, Ociobrrowlng money while waitingigfor complicateded hbusiness. Is among the 20 But heriwllcy pronounceiicements are as airy as Reading, earnestly but confonfusedly, from a you makem sufficiently unrealistic>tlc demograigraphic trends to make SocialU ISecurity pcrccnt. If[ youyot asked Donforth’s 99 Senate, cotton candy. badlybj ty p ^ page that is a tosstossed salad of assunjmpllons, any problem can1 bt Itreat compound1 the Institutional injury werean^ of uhwUllngness to facc choih o l(^ . ' ______-President’sp request for obligaligatlonal authority serioi:ously. or one who Just prescrieribeswlshful votersasI as adults capable of comprehiihcndlng the strongest!est to lose in 1982 bccause of a /. -Hent^hprgnmpalgn,I. withw Its strategic______(whirhb i.q what Congress canMl control.c ...... thlnklking? ------^. -______h ard cbIw o l lo ^ ______Reagan underidertow^anforth ls.lcadlng.Tiye silences about real dJIemi>mmas. illustrates thc year-by-year) yi for the next fouriiscaifou years InT!noso Mine sincere but dahgeigcrously She Isp ' grindlngdlfflcultyofgoveiovemmentlnthls c

H ansen’s recy ccase has been ■ Uoyd Walker’s letUtter (Oct. 21) superbrb. a n d found m o re oif fl the same. IndDl!idDlstrIcl23. ' settled. Five counts of briberywerebri H prompts this reply. LetUI us defy his enemies and get'Clout ( ll’s time lo elect::t someone who will ' DAR DA WHEELER !' dropped. 1 have pleadedsd guilty{ to a ■ What George Hansesen does wllh his thevot<'Ote for George Hansen. Ourir •— belherewhen'W en; need them. Gooding Ga ; m l^em eanor for filingg a a false ■ own money is none of)f UoydI Walker’s countryitry needs him more desperater a te ly • writing. ■ business. Neither Is ilit my business, thanevever. Idaho has the finest - I also will resign my'Office ofl as the H nor Is It anyoneelse’s.’s. • congrejsessional delegation in th c Clerk of the District Cour ■ The only criterion; regarding,n countryitry. However. 1 will actlvel:lively seek the ■ George's finances Is> howh hc handles I-ALL SEATS RESERVEDed:MO.OO ______TlfKFTS AVAIj ARIFAR AT-______: Li------, • lw as elected, II cjcame Into this County, * W e” wiII~c{TX OFFICE ______^ ___ '■ office with the Idea of proproviding a W henrn reflected, I Intend to changc■>80 your brake;es, windshield wiperers and washer solu BUDGET fAPES &F6 RECORDS ‘ ;; t>cedure. As a matter of fact, )lu - : servlcetotheJeromeCoiCounty . thatproo tio n p l u s . J.C. PENNEINEY , ‘ ; residents. It has been thethepollcyofmy theformsm s have already been ordered, believe the voucher to be false, BROWN & GESAS -BLACKFOOT• Bl / ----- M>fflce4oJxMi«alIahIaI — REXBURG " ' i orderto"playpo!itics."I."Icameto Ifeeltl;1 the voters should be told both All This ' ELI'S RECORDSs •- BURLEY ; work; and I have worked,ced. I have sides ofif the U story before going to the K C h arg e titickots by pliono usingg \ck, .•••: Inflation Fightere r I *■ spinal probliblems Sot. & Sun. j j f f ^ D E - SE-SPUrriNGLY I FUNNVr I and stres ' ■ o h l y ^ 2 * 5 0 ->uMM.tTSicinein«nutie ,<{: B o tw oon 4 P.M. & 6 P.M.M II :r otoole ■ 8 . I t VtYfiWORITE ja 1 ^ rfl ] 11 ' YtAR BD I D«lty7ilS,»;0S t,-S«n. li4Hi3Hi2S-7il5--Si]t-7;20-fiOSi Ks'.T Mogia g ic of swoMords iorccry

Po.llt..l, ^ KATHARINE HEMHENRY K , l l ^ r c eeress r HEPeORN FONDDNDA ^ 1 ^ ^ ■ I > ♦ ♦ ■ j i f l ll i r ------The, FJssL u-.—.... w - ^ MolofVu __I SW O) K R D r f g iK'.'i "E. s' Free HeaHeatEfs! - SO RC€z e u e R m S " ______iTH EtXTRA-lE,ERRESTRIAL [isi ~ | i _ ~~m- B o«nr7:jo " Dolly 9 :O o T ^ L ’■ 5IWIN f I J "" ' ■Only ~ 2 i l U -twi. iiOQ.a,ea.5,ott.7,oo JJMi]

\ ------L — " ■ 5 i=s^!s ______Nowost. M ost stj M odoj;n ^___; I ...... THE WORU “ Tochnlq'ob'of SolSelf H olp ------— ------ACCOHDI ...... Comparcourprlipric* ond...... -...... — - ...... TO,,I “ :1H 'RICHARD l l i L eom* In lo r d*mnonitrotfon on I G E R E . «S5S§“ - | | f I — H e'* g o t tl ElU TLEM AK | j | | ,1 » 3 S 0 " I '■ funny •li D E B R A !iii W IN G E R k IfsAwesoi^ . I CANYONUWALLS i I __ looklnft « tn f e . ^ f ToMIv A— ' ' ^ 1 R A C Q U E TI CC L U B ■ 1 I - ■ ill - Ooll, 7ioo-»i:o Ofl)l,7i2».t>t0 11 PoUUncfioodEoil.-III. Twin Felti ; -'0olly9«30 -Only...... -I «r».a!iHia»fli40>iM.iii0------JJM'-,— _ : : _734-74il4 4 7 . ■ H 5 F 5 5 ^ : i - Sunday, October 24.1982, 1Tlmos-Nows, Twin Falls, Idaho A-7

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I * 1 1 1 - Gi f o T c i i d — By MO^ONAA.ZIADE his condition Iss not serious.’’ a Israelraeli soldiers remain in Lebanon. Uniteded Press Internationa] spokesman said. At his Cabinet meeting. Gemayel Gemayel's talk:Iks In Washington, saidlid he1 was confident that the world Lebaibanese President '-fi•Amin France and Italyly earlier this week underiderstood “ourcause.” Gema>layel, briefing his CabinetI on01 his devoted lo rebuilding Lebanon "The "Th president's trip was a greal visit. to the United States and EuiEurope, Its army. He! aalso called for moro succeiccess," Prime Minister Chefik 6aidSaSalurday he will travel to sevseveral International troopops - up to 30,000 - Wazz;azzan lold reporters al the end of Arabt) countriesc for similar talkalks on topollccthenatlonin...... - the2-le2-h6urCabInet6essioir — reconsiinstruction aid and riddinging his After meeting' with his Cabinet. In ah0 Interview published Salurday. nationon of< foreign Iroops. Gemayel said hetie planned lo visit PalesQlestine Liberation Organization ___ In ththe Israeli-occupied WestI Bank,B "som e of the ArabQb countrles-who a r e - Ieadeader-Yasser-Arafal sald he saw-no------Palestistlnlons stoned Israeli vehlclilcles In concerned with thehcLebanesepeopIe." hope!ipe in the current U.S.-Arab talks on scatterlered protests called to He did not namme the countries h e ; thele PalestinianPi question. m but political sources i “Tl memtMntier the victims of the massaissacres intends to .visit, bi “The U.S. stand on the problem at twon> IBeirut refugee camps. said Syria couldI bet high on the'list does» s not rcflecl an American un- Israeraeli soldiers dispersed the de* bccause of. its dinirecl involvement in derst;}rstandlng which may pave the way rhonstristrators and there were ncno re- Lebanon. torir a constructive dialogue for the portss Iof Injuries. An IsraeliI aarm y’...... Syria maintainsIS some 30.000 troops - rccovjcovery ot Arab rights'and recognk - - he de- Lebanon’s eastisterh Bekaa Valley tionon eanc carried1 outg by heavily armed mennen the kidnappings werere laklng place at sllghtljitly wounded by debris from fro a : Hinton Saturday denouilounced the kid- d resk dd InIr civilian clothcs and driving'Ing the same time thetie Magana gov- jand imine explosion Saturdayday. a ^ T O nappUigs of five Solvsdvadoran leftist pickup trucks.tn em m ent had proposet«d a peacc plan lo spokesiicsman for the Italian continitlngenl pollllcaUeadersas“GodGodawful.” CarlosIS 1Molina, head of thc Unlversl-rsl- allow the leftists to participatepi In the said. - “This Is not the kindind of thing this ly of ElJl SalvadorI economics depart-art- country’s politics, - t Ijqle soldier5 “was hit by debrisiris, but SUU N D A Y •government wants toX) i see happen," ment andind a reputed member of the On the batUefront.it, rebels consoli- Hinton said in a tojephophone Interview, FDR, wasvas among those abducted. dated control overr to hamlets in RUNCH referring to El21 Salvador’s An FDl^OR source said he suspected:led ChaJatenango and Molorazan provinces ‘-.U.S.-backed governmernent headed by-Treasuryiry police kldnapp^ Molinallna and threatened the townto of Clnquera, ...... ^ ^ - A t T T h e A l l e y ! Alvaro Magana. and thehe others In an apparent-ent wedged between thei t'two major fronte GRANDPRIZE- Hinton did not spccueculate whether crackdowown directed at the few leftistlist as their “Oclober OflJffenslve" neared . S(Served Wilh CompHmenta>n / a r / C hampagne rthe kidnappings off five leading leadersstsstlll In the country. the end of Ils second wweek. WINNERS .In addition^ to our regular menujnu the following special members of the Democnocratlc Revolu- Hinton)n saidi the U.S. Embassy knewlew Government forceses pounded guer- For A Fre0 Movie Rental dishes willibeava[(abfe t from 9 A, . tionary Front known as the FDR, the - litUe aboibout the kidnappings, but wasvas rllla positions In fourLU* towns about 70 A Day For A Year )A.M.to3P.M. •• ' political arm of rebeebel opposition, “reasonalnably certain" they were not miles northeast of Sanan Salvador In the ..ujould endanger U.S.>. t congi^lonal carriedI oiout by someone .acting underder beleaguered Morazanan province wilh Trent Dutry C R A B STITUFFED JUMBO3 PMUSHROOMS ------certification of humann rl,rights progress—govemmcment orders.------lOSmmartillery.-mlllillllary offlclals in— ------Donna-Kruger------Vegelablersoi!Oup or saladrbcvcrage:irm m in i loaf o t b rg .a d rse te c tio n ':------to clear military and ccteconomic aid to In a broadcast bi on the guerrilla'sla's ' the area said, RicharcJ Heindel Irom desserttc c a n . BlSalvador. - ...... - ...... clandestlrStine' Radio Venceremos,-threeree Officials In Chalaleilenango, 43 miles . leaders lashed out at the A«k a b c o t o u r P H H< "^eHleKE^N LIVER OMELETET-" ...... -' . “I think this kindid of action Is FDR' lee the northeast of the caplt}ltal, said lhal an Reservation* Program ' thoroughly regrettablable In any Salvadorsoran govemmenl and the- the operation to retake;e six rebel-held "» A s p e c ia l blenjnd of herbs &-spices makiiake this an outstanding taste !;circumstances. It Is Jusllust God awful,” Reagan1 t administration for allowinging villages had been callIlled off. virtually treat.. Servedid with sec re t'A lle y potepotatoes, danish pastries &______•rHIntonsald. the kidnainappings to take place, ceding the entire nortirthem half of.the— —-W V ith A $20 LifotlmoIO” ~ “ m u ffln s7 b ev e»e r a g e:------The kidnappings onn Uthree consecu- Guillenermo Manuel Ungo, Rubentx*n .provlncetotherebels.IS." AAomborship STUFFEDD FR E N C H TO AVST S REHT Filled -with aI blend1 of cream cheeseJse and marmalade. Served Vidoo Plavor ______w ith s e c r e t All S o v i e t: d( ef ectoi)r l a h e l e dd ‘b i g f iss h ; ^ ______Uiey potatoes, danish pasl)aslries,&.mullins.-beverage ______$2.00 Mon.-Thurs.1 _____ ,BEEF_STF !::UINDON-S IwhcKdefected while In IraiIran. \^ e n1 ,, wherc and. how Kuzlchkinkin In the past, Britishh and American 5 Movio Rontols for-$ 10 $ 4 7 5 ;;:::'P^e-Home-Offlce • sasaid Vladimir tntered“i-Britaln. i as well-as olherher Intelligence services:s have conduclcd £a 5 ProoWovio Rontols1° -YOUJR CHOICE rv lAndreyovicb Kuzlchkin,dn. 35, a vice details of his decision lo becomee a Joint Interviews of' Ikey communist With Mombership Jconsul In tbe Soviet•t ]Embassy In defector,ir, were kept sccrct. Therhe defectors, ■ O Of ffo r G o o d T hru O c t. 3 11st st I |Tehi-an, requested andmd was given Foreignn Office0 declined comment onin a British officials said s; the Soviet iperffilsslon to live In Britiritain. report hihe went underground five'Ive. Embassy In I..ondon1 vwas Informed of— ___>AJAR! RENTALSi ' q “This Is hot a nm-cMJiMhe-mlll defec-_,..monthss agoa] when his automobile wasvas the defection and hadod requested con- NOW AVAILABLE!EJ______^ ; fish nnrt thIs.Ls— found^betbendoBedon-ft^fan^rect.— an Important -catch,"’■ :said a gov- The Fo;Foreign Office also would not said the request wwas relayed to ------cmrpent— source,——who— w added— comment-mt— on— reports— Kuzlchkinkin— Kuzlchkin buthe had[1 nofr replied: ^ Ku2 lchkin’s official po:post was evi- broughtI wilh\ him a ‘‘vast dossier"er" In 19G4, KGB officii:ial Yuri Nosenko dently a cover for bls-KGl

l^ritain iggnorcs vieeto rio u s IR^A candid;lates I ■'SbELFAST, Northernn IIIreland (UPI) lion gaveive Sinn Fein, the outlawedired constitutional pnirocess," the 1-^ Britain’s Northern IrelandIrel minister IRA's pollMlitlcal wing, five scats In the spokesman said, TSatunlay snubbed five'e tcandidates of 78-seat assembly. a The Sinn Feineln tisino • Dirning • Moi *(he Irish'Republlcan ArrArmy’s pollllcal winners,s. whov want to force Ulster intonto Prior Initiated we-Britlsh Protestantit pparties won a assembly,)ly. local assembly after* 10li years of direct y nq ;tleflrmaJorIty inthe asstissembly. Britain’In’s Northern . Irelandmd rule from London. ^ llpg searched bordei*der areas In the minister,!r, Jam es Prior, sent letters>to to ■■ -BHtish province andi tlthe Irish Re* Ihefotffirr miiln parties for a meetingjto to ■■ ■■ iipp -publlic for a part-timele ssoldier of the sel the newne assembly's starting dale, 1 ^ 8 1 ,Ulster Defense Rtglr■glment, taken probably:ly In November. No letter wasvas ^njTT|fd»jTi^ -hostage Friday by tlthe IRA for sent, how«iwever. toSInn Fein. ------‘‘‘e ^ u s crimes commiimilled against “The SinnSI Feln has made il clearear V i ^itienhtlonallst communitinlly." they doneI nol want lo participate In anymy - 1 ApparcnUy In retallatli:atIon,aCathollc fashion1 so& we didn’t send themI aQ MRINE BENEI i man was kl(bappcd In1 westwi Belfast by letter.'’’ a £ Northern Ireland Office H p i B p p i B ‘an unIdenllfjed_loyallsJJls_^gang later_^kesmm a an ^ |d . "iPrlday.' The loyalists,s, who’want ' to Yel the lh< moderate' Social Demo-no- ^H|M iQ|EEpS| n maintain Ulster’s tiesis with' Britain, cratic andmd Liberal Party - which has Gnand Charimpion aSald the man’s fatee depended< on also vowewed not to lake Its 14 assemblybly "Whether the IRA released rel Ihelr seats —- was^ Invited, ^ a u % of Ite hostage. HnteriMtI In powersh'aiing...... Final results of Wednednesday’s elec- "Theyy alt least are Interested In the *------SEEFDINIm •1 Clubc 93 purchasod Sholllollio Browor's Grand I ---Championn stoor follow ing'tho TwiTwin l^atls c o u n ty fair. I This boaututilul animal will bo foatio a tu ro d In a n o lo g o n t ffl iWM d in n o r y o3u'll u suroly enjoy. S P L A rNNING; A N A L Ii I IS T u e» s d a y , O cCt. 2 6 t h | Cali N oww For A D ate Of Yourr C hoico A s W e A ro Book!>king Salos For tho Fallill & Spring Run $ A 5 0 Hele r e 's HoimHf W e Can IH e l p Y o u ! pier e r person M ■■ M W li■ ■■■¥O b n lUUIIa ho. Plos Purleyi £■■■■'B — J a ¥ w lIn n Falls A rea to haiand deliver sales bllbills w hlchw iirpro^o v i d e m o r *) b u y e r s a t y o v r a ul u i c t i o n . ff The proc3.ceeds_oLthis_c _gourmet-meal al -w iirbe—n ------___ ; J,!.;____ ^ * _ o » « r aL2l(0y!acu«.off.Profflt ii BSslenalExperlence- rertlslng & M ailing I er's Crip- M ir siiBiir ------794-6801------357-7443 ...... ------436-4»51 - ...... ”- 44i^i-3969 423-!3-5596 ...... __ _ .^ J w ln F o lI i, Idoho0 ^ Sh*ll». Idaho Ruport. Idehe N Noi om po. Idoho______KImborl>rly. Idoho ______A-8 Times-Nows, Twin Falla.ills, Idaho Sunday. Octoboibor24.1982 ” K a t e> S m i t htto g eiO Z ^ N a ttion i = | - M e d ta l o f - F ir e e d o n ^

------ByCRAIQWEDfl’---- T’------ASiRtekwWf-Mtsa-Smlth-wafi-iuppyi------T y l ample figure has hits. ___ nomenon.” I B - - d w in d led -to -141-L_ pounds_and she...... Her■fer career .waned until World.War Eight hospitals trcal"cated' scores of H | ' usually Is confineddto t a wheelchair. n , when wt she rebounded into popu- patients, some of whoi■hom arrived by BH But last month.. I Miss Smith recov- larityity wilh Irving Berlin’s "God B l ^ ambulance from thele jgtimc Friday, H H - ered lo lhe pointit where she <»uld Amerinerica.” During the war.she-often, nighl at Easl Los AngVngeles College, appear on the Em:mmy awards show wasis describedd< as "radio’s own SUlue for vomiting, dizzlncsness, numbness ■ M and Join in singingg her1 signature tuno. of Llb«Liberty.” and chills. Five wereere hospitalized Her sister. Helenaa !Steene. sald'lt was '^rhe e fame carried her Into the.firej overnight and releaseduxl Saturday. ^ the happiest the pererformer had looked daysys of< lelevision. where her vartety “ There was no serserious ongoing in years. showDw 1lasted several years, and.ilat£r illness, the vast majorijorlty were bet- The national attention a - Miss w ith"th "The Ed Sullivan Show.” „, j ler wilhin an hour.”r.” Dr.' Fnnnin Smith’s first sincere 1976 — contrasts sheShe moved Into seml-retlremertf said, adding the Initialtlal diagnosis of sharply wllh her quietqu life In Raleigh, neara r LakeI Placid. N.V.. only loliave copper sulphate poisonsoning from the She_has_a.ho.me_iI near Mrs. Steene,, ■ “Godtod Bless America” propel her. Into__ p ij^ s ih a soft drinick d dispenser hod takes medication1 for her diabetes, famelTie again In the mid-1970s w heni& been ruled oul. ularly and eals lunch phllac cd after a wave of poisiIsoning symptoms.swevept through thc crowdy d attends mass regull illadelphia Flyers hockey teamyiJfl* "A few could have: bebeen rcloled to C h c e>rlcaders rl are comfortcd in nearby reslaurarants — largely un- covenvered 11 was nearly unbeatable copper sulphate."" she said. , re not aware and suggestested early Saturday ththat noticed, whenien 11 substituted her song for the . “another explanationlon could-have Tyjenoljolscare." can lalk to that are 's not a drug and not a dellberber- have not discussedj Ibeing poiwncd. coppere r sulphate poisoning mign l ^ t Her business affo[fairs arc handled by NallorItio n a l Anthem. In onc crucial been heat crampsIS from people . *. * at a Iwo nieces and an1 allomey.£ who have • piayollyoff game, the Flyers took.-'.no exerting Ihem^lves.as.and drinking a ^ thing here at all. It happem>ens That's enough tot streamroller a have t b been caused by pipes at row{] situation. All people hav(lave crowd Into h;hyperventllalkin. concesjesslon stand, said the numberK rof shielded Miss Smilnith-from public ot- chancances — they flew her in to sing-Uie colddrlnk." went tention and havei inot permitted any tune,le. Bul she said inttinterviews with ) Is see someone lie on the Iht numbness and dlzzlnIness." affllcte id and an ambulance comt)me She said samplesles of unfinished homeB ffrom the game and thenn re r - Interviews wilh herer. Therh e Flyers won. ' ...... _doclors.and_some.ol.oI.the_vlctlms ..... area, most ol those them ^ away and the gossi;ssip soft drinks and sodi)da taken from a portedxl to hospitals outside thc are determined that mo rould be examined was abcabout 200. He said GO of the mostmo ----- stricl^ seemed loI havehi been suf- >_and f it passes through thcthe concession sland wot zautlon. . serlousilUsly 111 were taken from tl fering from “the mass mi paranoia cro_^Ij like a wave. nexl week asapreca 1 Elder, who had stadiunium by ambulance. ______welre seelng.countiy\iywide_wlth_the.___ lere are very few people yoiyou Police Chief Jon 1 IRE-EXTINGS^UISHERS^ - ^ Rechargingig ro d io n a b lo - a ll In accocordanco n with NFPA No. 1 (W I — A l l — P o i s eo n e d ^C y l e n o lI h a s n c0 f i n g e :j r p r i n t s D R Y CHIiE M IC A L - ADC & DC BC E X T IN G U IS H E R S ______Bv The Oiicago Sun-Tli-Tlmes ' public foundfoi cyanlde-laced capsules,les___ turnedJn-contalners> 0of the capsules__ Prihec;B. cone of the iVleno! victims.s. AT____ ih a bottle boi from the Dominick'sk's at the supermarket1 iafter a public CHICAGO -The FBIFB crime lab In Finer Foods F( Store, 230 W. North.th. warning by Mayor Janane Byrne. InVest[^igators said three additions find no readable here, bottless were\ relumed, bul thalr lh . ~ A R!NOLDS i HAI\R b W A R E - Washington could fine fthe 241 Main Nolo. K im boriy. Idah'd’"'’ fingerprints on a botbottle of Extra- Bul none of those! ccontacted said store couldcoi not provide names of lh ____ S l r e n ^ Tylenol capsapsules found to FBI agents, a{ along wilh Chicagogo Ihey had lumed in a Tylenol bottle customerners who tumed them irin. ~ SA M K D A Y SESERVICE I - ■■ contain cyanide. It waiwas learned Sat-' -police andagentsofan thrllllnolstowaw— mlnus'lhe'box'ircamimein"='ashad-— Pollceaj-anrasW ng that persons whowh - the urday. Enforcenxment Department. ‘ haveive occurred with'the lalrilnted bottle but turnedd Tylenol bottles Into th ;___ 1 The bottle and ca^ipsules had been trackedd tdown and interviewed ninoine wllh none of the othericrs. One person— Dominicnick's store-buUiave.jioU)eetieeo. . . sent lo the FBl'aTlerler a' labonilory of the“12“l2'pBrsbnsTitithorltlBS"havc' [vc----- sllH'Ucing-sought liveved-ln the same— Intervie'>iewW-bc-called.and asked-t!d-to ------Uumed In by the - identinw!led. as.-Tylenol-buyers-who-'ho— Sandburij-Village-buHjildlng-as-Pauia— assist-ln.-in-the-lnvestlgatlon.------= ^ ■ ^ 1 l a n y g o o) f s a s c i t i z e n s IH I R S m aa k e s t wi c e a s m t . '3 . f o r th < By EDWARD W. O'BRIF^lEN check, the GAO foundid tthot all but 4,5 percent offthe t ■ racy. h® .A mistakes were caughtIland a fixed. Some mistakes weiA'erc blamed on exomlners'I' hthasty ,, « ■ ------'i'h6 stuayTiemt oniy-virw lUiit-iatlvely simple erre ^WSSHINGTGN^^erheTnternai'Rcvenuc’Servlci /Ice— in arlIhm etlcrratherr-than-more th 6ubl]cformsof.tf-tax__ Iners.are^expecte^to process 25^short-formrm tax makes nearly twice asI mimany mistakes In processlniilng cheating, returns, or 75 long foiforms, per hour. income tax returns as3 tataxpayers do in filling thenlem In Its survey of IRS^S handling: of 2.543 individudual The GAO said lax-form la Jargon could be im- out. according to Congi)ngress' General Accounliniling returns, the GAO disccIscovered 3,270 mistakes. ToTax- proved. Many taxpapayers are confused by a limline on ------payers made.37.pcrwnt■ent of the errors. The rest weA^ere Ihelr W-2 form labelbeled “FICA lax withheld"1" ■- a ------Office:------i’ederal— ------: But the IRS does “ anan computers, cc which then stoilore Insurance Conlributilullon Act. Some taxpayers tl congressional watchdogog agency says, In a sampliiple the information and monitorm< the employees’ acciccu- it means income taxIX withheld. '

D e L o r ee a n n s p o►Its l c a r s H o m e> H ealth Pre- unkiueeni:enough to make buyers ignoreSS providining In-Home Servicices including: Lorean’s million-dollarar misfortunes the $25.00(000 price tag. While they sold have proved a bonanzaa ftfor dealers of well in their th; first few months, saleslies ^ • Skilled nursirsing ) p ^ off to a trtckle In pastlast ^ ^ his gull-winged sports catcars. Instead of had dropp W • Nurse Aide:Jes being stuck with a stainless six steel weeks. TlThe 1982 version was dls- white elephant, they havlave a hot Item counted1 to about $17,000. “r •Social Counjn se lin g on their hands. The dowlownlum ended Tuesday whenhen A f i I • P h y s ic a l Th«h ero p y ' - Dealers across the courountry reported- dealers foundfoi themselves in a posilion the cars in the they hadd aalways dreamed of...... - If JP ,1j P . _____ •_Speech theiiefapy_; a surge of Interest in the Ids. ■ • ^ TAKE ALiniTLE BIT I [ler Delorean’s Dan PIPfeiffer, a Grand Rapids, days Immediately afler ars arrest on federal druglg t charges and Mich., dealer de; said he had four cars . Denise Ma)ayes/R.N^, and expected them lo Iw.sold»ld the demise of his Northrthem Ireland- Friday an Administrateto r 0DF HOME w mTHYOU... I based aulomaking, by Monda;day. ’ The cars came onlo) lhthe market In "I’ve hihad al least 50 calls," said Ph. 734-22911 552 5 Shoup Ave. W./V. ■ the ‘1981-model-year-Juj-jusl-when the Pfcilfer.*, vwho owns a Lincoln-Mercury hlp. ’T v e sold one since-thlsthis-- ll I ■_____ industry’s ciurenl recesstjsslon was gel- dealership ting underway. Featiu-lnirlng doors that has h a pipened." ^ out, a polished He saidlid he has been "trying hard”rd” opened up instead of oul m’s ,,, ...... , ------:m elal flnlsh Instead off p:paint Jobs and -to get mmore cars. But Delx)rcan’s the cars were a Americanan stockpile on the East Coastlast P I m ■low.'futurlslic styling, thc I 'lah A POR’ITRAIT 'breed apart, has beer?en impounded by federal2ral ^ ■ i Bul their appearonconce was not bankr^jplcplcy court, he added. of yourselfy or yoiDur family Good ne\iws from rirecession NOW-i-in tim e for ho!Diiday giving. VASHINGTON sion Isn't all badad news: the "The periodp -Of January through u're a Tim es-NJews e sub- - = hi hway dealh loll so) far fa for 1982 is A ugust'- i982'shows"a-larger-thar 1! h a n " " ------' ■ Ifyou du vn more than 12 per«jrcent’from last expected?d reduction,i an average of 12.1 scribeier now receivir/ing home = yr.ir and governmentit analystsa sug- percent,”:,” .lhe , agency staff reportedd in , ■ I the drop is due lo the sagging a memonorandum to NHTSA Ad- Ad' delivere ry ... W E V\/ILLLL TRANSFER . = I nomy. mlnlstratcator Rav Peck. . ‘rellmlnary figures:s igathered by y o uI SUBSCRIPTION; )N TO MAIL ' E II Transportation Department's £ ‘‘The: reductions n in recent month;nths I :.v lonal Highway TnTraffic Safety from he the corresponding 1981 figure;ires • ; and SIsend it to yourr wv inter 5 ' 28.B72 people are moslist likely due to thc changess irin I - ,r ninistrallon show 2 e s s . -killed in the firsl eightt mmonths of 1982 driving' patternspj brought about by theth< addre •compared wilh 32.8C0Q deathsdi during currcntt statest of the economy."

______- M A I Lb-SUBSCRIPTIOJ - 3NSMUSTBE 1 _ ) IN ADV ANCEE iat the Times- -S ~ " MR.. JUAN’S ^____ A lovely P PORTRAIT by pjdlc'cy Studio will please —;------^“ Collegee otI MaPr Design your friendsIs a n d r e la t iv e s yWit/ith a gift only YOU)u l^ews's O ffrce 132 3riBrd-StrWest— - - can give. We Now H ave Slueludenis specializing TwinI Falls, Idaho In The Art of M aniclicuring. ■' Be satisfi(Fied with quality fportrdits made by Clarence Duejdley, photographingng residents of MagicJic ■y.e£_3.Q-y.e_qr.s_at-it_he_scSame locotion. --lniroduciory:^Qf(erser& i-.- . ■ — VolJey_faiLD.yj r-further-inforiTrm ation7-Call.^=_E _ Montcujoo j $ 2 0 0 ; Rog 10 $ 3 .5 0 . ; - Full S e t ofS cutpturcO■0 NNniiS'orrjmrTTp5 ^ ^ Mok» an apposointmant b«For«‘l)^v«v¥mb'»r~‘6th“dnd, quailf y forairam«d1616x20 daluxcconvat perlortrait, w ith thli cd. ' I $2^0070100. . i 2=‘>_ rT Q I j j . ._Replaco'm om Noil Of Sirifjlc! . ■ ■. . . . « i " V J L i CIRRCUtATION DEI)EPARTAAENT: S D)UDLEYshUDIO Lynwood Mall. Twin F.-i 1 1th A vo. E oftota t B lueLak«i Blvd. Twin F alliIII ------— T 3 3 ^ Q j - 7 3 3 ^ 7 7 7 7 ------— 733-7Tlt)-...... _ | V ^ _ ! 2 — Sunday, Octobor24.'1982 ' TlTlmos-Nows, Twin Falls, ldahoA-0 — ^ i G o v e rmment t facing5 t a s k c Id a h o■/West / W f u t i rngradiiation t e s t i m o> n y ~ By.Jftm CS-PE m t¥ ------— which hesaiOua 'were lar above me maxmilmum aJlowaoie s c i l L i c u unites Press Intematloaaiiqnf doses. A third punchh wasM delivered by an Dr. KarlKi Z. Morgan, WASHSHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. S pushed through Corkingress a measure McCIcClure said Idahoans should un- SAliT LAKE CIT Y -T■ The h tears of the victims haveQve dried an eminlnent physicistph) who had been direIrector of health Jam ess McClure,K R-Idaho, Is attackiicking that rctfulres thei administration i to derstoi“stand lhat the federal govemmenl blit smoke Is stlU In thehe air after testimony of th< "big physics at the farefamous Oakrldge National Lalaboratory for 29 "tJemagiagogues and self-serving polltl-pol seek congressionalal approval before “does)es nol now have authority lo sell taiM’' who said radloaclactive fallout from above-je-ground years. He saidIsc tq ie n tists by the late 19^1940s knew there cfans"' w who have resorted to "ridiiidicu- any federal lartd i3 s sold. : URocco has massUsslvc amounts of federal land” aCMtlle testing caused concancer in southem-Utah—>ar-and-thal- was n o ‘‘safe’-’levleveUilradialloQ..asJu)d-t}« censimposed for lous” statementsst^ conccmlng theepos- p quesUoned Craig’ss Involvement,1 how- althoui[>P.ughJLdocs_i:have4iutbority-un------mVwiiinent officials knewlewltwould. decades, sibllltyoy of public-Iand sales, ever. < ■ der• lawsl’a\ thal have been in effect for k'Now. defense attorney*leys are lining up their expexpcrts to • . , Morgan also) said» be taught men who) isupervise .the In a lelletter to Idaho editors, McChKllure “Larry Craigjiasas been accus^ by yearsirs toi dispose of very limited sur- k i^ k the props out fromm tbeneath thal testimony -- 1«lo show a e C's fallout monitoring mo program how loXi avoid rodioac- specificfically lashed out at Democracratic his opponent of notthavlng h anything to pluss lands lai and buildings." fK4t l|>ere wasn’t that mimuch radiation in southern*m Utah; tive exposure, andant hovflow doses are cumuliIllative. c o n gesslonal i^ candidate Larry Lai do with the passages|e of this language.” lut But he said even if the Reagan arid lhat Atomic Energyy CCommission officials knewwnexlto i So.thecardsws were laid out. The expertsIs said there was LaRoccccco for accusing his incumbimbent McClure’s letter saliaid. "This Is totally admlnl-ninistratlon wanted to sell millions. nothing about the effectsts oof low-dose radiation------too much cancer,er. thal the canccr was causcsed by-radlallon, opponemcnl. Rep. Larry (Draig, R-ItlalIdaho, false, and Craig's’s opponent either of acres acn of federal land, there is no The plaintiffs rested thetheir case Wednesday,-five:weeksto vn and that the gogovernment knew about the 11 dangers of of misrc]irepresentinghls Involvemenllent In does nol know thee facts or is inten- authorhorlly lo sell large tracts — oniy tne day thal the first cancancer victim — a green*facenlAct.------...... :SHe was one of 24 cancm cer victims selected to reprepresent a motion for dismissal dls — targeting Johntinson, on N^iiose ! ■ tfl6“X200"clalms-agalnsilnst the government, saylrlying the work Gofman’s9 testimonyle tjalances. Ktwnfc Energy CommissiIssion — fully knowing the offeffects of He character:tcrlzed Johnson as an ar out-of-work fallout — showered them:m with fallout without telllniling them epidemiologistI wrt leaped at a 515.000 granlmt lock) a project • ol'ihedanger. that Universityly of< Ulah researchers h<^(q>ed can be ac- t-'Wlnesses testified thathat the AEC’sow n employee/ees were complished withith ai 56 million appropriation,n. Idaho IPower -told lo take certain. pprecautions to avoid ex( U.S. Districtt JudgeJl Bruce Jenkins, whoHo is hearing the -eroosure to fallout. — prprecautions thal were nol: case without a Jury,. denied the molionin for dismissal, along to the residcnls of SSt. George following any ol saying the facts:ts presentedI by the plaintiff:Iffs raised "very, open-air atomic tests Ihthal rained radioactive detdebris on serious que Tempe^rature questions,” ri|)l only aboul. 11the legal Issues m eir community. ' rw involved, but alsoilso the related socid issues.i. '' '51160} were tears at the trial as a woman told of h To undo someTie of the damage, defensei 1 attorneys pres- husband hid behind a Ibam and retched from■n canrer testimonyiny from Morgan's succesessor. Dr. John therapy, and of how piparents watched 'Iheir leu Ccomparis3on Tabble Auxier, who saksaid scientists knew little of the effects of Wdden children slowlyy tbleed lo death from theiileir eyes, low-doseradlatio:Ition during the above-groundnd testing period, ■noses and mouths. irchers this week bill and find that vJ.m>e plalnUffa' attorneyieys reserved the lasl two weweeks for • A pair of Depaepartmenl of Energy resean W hen you lookk ini the bottom leftft corner of your bil > in a study by Dr. 3hfelrblg guns—anepldejIdemlolo^st and a prominent■nt atomic presented a repoi;port designed to blow holes ii om pared to last attd medical researcherier who delivered devaslatliitlng one- Joseph Lyons. your actual elecectricity consum pt)tion this year corr Lyons' study,y. based1 on the notion lhatt ssouthern Utah’s -two punches. hat you expectedd, it might be expx p l a i n e d b y t h e ' ^.iIEpidemloIoglst Carl1 JoJohnson testified that he foifound 288 population rtcehreived higher radiation doscjses than northern year is not wh: nong the residents of southenlem Utah, Utahns, blamedC!d zan increase In leukemia cacases there on the . 'iricidcnls of cancer amon . difference in tem te peratures. No) m atter how hareard you work to 'Where he expected to» flifind lOd. And, he said decleclsively, fallout. were caused by radiation, The DOE reseasearchers. Harold L. Beck aiand Philip Krey, 'eight of the 24 cancers we: conserve electriitricity your actual u;Lise m ay in crease5 sisimply because Then. Dr. John Gofman[tan, whose credentials in atortomlc and a physicist andd clchemist, respectively, repoilorted their study unquestioned, found "an ostcistoundlng showed radiationtion doses In northern Utahh was 50 percent medici^ research are unc of an extra-cold)ld w inter or an extrtra-l'iot sum m er. ThThe tem perature confirmation of the studyidy’s validity.” higher than in the south. ork-callcd____ Their study — begun In 1979 afte r Lyon;ins.pulilIshedJiIs ______■ Gofmanr^uthor-ofavot-volumlnou5,.landmark.wor> — com parisons belowbe can help exixplain those unexexpected differ- ■ "Radiation and Humanon Health,” used Johnson!s.i!s.dala to study and In thehe 1same year the radiation1 ssuit was filed _ er vicllms directly attackscs Lyons’L findings. Spnlculatc the Internal dosedot received by the cancer' ences. The infoformation com pare■es average tem peperatures during Septem ber, 198382 and Septem bee r , 1 9 8 1 ,______j u s t ic e; a g a in stt-court-arim e n d ir M ^ — —S^OISE (UPl) - Idafdaho Supreme bosed meinerely on which justice has the.the~. proposal would allow a ;simple majori- Tq^tioiT' T This year is: Sbourt Justice Stephen1 EBIstline said shortestI termt left to serve. Propo-po- ty of three justices ‘‘to ‘‘ contrive to - BB o i s e ...... ,3 .2 degrees cco ol d e r Saturday 'a proposed wnstllutlonalci nenls off theU amendment note, howev-ev- pass the office aroround amongst 1! consider next cr, that: U:this has resulted in turnoveri^er themselves, and preme the execu- out-constit , ® the principle of the amimendmenl — to the inform ationn gI i v e n a b o v e . If yc/ o u w o u ld ^ lik e t o find fir ourexactly 5ve head of the statitate’s judicial the state'lie’s Supreme Court chief*®‘ gel away from what ha\lave amounted to S y s te m .'- justicesr- one-i-ear terms f< ^he e chief justices t ■ ■=how*tem p’erafurures this year cominpared with last yye e a r d u r i n g y o u T '^ ------3 Chief justices now assiissume lhe post BisUlnenc said he also was afraid the — he said the proposalJ ggoes loo far. particular billingg (cycle, call the enelergym anagem entnt representative iAnti-nukke group ccritical of bballot m eai s u r e _ —- at vour local Idadaho Pow er office,a ■ S BOISE (UFIJ - Thele ! tari&Ke HlVfif------The irrnea^m^— wsnni— p re hmr~wranmrnEgi5i3rar5Tu W knows lhat they------— SbllanwrsawSatiirdayiJnhafninnitia^aBsag^ro ror"£my-iaw-imaaho-tmir !iive appearing on Idaho’ho’s November would barjan U.SC of nuclear power to nuclear industry, fronom encouraging 1m m Shallot could lead to a rlslrIsIng amount of generatee celectricity. It would requireIre the federal governmiment lo bulid jj/ork on nuclear weapomonry within the an advisorsory vole of the people before)re nuclear facilities at I the Idaho Na- ■ ------any.such4jh4awvote on the fxglslaturture will outlaw nuclear power/er fate either. That Is a a decision being 3nitlatlve, which will ap^ipgear as Initia* wllhout strongstj prior public demand,"1," made for us by econorlomic and safety mdt said. "Anyone familiarlar factors." 3ive No. 3 on Idahoans''ballotsNov.2. ba Ms. Bem( = H Theborightestidea;as in the world arBherektoday. ^ IDAIH O ^ ^IrA ' m S&UDITQ“ I m M ______■ W I MAG\GNAVOX RC4936PE Reguj U l a r $949:95 . m f=-T^ 25- DiagonalC Console m / m Autoitomatic AFT Color TV SPECIALSI m m • MXMX/300 chassis m • IOC 100“ in-line matrix tube $ 7 I •m.m— • RaiRandom access Touch-TiT u n in g . 10£105 channel capability r 9 9 * * • InfiInfrared remote control A.lso4934HP1n lso Early A r ----- I • MeMediterranean styling Amorican stylo

m J O E I m ; R. W ILLIAMs S | l B |g;w |jE i|| I L e t T h e RRecord a Speak . 8 5lM : •JOE WILL,LIAMS has beenin a Public Accourluntant for 44 yea!ars, 24 : as Idaho'!D’s State Auditor. i • JOE WILL-LIAMS continue!es, as Senior Lanand Board' Memfciber, to i secure thithe greatest posslsible income fromm State lands forr public J educationan. BB17:1738W A ■ M o d e3l l 42244

= •JOEVyiLLI.LIAMS nri'anagess the largest, mostist up-to-date conimputer ___-MAGNAVOX, 8B1738WBWA ------I ' ‘ center fnn' ldaho, insuringig thaj..ypur tax dodollars are used E IV IG C R A T rs _ DE ’' S e rrving \ AAagie Valley a Since 195? 5 8 " y Jo a R. Wllllama lor StaState Auditor CommlHee,B, iHal W. Turner, Troasui 157 Main Avee.W . I _Tw in^Folls___ A-10Tlmo8-Nows, Twin Fath•oll3, fdaho . Sunday. OctobiObor24,i&2. / nday Croossword/i IJELe.ophe-

___ STACKED DECK T H E - :S u n d a y G By Foter G. Snow [omecooming^ ACROSS Edited by Herb ElteEttenson 1 Con 5 MaturoB h" h i ll ■ ■ ■ ■ ! I ll 9 T onnls u n its 8 p n p ^ r i j - i r " ' b uut no c<:ensors» h i p p l aanned 13 Unrolurnablo i:, r I' r ■ ; servos GAIN)INESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) — - De- onlooker’s camera_Ujown.theJronLDf __s aldild.-IUt_was-£uper..supo:.pnkJuii^ - ______i7_Rorttionon..o-B-_____ ------s p lie ilt ie BluoondWhllo r = = - l - : alumni prolwls'abbut comednedlan his trousers’. A stutudent sketch about andid I think< that's a credit lo Ih e p ^ lc ------RobinJ VWilliams’ risque humor at rivor ?T“ at the aclress Brookee Shields was who1)0 did It. They're m ^r 19 P llo u p Univers:srslty of Florida homecomnmlng highlighted by a stutudent aclor dressed showrowmen." . V..'.': 21 HoctorKugh pep rail:illy, administrators don’l plaiplanlo lo look like a sex orgirgan. LetlLetters lo the campus new^opcr M unro' ■ .censorr future events, a unlver:i»ersity A number of slaitale lawmakers and showeowed some students were u p ^ t by ^.22 Largoroptlloa______-- -^spokesirsm an said Saturday—'______25 Conoplod othet— promine'nl.il_pollllclans__ on__ the_!ti_bawdy_humor_whlle_tith'ert_. bodslofid ^ Spokeikesman Hugh Cunningham s slative Appreciation .sarca:rcastlcally chastised ; thiSlt^ 27 IncroasoBths ------thc !student-run show \ * rally last weekend, classrassmates. . slo p o ______"m asterterfully produced," Just a1 II iitiiP Some, Including istate Rep. Fran \ . spokesman^ for the paper. The 28 Glows gonlly J S Carlton of Orlandodo, the UF Alumni 30 U soloss ------lo o -raraunchy." i He said the studc dependent-Florlda-Alllgator.-.said— - — ------who p m iroduced the show, dubbedS Gc r Association exet:ccul!ve ■ d i r e c t o r , - ™out ^ 30 letters favored thc. rally, 31 W ithout 0 . ! T ^ ------59 60 - expresseddisgust. m ixor 1 A Growl,1. probablyp will tone Itctown n ill^only "half a dozen" •were'.— " - ^ But Cunnlnghairim said Saturday. 32 Concerning alnslll. 33 Undorworld god ------"G ator Growl thisIs year, other than °saln. . 34 Poor- U 87 ■“ 70 71 O therwlse, e n “ It might get to thee p(point what I think in my/ cown judgment was StevSteven Ijizarus. a sophomoni„ 3 6 Z est ______o f t h e2 i law walking In and ^^uttmtting going overboard In the limits of good wrote,•ote, "I’m sick and tired .of^iifiy 38 S tato ^ dow n-a• a pornographic show," C explicitly ' Cun- taste, olherwise wa;^as the best we ever fellowlow human beings attempting, 42 M oro d e p re sse d ------ninghanam said. “ If they’re not careareful. h ad .'’ editit 01out material they deem unnece^. 43 Rorioctly r---~ A ______; the U^glslature's g going to act.I. Thc ' He added that ddelays In the pro- saryry orc unhealthy lo the mlnd.'l'itt, 4S Clock numoral IB------U k I^eglslatlature’s going lo say. 'We’re'rc not gram that have bc<)ccn common in the surere they'reII the same religious fiinAU 47 Rogrots i ’i going to have this on the campus^cus of a past were missingJ tand the show went Ics1 whowl: have been buming so m ^ . 48 Southom m n — fiy M - I® state university.’uni " off withoul a hitch. greateal maslerpiectjsi in the Ilterarj' arid, constollstlan In OIK)he Incident. Williams stuckJck an "11 was masterfu islcalworld. 49 Rod or Block a fully produced." he music ______' SO Flesh-oa tin q ______c a t ' - I I I ™ 52_C itrus ______boverflge.. — _ ,H “ — — — I 53 Noon.ntsea m ------W t i 57 AnAstalro 58 Capablool . ' DO i S C O being strotctiod imuk ' 61 Tyroloansong 1"l ■ stylo 62 Fonrs 102 P n e u m a tic tool 23 Asparaguk 70}iliil SrSnigglod . 9 2 Rel 63 Bolgrado 104 rfovolver p ie ce ^ 71I Two Tv 93 Wa iC A R iES. .. • .. natlvos 106 Philippine 24 Rustto, os 73)Rowof R( seots - 94 Sllge lln o m olol 64 H auls troo . a e k lrl 74> Cleopatra’s Cl 95 Adc/a s te m a k er 65 Lucllor 107 CraltlnoBS 26 Aural m m aid ' 96 115lightly opon . 66 Cavalry 108 Ceremony 29 S tak e 79) Ash, At e.g. 97 Plei.ddalcohot' w oopons ' 109 S W o/dbordor 34 Avoid adroitly 81I CiCfocholed capo frfo155 ; 68 Froo - ...... ^— 110'Accelorotos 35 Rule-making , 82I Et E s s e n c e s 98 StO'lerro'sglrt - * 69 Guarded 111 Shoaathloles . marquis 83IM M, . M o n ta n d 99 Ral:io n d ;l72Soo49A 112 Olio 36 Doop p a s s 84I AtAbates 100 Corta g o diroctlon •• 73 Entirely 113 Roslst 37 Boohlve State 85> LcLono Ranger's cono ls o n d '— successful 38 F ish h o o k Uno------tl, o n ta ln o d or a c tio n s ' — 39'Logume#------87^'aH Cj slorth ------101 Lovo n te n te d . _7S^-illtomnn^pito ------40 Certain stora ------88-Wl-W indow p a rt-^ ------103 Silsrollxi ofliclal ------Clumsy bo a ta 41 C ede 90) NiNut 105 Gotow c o rd _ - '7 6 M me. Curio 2 N ight: Fr. 42 Unruly child 77 A uthor Flem ing 3 Fork part 43 Shadows * lov’t. ag en c y 78 Dlsencumbor 4 Unworldly 44 fi11 82 Holy w om on: ■ . ■ St. Francis i65 Molls L f - - - —nbbr. 14 Roman states.------—- 66- In d efin ite ------v— K 93 Crew member num b e r* 5 s "I have worked|hI|hard for my schoolol, church, commununity and govern- ; r 94 Nearly 15 Supplomonts i67 Havo — (bo h j 97 Enteriain (with "o u t”) cautious) I X ment as a volyrlynteer for many ^years. Because I am concerned , 98 Certain foot- 16 Father . i68 Furlough . ^T?M'Mi ■■ riiiijW aiM ___ b a llg a m o 20 Porcolalns______^ about the statee of the w orld* myy family_Jjy.eJn._y_Lw.o.uJd_conaider __ Lizi ___ —ifuti horiorundhprw p ttege-to-serve-i?th e peopTg~of~DistrsTr ic r g S : '* " ' ------Donna Scott » P o l i c e titicket VOD lunteer!sweepe: ------CULUMUUy. Ohio (UtUPI) — Two figure ouln r whysomKnnnrould-Btve-ve— Assembly-^foiHoontrll ______Pnid lor by iho tomihilloo »r Scoll for Slalo RoproionloMvolivo- ^ years ago LouJse Roseose. 79, was me a ticke:kel for something I've donene well-being of the comm' rlbullons-to-lhe— ------Ooubloj R. Jonoi, Chairman praised by thc OhioIhio General foryears.”5.” she said Salurday. But Thursday. Offic ------. A Assembly for sweeping I an often be seen sweepingng gave her a dlfferenl-cmunlly.” lg trash from She can STMTt H.K tfittS lN T A m t BISJHICT IS curbs and gutters near her residence, trash downwn a sidewalk or from curbsbs she violated a sectioleer Paul Clark _ imif£5rm______REPUBirCAN Z N o w she has been glveiIven a traffic on bolh sldsides of _lhe s t ^ t on whichch traffic code by swecpini-citation, saying ----- tlcketfor doing the sam eethlng; lh ‘ "Relives.'" ion of the clly Mrs. Rose was lo be inn courtc< Oct. 29 Neighbor»rs said she had made a lng In the street. to answer the citation givgiven her for dram atic: tdifference In the street’s slanding In the street whil/hile sweeping appearancctice. trash. In 1980,I, she s was awarded a special NIEW i A T SEARS! S “ I couldn't sleep all nigflight.trylng to commendaldation by the Ohio G ^eral p e ;ars TH4 E V O I CCE O F O IDYSSEY

' ^ 1 /

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“I’ve bccsen buying C o m rn o n S to c k s fo:o r m o re tha«m 2 0 y e a r s through EcEdward D. Jomes r & C o ­ an d m y iiinvestments ts re m a in valiluable todajay!” , m ------— At€dword-0.-;«n*»-& -Cn.on.tn»oiivo-tommon-tlocki ------_ T he-keybo - Newl-The-VolceofQydi>d is e y l— ------t c c r s K f a g y ] vorioly of good coininon ry C ase ’ p(Pick Axe Pete ’ '.TttSSj lhal boll iuil vouf financlancioi noodi. Choo-.o Ifom a »i Odyisey 2 cc ^siow you can get a voicece syn- V o ic e EnTvtilanced — 'ilo c k i in any ol ih o jo calard-ls-the.keyl___ ^ jcneming o f a thesis module to give yout'OU a n MuncMMn mu,. ^ fli of {mm. -n S 3 combines the strategic R c o m p u te r witi -^ven more exciting game,ne. A c- .<6'ntMl 0rr.»()eJ B ______* Int'.tin- r yliU iy g -__ » L o ng-. a keytKsard-contfolled ycfpts'reguufO uy»ey 0 _ rC £ '^ /fth the excltlng..spllt-*-^,' _tftC. Miiiy “' Ma MounMin iliM ' s a f c t v P*"*jirin c ip a l g e’Enhan'ceaM ...... Q u e s t Q.imri Crv»im«gtn*- ur fj voice MODULE Oti-,ctr*-r>.«i,o tKjn J.cr tcir. 75970 - ■ q.)mr luni Won (Ovrr Illf 10 ri' s credit plan —power rrnm t.i. I game system .,. more thjthan 20 arcade sports and i now on display at m ost See the comp A tk a b o u t S e a rs c. ■ farger Sears n iplete ODySSEY 2 vfdeo g, You; retail noreif------VIN FAJLLS 403 M . y ' s ’ . » 2 f pJlVe 4 Idwnpd □. Jorm « s Er Co. coun S HClO U R S i M b n .- T l iu n nM„hr- *«-. Hoc. f.cr>i»». ,r< d educational games ... >0no't -• ■ . t-nwr l«,f|ly »telKll0n CttOttlljan. „ PFriday ri 9^af0-9i00-St IO . : ■- ...... £*tobllihodlO;187) ...... S«tfif«ction Gl ~ UA*1. KXauCXAMOCOcyBack Main St. 733-082------— ■ ^ 7 ‘ G igranteed or Yotif M oocy r s .& S a t. 9 i9 0 -« i0 0 Bundiiy 12iOO-5iOO

' J ^¥o«nggstown Suminday,Octobor 24r1^9fl2 • TimiTlmos-Nows, Twin Falls, Idaho4J-11 'S'- O u t o fF it v o r k / ^ :_ apartT'0 f n ation*s i -Frospjerity gjives WiTay to umempliIoyment social revoluition “ By CYNTHIA P1ECH0\DWLUC _ firmI cclosed lls Campbell Works. - ___ UPI Business Writer ' ellminailnadng 4,100 Jobs. The Impact of By LEONARD CURRYr communityily reliant on services — that. momove was minimized because,'at ' ^eyt'bouse News Service2------more diver'erslfied, maytte even a unl-I- YOUNGSTOWN. Qhl'hlo - 11 was____ _ ■ ______^Uie_sa_sarae._Ume._GeneraL_Motors„__ h m ------—versltyiow0 WnT”"says‘'VukbvIchT"W^® once a thriving factc:tory town. Its i i r V ^ boostedsted production at Ils nearby • ;’"t60NGST0WN. Ohioio — For 18 don't haveve nothing left to give to^ economy as solid as lhlhe steel rolling H i f t i I>ordslQdslown plant. yciire. bearded Kennjnny Cavucci Industry loloi attract them.” out-of-tho-mlUs that-pcpoured-flre-and_. HH lie bottom tell out In 1979, when____ y/{Uded steel doors lhat: wiwent Into the Despite2 517 5 million from the U.S.*• -_ smoke - Into the gerenUe hills of ‘ j Youngsihgstown Sheet and Tube closed lls cbnlructlon of railroad-el-ears In this Economicc Development"Administra-1 northeastern Ohio. __ .B riarir HillI Works and lhe auto In- inciuslrlal city. He lost hislls S300-a-week5 Uon and mllllons m in additional state® But In the last half-d>-decade, almost B B BuslryIry began to fade. Since then, lls — ^ w h e n the'steel mills1 beganbe closing ' and local1 fifunding, only a handful of all of the mills havtive c l o ^ and f l H j beenn dodownhill. ih a mind-numbing succes-cession begin- new compjnponles have relocated In Youngstown has plungeged toward bot- . '■Foror thoset still in town, times are ' nlng on “Black Monday’lay” Sepl. 19, . Youngstowi)wn. tom. Many of th o ^ whoK> have watched ^ lough.}h. Trudy Wayne said Iwlre- 1977. Potentiallal employers Include a con- the slide fear the worsttls 1: still ahead. \ weeklykly donations al the Hyjand____ — b-AIter two—years—ol-o f - fruitless -ventlon ccnrenter, a factory lhat wouldd - Latesfgovemmenl flflgures'showed J Plasmasma Donor Center provide her searching for an Industriatrial job In his build blimpmps and another lhat would1° - lhat. in August,-51.C000 workers were . onlyincom Inc e. ------home lown, CavuccI bitterIterly reslped constructt ccommuter aircraft. None, unemployed in the two-'o-county region “TvreI\venty dollars a week feeds me himself to “the last resort')rt -!-driving a though, iss 1likely soon to make up for surrounding YoungstO'A>wn — a Jobless H B ^ and the baby.” said Mrs. Wayne. 21. cab from 3 In the aftemoonoon to 4 a.m. the 200 tojO :300 jobs lhal will be lostsl rale of 20.9 percent, fhighest of the ■ ■ Her' husband,hu: a lald-off auto painter. tO'rSZS.” ------when two0 Woolco’ stores close after nation’s 80 metropolitanon areas. H f l also» gives gh plasma when he can, net- ■-'Fred R. We of nearbjirby Hubbard, ChristmasiS asi part of the scaling-back•** The people on Ihe.stnIreet knew ll all •jS tk 4- ting: the couplfe iip to $100 a monlh until 6h!o, lost his job with CorConrall, which of the ailinglng nationwide retail chain, along. — they^ - can( receive unemployment Hauled raw materials inlinto the Steel Sweepinglng changes In work roles likele ‘‘W henlflrstcam ehehere In 1950, Ihis / uiiiA-.. checks,cks. Valley of PennsylvaniaI arand Ohio and those In YoiYoungstown and other indus-^ was a bustling lown,” saidsi Dr. Robert This scisculpture Is a tribute to Y oungstown’s once*e-thrlving mills "IfIf I 1 can get a job. I'll work,” she <;3 rrled finished steel,, cautomobiles trial citiesies are someUmes called® Parry, a physician vwho performs___ said.1. ““But I have no experience at and industrial parts fromm thet valley to “ posl-lnduslustrlal,” but lhal term can physicals on Joblc^5 workers who "But I've:'ve been here 12 years andjth th ls fairly close to lhal no'lOW.” anythinthing. Being a waitress Is proba- tMe rest ofthe nation. be misleading,8- come to a local plasmaia center to sell is the woiivorstl’vescen.” He said he expetsts the economy in bly lhIheonlyopiJortunlly e' there is.” Today. Lee travels asIS f;far away as The Uniteded States Is. and will continue Ihelr blood, ThingsIgs might oven be worse thithan Youngstown "to keep ke going down Bleaileak as things are, many residents ^pasachussetts and' TeiTennessee lo to be, an1 Industrialli power, but It Is•s “ But In the last two) tto three years, they appippear. The official joblesss flfig- until we finally findd equilibrium at a are relireluctant lo leave. - paint aluminum siding.. "I had to go using fewewer people to produce the inies have gone ureq undinderstate the actual number>erof very low level.” since the sleel compan Pwple here are very supportive pf on the road, but It wiwas lhal or sam e Induidiwtrial goods, says Prof.i:___ down...^hesaIdJiUscjicntence. trailing__uncmplo')loycd-by.asmuch aslOperccr•cent. Olher analysts arere less pessimistic ,r-clly,-saldiWCA.spQkeswoman^:___ — S)thlng;''-Lce’saysrMealeanwhllerhis— ^AlanDIindeider of Prihcelon Uhl v ^ l y . off. said Dr!Dr. John Russo, direclor)r of but by no means cheee w fu ir^ ------Ihelr-cl g lfe Is studying to bc« ia nurse lo But foror the first lime since 1 a whole day Youngstc;stown Slale University’s I..ab..abor " il doesn't oppeacar there’s much Barbarbara Davis-Probert. "They-want » «‘You coulil spend stay here and that's part of the supplement the family's5 inincome. record-keejeeping began, the U.S. I..abor shopping here at one titime.” he said. Studiess Program.P . relief In sight.” saidid Stocks. “1 Ihink flay ~Cavuccl and Lee aare among Departmenlent says more people work In “But there are just sso'm any busi-"" Considiiidering the number of workerkers we may lose some‘ more r jobs before blem.” tbousands of workers Inin the United services -— such .as .hotels, restau- __ nesses that have cloilosed down — who havtQve left the area, as well asIS IIthe we hit bottom.” Wllh/Ith the steel Industry on ils knees, ^ t c s caught up In the past half- rants, hospjspilals, law offlces,“schoolss servlM stores, speCiataltyThopsr-The— “undererremployed'-! ----- Ihoso- worklirklng . Youngstown’s pro:roblems began In-^ areaa officialsof are trying their best at csentury's second revolutiilutlon In how and unlveiversltles — than In basic'C whole downtown has l05lost a lol of good only partart-tlme — the real joblessi ratera September 1977,J, when the econoirnomic development — mainly people work and whal theyiey produce. Industries‘S suchs as steel, automobiles,S' business.” could be as high as 30 perccnt, Ruslusso Youngstown Sheett and Tube ^teel helpingling smaller businesses stay open. “ The flrsl change cameme during the tires and glass.gl; I f s about to losesc more. The estlmatciitcd. g n o m ic dislocations of the 1930s. This ch'aili'ange In the structure of the downtown branch of HHlgbee’s — one How' nmuch higher could the nurnum- «y. ■ :e Is the most significant Millions bf Jobs went’ere lost In workplace of Ufe^ city’s two maialn department bcrs gogo? Russo -doesn't- like— -K i m b f b I;ty-N«ASER/ES s-Fflll-SpEciA]- apiculture, and the formirmer fanners developmeinent since the 1930s, when stores — will close Octct. 27, elimlnal- speculateate. Srere unequipped for the emerging agricultureU12 lost Its controlling grip on ing the jobs of somLBUyTIJHE-WHOIE-'TREET- — S rc ra ft rhpm^rnl tnri Mployment gains ’ InIn" sbfailed' ByTHeliifend of lMtT'manufacturinglg ------^^faiowledge" technologicgies, such • as employmerlent was In eclipse with 20.2.2 computers, and servicece Industries, million prairoduction workers compared — & ch as health care.------^-mllIion^obs^ln-the-ncv^ ."After Youngstown’a JJlrst l r wave of growth sectector of services: ______— $dti£ld&i jbl5— I5SSSTES li! 1977; TheLaboibor i.)epariment says prelim- steelworkers believed thhe e :mills would Inary datilata Indicate ihat scrvlceMS i^pen again as they haihad following employmerlent,- for the flrsl time, now #ery- other shutdown1 sinces early has surpapassed industrial empioy- 5 ^ found Iron orci s

llVort M o'"'Joron’® 3

P - - ^Liss t o r e y o u n e:eltoknow. e J The Diamond Si is all

“ ZAl:a i £ s c r I':di'r incixidinc tw-davDAY I’LAN-SAMEASCASir • MiilcUtlnCanl • VISA • American l^iprtu1 • •Cirte liUnclic • Diners Ouh - tlluitiitjitijirwis'cnhrilcJ. ______j...... S^k prices efftctlve on:on selccleiJ merchandise. Entirer Slockslo nol includcil in Ihls sale. OrljIrlftinal priccs sli- By United Press Internalnational • • . . ed as reduced, or a jpecliil pureurch.iie, it Is at AIMMD It*Its regular prjce. A 5pecl.il purchirch.ise, th o u g h ------Community action groi3X)upscrlllca]of nnot o reduced. Is .in excepdon.illall value.> Nomi- the Reagan administratlration Salurday nal chargc for home dellvcfy.I. MostW Items at Teduced-pricet-Sale-peJceijAiJILvJILt>c_ct£fi«liC______MONI[DAY, ------pitched Depresslon-styleyle tenfcitlES In— ------^ Lry lo dramatize suiSunday. OctotJcr 24, through|h MA onday. Oc* cities across the country specified. the country's unempliiployment and • tober 25. unless otherwise spec ftTFS housing problems. i DCT. 2^!4 & 25 Members -of the Assoclallon As of ^ I Community Organizationlions for Reform \m - - NoW(ACORN) said tetent cities ------■— ONIJLY _ ------caned“‘*Reagan Rancheches” —“would-;;:. ' ^ ’■77 rem ain slanding until11 elecllon^a^ < _Jv*_ Noy. 2 toremlnd.Yotersoi■sof-the-^wlng needs of the poor and uneimemployed. In Pittsburgh, the protrolest — staged In a rocky and overgrov.rown vacant lot adjacent to .a churchIh - attracted about 15 tents by mid-aftcsflemoon. Comedian ^md pollti)lltlcal activist Dick Gregory opened1 ththe Pittsburgh - protest, saylng-eways and the Ipa l|k D esigned for; yearsars of reliable ser- In for best selection. All■Ml bench 9^9^ BnffJ " buildings high-rise buildings alonglg thell bay. I U vice. Installation available.av, r tool* come partially asscmtil T 15% OFF all regu;gular-pricetrac- tor attachments:s , : y S A V E O Vf E E n 2 5 % * NUTRITIONjn' ‘ ' i 1W SteadyRider ■ IRT sh o c k s ^ 8 25%OFFaliregL?guiar-pricebath ....' ' an d * r W ork benclT J J vanities ■ 20% OFF all reg'•egular-price - V • HEALTH fJegui.ir $24.99 e.i,. com bination • \ Inst 8 8 \ ^ ond nol alricily o phyihyslologlcal e-compensaiing pumps and tank: eonsldorotlon. Tho ihroee sidessl con. *- and temperature-C' * tiii ol slrueiurol-. psycl-jychologkol * y'^W device, i 20% OFF all rec « and chomleol otpoci*.>. all( woll « U S * ' 10299 regular-price • baloneod, bocou»o oach:h sidei and ^ Scrviccs .iv'.ill>ibrc foror mi ost A m eric.in- J;T»y(t 9 ^ Grow & Show/ GardenC ;; I jantltics llrrilted to stock on•n f h a n d . onglo olloeis iho I m.ide c.irj ond ilghiight trucks with nB Windows « Iwo olhor sidos • I passenger e.ir tutpcnsiorsior)t, a n d m a n y im- * w ^ po rts, ^ 25% OFF all regregular-price « ,To a'''0 O polloni IjM compactors « tplnol adiusimoni W i SAVEI Spectrum TOW-40 1 OIL wilhoul consldoro- ^ lion lo his postlblo. "A R eg u lar S 3 0 .9 6 . . ., 221 1 .3 6 c ase o f 24 q t i . X H R Wl regular-pri(rice [|^ “p n 25% OFF all regular-price reg . ■■ nulritlonol dofi- portable dishwa;vashers ‘ ’ “ ’ i cloncio* or moybA Craftsm an® omollonol siress SAVE 20% all carar radios and ^ 25% OFF all regeguIar-pricedis-^>-~-^ * 'I* moy brIno lost ortgbie elect! - p o s e t i ------. DM,>r. londwehr H to o ls in stocl< FREE H o t w a te r dlsp * HA1R ANALYSIS Is one woywo) lo'holp M T 9H | SAVE 10% to 30'10% all regular-j ^ c k f e : n dl|pcnser (W56)^ and ^ ¥ wllh.Iho nutrlllonol- orjr chomleol.c * |L ______I g . / / : _ ___S disposer [66461 with th _ ospoei of 1ha hoalih ifianQlinglo. ' «' ^ price tires in stocl< more kitchen c.ibinets. __ _ _!nfrasflllu[of_fii»v.o_.|oiqU lantilles limited to stock onn h a n d . ,* Iroco olomonis oro r ' Your.A/loney_Back______Hoi * M^osl Chlroproctic Qinc. 717 7 Moin ♦ ------Bears] lours: Mon.-Thurs.3. & Sat. 9:30-6:001 0 ' . : « Avo. W«*t, Twin FdlU. ' lEAftS ftOtOUCKANOCO F rriday l e 9:30-9:00‘ Si ) o : . for more delolleci Inlormotlon Info Sunday 12:00-5:00 *■ on HAIR ANALYSIS CollI T.733-0522. ■* * * 4-* a i i i l i — . i^unclay. OcttborS-l. 1982 T im os-N ow s. Twin Falls. Idaho Minidoka hires;s former assessor- EB 4 More local new — - — - - f m Obituaries/Hciospitals B2

n itiailfaae € 6 — ------^oterrs ’ d(ecisiio n

- i ^ — p.l — Railisespropoerix;-tcDCi'^exempfidn.--^ lUCE HAMMOND f-jVerts writer

IN FALI^ - Who benefitsfits from' Increasing the owner's tax exemption, andid whov pays the lab. Is the o m IPldGN e surrounding Inltiallve No.). I1 on< the Nov. 2 ballot, measure ~ commonly referred ref to as the 50/50 ;lve because it would mandindute that S50,000 or .50 nt of a home's value be taxX exempie: -- Is designed to f M initiative residential property taxes,i, wwhile raising those taxes illtics, businesses and farms,IS. issues porters say this shift Is need populationp< has grown l>y 4 percent. ■ J & i z i i ' j »nenls-argue-lhat-lhe-mea6easure-wbuldglvehome- . * .It would make the exisexisting home.siead.lax exemption a_____ rs no real relief becausc busliuslnesses merely will pass permanent part of Idaho'slo's tax code. Kreased taxes back to consonsumers In lhe form of . • The amount of lhe exeiexemption would be Increased from r prices. the present Sio.ooo or 20U pepercent, whlchever-is-Iess figures. ixpayers were WU by theirr legislatorslc lo support all to 550.000 or 50 perccnt. J—resulting i In Its popular title, the )x relief ot past years, like the One Percenl In itlo tlv e....50/50 ;' tox Initiative...... jmeowners received none of It.”il says Ken Robison of • It would allow owner'ners of multiple homes. Including , who has spearheaded thce Initiative Ir drive. "All the rentals, to claim all of.lof.lheir slngle-famlly-type homes, types of property have recei'celved their tax relief. t)ut rather than just Ihelr prim;rimary residence, not thee hhomeowners, The current low allowsws tthe exemption to be applied only ‘‘Wee t believe that this homeowmwner's exemption will put to single-family dwellingsngs being used as thc owner's main some eqequity back Inlo our property-rty-tax system." he says, residence. Thc Initiativeve 'would allow exemptions (or all iM% I Bul opopponents claim the initlativiitlve will result In less than single-family dwellings.s. DDuplexes, triplexes and fourplex- SlOO in annual lax savings toror mosl homeowners. In cs also would be eligible,)le, bul only tor one'exemption for :■; ■ f, ::■ ■ ■.-.' '■ additionlon, they say the measure willwll shift more ot the total each building. propertj:rty-tax bill onto utilities and ar businesses, causing ■‘Any building withI mmore than four apartm ents-is------higherr rrales-and higher prices for»r consumers,c considered commercialII prproperty, rather than Industrial," Robison says. ■ - (-• : ■ ;.' ■■': '■ "We'rcali e'r forcutting residential• la l^ p e rty tax. but this Is not thele way lo do It," says opporipohenl Jim Morphey. the In the Magic Valley,. thithe Inltiallve would hurt farmers preslderJenl ot the Idaho Realtors; Associallon,As "To get real and ranchers most of all.i claims Donna Bach, the propertj(rty-tax relief, you either have h£ lo cul government president of lheJ73-membimber Twin Falls Realtors Assocla- H ^ ^:,. ■ spendlniling or broaden your tax base]se with sales tax. gasoline lion. tax and)id others. "When these taxes are shifted from homeowners to The! cdebate has been madele >eeauBe-thfrpriceof-their-pjlr-producei&BO fixed:------■— of threeee major provislorwj^ __ • iTAXonPag^B2 ' g?~ >HB I pTX- - N cb .2 ~ A[IldiiJS i din-ect sale oof dentures By BRIRUCE HAMMOND Federal Trade Commissiils slo n review — that d e n tis ts and Times-fs-News writer dental technicians havejc>e jo in e d in a monopolistic p ra c tic e , I L _ This review, which the denlurists support, raises lhe I4M-FA1.I.S Denllsts nndinri fifninl-lab tpchnlclans niiosllon of whether consu>nsum ers are hurt bccause th e y are 1 feel the ‘‘bite” of Idalip0 votersv if the denturlsts' torced by law lopay "mld{Tilddlcman-tees to denttsis’ ’ in c a s e s illye passes on Nov. 2. where denturlsts believeeve they are qualified lo operate couldal’s f( because the proposalll >would knock down the alone. initlallv’s requirement that ail dentures den first have to iw . On Friday. Blue Crossss oiof Idaho, one of the state's largest L - T h a i ’; nWM ^ ______)rized by a dentist's prescripllipllon. dental Insurance companlilanles, also came out in opposition to . stale’sraciniHBCTJrandalro'sntnien aulhorl:tw allowed to conduct direct■ect, over-lhegroupj3f____ InlliaQte and Supervise denturlsts.ts, i ' people. That should l« lefl lo the market place lo decide.’' ?J -• ' |>ubHc defenderler M ike W alz says lonen g e r -‘jail tim e" d o e s notn o reduce tlic am ountMftiH/vw-iiArrrH ------* mow denlurists to accept1 oover-the-counter denture Mllchell said Blue Cro:Cross lawyers claim the Initiative xpand already-issued dental policies o f c r i m e , including new fillings anand repairs, wilhoul thc automatically would expai Colorful Mike WalzI leaves Coi'ourthouse /lew of a dentist except in cascases of first fittings. Initial to cover denturlsts, il C work,ire i placement and any workirk other lhan fitting would "The best parallel I ccan think of is In the case of • overvielin the sole realmof dentists.Is, chiropractors," he says,ys, "We do write policies to covcr denture>ermil patients lo legally hav(lave their dentures repaired medical care by chlropiropraclors, bul this pracllce"was remaintilted by a denturlst, withoulloul having to'go through a started bccause of the demandorpollcy-holdcrs:dea II ;Retiiring pipublic d ■ TJmes-News writerr entirely responsl !S, lhal is_an_____toeeUic )uld affect adversely thc Although pubpublic opinion has been p jm ers, the measure .woulc unless it (irst goes throu;rough a dentist, and he tacks on his regardlty of oral health care andmd require significant tax [ ■: ^ I N FALLS -- llIn a sense, public defend!nder Mllte rejecting rehabilabilltallon in favor of punis examination fee." Bameimes says. “ Meanwhile, a lot.more ' perceived os consumrs to license and educate dentlenturlsls, siting teltcr-fltting dentures, and f- I Walz’ presence in a 1Twin Fails Counly courlrotroom was argues tbat rehaehabllitatlon has not been giveilshment. Walz quality people would be gettlr ntal technicians, who buildlild mosl dentures, do not therefore better dentalal ccare, if they simply could cut out j’ > as predictable as a, sujsunrise. " I don't thlnklnk Ihey’ve ever really triediven fi a chance. dollors a deputy I thinic they’ve'C titried to go halfway on cach pl work over the counter. TheyTl require thal denlure some of these middlemannancostsandcometbmedlrectly.-’’ / ‘ ■- Whether il be durduring his 20 months as a fehabllltation. Oent£^ or repairs evolve from a dentist'sd< examinations, tig his three-year slinl as thele county's( says. Society ‘‘tries‘‘Ir to do a little bit of rchal V •- prosecutor or during t :h concept." he accept» embroiled in thc controyeilyersy. are charges — and a •See DENT:NTURlSTSonPagcB2 X , !:' I first full-time pubiicile defender, Walz could ustusually be a little bll of punilunlshmenl. and lhal doesn'tlabllltatlonand \ designs ,, •; found arguing a cricriminal case, trading. qui{juips wllh Nor does Walz'alz believe lhat the public, fnI work." Also« nmllted to longer prison ten ;i •• colleagues in lhe CourthouseCoi hallways and ofioffices, or crim e, is comm frustrated with i - planning a strategyy lilo win some polnl ot law/a al t a later nals. ----- ‘rms tor crimi- « dale. “ I don’l thinkInk thal is whal the public v, No. 3 — 1Prohibitss anti-nucdear laws C ,;^ His tenure cam e to Ja close Thursday. And whivhlieWalz' whal the publicbllc wanls is crime to be ( wants. 1 think 1 John Birch Society, has ha been promoting the measure \ -; departure to takeI a Job with the Ada Count)nty public eliminated. AndVnd I don'l think the public w TRPHANIESCHOROW r decreased or is-News writer through local meetingsings. press releases und personal \ -; defender’s office cancan’l be called the end of aran era, it a lol of moneyley to do thai. If you lookwants lo spend By STF area's legal community of[ a colorful factors, then youyoi begin to see lhal they di contacts. I- certainly robs the are It al those two Times-. I The Snake River- A.Mliance. an Idaho group thal :• character. lime becausce jjail lime is not cheap. £ VIN, FALLS - Around thehe nation, as voters select don’t want Joll 1 advocates limits on nucnuclear energy. Is responding in a ^ ■' ■ • The length of hiss Uterm as public defender' sisurprised effective in redueducing crime.” lidates on Nov. 2, many willi'll! be voicing an opinion on lewpoint Is often mitigated I:an d 'it Is not TWiruse of nuclcar power, ellher el for eleclrlclly orr "relatively low-key mimanner." says Janice Berndl. aX ; • even him when he retrealized he had been al thee j(job since . Bul lhal view candid; lost track, job — deputy:y iprosecutor — which enal [xinry. -spokesperson tor the group.groi ' : Ocl. 1, 1979. For’ S(some reason, hc had losl I by Walz' first the us Inllatlve really means that m i ^ It , : thinking he had starteirted the Job a year later. breath lo callI fofor a return to ‘‘chain gang; vo states have Initiatives askiisking for a ban on the use ot^f " 1 don't think the intli lables his next. wcapor } assumes the Idaho I,«gliegislaturc Is in Imminent danger of "Three yearsl AmAmazing!" hc said. "I itne\new I was floggings. ear-power plant.s or Imposinsing olher llmllatlons. Nine Igs" and public Two:»s have measures asking tor3r as nuclear-weapons freeze.-. passing anil-nuclear legislation. leg Anyone who know^ 1 banning the building otit nuclear-powerr plants for lOsl people who commit.crlmlions oUier Ihati Injratlng ei elcQtriclty unless the public Is firsl allowed toD__ , fund the addition of anoianother Inspection leam al the Idaho • _Wal2UaunmllmeriLtoib h laclien la^ -^ m iD a l deldefendants-. "Ithlnkmosl ays.--- ■ • from I: ering fjiboratory. ‘ somclhing private lawyer. Even duringIhg his last should be punkinlshed. But they don’t wan on the ban. Nalional Englneerin - - unable to afford a pri mea agree they.. genera 1— FolheringJiam considersiersacosUyduplIcatlon, ______-■ hoursonthejobrWal:^alt waa arguing forthe defenfense. ------— Hves-ruined by that punlshmenl.-Whon-; le inltiallve,-openly-baciied-'ed-by-members of-lhe-John- > for an extended period ofml tl to see Ihelr vole* or Society, fires a salvo inti theU war of words betweena "We don’t claim allII reregulations arc bad." he says. "Wc Calling It as his3 mmajo't fruslrallon. Walz,, IrIn a final into a prison fo i-you-pul-lhem------The yrou decide you'ure going to-outlaw...... tie Tin^es-Newsrrfllasled-PnProsecutor--ihem-intosocia »clal-cripplcs,-and you often ew hb say.nuclear.cnergy.l8.i■Is safe, cheao and should beB mereiy-say-that-if you —Interview with The ■ time, you turn Birdi! d nuclear plants, Ihcn-we-v,vc want tb go to the public lo niake the----- Harry DeHaan for>r «a rigid attitude towardd (criminal from everbecorK:omlng productive citizens." noted and those' who say llI Is dangerous, wasteful and been such an ardent voicen prevent.them __those.vlid be limited. , final decision." ;: sentencings. . Walz has bo ." promoi *: Walr charges lhalhal the prosecutor has Ignignored re? defendants thailhat one almosi forgets his I’s a lot harder to wage a. defensivede than an offensive . , Fotheringham says-l/s-lhe-Cltlzens-for-Enorgy-and lhe_^ icy for county pros«utor. Bdx;‘ for criminal ...shoulde / ’ says Don Fotheringhamam, an organizer wllh Citi- !- habilitallve progranrams In favor ;of stiff seisentencing 1380 candidacy is unsuccessful '‘It’s I" Environment Is attemp•mptlng to counteract the "abysmal L recommendallons.. TlThat stance may win EteHac!aan points no Intentlon'ofof rreluming to the olher side o I .For Energy' and EmEnvironment Inc.. which, __ ignorance" of the publicibllc aboul nuclear-encrgy. Ilis.group riminai defense work morBat now, he has b alte/trhcaded the inltlatlve.drivcive. "I^ l’s put them (anti-- '• ■ with lhe public, bulllIt ll docs lltUe to alleviate thehecauseof "I find crirr 3 of the table, zens '■ contends that ‘‘electrlcllriclty generated by nuclear energy is I. crime. Walz believes.^es.' " - mainly becau«1^ of being able to develop lear groups) on the defensive.ive." - safest tor the envlronmeomerttand all living Ihlngs. Thcrc-has whereas thc prosecutor askore rewarding, speartiI other stales, similar InlUati'atlvcs have spark’^d eb a te s' ►; “He should be flcxllcxible In order lo do that," WalzW< says, rehabilitate, wl op programs lo nuclea ® never been one fatalityIlty In a commercial reactor-related lail time," Walz says. "Tha 1C safety and efficlcncy of' nuclcarnu plants. In Idaho, the - , "His concern shoul(ouldn't be how ll will loolix)k in’ lhe J tia ^ _ and Jail sks for penllen- In ot ° accident.’!______t . i-qew spaper if he re

T-8-2Tlmos-Nows, Twin Falls.ills, Idahq Sunday, Ocloboibar 24,1982 T cOX------N u d e ...... •O•Oootlm ed from PagB B 1 tion J e n y E v an s claJalm s the Initiative “ ReslResidential taxpayers have : 5. He says tamper- cheatedated out of most of the property “ •CooUnucd from PajPaQeBl problems.s. Overexposure to sunshine. rmers that are already havliivIng would h i^ schools. le, surfaced-whilewewere■e campaigning. rears Ing with the way theho state’s p n ^ t ^ y —ta x rellirelief they should have receiyp^" F othcringham charges» • “anti-nuke" sheobserv«rvcs. can cause skin cancer.______“Wp.rjmX4telp-buK :ial problems after th i^ r pric« may go under," Ba

Sundaday. Oclobor 24.1082 Timesmes-News. Twin Falls. Idaho B-3 State Supij r e m e C o iJ r r t r u l e s i n - f a w r o f Buhl coirT ip a n y —First [jonndchxjst-$9e,dde- ' < • J BOKfe-y Rangen Inc. of Buhl has position onI liquidated11 damages under premrcoun— fHir -(iaanai161 um ionn Cmiiuieiuiat— battJe>flUi VaUey Trout Fan^'armsovmer Code." KehElHaotBuhJ. _■______Rangen hthad sued Ellis lo collect------B y CTEPHANIE S(iHCiOROW______' _____ level had tesled averaerage for her age and the gir;lrl In danger of collaspingping, and the child began to In an^lnlon released lost'ost week, the money due} onor an account. In which the Times-News writer seems destined (or a normaln life. lose a d^gerous amounount o( weight. Supreme Court rejected Ellis’s El con- troiit (armerier had purchased fish (ood Department officiaiclals have dubbed her lhdays, the navel artery sceme(led We've put her on1 a ddiet," Whiteley says. “ • Rangen had committed stimated $81,410. charging an Illegally highlIgh S ol ^totanesll. Interest—on ils account willwith EUls But Rangeigen contended lhal the two By ruling In favor of Rahgen.Ra the parties haded entered Into an expressedI I TIMES-NEWS CLLASSIFIED ADVERTISINJING PHONE 733*0931I I ' Supreme Court clarified theIheusiu^law contract orfor the payment of the late In Idaho, said Rangen lawyer law Kent charge, ass provided i by Idaho's Un- Taylor. IformCommimercial Code.. . . "That area was previcevlously un- Tbe Supnpreme Court agreed, con- DON'T WVAIT FOR SNO DERICK A. MUlU R S C H E L decided and will now act as a guide to eluding thatlat the interest charge for vendors of products and1 it win also late paymerlenls did not fall under tbe H « a t T d « r ffOMfl AnnouncesS.. - • give them some directionIon on when definition of ol usury, that the trans- WHhAnOBLIYI Ii The openin'ng of his bookkeepingng and tax,practice they should extend the payi)ayment of a' action wass (governed by the Unlfonn • > »>|>lix* moO.U ro lit >• ______spejecializinq in small busbusinesses, ' debt Ip consideration for a percentagepi Commercialial Code and that an • tn.roy ,a.>xg. Mgl.l. a h...... jai, Corporation, Partnirtnership. frust. rale of (nterest,” Toyloror said. "It expressedI contract c existed between ^ 0'^d mnbil.hun<.'>r (Individua helps spell out the Suprei?reme Court the two partiirtles. Profoflt Sharing and Pensicision Plans) ------“O vver i 2 5 -Years of Expx p e r i e n e e " - - . Rupert m an1 adma its violatiting gun law OnSlovailnSieck Uniil N ovam bar 10th, BOISE (UPl) - A> 33-year-old3 former pristison convict, of buying a .22 - Rupert man has signed aiplea-bargaln pie caliber riflene at a Burley pawn shop on 'lOOFD (208)733-363535 R o u tete 2 • S o u th View Drive agement, admitting he violated March 2, afterafl sfgning a U.S. Bureau 3 2 6 -■ i 5961 i Twin Falls, Jdaho 83301832 (ederal law by buying a riflrifle and nol of Alcohol,>1. Tobacco and Firearms3 OnHtohwoy30*4n(mltaiWailoiHofpllal ' telling the dealer he hadid ac criminal form sayinging he had no crimlniU rc- O pan 7 Ooy> A Waaltak 9 A.M. - 7 P.M. iIIHEWOOD STOVES record.. ______cord. ; Je rry Lynn Connor face;aces senlenc* ing on Nov. 19 by U.S. DIsli)lstrict Judge Marion Calllsler on a felonyony charge of — megally-recclvlng-n-nrej1rearm :-Thc------offense carries maximumn ppenalties of live years in prison and aI (5,$5,000 fine. In return for Connor’ss giguilty plea, _ . the U.S. attorney’s officece ag re ^ lo drop a second felony chargarge. making a false slatemenl on a go'government- rpqnlw>rt flr«>nrms-piirphns<‘aseform .-______^ r e s ______Prosecutors' accused CConnor, a I g ^DOliipaire l[nte a

"^Em ployee-stotops—— ■ ; ■ theft in progrjress TWIN FALLS - An IntIntruder was taJqen. by surprise Snlurdarday morning as he tam p er^ with a till111 ata Klmberiy ___ F ^ . jjcwrding lo thelore.toId'tlie depui'Uiieiil't!fit-thnt=aF0:5g = = a.njT ^turday, he Internif■nipted a man whoAvas attempting to breakbre Inlo the store's til!. The man fleddon oi foot In an unknown direction of travravel, accord-

N e w s o f r e c o►rd n ------• Morilogc licenses recenUyntly have been Issiicd lo the lolJowIng TwiniTln 1Falls County ...... couples: U rry Irving Weeks andxl 5Susan Diane Tyler. Gustavo R. Bemal andUld Kimberly D. Dewey, Robert M. Goynor Jr. and Barbara Carilon. Wayne I* Vlllerss ar and Isabel M. . Courier. Kevin A. Bradshawaw jand Irene M. Kirkpatrick. Kevin S. Wilson» n iand Charann W eta. Kennclh E. WyneaI nndnn Relnna M.. Mlerbach. Joe D. Shepardrd and Pamela Pow ers, and Oavld McMuilclulicn and Kim* berly Ester Irene Rose, all ot TwinT Falls. A]«H Jeffrey Scotl SwatforIlford and Je rry l,.ynnd WV .-SarBcnt-of-...... — , Tw irt F alla and B renda L CopenbargerCo of > ibcrty ond Peggy E'E O , „ * ^ ir s o CasUeford; Rldiord B. Hubcn A. R ^ rw ld s. both of Buhl; nndand Ja y Bradley u F o rlx f F;ugene. O re., andSbe!Shelly Kay Sm ith w « % of Buhl. And: Bmce G. Slemkee anda Alice M. — - ...... SImonds, bolh of Port Toww)Wndsen, W ash.; Robert Kari Wooten of KiKlmberiy and D onelle Daniel of TwinI Falls;Pi Ramon Torres Ledeama of Mexico» anda Roseanne unds over SIO.OOO earnirn even< | D arl^ Mcaleo of Carsonson Cily. Nev.; Moneyr rmarket rates gclet together withh money/ rrmarket rate, and oil fui D aniel J . G iese and Debornhrnh A. Kolb, both- higher Interest.Inl ______of B uhl; and Rickie D. WIlsoillson and Bonnie checkinggot < United First. K. Umrlck, boUiofBuhl. AAm ount R ate Dlyorces have been granleinled recently in gement plan can be Tw in F a lls Counly to the followillowlng couples: Finding theie right money manage ^ SlSl-$2,500 5.25% Riigene F. Harrison fromim PI atricia Kar- baffling. Whoho pays the highest rateites? Who offers the me•nost s;S2.501-$10,000 11.75%- rison. F a y e J . Thom pson {romfrot Richard C. about financial piannlmlng? S'$ 1 0.000+______Thompson. Teresa Maxinew PulsiferF from ...... convenience':e? Who knows more a 12.50% ’ M ichael Dwain PuJslfer. Chaidiaries L. Payne Sob efore5 Yunt.Pius : from Duane M. Payne, and Do Compare. Writee cas many checks as yo Bailey (rom Robyn Kaye Baliclailey. ■ jr money at Day 8c. NighIghtteller ‘ You'll find1 thett- competition offeriijring you just one moneney there's. 24-hour access to your market rote> non< matter how iarge(your y balance, ■ rnachlneInes throughout Idaho,I. E X C IT IN G II FFUN l I 5cking - Idaho's best;t fTioneyrr Money Marlanagement Checkingig gives a better W'way to Mone^ley Management Chec IIPIFFERENINT! m anage your3ur money and maximi:nize your return. As youiDur funds managegement package, 9 convenience. Compa^ r e grow, the Inteliterest'rate you earn aisliso Increases, Compnpare rates. Compare i tise. United First beats ihthe competition:; ______V_____ Here's howw itI works. Ail depositss upi to S2.500 earn 5'A.1/4 % ^ expertise ^ 3 ^ ) bytheFSLlC -Interest. Amoilountspver Sii.£>uu..up tot( moDO e a rn-o high A-w>gf>mnnt rhwklnfi hnlnncticmuolo S2.500 OfO Ireurod by t .•wnrasiuKS. once ovof S2.500. while not insuS tf^ by tho tj MC«oaJUV Dy UlilluU3lul03------.... -•ja m s____ _ G overnmnont_CT er Ils opencles oblloailont.■\i. ___• . f , *Ralosub|ob|oc> to chor>oo doily. -.THMW . - 3 ^ ,r o f m . . . TWIrIn F alls O ffice ) ______■ 4941 BBlue Lakes Blvd. N.,(al Filerer Ave.) _____ IWE-OEUyER _ L8200 ______• • lANYWHERETNfflACH^ICVAltEY------;------ro m e O ffice ___ ' -OuorantMdlopuioimllimllo'onlocatT' ^ ETMaln-STTGQl------:------' ; lat y» turprit* your ipoipodal toma- 324-(1-8827 I ona vtilh o balloon bobouquot and ' g : , , '. ; gilt tnoda [uir lor-thofr^om. Balloon* BuHH ey O ffice ■ i wllh ip#clol InxprlnnH 'or 'i tpaclol ------wm ■ Burle'ley Mall . colon, lool I W ^ 678-1J-8113 -J , • : DEBBIES' Firs Ices also In Boise, Jdaho Falls^alls.McCdll, FEEa E n R L S R V i mJ 1 E 5 ' BALLOON BOU(fUQUETS ___ trldlan. Nompa.Caldv^ell.i.Pocjalello Pc ____ ANDGIFTJFTS— i::;. . I d a h o 's5 !largest savings assisso clatio n ----- anai3l?07todfg:------' ------' 17140STERURIOH 7 3 9 - a ailT i i . ^ • /-' 7^ T I ■ ^ ' ■ J'

Ober 24.1082 B-JTimo3-N6w3._Twjn.Eall!rails. Idaho Sunday, Oclobc ^ M inidio k a C ottunty hire^ Jl e x - ^ f f ^appraise BvPATMyVRCANTiT o m a ______.aooepiC«pt Eryin’t Inwpr pmpfwnl----- Times-Newscorresiispondent Gameimer said. _ , ^ • , Com:ommlssioner Lyle Barton voted ____------RUPERT— Thcic-MinldokaCounty__agalnsalnat hiring Dickson. He said he i commission has hirlired former county wanleiinled to wait until lhe oew a s s e ^ r Assessor Cecil DIc)lckson to appraise tookoltk office in January. county properties fofor one year. - DickDickson’s proposal sets a fee of $C0 ------J lb a commlsslon-iQ-made-th& decision__foc_c.v• every , parcel he appraises and______Wednesday. $4,000ood (or developing a “treSa factor” The*boanJ‘rocciv‘lved"appralsal pro-—for-pr•-property that is not appraised. posols (rom Dicks 8 ^ : FREE ’3fl CcCosmeticfacial ^ Ornomonfs,' Stoiockings, Mugs, Music — -"40%iff Oil Jega-r^ITTr erne Court Boxes, Windchimmos, Condlos, Afghons,IS. . , motion wivith Supre t Powtor & Brass,is. Placo Mots, Soops, L : .25% Off onin all Herb Teas ' HOUSE * : jjjj. W ood Toys, B oskep.-5»30 ; » procccd with Its legal challengechi of the itlng monloney. bul the drive has losl »ls turn, said Richard BohJe, who IST oylorW atl. Klmborly ; 3 2 1 W .Mflain c St. Burley 678-2197 : “f cl(y’scoHec»onoffundistdis to pay lor two momenlui i> I Dlocj^Wait ol Moxla'* ______4 2 3 -5733 ■ abahdonetfnuclcarpowe:iwerplants:------alsoisa-mi-member-of-the-commXttcc^-— ' '' %‘V*'V»VVeen set by the court to hear the Simploplot case, which ------wa5tll«rcin1Ierthl?7cai'CTn7l:ing^Ji1d:------______- i - Both SImplot and thc1C IRupert group are questioning the cUieslies’ aulhority to 1'^ r . 'ijh enter into agreementsts with WPPSS without a vote of thee ppopple. Along with ■ 85 olherr ' Northwest municipalities and utilltlilUies, the three southern Idaho cities coicontracted wllh

■ £i;ans names GGalvan to industry cowluncil TWIN FALl^ - RIcarcardo Galvan of Twin Falls has been appointedapp to lhe' Idaho Private Industryitry Council by W Gov. John Evans. WxU Galvan, the ownerr

UncrKY-SavinK Sale! l i Jiitt Irv lime for holidayly ildccoralinn- m 3 0 % C3 F F • S.1VC m> lo " oiiMviTivicNot cncrgv fabric'. I’lu^ \;i\■uivinkT* up lo 20".. 0(1 wide niiiKC: of»if cii'erncnl, Oiccr .mil wlir^iln driipcrlo, woven u’oikIs iiiul mini-lini-biitids, Umi! . SpecijI CoordiulioaID C:Carpels. m Sovo, loo, on our., grogrool Soxony pfuvh carpo! ^alo. Ju^tj»t Ini limo lor • • ' ■■ your Koliday onlonainmcning, 1 ^ ^ h IPj 5 / Regulaar C ola S u g a r Free e C ola

Wo II brinfl oui onorgyrgy moving \olo lo vour homo'ol you»Jl cconvonior>co. itPurchasBOf Doyllfrift. ovoninQ*. or wuokopdi, ______On Your Next No cKorQO or obligoigallon rci ovi KUiuuoruecl6eallAlhalea'RC ------_ docoratlngiorvlco. I F F ■ InaePackcfcfCan*. f B ': ■ ' ■ Ono-Z-UtBrBiBottle or a 50^01 Carton ol BoltDltles. 1 ^

■ " " p n To Doalor; Rayol Crown Colo Co. will rodoorn tni» coupon lor lacocovnioo fn plus nnndlino'provldos you andmd moi consumer hnvo compiled WUI, wil Ih. I iiiJ * W ^ : 1 purchnio ol RC 100 and Docntloinm«mod n c ^ P - \ ■ - loffnaollhlaoMofGoodonlycr^poi —‘Customermusl pay nr»y inxoa ortdond usual do^tits..Void whoro uroliljhibi!cd;-.::r;.'-.g_:2S=i— Dorrcl* Cdior |i|* loKod or roairleiod. CAsn vniuuuu 11/20 ol 1 cont For lolmburaomi■murti ol' B ' D'oporly icdoomod nnd hnndlod(d cg r*' Th» colorhil tiora Hid com*omM lo your door.'

*• . ' i T' gi.nrtay fV^tnhor 7 ■TimQs_-Naw3JwJrLEallsJdaho______. Ducks tip ;h.C 3 . . Aq/Susincsss C S S ______nsg ts O^assifiGcd :8 -1 2 = = C E iitiu ie ed as s0ides won’t' alter starmce HUNT'T VALLEY..Md. (UPI) - MedfledlatorSam hung up on. on conceptual Issues,” Don)on]an said, have done as imuch as Sam Kagel did hhere the nled that Kagel’el everc attempted lo get them off i e demand. Kagel, realizingre; both sides are unalteiIterably solid “ Some day>y this strike will be scttlccled. bul we past 12 days.’ys.” Donlan said. ” Ed Garvrvey has the wage scale de In theirir stances on the crucial wtwage Issue. won’t go bat>ack without a change in slantance by the written a textl‘xtbook here the past 12 daysson how "Sam Kagelcl nevern said our idea of a com- Sattirdayay recessed IhdefinUely'the'tiirtalks'oimed union?’ ------not tobarRaln:il n r ...... —------— pensatlon fundid wwas nonsense or anything else.-^^------;vcr budged off_th at endingng the 33-day-old pro (ootballII strike.st Ed Garvevey, exMUtive director o( the NFLPA,- "They nevci ____Kagel.:d.,73. headcd.back.to his Sanan Francisco sald,-wllhotoul much eonvlctlon. he exp«xpecls talks —worse, Iheir.llr.llsl of.noniconomic.domanQnd.swas_ DonlnnlR_aJlar.-:: home aftiafter trying unsuccessfully to get cither to resume: as a; soon as the iNFL owners•s nrealize the never complcnjlcned. The first day. they ga\laveSam “Some progrejgress was made here on non- f the striki•iklng NFL Players Associatiiation or the solidarityolof the union. a list ot non- of ol the union negotiating te.team de- *See>See STRIKE on Page 02

I d a hr o a mS SW C? i e p

______B e n g eja ls e n d sskiid as GrIrizzlies fcall I

By CHRIS H.\FT The resusuit was ISU's third vlcloryy inii "I used the curl roulluics with the wide Times-News writer seven gaigames and Its (irst in three BigBi| receivers (and) by’ tthrowing lo the tl S Sky Cori:oriIerence contests,' Montanj:ana tlghl end (Ken O'Nealal) early, we were i.ia POCATEMX) - IIL wwasn't perfect, droppedxlto I 4-3 and 3-2. able to control ththe linebackcrs’ ^ but considering - thele Idaho State The BBengals' point total, theliheir drops." Peterson saidi d . ______I Bengals' performanceices in receni R ^ e s tt ssince the second game of theth< ISU’s de(ense. m£heanwhlle, came ^ weeks. It might os wellll haveh been. season,1. rreflected their improvementlent. through with a crededitable effort In - J Eliminating most of the offensive Given moreme than ample time to throvirow limiting the Big Sky's>'s leading rusher, -5 and defensive shorlcoIcomlngs which by ISU'iU's offensive line, Petersoirson Greg Iseman, to 43 yaimrds in 15 carries. ^ had p la c e d them duriiuring their four- completee t ^ 22 of 29 passes (or 214 yardards Additionally, Montai;ana . ?. the Big -Sky’s ____ ,_garae_Joslng_stceak._k._lhe_Bengals__andJJiDS[ggtpHchdowns^__ "I...... Marty Momhlnweg. ------^ ended that streak In defilefinitlve fashion Peters

I V a n dials-C ; K eatto-tiqhfe-Bt)iq S k y r ai p p . ------

MOSCOW — Idahoi10^ Vandals re- -flurry w:with Idaho scoring (irsl, thethen iwo-point conversion.n. ■I turned a race to the BigBi| Sky Confer- falling; b-behind 17-7 and regaining; ththe Montana State punanted after a first M . ence Saturday nightjht when they halftimene lead 21-20. • down and Idaho swiivirled 78 yards in % toVdefenalve-unlt-came ioJh»thP fniirnlavstostartpadadding its count. It “ defeated ranks, 36-20. fore in1 tlthe third quarter, twice beincing opened on a 27-yartliFarpassToTrany~ ^ > The game pitted the nation’s best tem perared by flre. A penetration to3 ththe Jones and Hickey cailarrled 51 yards on ^ ; Division l-AA offensee aiagainst the Big Idaho 282i was snuffed oul by PaiPaul a draw to the MSU 44. He scored on a | H Sky Conference’s bestist defense. The Petries';s' at the sever!ven. , sweep the next scrimi[nmage. H 1 Vandals offense won Its battle and the After a short Idaho punt, Montantana Although Montanaia Slale Is known wM : lightly-regarded Idahoaho defense — State retrelumed to the Vandal seven bi for Us comeback abability. Idaho iced ■ ; after a scary first quartiarter — matched . there on fourth and inches, the Van- Var those thoughts whenin it u ^ up the lasl H r itlnexcellence. dais holdeld. five and one-haI( iminutes wilh a H : The result lifted Idah(laho Into a tic for After!r that Idaho's o((cnse begacgan three-first down rushiihlng march. H the conference leadJ withv Montana clickinglg like a national pace-seltei That It could windd iiip a triumph for H ; State and a host of tv/iceice-beaten teams Ken Hotlobart hit four straight passe the Idaho defense waA'asn't apparent in ■ ; right behind, includingling Idaho State aridKeiieiT7 Hickey rah fbr 2G yards an lut It was defense B and Boise State wholO came t up with on the• eeighth play., the 94-yard drivf y,® that started it all.11. Idaho's Uoyd K ' decisions at the sameme time. Those ended on oi Hobart’s one-yard rollou Williams came upp with his third K kept the Montana Slate dcfens two. along with Montontana, are one Idaho ke back li'terccp^*on of theIC season at the H game behind in the losttst column.< reelingg when reserve quarterbac The battle openedt in an offensive Scan Knudsen Kn hit Tim Payne wilhllh a .See VANDALSLSonPageCZ R ___ D esR^xes,JA ; febb sierip Q WA/er B r o n tCOS I BOISE (UPI) — - Sophomore for thejyear. yi " I’m really pleasecied with the way we • quarterback Gerald1 DDesPres threw Boisese State 5 split its 414 total-o((ens!ense played a much morore complete (oot- ^ for 181 yards and two) totouchdowns and yards evenly c' in the air and onI ththe ball game. When ththe defense gol In tailback Rodney Websi“bster added 142 groundd while Weber Stale - with wll trouble a couple o([ tltimes, the o((ense yards on the groundj totc power Boise second-yd-year head Coach Mike Prlc^rice responded with somene long drives. You j rking to win games > State to a 41-21 Big1 SkySli Conference callingsg all plays (rom a radio boothith Iin need bolh sides work victory over Weber• SlState Saturday the presress box — amassed 414 o(>( iiits and we had that toniglight.” ‘ ,:7] n l^ t. own yanards. Bemal. who replailaced Wilson at the ^ Both of EtesPres'' s1^ offense. periodi nmanaged lo hold on (nr thee wwin Weber Stale a sccont>nd scorc. un rt«w> d IG of 30 passes beforee 117,750 fans on a warm, partartly But Broncos nmunning back John ^ DesPres completed l Over the top? ■ and threw one interceirception to boost cloudyy hhomecoming nlghl. Broadous sprintedJd 11 yards five ^ the Broncos league record rec to 3-2 and "It loclooks like we are getting healUalthy • minutes later to extend c the Boise Alabarha fullbackk Ricky F Moore Is stacked up by Salurday locludedBd SSouthern Methodist, M lch lg ^ the season mark to 5-2.•2. and doldoing a much bctler jobiJ cof- state lead 1034-14. several Universityty ofi Clix±iDatl Uoemon dmluring Illinois, WashlngtaigtooT~Kebraska and Brlgbam' Despite 217 passingling yards from fensivel;/ely.” Boise Slate Coach JiJim . The Wildcats refu■fused to give up as the first half of tbele CrlmaoQ( Tide’s 21-3 bomececom- Young. See Pagesges C2, 3 and 4 for details on quarterback Tim Bemamai. 72 of them to Crinerr said. "If‘the defense ke

T w o million wwill line N .Y. MaratFithon course todSy 3 v o) l l l c y b a l lI t e a m s Walitzfavowed; Saltlazarto^F^duel-Bcieardsley------1 e a r n s t a t e pl i a y o f f s ____ NKW VORK (UFJPl) — In the delicate.worvorld of the other,glrls. TH(The most important thing Is tcto win,” (elt good b w ^uselknewJiiadtriedmybest s e ------gu, miU yuur budy^ays no."------HeidrTibisuir-pnccr-ti^ HDcnng ner injurlusJ. aililwl; “ IKY — AllThrCC—W tltlin A lthoug't^Sc slim Norwegian said the worid volleyball teams BruinstslnservipR. 1 . far Into the future. and to flnish." Magic -.Valley vol “ Because o( all U:the Injuries, I take one yeaiear at a Waltz won thee New^ York'race three consiisecutlve reconl “vypuldd bbe nice.” she. ‘ike her male coun- • • -knoeked-off-thclr-elr-third_dlstrlcl_Twln in FallS'advances to the state 78-ao.-and.scLa-World.reconard.each __terpart^bertO-Slo-Salazar..refused Jo-predict_suc^_ (olloyball pmyolls „„„,s tim e," said Waltz.->rwho today Is favored to wliwin her—years,-(rom-i9784 ; „ competition tn voUi ; in Idaho Falls Filday. going Mmblne time, the lasl atL 221 hours. 25 mlnules. 42 secom»nds. But time, >ance to the state u,g ■ fourth New York CilyCi Marathon. "I can't con Satuinlay to advani he second pool with the Boise track and road anyijymore, like I did four yearsars ago. last year leg crai:ramps forced her to quil aiader 14 The men’s racrace Is expected to boll down lo a playoffs. and Pocn Salazar, the hind the spiking o f . shoshor F orm e, It’s natural Hagerman, behin' lone and Hagerman will be at , Waltz wiU attem•mpl to recapture the wonwomen’s Lasl April at Boston, Bt Waltz tested the legeg again two-time defendli•ndlng champion, and Dick Beardsley, ____: Kristin McFaddBdden, downed the A-3•3 1and A-4 site In Meridian. — L- —-world record and dedefeat a field that includes5 aBoston' but”couldn't mak.Fall8-area-tiUist-and-Good-xl- — -- year-old veteran nw■oad racer from Norway haaia&been 2:29:33. •Tlie marathon,hon, which begins al 8:40 a.m. MDT Clarlh'Oflbomhavl 1 the second pool. Hagermanan troubled by leg allmIments the lasl two years anand has Waltz said shetie would nol be competing5 1in New and will be televdevised live by ABC, (eatures 16,000 night, dropped H< :>attlc the panhandle ^ m ppU l - not flnished a niaralrathon since she won In NewJW York York If she did1 notr> think her troubles, whihich she runners and anin eestimated two million spectators in 15-14 fmd Twin Fall In 1980. said came fromr\ “‘ too much running (or so many New York’s fiveive Iboroughs — which Waltz is looking ■ ■ ■ double platoonlnglg toI beat Capital e (ormat of the state playoffsiffs But now Waltz sasays she la healthy and eagjager to years. were behind bd her. Those problem>ms also forward to. 15-5.14-16,15-4 Inn theU A-l competi- The f splints and a stress fracturere In her "1 like the crccrowds in New York better than in will havlave cach team play the other>er regain the crown stshe lost to Allison Roc la£t st; year. Included shin spll 1 Uon. Tie Not only that, but, "if"1 I can stay healthy,” shele vwants right fool, - Boston,^i.she saisaid. “In Boston the crowds arc.too I Twin Falls reatscclved excellent duringlg Friday's competlttoOf The two from _each popl_jvllLvllLi^ _tojcunJiLJheJIr8tt (Olympic women’s m aralbithon-in — “ I would not do u4uit I'dld last year agalialn,” she close to the runncmners. They give you a headache; you _ j____ L spiking from___TonlT| Martinez. _ lop__lVt said.‘T thoughtit maybeI a mlracle would hhoppen. have people barbecuing bat and there are all these . and JIU Skeem advanoijce to the finalsSa^ay. 1984. I : .W endy Coonts-ar ___ 1 “ I have no strateitegy,” sbe says. “ I jusl run■un wllh that I would haveive no pain. I cried afterwardird and It sm ells arounddyou.” yo • , i '______—O2-TJmeB-Now8rJ^iivPall0H

Sundaylay, Octobor 24,1902 Timos-10S-N0W3. Twin Falls. Idaho 0 3 - ^ e e p s N o . rw i a it s K i n OS ANGE3EIJ2S (UPl) - /Vnthony SSpencer, and a 22-yard field fli goal by completed<1 conly 10 passes for 85 yards•ds champion BYU sole pos;Qssesslon of flrsl the fourthirth quarter on Tim Fahringer’s - “The onslde kick was thereere. wc saW— Gibson-rush«ehy<-fnr_twn tniiphftnwns Sttfvp S Jordan accounllnijSJgilther yards on a quarterbadick draw and 21 loss of)f :starting quarterbjck _ Ken ■ winning streak dating! 1back . lo thelineofscrscrimmage as Southern Cai ■ ______completedid 12 passes for lUO yards.cls. yards o n ''a brokeni play for his VlerraI caearly In the firsl quarterhurt' „ ' chut HAU,n-lh■Uwlf-Fushlng^ n t e. hold*— \ including; a'a (jO-yard roucnaown pas.sto lo luucnuuwiis. Ttiu juiilui ea. "We loot como of-oiir mntl...... '• Ing them to0 jjust 1(» lotal yards. The «•Stan}ord 31,f ~ ■ T.J. Jonesies ,-on the Cougar's firstrst leed ‘the win wilh his TDT, passes of 21 ■ nuily and anc had. to go through, an - t o — ---Trojaris-pilecled-up 489 tolal yards as __i , possessionin of lhe game, whichich and seven yards to Hueudson-=- bolh in adjustinging period becau s of the new NqtfeDaffiel they improve)ved Ihelr overall mark to Wash: ' St. 26 ------'“ "stunned SliStanford and put WSU up ....thesecondhnif. •• quarterba!rback;"hesald.------— 5-1 and IhelrlrPac-10rewrdlo3-0. F PULhMAN. Wash. (UPIPD-Runn- front 7-0. C;Casper also connected on.al.a Yoi^ng. the NCAAV tolal offense “We• didn’tdie get Inlo some things we O regon 13 jfing hnwryor, -^ng-liaek-iMike-Dotterer-S'--icorwWhree—5 two-yars Michligan tco romp ___rlghUacklesJxyardsI fortlrlheTD. -lead, ^ railiei*s Comhhuskers E ^^ S T O N .-Ill. (DPI)1) — sieve Smlth^tljrew for three touchdchdownsand r> Linebacker James Nedide's recovery Indianala (cut the halftime advanlage IJNCOIJ^. Neb.I. (UPl) - Re- A'ilh an elghl-yard touchdown rusiipa^or two more In1 a 35-polnt, • ', ^Big Ten aii>ack Chuck Ixing sconxl o n : ' plunge, putting Unthe Comhuskcrs totaled 371 yards in thele first" two- TonyRasoiison, the Illlnl quarterback. the i quarter, making the score2t-l7.sc pair of t'two-yard runs and Rddic ahead 16-13.' lahoma 27, quarters. hurri<^ his3 teammatest( downfieid and Phillips mrushed for 198 yards and a TC On the ensu;;uing Missouri' /-w| | While Mlchlgan was rollliDlllng up the moved the bnball lo the Badgers’ 29 with / t o Salurdayy i night to power Iowa lof ^i possession. Nebrajaska linebacker L /K-.lahoma lO S t. 9 Ohio State 4 ...... ,21:10 Vicloi:lory over Minnesota, handing points, Nbrihwestem freshmiiman Sandy a 23-yard pa;pass lo Tlm Brewster with , ^*"8-...... Brent Evans picketced off an erran t...... n g rRM/\N. m 'Okla.....(U PI)—- ...... nds lo play. the (Gopherfiers their fourth straight loss, ■ ' Schwab was busy settingig anj NCAA three sccbndi Indiana 25 Brad perry pass anarid returned lllo preshmaiman tailback Marcus record .for pass attempts,pts. Schwab Illinois imrmmedlately callcd time-out Iowa IIIlinebacker James Rrb *"• In the Missouri 1!). ” BLOOMINGTON. Ind, .... Dupreeee scored; touchdowns on a cohipleted 45K)f-7l passesses for 436 and Bass sursurvived a series of ddays . id,. (UPI) — lerceptcd^d Minnesota quarterbad The Comhuskcrsrs needed three , Tim Spencer scorcd twoiO touchdowns Mike Hoh«ohensee at the Minnesota 41 rd run and a two-yard dive . yards In a losing effort asis the broked lo kick thehe game-wlnner as time i ‘*3 plays lo put anothcher seven points saturdaj•day lo pace 18th-ranked- and Mike Tomczak threw two midway Ihrough U the second quartei the attempts record for a ggame pre- expii-ed. on the board. Mailathlson whMlcd oklahomloma to a 27-9 homecoming son (Illinois, Bass hadd ffour other fleld goals on touchdown..passcs to leac:ad Ohio State and returnimed It 12 yards. Ixng scorcc around right end onatfryardTD01 viously held by Dave Wilson to an easy 49-25 Big; 'Ten victory .his first Tl ry over cross-state rival 1980) and Chuck Hlsxon (SN(SMU. 19C8). Ihedayfromim 19,21,30 and 44 yards. TD wilh 3:49 left in the half•all. romp. Saturday oyer Indiana, Ichol’s point after attemp , . Oklahomloma State. In-addition. Schwab brokwikw Wilson’s Tom N ld n’Pt However. Missoi» u ri refused to QuarteBrterback Kelly Phelps re- Spenccr and backuKup tailback (ajicd. but)Ut a Minnesota penalty gavilave quit, The Tigers scored s on a 24- p^vcred Big Ten record for complel P u r d u : Jim m y Gayle combined1 ffor 279 yards himanoth« •ed a Sooner fumble and ran game. Wilson completed ue 24, ither chance and he convertecrted yard pass from quiluarterback Mike S i yyards a for* a touchdown, re- rushing againsi the Indliilana defense, for a 7-3 leilead. Hyde lo tight end AndyA; Gibler wilh passes In I960. Spenccr gained a persirsonal season Mlnncso • halfback Fred Sims scored The victory was Michig^higan’s mth M i c h iigan c St. 21 ssota's Jim Gallery kickcd^ ‘J,. i .53 seconds remainiinlng. dosing the ^ ^ g,. high of 187 yards and 33 cacarries, _ 25-yard fli six-yard nm and Michael straight wilhoul a loss Inn thetJ confer- EAST I.A*jVNSING. Mich. I UPI) - field goal on the Gophersers’ gap to 23-19. The= to-plny scoring Indiana quarterbaiwck Babe second po ing succeeded on three of his ence, and kepi il atopI theIti league Scott Camjmp»)ell passed for one possession of the game foifor drive'covercidSOyai -aflcr-louchdown attempts., le ahead of touchdown1 aand ran for another Satur- I..aufenberg' sel school1 records for u,ejr onlydy lead. He added a 4S-yarc'^rd Mis.sourl, 3-2-2 O'overall and D-l-z '"oijl'^t standings, one-half game passes attempted and coi»mplcled. hit- kick with 2 lahoma Stale relied on the • Illinois. Northwestern. 1-5 l-J In the day to giveve Purdue a 24-21 vlclory h 35 seconds left in the halfIf toK In Big Eight pialay. was unsuc- foot ofif I^i j rry Roach for Its points — ting 34-of-56 passes for 3c334 yards and pull liis lea !t-6. league and 2-6 overall, dropped dr Its Saturday ov1) “ Mike , final go-ahettiead drive lhat went for 92: Rich Spangler mlssc-yard.flddd d goal with yards. Purdirdue’s drive was given life •’ field goal attempl for OS)SU on Ils next the Iowaa 313 to set up Phillips’ 14-y'an irdoy to give by a 24-yaiiinl'passnnterfercntti’cnirori r - posscsslon.“but the Budickcyes-scored—louchdowr wn scamper down the’slddlmite Coloradoy - 1 4 - "for^ccd-sKl’slx'lumovers to trigger a .no time remaining Saturdi rout Saturday night of in­ Illinois a '29-28 Big Ten1 CConference Michigan SUStale. four'minutes later on a 72-yard pass for a 21-9;-9 lead with 12:22 left In thithe BOULDER. CoColo. (UPI) - 36-7 roi -in=argame.. —Pufducsascored-first. rolllngSS yardsi -play_ItQni_Tomc- 2ak_lolo Cedric An-, game, The Th “Minnesota-quarterbad)ack-i ___b la n k e r. Rocky=: ■ .f ' . " — i - :■ , ------&4TlmQ3--N0W3.TwlnFalli=alls. Idaho Sunday. Octobobor24.1982______s s t T i

>oug Smith at the lng mrusher wilh lUU yikrdfl ■B Ah in?— meTnanvg m n m r AUSTIN. Texas (DPI)>1) - A bizarre by Aubum lackle Doi the ^ rirds d s for the touchdown. 79-yard touchdown pass that Bulldogs 22. The TIg([ger effort almost carriesles, scored ' the “ Other ' 1TCU tion’s leading del in, the score, and afterr sbc: games' ll- has The Bearcats. 4-3, gol their.onjy richochcted off the shouic)ulder pads of a fizzled at Mississippi)l State’sI 14, but a touchdcfidown ori a (a^ an J-ru n , )ints in a llsUess second qtelCT. the arms of South npl kept the drive longestest offensl^^Iay of the se:season allowed only SIS poiointspergame. po'ni- defender right inlo th fake field goal attemp imore. replaced Tom Southem Methodist rcc(receiver Bobby ■" ^ going and Jessie scoiMred on the next for lhclhe HorwH-Frogs. KenI COzce Taylor, a sophom _____Leach-brolce.a-fQUrlhHiii:quarlerJle.Sat:___:____ ^______piny fm m scrlmmaee.je.______kickeded a 51-yard field goal andnd five • Jones with 12:45j left1 In the second 5eQrgioLlech_3JJ_ ing the fourth* score by/ JamJ es both teams put scoresres exlra3 pointspi forTCU; quarier and BeforerethTh-anmpassed— ^ T — ^-urday and helped bring end Derek Holloway X g ranked and unbeatenn :Mustangs a on the boaoard. Baylclylor scorcd on a l-yard rurrun by 56 yards'to splil er ’'ennessee 21 30-17 triumph over No. 15’15 Texas. Foiir minutes after Leach’s ice Ates In the second quarterler and for a score and twicet sneaked one 5’= T exas A&: l M 4 9 > e touchdowns. • ATLANTA(UPI) ATI — Robert LH.velte The frantic victory, whichwh Included touchdowiiwn IVJcllhenny hit JackieWe _ „ a 13-yord run by restreserve yard for two more I quarterlerback Alan Rice In the foifourlh Thomas Brown-n ■ added "li • l3-yard rusheished for 139 yards and three a 37-polnt fourth qunrlcr,:cr, was the Uth wuson wltwilh a 33-yard TD throw which R i c e 7 uchdowns Saturday to spark J-th e longest followed, period.)d. scoring, run andid Ernie Villarreal touch straight win for SMU - d. an Interception by the Mrgia Tech to a 31-21 upset over current streak In majorjor college foot- Mustangs’gs’ Russell Carter and the COLLEGE s t a t icION.; Texas (UPI) ^ kicked a 34-yarfd field goal In the Georg •ow — Gary Kubiak passtised for 306 yards fourth quarter ass'Arkansas, i G7 anand(M. the ddefending nation chamj isling lls first win over TenitM^Je fit to a lO-polnt advantage;e andi appeared run wilhlh a 60-yard rambi(u'on-thc ff to a ^'v'ce on one-yartird runs and Llnnle ime in IG years. tand early in the opening»play pl of the second quarter. Aggie split end DoDon Jones caught Tigers,rs, 5-1-1, after getting off t 15,-yards for another to have the game In hanc y 1982 start with a loss to Gcoikwroia Patrick bolted 45, Tennessee, 3-3-1, scored oil« W- fourth quarter aflerr recoveringr a louchdoN^m passes ofDf five. 53 and 56 shaky I nlay ;o spark ninth- Itle wilh Boston Collcge. touchdown Saturd ard run by tailback Johnnie:Jbn«s. Longhorn fumble at mldfildflcld. A i i h i yards. Kubiak hit s(split end Jimmy and atl I Q> 0 21-3 victory over >“ ™ b u m 3 5 , irth Carolina State’s Joe McIn- M ranked Alabama tt n 1 l-yarf pass from Alan CdckCell^ But the Mustangs proipromptly turned Teal for a l6-yard1 touchdown and Nortl en for a one-yard tosh scscored twice from the four,ur and Cincinnati. like Miller and field goals of-«?l afid . the ball back over lo Texas on a tight end John Keller David Alabama quarteitortjackWaitorlxwis 57 to go in the ;s. S ta te 1 7 s<»rer-Tailback Johnrinny Hector added quartetlerback Toi Avery hit Di ) yards by Fuad Revelz. I - ', t fumble and. with'13:57 — ...... - Davis- « and ran lof “ high 156 yards on 2i The uo-yarder.,which came-wlhone gam e Longhorns’ quartcirterback Robert STARKiKVILLE. Miss. (UPI)------a one-yard score. S'with a l7-yard TD pass cading.the heavily- ;Ired early In the Stanleyley Davis wllh a IG-yard scoi“ rine carries while lea econd left In the first half. Brolce & Brewer threw a 5l-yaryard touchdown • Quarterbirbflck Randy Campbell passet^ After Kubiak retir favored Crimmsoiion Tide to a totol ot le Walls that got for one touchdownto and ran for anotheiIher fourth quarter withI Uthe best game of pass,. tbut the Wolfpack attack outheaslem Conference distance fe- pass to sprinter Herkle \ 444 yards rushiniing. but Lewis was ord of 59 yanls set by MIsslssippta lthe game. Saturdayay to guide Auburn to a comcme- his career, backup JoJohn Elkins added . slowedcd by penalties. the L on^om s back In thi e set a shaken up on the flfinal play of the third lloyce Hinton In 1969 against G e o r^ . Texas tied the contcst;est five minutes from-behehlnd 35-17 victory ovei)vcr a 15-yard scoring po«« pi to wide re-' , Cleni2niion's Donald Igwebuike s< I’t return to the game. er Stadium record with a 55-jS5.ynrd quarter and didn’t • later on a 41-yard field:ld goal by Raul Mlsslssipsippi Slale and boost th«the ceiver Jeff Nelson. Carter touchdown copped an fleldgogoal. ^ Tumer's flrsl toi - Allegre and the Lon^o;Corns’ appeared‘“ T lg c r‘*^ulhcaslem-€ont6rcnct-r£ s ^ 84-yard. l7-play drive c following the ready lo get the ball bacback again when cord to13-0. 3-4 and gave, the Tide. ~ ^ ~ A rr l k a n s a s 3 8 , —------o p ^ n g . kickoff a ^ h S o T ^ a T v I ^ the Mustangs faced thirIhird-and-nine.al TheTl(Tigers, who held a 14-10 lead a which suffered Its It lone loss of the I theirownZi. haiftime,le, dropped behind 17-14 In the B a y l o r 1 4 SPECIAL ■ Hoio u s t o n 3 seasdn last weekk at Tennessee, a 7-0 •“ Mo(ICeriSPIckgp<— - Mustangs’ quartertcrback Lancc third period pe: but rallied for thns tcrback- lead. His sccond1 slashing ! touchdown 6.CyIInd0rlnLln* ...... $ 3 9 9 : Mcllhewiy scrambledcd out of the touchdowlowns in the final quarterr t(lo f o r t WORTH. TTexas (UPl) _h OUOUSTON lU P I ) - ^ Quarterl ^ AJabama's first en Jones scored grad 1 run came on SCyllnrfar...... $ 3 4 9 pocket on that play aniand threw back spoil horromecoming day for MlsslsslppIppi Quarterback Reuben i Taylor came off the benc possession of thehe second, half and md,Includes tator. rinai, rod.bearing}. across his body tryingng to hit Leach. State. the th< fifth straight defeat for the two touchdowns a ni d set : up two moro passi andgi run for three touchdowi to 14-3. go%koi». oil fi filler. : . Saturday to lead the second sc quarter • Saturdoyav and swelled the lead to Chromo ringt S2S OKtra. The ball was . headeaded. however. Bulldogs,gSi with long passes Sa Shpn^n That was the SCOcore when sophomore pbell passed for 101 yards! in- in Texas Christian too138-14 31 viclory over carryy sixth-ranked and unbe AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION R.EPAIR . toward a seeminglg Interception Campb S e r" quarterback Perrrry Cuda came in to OVERHAUIS AS LOW AS---- ' because Jltler’Fleldss'was v cutting In eludingg t a 49-yard strike to spill end enc mjstake-prone Bayloilor in a Southwest Arkamansas to a 38-3 SoulhwesLCoi.Confer — ^jjjrect Alabama's’s final scoring d r i v e . ----- front of Leach to pick;ltdff. Ui Chris Woods V for Auburn’s firs'[irst Conference gam e.- - - . _ence: ^um^ p ii over Houston, an 89-yard marchJhJn six plays. Patrick . . AWto»ASi«>Mamcs- nms of five and 10 Arka■kansas intercepted fourpassi Bui the ball skipi)edo(doff Fields'rtght touchdowlown. The quarterback score<)red Jones scored on nu l e ^ c k took apitch arounund right end. danced All «floke» shoulder pad direcUytly Into Leach's again onon a four-yard run in the finainal yards, passed to fullback fu Kenneth the game. g Including comerl Cor-Truek*-Mot6rHom«» ^ hands. The SMU flankenker outran Tex- period lo I cap a 77-yard drive■ive. Davis on a 58-yard plplay lo the Baylor Dannyny Wallers' pass theft and 93-;93-yard otMnuaHBVAnk . ' yanls lo nanker run forfor a score lhat turned thee g^ m e TuTuno Ups • Tronjmlsjlon*'- Brok**','.'.. . a s ’ Jerry Gray to thei enden zone for the Auburn’sn’s other fourth period score;Dres two and threw 44 y Corburntors ■ AlrCond. :.Et«!,fleh1. j. ■ TDwlth7:37toploylnUn the game. cam e on a 32-yard gallop by Lloneonel Stanley Washingtonllo l< the Baylor 3, aroundind In the first quarter aftertter the H 1IN 1 eld goal ^ n W l>iITERS! I . HONISTOtPINOAtllCUAIAHTIIOVtOIK • Despite that unusualal fplay, the game James; anda a three-yard run .by UiBo Davis scored fronom the one after Coiigaigars scored on a 41-yard tield 5S and halfback and threatened th to Increase theliheir 3-0 FREE Phoas 4G-yard TD pass tb‘ Crj ibllshed I 7^5163lor733-:8Z74 c L . between Leach's touchjchdown and the quarter:r followingI a fumble recover/eiy TJiI5ert7^ho-was-ts-the-gamelsJcad- ond_Bllly U Ray Smith, establl

; P e n f r : S t a t ^ lb l a n k s ^ * :I Pre3sentirngWcoolrich W . VJ i r g m i a1 , , 2 4 - 0

...... Jon Williams ran fourour yards for a . East O O m t C T L )r Fall/ touchdown in the secom^>nd quarter and r 4 ^ linebacker Scott RadecItecic returned an . Interception 85 yardsds for a fourth- triumphiph over Syracuse, • Quarter score Sati^aylay to carry No. 6 Plttsbtsburgh. frO, dominated thele (of- ■ FAf w armth_cQmfQrU. lunclio n antlclurabilily, 7C~statlititb, liul Ujl- Syracu L______" ■ ' ' _ Penn Stale to a aWvic ns quality defenseise turned In a tenacious effoieffort. .. i choose Wodlricli outererwear, The name means i n West Virginia, rx r fall ■' ‘ - With the viclory.y. Penn Stale intercep:epling MaHno three times5 aiand to th o se who love the oouldoors. Gel ready lor fa ...... extended Its winning* slstreak over the twice holding li Pltlsburgh pn fourtlurth- hunting, fishing, and c.camping wilh individualtl oul^wearoi Mountaineers to 24 games. ga In 1958, downsUsituations wllh a yai^ to go. item s or the •'compleU*te clothing system " fro)mWoolrich, m ' ’ West Virginia Ued Penrenn Stale and ils Syracacuse, 1-6. could never get goligoing last triumph over lhetie : Nittany Lions on offense, of as Coach DIiDick . : cam e in 1955. MacPhc>herson shuffled freshmitiman (IclDWoolrlcheO/40 A record crowd, of3f (60.958 was on quarterlerbacks Todd Norley and GnGreg u- Mountain Parka hand al Mountaineer Fl(Field to see Wesl Chrlstottodulu. An inicgtnlpntiol llie • closest Syracuse came lo seescor- ••cloiWng system", the Virginia shut out forir Ilhe first lime The cl Mountain Park;icanbc since Pittsburgh blank'inked the Moun- lng was'as when il reached the Pilltl 5 20. 4 worn ovor down vests and talneers. 17-0, on Oct..10,1980. 10, but aI 43-yard 4: field goal atlempipl byI . wool shins lor nny degice The victory gives PeiPenn'Slale a G-i RussCaCarpentlerl was wide rleht. ol warmtn. 60% coilon. 40% nylon Ramat Cloll) record, while WVU fell;11105-2. t l A V r i sholl with zip nncJ snap Penn State also score-ored on a 31-yard V l r' t g j i n i a 3 4 , closure, (ear siornqc pockc field goal by Nick GarGancilano In the I I / / - , I expandable breast POCkois first quarter and a nimnine-yard run by v v CMike i F orest 27 nntJduai cniry'bL^ow pockoi 79 D5-e9.50 \RLOTTESVlLLE-Va-( UP Radeclc’s interceptxpllon rctum. _ way'ayne Schuchts threw for3r a which gave'Penn Stat( tate a 17-0 lead, school-nl:record 320 yards. Including'"S 0 ^ o was the third longestst IIn Penn State gs.yard-d toouchdown pass to NicNick Ka* '''/ • history and came afterler Wesl Virginia Merrickck. to give Virginia ils first fir ------$ a : quarterback Jeff Hoslcjsletier lobbed a victoryy of the season*- a : :w-:m-27 : pass from the Penn StaUlote 17. triumphph over Wake Forest. , ^ - Tho CavaliersCi broke an elght-gan - P ittsburgh.1 14, losing; streakst and an ll-game confenfcr* b ’ \ *^ _ encelosloslng string with the victory, S y r a c u s e 0(J Anton!onio Rice, Quentin WalkeJker. Merrickck and Schuchts scorcd Uthe V SYRACUSK. N.Y. ((UPI) — Dan Cavalierler touchdowns and Wayt'ayne UMhSAflk ^ Marino threw a two-yi>-yard touchdown Morrisoison kicked field goals of 47J arand . T j T j ^ T I fc pass to Julius Dawiiin:kins and Joe Me- is yardsrds to give former Navy coa(roach Call scorcd from a yan/ard oul Saturday George;e Welsh his flrsl victory wii w . {above) Woolrlch HoBvywolghl. u to spark No. 2 Plttsbitsburgh to a 14-0 the Cavaivallers. . Wool Woe ShlrlB. These wool shirir.afo ,• made ol a blend ol 05% wpol and' *• ^ 15%% nnylon. They'io ideal lor wooilng n i m atoneati a s a ll(jhtwolgfit sh in or lor__, :• i ^ 1 rfcaring wilh dow n v e sts or ja ck e ts. ^ ------Extra long tails. 27,00 ;e- sea so n f ' THRU NOV. 7 th „ ra L I ■ * ^ r | R SEASON PASASSES B oloro N or. v .;7 Aftor Nov. 7 ^ t i '' 1 ■I I 1st M em beb e r 1 6 3 . 0lO 0 185.00 . li| ||j| 2ndAAemb

— i ~ SKIE6UPIPMENTINVENTDRYREIlEDUCTION SALE J i . M SKIS-BOOTSITS . BINDINGS...... 3 0 % O F F . . E • |i-A t^m lTTE^ENS : . . T r : . t:r. : r750% -O FF'^P : ^ A U ADULTSr SUNGLASSES...... 5 0 % O F F i j ___ (iigni)^otrlchPowdordorJackst ^ M A M Y M O R I B A RlO G A I W S ------r------K (of cnn\i:il wcnring.inVPuilOVOr ------poplin lackol wiihihRfuimisr-— S 1^^^ ' Aik abouout oxtra discounts 1^ - und c u lls h a s zippoiipoiod han d------dkangoroo fo r S a alaon a o Pots Holder* Pl w arm er po c k o ls and k . pouncunch 50.00 i i OPENN 7 DAYS A WEEK | IPP.M.-5P.M. I ' m k X U m liad To Stock On Hond. [fe . . In LynwoodxJ SIShopping Contor, Twin F a tls“ ------Yourjr BB: ankcatds W olcomo - ^ ^ PRTri!’ RTnlyof FroOTafkifig | ■' ^64-2260 ' i

...... t ' i ------— T ------' . SlSunday. Octobor 24,1962 TlTlmos.Now3.Twln Pall8.ldahO.C-6 -

Sylvia Porter C o m p u t e r r ip o f ffs s C 6 ■ ~ 7 TNew busines>sses, iradew inds ~cr C ^------

- n I m ^ A '-■"'1 j i T a Jap aanese iMsM expo3rt lid wm to reim ain 'By ROBERT G.F1CHENE3^NBERG Newhouse NewsserviceK

w a sh in g to n " ' ^ ! ^ likelihood is increasing that m t Japan will extend lls volunolunlary limit on auto exports to the ...... Uniled States Into a UiirdIrd yeary — with an announcement as early -as January —’ lo dampen rising sentiment In “T-f-W'...... ■! Congrcss forprolecllonlstnisi legislation to aid the ailing U.S. ... aulomobile Industry. ___ ^*nie_lalest indicationa ofof this, comcs from the J apanese___ tedStatesr^f^loOkawara,— —1------He~Mld‘Friday regarigardless' of' who succeeds-Zenko Suzuki, who stepped downown earlier this monlh as J a p a n ^ - . y . prime minister, fear ofr U.iU.S. protectionist legislation aimed ------at Japanese aulo Importsirts protjably-Villl result in “a quick mcnt"onexlendlngthellmlt, which Is scheduled to expire nextlext March 31. - A new prime ministerer isii expected to be choscn by late November. T CommerceSecrclaryy MMalcolmj Baldrige said the Reagan administration also favo'avors a third year of voluntary Japanese auto export restraintrc£ — which, "although we don’t like It. Is better UianUiar the altem allvcs" such as U.S. protectionist IcgislaUon.Il­ But Baldrige said It Isls iunlikely the administration will wanl Uie Import restraint;lint agreement continued after 1983. —“If-we-go on-using-thalhal as a crutch,” he-sald. “what Incentive does U.S. Industry Indi have to become morc compotitive?" Baldrige said U.S. autouto Industry workers and manage- ment have lo get togethertier to1 bring prices more in line wlUi T.t.-T.t« N..*. ij.k,./sti,vi.n Gnri;M; foreign competition andind make U.S. cars “ affordable E m ployees a t the Ore-Ida plant in BuS u rley p a c k a g e p ro c e s s c machines Installed In«n a n extensive Improvevement program • again", for average Amerilericans. U.S. cars sUll arc sUll too q ssed p o tato e s on th c m expensive In compariMnin wwllh other American products, he said. i Many U.S. auto Industrystry officials contend that indefinite continuation of Uie Importtort limit Is esscnUai lo protect even the shrinking U.S. sharec of ils own auto market, “The Japanese are sceliseeking 35 percent to 40 percent of . ‘A llI rig lh t a ’ the American market,"." (Chrysler Corp. Vice Chairman •’ Gerald Grcenwald said1 eariiereai in Uie week, predicting Uie Japanese would reachI thal th« goal within two years if the - ^ Q r e - l d Import limit Is permittedtied lo lapse nexl March. If lhat da’s h eftyi; inuestmelent at B iur/ey bac,:/cs that oopinion __ occurs, jGreenwaldsald.^\l..llWe.wilUose.the.war^______~fByS^EVEXIPSON ------depend on a new!ew spurt'of'^V rth ih the fasast-food business. Thee ttwo plants, which ^ a r cc a C^acrc facility west of____ All Imports account^<1 fofor 32 percent of U.S. car sales in ___ — J 7Y/nes-;^eivsHT/rer ------which has had1 flaflat sales for abouflhrce yeaEars.------Burley,ey,“canpro<*CM aboufv.oooI lortons of potatoieraTlayr:^^ “ Augusl, compared withi2'4pcrccnlln 24 { iMl...... ^ Corddi7 wasIS IIn Buriey lasl week withh other company In the lh lasl two years, Ore-Ido•Ida has Invested about S7 .Meanwhile, Japanese« AAmbassador Okawara, In a dls* BURLEY - Accordlnjding to Ore-lda Foods Inc.,, theti Idaho officials lo help:Ip :show off the improvemcricnts made at thc inilllonon making improvements; inIn ils two Buriey facilities cusslon with reporters,, mimade It clear Uiat officials of Uie potato Industry is "allall righta," and thc compjnpany has Buriey facility.y. LLocal leaders and the presf:ss were Invited to J o maklake them more efficient anand to prcpare for future--' Japanese govemmcnt and auto industry arc so concerned Invcstied millions In Itss BurleyBi processing plant lo0 provep It. ■tourth'efacllity.ty. ■ ^ w tf^ v P l a n t manager De Nelsonson says he hopes to gelS2.7 "abouf sTo^y Increasingsing su p p o rt—In Congress fo r-a----- This healthy prognosltosls comes from thc same5 companyc m on Interviewlew with The Times-News, CCorddry said Uie on for further ImprovementsIts inexl summer, "domestic content" billII thiUiat whoever succeeds Suzuki will out half of Burley's productiiictlon goes to supermarkets -- that just finished speiending $30 million expai vision or now proprocessing plants being builtiit In Uie Midwesi be under pressure to exitextend-lhe export curb. Domestic 3-ycar-old processing plantplo In the Midwest. That^expanded e> ui slcal Idaho'ss mmarket share Ift unrealistic,Iq and ababoul haif to the food-servisrvice Industry. Ore-Ida is content legislation wouldlUld rcquirc thot cars sold in this facility In Plover. Wls..., l>began production this fall, ___ „ ______Burcer:er King's major frcnch-fry'ry supplier. The company country contain up to 90)percenfUJS. pei parts and labor. Finished products canran be shipped from-Plover ti imy Cd{:>llai>lntenslve buslne*less, To pul up a — also suppilessuj potaio producis torioFKei^mekyi'’liL'U CIllcKuii Eostcrr] markets for lessles than 1t costs lo shipJiS p S S Plaitrwl^»w!Jw would cost obout $60 millioron," he said. franchi:;hises In Japan. Okawara was careful lo0 IndicateIni the trend wlUiout making from Idaho processingJ plants.pl The expansion of pro " a time wtwhen only about U5 perc(rcent of existing Ore-Ie-Ida will ship up to 12 millitilllon pounds of potatoes to •an outright prediction1 that thi the voluntary limit will be capacity In the Midwestest helped spark fears amor ipacity is In use, there IsIs some question Japanenese Kentucky FYled ChlckiIcken franchlses-lhis year. extended. Suzuki resigned;ned largely becausc of Increasing that thc Idaho potato's's daysd were numbered. At’t Z I T r J lajor new processing planiml will be t)ulit C orddrdry said. dissatisfaction wiUi hisis Inabilityli to cope wlUi a sharp nniid iJaliiK uiiUui Um piiib sald^^------Ore-l'a^dn.diffffp; fmm-most-potaotato orocc^rs bccause it decline In thc Jopanese! ccoeconomy. Increased competitionI fromfre other regions, they sale— vlll remain loyal to Idaho, Corkirddrysays. sells the lh majority of Its productsjcls dIrecUy lo consumers, The lwo-y©ar Japanesei c ^ ilt)\ll~on' cQi' <^A|jui ti> tu this ; "You've gott a great raw product here.5. There’s always - O therr potatoj processors sell ababout 90 pcrcent of their country is the resull of ana n .agreement reached In May 1981 “ I don’t think It willII gget smaller," says Paul1 Corddry.C going to be a demIemand for Idaho producL’' produclucts to food-service InstltatitOtions,' primarily fast-food under pressure from Uiehe 1United Slates after a decade In Ore-Ida’s president andid cchief executive officer. And he calledled Ore-Ida’s Burley plants,ts, which employ rcstaurlurants, Corddrysays. . which Japanese auto producllon pro slowly caught and. In . "It could conceivably)ly get larger," although thalhat would about 850 people,-ile,-"a ver^^efflcienl operatloiIon." ------•— ------•SeeORB-mAonlo n P a^ C 6 1980. for the first time surpassedsurr U.S. automakers.-

Sharp;^riseir]a f ojad pricesI Nev2W plan angers mr any across nationnc lff|recaast frorm grainnbelt DJ airynm e n figjh td e dluction i _-5--By56ff^ JrFARMER—I— ------ate -th e-frnight-of-farmcrs-from-thethe— hesaysT"In'10'yearere ^ y 25 percenl ?-MARV BETH FRANKLIN-IN------— establlshed‘rederal"“suppupport"-priccsrcurTently-sel-at ------Ne^Bquse News Servicece '{ land, conconcentrate agricultural powerver of those who arc fanirmlng today will nlledPress International $13.10 p er hundredweight.ight. Thc support level virtually ’ in far fewewer h a n ^ during the nexl:-10—.10 sllll tte on farms.i!----- __ guarantees a mimimumm pprice for all fluid milk needed IX»JGE c it y . Kan.1. — - The farm- years, and ar lead lo sharply highertier In Uielr placc. StulkiIkenhultz foresees WASHiNGTON ;-^Some dalry-farmers da are fibpping” to manufacture olher dal^lalry products. - - ers; fefokers, agronomlsinlsts and grain retail pricrices. networks of huge fanirms run by orga- niodad aboul a proposed dediieducllon In their federal Critics say the guaranteinteed market for dairy products s t o t ^ operators who10 make r up thc How much mi higher, they claim, de* de- nlzatlons wilh acccssss to easy capllal suppipport checks. encourages overproductloictlon. which in turn keeps milk A n^pan agriculturalJ complexci here pends on)n 'the extent to which produc-uc- — Insurance companinies, increasingly ■ ThThey arc' mounting a camampaign to head off final prices low. In tM High Plains have.ae a message for tion for• tiithe U.S. market is limited1 —- largp "family corpoporations,” large Agrlgriculturc Department approproval...... - - Beginning Dec. 1. if tthe department issues final th^CcUy cousins: . either by fewer farmers, strict pro-•ro- coops and corporatee conglomerates.c I>ed by the National Farfarmers Union, dairymenI - approval, a portion of thcthe proceeds lhat dairy farmers l l | i%lall food prlccscs are; going to ductionI controls,c massive exports,rts. "Only largo compcpanics or Institu- Ihroiiroughout the midwest rallletIlcd Ulls past week lo sign a receive from dairy producxiucl manufacturers will be sent ha\£B-to rise — maybe dramatically—dra poorharviirvesls here or abroad, or someme lions wllh great capltxItal will be able to pctitilllion protesting the 50 cenlsnts-per-hundredwelght milk to the government to offsioffset the cosl of storing surplus . .lnq>e^980s.______comblnatlallon of all t h ^ factors. __withstand toe_l)0 0 nKi-and-bust nature checlock deduction program setittobeginDec. tc t. dairy producis. "Wfe'vc gotten off att ccheap^nergy “The we've gotten1 oloff a ciieap- Congressss and beaten thc farmer intonto II,” Stulkenhultz says.I'S. “ But Uiey’ll be Nov.ov. a, the deadline for• ppublic commenl on the Securlly on a worker’s■’s fpaycheck, will amount lo 50 hoiulpg policy; and1 inow.” says the grour)und," according to John V.*• better organized, morproduction, and “We'llII have at least 10 pcrccntcnl will triple In to years.”jt. ••scrsend a signal lo the adminisinistralion and Uie Congress; P at Hcaly, chief execi(ecutlve officer of Uie National sagging priccs, confrontont Ihelr mosl fewer farm far ers a year from now,” And If corporate fa:farming becomes thatlat this program is not acceptreptable and lhal you expect Milk Producers FederaUoaUon. said of the program, “ We serious crisis in a half-ccnccntury. predictss Alexander,J president of the the dominant forforce In U.S. . Coniongrcss to go back lo Uie dra\Irawing board and lo give us> ccrtalnlydon’lllkelt” and predicted lhat'"il wlli lead to Wall Street analysts,Its, while pre- Bank ofth[ the Southwest here. agricullure, the risesc will be.even plan lhat will work." an eventual control of milkmil producllon — in the wrong dieting an Inevitable towfood price rise, Rollle 3S Stulkenhultz, an agronomistlist grcater, Stulkenhultzzsays. s Other 01 milk Industry, leadenlers arc equally opposcd to• way." ' -- "queatlon.w het^r It will11 beb( as steep as who heada ^ an agricultural.consultlng|n6-..__.0n_WaU_Sttcct._lv .two agricultural...... the-ie~ plah, but ak% resignedned to the fact Uiat thc! But, Healy said, "1 Uiinlhink probably it will be Imposed, the farm community belleelleves:*'"'^'"''‘ '■fifih herejre. Is even more pessimistic,lie. analysts questioned aboulal food prices Agrigriculturc Departmenl probaobably will approve il. (Agricullure Secretary)y) IBlock'says he doesn’t like R- The consensus here; on oi lhe farm. "You'ree goingg lo see a faster decline■nc say Uiey don'l ss« cor^rate The Ti government influencesces dairy priccs by buying! and after Uie first of thec yearyc will go back to Congress to however, is that the cost' a squeeze, in the nurlumber of farmers in the nextext irplus butter, ctieesc 'anciand nonfat dry milk at■ seek additional authoritiesltles." V unless reversed quickly.ly, willi acceler- five yearsirs than you did In the last 20,”0.” *866 PRICESlonPageCe a - ■ -* r cirn • J n-buy ; By RICHARD ORR Schnllnlttkcr, who 'heads the fitfirm, was un- next 12 monUis, Schnlttker eslimImates Uiey according lo a reccnt analysis by Chase _ . Cliicaso.Tribune______- Idersci5ccrctary_of.,agrlcullure_lnln_Uio. Johnson__need.lo0 bibuy.oiily.35.miilion to 36 mlllilllionjons ____Econometricsries.- ".Farm-ieveLprires of com.____ A n S i y sS I S admirlinistratlon. --r-' “Sinceice Uiey can get 29 to 30 mmillion tons wheal, soylieflfticans. cotton: sorghum and barley Now that President: RiReagan has offered to r Block's estimate of- 18i imUllon.lo.20 fromthethe rest of Uie worid. lhal docloesn’t leave are all belowlow the government floor levels, as let the Soviet Union buyly uup to 23 million metric milliolon Ions, Schnlttker said, "I Uilnk Uiat’s much for them to buy from the U.S.,').,"hesaid. defined by' the respective (price supporD Ioan - tons of -United StatesBS grain,-farmers are -JPmillion tons^of-U.S.-graln, coicompared with the— “a political esUmate.” • ^ ____ Mosl1 Itfarm leaders believe thatt because1; of rates. WIUih daiigere_ot_Myjiiojor.frost_dam-dt ____ - —wondcrinff how much the-Sovietsactuaily.the w11L :_-13;9-mllllon i2 tons they bought-1Jil-Jn the fiscal year— •hnlttkpr hnBi>s hii; flnfllytily8ls_on_threc_j^l_Ji;.S, H.S^xpori:einbargocs.the=S :Sovlots-are— age behlntni!dUs and wheal and com exports I I buy. endedei Sept. 30. ors: The Soviets have a largirgerghdncrop reluctantant lo buy any morc U.S. gralriln lhan Uicy running respeispectlvely 10 percent and 20 percent The president himselfiif hhas acknowledged the . J lh a n1 \was-ptBdlcted earlier, tiie>ley liave a good have ta. o .' Under the current U.S.-SoSoviet grain'" below year-air-ago levels, grain prices imve' : Soviet? may bypass theoie offer. _ Economists with Uie AAmericanj Farm foddeiler cn ^ ,; and they iiave; ffinancial pro- agreemm u ^ t ^ Soviets arc obliged1 tot< buy.only__ slum ps, to> tJthek anticipated low levels. I "Of course, we can't't guaranteeg the Soviets Bureau FederaUon think: 18li million to 20 blemsns. Tbe Soviets can get credt^il^m other -6-mllHonlon tons lii Uie fiscal year, whiVhlch began "There irillU Is e .reason for'agricultural------; wiir make these purchrchases, bul we know JJ]niillion tons would be thee most n the_Unlted_. sup^lailers. but they musl pay casiash'for tiie grain Oct. L commodityy piprlLCs to improve due lo record > I they’re shopping, andd they ti stm have large States SI could expect Ute Sovliovlets lo purchase, they' purciiasci from the Uniteded Slates, Inas- Wltiioullout major purchases of U.S,.S. grain by marketing; yearyi suppiles of feed grains, but they also think 15 mllliorilon tons Is a more muchOl as Ihey arc not eligible forfo Commodity thc Sovleivlels, liie ouUook for improroved grain wheat, andd sosoybeans, depressed world grain J _needs,” h0 8 ald.- - _ '.... t Traders on the Chicailcagb Board of Trade r« CreditdllCorp. export credit progrcSrams. prices Is Ibleak. demand andmd only modest advances anllcl- -l—reacted-withaJjlgjiuwi.. . Schnlttker Associates, aI Washington-based W a IUlUwughi Uie U.S. Depdepartment of “Allmimeasures of farm income contlnuac to pated In domeimcstic demand. However, seasonal I Secretary of Agrlctr l^ tu re J 3 m Block - economic-consultlng-flrm,-s1,-Bayp-the Sgvlets— Agriciiculturc estlmaUs tb&Soviet’iel8,may.buy_40 _ denote! extremeex weakness, boUi thlflls year and advances will wll come beyond Uie autUmn- -{-b eliev es Ihe-Soviela-wmviU-buy 18-mlUion to-20—rajnay-buy.oo-more-Uian-8-mi-million-toos.-John— millioiion-tons-of-graln from alll-souTcesinthe—next;~wlt s with-m odest- Improvement"it-|n-t984;‘‘.....harvest:"-- t ------') , \ a ' -OflTlmea-Nowa. TwinI Falls,Fal Idaho Sunday. OctblJtbbor24,1082 ilviaPorter----- M

______j cO om puite r tip -^ b ffsc lh e fr i^ie x p a nid in g uvithprco d u c ts

Universal Press SyndicoIcate . micro-co■computer user, wants, they willwll — he doesn’t havei time.t And in any qu^tlistions that go teyond techBchnlcal and need custonom*written software, grai5 -am. If you can't — with a m ^ u m fall inthithat last crucial 10 percent, case, he Is not in a position; to tailor querieries. If the.dealer cannot explainexj The whole exerebelse then con become of)f ptpromptingfrom the dealei-^lltfler As lhe variety of avavailable com- Mostt businessmen I and computeuler the software to the cucustomer’s needs. suchell essentials as cash flow, plar>lanning extremely expeniuisive, with software theiie 1dealer doesn’t know thejwjgrdm fpuler products multiplle3lles, the rip-offs dealersa haveli neither the time nor■ theth( How, then, can yoyou find your way budgelgeting and olher financial-oll- or ex- costing as much] ass four or five times )r or It requires a high d jffje Jof ------follow — underilning thtthe clld»e about -experienience to bridge this gap — or)r tre realistic about the man:lany getting ripped off? probatsably wil] bc ndhelp toyou. Also, with the costcc of brining a new nilniTTlnutes (depending on coifi^^'ffia), Lhat this 10 percent represents Even the experts can’tin’t keep up with trap s tha I) IDENTIFY -V software progranam to market easily you/ou should be on the way t£p2mlng alone the un- says Se>Seymour Merrin, president 0 YOUR NEEDS. , , ^ the Industiy. let ale Whether it Is spread!d sheet work, sales 3)I DONT D FORGET SOFTW^WARE, running $100,000D or1 more, producers thejheprogram. Z^Z sophisticated buyer. The Tl market Is the newl:wly formed Association of Bet .ware Is tbe instruction pacpackage are writing softwiware for the greatest 5) 5) DON’T HAGGLE. Yfiu-Cn^ 3j)d that’s Just te r Com)mputer Dealers (ABCD). T< and purchase ledgeeers. Invoicing or " jDWmlng glutted and corporate planning. : tells the computer hardardware' number of comjTiputers. A bargain- helplelp, advice and guidelines. VSijwant It this, the ABCD was forme( g. In most cases beginning. combat i (Q satisfying a single it to do. Software is by far theiie most] priced micro malay look templing to h the e dealer to work out anwfiugslln t Is that you, a and it has tu worked out .guidelines t< e need or single . ^ ^ The obvious result Is problem can ‘pay folor the cost of a ortant part of the’^lemn - — ex- you, but you runI thetJ risk of winding up youi/our system, to have tjme l 3 ^ s^re mlcro-computer consumlumer. are being assist you yo In your hunt for a micro iing the significance of whal-halcver with a piece of e

Ore-/(r d a — ____ _ Vaalue line ------tCOOtlDUinuPdfmmPfleBrs______This Includgg n itargins t up► I . - , . increase In brebreakfast sales at fast-food>d restaurants-and...... - - , The food-servlce indii nidustry provjdw the largestcst market products to glv!jlve the loyal potato eater morem variety,-and (\NSAS CITYT'Mo. ■'(UPIJp . ) - ' - ™ for processed potatoes,es. And products made for 1 thusar^asontoI to cat more potatoes. ^ Kansa:sas Cily Board of Trade dire 11it goes into thc sack, sayss Jerry. Gummow, J '’1necessary to maintain adeqdequate better avenue towardi growthgi Is through introduclucing new the packing supcupervisor. . ^ financlncial safeguards." products, he said. Offic[ficials of the exchnage saidlaid the o XJU ------...... movet'0 to restore the higher limitit camec 1 i d s . ^ ___“ inresresponse lo concerns expresseissedby. _____ — ______certairain governmental bodies.’’ — Thele exchange added, "furtherher dis- JL ^C S -.Price cussioiiions with govcmfnent offii3fficials s ^ u d s the Barry says, •■•the'^cli •Coatlnued fromiPageCS P j says, areare more likely to dictate thc clear direction of arcpctpending.” ^ . . course of food priccs. He sees a r i ^io ofoi prices will be u p ^ rd ;! agriculture as the waveive of the future. «4 5 •••••••••••••••••••I 5 percenl” a year for mosinost The agricultural ddecline, he says. • * * * ' : They agree, however,•r. that ^ a ^ r commodiixllties. concentration is inevlta/Itable and that— "is hitting bottom,I. 1 look for food • REBUILD | OR REPAIR R F o r m ore pol)otatoes und moro , crop cro of bi^h.qualily potatoe.s ■ retail food prices are likelikely to rise as a Peterr J. Barry of E.F. Hultoi prices to begin risiniing. probably at a • kny welding and Itamtf culling < Z e average Inflation inp«t nn> nc rim. <^r 0UP -lnc,-says-h&-^wouldnU;--ft - - ■— - — matlcally as farm spokesikesmen believe;— fe i" ' witf/Ith the Stulkenhultz vision 0 ------*- ■ soil-4^imitfan iStimffeolGiileiizifaouL-Vapiiin; lg agricultural 'rancentratldhlidhT" A f the' heart 'o f‘U’the' cry"here“ for ’ Z P IC K E n 990 • penetrates3 ILhesoil to fiKht - and an( follow label directions.------. I Al Jackson, analystit tor{ the First concentration will productluce higher food prices Iss tthe belief that the • • n ex t season'>n'ji early dieback S Stj tau ffer Cliem ical Comj)uny, Boston Co. In New York do«n;t bu, J’™re for higher retail prices.. he h( American consumener hasn’t been • MreIFG. CO., INC. S s H k • diseases likeke verticilliiim wilt, AgricuTTural Ar Chemical . the farmers' s cnario, ^ chiefly ^ and lhat In tufn_wlll be ag- ag -paying his-falr-shareirorat^east not to S 42 ff— -J- and controls)ls nematodes. Its Division, Di’ Westport.eT0tl8Bl:v- ; becausc he-believes ai 423-641-1 Jg g friy r- ;ed by the population increasSSlra,l?i,“ e ‘" “- f "The wheat in a loooaf (jf bread costs • Z center pivotot irriRation sys- s either primitive or un only about -l.S^cent:nts.^p»s”than-lhc-^S- j j j j l ^ . tem . And. by,)y usinR it now, Sli '. says, are put off by Its i nlcal. i-b-ir ‘ nature and Its rdaUveJj ______wrappcr,” .a visitor.]r.is.tDld;-or_‘;The you can heiplip a ssu re a b e tte r S \ & p a i i f ; on InvestmCTt." ■ American consumerir pays oul less of ••••* h fewcr.and fewer farmers and » hlg rtlspn^nhlP.Inrnrr — ;— r - r — — Ordinary inflation rates, ra Jackson more and am more mouths lo feed."?d.'' any other consumerrintheworld." ii / M l IE ■ BUYAANEW ■ ^ TWFFORD |H Big-O Is O ffering' jTTpn ____ TRACCTOR i Tire Studs at : RECEIElVE A { forthe ■ 3r; n R*c*lv*a$4004000 Thl» OfU rli Umllad ______pride of 1 V / R CASH REBATETE - - - >RD i 2 ll*c«Iv«a S200I1000 FOI •t Your Snow Choint ot Blg'O•O oond Roturn Them by April l i , ' V ^ K CASHREBATEprEpluf V-CHAIN 83 Unoponed & Wo'II Refundjnd 80% of Ihe Purchote Price' ______Wel¥*r_ef,fInonilancruntil M afeh .l9 0 3 ^ _ ^ | ___^ ___ RAN4GER I R*c*lv« 9V.*/Vlr'/V lnt«r«M ra ta for 12 (2000 CASH REBATE lORSMENrPICI!KUPS^4x4’4’S-RV’S ERYDAY LOW PRICE MGE R E Q U IR E !^ , -- 750x 16-8 ply' ------7 5 tn n f0 p ly ' " HIGHWAY TRACTIQN

r a $ K ^ 6 6 Plus 3 .5 4 $ ^ 0 7 1 Plus 3 .9 7 '. Vi mmiciAif 9 0 F.E. T ax O l p F.E. T ax;.-., . BUY AkFORD I DISC —-W E'LL BUY YCOUR VACATICON I « SOilS 6 pir, jDJiis— »-pif,-*sj.»r.i;3:irF,E.Tjn '3*11:5 f.E.Ti ?5ll6.5-J-j!r.-»6*.Ta+3.S5 f.felu. -- iOilG,S 8 pir. »«S.«0-»4,2I F.E.T; :oiiB.5 t jiir. rxTfi. TAHITI [{ Otiier Sizes Available HEE MOMKTIHB-FREE Air Ctiecks. OR i f Iter Betreads— I t emem ;t; thomas ' « (1) 242-66 Tandem 17’1"10” OR 8 SERIES (1) 242-1212 Tandem 201)’8” ^ ifffTm/CARRIBEAHM CRUISE P lu * 45* FIBERGLASS F.fe. Tax V Hi/ Of ^ 2 8 SiieMSsn BELTED (3) 246-1212 Offset 127T ^ # WUtariU t t SUPER BOWIWLGAtfE i i RADIALS : (2) 246-l«18 Offset 14’ H IN IO S AHtNGElES « 5^; CeU^ S ^ ' WHITEWALL oroqulvi Only Discs InI StockSi Qualify <+* •»«

i. . .-1. ____:______Sunday, Octobor 24,1982 Timos-Nows. Twin Falls, Idaho C-7 B w b u s i nness— H = ^ r «i d e ^ ii i n u l s ^ ^ ^ - Pori^ p;';'Hymaa, a Jero'me ■ ■ cattleman, hasas tieen named to the R - ^ r d of directxlors of the NaUoggl_^ B DO laeai Board ^ H g Idaho's represi;!sentativc. The board H | | b | Is the rescaniroh, promotion and education arirrm of the meal in- B H dustry.

— -— ^Gary-WaUratErra'Twln"Falis"op^~T^ tomctrlst, - rec■eccntly attended a - I ’ three-day confciferenee that featured ' seminars andd exhibits about the latest lechnoloilogy In the vision-care J industry.-

' Jim and EIEllen FtBcbcr of the LINDA HUNZEKERR WendeU Granjmge Supply recently ' O pens her own office[-e attended a scseminar Tor CENRX, FORREST p< p. HYMAS . ctw)p-personntincl..Th^ seminar of- - - --Idaho - i t representative —• -- H i r ~ ------fered-workshoplOps on merchandising______and graln-hailandling. equipment, namiamed president of Mcmroc Inc. m i ru ck stoi J L / plus It featureired exhlbits..^owlng The'he Iformer Utah rpsident.repiaces * the latest cocommunications __Johnohn D. Smitii as president of the bookkeepings)systems available for UlalJJlalj^based ' company. “ Monroe 0 co-ops. oper;perates in 15 ' communities in a m e inte UtahJtah. idalio and Montana. Includ- regal estatite. ------Robert A. FParry recently was IngTngTwini-'ails.

openeitied a Dew real-estale offlc iN issarn stu d ie s^*siigtit cuts Titi,« Um ifi.no/snivENCRii-rj: fi TwInFn Falis recently, „ TOKYO (U PI)-) — Nissan Motor Co.. - The Th • M exlc^' government has Shele has named It Oasis Iteally. Rc -Japan’s No. 2 autoIto maker, said Friday clan:iamped down on foreign exchange ; " David Blolloxham works on a corom poricnt of a Clock inn h is n e w s h o p in T w inn F a lls afterr Lthe Traveler’s Oasis Truck ‘I 'nay *"‘>ke a “slight production allo being prtxluce In Mexiixico ad er December Butut as someone used lo 1: ’ foreign exchange to | TWIN FALLS - Oaock o sales have He e> want one of the hourly out)utburstslnhlsshop •employed, opening her:r own “ due lo lack of f HAINES AUTO ELECTRIC expects more people to wai 17 components (from IB6Jib Kl^aHyRd. 733-3543 standing still forQr_yfiats ' j3 U l.th e s o m e lhthlog.in-lhoin-homes l that got^ got had subsided. real-es1-estate office “just seemedr thet business to “ (Ick,,tock.” to Bloxham began fhis ciock repair i thing Ior me lo want lo do." '■ Jap an ).” nd this seemed the natural1 tirtime to l^ap ^ea d , says David'idBloxham. 1 ..The-lere’s an Atari in every hom career as a watch rej•epalrer. In the iast -'He opened Clocks of)f Idaho,Ij off Main three years, he has5 (done repair work °olLI. Ml this beep, beep — you relat [ feel 11 Is a good time lo beX dc o in g V V Avenue West In downtovitownTwirf Falls. sounds to foreign things for several area jewevelry stores. last monlh. For now,^ theU business Is cnn/whi ' Clock and watch1 repair work are 'i-W'u/ith interest (rates) comingig dd o w n . ship&and doomsday.” hesays. people wailing to- buyly who ■ MW irim aHlya clock repnlijnlrsh6-p.Hehas ils shop, with the clocks that h similar, he says, excxcept that a watch .T i v ^ w e ______ust a few cloc.ks,for_salisale..l)uUe.lwWs ------, repairm an who woriiiricsj3nJLCl0Ckjyin--MUldn idnltbofore,--the nextyear wiliwill be a — — ------^ tly-has-repalred-hanglng-on-th J time fbr real estate." she sa; >lg hopes for the future. each hour Is marked by chimes_p <5 sometimes lose thee ;precise touch he er office in the Blue, i L S c s “As any young guy wowould who opens os and assorted dings an needs for work in tlthe confines of a ^ a d a business, 1 think It’sIfs going to sky. Z i p watch. Officece Park off Falls Avenue! -— Is a I c ^ l f o i rocket. 1 really think clocksclo are ready ^ The oniy olher cloclock repair work in one-peperson show. Hunzeker wiiwill be ,for a comeback in thehe home.’’‘Blox- “Somtme days I feci lll(c bringingng a Twin Falls is done atatBenno'sJewelry. herowown boss, as well as her busin. i n e s s . ham says. - . shotgun^ lo work.” Bloxham said afteafter "and he’s swamped,'i,” Bloxham says. onlyer-employee. “ I1 feel fc like I can devote morcirctlm e i u ! .. . to geltelting irstarled the way I w wt a n tir ...... F urnittu re m en1 expectiiin g uptuirn — J aL r nlsauits-post->t------Chevron__ ------r;WGH-POINT.-N;Cr(::r(UPl)-=-The-~posltlveve approach to bu^'lng, cotr»m- . 50 states and.up.to■M.countries O came__ fali-Southem Furniturere 1Market closed m)tmentents and orders placed, to examine offeringsgs from more than a SrealFedhead \ N o ' n m i t a lilne-day run Friday ai y amid reports of - “Thele mi arket opened (Oct. 14) In a L300 manufacturersrs, association of- = - T h e 10W <40 — increased sales and pnpredictions of a very.pos 5S ANGEU3S JUPII_=__ [>osillve enviromncnlAhc-salcsaid, ficials said," - formerie r chairman of the FetFederal D ealers W elcoro m e — — ' steady Improvement JnIn business dur* “Buyers . (CfforExplrat 10-31-82) }rs cam e to buy. Manufacturer le lo)an Bank Board has abnibruplly ing .the next six months.IS. tailoreded their Introductions to '7h? th ■ Executive Dirtrector Richard Home Uarenline said thee true test of the resigntgned as president of thehe Los J V V : “No one Is lookinglg for anything mood of o the marketplace. Thei eies-based California Fet 5ment_was_a_go^^to-bettc market's succcss wwill occur In the Angele , dt!amatic,’- said John1 PiPastrone, pres— assessm when manufactur- SavingIngs and Ixian Association. w ia -H ouse—of—ijnarket.' __ 1 nexfaolo la days, w MJg\ Ideht r-of —Pennsylvanl; ■ ers'-M ies representsitallVes"call on-ac- CalifIllfomia'Fed'chalrmanfand Id •chief i / f e cy O i l Lewisbiirg; Pa. "Busirisiness will im- The Furniture F Factories' Markel ;utlve Robert Dockson said Icini counts to Mlldlfv m»Tiarket orders .mci executl ------s e m wINC SOUTI ICn'N IDAI)AHu6INLt fy4ir fgoflillnn nf lhe-SouO>t-6tfiei£yjg " seek additional ones.'J} Jonls.s, 49, resigned Oct. 20 alt 2 Robert Gnienberg. gegeneral manag- sponsors3rs of the show, reported th 22-monlonth stint with the associaK:lotlon. 1 992 Kiltlliberly Rd. Twinerg said tithe market con- DockscItson said Janis resignedled for ^nter, said, "Thisi viwas the first favorabl)bly wlh last fall's show, linued a trend towanird smaller buying “perso-sonal reasons'’ but he woulc}uld nol J .. m arket In two yearss vwith a strong Majoror retail buying groups (romn allal groups. elabonorate. G u id e to1 S w isiIS b an k s / prco v id e raiitings----- T o p - p r i t ' ■GENEVA. Swltzerlar•land (UPI) — A creatingng the association,” he said • f ^ u p concerned withth the quality of “There•e Is1 a pressing need for some ■ y o u r r a i ■ .Swiss banking saidI FFriday It will thing like lik a bonking ombudsman™ onoi • Coyote .))ubllsh a “Good Banknk Guide'! along the linesnes of the existing insurandance ^ _ fe llo e s of the French!hMichelln f, Guide ombudsrism an.” • F o x T o p dl < o l l a r f o r Torrestaurants. Membinbers will be given free legacgal • R a c c o o i ther advicc in pressing claim: » n y o u r g a m e s k in s : The SwIm Jrives^orjtors Protection ond othe - * B a d g e rr------— — nded by 17 busi- against5t ’ banks and brokers'' fo ------W rite:e y o u r — -Association was'founde I • D( e e e r • E l k 4iess executives and coiconsultants who mlsmanianagement of their money, , • B o b c a t Srald they are “concenrerned about the ' iy too ' often investors arc unabl< • B e a v e r • M o o se 'age In lengthy and'cxpenslvi o w n c e r t if ilcrate a 3limllty of services" offn or sUli ^} raised” with each week passing _ J-irrigir a tio n e qimpment.^— i ;ach related press article, am ^ TwinFo-a llt J o ro m o 5 ^ ; engaged in claimlims' lo recover with eac “"0 HlghlondAv*.PhPh. 734-7440 61607 Sth Ava. W. Ph. 334-5873r3 Bosses. - - __ . with- eaeach related action by a.j Here's yourr chance< to purchase;e a Valley irrigation belonged to a parHanf'cmenlarlan. { GHessen said he b< I syslem at aI substantialj savingsI diduring the month of « ^ u p of Investors whc#ho lost several "Thee various concrete cases October. Sinimply stop by and mainake the best buy you ' fmlillon dollars three ywywre agojvhen a„.entrustetted to the association will'alstsa INTERES!;T RATES ARE: I D R O P P IN G . 'jSwIss tiank us^'lheltheir "money lo providele ian excellent basis for IssuingJin g can'on.thes:system that best,fits5 y— ...... EO HUDSON...... ""••• S43-S$97 543-4642 ' ■ » i C I A IX SEMINARS alley D ealeier Day s __ . _ L l — n o w -l o(W w ERJIATES^AN.MJEVERBEEORE^ ____ m ------^^^Novr4^7:00 PM BurUrUyifihTBiTrU^' 5 _ 7 :0 0 PM C anyon Spri specialize .inn FRural .: • Hay□y a n d S tra w Stacks Fri., Nov. 5 p r ln g i In n , Tvwln Foil* ^ ' r«i»rvatlon« o r mall In tha coup- pv I fire Insuranceice • F ajrm r r Implements CoHcolivctrWr* >upcn o r |u«t orrlva ot th* door. - 0 ^ H o m e s - • Barrirn s :t o b e r 2(6,1982c __f:pj|.Outbuildings-j s ______^•_lmpiplement_Sfieds.ll: . yjJONES-CONSISTRUCTION----- )0-A T A A rto“iil Rt. 4 . B ex 4 0 1 0 -4:00 PrWV^” ^ — ^!i»rovidlng-RoIturai Fire Prbte^Icfion "Since-! 911^- -im iF— BurUy83318- u: 6Zfl-ltl8“ - E A jnielV < (8rR efpes3s1^m "ents^^£^ = 543-464212 ■ “ ■ ■ ■ ^ ■ i Yes, I om Inintorostod in finding out p and will plann t o o U o n d ih o fro o som ln :• iTWIMfflALLS COUNtYY MUTUAL ^ SILIIVER CREEK IRRIGATIONII J AddrcM.------...i 1. South anind. Vs W o s t o f J e ro mmo o 324-8185 I F FIRIREINSURANCE;eco. I plan to ottcnd BurUy ( . ') TwTwin Fait* ( ] H . .^..•Ordrdors must bo placed duiin?ig tlthe month of Oclober -^------li6^ Sbufh-B roddw ayl y r B u h l i m m m m■ . I I m m m m m ------and dolivcred beforesJanuaryT, Jai 1983. ' "•p— ■ V C-8 Timos-News, Twin FallFalls, Idaho Sunday, Octoblobor24.1982 - — ------i h —

F u e l ge— d t ^ m rm m m ^ u id JMATH M^ Mon. Ihru Frl. 11am. S;m . ^ . , One area vrtienj ener;tiergy savings The repeport notes USDA recentlyJy Documents may bo e> words). OR READING? Prof.. TuTutor- 7pm.olthoCrltlorClub.Al90 could be made Is more efflefficient water reestablishIshed an Office of Energy, Inp lal -3rd oradoa. 734-45U-484S. Mon. Wod. & Frl flamlfiatfStr y, amlned al tho office cOf CUSTOM WELDING DOIDONE, nsk (or Roftyn Sas'f-.Cfllii fnanagement. which can:an potentially which .shoihould be useful In getting MCCLURE ENGINEEFER- Aluminum & slool. 733-5733.5473 423-5459. ^ conserve about one-fifUifi of the energy Informatloitfon to the farmers. - INGInfheFlrsfhfersJatiate daya or ovonlnns______DO YOU KNOW Soth? Woufd^ used In Irrigation and cai Bank Building, TwitMin O’Loary Jr. High DrillN ToTeam you l‘iepartmenl of Energy hasIS Falls, idaho. Ono (1) sot so a Pop Band would llko to do? Call 42:^6244 ■ e r a " ^ of said documents ma'lay thank Bolao Coscado Also recommended Iss conservationa 5“ " ^ ';'olved ? ': in agrlcullual energy ido (or DOLLS^ontlquolomodW .'i' itlon by sponsoring severalQt bo oblalned at tho officiice thoro Iruck & drivor In tho doll rolalod Homo a"taW i,' , tillage, which Involves1 leleaving crop “ "Servatic . of the Engineer upoi)on HomocomlnnParado. • ___ 2nd annuol show S aalo'Jbi' residues on the soil surlatl si and }*atIon projects, but the ad- 'deposit of $25.00. AddlIdi------RETIREES for 1 oldorly oldt thojovo ol dolls. Nov.tl minimizing plowing, dlskllsK,ng.orhar- tion cut funding for the pro-i>* lional sots may be obob- oraon inal noods, goodgc omlo8pm.Nov.l4.10aifi‘tkf, the 1983 fiscal year, lainod by payment o Romo and caro. AvallavalTablo 5 pm. Bosl W ostorn Surlo;^ rowing. ■ ---- 526.00 por set. The plai nowl 734-3811.______Inn. Convdnllon Cot«*r,- . "By reducing the numbenber of tractor GAO reo•ecommended therefore that” SIGNS, logoa. poslors. Burloy, ID.. Adults— IT; deposit will be relurnei I chlldron12& undor 7^ 0 ,0 ;. (rips across a field, a farmerf can manageme:nent of lhe Energy Depart-t- to actual bidders pro GUARANTEEDDADS olhor protosalonal art wo iro- ■ - roaaonablo pricos. B reduce his fuel requlremc‘ments signifi- m ent’s igricultural agr energy projectsts vided the plans an1 ius know ond wo will run your od 1 oddi- fertilizer, grain drying,^ anda mainte- agriculturairal projects will be properly'y ing. All drawings ancmd tionol w Q o k free* o f c h o r g o , (Effoctivo (Ef Jonuory • nonce and operation of farm'machin-fai m anaged1 andai that the results of theseX spoclflcatlons ' are thci< ._lf.your5ur:iiom doosn:rsei|.- nolif')lify our office ond In tho amounl of liv(ive -a r,;:n i percenl (5%) ol Ihe lola>ial ^ ^ ro-run the od 7 moro1 dcdoys froo | A I . amounl ol each bid anc •mu*_t.bo-ro-run w ithin 300 d o y s on off-f;farm inc;:ome__ shall bo made payabicJc■jQ ______• it your)ur'ttVm 'soils in I055 ih oon n 7 do> s. contact lhe SOUTH C^TRAlAL - 'iou.trbflbflici! &'w6 wTirsto^H olicl - WASHINGTON (UPI) ' ocTfno monoy' ' J- " [) — As net placed off-1f f - f ^ Income in i960 at $3636 COMMUNITY ACTION3N bo'rbfyrfd(?d) farm income h ^ fallen durJt^ng the last billion - - up $2.8 billion from thele AGENCY. Tho work on or three years. American"farmers fa are previous yt•year. In iM s a iim £■* ■ ■!'' • i C m bem nilng incfefislngly dependent dej on cash farmm Incomc was measured atQt Substantialiy~Comploieco'd ” W m T s money earned at Jobs offfthe th< farm, the $32.6 billion on or bofore January 21 ion, the department said. 1983 and Liquidatec s S i 2 7 s government says. "T he welA'ell'belng of small farmers Damages In lhe amoun'int • 'ijWis 7 DAYS This year, farm families fan are was greallally influenced by off-farmm of S25.00 per caiendailar -m , »rng<» n f n>wiit ’ said Ihft USDA's rppod-flii-IP__ day will be assessed foifo r______S J L J N £ S J L d AY-S^ ------$17,000 through off-farm jobs,jot a recent Economicc Indicators of the Farm71 failure lo complete wor>DA reported incomc earned ^ offering ilemsIS a t $1,000 or less. from non-farm sources w Contracl unless said>'d I I I were those off the fam,rm accounted for 29 percent“ award is delayed for a I Phono ^ ing price must I whose annual farm saless wereu below of the totalal Incomc1 forpcople living on I iSt be in ad. {Non-rofur>^V.:^^ n period exceeding thirty I Print A d H o ro : ^ able. Exlra linesn es only 50‘ e a c h ). *5,000. farms that3t hadi recorded annual salesa (30) days. I Another rcport, releaseded lasti .week,' of at least[$40,000. $4 SOUTH CENTRAL<^L I I COMMUNITY ACTION I ■ AGENCY ! I VICKI KIDD ______I______U .S. lackiting under!rstanding Execulive Director I PUBLISH; Sunday, I TOKYO (UPI) - Japanese days of nejficgotlatlons because of the® Oclober 24. through I I ifaS Agriculture, Fishery andnd Forelstry— Japanese refusalre to liberalize Importss ■■- Thursday, Oclober 28.t \ I Minister Klchlro Tazawava criticized of Americaica’s high-quality beef andd 1982. Chock Monoyloy Ordor I the United States for falliailing to un- orangesl)cg«glnnlngln 1984. - ■ & moil to Timos-Nows. BoxBo* 548, Twin I -K ■ - r33-093J?\|| derstand the Japanese fanrarm situation or coii 733-0931. I Iks had been set for threee Announcements . Tlmoo NowsClassiassiliodAds- ""•'•'"flr which makes more Imporl» rl= .IU ,S . ■ji P.O. 80x548. Tww in F alls. ID 83301 _ cltrus;and.beer.lmpossible*_ __ _001=HorIsts______^ 1 3 2 T h ird S tr« a tWtWoal . ______T ' Commenting on the breakoff br of TazawaI blamedbi the talks’ (allure onn Mafjoflo'3 Flowers for loas;is: (arm trade talks In Honoluliilulu, Tazawa “ the Amerierican reluctance" to un-1- dollvorios. All occasions,IS. said, "The United States; Is looking at derstand the thi agriculture situation inf, 545 Sparks. 734-2021. the m atter from a purelyy tradeti point Japan. F arrirm ers in Japan, a poweriul of view when It Is In (act an lobbying bloc, b have campaigned3 002-Lo3l&Found CLAS5 S I F I E D) I N D E X agrlcinnireTssiSST’ against furtiirthcr liberalization of agri- ud U.S. negotiators proposeosed cutting . cultural imports. im from . the United--...... CHECKDAILY. ANNOUNCEMENTS nil...... the Honolulu talks short afte FORCURRENT ifteronlytwo . Stales. 00} toil Kev"*) 0>«Co'vdomini„m.ro.«^ HOUNDPOUND 004JP«.01H6I«». Ot1Caioo**«',m.W Ao.fV(>«l 069 Com».d “ \ 13IA>,1or..I.*A.„.,ci..t p i^ u ctlo n In order to stablliblllze supply en theproblem of existingr 4. Black Lab, Malo ’ * 133Au>a>Wonl*d 07»A(oll<»KVt house, don't I throw ! and prices, it calls (or an1 assessmenta: overproducliiclion of milk bccause[ 5. Black & Brown Sprlnoor 134Auioytal«. F arm Bureau" Dairy Committee C ‘ Ilonal cost of ...... 7,—B row n-8-W filto-C olllolo- - —OJvitl------— ------a r e .stillill_usable,—bui-5----- . of the tax...... WIro-haIr Torrlor Mix, lomalo[0 030K«n...r©f Jol. 0B7flof.l.»T.... • 0. Black Lab pup Mix, fomalolo 0JIO-lOITov.,.M,«.. OtBCoodlhiogitofai - - no lonenger needed; ; • wllliorooncollarw/bolla______032 Buhl nutnom.1------03JK-"b»>'r Horn..M______0»3AuttM»n.______U»Auln«-AMC______Sell thenam with a last-.; __ nours&-7pmonly. ' (RKfcl l92A«lol-luKk OMfMlIiloKWantMl -- Monday thru Friday 0*9 r«flllli*t t TopSotl0.1 IS’*' Bocauso Dogs-aro broughtfit .0JIAiiW9.4lot. , . 4 IJBAulol.CWloUl An a d iin the ciassi-; : ^ Baling Twloe - 9,600oo feetf ^ 1 RADIO SERVICE In ovory hour, ond SOLO or3f OJ* BxiioM* 01SF«>miro.R«.> .. 160A„1o.-0o09« COMPANY DESTROYED altor 48 hours,S, 0*tPstrwi*irsfB*n< l6}A.io>.rol.»«kWW.d1 164A»i«|.M*f.Pontls< L . . .^y.o u J na _ j o u c h — ______a Radios from Mountain Is nol on up-lo-dalo list,_____ REHTAkS ______- ^ • freenuiiiate_ TopRopoOlOfl^------MIxod dogs aro harfl'lo“do^ ^ OMFuio»M> . — m any—Jpeople—one ; — scrlbo. com olo Iho pound lo'0 ' l7SAulsOl«l*.t Oswalt Feal-Tnidis a ea fl your pot is thoro.- ...... ■ of w hoir>m-maY-'-be-irt !---- ■ — OEMONSTRATIONS ’___— Como and-plck out a puppy ^ • Steiger Tractors ■ CALL TODAY Of (ull grown‘•doo- tRoy the men]irket for whgt j would lovo to hf va a homa. ^ • Wisconsin Motors you hcfV(tve to seU. Yquj j ^ 7a.rn.-6 p.m. Mon.-S! , . s . , I 734-2444 LOST: Ploaso holp, wo woro I H burnod^ut ol our hono & . brouflhl our chlldfon’B malo. k *...owe it tcto yourself to':: ^ Leslie Davis & S( black Poklngoso' pup to --- ^ ------197

______...... “I, bundJiHayrOc1o W 2n B 82------nriio;irnotf^e^srTWinFaifsnaamjtWP------W§_ u t e it t m OPFNw>n»a <007-Jobs of krtorest 007-Jobs of tntwost 01/-Business Opptys. ' Ot7—Business Opptys. 017-Bmlnes3 opptys. _ OIMncomePTopeity 020-MoneyToLoan------020-Money To Loan...... - HOTUNE SKI SCHOOL DIRECTOR 21 Unit Motel Eastern Idaho.M BEST PART TIME businessoss p a in t or Mechanic shop loi ALS COMMERiCALLOANS • \ 73Wri22 waniod. must hove In- Very good potontial. Ideal)■! vending machines. Call salo. Clean, ready lor busi, 's S50,000to»50C.000 A Problom Is not a problom :structlng exporionco. busi- BusIneM^«>cla!0' family operation, Nice 3 S29-«245 • . ■' noss. Paint booln, 3 curtjrb &MORE . whon sharod. Menial Hoallh ■ c TECHNOLOGIST noas' background holplul. Wanted t>odroom managora apt. WIII [7^ culs, good torma, gas hoatlat, Tho oquity In your home)can can 1 lo 5 yoor interest only. ---- Full tlmo. AFCP Of A ssem bly 8. Dlstrlbutk>n 'III lucratTv e * und ero'“e f :- conduit wiring, oxtro patkinclng bo turnoo Inlo cash throughDugh Loons on commercial, in- A!>ip!OI4!l^______^ oqulvalont,a good salary, Salary based on experience. accept homo or olhor pro­ro* ; VELOPED territory noar Apply al Soldlor Mountain perty aa part payment -i- ■.■..nMM4,AI.______a Iasi Home Owners Loan como producing proporty .... UWSHOP ------oxcoliont0 bonollls, some • • Excellont Opportunlly (or + Twin Falls sooking olllco S kf area. Box 337. Folrfleld.- minimum of $10,000 cash.[h. prolosslonala Intoroslod] In TRANSFERED. MUST SELLM I Irom Transamorica Financialnclal socured by business, com- ___ Uncoo»08tod dlvorcos, J75. call c roquirod. Contacti Idaho S3327, Phono 764-2260, B ualnoss Dlvorslllailon. WIII carry' balanco on 10% ,nll Sorvlcos, Your monoy carcan morctal_au-roaldoniiol-pro:---- Porsdiiriol, Cassia Memorial. .expanding, rolocatlng, or Bost reasonable ollor. 3 unl Bsfrttfuptcy nnd corporation, r • No olaborato laclllllas oss." -apt.-Se.OOO-yoarty ront.-Exc bo used lo consolldato blllsibills, '"perty, t V L z m i S , 130, olc. MalL '■ SOBER ___RESPONSIBLE. .. M... -atartlng- -their— buamoss; i. 10- . - 'poraori to caretako ranch — Brand now building, IlmltodItod 'Cond. Low Inlerest llnancncl buy "big .llckel'Llloma. (0- ROSEMARIEWOOLLEY— . . -ocd«vTjvallobIo,'CaIt~33e- ff homo for two winlor monlhs. , , ^ - 'S c o / /o n l prolll markup. hip, lnn:734-31S5...... ------modeling, put Into Invest-»««• 733-7B88 - a73??90M1.-; • byptT D no or mall. Lovo- Write: Times Nows^ P.O. J 73^0931 ______' Jackson 342-6600 ' Oat(ii(^ MarrloQO. Local/ _ Box T-44. Twin FolU. ID 63301 manufacturers lo assomblo you can borrow, coll: NatlOnWIdo. No loo. dona* ^Caroer oponlnga lor oul- and distrlbuto Commandor O^l-Money Wanted •. -fl(m-oniy.8o*1429-TF, Santa' • °otandlng-poraona to grow - Board products, Inlllal capi­- 0»-0pe' NORTH IDAHO BAR: Liquorf In H owsing' Mornjon; Church? 734-2613. aary. you 0 ouarnn'eo & a monlhly [ II you aro ombl'ious. ino'u>o. ■ . draw). Plus 1 liconso, ' Evorylhing goesJ iarifPARKS,Twi«ralla 53ft-7?8a, or 678-9103 (Of a “ plu s modorn aparlmoni, 'ocorrtod no». 'j-j(J0 Jand onioy - ••'. v.-n. |. cotTjufi'iaiu I lorth on Washington, loll conUdoncc'-' t!. . J...... irth o business. iieo.ooo. $60,000 down. Carr n rvorth Collooo. 3 blocks wooKiy.______£ Roalty, Box 24. Clark Fork, Twin Falla. ID 833U1, Hroauction ponuaus lool . 3l371Sporks. PARENTS WITHOUT Wo'II give you outstanding IDB3811.208-266-1322, PARTNERS Invllos singio *■MECHANICS w a n t e d ; Wo Insurance products lo aoll. u l parBnlfl who aro Inlorostod titrain. Earn whilo you loarn. Back you wllh on sggresslvo « 4 0 ,8 4 3 ^ m.j^WoolIng now frionds. fiArmy coliogo fund ovallablo., undorwrlllno policy, ond a WARNINGI Good poy & bonollls. Call The Tlmos-Nows ro- bedroom, largo living room, OPENMHOUSE I national o ^ r ll s ln g com- Army Opponunitios In Twin com m onds that you in­ liehon, dining oroo. eolho- Swndayr Octcttoberaatlil.aPM l Falla 7^5671.______vestigate evory pnoao of ' ■ ~ dralIroi coilings. redw ood dock. .PREGNANCY HOTUNE ^ V^u'll also get All Stolo Invoaimont opponunitios, dljh»Ijhwoihnr •.-Pm onanl? Nood holp? MEDICAL fc SPECIAUSTS' omployoo bonollls. Soars W antod. Wo train, no expo- oapeclaily Ihoso from out of ...... n S -7 tn V diacounta. Soars prolll state or ollerod by a porson SELF4IELP Divorco Kit. tSO rlonco nocossary. Earn' sharing. good Pay & benelits while doing buslnoss out ol a bluV tax. Uncontostod only. 0 ' Intoroslod? Givo ua a call. local motol or hotel. OPP E N H O IUSE Cafl 734-7033.______you J learn. Call Mfny O?- You may find ll a'very mov- Wo suggest you consultI pprlunltJos In TvSn Foils /no exporionco. , T ^ ( ( Q ORDERS lor Rao- Y your own allornoy. 2 -5 Call Karon Pago al-73«950-■ “ tho’Botler Business Buroaur goay Ann & Andy's. 3' lall. Monday-Friday & Joo Blond call5?fr5a73,______Modical ^ Tochnolofllsts- Full Idaho Consumor AKaIrs or tim e s part time, (vlLTorMT, 734-5006 Salurdoy 4 Sunday, TiRINKING OF Xmas? Ollls n asK for a Iroo pamphlet ond 1 1 4 0 STAI Roglslorod Nurso- Mod/ ALL STATE INSURANCE informolion Irom the S a t u i I boautllul & laallngl Havo a Surg c 3-11. Contact: Si. 1039 Shoshono St. No. EOE ] r d a y - Si i u n d a y Three bodroomi, Iwo iwo boihs, electric hoot, lull c a tiporsmllh Show 733-6466, g Allornoy General's Con- Bonodlcl's Hospital. = Iaumor kllchon opplloncet>» and o lots ol storogo oreo. liNOONTESTED Jorom J o. ID 63336, 20i324- , Prlcod at $53,500,0000 COa-Sales People \Proloctlon Division. Stalo- DIVORCES Irom t275, « 4 2 l ______houae. Boise, Idaho 83720, O uur M odel Scs a le s S U P E R 112%-riNANCINO 2 ? ------Bankniplclos Irom $350. Call NEEDED: ^ Exporioncod Long AREYOUANonorgollcgoal | Phone 334-2400 or 1-MO- Yo», 13% linoncingig oion o 30 yoor loon with prin- 7 3 a ^ lO . Haul H TrucK Driver. Must bo. .. rqachor? Do you want lo , i 632-5937. poymenis level lor tho entire highly qualillod. Rosumo & 'Incroaso youf Incomo?‘Wo . ^ H o v e5 Been A Suu c c e s s ! cipal and intorott pay hove tho position wllh IWORRIED aboul layolls? Is 30 yeor», Thoro Is'nos'no pro-poyment penalty and Selected Offers Irolorencos roquirod. Only assumed by o 2nd buyer f o r ------tnoao with oxcoliont drivingI advancem ent lor youi Call :your limo worth more W IsI N e3w ' M odels; IN o w Ihls loon con bo ossi rocord nood v p ly , Writo:! Snolllnn&Snolllnfli^2550, ;your lob soasonol? lots than $100 undratlon. doing business u WANTED: GOOD auc­' DAY CARE- by wook, by day, Twin Falls,.Idaho 1d( 83301 as'f-E lav o n Footf Stores Is tioneer. ,t who is seriously or ovonlno sllllno, 545-55M affiiKing'careor-mlndod Indl- wanting " to work at trado. or 32fr^:®( In Buhl, vory and D rivo N orth an d v l^ la to train as Hold rop- ? 7 6 3 l a B tl a n Must bo dopondablo. SondI dependable ask (or Pearl or I Northslde Bo(B o ard o f REALTORS roM ntatlves. . Applicants .rosum ' o of training, oxpcri- Lupe.______• I 3 2 B' IP o p l a r Roal nico 2.bodrodroom homo located on mlRI havo 3 or more years ol onco. . phone, elc. lo Box 1.34 acres. Vory■y cgood lor horse lovers. 239 South CCo o d a r sikcesslul managomont r DEAR MOM, II you want TLC Good location, 3I Ibodrooms, 2 boths, 0-44 Times News. PO Box and individual ationtlon'lor C o rra ls, sh o d s, pasturo. pc Foo .oppraisodI Joromo. Idehlo h o 8 3 3 3 8 and^auporvlsory oxporlonce. 548.i Twin Falls. ID63301 - - bosomont, double>lo co r g a r a g o , RV lU flto ll or roalaurant opora- - -your child Irom responsiblo ot $58.500.-0wr)wnor w ill-sacrinco-ot-I— -WANTED:-RN or-LPN-for-- -m- oihor.—Call—Nowi—Fow- - - p o r k in g , s h o d o troie e s . ------tRSno.'Grocory retailexporl-— S ■ ■■$53:500:Comoono fT o u tl onco plua coliogo dogroo Part ^ Tlmo Employmont In. oponlnos. 733-2621/734-6467 pTWorrod. Startrng salary Skilled ° Nursing Facility. EXP. SITTER, Rol. Any ago. 1 , 0 0 0 Bonellta Includo Contact ^ Magic Valley Manor, Robort Sluort aroa. swing b o fu a . car allowance, prollt - ' Wondoll\ Idaho. 636^71. shill only. Call 733-2470 ...... ------^ C O U NiT T R Y H O M ES-i^r------_shar!n8-!nconllvo,.company—-WANTED: W ___Subcontnctor. Exporioncod Baby Silling In (jfU ra d ic a l, dontal and Mustn havo exporionco In­ my homo, large fnsldo ploy $ 5 7 , 5 0 0 scEtSCENIC MELON VAILEYI. Nowly moto. Mnd rosumo lo The sulating s attics. Insulating oreo. Anvaoe, 734-1270. i e 3 0 under floors. Installing vents romodolod 4 bodroon-oom home on 5 ocros. B65. SBblhland Corporallon, 3160 u FORMER DAY CARE ownor ^ ^ 0 Road, Bolao, Id ^7(M, & & windows. Must hovo«wn truck & Insurance, 733-0515, would Ilko lo care lor 2 or 3 $ 6 0 , 0 0 0 hor:tORSE LOVERSI 2 acres, posiuro, ES3/M /F/H/V. tr kidain hor homo. 73*^75 H O dm [flfjS carrots, 5 sloll born,rn, 3 bodroom homo, T74. LOTS OF TU Hoi lunchea, ' -snack8,-ploy-room,-lonc«l-i------T 33-00.1>1T A nvtim o______733-0716 $ 6 2 , 5 0 0 PRET'RETTY YARD! Nico homo on 1,26 wllh good Nurtin■1ng.& & croollvo play, 734- ih o n o St. S. T w in F ollt — ^ocrei sf of TwItTASSlAiSSUME tOAN.'T56:------:------^«ad«rthlp SkItU MARY'S DAYCARE $ 7 9 , 5 0 0 EXCEXCELLENT lOCATIONI 3 bod- • Compotltiv* Wag«s 2 oponlngs, lull llmo -I room homo on I.S3 acresacr soulh of Twin. T66. • GoodBonelltt ' chlldron wanled, 10 yrs, ex> porionce. lovoly-homo,-or------$ 1 3 5 , 0 0 0> N NEARLY”NEWrVoviily“3'i)od~ ' •R o tlro m o n l'' ganlzod aclivllios dally, will room liomo on 3 ocros,oer< corrol. dog konnol, plu» o • Slock option* potty traln^. ^hoaUhy mcnla| • Hoollh & Dental Ploni double wldo lor guosts guo or Crondf^mo. good loco- - —•FrJendlyAlmotphoro < tor ”plocomont,~ Mary'Lou ‘‘ — — l)on, owner anxious.')0*.T32. - -- • Oood Patlont Coro I 7 2 m i ______th m ------☆ - ■ i r - i r F-FARMS-« J *-☆ • F ^ o rd ln g W o rh lEM’ranpw 'E s ■ MATURE, Rosponslble , womanwanls to caro lor 1 , 9 0 0 A C: Rr I e s Producllvo row crop/ I Chlldron in my homo, largo Sunilay, Octobiber 241:00 to 4:( i CONTACT:MAY LOUI3U WAICROFT DNS MPH. I eattlo. good improveiovemonlt, nlco home. Adjoining play room.''foncod yord, hot GREEN ACRESiCARECENTER CA m oals, mllK, snocks, drop- 640 ocro* ovalloblo.llo. EBSt; T*laphon*:2C8-208-934-S60I In s wolcomo. 733.7809, - 9 6 0 A C RI U S Cottle ranch lor 150 hood, I POOH-CORNER Pro-School JBOAHU’s.ioinoroMrow crop. Cotlloford. B17, • & Day Caro. Trained toocher.' I mm' Indlvlduallzod program. . ((8-SateP«ivlii ~ f%6-SaIea People T u to rln a . ' available. Noer . 2 2 ; A C R EB S S Farm lonu Ond spoctoculor Sawtooth. Agoa 3-12 734- -rivortroniogo. homo.ime. Buhl. B6. ' 0544.______1 S 5 A C RiBS M Choko row crop NW ol. H n d u s t r i aIA i L S A L E S ” a^V^SE.*N“fSSL Fllor. whool & hond!ondllnes. mobile homo, corrols, 733-3910.______1 2 0 A C R E[BS S Oood farm, pricod right'. ! A Subskllaiy ootIt acndvorm ly alfoctod dava, Phono733-77W. ‘ ^,doaWotrr.it-rJoromerT42:r^ ------~ “ • iJlJrHtSffrw^WnllallUal (our lop eolea - -«-DAV-Ofl-NIGHT;i{haH-dar “ - s a ^ c R i S i ^ S) Uncoln School ana. r ' roprewntathre# aamim over $40,000 por 734^783. • (iVST A «AMMMrtM o r TMI MANY ilOMBS, V*RM> * DAIBIIl■MS W l NAVI tlSTID. CALL o o n m i ) . • L)c^ tsrrltory (oveml(imlght travol Ilmltod) 01ft~Sltuatk>M Wanted roHAmiwracii • Formaltzod tralnlno ' • OuoflW products Blasting rock (or basoments ! OXFORD «quir®aappllcpllc an is with: o r w ater linos, oct: Sloveni _ —I------. - A •taW a.w ofk.hlatofv, L 8 ) • High leva) of moth/ailo ------r - “ OTMPLCTE^^Oj^r^^ “ I '« Tranapoftalion FALLS A VIN U IMl A S T (2V< M l.iait from Blueue Loke*I Blvd.)— * • NBiurally outooJr>g pot .------s, 1 n 'T h o ibillty to tum No i ------FACT^ & R^EtJABLE SUPER ENTiRTAINMEMTn HOME with 1,800 sq.sq. o n J . • MoUvated by nvsn*y>y a a n d rscognlllon Houaocleanlng Done. Call'r _____Jovei^::_2_-flroploc*»,-forU formol-dfning-roomrfomi a m ily - ro o m ------2 If you qualify. ^ s s 9 » callcall: 324-7878. _ 5 = 6 3 BR & 2 baths.' Excollontnt torrii9.:,$M,QOe.OO. ‘ K#ni Yocum. Holiday Inn In aOQ-733-0650 . HOUSE & OFRCE CLEAN­ I on Monday. October35 35 & Tuotday, October ING fast & olllclent. 734-9022 • 26 from 9om-5pm or lendi« retume to 3977 o r 734-2369______R o b e ; ■ ; PllttllaldWay.BoIi*.ld.B:i. 82706. I DO HOUSE CLEANING. , q p M !STATI ' Sal*»lraln*«aluolto ecnildered Hard working, dependable, B»per.-.-rrtef.^733-(M7?------' ^rATE I - — Jonesr s R e q i t ^ : RETIRED COUPLE wants HEAL TWIM PALLS O x fO o ld™ care taking In counlry in ...... 1746Addlson-Eo»t ...... 7 3 3 - M M ChamkMilkcals, Inc. nxchanae for rant. 733-2tt7 - - iADDlSONAVEUAiSl SlIHL idh»

___ C-10 Timo3-Now3. Twin Fallsall9,lda(io. . Sunday, Ociobo

A , | A • i t e . c O f w

w :^g i * J I s t 025-lnslructloa 030-^o¥esForSa)e ~ COO-HomesForSale (tSO-HomesForSale (04-Jerome Homes 038-A creage & Lots 03S~Acreaae4Lol3 M 5-M oblle Homes 0 5 2 -fu m . Apta. 4 Dup." • ’ INTEREST IS ONLY 8% on'n li^E D IA T E POSSESSIONN LEASE OPTION EXCLUSIVE JEROME)ME, ‘ • 3 bedroom brick homo.10. 2 12x55 87 FLEETWOOD.30. all nTcE 2 bdrm b a so m e rit^ t 026-Muslc-Lessons this assum ablo VA loan.\ on this cholco Qrick 4 Custom built contomporaryry ACREAGE. Ono of a kindl ( bath8.8.17acres.9sharo5■030 oloctrlc, clean, (urnishnishod with carport. furnlshod. Cari—• Immaculaiolv cloan___jLl i- . -bodroom—homei—j—balhs,— fl(_ _bdimJioma-localed-S.Wr^i _____ AU.CILON^------watar,-lane«d-yardHJOwj» - $5000r53»23t6 attor noonrson— - ?33:7tB7lr733-3BKr------GUITAfl & BANJO-loTeons:----- Jt firopiaco.. (am /m. dbbibl Caynon In ptlmo N.E. aroo.0. Jorom o. Beautifully deco- BIG LITUE RANCHESIES pallo. (rult ireos, Ni bodroom hom o In Northeast omo. Jerom o. $75,000. Will s JJ500 4 take over myly pay-p; Rosponalblo Roomm«!tt>(8| . — BoflmnTfinlir adv. GUI coftH- location. Froo slondlno0 naroQo. sprinkling system,n. Many amonltlos In lhls 3 ratod wllh oil Iho oxtras. CallCal Oct, 30, e mlles S.E. Jorome monts. 3 bdrm s. 2 ba 4 Landmark Roalty (or appl. tc with wllh loss land: 324-4782. bath, wanted to chare Lg house. ., , icatosov^fablo. 734-5^2 (Iroplaco. Lovoiy pallo. Callill S84.000 but wo nood an olfor.r. bdrm + don homo on 1.4 1, 10 1 acro building lots wit ------doublo wide. 61 Chompicmpion- roasonably priced 734-9821 Davo Lutz 733-1717 or Town &i Call Jo o 734-3393 or (MainIn acros with 2100 sq. It. Prlvaloto aoo. 324-8865______utilities. Toims 10% dayay olt 734.8718______Country Roatlors 733-0718. W ost Roally 734-0555. tonnls court, largo rodwood3d ■ ^ P E R CLEAN 3 bdrffdrm aalo, 16% at closing, Bal.)ai. 5 C39-B usin8ss Property ------1 BDRM. $125 -I-powor; ,Lg;;i.', RealEstate . docks, oxc. assumablo loan. TQlo yr30l11%.324-5821. - %__ 1972 12x60 GENTRY MOBItOBlLE Sludlo $145- ali ulli-s paid;-x-s. n. FmHA houso. ' Single - CUSTOM CUTTIN'Q & motlobiie HOME. 2 bdrm wilh ilpout._ tlpo Both noar Snloway. Brian ------F o r S a l e !1 - -R oallof- ownod. *129.500.>0, garogo, 14 by 22 wood dock AUSTRALIA—- ^,--- butchorinn plant.-ln Joroiromo All app. oxcopi rolrig..G Go ood 543-4148 W ookdays, 328-5377 .'.5 . . 213-a2.Call.Llzal734.1377oror wlroo lor cablo, mota 100 ac. parcel near smasmall & Twin Falls area, ExcoliiBlieni cond. A lter4pm .423-4110tlio ' other timos.______: Oom Stato Roallv 734-0400 storago shod, $42,000. Cal (arm town In queohslanc.land, lorms, modorn laclllty. gc “ ‘ o a ^ p i n Houses • □ ------] LOW DOWN OR WILL1 Carmon Prunty 324-2484 or 1976-l<,M Tilan 2 bodroodroom. i bDRM, Lg irvfng rm. ulli’3.7 j Of Has V* ml. frontagoI oon not. Woil established.. WC " partly lurnlshod, llko) new.no paid, sultafilo 1 person, np. ... • TRADE. 3 bdrm with (amllyIly Canyonsiae Realty' counly malntalnod road, roac sto v e Oixon, at Rool Est: S9.850. Cali Marian Rowo. Ro> oots.734-Sl88.alior5Dm. .. • room,—S42,000 assumablo,- I------Lovol-land, oomo-cloaro7—a6fkei— 20 ACRES on tho S^mor iRdDst'r iaL'l o t : i s rFZWT r : • ' = ___ nooilor3-S43-4371.------cond, 733-8161-...... ’------1“ “ tracl, (or $11,500 or'-lD acro: ^?*o ! ^ B om !!:i496!^!^rnat irm T . -STUDlO_ART._carpotQd.-4..;s____ ;■ Falls. Oregon 97601, orr cac3il locatod lh Valioy Ihd-usli panolod, heat 4 wator- - ■ ASSUMABLE BV%% VA OUIET CHARM doscdbos3S for $22,000. Call Harolc iinhia subdivision, ail utllltios,' ' cc S ' Rentals ._Loon- 3 bdrm. 2 bama, 2 car Ihls 2 bodroom tirlck homo, ------sanitalon paid, $t25 + do- • 0, 733-8071. Main Wosl Roalt] ^ services avallablo. Ono 30S posit. 734-5516bolore9pm. - hoaiod oaraQO, A/C. . singlo garago. Ownoror 734-0555, ______■=—^ Iho best locations In ’?win Tv 050-Furnlshed Houses Firoploco. loncod yard. 20% -T , BEAUTIFUL 5 acres Roc ------1 BDRM Furn. 1015''-' • 260 a c r e s : Sprinkler Tr »£Si Falls. $25,000, Markoll‘” ‘"0 sTSalL Exc, Mobile, ull down & ownor will carry 2nd Ing. Mako ollor. Call Gudrun rigolod. sandy loam. Ion;" Crook Canyon. $28.00( Asaoclatos. 734-4875. . u l l l s Shoshono, cioso-in, . MGI..734.719_9,______543-8800 or Wostorn Realty Torms. Call 734-2445, ------pd. quiot. privato. , 1 F $2004doD 734-3200.734-7466.. 'y orowing season, grow sponsibio person, 734-205( BEAUTIFUL BRICK 5 bdrm. 733-2365. ets. BUILD YOUR DREAM HOM[oj^E Large Beer Bar II Apts. Compioto with ca-.'- poiatoos, boans. beets Jtlon. — .• =------2V] balhs, olfico & oxiras. SPACIOUS Ranch Rambloror good markot accessBSS. on this 1 Acro building] sitsite ^lo Loaae w/optli ------blo TV. Wookly $40-S55..1201.-v.’ Gordon & fruil iroos on Vi homo SW ol Twin Falls. 3400 own wllh an oxcollont countiunlrv Small down. Buhl, Soric'toua 05i»-Un(um.-Houses3 ■' Klmborly Rd, 733-6284 00 oxcollent-torma, 11% dovrr ed to buyersonlv-543-6932, acro. J78.000-IOOSO consid- aq. fl., 1V^ acros, 5 bdrms,.3 3 and assum o existing loansans. localion and view. Pricod I nniinVo $135 Largo 1 Bod, 1 b a th .- o ro d ,734-7039 or 734-4740 SAVIE M E baths, raised non-tralllc Ilv-Iv- $455,000. Call Bob J'onsorison soil quick. Call us todayly (( (pr OWN your own homo a Avallablo Nov 15th, Smalle uilding wifh ologanf llvinn bdrm houso in Joromo.in $' SI65 Complotoly furn,.,. water-'' BESTVALUEAND Charm ing old buil lng room with liropiaco.0. 734-4875 or 324-50715076 moro details. $13,500, business, cafe, bar, livi ‘nnD'ii polf. 2M 2nd Avo. No. EvaM„A TERMS IN TOWN post. (Tho doclor'sJ trm ansion). Rostorablo Covorod pallo. polo loncos.s, ovonings. Markotln( c]uariors & rentals. GoGood damage cfopo: ^ropei1yMomt._;g4j401. — . stabios, & tact room. »"» __ VEEH&CO. -torm s. L.B. Jardino.. Ida:daho 324-3832 Mornings only. 3 BORM, 2 both, family room, sound structure. Tl. Assoclotoa. ~ ------liropiaco, control olr. $148,500. — 734^1707 Realty. 758 Overiailand. BIG 3 BDRM. 2 bath hon 280 ACRES Burloy. (208)678-7425. .m o™ f’ OH-Unturn. Apla. sprlnkior ayslom, aluminum MUST BE Mls oi EXTRA CLEAN 1 Bdrm Bd all ulllltles oxcopt olocirlci---- Ownor will carry contract, all homo wllh oxtra largo In-n- 432.6240 ovoa______Iracta with utilllios. siroet:ools olflces. Both healod &4 In- houso. Carpot & drapiIrapos. ty, J145 + j / s ls iin ' ^ oxtra ciosots, dishwasher,my g% assum ablo. Low down & I llor, Jorom o and Twin Fall - 10% ASSUMABLE LOAN- 3 bdrm homo, full water, n“v“ M4-Condomlnlums Large 3 bedroom, wfwo''^ 0 0 0 disposal; torm a. >44.000.734-1376 all.6 I Socluddd aroa, closo to ownoranxious. Counllos, Low down paj ------burning atovo, garaoo. I 3n at ------^ T privato utility w/tiook lips,...' BY OWNER Largo 3 bdrm, 1 I schools & shopping, largo]0 20 ACRE DAIRY, doublo0 3: monts. Call Stove Olxon i pots. Ref, $315 mlh. 734-491 A/C. N opols $265734-6365.;^.- . dow n. 2 batha. Formal din- I livingroom and tamlly room,Tl, horringbono barn, nleoa 2J Roal Estato Unlimitedd i at 045-Moblie Homes ___ NEW 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. FP ing. 2 firoplacos. lots ol - 1 tiroplacoa In oach, lormallal storyhomo,closelntoBuni.Ihl, 324-3553 or 324-556S. ; 'f FALLS APARTMENTS • family room, coniral vac -Close-lo-.schools.i shop-v. • ciosots, sppliancos op> I I dining room, 3 bdrms, don,n, 34 ACRE DAIRY, noar Twirwin EXCELLENT Chance fc rwiQ um. Jonn-AIr R/O.“ 0l0Ct llonal. 3 car garago I I workshop In basemonl, bathth Falls young poopio to not a placpu'S CAN YOU BELIEVE TH' heat pump & AC. largeJ,« HKic ping. Childron wolcome. .w/ostabliahod shop aroa. I I & V), boautlful troos. Call111 40 ACRES row crop, fulfull of Iholr own. A low 1 ocro acr Now ail electric 14' wldo •?nH w Warm Irlondly & quiol garage. Property is listed; mosphoro, 1 4 2 iodroom?',! - . largopolto.foncoyard,largo- I I Chuck Porldna at Evorgroonin wator. lots available, zonodI Iclor bedroom. BROADMOf salo. All on 2'/t acros 2 mil lot In Klmborly. 423-S342. I I Roalty, 734-3200 or 733-1874,'4, 60 ACRES row -crop.-ful-full- -m o b ile homes S-livoslocllock. 0nly-$n,900-wlth-$1221.21J5. - froffl-csi-ln-nood-:'ar«^5^roa $255 month,.663- I Realtor ownod.______wator. Roasonably pricod & locate:ated down & 13% llnanclilong, J55o/month wllh $150 dope call wmio I 2240 SO FT Boautlful 5 & 130 ACRES row crop, full fol In boautlful south Jorom(omo. Loaso payments for 15 yo:yoars- », ooug or DoAnna Voilrra°„=; °"'"‘* : 7 ___ * I Spacious homo 2.2 acros, > wotor, high dovelopmon'lont Hurry those won'l.last!I ForFc ot $137-91 a monthl 734-5650- : - • GORGEOUS prIvolo 2 bdrm' . potontlal. . 324- apt. Built-in appliances, w /du-, I bdrms, don & largo troos. ' salo by owner. Terms. 32- .Nico fjplghbqrhood^3 Bd I - .VQfy_n!c0_hQma_d0i£L:ifl:2 c -520;A CRgSirovfr.Ct0D.-lulilulL _ a900or733-34S2. ------______b r x k m a n :s ™ ------...... — — -- Jerome-or-Twln.-Call-Jerry-fy_ -water. - - - “ FOR SAL-E^y"ownor 5 acroicros MOBILE HOMES! now carpoi throughout. $: Jackson at Roal Estate Un-n. Call Jim Paulson 543-4930.':'■ ' In Melon Valley, well o V -nx smokors dr pots. 130 Elm S C > :> .. Oirvctlont: 3 inll«i w»tt. 2 1 l / 8 m ll««foulh oi Moglc II on_ 93 Highway & Interstate:e 84, + deposit, Kimberly/ T. 734-0565,734-0500______/ - ^ COUNTRY UVINQ on 5 Volloy HoipHoL ___ llmltod 324-7516,324-5922- . properly, 543-8574.' ___ Phono 734-3167 or 324-4203?03. 8788 alter 5 4 wookoncis. ocros NE o r Klmborly. NIco- _ r _ . . -BARNESREALTY — :«iimA;- - IN JEROME-1 bdrm, Elotfuid;!’.; 1043 Bluo U k es Northr — ■ LOTS IN WENDELL, utilillullliies ------. ‘ —' NICE Sma'li 2 BORM coun country homo rocontly ro­ Elogoni 4 bodroom . 3 beboth homo on 2'/» ocros. ames BURLEY mnn h I’ool, range, rolrig. Dish- • - modolod. Pricod ot $75,000 Call 733^277 avallablo. mobile homo homo. Pots ok. $160 monmonin. wagher, Carpolod. Water voullod collingi In livingig iroom ond form al dining 8TH AVENUE EAST, 2 story. — okay, open to any tradtrade Kasota Road & Intoratato10 S''. $100deposit. 543-8330 with torms 4 oxtro low^nIor- ino llroplacos. lamlly room. 'j 75 ACRE Farm botweor ------lurnlshod. oil strool parking, room , Two m oitivo ilOf»o 3 bodroom, 2 bath, 2 OO" torm s. 53^2256______Phone 438-5707 or 438-8303^ ONLY $900 DOWN. Why rc ost, ownor wants to soil ree room, fruit tioroge.». G.E.C hoot pump. Quolily firoplacos, family room,T, Hoyburn 4 Ruport, ID hyront $i85/mo. $75 Deposit, no boloro wlntor sots In so .} Sprinklor irrigation. Low 1°: In O W NYOUROW NHOMDME I CARTER HOMES diditJ II whonyoucanbuythiscutiI cute 2 pots. 733-2365 or 733-4B40.- construction, jupo'bviov/ew of Sawloolh Mountolns. sprinklor system, guo;it T, agoin! Took m otorcydo ----- mok©an olfor X Iol'e ooflotl----- QUtomoi|g-^pririMgr».-4 roll . terost ass. loan. 438-8558.;__ Tho American Dr«»am bdrm. 1 balh home w(< a l « ______I. Will «!n (I Lf^w fjQwn navmrivffooL Studio, stove 5*/e- lonco. 12 x^o'l.l5arn wiiMh tocK c room , in oroa ol lino i!T-ilU .-A LH bb, IjnOOVOICpCff, '«>■ m undor IHA linanclngT Aski hom os, Twirt Foils schools.ols. Good torms, S175.000.- vory shorp & ottracllvo. Soll­II- virgin ground. WondQlt aroa. jows $18,000 4 located in Bu '• IRWIN HEALTY, INC or will consider torms.s. Potential .lor potatoos. rOM ;9 tck. alligators, land. CART crops & dairy. Ownor KnanC',nc. Johnson at 208-376-4769 tc «TER Barker Realtors 543-43 73W 500 $78,000. • , . : . 5 ^ HOMES 733-7568. ____ Francos 537-6636.. LARGE 1 B O R M .'qu'ioti^B m In g .-10% down, balance 2JK day or loll (roe 1-800-547-599 - _ ~ r tion, $185 + $100 d o n S w S i k e t i n g I B voord. 837-8383.______(or a Ireo Cuitls Homosmos DBL WiOEO bdrm,' 2 baf o '''. SMALL HOUSE in Tw DEFAULT-V.A. tow Int., i -AMERICAN '— Catalog. No down paymormonl carport, palio. slorago roooom. Water & Sanltotlon paid,w s: util'a oxcopt E le c ti lc i y s S J b it, homo or commorclal. . tiavo hoat pump, dlshwash hoa!- Stove. Relrlg, ’Ju i l f f l C - K J + e S ------REALESTATE------, - roQulrod nnd vou don'l h y s^or. deposit 324-2932 oftor2Lh... 5. _hQQkup. 733-2973. j S ? ------eO-ACRES-ctoao-ttrB nhtr^ 10 own yout own lot, Ca & APPRAISAL bodroom homo ond out. SMALL 2 Bdrm. in Jeron (Across Iram Court Mouse; loday! Wo say yes whewhen Lazy J H32 734^22 (or api !i'nh«; 2 bdrm, flroplii'C:* MLS > buildings platted In 5 acro ?PJ«- J1S0 + deposit. Call" ol stovo. rolrlgoralor. wastt«r„ ■ 734-5650 cod olliorssayno. DELUXE REPO 6Dm&wknds324-2647. DUPLEX. Noar now cholco 7 3 4 -- 4 4 8 7 5 . parcols. Full walor, foncod :------dryor. 1 mllo lo Twin;eiw; • DougVollmor,Brohor for shoop, $190,000. $1500 down, toko , O' duplox. hoat pump, OURCONSTRUCTIONIN paymonts, $343.02 a mon Twin Foils; 3 BDRM.. largoior pots. 734-2089.______; aprlnklorsystom. A ld a S tro n g ...... 73M905 „ CHEOITRATE loncod yard, stove & reir MafyAkkorman .,.73«e82a 240 ACRES ol sprinklor Ir- -- 18 yoars, 3 months Iolt'l i? " no dogs. $300 + $100 Hnn«2’dope UKE NEW 2 L o ca tio n a rP E 2 6 BEDROOMS? oloctric ------___ contract, 14'.^% loan. Fl oopoa- 2 bdrm. $245 i 2 DonlsVollmor^.^..,^. 73W199N rigatod farm ground, Ono li . « A m . ;33.733r. --- 734.6135or73*^. > ^ 5 J_heat2-CarpolC£J7-Largo lol? man operation. 5 bodroomlom owner put $10,901 Into hon OnlyJ55,900r ' his loss, your gain. Homemo'ir) UNFURN. 3 BORM hou! nice countryside 1 g 9 MO. OLD. 4 bdrm, 2'/i bath,>: homo. 4 mllos from Gooding iggi $275/mon. -f $75 dOp, I Iq on main highway In good • oxcolloni condition, V BARNESREALTY -i-rPBICI BIDUCICID Sovoral thousand dbl garago, hoat pump, auto • 0 28x60 . total oloctric. di:ai3H. pota. Automatic dlshwash 1043 Btuo Lakos North dollars. 4 bodro’ private bath, batt Por Salo 60 x 14 It. Skyiilyllne $215. 2 Bdrni. 1 balh hou: 1 BDRM APT. Rango aj y g - Ifln. $95 + deposit; STWQW f $103,000. osking SUlOOO or on ono acro. FrFormal living room. A LOT OF HOME lor a small Handy u i % room S ailI nowno' Mobilo«homo 536-6478 alallor Now carpal, nowly palnlt loaso’ at $750/mo. Lot's prlco. 3 bodrooms, nowW ______carpeting. Full water shareiares_ apm.______i WAnl Apt, partly lurnlshod. $ 1 1 5 * 2 . ______fam ily room, !*/ ______Roltig._Olom-^5 W< -degosltr/34-9652------— maho-o- . .. ONLY $79,900 now carpot. Insulatod. stormm small dairy noar Joromomo. an ollor, Somoono wlli got mont apt. 1 bdrm. 1 < monf ond savo . bargain so don't walt-and b Built Great Lakes 4 Tho} LowL $230, 2 Bdrm, 1 bath hou: windows, largo t)a3omont.It. 377-4681___;______cost Concord homos. COur Carpot. Hardwood Moo carpot. drapes, atovo. re«fl« J HAQERMAN-Prlcod to Soli, now 24x30 shop. in Hmn; Walor paid. 331'A 3rd A'^i*-.C 3 ----- newof—4— M rm , view & L"-. ..1.34..'ACRES_wlt'h"nico_:r i ______prices A aorvico.can;i.;i-Dfl_-Baaemonl .w/wshr & drj - Murtaugh, $30,000.'.------bodroom hon\o. This is t ; °^,fd - ' Property M g m t.i? ^ J ------privacy. 3 acros. 8 wator .-WOULP TOU>U L i K l A P A R T * , boat. 2\i West ol Hospitpital hook-up, largo back ya sh ares, gravity sprlnktod. close In acroagd and Is ar HAMLEH ' 7 3 ^ 1 4 1 .______252 2nd Avo No. Evans P JMINTBTT WitVith good incomo, - IN MURTAUGH-qulot com­fl- oxcollont houso sot up..Foc j l t l ^ $185. 2 Bedroom, 1 B 8W% ossumoblo loan, by munity living, 2 bedioom MOBILE ho m e ' LOTS FFOR p_orty Management. 734-14 ownor. 837-6217. v^ifh supor form m . appralsod at $59,500. Ownoirz realty TTjrpr. Duploxo. Carpet. OrapHj; < rms. wifh nico quiot homo p o rted (or small fami­ 500 26 Yoara of Honest Servicovirn sale "Magic Valley Mollobllo 3 BDRM. BATH 3/4. doul liv in g , In o u tsk ir i>- will sacrlllco al only $53,500 I'n n Estatos", Now adult sisub- garago, (oncod back vrtyd. I M 'o'flp- s'ovo. Oil r i K n 5 . kirfs of 'fow n. A prico ly. larga usablo basomont,>1. Call Davo Lutz 73^1717■or oi O F F IC E ...... 733^07 in Ho pa'klng. yard, Pay» ji S 3 HOME IS THE HUNTER hardwood lloors. Insulated,II. Town & Counlry Roalior: division, Washington SI.So. l.: bsmt, $325 + $100 dop.,F ulllllios. l60Vf W, BOWII* 9 o f ...... ONLY $135,000 lora joycoCoto'...... 733-876 4 1 block wosl on Pheas.asant roo. 733-6834 allor 5:30 pm storm windows. {17,000, 733-0716.______^______Davo H am letl...... 733-403 ’P^-- Evans Proporty Mgmt.:j^ K No moro searching- wo'vo !l^.WO Rd. Easy terms. 734^6941L __ 3 BDRMS. 2 baths, gas13 trotroat. i«ri^______. 7 ^ 5 . ___poLlhQanawot.io.your.hous.—. CAN YOU BELIEVE? $12,500V) 2 ACRES w/3 bdrm homo,mo. SUN TRAP RANCH Homiomo will docorato to- lessei - -rr-rraS-ACBM Homjm oond-outbuildings P 3011 pallo, loncod, land-ind- oitoo. Boaulllui open spacc ^'’®f,2l^ 2 bdrm APT.^A/cTwal^ 5 Ing noods. Soo our now (or a sound slurdy 2 OVER 50 UNITS ctiolco. N W 'Section Tv slto-bullt homos at VILLA full wator sharosros, in 5 ocro parcols. ' bodroom homo, storm„ scapod.-fruit Iriios. & watoialor hot artosian water. 734-^208. Fails. Cali 324-8900. ' sowago included, ulKUSC S DEL RIO ESTATES. Pricod sharos, S55.000. Call 324-369: , ...... i n s t o c k _ . - - - not paid. $250 mon. 4 ‘» » » H windows. Insulalod. hard TOTAL OF 3000 Squaro loc _____ 3~ bodroom. carpolod.-$:[>.-$225 • aop,-.PIU3 ulllinos: C a i r ^ 3 from J41.000, 12Vii% ownor ..w o o d lioors.-A good in­ -S a S li...... — _u. ---aO ACRIS Noxf>xf to city limits, sub- — In this newer homo locale mlh + $150 doposll,"■ 7^ Included, No pels. b^36B g£ S voslm ont. In Murtaugh, on 3 acres, Lovolovo'lv *7NEWD0UBLES 4799,______division potontiotioi. brick homo and 2 ACRES with 2072 sq. It,IL 3:! landscaping, Excoilont vievview *12 NEW 14 WIDES ;------2 BDRM DUPLEX. R a t ^ H AURORACAPITAL” sh o p , full w a to■ r rss h o r o s . bodroom home all largo Ihed' •11USED12W10ES 3 BEDROOM w/appllanciu9 All Joncod. Priced bofO'otow •2USED10WIDES -34^4221) POsH’ N o pols, 734-9652> ^ ■ 2538 Klmborly Road REALESTATE liropiaco, Wilf consldoiIdor market value. Call T Lo * .3USE0BW IDE3 $300 month & dop, 734-4: 73+*34? , 543-8806 baroland or Ilx up homo1 na as Woltjor 734-8254, Town , . 3 PICKUP CAMPERS allor 3:30.______— 056-Rooms For Rent 3 trodo. Counlry Roaltors 733-0718. . 7 USED 14 WIDES $350. Large 4 bedroom 2 bi ^ j p ^ E S I'o3, ro- r o o m m a te s ' WANTE0«1i5 3 IMMACULAT^'B^tC^o OO OblN& S acro mini (arm, TWO ACRES- nico 2 atory. carpoi, drapos, timo rool. doublo garago. 4 PRICE REDUCED, ownoi ' 3 Wo trado.(or used (urnituIture. Irlg, stovo, hoat i wator wa a 4 bdrm houso, $150 meliltr: " com plolo. J80.000,-l4-down,- ,51 bodroom . 1\4 bath home Quns. cars, farm machine . East, oil uillltlos paid. C onliU « bdrm s. 2 baths, famliy room, balanco 10%. 934-8313 ownor ~movmgout-ol-statol-$24;30(] firopiaco'."' garago,—fonco nory. paid, 1356 11th Avo, Ea flropioco, living room, dining -' cash and iako over poy- ■ ■&oals.'lruck3:ilvo5tock;-h;hay.- Avoliablo“ Ocl, 23: Evans Evo Terry Konnody 734.9S78- : - ^ .b _____ WANT A HOME? Interosi paoturo, good financing. 3t room. ciosots galorol 5 m onts on this Iwo story, * 4 w est ancT mile south c Proporty ManagemolomonL WEEKLY- Nightly- MonlWi/^ % ratos loo high? How aboulJl bedroom homo on 1.77acros 734-1401. Somo kitchens, $35 &■ ti p a drapes, pool room In ™ Joromo. mSM. n«B7i basom ont. Sprinkling this? 9% assumablo loan" In Iho counlry, full watoi .BROCKMAM’S ------.--- dovs 733-0874. ovos 734-30a“ ■ ___ - plus olhor available financ-. ngs _Mori«llng Associalos Roa syslom , Will (Inanco 12%. I 7 3 4 ^ S2 8 5 9 ^ oharos,-lot3-o(-oulbulldlnga MOBILE HOM ES» ‘ ■052-Fum.ApL&Oup. CALL733-W58. lng lo quallllod buyers for' for animals, largo assuma- Ihfs quality 3 bdrm homo VERY CHOICE Short acrn acr 93 Highway & Intoratato 057-M.bll^oSe .v,-;i 2 blo 10% loan of $40,700,00, rwin, P h o n o i ^ l 6 7 o_r 324-1203 A BRIGHT CLEAN Apl, N loadod with oxiras.'locatodf Call todoy, $85,000.' bulldlna site ciose lo Twir carpet, paint. $130 4h eloc-eli 3 BDRM In counlry. ”• In Buhl. $78,500. Call BIN, ono o f tho bost. Call Jo Iricltv. 733-5365,______expandos -t- add-ons. Onm S43-8464 or 543-6332. I 734.3393. Main Weal Roalloa°i5 BURLEY MUNROEROBIRTS Kasota Road & Inlorstololo84 FURNISHED BACHEUHELOR $nT5/mo, 734-9077, ...... 2 BORM houso In Edon. NowZ REALESTATE ^ Phone 438-5707 or 438-8303303 apt. All uliiilloo inciudt wiring, now plumbing, In­ 5 'ACRES FOR SALE b j s i b ' *14? month dop. 733-424W248’’ 05ft-Offlce Rentals •■'ViS • 'X aido romodolod. $17,500.5, , 543-8806 ownor wllh lerms, 324-588'saa? OVERSTOCKED ON US h o m e s , a-18-12-14 wideslos 2 JEROME- Nico 1 bdrm. = ------Bdffn3Tanow-as$50t r u c t io n ;- h ig h “ “ OM-^Buht-FllerHomes llmo only. . . --...r...ENERGY EFFIClEhlENCY.-ALL REASONS WH ONE 14wldo 3 bodroom, VHY YOU SHOULD. - BUHL.’ -pilCO roducod to0 PurchotoDIae[•eount*d M ertagci ...... LOOK AT FUTUR/iJRAMA HOMES. . $45,000 on now 3 bodroom. 2 C o n t i a c t sI AI O sadi ef Trust ONE 24wldo 3 bodroom,m, Hurry. BroclunanB Motloblle bath homo, doublo garago, •OONWof Fllor.Trod«id« for h o u se In Filer. ■ In qulot counlry sotting. Call Hom«8 M al Kasota RoRoad ...... ______: . j Futurama Homos, „ - •eONWo(FII«riOood>» d 3 br. h o o io . Iclni obastft------438.6707.------— Gudrun 543-6800 or Western Ol. Ooo'd d in , good lorms. “«A o ffe n e o o r Realty 733-2385. • Twin Follt - 196^oaei. :t4xS2. 1078, 2 bdrma, AIL SPACE I • Cholco Butil 80 on Hw'fwv. 30. loroo homo. batha, apacloua arran • AAolivotodiollor.Fllo^llor.aO W. oTDoodmon's CurvO 'iii n o w aAVAILABLE j ______Womi ment. Waallnghouae n □ma: Horn* S w e at Horn* Bulldar^ 1 - ______- - - 033-Klinbefly-H«n8on —------*-434 dry lo rm HollHolllHor------pump & proclpltron, wi PhylllsM.Crtlisr S: 4 5 0 tto o 1 4 0 0 s q .ft. BY OWNER. 358 Birch St, S, - softener, kllctien w/up - *y:A ddf.d dro il: 104 E. A va. F.;*rom o, td< .1 . 10 Fllor Avo, C. w aahor, dryer, 12x12 Phono: 30B-a34-BB34 - - Klmborly,-Spacloua'.3 bdrm ...... —I...... all brick, Jllod rool, hoi wator)r t>.0:'Sox411 -(2C8)734-S3B0.ISO, . tached, Inaiilaled - ahi 16 733-2282^ ^ ______i _ _ ...... hooL.llroplDCO, & ig_wood.,d. ______JotkRa.inu...nAn ARA • Elbort DovI* ABA a - -> hiirnlno stove. $44,500. . I i i •,

Sundiiday, Oclobor 24,1982 ' TJmpjim p^^ows. Twin'FaJiB7idafioC=il-:------

______^vEiXa ^ ______A

M a im i P f i

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' 056-^ce Rentals 067-Mlscellaneous 067-Ml8ce»aneous •■ 067-Mi5cellaneou8 ^ - 07*-Mu8i»l . 079-Appllance3______.090-P6ts&Supplles _ ' Op&-PasturesForRentll 112-irTication a c c e s s i b l e wilh privalo Largo almond CAROUSELL ______P.A, SYSTEM, Custom Mixer Upright froozor, 2 whoolfu ulll ^ - AKC REG, Brittany pups,. {75{; FALL & winlor pasluro.). irrim- ■ HASTINGS FIREPLACE. 3 yrs oid.I. 22 FT. NECKOVER. Goosen Wllh graphic EO Monitor"O' Ity Irallor. Pocan dlnlno' sol.soi oach. or Irado for Gormaman mediately available. 829- 8?( GATEDPIPE ------ETteallant«)ndr324-fl509. ------° -Oulpuln6-«hannol^i-i-Io- l o - - 702-755-2573fnominos. ■ • rail ;»«ilo~on att~3izos."'Dilt ------nodrdaftJodtrallorrTandom’a Impodonco w/2 PV column *50.,______.LAWN MOWERS, used &^ axlo, ramps, {3000, King size USED AVACADO S/S RolorrtTr. 91^71.’ Mathers 6 milos s ol Kim* AVAJLIABLE for RENT of I box springs, {25. Junior„ C.I. ^ borly. 423-5847. Evening SORGHUM robulll wllh irado. repairs, 19 cu ll. No only {346{349. AKC REG, Brillony Spanl< ;n »-llve»lockWaiilBd LEASE up to 2000 flol Olllco. 32i§45L______skis, boalo. 7334235 aflor 6 — Bannor Furniture. 73>1421.121. pupa. Shols wilh parvo, i Sj___ calls wolcomo.______11,000 H of wofotiouso Of : SELMAR PARIS lonor sax- IS BACK! LIVING ROOM drapos 12' " S ’ USED FRIGIDAIRE Whit.ulTT. wook3 oid. Exc, linos, {55, {5 l^ lslo in Springer Hollers 0 buslnoas. Good vlaibillty & D OeS-Computers aphono. oxcollont condillon. a monthly dairy ossignmonSiSr PIPE SPECIALS . location. 734-2SS8, Al or Bill, wldo. 7’ longth, Looso - {TW. 678-7741.______Range. like now. {249.9C ‘Haslings aluminum galod O n P a y le s s D ruo’s woavo custom made, whiio — ’ Bannor Furniluro, 733-1421,121, AKC Rog, Pomeranian at;0,5P 645-2328 1 645-2438 BLUELAKESOFFICEPARK; ° KLEENLINE DISTORTIONflJ WURUTZER 3 keyboard ____, •& mainline plpo ______Parkinglot wllh bluos i ’ aroonB, Exc,•' (liter, 120V-20-A-M hoavy WASHER and DRYER1 Iclor AKC Rog. -Shl-tzu pupups, ------_ ‘DazocPVCgaled- ...... Spaco avallablo (or loaso or shapo. {150. 73f-2255 oloclric organ,.Top ol tho aalo. Call 733-8587, .. 934-5971 or 733-5988______saio. 300 sq.(t.& up. Avalla­ InTwlnfalls. duly. Coal {450, sacrlllco“ line, llko brand now. Now - 102-Cattle • — • •Plpolinos inslallod MAGIC VALLEY Flea MaikotIt {156.733*7291 blo ' sorvlcoo: socrolarlal. , S3800.- {2500, Soo at 1508‘Sw 3 ELECTRIC STOVES, 73^734-. A K C - REG., minialui -aI T b o b BAILEY p i p e SALE is held ovory Sal. & Sun, alII ■------' ^ 4243 or 734-9990.______Schnauzer puppies. Sail;!!"• ANGUS BULLS FOR SALE bookKoopIng, answorlng Mapio ( syrup &rrlbbon cano? Iho oid Soloway Store in Mapio, Bob- 734-6558 8-5. or ^ HOWARD'S Angus RanchiCh 2V^W0F HOSPITAL 733-4013 sQfvlco. copy machino. con* Jsyrup also. Um/iod i/mv i oltor 6:30pm 734-2506. ___ 30 INCH. RANGE wilh.roliarolis- POPt>Of. <23-57^8______' - Ruport, 8 10 6 Saturdays. 115 O^-Camera Equip. ^ Cail64^91S _ - - SPECIAL FALL-PRiCES - - (oronoo room. 733*5200 or supply, ' s o hurryl if 12 CHORD Magnus oVgan, sorle. {140.324-7304 ___ AKC R»g Whllo Toy Pood 734*4201.______lo 5 Sundays. Buy now &S Miranda Sonsorex. 35mm sir jinor puppiea. 734tW8$,______COLOSTRUM FED dayy oldoi PVC gated pipe. AMOTH usod Itoms. Aii al iow pricos.1. 50mm F l,8 Ions. {110 324-4. roal good shapo {35. Soo3 al 40' GAS RANGE, 4 buino 7^ 1, calvos lor salo, Coniacsniaci IRRIGATION 4 SUPPLY, Call' DOWNTOWN Olllco Spaco. ^ELECTRIC Incubator.;■ For booth call 43W927 or>f 3650.______Doluxo Motor Lodgo f118 l8 grill lop, {50, Homolilo chai.:hain AKC REGISTERED BlaiIV,'' Barnoy Lllllo, Moglc Vatiok'atloy us loday, 543-4777.______£25-sq/lt to -1250 sq /lt Ro* Choap.[ Salamander oil» 438*9683.______- aftor 3:15pm,______saw. 14 'bar, oxc. cond. {IOC{100, Male Cocker Spaniel. 6 wk Dairy, 438-8292.______modol willh loaso, 733-2624. hoator. [ Aniiquo Jenny Land 100-200 Zoom Ions for ^ 5 7 6 6 _ {100.734-7084 allor Spm. - — USED TRI-NATIC Irrigation , MEAT SUCER^-Scales. lablo0 Cannon camoras. S95, 734-4. 1914 Buoschor Saprano Sax-iTt- ______7- : , COLOSTRUM STARTEDD ButiBu syslom ,'/4 mtio long ItJby 40 Nlco shop - w holosalo build* bod.\ Oak library tablo. aphono, {1200, or mako of- 'ATTENnON“ HUNTERSl w rp o i ‘gylnp lowor s irot* 8l chairs, moal casos. loun*-I-- 4220 allor 3:30,______Calves for salo. 324-7360.0;___ll. drag lubo assembly. Will i l tnln X len mnknr. sandwich . 060-Heatlngand ______I'ou wai^i QjiulL accont bosl ollor, Can_be------,-.tn3ulalod..734*2336. ___ _ ._unil i ca3h_roai3iof._324*_ - machir>o.-S32*4153ovoninas.- --070-WantedToBuy_____ 1^:;::^— posilion-i-ls-s'slrong-r ___ calvos lor.aalo. 324-5042.2 . soon in Nompo oroa, D o y .,...___ 7518,324-2660,324*8912, r " “ 0?fr:-OttlcBEqulpfnent— NfA’L ' «W3S2;NlQhl3722-504l Exorclso oquipl: woignis. BUYING & SELLING alt __ DON'T BUY a woodburnintning irlovor lhal will work roirola- lor salo: 7/8 SIMMENTA 061-Garage Rentals Ibonchos. & roiior machino.1’ Pocan dining sel. Upright. form s ol gold & silver, Cor»-t ^ THE EQUIPMENT■NT slove until you comparoI otobr ' lively slow & ctoso lo youuiry t BULL, Provon sire, CALCALL Roasonablo. B29-51BQ. freezer. 2 whool ullllly irail* ,, NEEDED FOR A NEW OR OR pricos, Hilchln' Post. Kin'Kim* a Wolmaranor. Pups ffor 324-5922.______113—FarmSuppIies INCX)OR / OUTDOOR ' or. 702-755-2573 mornlnns. ' tinonlal Gold 624 Bluo Lakos Storaao lor boats & cam- IFor Salo Portable Hoatiialor In . 734-4567,______EXPANDING DAY CARE\RE borly. 423-4029. ______8aIe.67S<»49______----- FOR SALE; SMALL soloi e PFAFF 1222 Sowing - CENTER. SPECIAL soloct f a r m DUTY iiocirTc DOrs.Call734^280. Ilor llroptoco. Thermoslatic ? BUYING all lypos ot unlquo ;[AL FRANKLIN Woodslovo0 .i BEAGLE MALE PUPPY, AAK ^ ^^b^od Angus .here Motors. Ihp {120.; 2hp {184.; ...... — (control (an, {85. 324*5168. Machino. top of iii}o. Button '0 PACKAGE PRICE, CALL^LL Lava rock lor lacing wallall &. ren. shols givon- {95. 76 ■ . holos, darns, sirolch stii-i. anilque clolhlng. 733-4218 . KAREN JOHNSON AT — ^ 3hp {237.; Hoddor Eiociric FOR SALE* pickup tooi t»K , AT .iioQf. *230. Call 3 2 4 ^ aalloL. l l c ovonlngs & wookenda^ HOLSTEIN SPRINGINC 063-WantedToRent~ ( * chos. {21.6S/mo, Croditit BUYING: Evorythlno in-goidId ' KAREKOTTAGE OR WRITE‘' ' I 7pm 8 weokonda.______S’NG. W ^169i______{100. Quoon bod & framo® Mananor*734-5267.______^ & silvor, Idaho Coin Galior-r- FOR INVENTORY LIST, 116 _ bea u t ifl il ' s ia m e s e kiKIT- brod and opon hallors.• Als STEEL BUILDINGS. Extn . {too. Desk {75. Blown Am FRESTANDING' Corncsrnor TENS.{25 oach. 688-2781___ holfora 3 monlhs I f REPOSSESSION. Kirby io s. 302 N. Main. 733-8593, ABBOTT DRIVE, MOUNTAIN .n Inventory sale. 30' x 40' K6-Moblle Home Spc. Isido*by-side rolrig Iroozor I, HOME, ID63647, 58^8273 Firoplaco. Enamoi linistn'sfi. BEAUTIFUL Soal pollolnl yoarllngs. Dollvory upon a| was-{73j» now-{3580, 50' X {225, 733-6017. Vacuum Cloanor. Musl soil.!. W A H J .IO BUY; Used or mobilo homo approved, vor 13s proval. Subject toinspocllo ADULT Mobllo homo park. \ . Bosl ollor 734-6870. burnod oul oloclric motors,s, LARGE MEDAL socrolarlal ’'0 0 ' Slamoso kitlons, 3 only, « 100'. Wos-{26,139 FOR SALE. 700 watt Inlrarod •fl“j good cond, 733-4036. oach, 543-6659 or 423-4278.B on arrival, HRDLICKADAIR now-{12.922, Othor sizos larQo lots, com ont pads lor ^ , RV REFRIG. g a s.o r 110V,; 324-48n or324-S665allor5. . desk, {125, 536-212? ^ CATTLE INC, Rt 7 Box 14! - -douWo or—olnglos__ Rot. -__slyMng • tamp lor barber or (i . WANTED. BORRED Rock:k evenings BLACK MALE KIHEN. Fro ovailablo. Catl flood at 65^ bOQuircion, usod vary lllllo.' -{350._FaUILrod slowino.; 082-Bullding Materials .„to cnippowa Falla. Wl 5472154729. 229SPrea1on. ------Rooms. Grandvlow No. | li h en s. {2 oacfr. Pop machino. - Puilois. 324-4826------S Box iralnod, S wooks. cut 715-723-1171,______Sholby's Counlryaido ‘Sold lor ovor {200 now, will ------CALL 3264203.______dispenses cans. {300, 536-^ Wanlod lo buy ono lon ofif’ ’077-Radio,TV4Stereo ■ ~ RED ANGUS BULLS^ — 1,000 gal. DoLavol bulk lank, villaoo. 734-3120.______^ sacrinco- {150/mako offor. lows Championship Qerriu Iinh«r 2 yrs oid. aulomalic washor. Dicks Holr Caro, 678-3451 or oood hay. 733-1119. - COLOR TELEVISION, Usod,^ CD PLYWOOD blow! Add calving oaao, hight 1 SPACE AVAILABLE* 64- ! ' Short halrod pupplos. AK woaning wolghls. and "O".®/ pro {8000. 3 Low-Llno bou-matic 678*8021 ovos&Sundavs. ^ SURPLUS ioops! cars.1. WANTED TO BUY. Sol ofof Large solocilon froir r Rocont Edilion ol Woridid {149,95, Kon’sTV&Appl,42C 'ROLLED Roaling- while — Its 10 your herd. To FOR SALE; UKE NEWI S9,95oroil, OfJs V20PQ.-934-5167.______, {50, For Info, <312) 931*19611 Book Encyclopedias. 733-3- Main Avo Soulh, Twin. DESERTSKYKENNEL:i S bloodllnos. Proven rocords Ronyolda Ptlnfaslgri — I ‘2x48'Ul»lly.{.99 i’u r ______AQUILAANGUS (6 (t. Tradoswind combo Merchandise______fmachjno,__ Originally— cosl- Jornjtd-VMF UHF-FM -An-A n --:— •|ZTlua'55rSfiaK057{45:00-roon- -SPEeiALlZED'TRAININ bod. 52 inch sides wilh THE LARGEST solocilon. ol INon aiiss.ldaho83314 -J3000 will soit Tor {300. 734- il 1967-72 • Chovy piekup lor}r lonna. booster, rolor, & ca­ InOUNOOGS.Obodionco.=o.& Amy&ArchioWalkor0, scissor holsl. *2400.678-3796- 067-Ml8celIanMU8 11444 ask lor Mr. Bowman. unflniohod furnituro- dross*1* parts. Call 734-V953, ble. {200, Sonar Scan crimoimo °‘’‘ W 'SheelRock.{3,991 Prolecllon, Dogs S PupsJ for( 352.^222 pr 678-8042. Q Iass/brass Ilroplaco doors, ors, rockora, sloois, chairss ...... ootoronl sy3lom, {800 otor *26'Wldo galvanized DoliaDoll salo. Call 326*5809 BABY WALKER In Excolloni i . and roll lop dosks, Tho Mary bost olfor, 734-0437, Mlko Vos 352-42922___ ...... ,— — . Condlllon. {IS or bosl ollor. with ’ hoalor & blower, Uko I OTI-Shbes&ClQthlng _ tlblin63calinodll. DOG HOUSES Woll madol horn 114—Fafm Impie(nent8 new {250.733*48?4 after Spm ® Carter Conlor. 733-3493, 2118 ' MAGNAVOX Asirosonic>nic (Can olso ordor colorod c '0,18 .REGISTERED short hor 733*9255...... - . . ..[ , . FourthAvo. E,.TwlnFalls, lor sale: SIZE 8 & 9 Ladies 10 at 3(203 at the rlghl price. 2'’ 2 bulls. 733-4393.______; HOMELITE CHAIN SAW.-23 n solid Slale Sloroo. high lidol-jol* ,g3callnodlool).______nil|n»' fin aliDOrt R ------ARTS WAY grain mix wagon, .COMPLETE STEREO J i - -UooBTOspllal Bod.-aoclrter-— -DRE6S-PANT5: {lO.oa Call- 'IlyT FM-AFC. AM-FM, STPH,P H . ------7^ ' TOP DAIRY helfora & cowscow with scales', Usod 8 months. SYSTEM— s 4 0 o ^ o o y s s o y inctt—t> ar~ t100r“ C- Porlo Powor Vacu­ Q 072-Antiques______cond. {275,436-4133, PLYWOODSALES5 sonablo, Cali 543-4752. lwoon9&12om______um i Now only {88. Bannor Walipapor .tablo. cutting = : — PrairplcKon goio all o f ihem.------' tools, zinc SIrip. Iiko now. rrr (Bohind UnllodOII) FOR - SA LE:'-1-Y r.— of.o y r " wan't t O BUY; Poiiod"SaniSanta 829-M40;______Furniluro, 733-1421,______'• ANTIOUE woodon churn (orir MOTORALA MAXAR, Mobilo MINIATURE DOBERMAI DAD'3 TOOLBOX, buy/soil. ^ Honda Gonoralor 900 Watt. 3-;. & baso. Bluo Lakos Com-SS ...... 73MW9 IAN. Qonrudis Bull. Broodinoding JOHN DEERE 216 Bator. ^ -sa lo , good condition. 733*; CoII.,543-4752,______Hand/powor. Carpontors. KEROSUNr Hoator. Laroo® Tiros 2-14"-Sluddod Foftf“^ 8 3 8 5 , ______munlcalion. 733-9444______CEDAR, 1x6-1x12, rougti ___a(?e. Call 436^089.______Good ahaoo. Call 733-8230, ' eloc.,' plumb., moch. All sizo a (Diroctor). 11,000 811/33 whools. 2-15" Snowlroads, .Qy, smooth, channel rustic,c “ s ; FREE KIHENS. Gocioocj WINTER CALF looding, ho trades. N.SpolrilS, 733-19M por f hr, U sod approx. 5 mths, 16" 8 ply roadlrood. CallSl NEW LOAO, SocVolarles,s, RENT A NEW TVI Own a new 324. m ousors. ail colors. Re >• JOHN DEERE 4320 traclor, . Uko Nowl {200 neflotiabio, wardrobo closoi. drossers,3. color TV by renting. No crod-Q(J. V-nroovo. 324-2127 or 32^ Hoai 4 faciliiios lor up to SC Approx. 125 HP. Cab wilh DIAMONDl .68 Point ao- \ afloe 4pm 733-2491, cuto. Call 324-8806, ___ head, noar Hamor. 662-5454 prafsal. U200. asking S15&0 734-2527'■ ovonlnno, ^ 3m tables, bulfels. Susanin llors chockod. 204 Main Avo,iVO, ______555I 1 blower, snap on tools, oxc, WHIRLPOOL PORTABLE= Borlln 436-9425.______N.CAINS/733*7111.______ROUGH LUMBER. MOStOST FREE KITTENS. 5 wooks oiold^ 6 Rogisiorod HoisiotnI Spr-Sp cond. SI2.560, 645-2328,and ' or boat olfor. 733*9504 King H sizo wator bod,•. dlshwashor, now {350. Laniz ii- USED COLORED TV'S,/Tc DIMENSIONS. SAWDUSTUST. I’ll doIIvarrCail324-2i22.—__ I ' Inger hollers'. Duo In -oariy- oart ^afso 64^2438- • ------r Diamond wodfllng rlno sol.’ '-w/bookcaoo r head board. RV Rofrig. {150. Loalhor,f ROUNO oak tablo. ook hl- NEWI {150.324-4732. 3 boy & drossor, bov. mirror.r. nuaraniood & rocondlllonod.Od: CALL 326-3131. FREE LAB puooios,' CiCall_ _Noy.326el278,___ , ______------JOHN-DEERE-2440-lraclor,------aepralsod al $2ra . askino ^ - -chair & oitoman. {150. 803 ------6vos734^474, ------0 ■ AllurasN.TF______• princess drosspr. lancy wat,it, Porlabios 8i consolos.los. _ _ ' „ , 60 Hp, wilh 14S John Dooro {1200. King sizo walor bod 1% 1 HP Homollto gas enoino ' J. Biackor appilanco 733*18044_ 0»-Garage Sales pump. Good cond. 733-7022,- ;■ lib. lablo. loa sol, ond labio. FREE TO GOOD HOME AK loader. 1982 model, exc. w /paddod rail *175, 248 Har- | ; WOOD BURNING Aniiquo .old.plcluroor734-7069.------fogiallorablo-jamalLBoaglK ■1M-H°rae3 ____ cond. manuor or siloago g _ J r , ,= - « » - TJOE-nrHWiF^alo-TTioyo —i4,8-cU7-Fr-r^Ffoc:orTHisata t ■ I'R uuiiti ■" OaK” 'iH e a tm o - ~ speakers (or solo, {200 lor iL«. *ul'y grown. Houaobrokokon, a OHA Maro, Well brokijrokoi Iraclor 645-2328 'and also ■ Lad"y^ d ln n o rP rtn g r^ T : <&Tog^^roll-lop desk. Call11 Slovo. {400. Call 543*5333, - 'Of insldo, Colorod TV, bike:h09. good wllh children. i t. cow 645-2438 ______074-M'ualcal______Iho pair. 734*3123aftor5 _ air cond. 2 Fords lor parts, ail sound, gonllo, 6 yra old, co diamonds tolal* 1 ovor Vt •■'i YELLOW 4 ORANGE Woven 2 ahols, Mu3l find homo lt«* Ir brod, {1000/bost oflooflor. JOHN DEERE 6600 Comblno, caral ,1775. S" )olnar, llko :2 USEO__P0W ER. OP-’■ W oodon Shade in ExcollontII Fonder Jazz Maslor oloclric (reo dOQB, Alt kinds ol misc modialoiy, 734-9737 . 5=. •078-Furn.4Carpels------Sun-Wed— I0oni-6pm— 45 _ 543^59 or 423-4278.______{16,000,1B75 John Deere m — now-{3«3rOoWn1t-Bond-aBw-----—PERATED-ovornoad-1 floors;-j;- condlllon. 45"x88". {40/bo3tI f' guilar wllh caso S-ampllllor, , FREE TO GOOD H0^3ME BOARDING NOW AVAIL/'AILA- 42 HP. Troclor, {5,000. Four 14'‘J495.Callallor5543*4679 ( } ofler. Call 733-9255. :^ l -Hlflhland orcall 734-1270. Ono 15(1. & one 12lt, 733-2140 Mi/slSell!{275.438<3lil. BEAUTIFUL Slolo Top Pool ^— , Dingo Cataloua, lully growBwn. b l e at Silver Troe Farm:arm s. inlert)'l 185 planlor unlls {150 ' Tablo: King sizo Waiorbod]Qd HOUSEHOLD SALE- 12 aponment sized stovos., rc, / Easily Iralnod. wiwell Pasluro. Runs cr slalis,13, ii In- oach. Liltlston 4-Row corn Framo- Captains stylo* 12 ’• manorod. Good wiwith door arena, Call 734-0973,^3, culllvalor. Early mornings or drawer; Botn llko now, Sacri-cri- Irlg.. drossers. bod3, rc children. Must Ilnd hon id h ^ . oves. 886-2133______- - llco {500 oa, or will Irado for cltnor. misc. ltom3, Acros immodlalolv, 734-9737 FRIENDLY V, ARAB goldlni livestock, 423-6254 eves or ■ Irom Aco Hanson o ------good conformollon. {500 500 ( or ■ LATE MODEL Usod traciors' ' . Polollno Eost, Frl,. Sal.,I., >^ FREE lo good homo 4 yror Old Sosi ollor, 734-5377. ____ & olhor.(arm machinory for BEAUTIFUL Volvel Sola & SATTsUn 10-6. i m iles, 13/ ffllc. Watorl Sun Trap Ranc3nn^h diosel. cab. is £ o . Machln- L Lovosoal. now only {599,90, orv Connection 678-4534, i Bannor Furnituro. 733*1421.t W ol S Park, Old & now 100 — Homo Sllos, 543-8052, ciolhos, rod potaloos. otc.lc. GOOD FARM CATS TO gl' Horsos bought-sold-lradod::rt7rt MF 421 Corn Head 4-30" 510 B CASH (or good usod — ■ away-hoalthy, lovable. 1 , ' MT {1000, or Irado lor blade ■ (urnllure and appliances. oi'J' Homa o( Doc's Doctor. 086-Rrewood sizes. Good mousors. 92 ^ 5 5 or PTO sproador. 543-5905. ID I l ^ CTORT S Bannor, 733-1421.______5744______93-Llv03lOCk, PH, 733-8055 V -GOMPL-ETE-tw)ft-*e)ee*-b«<};«<},------A-fOOE&flWKQAINI—------MOOTR------fler-Rievf M prlcod 10 sell al {79.95..95. WE'VE sllcod our pricos3 fc'0 / KENNELS, Annual Fall hu 1880 Kimborly Rd, 734-0988! r Cain’s Cioaranco Conlor,lor, two wooks on cut & spit g o o d 4Hproloci. {1000/boi spin- ling salo. HANDLING DOGjifg j ollor. 734-2647 ’______Chock^ourprWaonnowA \ 733*7111.______You haul cords {85 STARTED DOGS, STARTE ------used equip, before vou buy DINETTES, 5 pioco and7~j 7 P.U. {45.Long length J45y s a- PUPS. Specializing In Labj b s . Wo deliver- wood shavingi pioco. prlcod from {59,95,gs cord. Doiivorod cords {75,’'3 ' ^ All Irom fleld champli' 1 bark & sawdust lor anlm.mi52l RENT-BUY-LEASE in,' or moro {70 oach. Induslrlal or Farm Equip- - Cain’s Clearance Contor. „ paronls, A dependable Chu . boddlno. 587-9246,587-3742. mont. 734*2713, H For A> 733-7111.______Long lengths 3 cords {175,• ' h (ing partner. 734-9<84,6pm.im. 18 MONTH OLD Bay Col —; Dry Pine Mill ends* Cord jlrod Thoroughbred - & Quortiuartor * ' FULL SIZE hybrid wator bod, {50. P.U, {35 U-haul, w W „ NEW LIHER. Champ, sir. _ _ Low A i prico roducod lo {159,95 ^ Poko puppios. Top Ouaiiiaiiiy. Horso. {350, 734-7320?0 or< 2000 Gallon luol Iruck. FORD Guarantoo our volumo, 5^ i ' 423-4083 allor 5.______■ $ 3 0 . 0 0 complolo, Cain's Cioaranco discount lo Sonlors. 5Vi 5 AKC Ron. Evos-324-8355. ____ . F800. 27,000 miles, runs Cenler, 733-7111.______— ol Kimborly. 423-4360. OLD ENGLISH shoep d< 2 MATCHED YEARLIN=tLlNG good, 2 comparlmonls, with KING BED. 2 boif side loks, drall horsos. Filly & goldlniilding, dual pumps, motors, reols. - - CUT TO ANY LENGTHS, Lc 764-2525 ______& liilors. {3500. Soo al lablos. 9 ll. dresser, chesi plchup load of llrowood, {6! on chost, {500, 733-3618____— Call 543-8031.______PARAKEETS. CANARIEtlES 2 MULES. Molly & Jack. S' .l,po,l „ Cl, LIKE NEW. French blue love 7 ^ COCKATIELS. BurKs. Fin- Fl Ibs, Rido or pack. 536-261 DRY PINE, SPLIT STACKEC .ocal ovoninos.______4020 JD TRACTOR w/cab, soat. 324-4453 ______— ANDDELIVERED chos, Rodrumps, Lot Malchlng bod & vaniiy J55 raised, 25371h Avo, Easl..TF T 8 YEAR old Morgan maro mon very good cond, {11,500. Cali 'il'y 1610 24 Inch, split largo {55. 73°: 788-2!94______■ _AMS5HCnEIE~J ______CAKES CAKW tES CAKES PAINTJNQ(0 — dro33Qr./:_(iugQ_miiiDt_A----- 1610-18 Inch .-spill modT-{W. 'o y a ^ -J^ n llo , . packs. l700. 73 chair, Excolloni shapo. {150.150. 141016 Inch, split smalU65,f f i - ■■ ‘'63 CHEV 3/4 Ton 8 cyl, Atl Flat work, pallosIlios. drivo- Birthdays, woe«oddlngs or lust inlorlor. oxlorlor, o quality S o e a l 1816 Eiizaboth Blvd’ *5IS Por 3/4 ion pickup load loac & Champagne. 886-2781 — Locking Dill. Runs good, w ays, aidowalks. Qut lor lun. Porsoir anytlmo, Movinn .______looks bad, {375, 733-3335. rsonalizod cakoo work, roaso — 324-3829 or 733-f340 PROFESSIONAL workln’ m ans prico:o.733*1658. 7; about Vi < lasonablo rates, froo 105-H or8e Equipment fy cosl ol storo ostimatos.)s. Call 10am- 9pm, ONE HOLL Twood Rub-ub* FIREWOOD FOR SALE. {£J55 GROOMINGI Vacalionin' !l___ 911 Slahi uliiily bod (Ills 1 lon) ______cakos. Wandnidn 734-0322 ovos, _ >nly_ _ior random dry. {70 In1 Iho. Ih .IUI_board_your dog. .Chi:horl BEN . TARRELL ...SBddliBddio w/lumbor rack. Good shapo. _ H ------advertiseIS E 'c h im n e y f’or found. Call 324-31C1.3168 Miilor Konnels. 423-5104. Mado In Bolso, Exc. cond. com ■ ■ {950,734-5789, ■ - ■ YOUR\ • NEEDCLEANII,NINOJ...... ^'PAiNiiNQ- ^ Furnituro, 733*1421,______ovonlnns,______PUPS to be given oway. or {850.324-6676______Commercialrcial & Rosidoniiat, PAIR ol Whilo Porcelainia‘n FOR SALE Good cioan1 drdry— *0 good homes, purobnbred FOR SALE; WESTERN l[t^hstoc ilS-FarmWort; ' ■ SERVICE SPEC!/•CIALTY Have il dono c xp, Inlorlor & Exierl- Lamps, Usod. {69/sol.301. pine, Discouni to Sonior:liors, Doborman mothor, 326-416.168. saddle, {300 or bosl o((o ALFALFA grass straw iCTORY doanly by m I Bannor Furnituro, 733-1421, ■ INTHISDIRECT! bslim olos. 734-5732, I . Aspon also avalloblo, CaCali PUREBRED SAMOVEIVED 432:5465______— — cusiom stacked, fast Quallly Top hat Chimnimnoy Swoop. . 67^8249. QUEEN SIZE Waiorbod &, all for dolalts. 733-3266.- ___ Puooios. {50, Call 733-7522.22. HORSE WALKER WANTEI“JTED, work, Jerry Staley 734-7922. Plocod undor tno' headinghoi o l COOPER ELEC accossorlos. To highosl 733^7480______yourcholcol fMNOiNG ]“ lost g o o d - dr y Island PatPark SIAMESE KITTENS. Also bidder. 734-9970______Lodgo Polo Pine. Splitlilt & gonllo Appalosa sodoiddlo LIKE NEW Caprlola soddl.^ CORNTHRASHINQ ' commercial, SEALY Poslurpodlc king;ing dollvorod.{65 cord. 733-826'^261. ooldlnn. 423-5947______baskol slampod, llko no\ Cadillac job at Volkswagen Your od will roach'och 22,1, S .Ib lo c k S .o l SUPPLY • &---- REPAIR— = T-t>oard-&.. loolboard. needs axle, totally onclosbd, wo< ■ . REFRIGERATIONi SESERVICE. Depot Grlil.- hoalor {250.' SbO~Tit—181( 'o » - Feniii2er&Scil3 _____ llnot3.537-&31 o r 543-4121121 ° LESUE R. JONES. .INC. IPERIENCE. - 7 » S 0 2 . -II.-Allor-Hours-- 0 seaso n olf rlghl, — 26 y r s ;— EXPEf EDzabolh Blvd IS anytime, 067—Plants iT r w s MANURE FORSALE,I 2 HORSE'iraiior;'i973-w-fw T w - S S 3 . . & - 423-5829^ }love Sl Inslutaiion Roal oood shapo. Moving, ------GRAVEL CRU:^ HED"&-Pn- SaMndlJidlvlduallzed salos & Wo dollvor 733-8552- ' groon. radial llros. like»""»■ no' - tlM4580fHH!a(l ■ BACKHOE EXCAVA1VATION RUN-TOPSOil■OIL. sorvico. 324-324<3419or324*8705. 5 PIECE Wood Dlninn Sol,f t . - - 088-Vflij»tgfmodollno,.polnl-..------30« oach. Gourds, ell shw o ___ 1 EXC. MILKING-goat,'l_very ve RichardParrotl733 -. - — •OtJI— -flonlio,{95r73W177------Dump Iruck &. cconcrolo ing Inlor/oxtoixtor. roof ropalr, ------■ & fll'zeslSt oach. 324.8678 -FOR-SALE-8(KonB-1ol-oi RANCH, (arm or dairy work tors & sldo- & plumblnn.■ 73734-8857. . ADMIRAL REFRIG., {100. 3C — r I‘n0 , 85 Iona 3rd culling hth a y ; ------, ...... - ■ ■■■ wotk. curbs, guttors • 30 HALLOWEEN pumpkins.3 'orIc •^{^a37-6267Tullle.___ ^ wanlod, alrong & rosponsl- ^ ■ . . . . w alks. Roasonoblo.;I0. 733-4727 HOME MAINTINTEN/KNCE AND . ADVDVERT1S£ inch, electric range, {65.»5- Mlo{l*{2.Calf324lM25. 45 8 blo 24 yearold. 423-4370/^ _ ^ W ^ _ d ttv/nlatil for oatlmalimalo. REPAIR •YOUR------■ Gas 'Dryor, {25. All gooflood W .7lh. Joromo.io______’• FOR SALE: 60 Ions, 3rd.ci - -wofklng oondr733-6786 = = ------Ung,jjoUalnod-on. {65 aI tonti - Yoar ®kU.oghomJiaoa-(oa-foc— ^ ______CESPECIALn ------■ - “ LOCKER .MEATTTork-BS ■ In au ck . 324*5943 - ■ Carponlry 8 ' -AVACADO— Rangff,- Black laying or-atayring, {1,25 0oa. ^ H I r e m o d e l ack 'lamb 85c'. bool somo grat 324-4193 finishing, 734*2«-a78='’r ’’” ' ISOIRECrORY ■ gloss. Usod, Exc. Conditiontion Ind on hool 45*55t. 324-2574,I 74 HAY bythe Bole. In field, r ...... Sm all iobs a spocicociaity; Wo 326*5869. '- J179.' 'B annor Furnljure, — j- ■ rained on. Evos-324-8355:5: ___- ..i___■_____ ^ ------Placed unOfI■>dfrthoh^lngof jre, R £o POTATOES, Squasl Recreational - . do m ost ovorythinghing. CALL JiMSTREECA 733-1421.______— Banana & green Hubbarcb a r? MANURESPREADINQ 733*2177.______^ . ^ 1 yourcholcol ' - Leo’a Custom FarmirSn,. ______FREE ESTIMA' Copportono Admlrol 20 cu. Call423-5014. . . 120-A viaiion • BUILOINQ' REPAIRS R It. mfrig/lreezor. Goodood - . —' .■ 326-4703 or 326-<964. — ■ - -Cuivart Plp« • HMdgales Landscaping,ig, , shrubbory' cond, {3W, 733-3254. . — -QflO-Pets&Supplles ’ -' ' - NEW SEEDING -Allalfa Hav H StUKtplpfl'o Armco Inc,C, 171790 — ...... ; _ __ Reilablfi_crBftsman.ion_wiiLro*._____^irlmmlng._tfoi ‘ Gibson Eloc. Rango-Poppy ______with ..Oa(a.,100-Ton3.-BltBiiSS Kimberty Rd, 733-4168 TF. II 121-Boa(34Access.- ^ .palr^o-paint, oror. .i fotnodol--rom oval., Jir ------73-73W931 ■ - H ?ra! AKC Black Lab .pupploi'Ploe, 352-4884.-. . ______-FARMOREIRRIGATIOI b o a t s . MOTORS ft-TRAIL— — homos, lactodos,I, orollicea.or . 734-1484. 27FLD CHP In podg, bot - Slr«w. (orwllh' 1 1ton ‘Your Rolnko ond Wado Ra B & R Entorprisos.j.423-4410 42 ~ 5 paronia; Supor Tiuniln 0 Rain gR s., M jgic Vfllloy. Marino .. . KENMORE rolrigeralor, j "''"O baler. (06*2345. ■» ___ doaler. ■ • ■ -2VtWlon30-93:7^14I. - 5ona-733-5900. ____ n ^ - - --T. RVCGATEDPJP6 - - -WANTEDr.RalnQfl on Oa ...... ^ATa lin a YACHTS, >lrom drawers ' & ' shelves, i:15 -AKC BRITTANY • Spanloli aood Hay, Call 423-6634..^ 10"{2,03-{2.16 , cubfcs. {380.734-1269. 2-3 m onlhs old, Exc. hun 8” {1,51-,{i:76 13’ to 30', Parts {.Aardwaro, r I . era; 3h6l8. {50, 837-669404 cor - I 9l, 2nd 4 3rd crop hay, Seagull motors, 463 Soulh - MIES COMMERCIAL PR& rain on il. Call 352-4( . Locust. 733-6227. - : . ' J | L THEPLACETITO LOOK FOR' ^ SSER FRYER (Broaslor] 637-4847: ______bolorogamoLovos. you— -EvlnrutJo-8i Mercury Motors;------Fine, appearance & porfociloci AKC REG. ROTTWEILE 100 TON 3rd CROP HAY, 1 w o^ln^ ordor. 734-5355. oi boals & Ilshlng lacklo. J^DEPENDABLE,E,AFFOROABLE^t • rain. Call 825-5683, r n :::r Tom'a M*f(n* & Sport Gd#, =— WANTED TO BUYi 3 Im n.SpS; Hejburj/BurLey^eg74n._ . S5._ _AKC^fiEQ._Gorni»il-ahQ .. .. hook &-latch Irrlgallon.pit 3 ? ^ SEBEBVICE. . _ • halrod pupplos. Pardn5 -ae-FarrnVForRenl-^ . *TD 2-738<123------tor, • nxc, hunlora. 324-8737. 'WAMTING To .Rent or ^ ca IT h . -TOWER Raln— Clr. _1grSpofflng.Goo(iC- ' i , ' - -• 'STOVE;.:^ d™liwoshor« or & AKC Rog. Scolllos, black,ick, 6 ^ont 20-40 acroa boiwo«oon Contor Pivots (or salolorjitUi’ or.i f o r SALE; High standard ' — ^ ■Sl*vpofi''couc'hrt>ost-offerferr: -'wooks—old.— 2-m aiea,—8,-1 -T,F.-4-Buhl-atM,. for-1{-1^ . _irado. (Of-3" Ban,i,Soc)SockoL-20GA.-. yorlabla--chokfl._; .- n3-^Allor2om. (omalo. 423-6303 allor 6pm,iffl, , 8oaaon.CaII329-4687.. Handllnos. 625-5014. ■ vonled rib. {89.543-4^7 \ : V ■■ ■' ■ i ' —— 'C-iaTlmes-Nows, TwinFjiFallB. Idaho . Sunday, OctoctObor24,1982

S t e ...... n s S i M e l

122-Sportlno Goods I 12?-MolorHon\ai __ 133-Auto3 Wanted HO-Trucks 142-ImpoftSpoft8Caf8 148-AntlqueAul03I______160-Auto3-Dodge GUNS, Buy. Soil. Trado.10. I THREE MOTOR HOMEIMES LOOKING for 7 yr. oid(J 0.or 1907 GMC 2 Ion 'iruck. Fair Fi 1972 VW Squareback. .$850. $ .FO R SALE: 1950 Sludot Idaho Coin Gallorlos. 302502 FOR RENT. Call 734-2302. Joop cond. 423-5586______idebaker 1974 DODGE DART. :__ nowor Unlvoraal Wlllys Jeof _____ 886-2287anyllmo ___ plckuoaa Is. Call 543-41;M138. Indor. 3 spd. 68.000 , Noflh Main. Ph. 733-8S93. King or Broncowllh Hit windshioic _ . TRAVEL TOWN loalurlni t»ioid 1975 DODGE CT600. landedom. iW TTdVOTA C 0 h6 lLL/ U r2 <>ARTIALLY -rosiorodod 1964 milos. 734-3M9 REGULATION pool lablo.lo. I Sporlscoach, Crosscountryniry. & hard or rag top In gooc}ood. 413 V-6.5 and 3. new rubbiSber. df noia nood oa s miloa OOK! shapoT'WMI pjy ujsli. -733^ 733. -voryTioan:$5000.-676--379S I'oago;___^Thundcjaitd_calLaUoi-Uoi-5pm- ~ - ~ ------wiinfagirronit3nnrT3K0?9- W T ir ~ 734:S7afllidtWrr8'&~15al2ai!L 733-4906. ovoaor733-75l?dfly3. _ j conslgnmonio. Twin laits Fait 5844 altor 6pm.______67fr«)42.______1B2-Autos-Fords ------1977 HONDA CIVIC COUOUPE. 48 Chov Fieel Lino. Ai. THEVROLtf V2 lO ir^ REM. MOD. nOOVonn. Rib.jlj Motor Homos hoadquartorslors. WANTED 1975 or nowoijwer 1975 FORD 1 lon wllh 12t2 ft. 4 ap, from wheel drive, r • All orl- BANK REPO. 1975 25. i 643 2nd Avo. S. 734-2^1___ Chevy Blazer or Chov) funs glnal.666-2^ 0 cailanytii PlnloRunaboul.Falric ^ a Liko Nowi S2M 32S- hevy Williamson slock bod, 4 spd,sp on rogular. 734-6100 askisk for .JJ HUDSON HORNE CKUP SILVERADO VERY NICE 1971 19' Paci’aco pickup body oniy. in goocjood • V-8. 25,000 actual mllcillos. Jenny.______INET. 4 cond. Good lires. iu ■ PICKI'owor Slooring. oir condllionlng. jm Arrow, good condillon, foar roa shopo. 733-5344 altor 6pm.n. ,. $3950, 678-3796or 678-6042 — door sedan, twin 'H'I powerpi rack. 4 spd. Mon-Frl 73 SEA Nynipli 'l2vi,’ oi(jmfnum 1?— __ 1978 HONDA Halchb:hback six. good roatorablo0 condi- ci oskforChorvlorKav. OADED bool t295. Now Insul-drI(jri bed, sloops .5. Dodgo 31fi 1977-DATSUN PICKUP.,P.. 5 Civic, tuned, new llros, gi K ai. _.135-TCyclfl3,iSuppllB3 1, good lion. Iasi of a racingllogecy io( ---- f5rial5:"i977 LTD. ioi ___ _w/bock ft main loboo J105,55, 57493 will (IIcKq;-_Soq . a spd. dual roar .whools, nlco nli __brakos, ailgnod. oxcollcollont will tr«do:“ 734.2442 4 1 0 ^ . . AT A LOW Romlnoion 1100 12 gaugono Intormounlain Molor Homo; Di;n camper shell. $3100. 678-37-3796 Inlorior, complelely J2 aller ^ /T , p /s . P/B, A/CT'J:;-$2000.. PRICE OF . . . ALL 1082 HUSQVARNA / in- 6pm.- Truckol * 6 9 9 5 - aulomollc. vont (lb. 30 pullull In Wondoll. 536-2301.— , Moior Cycles In slock 25% or 678-8042 ■______spoclod. McPhear:oarson ------OR TRADE for 1 lon Tr w/canvas caao. now cond.Id. 1977 20 fl. Dodgo. 36i 1 (Jo- snocks. recharged. Be Equal valuo. 306-2234. 360 olf. Miller Brothers. Wen.Ven- 1978 FORD 150 cuslom d ®Auio H9-Aut08-AMC $350. 78S-33&3.______onglno. roof & ongino air doll, 536-2129. luxo. Good shape. 42,02,000 nook $2750. OK A MUST SELL 1S76 Must ------WINCHESTERmodOl 112, 1212 mony-extros;--Exc. cond ,QM miles. Below low book pricrico. S yoiomo 733-3333,______------: 4 cyl. 4 spd. A ouago. WInchosior modollol $10,200 or bost ollor. VJ?'' 543 SALE OR TRADE? l97fi Casaolle. A/C. Cl COhWPAULOS oss $3000. 352-4283. __ _ _ 1979 DATSUN 210. Iglob 16. 1K-Aul03-Buicl( ° Kowasaki KZIOOO. fuil dross, ...... whools. New radiais, 124, 16 Quooo. Browningng =5^5______low miloa. Extras. 733-7022,>022! I960 1 TON. FORD?’EiExc mllos. $3300. Call 326-5J6-5381 ------■-...... S'% T p u c aulomalic 12 guago. Soil or 79 25(1. PACE ARROW'OW or30oal50S2ndAvO-N.TF.TF. cond, w/traii biazor dioslosoi allorSpm . ______Cond. $2000 or boslsl olfor. | | f ] £ trode 543-5950-______CLASS A. 454 cnov. ExUi 154-Autos-Cadlllac10 734-7331 alter 5. fEVROLET woider w/HoIlarc. 2 yrs. yr 1970 DATSUN 2602X. 2 clean. loaded. J23.000Sm ' 1 9 « KAWASKI 125. $350, or )N. 2dr, I-'14 0 W a it M ain - 12GAUGEShoinun r | ^ bosl ollor. 733-2811______Real pood shapo. Aii lor (1 GL. pwr windows, cruiscjl3^ 5 Lasi ol full sizo Cadlladlliacs. IM I FORD FALCON, RELOADER. Many Exiraa. ^4-4565 810 S. 599 Min. Vlow Q 1979 Fioelwood BrougiDughami boa' oHor. CALL 32324.3115 3 2 4 -4 3 1 8 n 'E iu iju n cu . Oiuan. 10a 8 !iero m « 7 3 4 -6 5 6 5 -cxcolionfconditionr$450-or -P .O .-B 0r t 8l0,-Sun-Va ------7mm RamlnQlon ML wllhIh bost oiler. 536-2129. .1981 DATSUN ionnbci ^ ' “ i079 DATSUN Ironl wh (-Valieyr- *-1974-FORO” Qaiaxy."f’. -oood-: BIHHHHI Leopold scopo (gold ringig, 128-UlilityTrailef3 :— pickup. Exc. cond. $4901900. drive. 30 MPG lown. 7o 40 CO T2&-9265. $9500._____ cond.. now brakokes 4 3«0)t425 Of trado. 7j4-1306. ' __ 1977 Yamaha 175 IT. Good'Opo i^4-6941 ovo. or w eekends. toller 1970 CADILLAC Sodali'flan bo- luno-up. 733-0770. HIEL 3000 nallon milk Iraiior,Her. cond. J550, Aiso a 1973 “ 4 3 ^ 3 1 ^ ' _____' VHIo.$600. 733-3155. single axle, good cond.)nd. Honda 450.i3MJ26:4263; 1981 bODGfi RAM 150. Has ______1978 MUSTANG, exc comper shell. Take ovi mileage. 123~Sklino Equipment 324-5042. __ 1980 HARLE'Y DAVlbSDN ovor 1979 HONDA CIVIC CVCVCC .Sensible deals on now MM paymonis. 734-9201______Station wagon. A/C. AM/kM/FM used cars are your: The Time To Get ROSSIGNOL 19B1 Noww 2 whool Ullllty Irollor. Up. Supor Glido, 1200cc. 9.100 Now Is T I., right froozor. Pocan dinintiling milos. extras. $3700 or $22002200 77 WHITE 3 axlo conv. Nohjow storoo, brand now slSlool Cia3sHied.73WlM1. Racor Ml 160cm. Exc cond., ,500. bollod rad|.ala, broijronze ------— 166-Mefctfry&-yncolaln— luy—O n_The_J9a2. ___ tjO, CaJI 934-4_917.,.__: ool. 702-755-2573 mornings.0, & lake ovor paymonis. 734.734- 335.9sp..nowpaint.$14,50i -T h at-B u ; r ^ . 7320 or 423-40&3 afior 5pm.I 1969 Frolohllinor. 3axio,, 2!250 motallc palnl, accent stristripo. 15&-Aul^-Chiysler 42 fl. COMET FLAT bod trail, n r, cummins. 10 sp., wlil la k0 e 20 : 734-6100 ask forTom. er 1968 MERCURY PARKLKLANE. Pickup Y Y< o u ’v e . B e e n W a it - 124-SnowVehlcles or. Good cond. 324-5042. 1980 YAMAHA 8'50 Spoclal. It. bod. $5950. 1973 For ^------= Now tiros •& brakes, = Liko now. $2000.326-5332 ^o.rd 73VWBUS. SoatsSpooc ,|qj cond. 324-3043______- _ C7000. cal-dlosol V-8. 5+;’+2. Now robulll motor. $22 - 15B-Aul03-CliBWQlel ing For. POLARIS STAR FIRE 440. 1981 Kawasaki KE175- ,800 800 will lake 20 fl. bed, $495i 1868 Morcury Montorojroy Exc. Now onglno. Sell or irado.S: 132-Aulo, Parts i mllos, liko now. 543-8262 ^50^ Exc^shapg._324-3610 1966 CORVETTE. 427.'$i^ $8500. Cond. Low miios, now 733-5401 ovoninns.______3262 1969 IHC 1600 2 Ion. V-6. Accessorlfls______davs pr.S43r63!)8 oven. — cp., $1650. 1971 Dodne 2 loi —T i .32.4:8680. ______Micholln’.llro3_-Soo-al ------2 W H 1977‘Skrdoo“ 44d. oxcoliontnl For sale: PICKUP:UP 82 YAMAHA VIRAGO.,750.750. 4 yard dump bod, V^. 5+: 1 4 ^ W heel DHvas 1970 IMPALA. GoodJ cond.Ci aco. Buhl. 543-5252. HEEL t DRIYE condillon. $995. 733-69B5. TRANSMISSION. 543-6263.1. 1.060 mlios. black, sissy bar,bar. new palnl, $1800. 536-66(6666 1969 Scout 11 Average CoiC ^ ^.2^5560...... ______1971 Morcury Marquis, REBUILT 49 Chry flat 6, ■73 '73 2 nova hoimota. Cloanorir && wookd a y s. ______V304 Motor. Wldo tintiros. 1076 CAMARO Rally1 Sporl,S( trans. $590/be3l ollor.S S ; T o y o 125-Trav0lTraHefs Mazda w/rolary onglno.no runs boliof Ihan new. S2.750. ton} 538-2345.______.350 V8. Auto.. Mags,s, cgood 4^93______O t a T r u c k s 733-7175 9(iStahiuliiifyt)od((lt5ltoi SNOWBIRDS. Usod Trallors.j Mako offors. Eves. 786-^0 w/lumbor rack. Good shapiJPO. 1972 , CJ5 WITH hardK cond:,.$3Q0p..324:25^....L_ ___ 1977 LINCOLN CONTI- O 26' Holiday Ramblor; 28'9' Wfi flEBUILD HydraulicUllc -■— ^ —-- $950. 734-57S9.______G ood cond. 734-9373 alloral 1877 CAMARO V-8.. a aoio. NENTAL Mark.V, desloslgner Roadrunnor: 24‘ Nu-Wa: 30'3' Jacks at ABBOTT'S AUTO — 7pm______good condition, goodid nmpg. sorlos. Exc. cond. Low)wmlle- y ITO. 136-Heavy Equipment 0, Slh Whool Trophy: Sovoralli SUPPLY. 305 Shoshone _ 141-^Vans______1974 DODGE powor wage »34950rb08l-733-8480-____ . ago, 543-5960______now Slh whools. Maudd’s3 Stroot South.Twln.______“'ISn' 1977 CHEVY NOVA. 6 cyl- -1981 MERCURY ZEIlEPHYR 79 CH6VY VAN. V-6. blue LWB. Club Cab, 3/4 ic Trallof Salos. olCTultlo^ExItII WIDE BURTE Romlnnion^^n J O H N D E E R E P/S; P/B. $2450 or besiSI 1n(! Indor. air, good trans- tn Wagon". 6 cyllyilndor, C c 147. Call B37WI492. . . llros. 2 L70.1S. two 11.15 LT. ilko now. Insuialod 1 Donation. $1795.324-5166i188 aulomalic. low mllos.3. .oxc. USED carpolod. now tires. WiWi» 'orJ2 4 :Z .1 ii______;— p jg c ond. 734-2453______WILL SACRIFICE 1970 30’ Airir $40&$30.324-6676______2 or 1976 Subaru 4x4 Wage 72 MONTE CARLO, f Flow Park Modol. good — INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENTiT ifado lor Eqully. 733-6442 c f* 13" radial studded snow _ _ _al_t0L6Dm 734-5876 Noal lilllo car. 25/30 mpgipg’s. P/B . Blue w/while vinyi.riyi.lop! 74 COMET. 2 door. 66 cyl- ' r j / ---- condillon. roar doublo Dod,'• tiros wllh now lubos. Used — ___ Runs good. 436-3878 oves.03 Body Exc cond.. orlgoriginal Indor. A/T. Air, $1150.50. Call roof a /c . $3495 or bosl ollor. iod J.D. 550 Dozor. $36,500 322-3218 733-1735.______^ toss than 1000 mllcs.es. J.D. 544 Loador, $29,500' 142~lmpoft Sports Caf3 ____ 1978_GMC_a/iJ_lQft.. 4 —H X ownor $900. Coil 622-; Soo at Inlormounlain Motor» $75/pair. 734-2647______Cnii Sun Valloy.______Homos In Wondoll. 536-2301. — _ 570A GraOor, $45,000___ Runs good. Bost oflor. C - 2 NEW lOxieiS niua-S-snow ------Datsun 280Z. 5-spd, sunrooi a fle r5 p m .326-5433 ______75 CHEVY. IMPALA.7“vory V 168-Aulos - Oldsmot'oWle 12 FT. KIT TRAVEL TRAIL- tires wllh 8-holo wheels, low miioane. good conc nice cond. 324-3415 ELLIO n’SINC.. 1979 -GMC Jimmy, Hl| ------1980 Olds. Omega; -7 i ^ , BUY ATEr DEALER COST! ER. Exe. cond. $850.786-4573? $160. 733-1712.______, $6200(lrm.?34-2i27allor5. clean 77 CAMARO, now who — 111 Ovorfand Avo. — I Sierra, 4x4. V-6. aulo.. cle. Aiheels. wheel drivo, 4 spd.. PPriced n From 15' Damaaed Breezo Lo0 357CHEVYENGINEwilhlols 1971 VW Sug. Runs groaioa I a s now, $7500. 678-3796M Of A/C. P/S, Cruise, ‘Ols lols ol $3705/best olfer. 324-74t74S4. Liner by Travolo:o. Slovo, Musl sell $liOO/bost ollei - • oxiras. shbrp. $4500/t of oxtraa. Exc. cond. Havo 10 676-8042.______00/b e st .jgg, poila 88. Rrd Bouahl.SoiaARenioO — 73 Wagonoor. Loadod. L ______cond. Now Kies. $700 or ^ i 1976 23 ft Prowlor. 1971 30 tl.- Cuslom (or parts. 734-1270 This W eek's spoclal 1972 4dr m' e RCEd’ES b en;NZ; hubs, TR brakesr coolc olfor. 825:4100 Socurily. Call or soo from 6- IN. •AUl3 ChalmorsTL-20 280SE. Exc. condition. $6000300. new radiais. Sharp..-$240^ 4m! 160-Autos-Dodge lo 6 wookdays or from 8 lo 3?■ 69 BUICK STATION WAGON. ^ A/C. P/S. P/B, crutsrxon-5t». Loader $7500. 734-3200 or 734-7496. _ 423-4933 ______'___FOR SALE O R .t r a dM' e; m • 174—A utos-O ttiers on Sat. at 2414 Addison Avo. dy Dflvo by Bolso Yard E. 734-0678.______Iroi, vlsla cruiser lop, body 1973 TOYOTA Corolla. 3-5pdpd, 75 GMC 4x4, V-8. A/T. P/S.PI. Chargor SE. Hlgh-por fair, bad motor. $175 or willvill 206-37^0143. Boiso. Idaho’o_' runs good, $500. 248 Harfar- Air. Excciicnl condllloitlon, m anco 383. shtd comm, CARS $1001 TRUCKS mmand Available at local=gov- w W 1978 NOMAD 20W ll. Exc. oart oul. 734-0694 anvllmo. 4 WD loaders & backhoos (or ______$3450. Call 73^m 5.:______aulo. maos. 326-4668 m cond. $4.000. 734-7295 ------. ornm ent salos. Cali (ri ------salo- Cail-Machinory_Con-_an-- -1975-DATSUN_2802.-Goot3o’d. _76_CHeVY_4x4 Short box, bo 1969 DODGE Cornoi MS 01 440 cJablo) 1-714-56WJ241 IWO 23’ Prowler; OKC. cond..'.• I^HeavyEqulpment . necllon 678-4534. cond. $4100, Doan 733-876:76t aulo, many extras. $450000 ori ’_wogon. $400 o r beat I of oflor;- 1127-tor jour directorw i MOTOR)R COMB4hLY_: „ aolf contalnod. Call 733-7828 ' or 733-327? mnko ollor. 3?4-g1g7.- _734-0476.- ■ — ^_how2o^urcK550r24hr^ ------31'' 9111 WMUtJIiir. oxcollonl •3- . ?aAf;HnsHr>MF)NE ST. W E .1 tJ_ — 7 3 3 . 2 m 1 . ___ _ condlllor). $8000.726-4781. W e've got youy covered! 175-Auto Dealers 17S-Aiito Dealers 175—Auto Dealers 175-Auto Dealers 126-Camper8iShe!l3 ALASKAN 8' Tolcscoplc. 3' burner atovo, sink & Icobox. _ ------Hunlors Special 9’ Kamp-^ ^ fflO N A U - Away campor. ovorshot FTS | - H MOO K M - alooper. clean, $500 423-5410 ' 1 Catorpillar ModolJol 920 whool loodor. HUNTERS SPECIAL Camperr oxcoilent condition.>n. 1980CHEVR0LIILEiy2 TON PICKUP AUTO0 F I N D E R S ^ 4 ip eo d . 6 cylindor.«y nlco iruck. f ^ s m a ll pickup. $495. 423- 1 John D eere 544 WWhoo! Loador. • ovor 400 uiu d corsirs soldi for satU flod Mogic Vallo) eusiom ofi L 1982! S-10 PICKUP i : 1 FEEDLOTS. DAIRIESiES & CONTRACTORS: 4 cylindor, 4 sps| o o d , with co n o p y sholj. SHELL FOR LONG 'BED • full »lolf ol oxporioiirioncod outom obiio solosm on com pact pickup. 1969 10 (I. Ask about CotorpilUillar's Progrom Finonco • hattlofroo • woadi. Opon Road campor. 1980 ONLY. ®^ 5 6 9 5 advorllso. obloin financing, lOV^ fl Kll campor. Call or' P lo n . whoi ovoril takoi. soe from 8 lo 6 wookdays or For Exampio: 8 to-3 Sal. af24i4 Adolson . ONLY. ^ 6 9 9 $ i Avo. E. 734-0678______Now Equlpmont 20% 2( down approved FREE=E L I S T I N G S 1957 CAMPER SCHOOL crodlt 36 monlhs1 olc 7.5% , 60 m onths BUS. Exc. lob. 13900. 678- PAULOS a t 1 0 .5 % . CONP 3858 or aftor 5pm 654-5762 CONNPAULOS f: 8 tT .'/4 CABOVER. Sloops 4, 1 ^ 1 Coll Al B rutchk* lor Stovo. Ice box. good cond.. _ [WESTER CJHEVimOLET^ f — -tnoro informolion 886-2921 ~~______- - aowrwpff co«wwT~~ 140WW o st M ain - f e M O I N D ^ ^ ^ CHE ‘ concornlng ihi* EVROLET t " A ro.d ■,. io..i,r 140W*»tMoln14< •: " FT CAB hlnh campor. $400. YOUH I oroorom. 324-4318 JcJ o r o m o 7 3 4 -6 5 6 5 - :c. cond. 734-6941 ove. or CAT«nPIU.AP 3 2 4 ^4 3 1 8) Jorom o wookends. ® 7 3 3 -3832 7 3 3 - 5 1 1 0 • I1 l343ll»«l«k*>el.d,N>..Twb< r*II> 734-6566 DEALER 127-Moior_Homes __ ■ ffl 11>..J..CIWI1,»0IC«I*1II1.||.H Imcio’Co - •' Cato>o-iin<.C«li*'v» O J.., 1... ECONOMICAL 1976 ChlMOk' 17’ Toyota, gas/oloc (ridge, neaior. sloops 4. 18 mpg. 140-Truclcs ^ HO-Tnjcks $5995 will dickor. See si n, , 19M CHEVY 2 ‘ion" spud Inlormounlain Motor Homoa CREW CAB 79 Chov ton,y. Iruck. 283 engine. 16 ll. curljri In Wondoll. 536-2301. ' auto. PS. now palm, battory. -•ipuff bod. Ro.idy to go! $99^ FALL SALE on all Eldorado*- Saciiflco $3995.324-6651. 76 324-2512 or 324-5188 Motor Homos In stock. FOR SALE BY OWNER. 1976 1968 INTEfiNAfldNAL\L f iJ Ono 1983 27 ft. class A Ford 3/4 lon Suporcab*!• Travel-All, $350./bosi oiler. diosol. 6.2 onglno. all pickup. Fold down rear soal.C. Cail324-7134. ______fiborolass oxtorior, unil fully sliding roar windows. A/C. equipped. Lls|., prlco P/S, P/B . auxiliary lank, 1969 INTL. 1700A.'s spd, ~2 2 $38,M9/Saio-S28,995. spd. Air brakes. P/S. 1000-2020° “ cruiso control. $l6w. 733- lires. 10 hoio buds, molal Ono 1983 2711. Mini Ford 460. 7461 from 8-5 Mon-Fil. fiboiqlass oxlorior. has ov- 0- spud bod w/boii. 345 V-8. FOR SALE: 1980 Daisun Oo- Call 733-6647.::— ______- s a ™ " ’' luxQ King Cab wim 5 apd. f REIE. Low miioago. good shapo.S; 1970 FORD iruck with 18' van ^ Ono 1963 24ft. low prolllo. all en box & power lilt galo. now Buy a New u 1 | " : molded (Iborglass body. high bo-r-a.- ^ TO-0963. G&GMFG.&SALES -1M2>RElbHTL!NER-^r • HWY 25 spud bod boil. 1962 Fordt, 1974 r o t a r y " ENGINEIE Scottsdolo . PAUL. 10 63347 TBBIChe Diosol 21 (t. apud bod bolt, Mazda pickup. $495. 536-212727 4- s p o o d 438-4580 ^ 1963 GMC Tag Axle 18 It.IQ ovonlngs______V-8 ongino, S ^ to n k o n d ihiiiiiiiiiiiim ib - For Salo Pickup & campor. apud bed boll, 1957Oodgo 162 1 974 WHITE f^oao Boss,' ! oquipmont, ^ - 59.000 miles. Exc. Cond, fl. apud bod chain, d 2 Conventional I0-whooior.' I trons.. aux. 2 t< 2 . Jorom o. 324-3695 allor 5 Lockwood spud Wind1. ^ M O spd. sharp. 733-0717.7. I------‘ Boforo 5:00324-4782 Rowers. Aii good cond. m o r o . N o . 2-42: ------U K E -N eW -t9 7 B -a--S p o rr “ ■324-8294 allor 6 pm______.King Mini. 28.000 mfles, 175-AutoD6alef8 W e a r e | 195 ■ Dodoo 440, roar bath, loaded ITS-AutoDe^rs p r o u d " ~ ' & cloan. $15,900. Will dickor llck«t*lortwe, lo Soo at Inlormounlain Mninr r i t l r i / % 1 ■rnAIrflnailll*!. ----- Horrioft'lrt'Wanaoll.i>36.23Cr~ ' IvT W TlTl VM( u n c e ------'- 4 ,'i Including Fragile onywh«r« Eotlari 82i:tie?y1^lier— rrrr j— MUST S E a 1976 Champion ------ZT198? 17- Mini homb,-35.000 milos, SE k ™ 4 cyl. ongino^wli}i v>ii 4 apood Irons., powoi *leor- : • Cab o /c, crulso conlrol. soil Ing, tinlod qIo s i. rodiol ilro* - ? conlalnod $8995 or bosl -ol-' ' t o 5 . ‘ns lor. Soo al Inlormounlain • WLEIIIH Rick Blir o w n ondmuchmoro.No.o a 1-626. ’ - Motor Homos ^n Wondoll. ^ 1980CHEVInlng, cruiso. whilo spoko OMUY . ,536-2301.______• 4*^ood, air condllionlnlopy-lhod ------____ .has.ioinocLo.uc.x_salos_stafft__ PRICESSLASHED w hnoK w ith nico conpo R!cks invites Ihis friends ’ p SAVE $400045000 or» now 1 ^ 1 1083 Mobile Travolor Mini ------;and past custonimors to drop W Homofl. Wo piust roduco our 5 T 9 5 by and say hollcllo. fne1dutoFr««tlck*t*fortwor*oi /___ - Inventory.-3 plans lo choose O N L Y . (rom. All havo 460 Ford. AT. 1 ; ; ^ •-— anywhar* Eoitarn'Alrllnai fll«| ’----- PS, PB. A/C, llll, crolso. . AM/FM. topo, CB. 2 havo I i[- - • goneralora. Now Is iho tlmo UUAC.^DAY«m lo own ono o( tho flnoat m m • conslruciod Mint Home.p on com 1 MMITIAC OMtm tho markot today. Vou can M l \ ; •nover buy ono choapor than. . ROLET Hell . y f a n s e n ] right now. WE lako irado Ins PHEVR — and '-h av o - bank -financing . ■ } 4 i> w .-, ' ^00 BLOCK MAIN AVE. E ji^naLETl — avaiiablo. FRONTIER »rem> 734»6S65 ----- ; — PH. 7 3 3 .ta ? 3 .4lUKLARC»|iC»^OflTH«M»»OLCllNtftOaO-----1 ' ------MOTORS, 356 Addison Avo. 324-4318 J.r. — W.-TF,-73«340------1- 1 ^ ^ . . . ■ y .. I — -Timos-Naws. Twin Falls. Waho

Weddings D2:l; : P 3 . - y ^ V a - . Dear Abby Dfi \ _ ■ i l l e i y l j ] ^^^VaDe^^gpennings D7 - O lId e r G irlLScc3UtS 1 deciic a lt e d By LORAYNEO.SMnrtlTH ■; T w in FFalls j and recently renewedd Scouting was a-threree-generalkwi H er hihusband, Paul Norris, whoho She ciiose a Negro0 girii to sing a frlendshlIshlp with the Baden-Powells Times-News writer h er regieglstration for the 45th year,r, affair. Her mother,. inow 83, also died In June, 1980, became so solo obligato part, overo' racially- becamen e Interested In the Girl appear!IT lo qualify for the respecllve'e still is registered andd was director involveded In the activity that he was'as Inspired objections,, bul I after the Guide; 1 movemenl in England ------TWIN-PAbl^— MilMildted-Norrls------honorer■srUnrau'saldrMrsrNorrls.'—K------of-a-campdn CallfomlijlffforlOyears------once-ldedentified-os-“that-man-Glri-Uri------perfo rmance~she~**ne TrnccortUng-toihc-GlriScout------and Zoe Schuckerlrt had never who ha£las 17 years of leadership tolo imtil "retiring” aboutlUt three years Scout.”” He would drive .to campTip word of complaint.” handboolDook grew out of the forma- ■ heard of each other untilun ^ n t l y , h er ereTedil, registered last weektk ago. and pro'irovldc security on thc lastost Lady Badcn-Powel«11, - who - was Uon of Ithe Boy Scouts by Lord but they have one Imp.mportant thing with theJie Silver Sage Council, Mrs. Norris nevera*-was a Girl , night of day camp when the olderler first president of the! GiriC Guides in Baden-Pin-PowclI in London in 1908. In common — Ihelrr d4,64. Juliette Low, whoI through her -•See a SCOUTS Page D6 giving training, andId serving in Includinjling firecratt, food, crafts,:is, many capacities incli:ludlng music gear andmd shelter, map and compas,as, . leader and cook, for tTycaiKi7 H<^BiTfi~ White ^ e obvlou^ylyenjdy^her leadS^^ ip ^ activity,, the Icadersliship she pro- sh e is credited with starting thelhe vided for so man;my years in first daylay camp for junior high andm d Oklahoma Cily alsoso served as senior' highi school girls In theLhe therapy, not only ioor r her bul for Oklahonloma Clly area in 1963. Priorior -1-:— her-husband-and-dalaughter.aner_._to thattttlm e day-camps .wcro.helde ld :i______:____ the tragic death of anUl older girl at , • only foror ^ ris up to the sixth grade,de, ages. wllh only01 __the longer lO-daylay Admonished by herir doclor nibt to sessionsins for thcold^’glrls. have any more chlldrirennor adopt “Noteit all the older girls were ableblc any, Mrs. Norris repllJlledi "At least toattencend the (stabllshed camp ior.for ...... -...... you can't stop me! from loving todays,re, but with day camps closerser ,51 ^ other people’s chlldrer'en.” ' to home,ne. It was cheaper and easierJer ifl I And so when her ononly daughter, for therHem,” the longtime leaderier _ 4f? e . y j ■ Paula, now Mrs. Paullul Brackett of said. B Three Creek, went totc day cam£j______She foundfo in le^ tin g siles, suchich ______■ h er mother went too iandmoUie^a as a far[arm near town, for the day[ay ...... I them all. The campp was held at cam ps,s, and scl up thc advancedx d ( ■ 1 / ^ Lincoln park In Oklahchoma City and campingIng program for the council, ^ entailed an hour bus riderli lo reach. All lhthis effort did not go un-in- i . / <3 Part of the routinele was for the rewarde-ded. She was presented the young-girls-to-have-a-a-rest-period"*” ^‘Thanks « cach afternoon. Ones dayi when it Inliercocouncil, for her leadership. \}fer^ i V ' ^ lum ed cold, Mrs. Nororris put eadi H er’ didaughter also look traininging B girl on the top of the t concrete^ and beejecame a camp counselor. E picnic tables which wevere loo hMvy Mother:r and daughter both at- m forhertomove. tendedUd the national Giri Scout con-on- ■ She noticed the. girlIris seemed to ventlonm In Dallas- and El Paso,s o , I know only one song"4 which they Texas,I. ■ sang over an_d over tilt: ll "nearly The: BiBuhl woman was serving on H drove her crazy” so she taught the boaiaard of directors of the Re-fie- ' I them a new song whiclich had many dlandss CCouncil al Okalahoma Cily ■ verses. a t the: ti:time her husband, who wasvas ■-rTTp=^fr=next—momlnilng-w.henT^er^ = ranTardil^tccluralrengineerrretlre^ 3 b o a i^ ^ the biis, thele girls Had a They mimoved to Buhl In January, 3 __ scat saved for me andnd I was 'In’ ” 1970. toto ibe near their daughter and u she said. "son-in-lfli-lQW^nd their five children, ■ ^ n “shc-was-asksked to train One^c•-of-her most memorablebie r leaders, mainly tcachihing them how experlericnces was when Lady Agnesnes il to become song leade:Iers. This was Baden-P1-Powcll, sister of thc founderder : -J easy for her since shesl had lead of thee Boy Scout movement In :i..... music at Reorganizedd LDS Churdi ' RnglandUld, visited Oklahoma City. \ cam ps whcrc she * dd her husband *nie: vlvisit was In honor ot thc SOlh k-— fllsoscrvedTumiyyfurarsT ------=------nnmvcTstinmry uf Girl Swutiiig- i ii 3 H ' Over the years sheJ Ilook training i962 andUld the Oklahoma Clly Scout out • in various places, Including In one council11 presented| a pageant in the ! located a l.a n Indlailan schoor at munlclp.:ipal auditorium. Mrs. Norris mBmTW.N.«.pln(i>/MARI A SQIARFEH Santa Fe, N. M. andtd a ranch In directed a massed chorus of girlsiris ■n™.Ncwtijoio/MAFa■n \ Schaefer" ------M ildr«Irgd-Norris-wKh Scout.:ilr^ cg alla______^______Toyng______fm m nrrnrpn tmnps. ______7.n*> S rh■rhiirltprt wrraphtpbook-of-Scoutlng------

R e t i r i rng in pipresent ieconoimy cornsiderccd ‘chaincy opption’ ByCHARI^STORCHI who helps run1 ththe retirement planning programpt of the In Empioploymenl Act in 1978. The amendment,am which many declare c a shift toward later:ter retirement. "That trend hasn’t ChlcagoTribunc National Council:il oon the Aging in Washlngtoi:on. "But 1 think senlorcllcitizen groups lobbied for, in d In many cases mandaloiitory retirement lo 70 from fro 65 by prohibiting average : age of about 62. eveneve in this economy." Al a time when the natlcatlon's economy seems to ha\tiave quit early retirement,nt. A lot of people are Just lookinglo forward employer/ers from Involuntarily retiritiring employees under 70 McBride is Midwesternc m region coordinator in working, many older AmiVmerlcans arc pondering lorlong and to retiring.” soldyonion the basis of age. ■• IPlaines, HI., for Actionn forfi Independent Maturity, an h ard whether to follow suitsuit. Unlil a few ycyears ago. It certainly se

P a c - 3Man rati:es with eelders, tcOO etirees»increa^singly /filling By JOYCE GEMPERLIRLEIN • Caused a noticeable not Increase In vislisltatlons by ^ Knight-RldderNewspai>papers grandchildren anand great-grandchildren >who ci\loy I ' playing the machlchines and leaching their eldildershowto - ST arttimee posts;^o kee]>pbusyL^ — - PHILADELPHIA -— Rose Nodler--^maybeI becauscb< " piny: ~ ' ."By CARCr o l e ; a . CARMICHAEL' . sels himself up aias a consultant." olderer can( cam up to $6,000 annually ~ — ahe-TOld'tothlng-suitailts-In the-budget departmerfient of a • Helped somele iintroverted, moody resideaents mingle Chicago'^^Tribune Burris said. andi ststill collect full bcnetllE. T h ^ local store fbr'lS yearears — Is a lively woman whowl has ' with their peerss anand become more social. The newsletter rececentlysurveyed20 .under0 o llonger means dropping oul of of employees retlrin1ng each year. The the allottedalli amaunt ($6,000 or $4,440). One day recently shesh( went to the funeral of' a friend problem, the workrk force. results showed that155 S pcrccnt ot those $ iisds deducted c trom his or iier benefits .. .-.andcamejiwayflibittcI tense and saddened. But il-uit'was not VThe residentsits were excited and thrllleled with the Uie lh past, retircimenl mecneant firms will rehire retetirees to fill in for for everyev( $2 earned above Uie limil...... to her apartment in I the Robert Sallgman HoHouse, a machines," saidd GGoldstein. "For many of them,U about accepUniing p ^ l o n benefits and1 then th employees on vaca:ation or leave, lo Forex;: example, ifapersonover65exinis residence for. the eldcilderly-ln Northeast Phllad(adelphia, 99 percenl. In fact'act, il was the first time thehat they had withdraw'awing Ironxjemploymcnl,, beboth assist during peakc >work periods and $ 10,000,000. $4,000 over Uie allotted $6,000, that she went to brood.)d. " e v e r used an clec'lectronic game. Somo were-e frightened full imd[)d part time,” said MalcoJcolm to train other emplojoyees, Burris said. 52 .0XX) 0 0 Is1 deducted. No, Nodler, a shockicking-pink chiffon scarf streIreamiilg and Intimidatedj b>by them, bul they began toQwarmopto \ , MorrisonJon, director of national studtudies For the last 40 yeai•ars, Harris Trust & Beglkiglnning in 1983. ^ p l e 70 or older from h er hand like the tall of kite, went directlytly to lhe them through their the grandchildren, who ocould leach of mandiidatory retirement for thee UU.S. Savings Bank In CChicago has been canI collectco: Uieir full beneflls no mat- __ n*»u/ gnmn rnom-of the th apartment house to taltake her them how to play.”ly.” ______tment.Qf.Labor..ln.an.lnteryl'rvtew rehlring retirees :and • other~ older ' to r hn<. mind off the sad eventsnts of the moming. A number or eldelderly residents who weree constdered rtewsletter Runzhelmer Repo:ipoite— workers, "Wheh em]mployees aro aooui Uonno1 now takes effMl_at age 72. It was to the Ms. Pac-'aC'Man machine that NodlerIerwent. - .Inactive and Isolalolated have begun frequentliting the new onPr^-ref-relirement Counseling, to retire, we advise>e them thal if they . paiti'atton defiried eamings as inoneif ■ Step aside, Junlpr. ElderlyEll people like Nodler; anda: Abc game room, he.addadded. . , “Ihthethe future, however, retlremejmcnt wish.to augment ththeir income, they rccelvect ^ • Geraldine Patton01^ a field repre- tionsIS ActA was set up to provide a base ■ - AsteroldsandSpaceln^ilnvadraa^Bve:- them foMreie." chirpedchi Mary Shapiro, 73.' •,ol retireIrementrfrom (he school crocross- sentative with thetie Social Security o r foundation foui for Income loss due to------_ J —lng guanard to tho retired executi veew w ho Administration,_8aliaid retirees 65 and retlrerirem ent,”- Patlon. said.' ■» . ,.v' " i ■ D-2nmoS-New9,-Twln\ Falla,Fa Idoho- - Sunday.'Ocioi:i0b0r24;i982.' ’ " — W e d dl i i i i l 9 S F = ^ = J N o w -€m * m es-britiiUiemt=pticffie-^ Chicago Tribune? “‘works” WOI would be packed inlo a small box)0 X Ithat would hook up to your phone, K q k In rcccnt-ycarars, we’ve seen tele- and'md would probably include a portable -: irtpr nnd smarter, as wirei/lreless microphone that could be they've learned to memoriz^numbers cIIpF - and dial automalijtically at lhe touch of------AllAll you have to do td make a call is : - - ^ ■ iH a few buttons. BuBut Bell Laboratories turnum on your microphone, order ihe • T ■ t f is working on a new Invention that phor>hone to go "off hook" -and wait for a mlghl well be coconsidered going one diallial tone. Then name the person you •/ • j W | step beyond smartirl. wanivant to call, and the phone will >^- Enter the era'■a o f'lh c "Ijriniaiil” "‘ren''rcmembcr"‘‘thc“number-you'p"r&r ----- m t ' telephone. The n. Mr. and:id Mrs. Allen D. Lee of Jerome,me. Grindstaff. all of Buhl Ihl. ..T hebtbridegroom is the son of Dr .Aho 5,ovor.Ownor0 . ~ Rev. W. Daniel Kilnglnglcr officiated. The bibride wore a ‘gown of alenconeon A reception was held h< Oct. 8 In the Mrs.I. JJohn McNees OfTwin Falls,Ils. .Linda Blollomlros. Ownor . . . ~Tbt» h rld p W Qrg_fl_{a-gown.ol-satln lace accjccented wilh seed pearls, ShShe Clover Lutheran Schohool. - P astastor Duane Heckman officfficlaled •VkklOruIrunyor ’ .M aturing a chiffonin overlay and carriedtd £a colonial bouquet of.roses. • JannloS;'Sponcor The bride wore a Peggy Reside was soloist, trCrimmed wllh lace..•She S carried a Karol(ol Cosperson was maid of honoi a Victorian floor- he bride wore a gown of silk :ior ice and net over iPotorson _ / * —4»uquel of rose buds. Karla HallHi and Keri Lee. sisters of,fthe th length gown of lact ! featuring a long iraln. She ci Mlchdle Brake ofr TwinT> Falls was brldegroptx>m. and JamI Lee, sislctsler. ,^f^cta. a bou(|luquet of gardenias., ^I!3hald of honor. Trac;'acy Kilngler of in-law ' ' of the bridegroom, wer Melody Clayton, sissister of the bride- Susaisan Reside of Pittsburg.. PPenn.. ■ : Jerom e was brldesmnlnald. Toni Shinn brldcsm;;maids. Melissa and Michell groom, was guest. bookI attendant, was; maid of honor. Bemamadette . II : ^ f Twin Falls was floweiwerglrl. . Mlllerwi’were flower girls. ,, Jennifer Jones andd Angela’ Bowlin. Furlorlong, Terri DcNIcola andd Char-( MQ m - Bob Erdmann of Kim::imberly was best ‘ Kim I 1 Lee, brother of the brid< cousins of the bride.I, carried( the gifts, mienn JJago were bridesmaids, ^ rm o n . Scott M lldnerotl3f Twin Falls was groom.I. ■ was best man. Barry Neal Cally Parrott, sisleiler of the bride- Malilatt Newton of Boise was best:istman. ------^Zrpsher.------Brian TenneyTc and Todd Thomas wer groom; Carla /VsJctiett. sister of the nk WaJkerandDan BrJzeeoflofTivin y f J . —- Special__guests Jncluded in Mrs. giw m snismen, ' ■ . bride; I.«rene and Eileen E; Schroeder, • Falls,Is. Albert Enouragc J r andd DavidE ^ itD o rath e a Shinn of TvTwin Falls and Specia:lal guests included Mr. am Susan Jones and Wanimda Bowlin, aunts McNe<'Jees were ushers, : IM rs.'B ertha Whitakerer

~ F ciLASSlFiED u ADVERTISIN w e d d i f PHONE 733-0931 m 7 | p ) / t e n'c o a stt^ r e ^ e rrience ' ^ (Joseph C ir ;^ , a graduate gr student at Sah F.Francisco together, you1 arear faced wilh lhe problemn 'of how lo finesse >gto/e University, sot marriedtrn lasl . this— the ticklish.lBsuiBsucsjf j cspoclabimy that -como-withc( gelling— f t - O© ) f - — -..artlclelorlhe^nJ(KehK Mercury News.) m arried. After;er so many years of living, if not exactly at l l j \ £p|Si D A V ID , w I j - odds with socletclety certainly somewhat aptpart from ll. after VL ' m - B y JOSEPH CURLEYY years of a relatelationship lhal looks to marany like a hedged ^' i g3 i:auty r KnIght-RldderNewspappapers bet. how docscs one take the full publicic pledge wilhout cSALON seeming to bctc'somehow s backslldlnc. or.. \WQr5>g. rt!P.inllnp ______BEFORE Y OlU U BI U Y I ® ■ ------Wc had been-itving- ng -toggthur fur-flvcry c arsrrs. diul wC on personal princlpiw? pr How do you rmake the event 122 E. Avo. F, jorom o-U— •• decided to gel married,id, • embody the meaningmej 11 has for you: notL ac renunciation of BALDWIN PI As A Spociai PIANO » - After five years all1 theth relevant evidence has5 lclong since all that has gom'one before, but ralher an aclicknowledginenl of • lor 6 monlh*h*. • rbcen presented. Endetidearing traTls and annoyln/Ing hablls that past combmbined with a hopeful looki)king fonvard? Iri Introductory Offor ^ 9 9 No obllgatiiJtlon to buy. Ronl lor a non>inaImai lon,i oil o( whicli ii oppMod ;have become equallyly familiar, not lo be forgjrgoltcn or short, how to make the wedding a kkind of personal CAROL WELCH 10 tho pu,clrclioio prico il you docido toI bjybj) • Como in today...Chooso -changed. Strengths ancand weaknesses have been;n assessed statem eni whll/hile reaching out lo emb:ibryce the social Our appronlico will lakoy ltomalargony cannot l>e held In a chur//'y»y • -^should help m ake thee BBig Decision a pretty easy3y onanyo< 4 ^ -Planning your own weddingwe turns out to be onone of the In our case; 1111' was a woodsy urea north1 ofc San Francisco llio abovo »orvl«o». ^ --biggest rollercoaster:r ridesi of life, veering Irfrom one where my flan'iancee (the word is Ilselfr evidence< of the Cdilemma to another. ThThe search for a personalI slslalement Insidiousness> of tradition) had often attencnded music camp, m a B B B B O B a m -bounces off conventionon and practicality. Whon ththe ride is Yes. this was'as the perfect place: oul(jldoors. familiar, „over you may be thanilankful to salvage a shred.II. however I tranquil, and,I. b< best of all, utterly unlikelyly. We would hold "blurr^ or distorted,i. ofo your original vision of what is the ceremonyly in an outdoor amphlthefiealer under the Isupposed lo be your dayJay. In the end. though, you1 aiare wiser, redwoods andi followfo lhat with a reception:nand home-grown '’and not only about weddiddings. banquet in thele camp’sc Bcowulf-slyle me.';!‘.‘i.S hail. There we Everyone begins by>y sayings ll’s no big deal. UuBut having would cat, drlnlSED I

Nov. 1, M onday,./..“ B eginners’ Quili l t i n g ” ^ 4 Sessions — 9:3030 to 11 :OOA,M. AAONII D A Y , O C TrOBER C 25tK ^ n FeeSIO .OO ^ TOPP R E P A R E FC= O R T H E IR Nov. 2, Tuesday,y, "Star Quilt Pattee r n " iJ 4 Sessions — 9:3030 to 11 :OOA.'m . FeeSIO.OO • j k 5 2 n

' * ' ■ "A'dy^nce Reglstrstration required — ------— P h o n e '^733-883T— 7 : ~ - I m I O l “SM.L t r i S al t i e S t a r t !■s v : ‘ T ^ s d aa y , O c t . 2 6 t h ^ In Lynwood r v a r j j (M------^ SIShopping Contor. ------_ ,7 3 3 ; 33*883*l-Twin Foils -jw in - ^ \ 7 A M .• / ' - ’ ^ ^ 0 ■ _____ ‘ >lcPlonlyoJFfOoPofklng idjho jrBonkcofCJ*Wo1cdm<» - - - • - w m ' \^'W aich for>r S ^ e A d in Mibiiddy'^imes- e !S-News 2 y ^ v*-«»ODer-24,-1962-----— TimoS‘NtmsrTwinFatt37ldHhtrMT------^ W e d d i§ i n o g s r r r ~ ..... - Tlh e r e ^^ i n o ~ s i m vicean]lymore By b oOBHUGHF^ b ‘ cart down aisles aiartd plik what you house!usehold running for the moderately ChicagoIgo Tribunrc wanl off the shelveses yourself. well-tcll-tOKk> a generation or two ago. Vou IhP" unl^orl rlrh-rlrh rnn»t find them 1 ^ '^'hly y 'do uiey call uus a -servervjce- movingbelland wai/atch while somleorie now.w. •- "Household servicc” is far oricntected” economy, when nobiwbody slides each produduct over a laser t»eneoineath anyone's dignity in a P ' A ' t l k -provideides services any more? scanner, takes yourur money, and reads servicrvlce-orienled economy, Somenewhere. somcbow. someont;one in what the computeiter decides , is ergcr and Taml the bridc]degroom, was flower giri. Samantha Schuck wai'as flower giri. ;. Charltan were brldesmsmalds. Andrea Martili Iverson,I brother-in-law of thcthe Rick Spriggs wasi 1:l>esl man. Virgil Neddowasflowerglrl...... bridegrocroom, wos best man, Gaoiary Quaintance was gngroomsman. Jim Brad Campbell was best man. Short wa:vas groomsman. Bullock, brother of’ tthe bridegroom. < ‘ Kelvin Calkins,' brothertter of thc bride; Special'ial guests induded Mr. ancand • and Wayne Huft, cou;)usln of the bride- J 3 H li T[M ij R 1 r Steve Woodall and Oanlon Marvin were Mrs. Charies Chi Ford of Twin Falls,ills, groom, were ushers,rs. Sam Bullock. : ushtrs. Keith Calkins,s, tbrother of the grandparjarents of thc bride, and Mr. Mr . nephew of the bribridegroom, was : ■ bridegroom, was ringbej;t>earcr. and MrsIrs. Cleo Prince of Wendell,lell. ringlx:arer. Kraig Calkins, brotheither of the bride, grandparjarents of the bridegroom, Special guests iincluded Mary - and Matt Pfaff, brotherher ot the bride- A rece;ceptlon was held Aug, 21 at thethc Scruggs of Hagermaiian. grandmother ■- groom, were candlelightghters. home oft)f the bride’s parents. Vlckl CoxCo> of the “bride; Mr. ;and Mrs. C.H, : ' Special guests Includcuded Mrs. Doris was. guestbook guc attendant.—Dcancana— Bullock-of-Twin-EalhJis..Mr..an(LM£S— ' Holman of Boise andd rMr. and Mrs. Rasmussissen. cousin of the bridcIde. • Ho'mer Borne of Iminlay. Nev.; Mrs, 1. Aaron and Amy Lyda carrlecried Med Downing and IErnie Downing. ' A.D. Calkins of ' Gooding. Nathan. / ^ J grandparents of the brbride; Mr. and the gifts.Is. Ix?eAnn Shupe assisted wlti:vlth both of Scrarhent) Calif., all . J I • 1 1 ^ 1 • T * I r M rs. Charles Scoro•0 of Emmett, the giftsfls. Shiriey Cardwell, Deolnc3lne grandparents of the bridegroom.br . . iT" grandparents of the bridegroom,bri( and Moore,, Mary Ellen Rasmussensen, A reccpllon was heneld following the. rr.M rs . Marie Hereth off EiEmmett, great- • Edythes Baughman,E Ijiura Lyda and anc ■ ceremony. .Andreaa Borne was grandmother of the brid

( ____P'D olo C a rn o g io ______' 4040 I r l i l A ~ m ;ww w>wrr -V H 'II^ I N iwrnoDa I « 0 z - ^ / / / l ! L = l U 'l I H n eeeici(CT IJI ^jSAVMCHOUyl 3USI K m DO! §■ Egbert-Broxown l l p M nless'f D N 'T M I S S '£ TWIN FAU-S - Peru’enny D. Egbert ;||.lsteelTITuiiJ f t h i s - became the bride of Art!Arthur V. Brown IS L I M I T E D - Sept. 25atth e third wan/ard U3S Church r in Twin Falls. ^ T IM/VE I O FFER I — Thc bride is the daughiIg h te r of_Mr^and i - Mrs. Robert S. Egbertrt £and thc bride- ■ B H lj . . . M odel HA3001 /H£500:103 groom Is thc son of Mr.r. sand Mrs. John F. Brown, all of Twin Fa!Falls. H m Bishop Don J. Johnsoiison of officiated H C S eneJERGY SAVINGGS? WASHABILITY? V f? ~ and Vicky Johnson wasos corganist. V — OnlyO' Spoad Quoon was'icli"choson for tho onor- — S p o o d Q u o o n 'h a s thotl longest agitation 1 ___ The.brldeworea.gowiown of polyester - gy saving^ for tho onorg%rgy sovlngt hauso at strika In tho industnistry. (210*) resulting In with a sculptured laceice overlay and [\UES ____ tho 1982 Worid’s F air... cloan clothos ... ■:— carrled'a'bouquctofcircamatlonsand— ;; daisies. Kathy Bulmer, sisterter of the bride, SERrv icAbility?• - cDURABILITY? ■- was matron of honor.jr. Connie Bull, c.C.C. Dudley, lolhor ol CloroncoiCoOudloy, __ Spspood Qtioon can bo sorvleod ior totally from ~— S p o o d Q u e o n h a s boon bb'i proven in Coin-Op ' sisterofbride.wasbride-idemaid. 01 Iho whool ol his now 19302OV0I00 ih,tiio-homol No nood to mmo ovo o u t fro m th o In- -applications certainlylly making it Heavy Duty _ Ron Dawson was bestJe st man. Sonny stalledSte potltion. '' f o r h o m o u so . Spacek was usher. Special guests inclIncluded Ethel ~ , Egbcrt_oflTwin.. Fallsalls and I ^ n a T h e r e ls> a —------^ - • ------Ot:Othor SpoBd Q uoon Wash’11 Novombor 6..I982 - =REE DELIVERY SINCE 1 9 3 5 IN-IN-STORE FINANCING ' TIMES-NEVlE W S ' - - CLASSIFIED ADVt)VERTISING D U D L ECY ’' S T U D I C fiOODIltl TWIHIN FALLS JEROMI«E BURLEY'' ecHUf« _.P.H0NE.7&it093.1_____ I ____ 1- 3 « w « ' IiriijiiiV a h h t.h . ' ' \S i miW. n 2SaiOralaKn.In. 'HliSl.SHIltolllS ■ iiil1th Avo. East at Bluo'Lako:kos Bivd. In Twin Fails 72^ 3 3 -7 1 1 0 :fiSM--im 726-3E3Q V ■ b-4 timos-Nbws; iwirtTalli■fliisrtdano— SundayrCctotJc0tJor24r>882------^----- E n g d s I t s E n v i r o mt m e n t a l s a e n t s n e i o ee i ^ t r e n d ChlciIcago Tribune — which after all. isn'tt ththat far away — some of thc early examples of thc moomoody aromas don’t seem to be , EnEnvironmental scents areB 11the newest trend in the quite so insidious an effortort iat m indcontrol. ___^ igrarice industry, and perfuTfumc manufacturers say ___Aiioiiis.0oiog-to-be-hitro do muri‘ tlian'JUSt make a thal wil]_make vour houhouse sthell like apple pie or ^ roomom smell good. gingerbread. Other ^nts.n iannounce the ‘ MniethirKing morqlhan a fryingdevice.Ice. ■■ ■ m ixture goes In a sinJtnoHpan,-which is------engagement of their daidaughter. Deon. AcSSrciJrding to - Entree 'magazinezine. then put In lhe wok,<, followed by the toRlcit Herndon. Taylo^t- &i Ng is introducing a barbcirbe- grill. The food is pl.aTnf?!7TScfTi PHONEEIER FLO O I POWDER EYE PRESEr■NTS O UR SHADOW by|V tvybelline‘ iKO? EVER \

MMI ^ /Vbybellinf „ Moisture W CoHeen Barnmes ^ 1 PEARLY COLOR ______LIQyiP. m a k eu p ...------_ I-. ,and Mrs. Vern------E. Barnes of Twin Fallsalls announce the.. j • fools, ii3 g o o d a:; ii i engagmcnt of their daujlaughter. Colleen. lo Rol«rt Elonzo Morlartin II. son of ^ • Mrs.Shirlecn MartinlofTwinFalls. of Mlss-Bames.-a-l98l1981 -grnduato-of----- .------Wfeybelllne Twin Falls High SchSchool, altended Ricks College and Collejllegc of Southern i^ g n ik ^ DIAL-A-LASH , " Idaho. TTie w orlds first • Martin, also a I'Jaigngraduate of Twin ^ — -.Z^S'fidiystaMe P’alls Higij School, scserved an LDS < Ti iT^s(Dai'a! mission in thc Bogoi)gota. Colombia.. ^<1 • mission. ML M il wATriiu-mcr The couple Is, planranning a Nov. B *Sf ' ^ wedding In the LDS)S Jordan River — II a Temple. ^ ' / I ®

Ultim ate gi^ i f t ^ 20% OFF ONTHPHE VINYL FLOOI3R IN G Jhristmas present . The parade of Chri THAT STOPS STAAINS FROM STfllHINING candidates Is beginnlnnlng. even though • ilium's cxclusi\o Halloween hasn't quitluite arrived yet. li isn'lisn jtiM liny fl.K-riti}; ituil / ' ni n g o l e u n v irtilu-cliis-rfi'fn'-ii'LL- P ricos Good On ------Here’s one for the kiddd who has every-— —tam.'inM iindiipi-ft:iill> ,mills. Like I'luelK-rry. MiisUntTSfji ---- wjr.jnl>rS..ifynn{;wiij; willi vu-n lliini; V"U Ji >UMrOCTr24 THRU-3Or1302 ------l |‘.«cVmp.lou.ir this, anyw ay.. 111 ClirMtiTiih'tuI c;ut. li,s,itio,lln|; Siilijn ‘ RETAIL q u a n t it ie s , _ FAO' Schwarz FifiFifth Avenue- Is ; t- f lilUL-lcsS K-.llllV lIUll a-SlMS CM.-HL-iulic ll ■■ When mmi'm-c lurn i.lh >.m1J S..VC. . - - promoting a pedal-powwwered horse and-;’' • l^hosi kitiils.ilsiiiins. A m liiV ‘"Ci'ivcicil vm ll kiuivv il isn'l jii-li-j iiiivi Silk-. sulky for junior hamQmess racing en- O d a y ' s Safewayr'WM <5 ere you g et a litUttle bit mdre. thusiasts. (Thc. attaittached. horse..Is...... - S ale End:ids October 30^ mounted on wheels and canbe steered by conlroUing the reineins from the seat •_unlt^ caji accojn- _ _ 'irs an d .of the buggy.) The_ui c io rs------— ------modatc up to 150 pobm)bfids in w ei^'t. i r ]__ r i^ T - P iOD - ' n f e p - 4 ird-pedallng‘minl- is designed for hard- i._B_rda3woy, B uhl,. .5 4 5 •, •----- racers ages 4 to-lO whcwho have Ihe-godd . . — .w543.8848.: 1 2 0 s a . a ■5064 fortune lo b e p a rt off fafamilies lhat can ■ i X \ - afford toys costing MM -• I------m i V Ik p . ' -.X------;---- .Suminday..OctDbQr.24..1382, TtmtTlmos-Nows, Twin Fajis. Idaho D-5 ~n Dr. L a m h a r A b b v

iron wiinihelp " Y e a r l yy party^ enoug^ ^ f o r ss o m e _ _ i f f . • • - / ■ — B i ____ By ABIGAIL VAN BURJREN______A newjiw famiiy.movojjnnextjtoor,•or,so __ totaiK-toJier. st colon—Uni\ 'ersal Press Syndic.Ucate ^ ^ 1 bakedMj a lovely chocolate cakee aand Wc discussed th'the situation with to 15 are not ready to have a. ipastic i look itt cover to welcome them.. TThe him. trying lo helpIp him understand "girlfririfriend.” ------" By LAWRENCE LAMB,3. ^M.D. You Ineed to understandnd DEAR ABBY: Poc'oor "Agnes In Mrs. harlanded It back to me and said, sa that il wasn't his fauauit —that reacting Andnd iregardless of how "grown up" Newspaper Enteq>riscA&Association dlvertlculoilosls t>etter so I'm sendingng Culver City"! She liveved in fhe same "Sorry,/, II'm allergic to chocolate.” withangcrtotheprciressure she had put an 11* or l 2-year-old girl may feel, 5 and-complalned------______on-him — only— 77 ~ you TheTfe— Health—Xetter— M^ ;— r house-for- 25-years-ar was— yr_natural_Wc-cn.— she’R-n DEAR DR. LAMB — - I have had Diverticulculosis. Others can send 75 bccausc her nclghboi»ors never said • DEARVR ABBY: In answer to0 tthe couraged him toI italk to her and either,ier. The bottom line Is; Mothers j diverticulosis for morcirc than three cents witl-•ith a long,’ stamped, self-If. hello lo her. li-year-cir-oid girl who complainlaincd explain that he dldndn't "hale" hor. he shoulduld not permU thoir young daugh* yeare. I'm.75 years old.1.1 1 was told not addresseded envelope for it to me, In Your suggestion thatat she could have bccausese her boyfriend, age3 12, was just npt readydy for tho kind of tersi totoe chase boys. to cat anything withith seeds or care of thishis newspaper.P.O. Box 1551,Jl broken lhe icc and saiclid hello to them dumpeded Iher for an"uglicr” giri: relationship she w,wanted. They aro — ONE MOTHER’S VOICE roughage, no tomatoes5 oroi pickles, no Radio CU):ity Station.. New York. NYJY might have worked an;mywhere fclse in l^jistI yeary our i2-ycar-old sonn hhad now on speakingg terms, but the PEAlEAR VOICE; You have voiced an ------lettucprotcourse.- Do'yopyotrthink-lTan— lOfllS. ■the - ' w'orld” except — in— Southern— his—firsirst— gtrmicnd*— — anotlTOthcr iriendsmp was wrccljcked. Imporliwrtant message for which 1 thank eat lettuce if U’s shrcdde3ded into small California, seventh-]th-grader. She Invited himIm to I wish that girl'ss motheri had had a you. BiBut a slill louder voice Is being pleccs? DEARI DR. LAMB — Cari thehe , We lived in Northricridge in the San school1 j socials arjd other "dale:ales,” talkwithherabouttit the constan'. phone heardrd througliout the land. PEER ;c and calls and the rest of)f thei chasing. Even PRESS I am constipated sirsince 1 have hypothalailamus malfunction? I un-in- Fernando Valley for 5 1/2 years. One. followededhim lo football practice a ESSURE! n older, that_kind of _ ourli ------divertlcuiosis^l-thlnic-it-li»-l6 because-of— derstand-td-this-gland regulales-slccp^>p New Y ear’s Ev^ a cou}uple invited the phonedd hhim constantly , _____ .______„ if they.'d both, been c luring any given week, no less than ------my chMgo in dicLtoavoidfoidroughago. I -ap p etite-!- andi -lxxly-lempcralure.--L lome for a party. If he1 dididn’t return ner~rallfordlddidn't— t)chavtor-would-lift'iftvc-bwn-inappro»— :ii)ol|ot-lotiere.-fromVIIdesDerfltc" glrls~- • 2 do eat string-bcans,-(1, - carrots and have-extres not contain throughI U the roof of Ihe back of your you would touch It'S the B y Ualtcd Press Men)rnatlonai •- enou^i roughage. In the past it was mouth ™ II people with hypothalaalamus. It is the switchboardard ONTEREY JA^CK >M.69l believed that pec diverticulosis should catal ia low-residue for slgna;nais from your. Involuntaryary With an area of 12525 million square soft or bland diet. nerx’ous5 ssystem and the seat of yourour miles, the Sahara Desert D is three But that doesn’Ulcavc.Lvg.nnn»gh bulk cmotlons.ns. It also contains the center‘ter times bigger than thele Mediterranean in the colon for normalnal contraction fo rh catntregulation. ------____Sea...... SH,HARPCHEDIIDAR lb«1.98 I waves' in the colon. ThiThis slows the transient time for the uncundigested food ves. th(the hypothalamus can be dam* A IIB P aacks of Pop residue, leading to colonlon spasms and aged ordi' diseased. An Injury can be the FOR WODMEN ^ _ ■ n .95 I • constipation. cause. A damaged area can induceuce F or good colon functlo:tlon most Indi- obesity aand this has' been shown W e a re veryy .jsorry b u t w e havere closed o u r Jerom>me i S to re. I vlduals without medlcallcal complica- experlmc:Ticntaiiy. ONLY tions do better with1 san adequate ' However]Bi\ C oupons^i 11 be"» h onored o t Twin1 Foils.Fi ______B amount of bran fromTl whole grain W om en's Weighi cercals in their diet. Youou

STRAWBERRY ------PRINT...... - . . P.S.MJ__-.______Long gown;------2 2 .0 0 ' • r Long Flannel Robe28.00 - - - 4

9 ^ /]■?'{ vS % Top-oMhe-Stair • «•'* \ A ■* vv 'j / \

1 ^1-OOh) holds y^our______. : to '' ------selecictlon until- - 3 holidays W m ’Ax jV. U ft p i ^ H r 4 - iTf ' W m ‘'A V ^ \ \ J; I’ fe K m m im M

P ■ - s : PPi R f I L ■ f ' ■ 4I '.’ ■ ffl/® • ■ Wm iJrfrMr' M I W t p .'h m U i m r * It fa m o u s ______Lanz sigtiat granny gov fe n n e l. Vlido cotton flai M n p M ■ m o t p rin ts Bfflw L t / / i / i ^ » \ selection c i f t ’' \orsv > I S \ -'-I andco^®'^ -.i ^00

' R ight;• E y o 'e t , Wit h ft I ' '\ iritnTned,edUl«S'9- ■ •: /; yWSr ^ W v J // natu recptmt.mgW-_ p ------\ h irts.; {oo^cotto"1 vei. W ide = el« - \ flanneV. o fpriP^tsand______m l l i i M i ______— 1— tion-o£- t 1 colors.its.'...... _ 1 4 0 0 ■ P fJJ' i - ^ " ✓ Hm fiV ^ -<.~Tf^)r7yht^y- ■ r; j; 9C-^ ^ if W -i'. ' ------.------^ — resP.SiM.l^------— 2 1 f jij MrjmkH r- fi ,ign® l98l LanZ. [ n = _ _ If J ' } t / F-.bric D«5«

US-

...... 3PEM DAILY10A.M:;I:^6 t 30 (FRIDAYS'Tl'TIL 7)rW E WELCOME/lE-VOUR PARISCHAfiARGEAecoaNTT--"-- T H E P A R118,124 IS MAINAVENUIUE NO., fwiN'FALLSLS,(208)733-lF06'Of \ . W nm Q 3-N ow 3, Twin1 Falls,Ft Idaho Sunday. Ocioclobor 24.1082 ^ A n n iversa! i r i e s ^ ^ ——

T w ln ra llBSenlorClUiensCenter ^ • •' Monday, crafls and quilling

__Menu:______------• - '...... II p.rp.m.... and bingo al 7 p.m. T 5 H • Monday,, bbeefslew. • 'Tuesday, bingo at i p.m. • Tuesday. spagetti wilh meat • Wednesday, delivery of gro* , . ,-a and cheese. ccrli:crles: call in order to Marty's ; V ^ • Wednesda:iay, chickcn patty. MarVlarketon Tuesday. _____• T h u r ^ a y . y. cabbage rolls.______• Thursday,pjnochleotlp.rn, _ • Frlday.'sa;jaladb'uffetatGp.m. ' • 1Friday, exercises'at "ll am.i ’ no10 noonni meal. Halloween party and 'i f f l Activllles; danclancc at p.m. A prize will bc awaiiwarded forti the best constume. I T vtr. "vv p 3 a t i g HHP ■ ■Ca a l e ^ H r - . f

------MR77T OSBORNE MR.N ANDMRS. JESSjISjM O O R E GOODING - Mr. andind Mrs. Clyde six years irs and moved to Gooding? inlr TWIN FA LI^ - MlMr. and Mrs, Jess moveded lo Twin Falls where he was O l Osborne will observe the i a their 50th annI- ' f 1Twin ^ T ' all ■ ■ ■ Howard were married1 NiNov, 5.1932. in grandchllt hildrcn and two great-jat- Huntsville, Ark. Mooi»re farmed near Falls.i. The ’ couplc has nine gngrand- >ats Gooding. They lived in Fairfield for grandchllihlldren, Huntsville until I'M!I when^ lhe couple childreiren. W arm thh plus fit, in o u r g re a t selection sel of Fall coats. in Q u e eren an d Tall Girl sizes. Man/lany Casual and Dressy sty les tofo c h o o se from, in a varivariety o f fabrics, S c o u tts ! ------R eg. S6555 to S 2 1 0 •Continued fromiPageDI Pa terest inca camping and the out-of-doors Tall Sizes ors service. Idaho0 on0 camping trips over thcic yearsy led to herier landing the Forest Service Queen Sizes I8 to 20 Ice Probably the hlghlljillght of her years so wherrten her husband retired threerec and 36 to 52 !S,IVI,L,XL council untililll she was 22 jqI}. of working with ScouL years old. uts was the canoe a halfilf years ago. they chosee 1Twin "Oncec Iat a campground I askedd a trip which she lookok around I.,ake Falls fi ' Atler high school sliele gotg a job with ranger wf 1 for their retlrcment_homio m e . . a _ ^ ^ H ______—Sale Ends'O cfollober 31st:^------' .why.women couldn’t glve out-out -Tahoe with with-H-giigirlsinhcrtroop:— decislol;Ion they are very happy with, ~ .‘-th e ForestServlce anddwasorlcorihc w 'tirepcrral■mits and help out." she said. dd- Shc and another leleader. wcre_rci -. Theirelr _clilldren. .are. both_ith__ In..;^^^^ - . _ . r^Hrst-^women-^tlre-ftghlglitcrsr-During —two W55R«i(S later shc got a phone call:all sponsible for the elgl : World War II she and Ight canoes on a Califorrornia, Zoe Krelzenbcck Is in nd anolher girl (rom theneagency. ‘■wonderf»LlQ;dav.trin ------Nevada Wftrp stntlnniHi nt n InnkrokouLln.Uie U s___ In— 194^ Ida City-und-Mark^chuckcrt- 944—she—marricd^dwaTaofa The Schuckerts hadad often come lo Reddlnjllng. Angeles National Forestrest whore Ihey Schuckcrtsrt who also worked In the - w ere lo keep alert for eneenemy aircraft. Forest SeiServicc. laler transferring; tolo ■ _ . They never saw any.ly, but they did iheCalHotfomia Division of Forestry, .. get plenty of experience, laajjagg-gggjasg ice, using shov* Althouglugh she retained her registra­rar rrs^jpA ■ els and hoes on moppinglg upi operations Mrs.rs. Schuckert wasn’t active In - on tires. Girl Scoutjutlng unlil her daughter. Zoe , "They never pul usI whorewl thc lire Ann.wascisoldenough to Join Brownies. — :—was-rcal-hot,-t)iU-we-gotBot-ln on lots-ol------Th^ni±t>ecame.-a:professionai-vqI- I . .r:;_ :clea riu ^ sh c micI.------' she laughedrShe lau^l-R ed Earlier shc workedd brlellyI In a Cross swlidimming for tC years and ^ • ——iiRosie-lhe-rivcler—rolerole ol DouBlas— anythingng the community needed." Aircraft Co.. until she: stonedslj Bolting when herhe daughter became a junior bolls t>ecause of allergyy totc aluminum, ^cout. herer mother bccamc a leader, irtlme alid-her Ijfontlnuing Because ll was wart! ing In that capacity until herier ;^>SIU4liT ---.defense Job was classitiellled as "esscn- daughterT wenti to.collcge. She trainedJed O< ne VVeek - TlThrough-Saturcday-,----^------tfal work”__after sheJhe. qult_,Mrs. .leadersinin camping^lllfi.,Including Schuckert was unableI loto remain In a water safe gfetv training, anri whon sho Pork yourTicar in our private parli — ^—vrlndow displayiob:------T"’ needed a0 ddemonstration on how to use ■ She believes her Scout■out-lnsplretl in- axes, prepressed her husband intonto ' std

M G i l tt . M ing o won* yoo lo soo tho-m<■many now shlpmonts ofF IFall M or. W landiio. Wo havo boonn bbusy for wooks puttingig ilto ro lly M honeindrods-of plocoi on our9ur salos floors. All dopajo rtm o n ts o Involvod on all 3 floors,ars. Many now promotion*nol piocos - -^1 . zo : a lso now ori d lsp lo y In our Clooranco Contor.ir. Wo aro - . X..', % igor for ovoryono.lo so

f e Register foior (5) ^100.00 I GiftCeCertificates No Obligatioron — J u st R egister ITho^JorrUor^^^^ ^ W inners will boo cannounced AAonday, m K«n»Hu q polished opplo1} gefor 9 - ‘ ~ each addition;>nal subjcct In a 'p o rtra ltit p| ac k ag e , but Lai Ho: I ------_no limit to ththe-numbcr of packag:ages you may 1 - ^ ' l i S v ^ ElvltCcin - pu rch ase. W'e e fpresent finished portralraits o f th e best ^ poses. Tho Dollvory/So Offlco Porsonnol ------rAY$o-/\vallable:------— 7 lnvit®-tholr-frlor -• ------Passportt PlPhotos • Copy & f?esiestorallon. - ___ -___ ------to drop- In this w o o k . ;...... ■ ODffer O good for portraralts - — taken thru-fVJovr6-6 ------T------‘ ■ ' * Avolkvollable at moH Scan f«loll *toi■lercf. . I r ...... 1 ' . StuStudio Houn: 10:00 am • 6:000 pipm 20 4 M aln Avo. N. PF (or untilunt (loro doling, if prior to 0:0B:OOPM) ^■Ph 73^^ StucStudfo cloi*d Sunday ond Mortdcndoy. Y o u c a i P o rtrait c o u n t Oo ln I Sears I stStudio ^ • co ■' i«inr»fiion ifjutnirta Ol youi monty D m V i. . ' f I ' - ' u iiu jf,O u .w tju titw / , linI im c.. •4CV.:., Twin r a ils , Idaho D-7 — ’■srJ^alitLm ghiasnge/Fran-Walla[Iqee., z l i z X f a pe y 4 a a p p^e r t i n g s ^ I g e d i s c Blooddraiaw ing schediilpAe d ~ ~ ~ ^ e s i i flangua l TWLN FALLS -— The Red Cross blood didrawing will be held . Monday and Tucsclesday al the First UnitedI PresbyterianF Chureh g from a food-service perstjrson, ' “You all" Isn’l alalways used Incor- "Noi'Not atall" is an example 01 Sloppy ] DearFran: Coming I behind the courthoutiouse. ich lo leam, so I this que: m lng recUy. "W eall.""U■Ihey all" and "you pronurinuncialion, but il hadn'.{ grated on • Quota for cach i I realize 1 have mud iuestlon could have alarml :h day is UO pints of bloodxxl. according to Ann others. This Is overtone;nes. My immediate reactionlonis. all" are not necessaiuirliy non-standard, my' earseai until you mentioned it. Now, I Livingston, chapter hesitate to criticize o' iter manager.'Die blood centcnter requests al least 10 why I enjoy your columim nsom uch,soI "Not I1 faln.would fi linger yet awhIUhile." any more lhan "thetie students all . wiilex1 expect to hear It all tho time. units of 0 negativeive blood cach day . Hours for the drawing will be mean or "the animals all. may leam. Sometimimcs, I wanl to say, "You me 1‘housands of similarly careless ’ fromZtoCp.m. MorMonday and from ll a.m. lo 3p.m.3 p Tuesday, ■e a few things well done)ne, m cdium orrare?" These are InversI•sions of "all of lhe Twin Falls blood However, • there are jnunclations exist, so many lhal v«; , ood drawings have been coninsistently successful, that really irritate mene when people "Done'ne" is a past participle ofbf lhe t students" or "all ofo you," etc.. and IJvlngston said, thanksthe to the tremendous effet-peev^p 1s-vrticni>eople-:— % c —qquestion “ Are you-doneane?" ‘ •HOWL^ e'fTinrSCT ‘alls" forall Mental Helealth'unit to mleet e answer a queslion'wlli/lth "not alall" suggestsits lhat your life may haiiave .-y all" Is another• mailer.n Often used Instead of "not at all.” A lall whal — ended,, in ir which no answer should 'anyways" for anyway TWIN FALLS—1~ The Mental Health Associa:lallonwHl hold a board when "you" wouldj Ibe correct, "y'all" Iree or building, perhapaps? • expectedled. The correcl phrase shoiihould ,s tjcnnilely not sUstandard En,;llsh. 1 •luh" for to meeting at 7 p.m.1. ^Monday at the Mental Healealth Services Building Please tell me "Ihey"y" arewrong, or be "Haviave you done?” or "Havee yyou douiji • |folks soulh of the 'beins'.'for because of ------else-explain-to-me-wh id2:i ——------Mason-Dlxon-cvct-i ind of course, the ever-present "he The film "Origins'Ins of MentiU Illness" will bex*shownat8p.m. $ Thank you very much. ourse.___ If you are being asked_ 1. Of COUI wrltlrig or formal sp Mrs. W.B. commenlenl on the slate of your grow I : ■- Sweet Adedelines seek simngerS or matuiituration. "Are you done?"I?" is ' ^ , 'Thairhariks foryour letter. appropripriate, I suppose. In that ca:case. — The Sweet Adelines willII rehearse r at 7:30 p.m. TWIN FALLS - lhe answ'swer should be, "No. God has:lasn’t Pew speakers arcresocarefulintheir Quc:Questions {or “Let's Talk Lan- • - Tuesday at the Firs’irst United Methodist Church,ch. 1 Before picking up) the dishes, a finishedxlwlthmeyet," > age" should be sent to: Fron imen who enjoy singing articulation thal thrr4and^s4fashions m splash____ : Filer Wranglerettes will spoiponsor a garage sale in ' FIIJSR-TheFI and plastic fish. Or. for Ihithose "We ihlnk ll’s great." gi said Karen crazy,azy, but 11 created so much Interesl. 'Bowling Hour from lOa.m..to to 4 p.m. Oct. 30. ByMARYGOTTSCHAIAI..K water ai . front otthe Flier 3o on’l fancy wearing an aquarliarlum Greco, junior blouse bl buyer for If thelhe] people here were Interested and _ Items willlncludcIlde lack and clothing. Knight-Rlddcr man in her early SOs bought a : - - Items for salei w will include homemade articles ari and Christmas expecls It, and she car lalks about her Sulherlarland’s Splash line, whichich Is The firsl SplashI designd she saw — a T-shirshirt lo wear to a picnic; two .m. lo 2 p.m. herself when she la: . '. decorations. Lunchich will be served from 11 a.m n. The T-shirt emblazoned2d with a pouch hold- pregn:egnant women bought sweat 1 4 ^ 8 :3 0 p.m. Oct. 31. newest venture. makinglg a retail splash of ils own. 1 ' A Halloween carcarnival will be held from 4 ating T-shirts, first daylay of lesl marketing al a Macdacy's* lng a swimming'flfish — was an Im- dresseesses for maternity wear, "and Activities will Incluiclude games and refcshmehtsh t^ will be served. She is decoratl sweatshirts and sweaeat dresses with store he:here, two dozen were sold.. TlThen mediate hll, Grecoco says. "Everyone SulheiIherland has been told Uinr Iho little plastic pouch pocockels filled with J.C. Pen’enney ordered IOO dozen. laughed about 11 being 1: far out and Splasllash line Is a status symho . ^ : J Murtaughh plans dinner ; ■■ MURT/iUGH— - The Murtaugh Methodistst Women will hold the • annual harvest dimIlnner and bazaar on Electiononday. Nov. 2. r Dinner will be! servedse from 11 a.m.to'2 p.m.m. Homemade pic and 1 -I coffee wiil be servtirved from ll a.m. to 4 p.m.1. PMeal tickets arc $3.50 ~ foraduitsa'ndS_1.75.75 for children. _____

^^Izamaze classcl scheduledi d : KIMBERLY-— (Couples execting babies inIn December. January • ■■■'------and-Fcljruary_maylay-preregifileiLnowJoLlhejiiiiexLscrIesdf-Lamai6^^^^= Childbirth Classeses fscheduled lo begin Noy, 4,^4,______------; The eight-weekk c:class will meel al 7 p.m. ThiThursdays al the United I Methodist Church•ch In Kimberly. Refresherer courses for former ^ f IS students are :av«available. For more Infoiiformalion-call-Joani McFariane. instrucructor.at 423^728. • I 1^5 •—' Filer dinnener set Nov. 6 FILER - Thec FFiler United Methodist Chuhurch's annual Harvest l l * . -----— Dlnner-%vlli-be-ser 5erved-from-5-to-8pv,-C,-Tlckels-are S4 for " aduitsandS2forch•children. ' " The CTunlrystfifitefe'wiiruropcinroimioojnH rumiiTmtt-Novrsraiwi ------from lOa.m. toBp.i3 p.m. Nov. 6. ^^PoGltoe:!S Ml A E g p = | = i Beef U.S. Mo. I Oellclou* EeonmicGl 1^1 ' ; - Holidax^ bazaarb( at Kimbiberly Albvrliont Supreme Boneleii Sove71' 101b. b a g ^ D oz. Ill ------. kim berly:^'i— ThTKlmberly Rccrcationn (Council will sponsor a ------llOlHlay ijuzuui-and I -1 m tn n p_m_JsJnv r. nt theKimberlyComi3mmunlty Center. Babysitting wilh/ilh free arts and crafts wiiiII Ibe provided. Refresh- J. m ents will be av,available. Table space. Sip510 for G feet, may i)e reserved by calllrilling Susan Bradiy at 423-Mi-5<)82 or Carol Marr at ___ _ 4^1-4734 before'Oct3ct.25.______r Stifle shotow tickets offertred ' . TWIN FAL!^3 -— Tickets arc now on salelie for thc 20th Century style show and lun

l l / _ # Turke! ^Artichoke M ^j^ne I AJbvnunt ------I j f t — - Self l e e t i n g ■'“o'd’*A V n — antI ' d ------r - — '’n'*’' 1^ '' ' ArrT a n g i n g . i i f i r o V Furi r n i s h i n g s by JoJ< Ann Rose day-M onday Specic ^ppleGid^ll f l T-Bone Steak 0*llclouiAlb«rl>onito.«SI.40 K l Alb«meni Supers.L ju fe Sundciiit^ Apple Although all thono lurnlluro plocos andi oaccossorios you uso a r c o b v io u sly ImiImportant to tho ovorallill look of any room, i ^ tho facl is that thothi sola usually sorvos1 o:os tho ono key ploco * 1 9 9 1 bocouso ol Its dominonco,do Its uso, andd tho way tho rost ol ^ .2 6 a I J" Gollon I . i n • th o f u rn ltu ro is plonnodpic around it. ie mm - > 0 " S i ,aQ.lout B ig jH rag g g g g y g g j . T h e ro fo ro . it's ImiImportant that you tokoo IInto account oil tho - many differentt c»u Iholp in thoso consldercjratlons. For Inslanco. ^ SenaUti • AlbacUoni iuai tO%ei.Sov« U' in choosing a soofo, fa osido from thoso twoI/O bcrtics — Its boauty t — bo suro it has tho right rl slzo and shapo h ond Its comfort — S I I M ; '--foi^jho rost'ofryoiyour-room^Taxturo-is-onanothor-considorotlon.— A n d DO s u ro to) ccconsldor tho color ot thotho sota in rolotion to your ovorall coloi)lor schomo. Anothor thiniing to think about is ____tho fabric. Thoro ro ofo so many wondorfurfuf cholcos In fabrics Fritters K a r!’...... B... ------^ '— tffdoy^hat-can-dc'do”5o*much-lor-both'thoho- looks-of-your-9ofo— and Its vt/oarabllit)ility. i8...... S Annie —! Fri .. All th o so th in gis s (oro important, and ronomombor wo'ro horo ' to assist you, ondind holp you got a sofa ycyou'll bo happy with. ' Also romomborr liIn today's docoratlng.. ssola* don’t nave lo IILI^SHOPPE SP __ ___ b o conflnojd to juijust tho living room. Pororhops tho right sola HT jdI . ' could olsoVbo boboautiful ana useful inI'onotHor i room, too. tich ol IhMt tMruud K M PECIALS iltnii It rtQtfirtti le MrtMIr 'K vfl ______In a n y .c o sc ..fo o LLfroo.to'.sfopjn, fr ______tviiiUi lo> sM ll or btKM E'Tfl -1l>« •tfvtitijM prKt (n i*ch — AtMntoni tiort. «npt ts ~ - »p«ciiicii>y noltd in mn «d. __ SQ Chiciien ^ — RJUM«HECX ^ ------D * tk lo u » '...... Wt titm to'luvi Ml tuAd SriJiM T lumMni tloa ei Mnniua-. KM ^ .S ', am s T r Sa»«$».00 • «• fiix mticMAftM. n loi tny ru-.B iil V/.V riTRiiom. Y o uur r Drexel Heritagele S to re 2 M ^ ^ 3 2 0 'Mioj^ o h A v fl'u»'Nor1h'------733»2B 0 0 y ' •' —

•> ■ ■ ■ ✓ , 9 ______i j P a s tWon J IsexvL 7 e d ‘ fEeast,of^cpthes ByJILLGERSTON wearingng them one size too'smnail, al th ro u f the collectlorlon that shows iq> In rearr view.v She does iU jK ^iogIsglng a ;; looking, black leather miniskirts, thathat move like a dream.' ;■ KnIght-RldderNewspapVipers There UIs always a slit somewheniere, silk piano prills,. jeweled guitars silverer chain under thet||mere. i^ Ttie. see-through strai•apless Chantilly lace His HI signature mixed prints range H ;d t- sl»ow8 up dlFtJgm;— flm Ses and sorrime son ol Jlowereu frorrrom sof t blossom paiiems lo spiasoy ~ -P A R IS ■•^-What's new at thc. Paris It. wolkliIklng — or w ip in g , as the cascase __thebaclt-of halter.eVevening gowns and . jerseyiey rniolakirt witKr^ lapMV'- lai metallic fabric tlthat looks like shiny Trahltian ^ i florals, and, as always, they :_____ rollectlons? - • -______m aybe*« —would bc Impossible.. in wacky, oversizedlamsaorles. a lealligherpanelia tbalrnt|^t 5 and.ls.used.foc.back-.__arctireslunning. .. Don'fosJcT------Sheer,cr, sc^throUgh knlt& are a\ bibrg: Plastic-gultar'eanirrlngs dangled to newlodow in bad taste. _^e»'flMr-length(h gowns. Ungaro Ur Is crazy aboul wrapped --F or the.past two wttweeks, reporters rage, as are backless and sidele£dess models' shoulders, a ball^loicn gold, Theibere are also-a fe|m j^oenKip, Most of his da;lay clothes, however, waisvaists. He encircles them with wide, and buyers coveringing the spring dresses» and oddly placcd cutoubouls, Prench-hom braceleJets were wrapped such.ili. as her crisscrosHH»^p ^ ^ r t s 'are'lovely — genently tailored suits in widevide silk sashes - which la a pleas- ready-to-wear showss inI Milan and such osIS key-hole slits at the thigh;h cor around their v^sts;ts and .black-and- with1 ttriangular cut-ou^ulbettWrhlps dark, menswearir fabrics, soft, low- mt. ant. pretty switch from elasllclzed. London ghinibled thathat the clothes shoulderier. while ■ plahihkeyboaimrd ctok'ers ' en- *" ■ ‘ 'hif ^ lrriae sc^ ^ , walsted dressess and bias-cut skirts' girid:’Iridlcs. .were so simple, so catcasual, 80, well. Everyrywhere you ’look there Is is a circled Ihelr thhwls.s. mioldiildresses wom with bland, that they hadi troubleti staying- girdle or sash or chain belt encirclincling As for thc troubleilemakers (besides hameinesses across the chaiS^;."' awake to watch the ninvunwby. the derrirricre. Indeed, fannies are5 theth the atrocious gird)rdles), there are Still,nil. there are some a m spol^iir’^ sp( ' ------Everyone-had-tbelr-Hr-fingers-crossed— focal-po-polnt-for-springr-followed-b l-by-=-black-and-while-knil nlls-so-aheer-you— the^i-collectk>n.-^uch-&a»£Hand:indsotfferr ------7 ^ ------that P aris would suppl)>ply the snap and waists} andai legs. It is nol destined tolobe b could see the oulliniine of the models’ "iuggz^ g e suits” In cri^pS ^ c (Izz that .was lackingng In the other , a seasorson for thc flabby or thc fainaint- thighs; frilly, pastelcl tuiie gowns that with1 Iintersecting bai^& t^^ J fashion capitals. hearted.id. looked like somethin,ing oul of “Cinder- leatheiher, and her pretty, P ^ X ^ ■ : Well, they got theirir 'wish. After 14 KarlI I Lagerfeld of Chloc. perhaphaps ella" and a slew ot0 tight, low-cut,' abslratract prints of fish and a n t ^ \ /e are proud to havere photographed1 days of tea and loosoast, they were Paris*’ mostr innovative and.copieipied . .gold-gHttered -evcniining clothes-that - Ther[t^j5ifll5ft_anj!lcgant:gni!SBUP-Df^ • -- .EDGE------— serveo up a rich, Indlg? icr. has progressed 'from last laf reportiSly were crcated cr with the prisllnitlne.. white linen dresseses with Mbs Rodoo Idahoho 11982-63 V ', - ____ clothes that sWpped-th«-thc.maln.coursc— season’sn’s corsclot-bclt4o-the-girdlc..Jc..a— petrodollar markel. inir mind. ------swoopioping, one-lapel collarsrs and and concentrated on desdessert. sort off eenormous band of elastic andan Since September,•, when il was an- sculptiiptured wrap skirts. It Is hahard to “Sexy” is the catclatchword of the suede,, stretching st from the ribcagegc tlo nounced lhat Lagerfc:fcld would bccome bcllev(eve lhat the hand that deslleslgned French spring collectloitlons: or'perhaps the hipbcpbone. II Is fastened In back.bybya the design consultanani for the .Chanel Uiemn jalso did the fanny chainslins and . . / “sex object” woulcluld be more huge, goldgol zipper. couture collection,, there has been leatheiher harnesses, appropriate. There Is nothingi subtle Where•re you would wear it, or bellecllcr speculation that thisis would bc his last Onene would think lhat EmiCmanuel about the clothes thatt undulatedut down yet, wh>/hy you would wear il. Is Just Juj collection for Chloe,e, a rumor lhat Is Ungar;aro, who dresses Just aboulut el lops and ruffled orgorganza Chantal Thoniass anand. Jean-Paul he wasas ahead — with his loostMse, a following amonglg young Parisian miniskliskirts. Other ludicrous lapsapses in Gaultier have been dolnoing naughty-girl elegant)t suitss and flowing white poet:octs’ trendies, also concncenlrales on the his show sl Induded tight. lough- l< clothes for the last few seasons wllh blouses!s —• he would have had a smasnash ___ .______quite a bit of success,s. Moret recenlly. collectloilion. ------Azzcdine Alala, a little-:Ue-known design- The suitssu that got all the applaus er of accessories and^ : made-to-ordcr had soft,)ft. boxy Jackcts with big, curv \TE DRAPERIES!i& liio L s ^ clothes, became thee <1darling of thc sleevess over slim skirts or. i mic i 9 A .M . T o 6 P.M. trendy set wllh hiss ^vampy. black ' ankle-lerlength pants. They wer^cre Addisonin Avo. Eoit (Before Kimbinborly Nursorios) leather dresses. Then,»n, too, there has teamedid wlth' romantic while blouse been a resurgence‘ oof interest In withwid/ide, fly-away triangular collar :frN G & EXPERT IN!NSTALLATION Marilyn Monroe, dueJC Iin part to the that Lagerfeld La patterned after recently published book bo of photo- blouse• liIn a portrait of I8th-ccnturitury I OCTOIO B IB S P IC IA IS graphs by Bert Stem.-m.-Whalever lhc Germanan poet Johann von Schiller. D R A P E R Y Inspiratlon — one wag-ag credited il (o The collection c offers some newnew, p 40%» (O rF FABRICS ______the_streetwalkmJn-to-the-Rue Saint— IntcrcsUj5tlng.silh0uetlesr8uch-a6-a-l0n{ Denis—sexy ctolhesiare ar spilling over black, )mlt )cj tank tunic wom overer a \ - „ WOVEN woeOOD ' the runways here, pro'?roviding the ex- white knit ki T-shirt or two T-shiishirt f r |25%(» O F F &MINI.BLINDn d s : \ oversy, that was dresses,s , each with one sleeve, worvorn cltement, and controve ' ■ FREE II lacking In Milan and LoiLondon. togethere rto form a single, two-sleeveBved E IN-HOME ESTIMATES SWrts wtwthpr langQigorshort..arsLSQ_dEe5S..^, Carl Burton 7 3 4 -3 8 P 5 ning— — Po

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Go, slip into som(imething luxurious to we;veat" at I , home! From Vanianity-Falr. Go for w/armth1th and - - . ^1.00'hold$ Jyour selectiorjn 'til the holid.'days cuddlesome com3m fort,..go to sleep in som si e- thing short andId sv»/eet...go treat you'ourseil to a lovely look< (cfor the holidays ahead..d ...ju st ‘ ■ ' fo rth e lun o tit. ’ ■ ^ -£r' Bod Chamber Longig IRobo. Shovola, Conitastmgig bands n c fo s s bo<3ico andId on faglan sloovc. Two insoam ir p o c k o is. Admiral Navy, Nt C3r>dloolow/Ca5lillianin winc.' ■ Scandia groon. P.S.M; M.L 46.00 B Piping Hot Wrap CoCoat. Fit over coordmatu qovjri»vjns and tio s wit.h satiny Glisansanda P.S M L Aqua, Tea Ros^050 and Scandia G>ocn. 42.00.00

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SoSome wise observer hasIS saidlid that the flrst purposee o f Uieile political! process is nolrat _____ gov«Dveming, but getting can(andldates elected. That':t’s W whahat campaigns are all 1 ^ aboibout. ______-TodayrTlie3toies-New!Tl ivs ------pub]ublishes its 1982 electionn - - specpecial section, anovervk/lew : x ofbtate races, WeW profile candidates,,th t e lie governor’s race:y...... Paia g e s 3-5 issuisues and how campaign; Th( *.-Page6------arere being waged. In eachr .t. govemorrT ase, we’re striving for a kli,auditor...... •Page 6 bl?lalanced, compr^enslvcve ______------T«treasu rer...... ------...... 1 iccount, ^ th notias prooor, ^ Attatomeygeneral.....;;;;...... '...... •i P a g e 7 con;on tor an y candidate. YoI'oii' ...... ___-Se

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■ Malad rar,mcher, Wildder farmer sqsquare off Fivee is s uies doD T n i m a t e b iitterrra c e By BRUCE HAMMONDJD andnd Includes multiple termss Inli the state crops to Idaho,Id even though neilher di . Tlmes-Sews writer Sewenate, where he was namedI bolhbo minority on his othcherwise succcssfui Canyon1 CounlyC l^tader d and, during one term of IDemocratic form. TWIN FALLS — A MiMalad rancher and a dombmlnance, majority leader. ‘ Hc eveventually was drawn to thc Wilder (armer — Uiejh e y . are the voters’ AfAfter being elected lieutenaiituit governori in Leglslatunire after, his brother. John,1. sserved _____ choices for.govemorinn IS1982.. _ _ l‘J74,)74, Evans was appointed goverivemoronJan... onC-tcrm.n._ As _a.. past. president.. of_theo __ But Ihc two men — Gov.Gc John Evans and 24.J. 1977, lo replace Cecil ,AiAndrus, who Homedalee PTA. the Food Produccjcers of Lt.Gov. PhU B a tt-a reire ; more different than resljislgned to become the U.S.>. IiInterior De- Idaho andid Hop Growers of America: Balt their backgrounds mayiay suggest. And thc partartment secretary under Presldsldent Carter. found he hadhi the negotiating and lead)adership ways they, camc into publicpul life are equally Evans was electcd to his firstrst full term in skills neces«ssary for a succesful career Balanciniing the budget; . ..distinct.------378, beating Republican nomlomlnee Allan Legislatureire. He was elected lleutcnan arsen by 58 .8 p e r^ t to 39.5perpercenl em or in 197978. "Public service Iss i a tradition in my Batt. the 55-year-old GOPOP nominee. Ball andId his wife. Jacque. still workork Ihelr ChargSSs and criticism (amily," says Evans. Ukthe 57-year-old Demo- peculates that he grew intolto public life Wilder forrJTO and have raised three chi:hildren. Evans has comt)me under sharp criticism for)f cratic incumbent. "U'sIt's something that’s Imost by accident. He writess ta weekly newspa]^r columjunn that his handling ofif theti state's 1382-flscal-yearir been a basis for my lifeife • -a n d for the ideals ^A chemical engineering studeakerortheHousc s\ Q^krcknowledglng that otherwise,ise. he mieht They havee fiveI grown children.- •* --- measures.-Evansans actually ended the year-ir- and finishing his careererintheldahoSenate. il }iqvave( become an engineer, rather rati than a Evans lists 11 his love for the outt•utdoors, with aSl3 miliioncon dericit. Starting as a rancherher, farmer and busi- succicccssful farmer. fishing andid hunting as hobbles. Two primaryy aareas are questioned: thctc nessman, John Evanss perhapsp< has pursued BiBut Balt Is proud of his farmlrmlng heritage. The majcIjor iMues in the 1982 race: andar the payment of stateate employees and the four-r- his political career momore aggressively. It and[Kl he Is pleased that he coUcould help his two condidiidates' stands on them are dedetailed day work weekssforstate fo agencies. began wilh his electionon BS mayor of Malad nati'ative slate by introducing hoptop and barley below. •SeeGOVEVERNORooPage4 . Sundinday, Octob«r.2<1,1982 .jTIrm■|Tno5-Now3, Twin Falls, Idaho.3 3 ‘P u b lic SIse rv ic e *i w ill w elco m o m e - , Is a litio n new industis try , In m y faim n lly .' a ll fo u r y ea i — Jo h n E v an s o f m y te rm ______— P h il.B a . . . ' I ^L--3zirzz:l I J ® a Govei •ConUnilUoued fnun Pa^B 3 Short of thal. Ball sayslys Ithe goverrtor should nevew industry' lo the Gem Slatlate if long-term the*thallut bi is continuing. At thalI time,lit he says, he will cgulallons Involved in thesese projects may Ball says,lys. essentially. EvaSvans shilled the recoghilion)nof i meet with‘legislativem 1leaders and decide J .isasarenllslle ripple nuciear-power plants Mints to the problem Idahoa colleges i I thal debt IntoI (IsIlscaJ year 1983. ' whelher lo call a ^^ i a l session In. De- tllemalive. Ball arguess U:lhat since Evans began fisc,Iscal . cember, n paying competitive salariess Ifor their ___ ' ..Evans1 says thal the declslo:5loi.otlocatlnBn ctors. and he says thal tuitlotion could year 1982 underder one accounting system1 fcfor oal-fired generation plant In Idaho must be jnstructoi employee paynlyroli. the books should ha\lave ;ive college administrators flcxibiiily fl< eft to the utilities and thehe Idaho Public centratlng-on Instruction, menorc than been closed using usIi the same method. SInc Jtilitles Commission.- But he stresses lhat concer ; of the surrounding frills thlhat may that was nott didone,-he-claims Evans' ai le vrauld not support buildlnding a coal-fired “ some ol ministration actactually ended the year in tf dem an* require jlant “unless our energy dei ns opposes charging ' forir tuition “ red." inc." The two alsoliso disagree on cutting bacback ...... , ,, becausese he believes ll will fororce some ees' working hours — Ifje oth«ither Balt takes a somewhat dltf,Uflerenl view. He studentsIts oul of a college educatiorion, solely m ajor actionI th^that was u ^ to overcome}the i^ ^ belKllevesit-ls foolish to conliifillnue supporting becausese cof finances. X)wer projects. Including cojcoal-fired plants, unexpected revccvenue shortage. ng them In Idaho. "Ever^'cry Idahoan Is entitled lo a quality Batt says theLlic amount of money to be ci n olher stales while avoiding slop after scut Futureeherqrgy needs; . fle.says Idaho is losing taxax revenue while educatloition, and that should nol st< should have beenbe mandated to all agenc t on surrounding high sclnjchool,” he says. "If a younfng person len, those leaders should ha\ T J t . • jecoming more dependeni c beads, but then lave H o w m u c hI is II enough? ^jtatcsaodiiUlltiesbccauseof^U hls trend.------h a s thele ability0 and desire to go to co!college.-he— ______been.glyen.lhe.Jie_aulonomy_lQ-lind-areas-iis-ln;^------j not be kept from It becausee hei lacks \ The two candidates:cs also differ In their Future 1 coal-fired projeclects should be should n< which to save. ocatcd in Idaho, he says. the moneoney. Education In Idaho shoul>uld not tw I ; However. EviSvans argues Uial with onlyJy a opinions on bow much* eenergy Idaho Is going *ot aprivlle(liege of the rich.” couple months(IS Ileft in the fiscal year, theihere to need in tbe near futun;ture.- OneI of Ball's goals is to give the U Stale was no time (or[or Ilhat type of flexibility. To'obc t Ball predicts thatat once the economy A'cre improves. Idaho coulduld find Itself short of ■ BoardI of Higher Education “ the auQulhority" sure the necescessary budget savings wei • courses.” :ided cutting work weeks for)r tall clectrical power. Evans'ans. on the other hand. to cut oul "frivolous or duplicative o made, he decide He says3ys the universities have s^shown no : agencies, inclueluding universities, was the 11 says that Lbe uliiiliescs Ituve overestimated power needs in the* ppast and lhat while V incllnatliation to eliminate duplicationin between best method. cr lo curb :Venwrshortage-has-contlnu{nued— growth b cflrtflln._the.ihe.statc!5j»wernecds_M ■^u/sy^B_Jheinstl]istitullons, and that in order BufTfi^rever ■ '1 I gkTalatliilling costs \vhHr‘enSlirmg“a-a-tiualliy— into the current:•nt fiscal year. Evans estlmatilates should be met duringng the next few years ■ says from existing power concontracts. V m I 1 educatloiitlon, the state board shouldJ haveI the a shortage of ablabout $46 million, but Batt sa: r to. make such changes foror lhe un- . n or more. "I doubt Idaho Is gogoing lo have enough povrtir U it’s $70 million 01 ities. In the gubeni•ematorlal c^bates around1 Uthe guaranteed power sisupplies when the piducation / spenci d i n g ; stale. Batl hafbaa criticlxed Evans for nnot cconomy gets back IrtlIrtlo high gear." Batt ^ , . ^ -H e alalso advocates establlshiniing sMffer calling a speciexlal budgeting session to deal de says. ruition costs at,t i s s u e enrollmcIment standards, so high-scljchool stu* with the antlcl]ilclpated shortage. He saysys a He Is especially comMnceroed that lack of dents; ususe their senior year lo preirepare f_o_r lid have been called in JulJuly, power will inhibit growti)wth and productivity in Perhaps { the biggest ns college, rather than1 "merely" .waiting out seerves r will be needed. Balt, hou9wever. has been critical off EDECA, for giving first-b>t-bld. or beiow-market-valueue. ______their time." •' ■ ______ButB there are sftP** i^nAmiJ philosophical—pt charging^•thaUt Is too pollllc.aUflntkIe6leslgned— privilegertcrthp- sses.me neea tor Keep- ireas-.where- Batt claims- he-dB-dlffers-froni— more-for-"]-"promollng-lhc go^m or’ss lImage— rely on leasedj-publlc'land p for-lhelr llvcirill-...... — ^ "irig f^culty^aries at a level competitive bviSvans. than for seseeking solutions to our ecoiconomic hood. with surrounding stalstales. Otherwise, he ’i t ’s all well and good to talk about woes.” “Especially In this lime when farm andnd believes, the quality orof college education in sup;upportlng business during anI electionel« year. livestock priccses arei so low. Idaho farmers:rs Idaho will suffer. butlUt I will welcome new industlustry .all four ✓ ' ' "■ "V and ranchers can'tcar possibly hope to outbidIld He also wants to clarllarify the role of junior yeaears of my term." Batt has saidsak in several oul-of-stale corporporate Interests lhal will alsoso colleges to ensure thatlat there are programs ofhfhlsspeedies. ^ wantlobuyourlarland,"hesays. available “(o train anin IdahoI work force for Heh charges that Evans has ha; failed lo ^ Evans says,, however,hi that he docs nolot high-technology jobs.” mainaintaln a pro-business atmosposphcA In thc oppose selling' isolated,Is hard to manage3C talehouse. f o M e g parcels, "or makitaking exchanges so'we don'tI't ______•"My-adminlstratlon“wlll-mnlmake'new-in“ — have'ForCst'Senfervlce'and'BLM employees dustustry wclcome^’ he 8ay3r''SoclikKlai, ec o n o m '= rr.^ ^ l|^ H passing each othe:ther everyday on their way to[0 : and environmental values willvill continue to ^ work.” e protected, but they will beB preservedpi in ^ - Balt Insists tha!iiat Evans Is overreacting to[0 ooperatlon wllh job-producinglg enterprises,c 0 3 1 6 Oaf public lands:\l the proposed saleslies, which Reagan hopes wlli11 ol In opposition to them.” generateaboutsn$17 billion. g S i fiatl also attacks (he incumbrn rlght-to-work. He notes thatIt oionly a small sale of 35 mlmillion acres of public land, sale proposal, andand the fact is that no Idaho0 portortion of Idaho’s labor force Iss uiunionized. Bait andd ]Evans have split sharply' ohor this lands are going: to Ibe sold without Input fromn ' ...... - If any phrase can bc« consideredc a catch- /M."We have had no major unloinlon problems Issue — Batatt upholding the adminlstralra tio n 's-th e sta te ,”.Battsaj-says...- ____all.for_election.ycar l^ . and serve.as.the__h enere..and.lnstead,-wc havo the-t» best of bolh- stand-and-j-Evans-clalmIng that Idalilahoans He maintains5 thatth public hearings will bee______Id ^ o politician’s call to armo srltlrM obstor— wor;'orlds7’Tirvlf^, tho R^irP!reau-of— not-the-type of-porparcels that-people-normally'y~ ------Batt for Jobs” theme. non0 reason to change what has worMarked so well Land Mana{lagcment or the state, so lhallat they would object to beingbeli sold. When discussing moslost job-related Issues, fors>rsolong.” can be bettctter managed,” Evans says.s.--But - “We're talkingIg about Isolated tracts, orr the two gubernatorialal candidates sound Beq)ltee my .opponent _saylng, *E<•Eyery- grazing range. AndAni we’re not talking about_t ■ - them begin anew or‘ expand.e They also nesssss: the Idaho InvestmentIt 1Panel and thing is alldl right._don’l w rry ,' thislls -Is a sealing off publicbllc;acceffl lb.recreational1 r ~ stress the need for a strongi educational "Induidustrial-reveniie bonding, ua _flnancing__slEnificanl

  • focuses more attentionon ion tourism very real threat, tli and I'm sayihg~H£reEre-and...,lidrd-to-manago 3 landsli into private, handss expanding Into Idaho. thanion does Batt. when talking aboulabo promot- now that Idadaho’s public lands are not for sale where they can^bobo more productive and will,1 Evans and Ball alsoso agree; that ample Ingtlg business. He also advocatess c significant business grov7V)wth, although they Comommunity Affairs for atlractineling both busi- TheprobUt>lem. according to the Incuin!unbent, redflagwheretxihiloheexlsts.”

    Evans’ slogan: C T J p ’*’ B atts* c ry : ‘M oving Id a h o ^^^5} Go To Batt A h e a d ’ F o r J o b s ’ - *

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    Sunda)day, Oclobor 24,1982 iTmosnos-Nows. Twin Foils. Idaho 5 ,t. governnor/Audititor ■ ^ f csM PelGirl” - m -

    • 1 • _ _ L t . g< By BRUCE HAMMOMOND Times-News writer?r

    TWIN FALLS -- ToT dote, thc lieutenant govcovcmor’s office \ has had Ultle lo do) wiwith privale business, bul twtwo of thc three candidates Ihis yearl!ar talk about little else, i B ^ Both Republicanin IDavid Leroy, now servingIng as attorney l '' ______Rcneral, andSen^ MilMike Mitchell. D-Uwlston-.w...wanLto use the— oliicc lo promote busbusiness and’jobs for Idaho, ------— But third candidalidate James Miller, an'indcplependent f r o m ~ ^ ^ B B |||j | Coeur d'Alene, is Ifirmly against big busfnsfncss and big I 1^ ' government. MlkeMltdieU I Mitchell wants to staff thc officc with no-no-cost collcge ^ ;|i Interns. He says hcle wouldv be “a salesman for IIdaho,” using his broad business; babackground and connections. Mitchell, 57. is com»mpletlng his sixth terin initheSenaleand lh also served onc tenterm In the House. He is a seml-rctired Lewiston busloessmisman and banker, and hasIS iserved eight year on the Joint Flntfinance and Appropriations; CcCommittee. Hc argues that IdiIdaho has Immediate needsds for business . k e M itc h ell (D) Oiivid Leroy>y (R) 'J^Jamcs Miller (Ind.) and and thallal Leroy's proposals proviovide for only record. ____mainonufacturlng-ln Idaho.-rathiiitbcr.than.rclying.almost totaltally ------long-range planning.ng. Hc sayss heh can bring "the samew Innovation 16 the onin exporting< Idaho’s raw materials ma and produce to othIther "We need lo gelel theI retail community goit(Olng again, so lieutenant. governor'sgo' office as I did to ththc attomey-general’s stattales for processing. people can buy good;Mds and satisfy their nee&.Is. And I'm not job — lnno>tnovatlons like the revisedJ Insanity defense I “ " Processing within our staletale adds labor, increases the5tix L wailing to be clected;£d; I've been doing these thinlilngsforalong sponsoredI beforebel the Legislature this yec'ear.y _ ims1^ , expands our relail_t>usinisiness and insulates us fromiU)e I ------time.” ------In additionion to being elected attorney:y general', Leroy. 35.‘ worvorst of the economic fluctuatiialions,” hesays. Mitchell authoreded a constitutional amendmeIment that will also hiis worvoriccd as the Ada County prprosecutor and as an appear on the Nov.^>v.Jl ballot tbat would allowow thc sale of associate attcattorney with a New York Cllyly law firm. JanramesMIUer Industrial-revenuei bobonds. Other legislation he} hihas sponsored Leroy iss criticalc of Mlchell’s plann "to be ii one-man A late arrival on the electiortion scene, Miller is nmnlng onaon over tbe years indueiludea Idaho’s child-abuse la\law. a special- salesman.” pro-inxonstitutional platform.r>.. .ile claims lhal Idaho has h ------cducatk)n-Iaw-.and..jid..a4aw~caUlng~for-.an-«xLaxtra-flve-yeor ------“Our problecau ausc' ' .. ____ ^Hesayshe.canuseltse bl&conDectioas from bis; poaiUonpc on the logelher In1 a mutuali effort.'' hcsays. ._ nonlonc of them took the propei>per oath,” hc says. "They are a ...... - federal Idaho. Districtrict Export:l3ounciMo;exjifacJhilmriorelgn ' —v-i jjBlleve.ive-ihe-lieutcnant governor'cacan be that umconc, uiioliicohvictcd feldhs who shouldlid beI in prison:**-.....------markets for i d ^ gocgoods;!!!.,:; prov1a«lthe~hc~]otris~ created by-both-cxc{ his opponents In the lleuUeutenant governor’s race. Mll}iIILer_ ...... In Atlanta, Ga.. of l.OC1,000 foreign f ( ^ buyers, andnd that may be t that effective;ive governmental prescnce'thehey need oversgas'*' say:ays. tharjnelther' " ’W o ^ r-Br-Bby' Leroy nor 'Say^othinling’'." ■■ ------.apcrfectplacetojnalinake apltchfor Idaho producclice.” ------B utlhemnajor aj thrust'onarrijy’ifplainsTs to establish a stale Mlt

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    p/" - 1 ______h lOND the overr $$41 billion collected and in in my officc anyway,^ since Ll m JM Times-i\ews writerr spent byy tthe slate" since he look everyonee\ has to come lo mele for the office. blbudget information in thc newr to the office, bul hc Concerning state lands, WlWilliams Interest in Idaho elcctections, bul 1982 stresses1 hish professional creden- wimts w to press the federa:ral gov- •- isdlffcrcnl. tials as an.an accountiuit. who audited em ct m ent for about 8,000 acrcs ac of The reason is Nolajolon Yoimg — a county ancand city government books in-lieu in lands hc says Is stilllowed o to K ifc - V i l fairly ordinary, allalthoug sue- for aboutIt 181 years before founding Idaho id after thc estabilshmiment of H cessful, man by hislls i own descrip- the ^) Jangles clothing-store the th nalional forests. tion. chain.' “ I've also worked very• hardh lo f f Until last spring., YcYoung. 54. was Williamsms' two major campaign dldispose of slate agriculturi Wmlllia m s (D) mN o lan Y o u n g (R) a llttlc-knovm businsinessman and goals arc a elimination of ththat Is iilready under culUviSaui:?! acfCountantTvho-neverwer-had-run-fot—diq)licatly< ;lve., auditing by both the he 'h e says. ''Farmers takeE teller public Intormodxl on the health of thatt recordsrt debts when they anare political office. Butt hLhis unexpected governor’sr ’s office and— the—ca-care of that landJtthejuJwn. M faJt,.imd__Qurgovemnieiit.’'ll-" _ Incumirred. rather thim the curreneht upset of a much-fai-favored state' Leglslatunuro. and the acquisltlon'of tbthere’s no reason it shouldJldn't l)c Young l ^ l U i senator. Dean ‘ Van Illcal dPGov. John— system:cm of recordlng-debts-onl)[niy ------an Engelen of jand owedcd to Idaho by the federal so sold to them and placed on[I theI tax Evans for claimiIming that the IS82 whenU:n they arc paid. Burley, for the GOGOP auditor’s governmernenl. rorolls. budget was balaidanced, despite the To nomination suddenlyniy catapulted He sayslys he would bring new "However. I do not fav 9 accomplish that. lhould need “on- budgets.” he 1 says. ”I think it's a th

    . JC # ^ontes]iFstrieti dball By BRUCE HAMMONDND as a leglslatiIallve assistant. He then comim m unity programs to fight^ tju - TJmeS’News writer opened whathal Is now a three-man veni'eniie crime — programs likekelhe •' law firm, anand he stresses that he citiz:itizens accountability boardird in TWIN FALLS - Next Nc to the has sincc practiced pi all kinds of Bur:hurley, in which Judges can plplace 1 governor’s racc, lhee contestc for law. from ci^civil lawsuits lo serving firstIrst-time offenders for civic-u , - attorney general oppcj)pears to be asaspecialpll prosccutor. dullluties and big-brolher guldannICC. - generating _ lhe„inosl-osl—Interest,------Also 40 yyears « old, Wililams also - Williams w also would ilke'to'sirscc'a ------statewide, inthisyear'sfr'selection. cites his law ia\ and governmental dolliiollar check-off box on stale si W " i . Both Republican Jimim Jones. and experience,J. inconcome-tax returns as meamins of Democrat J.D. Williamsims have long He began;an his career as a fundunding more field agents for fo a lists of objectives they;y promisep to Washington,n, D.C.. law clerk a M .^ la l( latewlde narcotics program. l i k ' ' f • rullill if electcd as thcle state’si top then returneened to Idaho os a depu^ Kc Hi says his experience asIS the' ■ ^ lawyer. attorney gen’cneral. He has served chiehief lobbyist for the IdahoI Pro- I But it’s probaWy theitheir anlago- eight years5 aas the Franklin County secuecuCing Attorneys Associaliatfon • . nism toward each othiother during— prosccutor-ar:-and-has-a-iaw-practlce—will .-111 help him promote neededI Ilawsj ' public debates and their thc much- in Preston lhatlh. serves six cilics. a throihrough thc Legislature. publicized negotiationsins to limil school distriitrict. a bank, a waler "I "I know how to develop broiroad- ..' campaign spending thatoat have gen- district andnd numerous private baseased coalitions to gel theseJ pro-[ • • erated the most headline:Incs. clienls. grarram s going.” Williams says.ss ■i don't itnow exactlyUy w hafJim Both menn ssay they will promote "AntAnd thc key right now Is bc means by negative cam:ampaigning. the muUipJo-jJe;use_of state-lands.- ableble to do more wiiWcsFTOoney but-1 agree that.thlngshishavfrgotlen— from the atl(atlorncy-gcnerars posi- Williams Wi , is also promotinging a . . .rJT''.'.' ^ out of hand at times,"5," Williams (IdnoritheStI Stale Land Board, and “ lO-pc[>-poinl plan for combating criirime. | - says. they cite their t similar back- AndJld he claims lhal the thrust pfpflhe ^ ' Jones claims that hee merelym has grounds onI fafamily ranches as good progrogram would be aid for vlctldims i responded "to Williams'is' insistenceI experience,(. andnd would’ forcc criminals to mimake ___ ^ ^ H i on playing hardball," but Williams They alsoIso agree ■ th at' some reslieslilulibnlo victims, J im J o n ec s s(R ) JJT . id . W llH am s (D)- aiso says he only defendends himself tightening of parole procedures Is In in the area of criminal law. Ii against attacics initiateded byt Jones. needed ,andmd that a tougher Joneones also says that "we.hihave tences. a role now leftlei tothe parole SpecificIflcally, he believes that Regardless of who started sti the drunken-drivi-iving law and a golUotten away from the idea;a of board. everyonenc would benefll If the pro- mudsilnglng. thccrlticisn:lsms of each statewide drudrug program should be holdloldlng people responsible: for “ Harassment suitsilts and technical perty own►wners orc notified any time othbr's qualifications continue co — implemenled.cd. Bui they do differ oh thclrlelractions." • delays” are overcrrcrowding Idaho a lien is Is placcdp on their pn^)erty. ------tiand-no-spendine-iimlttnltation-has— many-of-lho-iw-flncr-polnl&-of-how-to ------Jones-pi'pposta_tha^comdcJo; dctcd—jourts;rJoiB5raisoi Itft— Ho tiserjnahy-property owners ^ ever materializeo. accomplishlU Ul ieseg ^ s. clrugrug dealers bc treated Justt like1 says lhal by requlrlulring the losing - ck)n’t havilave ample time to make up • ...... Jones; 40.-is a-Jw mme-allomey e ------“ I f w ’regof going to gel a handle on—perperpetralors of-violenl crimess and—i party of civil-actloillorfe-lo-pay-all the debts,oisjuidjio one getspald,:hcr: who grew up'around hishls father’s crime liTIdab(aho, NW're first going lo thatlat they' be' required lo serveve at attorney fees, it willi'ill deler "poorly says. ' catUcopcralionnearEdeii^den. have to .gel:l.a J handle-on -Juvenile least:ast a third of their prison-si-6cn- founded lawsuits."” in addaddition, Jones advocates ■ After' graduating frfrom law crime." Willljllllams says, noting lhal tenciaice. Jones also wantsnts to make “a changinging the stale’s public defend- school, he served In thche -Army for half of thele .jn^or crimes are He' He also wants to give the! gov- g simple change” in the law that cr systemLem so convicts pay for their two years and then Joinedned the staff committed byyWlhs.by . • emo:m or the responsibility lo make mi ■ allows contractors’ito place Hens taxpayer-ireMunded legal defense as a — of former Idaho Sen._LerieriB. 1 Jordon He advocv o c a ^ minlmal-cost finalnal decisions-on-reduced sen-s agalnsl the properlyityof debtors______tcrm ofpiif-parolc. — -

    T r e a sLurer i ram<.c..V<»n/c iirrHfr------Idaho-bankSr« r- 6 0 -they-een-makc------■AtlurAtt rutiriHg Irom the Hououscr ' g _ housing andmd business loans." Mineliner was named director of thei W /t. TWIN FALI^ - Howow to Invest Minersays. Stale:ate Board of Pharmacy, a post-pc Idaho's govemmcnlal fundsfui is thc But Moon1 cclaims the attack on. tion>on he left this year to nm for state—sti key issue in the race for the state her office iss nmerely an altempl lo treascasurer. — “ V m - treasurer’s officc. create an issu5sue where none exists. "I "I served cighT"years in i Both candidates —- incumbentir She says thatat investment money is' I.«gi!cgisiature. and it seemed abo&TNows..Twln.^U.4^o7.--

    7 1 Ju-di.cialjl/Unconieestedsta.tte racest — ______m z ______a MARTY TRILLHAASE due to a heavy case’loadcaj and tiecause on’iin appeal. And he saya lhatjIJawyers Ti^Sews writer lie was' strivinglg to produce quallly {treire not attempting to dlsquallallfy him M ilinidoka \tzoters decisions. fronrom hearing cases wilh anyy \greater 1 • . RUI■lUPERT - In an aboul>ul-foce, Sincc then, BnBmce says all of his freqrequcncy than they altemptpt to dls- te n will play Judge and jujury on cases are currenl.>nl. But Chisholm says qualluallfy other Judges in Ihedlstistrict. will i cast VLzerdict rlIV. 2 in the heat<^ race for MlnIlnldoka a comparativelyy smalls case load and Th<^ Tl facts attest to his legi!gal com- , Countunly’s resident Fifth Distrtctct Court the pressures of ol the- election arc pele«lence and lo the fact thatl I.lawyers Igeship. rc^nsibleforthethe change. don'kin’t find him Incompetanl. helesays. j u d ^ in jjudgeshi] l Ip ra ce In reaching their verdict, avoters “It may be right ri now, that he But Bi Bmce concecies he hailas spent ------^------throui-oughout the Magic Volley will/HI have— docsn't-(have anyny delayed cases). But— mucnuch'of-lhe-campaign-on-li-lhe-de------lo slfl sin through a seemingly endless ei if It wasn’t for thliills election, he’d have fensensive. WhHe he believes thetw adver- ^^11 seriesic s of charges and counterchchargcs cases that wouldd beb belter than a year tiseiisemcnls arc misleading andxl unfair, in the race betw^n Judge Ronald R old,” Chisholm says.sa “Getting him to Bmi)mce believes their impact!t on the Bruceuce and his challenger, Donald D decide some of thosetho old cases may be elecSection will be slight. Chlshouglas Kramer of Hailey, he2 says,s gc has been challenged in the • In order to0 attend a January------"If"I they had even informallally said Magicglc Valley. speaking engagcigement In Moscow,---- theytiey did not approve of it. 1 wvould i not - ■ /V/x///.;; ' ■ Secoecond. It is the'only Flfth'DliDistrict— Bruce-Tcllnquishethed'hls'ToIu m u uOii----- haveave gone," Bmce says, addlrJing that ^ Ronald Bruce Courtirl racc on the November ballot; b tinuing jury trial1al to Flflh District-----hlsnIs absence did not affect the outcomeoi — ...... - Gencnicrallyrdlstrictjudggs:are,elielected ..JudgeGeorgeGnnranBla of Burley.— • -of-f-the-trial-and U did not leadid-toran— during1ng the May primary. But Bi a . "I’ve never hearlard of a district court---- appeP P eal. ------— thrcc->ee-way racc for the seat lrIn the Judge leaving a trialtrii for any reason at------GranataGr “received the verdict, v mary denied any candidatelie the all," Chisholm sasays. "I'm sure it's----Therhere was no appeal. I scntencmeed the majorijority neededJor.eIectlon. Thad figures probably are acciccurate. Brucnice. 41, vJas appointed to the speech." But;ut ho contends the figures: are a not ich last year, after having servedsc • Bmce has thehe smalicst^ase load presresented In context. The county's cc a_ma0stratejudgc.slncc.l37iI77_ H e _ o f the five Fifth DiiDlstrlct.Court ju d g e s ..e aose s e load dropped 5.2 pcrccnlu duringi lat period, compnrpfl tn n 4 f) p attorm)mey general prior lo hislis ap- during the first el(eight months of 1982, droprop Ihroughout the Fifth Judicial Ji pointmitment lo magistrate court, the other four judges juc have decided Distilistrict and a 7.8 decline In cas issue 1 more years of thithis type of judicial Bmcmce will not challenge his requestsre dcclstoIsions 30 days afler the cairase is performance." forir delays.< Moreover, he coiintends mittcd. Bmce defendss 1;his record, saying thatlat Bmce is citing both magiigistrate small that only one of hi Donald Chisholm AtI theU time. Bmce said a s his decisions during andid district court cases whi^hen he percenlccntage of his cases wore del;clayed the past six yearsrs has been reversed arrivrrives at the 149-case figure.

    Sec. of StiStateland Supt.. cof Public Instrucuctiori

    C e nnarrusa,, J e r r y L v a n s un

    Democrati

    A » - f i mW.

    f c - J r* _

    f e : ...

    - =■ -V ------

    Republican incum bent ------George-Han!insen .....r - CZ

    H a n s e! l n - S t a l ll i n g s r ai e e o n e> o f s t ai t e ’ s h o) i t t e s t . By BRUCE HAMMOND be reveiversed. cash to spend, order lo spur thce economye must have Tlmes-i\'c'\vs writer • Impmpicmenllng broad-based taxax reform.1 Stallings, holowever. supported the lax la priority over milllarlary expenses, and he includinding adoption of a flal-ratc Inco:ncome tax. hike, saying It"L "was thc bitter pill we all hadha criticizes Reagan torjr insistingii on thc largest TWIN FAi:I^-Whetherier theI discussion is reduclmring' “harassment techniques"cs" by thc lo swallow in onorder lo gel thc national deficificll pcacetlmc, militaryi budgetbi in thc nation's on economics, taxes, thc! mllllaryml or public internalnal Revenue Service andI reducingn down to a level:1 \where our economy can staitart history. lands.. Republican George)rgc Hansen and overallUl taxes so people retain more)re of Ihelr' movlngagaln." On thc domestic.c. social-servlces1 front, Democrat Richard StallingsIgs rarely agree. earningings lo spend In American markcirkels. Without the; Ilax increase. Stallings sayyiys Hansen advocates chaiigingcha Social Security Hansen, Idaho’s six-ternerm congressman Hanstnscn’s general philosophy iss thatU cut- the federal defeficlt would have l>een muclUch into "a true insurarirance program, where • from the 2nd Dlslricl. is beinwing challenged by ting tax;axes and curbing federal spendending will larger than lhlovcates a strong dcrensc. bul bi .on thc poor, cracking down on food-strl-8tamp fraud ahd most, onoi economic recovery Is the reccnt he insists'that.1 '“thc rule of matching reveeve- "The .safety net musnust be slrenthened by a mllllary "rrill" expenditurelures, such os new $38.3 billion t tax increase Reagi■agan sue- nucs with expeticndllures must be followed<1 IIn stronger commitmentlent to educational and officer clubs and administra!;trationcomplexes. cessfull[ully requested. peacetime." Hc says that many of thc neinew retraining prdgroms.’is." he says. "To ellml- • Passing a constitutionllonal amendment Hanainscn opposed the acllon. sssaying ii weapon proposetsals need to be scrutinizedI forro nate poverty, we mustlust eliminate ignorance, that would require a balandanced budget. He moved;ed away from Reagan’sorlglnolInal course, duplication orr 1for thc posslblllly thal theLhey By helping people acquire ac skills, we help believes this Is thc only solsolution lo dcriclt- h c bellielievcs thc economy cannot gel moving maybecomcouautdated too soon, them devdop pride,ie. .And I believe m o st . spending, since balanced-bid-budget laws can unless5S taxes arc cul so pm p l i < c a te ballotI t gldative-endors^ amendmerents ByRONZELLAR and the eight lc§l^ R are-the mosl issmisues lhal ■voters"have'had'd 'to — ~ — - Times-News wrileife r" contend wilh in rcctcccnl memory, ale 10 Tho stale Is pending $73,000 on legal adveIver- B O IS B -Idaho10 hope people will taketth ti e statc-londs managagement. Jury trial waivers a ti-.netolookatthemem,” Ysursasays. selection of stateI SiSupreme Court chief Justices, Amendments willA'ill be listed on thc ballot by^the U ------The-bflllot-will-ll-toe-lengthy-and-complicali:ated, -----resolution-number)cr-under-whk±-tbey were: IIn­ concedes Ben Ysui!ursa, lhe chief deputy secreta•etary iroduced In theJ Houset or Senate. All eiglight ______of state. Thc thnxree citizen-sponsored InillatUitlvcs received legislativeIve endorsement.

    J _ The proposal fo:for industrial-revcnue bondlndlng Opponents say’ thatth money directed into reveve- Indu[ustrial rev-,the;fi{a(e5vo v o ia= .------thc state al a conompetltive disadvantage when wh unfoir competitionlon that has occurred in sonome ------trying lo recruit nenew business and industry. olherstates. .

    ^ Two separate piproposals. H.J.R. 7 and H.Jl.J.R. The proposal alsalso removes an incomplete3 list1 Voting quualification! I l o 14. would revise: languagek In the state const!Btltu- of felony offensescs for1 which the right lo votete Is ______lion affecting quqwallflcations_to-vote or hold hi revoked.______office.-None of uiehe sedions being revised issnow n : H.K.J. 14 wouidlild amehd th6 £0hSlilUU'6niTT5 ------T— enforced, Ysursasisays. change the legalll voting\ age from 21 lo 18B.. to H.J,R. 7 wouldJd remove language thatt dis-£ allow residency/ requirementsr to be set: by qualifies personsIS described as “idiotic: aand statute rather thanhan by constitutional provisicsion, insane." and pers(rsons who practice “celestiallal or and to remove lan,language restricting'thc officfices -— :— ^—pnlriaryhni mnrritringo Thp InMpr'Is a rofcrorrenw "womencan^QliL.,: to members of ththe Church of Jesus Christist of Neither proposalisal has. any organized oppoposT Latter-day Saints.s. lion.

    A proposal to cchangc the standard of man- mi to secure “ mmaximum a possible airtouount Public land:L lo . agemcnt for statetc endowment lands. H.J.R.R. 18 therefore.” p would make clulear the state Land Boan■ard's Land Board nmembers have question!>ncd * responsibility lot manager the lands for "mimax- whether the changenge Is necessary. Officlais inI tithc fmum, long-termI financialII return.” Legislative Councilicil’s office say there has beiseen The existing lonanguage calls for managemciment no active oppositionion to the proposed changc.

    H.J.R. IS wouldId changc thc term of officcX fori turnover In the offic[fice and encouragc attorneys'Sto ~ F Prosecutor^ counly prosecuton>rs from two years to four yea'caris. view thc. officc as a carcer. rather than asIS a - I starting Ini984. Iralning ^ u n d . IWostIVIo other elected offices hailave Supporters sayly longer terms would redueduce four-year terms, theythe note.

    - The-right .Of personspi chargcd .with fclo:elony Often, the only reasonret a case proceeds to trijrial Juryr trial waive1 ^ 1 crimes to have theheir case heard before a Judiudge is to preserve the; rightrij lo appeal a ccrtain Issusue rather than a Juryy would< be granted under S.J.l.J.R. to a higher court,1 . supportersj of this measurure ____ U2 . but only if bot»lh the prosecutor and defenfense — contend.- In such-inrinstances, the jury trial Iss “a ■ lawyerglvetheiro•consent.'' waste of time, Defendants chailargcd with lesser crimes now n< The measure isi supportedsu; by both defense anand have the right lowjwaive a Jury trial. prosecuting attorneyneys.

    lendmenfto the Supreme CoiCourt thecourt. CChief justicece istitutlon. H.J.R. 2. would aff(effect New language would w require thal a chi(Hief thc selection of chi

    ■fc r r A proposal lo aianrtend constitutional rulesJS for i The first changeIge would allow famity-owncned Corpoorate votinjl y corporations. S.J.lJ.R. UO. would allow corpoi■pOfK- forming corporatioItions'to p ^ on equity Ilo lions to issue non-in-votlng common stock, andmd to descendants, whilelie retainingi mahagement coiMh-- , ^ v c corporationsns a choice between slral(•a p t trol. The second provisionpn would give corponira- ■ voting and cumimulative voting . In electl?cl|ng tjons a choice fn votingvoi procedures — a cholc)lcc ■ directors. thal Is allowed in mostmo other states. IQT^nPftHowa.TwV ^pClpt>Or,24,lB« , ■ftoiwSSGNiT] ______Thh e initiai T - ’a a

    T h rre e in v e s c

    = r t a x jL e s ^ j dLentm: i Lesni]u c t e a I T p o aw; e r

    By BRUCE HAMMirIMOND ' the use of nuclear power'cr for eieclriclly TJmes-Ncws writerter generation.

    ------TWIN-FAbLS—— Idaho-residentswlli-be—------Inlliotives^are Issues plaolaced on a general faced with three initiativeinl Issues when they election ballot through th

    Spearheaded bby y Ken : Robison, a former Proponents claim that; therethi has been a___r r * legislator, this Initiative inil wouI3~make thc sl^lflcaht ahlfl In the propit■operty-taxburden ' ' ' I axinitiativ 5 v e r temporary homo m e s ^ d __property-tax from utilities and tHislnesseisses to homes, and exemption now Inin (effecfa permanent p a rt''" that this shift iscontlnulng.-ig .-,_ ^ .------' ^ ______of Idaho’s tax code.de. However, opponents off ththe initiative de- __ tate these statlrtla. Theyrtey claim the *54 ______l U Mssed ^ l ^nLdiaols.- risen three timess ssince 1976 os fast as the The Besldentlal Tax Initiative lr group total amount of prdi>rdperty taxespaid. During maintains, however, thathat the measure that same period,od. they say, residential would not reduce funds3 forf< schools, but taxes have Increasi}ased by $54 million, while merely would didnge the‘amount an of thc lax ------— lhe .propgdy.taxeaxes pnld by ulllUies have burden homeowyrs are paying,paj compared______d e c r e a ^ by aboulDUl $10.4 million. to businesses and utllilies.

    This drive wasIS 1 led by Twin Falls den- . They say that ha'ving a stalei board, to turtst Lee Barnes,es, who for several yeors test and license denturlsts,sts, will maintain ►enturistinnitiative __ had s o u ^ t leglsiatlJatlve action to legalize the professional quality, as wellwe! as provide a sale of denture work wo without Involving a way for complaints to be heaheard. dentist. The Idaho Dental Assocsoclatlon strongly opposes tbe Initiative. This measure wnwould create a state Board The association claimsIS tthat forming a of Denturlly, anda 11it would allow that body separate board to goveDvem denturltry to authorize llceni%nsed denlurlsts to take diqjilcates tbe State Boardcd oof Dentistry and impressions of mouths mi and gums, and wlli cost tbe taxpayers addltkUtkmal m on^. construct and sell>11 denturesi to Individuals, ^ieve that many except in casess of< first fittings. First Thc dentists also belie' mouth-related diseases andind gum problems fittings stili wouldluld have to be done by will go undetected If denturilurists are allowed dentists. to serve customers wltboithout requiring a ' Supporters of: tlithe measure claim that medical examination by licelicensed dentists. people seeking den:lenture repair, or new sets Under existing law,-<,-denturists are of false teeth, tia:ia y too much m«»ey by allowed to work only

    This is a pro-oD-nuclear-power issue. It fective back-up precautionIons are In nuclear would st< 9 tbe statitate from enacting any law’ plants. [uclear inititiative tliat would prohlt)hlblt the use of nxidear Opponents say this IxiInlUaUve would ' energy for tbe gfgeneration of electricity create more unnecessaryy egovemment reg* unless tbe proposeo s^ measure is approvedI ulation by.requlrlng a stat^tew lde advisory by voters In the» firstI possible statewide vote. g ^ r a l election. One of tbe ( ^ ^ i n g grogroiqjs, the Snake Proponents dalJalm this nMosure willI River Alliance, says thehe Le^slature Is prevent hastyy legislation against already subject to extrenrem e public pre- nuclear-power plaplants. They claim that. 7rssures, and if enoughI) |people wanted nuclearpower is} ththe safest form of thermal1 nuclear prohibition of a partcularpar project, powerfro^mahealU^ th standpoint. the Legislature would be reqxmsive.res In inforrhatidh1 clcIrdUfltw byC itiiSis for" Opponents also stress5-that-the U safety,------Energy and the EnEnvironment, the support- economics and demand for nuclear energy -ers . clalm-thatL thetl Three Mile Island1 will be the r ^ factors In cdetermining thc accld6ttl“lrrpenn^m^1viinla-praved-how-«f'—i— validityofaprojectrnotthoIho Legislature______— — j-S uftdndav,X)ctofaer24ll9B2'- . Tlm11’ 1 riTi in i i-^iiiiiiTiinii'

    egislativt races I

    ftp mm s tr ic k ii

    L a rs o n I »/— - T alklngttgton ' Trounson

    c. I s a a c S< cott K islinlng g D is t r iii c t 2 2 : Ddistrict i 2115: D i ss t tr ic t 2 3 :

    T W o -iiin G u m b e n t s f a c e2 G h a l l e n i g e s — P c’arty splilit-p G s s ibAe l — ^All ithree seats I MOUNTAIN HOMOME — The two races inI DDistrict 22 wait until the Legislature convenes tcto look at the By BRIIRUCE HAMMOND the cost of eliminatinglg Individu- By BRUCEE HHAMMOND feature a candldalcQte making her third attemplnpt at state situation, TJmes-i2S-iVews writer als’ freedom of choice. TImcs-NcwsHS VwrHer ng his rirst ^ , • She says educatlllion musl . office and an appo^pointed Incumbent making do have to increase taxes. -sales » lax is the election bid. VIN FALLS - Party backingIng remain” the stale’s tojLop (undintj TWIN FALl‘ALLS — Dlslricl 23 voters have Uielr work to go. It picks up peopleJ iwho otherwise o( existing out for them»m Ithis election year, wilh ail three leglsla The district, whichilch Is composed of Elmore Co ytaxcs,^hesays— ^------______vs. nan■ame idcnllficatlon Is the realcal_ p rio jity , regarcilcss ol ------parrofA daC ounty;ity,“ hns'on(rtwnwntestedr{ contestcsl In thc District 25 revenue shortag^- positions upJp (or(c grabs. Kelly, R-Mountainin Home,I- is seeking his fourtlirth term In Dependingg oion how right-to-work leglslalatlon Is written. leglslatilatlverace...... Talklngton also- hasIS taken a Running; foifor thc Senate position are two men with 1 . the House of Represc'esentatives. Gillespie saysys 1he would support It becaustise *i think most in a Republican-dominatedted * public position supportlrting stWer backgroundsids in government: retired Gooding Cot of myconstitucituents would want me to suppciportlt.” counlyIly such as Twin Falls,. a penalties (or drunken driarlvers.' ' Assessor We:Wes Trounson, a Republican, and a for: sislant minority leader. Floyd Kisling Senate “I’macquaiiiiainted with business peoplee jand farmers. 1 GOP-si’-supported candldalcale He says as an Indepcpendent, he House assist The retirementI ofol seven-term Sen. J. Wils/Ilson Stw n— tjjjnfc i undenierstand thelr probiems molore-than'some------normalnally would have an easy rood)od—would-choose-lo-caucu! ru3-with-_ei.'- —Democra.t:— prompted Ciaire Weatherell W of Mountain Homp. his people might.”It.” • lo vlctIctory. Donna Scott has the ther party, according tolo the iMues The two} mmen are seeking the Job thal opened w E)emocrat(c opponernent in the last two contests.As. to make. credeniicntliUs and the party support.irt. ‘ where he believes he COcan be most Sen. Kennethrieth Bradshaw. R-Wcndell, decided to rt ------another-bld-forofflijfflce.-She-is:runningagainsinst-Stcen's -----Hmse------^------ButIt when Twin Falls Mayoryor effcctiveiUul if prtssunaredloalign a(terlhrceleie terms in ofrice: ...... ■' former campaignI manager,m Vemon Giile^lelie of Moun- Mark Larson■son, 32. moved to Idaho five; yearsy a ^ from Chriss 1Talkington threw his nameme himself wilh o sing)Igle party. CompetingIng for. the two House scats-in District tain Home, who sa:says he and the rctlred sersaaato ratc .. MlniKsoU. wtwhere he served two yearars on lhe city Into^.th,thc hat os an Independentenl Talklngton says he wli:/111 “caucus which is concomposed of Camas. Gooding, and part "both cut out of thesle same cloth.’’ council In Bcrtlertha.-populatlon500. * contentender, the character of the by myself.” Jferome andmd Lincoln counties, ore the two IncumI ms and their Democratic chaiicngefs. Weather«ll. 63. hasha lived In the Mountain H( 3l teacher and a electioiUon changed significantly,tly. Some of the statcwldtide changc.s Rcpubllcansi „ • Ah Amcrica,lean govemmcnt high-school Rep. Johnhn 1Brooks. R-Gooding, Is bclnglchallengei since 194C. She has served eight years on I Dlltlcal cartoonist, Larson sayjys he decided lo lg with his-name identlfica-ica- hewantslosecarc: ------Hnmff Citv Council.;il. thci last two as president.i / JJiTctlvc part-time polltl , Talklngton has establishedtied , • A comprehensive shifting s o[ Dick Stricklarkland of Gooding, and Rep. Gordon HollKl : Idnho House when he .wasIS asked by thc !, is facing William Hollaman-of Wendell. Democrat, she been state vice cnuirms locratic commlttec. ian rlM'ififnn-mnkinp from1 stale 5 gov- R-Jerome.is national conventionon delegate.i A former Mountx«talnH om e .... andas.as a City Council member. ernment to lociu' govenjmments - Chamber of Comme:merce president, Weatherell!ll Itook over "I just gave:vc my seniors a lecture on. ■If‘I you don'l get 'm in a racc now. there's no cilles, countlcs and hlgilghway dls- Senate race the operation of Guajuarantec Title Inc. when herier husband involved, whortowlll?’” v . , doubt)t about 11.” Scott acknowl-iwl- tricls — to give local ofodlciols thc Kisling. 72. served In the Idaho Hojjee (or (our .let r died...... - - _He.acknowkwledges that his .status ^ 0 o relative new- IS. “But If 1 can get mv namem e—authority—to m ake-tl-their-ow n- - beginningIln In 1955;1 ------lf.^tected^shcJioptlopestnserveonthejudlclai.cll. education comer mighttit bet a handicap, but he'sajays he brings a identifilificalion up to whal Chris hastias changes to atlracl hew2W business Now retirw;ir ^ from forming, he also Is a past chain or social services committees.cor ''iiuw pvia)Kn;tiective:" .------nayory-I-lhlnk-wc'll still winuda__ nnd gmwtli______of the Dielricirich school board, serves as a board men " I’rh concernedJ aboutal the budget and the Wisewi use of "I’ve spent;nt IS years studying or treading aboul "b^ialuseof my party alfillalion." • Allow counly or cllyly residenls of Sl. Benedltledlctls Hospital Foundation and the Big W our federal dollars,rs, as well as our state dolltollors ” she governmentL at all levels. 1 want to make? IIdoho my home fpfjele two i are competing for lhe to approve local-optlonin taxes, ci- Canal' Co.,I., nand Is chairman o( the Lincoln Coi says, ' ‘I think priorioritics have to be establish)ished If we fo rth eresto3f fn my life. se seat that’s being vacatedlied lher property or sales; litaxes, as a Planning and Zoning Commission, . can't deliver someme of the services, we mimust start ”W ene^^[ growth, but wc need controHjHcd growth. We b v ^ IHouse Speaker RalphJph ^ partial repiacemenl foror property Perhapss I highest on Klsllng's - personal list charging or start-t eliminating( some of thc>e services need new buslrisinesses, and wc need lo do. tilhat wisely Wc oimstestead. R-TwIn Falls, who ran taxes, but also as a means r (or legislativec gogoals Is enactment of a tough drunkcn-dr HopefuUy, 11. won’ti’t be In the area of the elderly eld and wont buslncsscsses to be compatible with wh<'hat Idaho is.” u„succiccessfully for the GOP gu- prodding new revenueje for local law. people In real need.”d." To make up revenue shortage, Larsonon calls for "an ^grnat^latorial nomlnalloriN. proj&ss^ Too often,:n, (the courts and^ prosecutors have contir To make up for fo projected revenue shortages. sl examination1 of o: existing programs to scsec If they arc imkendrivers ‘'breaks?’ oiit of cbrnpassioi ature Itself. t» ln g n m a se5 efflcicnUy f as possible.” If additionalac taxes mstead. along wllh many’ fl-ri- ’ • Ashlftfrompropert •'s family needing financial support, he say Weatherell advocatc:ates examining the Legislati :lally well-off Republicans,I, is user taxes'— like sales General sessions everyevi other year and budgetgel sessions are needed, a salesa tax would be thc "falrclrcst.”hesays. "onclal ,-he-advocates automatic revocation < reaUy from his bockimcing Scott, while omersiers mineral taxes - Incli ------cveryTcarmlehl-ctil-cut-costs-and-promote-eXficiiinipnry Larson Mysays he does not-dlffer gre; *"cr?ll'cenicense upon a first conviction and jail sente opponentTbuf"ii f ’hedld vote forright-to-woi.•orkrand Hvould— -bcIie.Y£?vp Talklngton has an advan-'an- possibility of dcdlcatlnS'ng'aMi’e': —says^____ luenLylolations not.” Also. “ “I I think I would be less affcffcclcd by party tage: In Ir the politically moderateiie «!ni~salcs~iax“ to“ eau< ling the present state (unding crisis. Ki! If additloni revenveniicsare needed.-Weatherellrellsaysste. Ir. IIssac has been In the past.” residcricntial areas of Twin Falls, cope with current fun Ilng toward ** supports somsome budget-culling ond. os a last resort, s would support a. solessa tax. with funds goinj oac. Gl, was ap^liitcd to thele liCglslature in Scotlotl, a 47-year-old housewife,l,c blems. X Increasepossibly o( the slate sales tax. education. She saysays she also would examinerre dnmken- January of 198 ly's • Eslablishmentofsoisomclypeol 1981. Hc has lived In Elmoreire County since who Is Is active In her family's opposes dedicated taxes “ bccausc once driving laws andid alternative sentencing lor (c young l a s j 'S n mIS s aa hardware store. He has; s

    >on - g . „ -

    ______V an H o H o o s e r______P e a v e y

    fe

    A b a u r

    iJ Brackett B e lle m •

    D is t rr i ic t 2 4 : DI i s t r i c t !2 1 : J ____P la tf< F o r m s s irm i l a r IP e a v y , ?N e i b a u r• f a c e c hl c a l l e n g e s ■ByBRUCEflAMMOND ing to their income poteiotentlal. while county assessorors are ByBRliCEHAMIVMMOND TJmes-NewsT/i writer Times-News wTileiHer left to assess everyonyone else according to projroperty valued" Peavey soys. •*'"That means that everone bibut the TWIN FAI*LS - The Dislrltrict 21 legislative boundariesics utilities and sonte largerge corporations are riding upjp wilh ______TWIN FALLSS —- Vq^_ln_pisti1ct 24_pImprobably will h_aye _lo ^ re a d over a wide array of)f >country and people.Ts.from ------consider polllic^EaT^iiosophies more thanlh i Issues w ^ deciding oni—inflation and having to paya{ iargeriand largecstiatiare o f...... Sun Valley’s mountains ajand streams to' the ruralrai the lax burden.'^ : their one contested^ legislative race, farming reaches ot Minidokarding to wliat they>y wouldu bring os;a rental, hesisays. But the two candandldates are campaigningi oion essentially the same "I think that creating jobstis. and helping businessmen platform — tougougher dninkenKlrivlng laws lav and openness lo »en He-also favors , theJie ,wide, uae^of: small.! prlprivate. and farmers stay in businessss are the main things peoplepie hydroelectric plants, suesuch os the ones that are planic^o n constituents! waht from their legislators5 iright now." soys Sen. John Fortunately foror >voters, hcw^ver. tbe similailaritles end there. S f ihn gravity Irrigatlon-systeistems, and more use of thc SSnake Peavey. D-Carey. River for power productljctlon. Brackett. is ta second-generation cattletie rancher wiio crew up ___- ,Otliei‘3 appjiwilly iJ 'OesigtintM s i s v / m ^ 'I'wiiT'mraiisuHinty.Tiesa>« .'fiS flii five'Df me canaidaies arc stressing pro-business anind pro-taxpayd- programs, his roots are deepicp In the Magic Vailcy: he; expoundse conservative r 5. had allowed small groups gra lo sell revenue bondnds to politics and suppoiports tbe ideals of Reaganomimics Peavey. a four-term Incurumbent. is being challenged;ed -financepowcrprojecls.iIs. more energy sources couldd 1have by Eugene Durrdi Moon olof Heybum. A Republican,an. been devdoped in Idahcaho, rather than having lo dc|Jepend At age 56. VanD HHooser acknowledges thatth b< er politics are slightly Moon Is campaigning on a deiierogulation platform, more moderate,B. yA transplant from CallfoiIfomla. where she was ___^ on projects like the trodroUbled Washington Public PiPower ______agtiveforMyPflrs CQmpetlmLfor-One )f the dl;district's two House seats aroire Supply System. three-term Incumbent Rep.. MockI\ Neibaur. K-h*aui. and been on tbb Buhlluhl Planning and Zoning! ConunisslonC since Its ^ Tia—------^— ------Democrai Clarence Bellem.. sa Rupert farmer, House race inception and iss pipresident of tbe Buhl Businisiness and Professional Rep. p Stove Antone. R-Rup wwants to crack down on drunken di drivers. Four "Most •• of the regulation proroblem Is causcd by dupilca- years ago. he unsu operating plans to the Forcirest Senrice and thc statoto Bellem advocates building bui more dams to curbrb the He wants a new:ew law that would apply to oilall types of Intoxicants. Lands i C Depzulment, and thenn ]post separate bonds to both not justjilcoboi.:. HHe says that measure shoulould Include blood-level th rising pumping c c ^ of ground-wotori irrigators ancitdlhe agencies. useof hydrodectric geneeneralkm. descriptkins of intoxicationintc and stiff fines andan mandatory evalua-- "There’s.. no need for this tyjtype of arbitrary duplication, Uon for alcoholism.sm. 'n. Neibaur. '59, is concernem ed that too much stote funinding lUjust Increases your costt i of doing business, and in for public schools willU take t away local schod boaoards’ In c^ u n c tio n3 w;wilh this, Brackett also belhelleves the drinking age ^many cases, it Increases It enenough to force you out. That Ifroml9to20or2l. at independence. should be raised frc hurhurts our economy and destroroysjobs.” ...... — ...... “ A fler the-younitung people get a little olderler. they cbange.lnto a ^ "When ycMi accept stoi^ t e money, there are going;to I b e Moon does not oppose envivlronmental regulations; hehe w m e 'strings'attached,d. dictating< how you use it.'I." he different crowdI arand don’t associate with tbe tbi high-school kids as says he pursued environmenentally safe mining tcch- much,” hesays. :h- says. “ Yes, our main1 responsibilityrc Is to fund sch<:hools, niques long before they becanmjerecjulred. bill at some polnl. you-ou simply don’t have any more n Tbe incumbent^ t also would support a temporaryi sales-tax ' O ver-re^ation is spreai3adlng throughout Idaho's increaseto help deldefray the present state reverkrenue shortage. ^ >'s money.” economy, and it is inhlbllbiting farming and smallall While he opposes taxX increases.ir Neibaur says lhallallhe "But I would not support a dedicated tax.K. like1 to education. The ^businesses alike, says Moon,m. a miner, civil engineer. Legislature losesis er. some type of tax increasease to keep the budget balanceced. If pecf)le lose control.rol." "1 know It sounds like a one-issue campaign, but The other two leglegislative positions In Districrict 24 are uncontested. .,,,| ut that happens, he favorsors a shc^-torm Increase wllivlth a cutting some of these out-of-of-control rules and regula-a- specific expiration dale.;e. Sen. John Barkerker. R-Buhl. the chairman of tbet Health. Fvducatlon tions J will spread throughout... . . all walksof life." and W dfare ComiDmmlttee, ran against felloellow Republican U rry ‘ p To prevent a repeatQt of• the present funding crcrisis. Peavey. a 48-year-old sheepep rancher wito also holds anin Neibaur says he wouldId suppoKi passage of a consiulllu- Olsen in the primarnao^. But be is now unopposetsed in his bid for a ninth ^engineering degree, Is campspalgning for equitable taxa- term. a- Uonal amendment thatIt wouldw dlow the stote lo dcv«ivelop tion. balanced devdopmentnt of energy and qualityty a contingency fund durin{ring good years. And Rep. Lawrcnrence Knigge, R-Filer. has hadha no competition this education. He initially was apappointed to the Senate, as a election year. Kniginigge is seeking a fourth tenr:rm in the House, where ‘ a "And having such a1 fundfui wouldn’t be wasting mononey flepublican, to replace his monother. but be later switched2d for us becausc it wouldId bet drawing Interest, and atatthe he serves on the JolJoint Finance and Approprianations Clomtnlttee and to the ^ Democratic Party. Agricultural Affair:airs Committee. same time we wouldn'tn't be so short-sighted as noiMt to "The Tax Commission appiipraises the utilities accord-d- expect some of these econconomic downturru.'' he says.5. * 14Timo^a¥rt*,Twinlvlii Falls, Idaho Sunday, OctoborOc 24.1982 “ (oSmJiirri _\m C<'ounty ra*%ces

    J w i n J f a l l s ^ ^ a: o m m i s» i s i o n W l e n e w - fF i a c e — Two Buhi res.isidents, Johnsoton and Felton, siseek to win positioion being vacateted bv Merl Leonmard | | | | | « By MARTY TRI LLHAASWSE ______partart-owner of the Twin Fallsalls Livestock ----- Tlmes-News writer------'hlmselt~a5~a— -••selself-cducated professional business TWIN FA L L S -In contrastcon to many other perserson” who would bring a busbusinessman’s state and area races,5, tthe contest for the erspectlve to local government. District I Twin Fallss CountyC commission rr, scat has txcn a comparat The Buhl Democrat also hopilopbs to break iratlvelyfriendiyone. le Republican Party’s strong! And fxjgardJess of thele outcomeo of the race. inghold on the between Republican Jud;Judy Felton and Dem- ounty board. ocrat Alvlc Johnson, thehe electionc will mark a "I think it would be advantageageous. I think significant change in the composition of the ’s been under the control oft onone party for three-member countyf board..Itb will give X) long.” he says. "I think( ItIt’s Just like iklng one line of cows and brbringing In a Buhl its first represcntjentatlve on the com- ilfcrcnl bull for high-bred vigor. - mission in recent years.■s. p. The incumbent. Mcrl t Bul the race Is devoid of)f -any j healed rl Leonard of Filer, is tietoric.'Bolh candidates expres}ress a similar not seeking re-election.*• ' ...... phili hilosophy of the role of a cOun)unty commis- ioncr. . Felton' 40. the formeimer chairman of the I i Duhl Planning and Zoningning Commission, says “One of the main things I willill ddo Is to keep she places a high prlorltorlty on Innovation in onn open-dooro policy,” Johnsonin ssaid. "I feel laHsTcal-lmportant:''------volvement In local affairsairs. ■ ‘ ...... ^Aiid Fcltdn says that she believlievcs a county r She says both conceptspts have played a role - comimmissioner “has got lo letlet the people in her experience in •Buhl.'She>Bu worked to ' knin that they will listen to themem.” obtain federal conununllunltyiblock'grants fof" • ------the city-andhelped desigsign tlie community's*-''”- JoJohnson Is the only Democratrat running for J u d y F e ito n (R) _ _ - . . A1»J^de.J.ohnsQn.(D)______comprcbcnsivoland'use]:seplan. ■ •• ■ . couiounty office Iri Twin Falls. The rirel of the " • i thlnk'if you get clotclosei* to'them; Jf you comounty’s Republican Incumbents:nts who arc up holds the ThirdTl District seat; Clerk RicRichard Edwards of Twin!n Falls. F __moke yourself: available,ble, :that;those people' jfbre>r election are running unopposcxjsed. Pence ofr TNvln Falls; Assessor I>Dorthy Counly Commissioner Coi Marvin1 will feel more froo to com»m «ln^nd talk about " - I BiBarring a write-in campaign,pi. incumbents Hamby ofJf Klmberiy; Treasurer Ji)Juanita Hempleman'ofTvTwin Falls, who'holds the whattheirproblenta are;'PBi" Felton says...... ssured of election are: counlyty f Twin Falls: Prosecutorr IHairy Second District seal,se and Sheriff Jim Munn1 Johnson, 58, is a faifarmcr-rancher and Cha:halrm an Aijn Coyer of Twin/in Falls, who DeHaan of o Filer; and. Coroner CCloyce were elected to four-yearfou terms in 1980.

    ____ Inr.liidingtwJO n commissionI sseats______j Jeroomevo ytershoi we five? choicees to m%ake withi crowdded batlllot’l j ^ite-in czampatign By BONNIE BAIRD JONIONES ------termliscoron•oner. thatilat all county purchases arc modem er. notices,s, sshe says. Times-News writer localcally if local priccs aree the A farmer, he llvtlives in the home ff Commlssknn1 races loweiwcst. Butler also promises dclose his parents establislllshed In the early H er DeDemocratic challenger, EllaQ JEROME — Therere are five. Grindstaff,ff. 69.i is chairman of the supeiipervlslon of budgeting .and 1920s. Schutte hasIS beenI president Mink. 48. of Jerome, wasS k Jerome County races on ithe ballot' county commemission and a six-year speni>endlng. of the Jerome: Counly( Farm nominatelated in the primary by a » this year, one, a write-iite-in contest veteran of theJie three-man board. He Bureau, and he iss ono the board of write-inin vvole. n launched by ah incumbeiibent county issceklngathI third term. In In the Dlslrict 3 commis;Isslon the South Cenlraltl DistrictI Health Minkk Is a resource aide al,l . y ____ commissioner defeatedted. In the Grindstaffff hasI lived In Jerome race,>cc. Carl H. Montgomery,/. an Department,______------_ J e r o m ele-HJgh-School^Her-college- -l e------primary. “County lor u years. ; He operated a Ede5uen-arca larmer and a lifel'elong. His six years ofJf experience,i he training,ig, she says, has been inn Jerome .County, voters£rs will de- servicc statlolion and garage for 32 rcsid(Sident of the arca, hopes to againag says, has given hin-llm the expertise accounlirfiling, and she Is taking aa cide between; years before•e retiring.r , ' winIn j over Henry Schutte. vrtiotjo he and woriting knowhwledge of counly computetIter coursc at the College o,f f' : • Incumbent Mci GrinGrindstaff. a He support5rts more commerical defei2feated in the primary. government that wowould benefit the Southern}m Idaho. Democrat, and Carlyle■Ie :Duller, a developmentnt to broaden the Montgomery, Mo 3G, served ththree county as a whole.:. IfII re-elected, he She sayssay she is excited about theC Republican, for the 0District I county’s taxX base.b Grindstaff says yean2ars on the Jerome County Plan-PI says his goal is lo cocontinue striving posslbllll;mty of being elected trea-I- county commission seat.it. he has workerked for. and'wlircon^ “ ningn g -a n d Zoning Commississlon." - for closer-workinglg relations-with • surer,'be«because It Is an office whereB ■ ■ ...... g • Carl Montgomery,ry, a Re- tinue lo worrork for. economy In durlriring development of the couniinty’s all departmenl headads. ' c woul(3uld use her knowledge andi g publican, and incumberibcnt Henry county govern:mment. comf)mprehensive land-use.plan.,Q..He skills inIn accounting; and computerr U Schuttc, also a RepublicaMean. wlKi.lB.-,‘_Hls six years yc. experience will alsoso has been active jn FsFarm Treasurer work. ~' running as a write-in1 cicandidate, enable him to Ihelp guide the county Bureureau and Soil Conservai'ation- Incumbent Elsiesle Childers Is fe ■ forthoDlstrlct3ci^nilssilssionseat. thnAigh thee current< Ught-maney—DistrIstrict.work______. __...... counting on her 20 0yi years of experi- Clerk • Democrat' Gleridai i Bclk and period, hesayiays. ' Montgomery Mo says his princlicipal encc In the trcasuisurer’s office to Demoalocrat unly supplies be purchaliased changes in mind forfor the office; her ers’ monloney by carrying out herr • And Democrat Edwidward Mes- also has owniwned and operated a throitrough bidding. goal Is to continues tclo do a good job campalgiIlgn promise to streamlinee senger and Republicanan Marjorie hardware slorlore. for the taxpayers, • the offlctflee. She says service from1 H. DuBois, for the assess«ssor’sposi- Butler callsills for "more careful Schuttc. Sc) 48, lost to Montgomimcry -She says she loollooks forward lo offio:fice has Improved withoutI tion. and consclenlentlous” county gov- In1 theth^ primary, but he Is condiiducl- using the county’s'’s computer for Increaslnislng the number off Running unopposedd are Rc- emment. andnd he says he will work Inglg ac write-in campaign to relretain tax work, saying thatth it will save employeeyees. publican Dannis Adan3amson for for greaterer harmony among hlss-year This is the first yearyej II has been centered■ed In her office, has been putit Ostler, a Republican.-foi-for another He says he would make certain term!rm as the east-cnd commisssslon- used for complete! taxta rolls and tax «See

    m . \ ^ ^ Im /- - -1 M elGrihdstas ta f f (D) C a rtr{ IM o n tg o m e ry (R) Glenda Bclk (DD) Elsie ClChIJders (R) Edu’<)rd E Mi'ssu'nger fiO) HP

    ■ 'N ; H w F* s -I ^ ______^ ' ^ k

    _ ^ UM — J ^ M a r j o r i e D u B o ls TRV C a rly le ButliM in k (O ) > J e r om i e — ------^calculated —rolls, electlonsj-dlsbursei:emenl-of— In the-Jeromene Countv as.-» ------tHHHlin^U[Bbeiorv um ultim a.------rfuna5.-cnnu Kuppun uini: thuti uUiui— olIlM, Ihim'n?:ISK to J‘J76. Prior to vorkcr. wor ncc In w problems, she If re-eleielected. Belk said she plans rresponsibilities of tht cic;lerk's of- coming lo Jeroirome. she worked for . He H' has 14 years of experlenc into service wilh few p ippralsal and assessment wwork. says. to adaptpt the county's computer flfice.* 13 years in theie assessor's office in app to district and magistrate ___ „ Sacramento, »--Tsasscssoris— ments;and attftthirtfmc'sne leii, siic TeS: ties: ^ 0office is between a Iclong-time had spent nine(ne years In thc ad- He H says his goals arc to helpphold made from a Califorr[omia firm. The fleers, ilntain . . rml gifts to it.c Ccounly appraiser. Dcmoldonl ondd well 1 »■ DISTTRICT ; known tl Duhl area (ormor ondi catllec ‘ '“ Is “ c:OVER fonchor. Pledged lo olfor new^ direc-c slonert 1 ^ tlon In 'conduct ol Commltsle D I S T . z K JUCDGE : office. i Formof cholrmon T,F. counly ct • A » Ndl’l Nc iarmert organization.n. For COUNTY . District ■* oMponded «» ogrlcolturol and prprivalo M CC » ' eon m plov'nenr opporlunillet in T.F. -> Is COMMISSIONER PoidOld Pol. Adv. by; » County. Co m CO Ron. ThirdTh Dltfrkt *’"*m in.nA nfiffrr^ yiYOUR VOTE APPRECIA1(TED Pd.Pd- fo rb y A n n C e v ar ' Poldby:AMeJahn»on Cha^n'O" ______I 16Timo»-Nows,TwinFIn Falla, Idaho Sunday. Octcictober24,1982 T‘;

    Paid Pol. Adv.. Twin Follilltl ICountr Rapublleon Canlral CerCemmltlM . KanCelnar. TrM tur*r.■•r.

    ★ ★ YOUn H t e HccmI 3 — I Te»ame ! ©f3) in tunes with thhe a o ^'s^and=y ! PHU 8ATT G ovornor- 1 9 r a n ■a if y ou n e e d a ridd oe to th e p o lls, p le a s o colloil your Twin Falls C ounty R epubllcolean Headquorters: 734*22•2 2 9 5

    I ______S 3 r i 7 wM ------;O EORCE«ANSEHtEN- . ------o y yv Ft r e R o y = = : ------PirPETEXENARRUSA ______- .... " — JJOi:AN.youNUNG—- _____ :___D aVLYLEC. L M INER------" U.S. R o p ro fo n tom tlv vo Lt. GcGovernor SiS e c re ta ry o f S ta te S ta te A udltoi[tor S ta3te te Treasurer

    • V •S?'

    A ®3 JIM JONES. JERRYRY EVANS ^ JJOHN M. BARKER NOY BRACKE1CETT LAWRE S tato Supiitporintondonl S ta te S e n a to r A tto rn o y G o n o ra l S ta te R e p re se nntotivo ta S ta te> R

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    LAIRD NOH DONN^NA SCOTT T.T .W .’7 0 M " STIVERS JUDY FELTOrON AN!\N N COVER State Senatorr S toto Repeproiontatlvo Stt. 25 DDll ltt.2 5 Dl»t. 25 _ _ D Is t^ l_ . D lst. 3 ______

    RICHARD A . PENC!MCE JUANITA\POESTETTLER P DDORTHYJ. HAMBY HARRY DEHAANAN CLOYCYCE EDWARDS C ounty C lorkc C ountytyTreoturer 'C ounty A tf o ito r Prosecuting AttorrJrnoyfl OC o ro n e r If >ctobor24,18^ Tlmos-Nowiow8."Twln F a l i a r i ^ o 17 ' I jAi. t J i-rt.t.l.*', J I.a.I.,, r Four vieie for two seatss amMaM Linicoln ccommiWi sioner, iBr M i

    a sses9Sor po ts ts conrtested J j B m lLLAGHER By SUSAN GALL Bothth IUgalde and Hansen ^ y theyth support the philosophy ' ■ i _ . Tlmes-News wrih/liter that goigoverrunents should providele services only when those servicesices cannot be handled by thee private] sector, SHOSHONE-— Voters in Lincoln Counlyy willw elect a county in lh'the assessor's race, Lynnm Williams, a 33-year-oid - . commissioner’and an an assessor on Nov. 2. Shoshonhone insurance salesman, sa:mys his long-standing inter- ____ ::------Vying to rth cEc Districts commission posist tKingt vacated by csl inn aappraisals-.ls-among.lhc !-rcasons.hc-ls-challenging- r Ig----- O.J. Harris are nn Douglas Hansen, a Republican, F and incumbimlKnt fmogene Helsley. Kathleen Ugaldcilde, a Democrat. The incuicumbent assessor. winiaIliams disagrees with the; stale’s; recent efforts to-^ - Republican Imognogcne Helsley, Is opposed by Democrat Lynn mandattdate increases In property-l.'•lax assessments In somele Williams. countieslies. The stale should establislish procedures, and countyy o Kai:[a th lc e n U g a ld c (D) Hansen and UgaldeUg both say a desire lo serve. the pulilic' officialstals should establish values, hche says. prompted theirr «candidacies. WllllaIliams holds a degree In rangtIge management from Utahh j f S t ______" I’m 0 civlc-or:-oricnled person, and I’m well-known w< in our stale! UrUniversity, and he spent 20I yearsy with the U.S. Bureau counly.” says5 Ugalde,L 3L who works aas a singer and of Landnd Managemcni and the U.S.S. Soil Conservation Servlcc instrumentalist,St. Ai lifelong Shoshone resideident. Ugalde says before■e eientering the Insurance buslrslness.- ' she has participa:lpated in many communityy endeavors,e rang- He momoved to Shoshone eight yearars ago. " ing from fund-ral!raising appeals to Scouting. HelsleIsley. S7. has been employedid by Lincoln County for 199 Ugalde and Hansen Hc both say the issueses In the race are years3, lithe lasl four as assessor,’. Aj graduate of Castlefordd H - low-keyed. High SclSchool, she is a certified app:}pralser and has completedd •'It’s a mattericr of dealing with Ihings as they come up." businessless courses al the College ot[Southern S Idaho. says H^msen. whowh< lives in Shoshone and opoperates Hansen's HelsleIsley says her achievementsIs as assessor include herr I Department Stonlore, off Rail Street, successfjssful effort against thc state';e's move to force increases Hansen. C8, says saj he possesses ^im d busiuslness knowledge in the; mimarket voluesof Lincoln Couounty jjroperties. that would be useful us in thc budgeting andmd expenditure of Incumumbent Lincoln County officiicials who are unopposed in county funds. " ' their blbids for re-election are:e: Commissioner Burrel He Is the pasttast president of the Sbosho>hone Chamber of William!im s: the cIerk. Llnda SIcvctenson;- the treasurer. Har- —:------Commercc-andd tbaRotary_Club,tl and preseisently is an officer riell DsDavidson; lhe prosecuto'r,•7T)duglas Rose, .and thc Inbothorsanizatications. He has been a Lincoln3ln County resident -coronof.K)r. R.G. Neher. f e l ttVCil . since 1053. The3 pf»KovloGooriGov<-->r -----^------All-seven^un) isCotx/LcgisUilion'' '—ry------^ ■" - Republicans, and anc at least one has -DARRINmIN - - -' _heldofflceformomore lhan 20 years. — Weldon J. Beefleck, a Burley-farm- ■ ■ STATE SENATOI)R ; er, is seeking3 roKilectionr to the ,• 4 t« n a fferm ar L«gl«lcrtiator(1999-1961) District I commiimisslon seal he has Assistant Minority Loadordor • C iio lrm o n E ducotion held since 1958, Committoo • Rovonuo ondjn d Tox C o m m itto o • Agric» Barring a successful su< write-in ——Ways &M«ons,-otc------^ candidate, me ulj d C o a a l C o a ip a a y filled by Normirman Dayley. thc • D IrM to r o f B ig W o o d C M manager of Des<>eserel Industries in • D lrM to r e f S t. ■ •■ •ddiet ie Hospltol Povadof lo C o o a ty P la a a la g A Z o a REPUBLICAN Burley, who wasas firstI elected to the • a r a l r m a a o f Ll^cola Co ..1 .9 • SIdaho's outstanding count;jnty chairman in 1980. posl in 197G. C oM H lttIo* The other CosCassia Counly can- • 2 0 y * a r« a s school trwrv f s to o didates, all from fro: Burley, are: 16 y oors.os c h a irm a n ofjf tlth o B oard • FARMER F F orm s w ith fam ily in Doclciclo. Undorstonds Alfred Barrus,. counlycc prosecutor; • r o n a a r D is tr k t Dlroct<« to r o f P o ta t o O ro w o rsr . . f economiesOC of agriculturo.o. Calvin Heiner,•. assessor:f Shirley Id o h o Povlsen. treasursurer and tax col- • Past M astor of Bothaam a y L o d g o , AV a n d AM ik Kearns, clerk, lector: Frank • W o rth y P crtro a o f 0 .1.I.S. . “ • TTEACHER auditor and recorder; re< and C. o r s UfUnderstands constitutlono>nol lim its of g o v o rn m o n t. Bruce Young, concoroner. r d i a a off J o b 's D a a g h to i • P o s t D is trk t a a d Covwvaty Dooiocrot Chainac■ a a ToToochos Idaho ond Amorlc)rican history. • A U fo tla io o f lo a d o rsrship h aad sorvlco te tho . cowBHniity a a d s t a t o'O CON$ERVATI^^) TIMES-'•S-NEWS • F a ir, k o a o s t d o d lca tlotlo i a t o g o o d g o v o n u a o s CLASSIFIED3 AADVERTISING • M o rlts y o o r v o to f or S ta t o S o a a to r , D istric•ict 2 3 Paid for by Darrlnalon for S«not*. D«nD«nton Dorrlnglon. p h o nIE e 733*0931: Paid pol. adv., Killing tor SratoJ S«Sonolo Comm., Howord E. Adkirkin*. Troo».

    . 18 Timos^News,,W tv n>al’l9:idah6 S^inday4y‘Octobor24.18M I of opponents leleaves no clioic«ce in 3 races Goo(ding Court( rosecutor, coror>ner, clerk poststs up for grabs ByGIJSNWARCHOL “I think I'd be a better proseiosecutor. I've deputy, der);rk for 10 years-before b(being Coroner T/mcs-Neivs writer . hadd prosecution experience bclbefore. John appointed ck:lerk to replace Vivian Burdenlen. For coroner, incumbent ir Dr. Jam es sn't." The combiblned duties of the office inclnclude Molchan, a Repubpublican, will face Gary ---- GOODING. - Voters-rs_wilI_have_thrce__[)oiDouglas moved to Idaho fromm Arizona six— keeping-recocords for .thfe district court.-t.-pre— j l/xler, a Democrat,at. I^oder Is manager of the choiccs U> make Nov. 2 InIr Gooding County yeanars ago and practiced law in Burley1 for paring the bbudgets for county dcpartm says,sj would serve him wei:will as coroner, Republican, is runningg unopposedu for the Camimas and Lincoln counties, aninexperience c ' “ft'Saveryii►'inlerestlngjob.'’ ' “I feel-1 have the knowledge, and I feel First Districl conunlssion:lGn scat, and Robert thatIt hei says makes him amply'qualified qu for Clementss says i her experience helpsps the that 1 could handlele thetl office of coroner.” he P. Thackeray of Wenddl,dl, a Republican, is the•prosecutor’s pi Job. office run eff:ffIclenUy. says. running unopposed forr tlthe Third District -w'When you defend coses, thatat imore than “They chahange the laws every year,r, and Under state lawlaw, no special mwHcal " seat, being vacated by Rid^IckBrallsford. qualiialifies you to prosecute cases.’es.” he says, that gives uius problems.” she says. “W■When training is required2d forf Iheofficeof coroner, Doris 0. Robertson of Gooding, a Re- - a. defensed( attorney leams thee weaknessesw you have tlthe background. It makeskes it Loder says thata t il is Important for a pubHcaniiis_seeklng.anot)wther_term.as.trca- __in theLhe prosecution’s case;"-----^ ------easier." ------coroner to‘be at. ththe scene of a death, if surer, apositionshehoshes held since 19GS. Ari(irkoosh agrees with Douglasas that as a And she feeeels her record speaks for itsetself. necessary, at any lime.tin • part-trt-llme prosecutor, the publicllic job must "I think I've done a good Job, with allall the “I have a pagerr ththat I carry wilh me. and ...... - — takep:e priority over privale practice.Ice. faultstherea5 are In lhe offlcC.'fllke the wcwork. I'm in constant contact con with the sheriff’s Proeecutor and il doesn'tI't frighten me.” ' office. If they (pollpolice officers) request a For prosecutor. DenDemocrat Michael “I‘I willv give the prosecutor’s Jobiob the1 time It coroner be there.;. I think he ought to be Douglas, who Is the deput>)uty prosecutor, will fequiijuires. over and above mjmy private there.” facc Republican John C. A . Loder says thalL in the case of an inquest, Arkoosh. Arkoosh pract!ictlce. Criminal law is setGl up' to be HeroppoMnent, Joyce C. Scanlon, says t -----defeated Incumbent Sevenvert Swenson-ln-the— exped>edlted. which to me. meansans 11 needs an Importani his lack of a full medical mi degree would be nl aqjecl of the clerk’s Job dur^ " 8 moot, since autopsiipsies are performed by a primary. immemediate attention.” , , next lenn Douglas, who has his I will _be_supportlng_Good^ ^ - p a th o l o g t s f a t Magicigic Valley Regional Medl- his law- office In . Arkuicoosh says (hat he feds peo;people In lhe CounlVs slai:and ih Its altempt to reduce Hagerman, says the majolajor issue Is main- count;mty would like to see more a “ JiJ® cal Center, and the information is made 0 a ^ lv e power otllKhe Stale Tax Commission, i availabletothecororironer. taining the appropriate balanceb^i between the proseiisecutlon of bad-check andnd d runken--says counllesIes should be given morc dcsc prosecutor's public rcsponponsibilltles and his drivin ving cases. ■ lion in carryilying oul the directives of thele Tax'1 Molchan, on thee otherol hand, says that dne private practice. In Goodooding County, the “ThThere has been a real changc I n. of the major reasons prosecutor'is a part-time cn ons he is running is thal he jcmployee. ‘ by Juries Jt (toward drunken ^JrlJiSranS dri feels it is importaniUml for a coroner to be a “You've got to give yourDur priority to being bad-d1-check writing).’’ he says. “ I thinkI that ‘.TTwyGhououid formulate things that woiwould doctor, the prosecutor,” Dou^as i as says. "You musl trendnd should continue.” be workablee lo counties lhat don'l hav

    3 = = w i w R e m a n h

    Several yy( ears ago PHIL BATVTT, at the requestit cof th e Coorsrs Brewing Companiny, experimentedd inI raising M'iAoravlon barley. HiHis crops w e re su ccccessful PEOTURI SO th e Coioors people deddeg..to eie re c t a sto ra g e andnd o f C h o i c e f f r r ° receivingg facility, they calleled on PHIL BATT " Y E S on for a recoommendatlon os to site and he - Initiative -— -- ___N o.J2______...... 'recom m een d ed the Buhl areiea. Phil did these• thingstf long betoo re h e vvas a candicJidbterforGovemor or: ------DON'T FAILAIL PREV TO THOSE WHO WANTNT TO...... T KEEP THEE COSTC( OF DENTURE SERVICES HIGH)HII lit is th at a t least l.i DENTUR(TYITY ... A SAVINGS. NOT AN EXPIXPENSEt The resuh 1.5 million contract!cted “ Initloilve authorizingI ihg dertlufonro taro ond Denturin* who orojro highly iroinod. woll odufolod croft»mor».nen. Thoto oi you who haveIVO rood your voler Informationon pomphlol. plu* tho olhor Informotlonn Ihe Ocnlot Boord it dUlrlbutlilutlng.reoliio Ihot We are suupportlng PhilII Batt for Govivernor Ihoy oro trying vory hardord to protect tholr denlol monoplopoly. ll you bellevo in o free'ee tociely. freedom of choice.o. Iho froo emor- because lie has Iieiielped stabilize our agiigricultural econnny Inin this area. prito compelliive lyiterr>tem our nollon ond d o le it built bui on. ond lhat (reedom li iho motlt frogllofr< of com m odliloi. YOUU MUST i VOTE to prolect ond protorvo it. lOHNM.BARKEfl LAWREHCE KNINIGGE N0\lOY BRACKETT JO IN WITH THOUSlUSANDS OF IDAHOANS JOT( END THE State Senator State Represent•ntotive State3 RRepresentative DENTAL MONOPOLV>LY VOTE YES ON INITIAlATIVE NO. 2. District 24 District 2424 DDisti-lct 24 Pstd for by cltiie n i lorr Idahold( Danturlttt. Frank Harrlt.It.froeiurer. f Pollllcal odv. pold for by the obovea lepU latoft. LoeBarnei. Donturilt >• ^Twin Folli. Idoho . I ' Sunday,y,Oclobor24,1%2- ( Tlmes-N9-Nay«, Twin Fills, Idaho 19 ...... ~ i l " ! ■•niirtf ,<■ r ’.Jv J 't r-r .-.. a,.;*' —I—T—•— rTTTT-n---- r - r T wi70 ( ranch(iers vie fcFor B lainte co m mlis s io n e»r*s i sea t

    H A ILEY -TTwo w ranchers are running a Both men raise grainI aniand cattle. ningaiand Zoning Commission, ' Robert Thoi•homas, a Dcmocratj beat JohOhn low-key campaij>aign for the First Districtct Moiyneux and his fourar ssons also operate • — G anirdner,- 42.- a Democrat, wswas’oufof R. Holmes'Iririri"the”prlmary to claim solJOlC commissioner’s•’sseat E in Blaine County, a small dairy operation,»n, Ihe says. He is a town1 i and could not be reacheched for his position onI thithe ballot (or county assessoisor. The race betwtween Robert E. Gardner ofDf native of southcm Idahoho and has lived In comm

    ______F u t u rre o f a irrport- i —a u t h o3 rity------"‘ATTri^ftorney^GenerarF < ForAllldalIhd”----- — i s i s s uue Will By BONNIE BAIRE[RDJONES Times-News writerfer ------

    -JEROM E— Voteiotera In fiv&Maelc— —-Siif-eh9r<]e-on-ftnes:l< 5 silcdcai r);D :Q lice=3 ^ ^ p n RsiblezenoagtrtDTkeeDTc il D-'DOHTlCS-— ~ — -■ ■ ■ Valley counties will decide Nov. 2 _ — o u t cof office ■___whether Jo dlsbancand the Southern _____1 t x p eerienced r prosecutorr • - -- • - Idaho R ^bnalAd irp r ^ r t Authority. -W ’ elfare fraud: a firsfirst priority ‘ — A lthoug the votii'oting will be held j In conjunction with wil the general A / utom atic license forfeiturefo for R e s pponsible c leader election, three olf thcth five counties — drunk driving ------will use separatete I ballots for the H satile.lawyer.. ;------issiip, Whprp! Ihftthpw» am vnUng______l_ajL£tigcKQffI [Q jigjaLdmg h i pushers— _ counties, the dissolssolutlon question A n d £ — ct'ive public servant will be on tbe machlchines. Voters In Jeroerome. Gooding. g Uncoln, Minidokaoka and Cassia \C itizens hotline counties will voteite on the airport question. ~ Y outt-J t h Commission chairrirm a n . . The question of dissolving the R\ eslitution''to victim:im s - IQ-year-oId airport>rt Jauthority reads > o p een n door policy simply. "Shall thehe SouthernJ Idaho Insure I that prison terterm is served • — .... Re^onal Airportirt Authority ^ be dissolved?" U n djerstands e Idaho, itspcpeople and. Attorney Peterr S:Snow of Burley. M r andatbry jail for drunkdr drivers ' the legal counselI foifor tbe authority, _ lainds n t says that a simplele majorityr vote is Establish I business/c5/cohsum er hotline required to dissolveIve the authority; * Sincc the projedJect has been re- ______moved Irom the; FtFederal Aviation ______Adminlitration’s5 nnational airport system, it Is po lonlonger eligible for _federal funding. AnAnd as a resull of...... ■ thc FAA decision,)n, the authority’s - ■ board of directors)rs agreed in I ' ' tember to let the>e >voters decide if ■ they want to retairtain the authority, ■ which Is supporte>rted by *a small I IBBHm ^ property-tax assesscssmentlneachof I thc counties. The airport sitsite. In Jerome I ____ J p Wiliiiims wns bornbo in Id.lho ;ind tnir.cd onn hihir. Inmily r. calllo and ------Countyr-wlll-revert'crt-to-back to-the— ------1 f.incMor. near M.Tl.id I nnd CI»hII>s-J-0—'H-*!■H-*ii(*Mio(J-lo-lhii-toim10> aiicndc-0 law school ;i11 AiAm eiican Univorsily in W:ishinf}lon, D C . where wl hc w.in named Iho slw•■pItjdGni who coniribuled . ready have asked:ed thc agency to I mor.l 10 lf;qtil •;choi:ir!i'.'irship Ar. :i lawyer he ha:; dcviJcvcioped a rolid record withhold the- site from devel- I ^ et2^as-raised In Fairfield and has long-lii3-llme resident of Cami Ity prosecutor’s office and inty. has farmed and now worltrks In the treasurer’ss rrace. Demo- the county Incumbcnl Commisslonconer Pal lived in Camaslas County for the last County Is challenging kept booksiks tori her husband’s store. fe has worked as a -for SuiSun Valley Ranches, He choslose crat Patricia !.«e is Funkhouser. a Democrat,at, decided lO years. He -om Incumbent Wilma Colter, Co a Re- to drop out of the race. Th(The Demo- - technician for>r Ilhe Ijiwrence Radi- to run•un becausc of “pressure froi jed races tnds," hesays. publican, Uooppoeed cratlc Party was unablele tot tlnd a atlon I.,ab al the University of friends 'ork Colter. 30. has servcived as treasur- Republic)lican- Allen_.Dauscher_ls:__ ■ Califomia ulI Q Berkeley, and for 10 Hele Ifeels his agricullural woi unopposed for the First replacement, ; given him the kind ot knowjwl- er for two years andi Is a nine-year running ur So unless a wrllc*ln1 campaignci years, he ranan an appliance busi- has gi' ; County. Pre- District ccounly commissioner’s isc, where he gained edgen';e needed for the assessor’s jotob. resident of Camas C succeeds, Ray Wolfe,e. a Re- ness In Boise, yig:_ viously. she workedI at the Country seat. Andid PRepublican John Varin Is in-4x)0kkeeping.-Hc-----BlU-im McGinnis: 45, ano_ther ]on ; unopposed for prosecutor. publican, will be elected:ted- as the - experience in le resident ot Camas Counlnly. Kitchen restaurant. running uni District Three commissionlioner. says he now hehelps his wife run the time i Wolfe. 62. a Camasas Counly native and a retired farmirmer. says he dcclded to run atteifter being approached by friends.. It elected. he'says he will operate! ditferentiydli .------' ' I _____than ht&prcdeccssnr. huLhJt hpdid not------specify how. ■Tm going lo do lhe veryve; best I can. and I’m not going lo10 nmake any promises." hesays. ______Here’s hbw the other■r contested c ~ P l 0 0 t i o n a l m a— r l i a races look: a s e - m e e f- s a n e x G e p t . Clerk In thc racc for countyy clerk.c Iwo newcomers arc vying for the posi- tion left when Republicaiican George Ji Gill retired.______l i i L n B n s £

    personal grlol ■ -May 2, 1972. disaster sirucv•uck th,o Kell.ogg-mlning distri(:rict. Legislature. Mufptfphy (e'u.a tremendous per — When the"smD>fBTna-1lnrcrc~cieared.~9l‘'miners-had-Ic -lost --at the-ioss ol his townspeople .in the rriirmine disaster. — cfiptlon-oh’th a- - -- - tfieir lives deep in the Sunstinshino mine. Far to thc soul>ulh. The poem was'latlater adopted (or ttie inscfip a fafmer-legisiaior trom WileWilder penned a tribute to tho■lOse • m e m o rial to ttiee miners r in Kellogg. Manyy oof Phil Batt's m'tnerc and meir families.s. PhilF Batt, a Republican,■ r'^0' friends believe thisthi poem explains why tiehe would make If’s oasy to como bby y w hon only wroie ttie ppom, he dedicateddo it on ttie lloor ottitle I such an exceptiorional governor for Idaho in1 thoseth troubled ■ you odvortiso~'yoi/our un- Idatio SonaiQ to a democrar r a i th P Info Art M urphv, WtlO wl ______----- ^------In fhe liad represonied KelloggI lorlo many yoars m ine loailaho fiod columns. Yourou r m os- ' sago roachos poopiDpio w ho ------o ro in fho m o rk oit f tot buy. So tho solo justit co m o s ~ noturollv. 3 'c nri rnnm In th e m in e ______Out tunyutii>iiiiv<^iion

    T 3 3S -« -0 9 3 1 • Sundinday;October24;1882 Timnmes-News, Twjn Falls. Waho J02t - F | — ' ^Z ^ EUection l canalysis —S m

    Gojovemor given slights lead B:vans~E3att racce coulif d h e a cUffhai\ m ger ■ BOISE (UPI)I) — Here'S'an analysis of • Voters. The candidateses have, however, group’; ■ the Idaho governemor’s race and the stale's p’s righl to join the campaigrIgn and said was rocked1 bybr publicity over a campaiglign 's appeared on the samee stage s In.several manyty of lhe comic’s criticisms arean factual, fund-raisingg letter.ic two congrcsslonai)nal races, provided by Unit-it- •'town-hall" meetings,5, with, audience______----- :------ed Press IntematlnatfonalTC^rtersr-:------In_a_writtatten-plca-foc-funds-from-paijast------quesllon-and-answer ses^tsslons. Coogressiooal racesJ _ conlrlbutors,•s, (Craig said he needed anoth(her Gov. John Evarvans, 57. the only DemocratIt Evans blames Presidcnl holding a major c lent Reagan for the Six*ti>term Rep. George Hanansen and ' $90,000 beforeore the end of the race or• he1; Dr elected office In Idaho. IsJs slate's economic problemlems, and he says freshm being chollengciIged by his Republican iman Rep. Larry Craig haveive an edge faccs "almostost certain defeat." >n Ball Is at fault, becauscISC hc supports the in theiicir races, but nagglng pera;rsonai con- Craig's opfopponent, l.jrry f^Rocco (of Hcutcnant govemiemor. Phil Batl. president's policies. He i le aiso blames the trovers:rsies and strong campaigns^ by their Boise, was an aide to former Democratlatic Batt started1 early,e won his primaryy GOP-conlrolled Leglslaturiture for lhe state’s challen easily and is expcxpected to make the race engers have given the campaigns ca Sen. Frankc Church. C iJiRocco is a solio lid « economic problems. drama.la. campaignerr whov has relied on walkinling tough for Evans.s. Each side is spendingng about $500,000. Public opinion p » trips and workorking in temporary blucKrolialiar in polls showed Batt steadilyy making it the costliestt campaigncj in the CraigIg represents thc First gained groundI throughouttt the summer,'• state’s history, whichI covers < the western halff o h Jobs aroundI thcth< district. and now Evanss Is thought lo have only a Canada to Nevada. He erin HomcnlscK> cxpected lo handily defeat hihis a Recenlly. the campaignign has been domi- p- : challenger. Ricks Collcge hi;Ws- slight advantage.je. nated by charges of dirtyy politics.p( Iroublele in July by vehemently den; Batt. S5, has focifocused on Evans' allegedly cement in the congresslo wr Richard Stallings. y Evans has denouncedI a comic< book thal - involvei however, in some hot watciter ------wasteful handlingIngjll^tale-Eovemmcnt andj__ polnts-hlm.as-a-bumbliog4og-dupe-of-Eastem__scandal!aL-cvcn-beforo-hls-namo-w failure to save Idaho's Id economy from Its tin any accusations, •mad ____ Batt says he had nothingling to do with thc wmnnti ------to-m«>rhim‘ln"dc athy.^uppQrLand.by-thejiea(ljad-cndlhe„boiTowed mowloney.fromNelsonBunker-Hun unt ------i’debatcs'sponsored-by'the—- political committee ifialIial authored the Justice Idaho Press Clublub and League-of Women re Department hit in its inveivestigatlon and used thcc billionaireb financier’s advioice 1 comic book. But hc haslas defended thal gf the congressionalc sex case, hc[>c recently to make thousausands in silver futures. E c o n oo m y NOMOENEF-tTS= i s i s s al e ■ w ith P TATE TREASURER r. in O r ee g o n lARJORIE ^ SALEM (UPl) — - Here’s an • JOY analysis ol the aibenMmatorial racc RUTH in Oregon, -provided ded by U nltod_ —^ W- : Piv:>s iniematlonalJ reporters.rc fill I C a n d id a te forr (Sov. Vic Atiyeh., a Republican, ff VAOON l K . -'-y - and who is ^ Wking n i a second . . STATE four-year term, is inin a light contest , Mlaking e Money with his £>emocraticitic challenger. REPRESENTATIVE, ------Senr-Ted-Kulongoskl»Wr-The-over— —■------fnrYnill ______D istrict 24I______riding issue is the econconomy. ’T" The race Is aboutut even,i but as 'Stot# Tr*of ur«r M ar|ori« Rothlh WMoon ho i •o m « d mor* REPUBLICANI . many as 20 perccntnl ofc the voters m enay In Invatlm ant ln » r *• ttl l feri Iddho'* laxpayart th a n all olhcr Slol* T r* o iu ra•rt rt InI hltlory cem blnad — appear to be undeciden representing i our arooo vwho oro copabio and Atiyeh says he maylay lose some M O stly solicit y o u r s u p p o>rt rt a n d will a p p re c ia te Reagan administrationIon openly for DEMOCICRAT y o u v o fo . the federal budget defdeficit and — • Bo s u ro to re g is te r o n d v o to o n NoN o v e m b e r 2. 1982. before tbey came downwn — for high » Poidi toior by ElECT MOON Comtniltoo.o. LorryI. M .Joppoton. Treaturorr Pd. for by Noy B^oiS^ockoll for Rep. Noy Qrackotl interest rates. 22Tim08*Nev(ft. Twin FallFalls.ldaho ' Sunday.O^obtober24,1982

    * J V c i ? q dd a l G o v etm t o r's ra - But momenturrtm shifting G o v . R ] o b e rr t L i s t JS till trca i l s h i ss o p p o> n e n t “ xrallc voter registration inIn state gaming regulaiilators have ITie attorroraey general has crit- CARSON CITY (UPl) -- LLike a planned lale inthe th« campaign. Democn In a Television commercialscc en- his favoavor and has been able lolo stopped access lo inforlormalion by Icized Listt forfo making a late-oight player riding a winning slrea ollze on List’s record, the attorneys from Brya■yan’sofflce. phone call11 tot one of tbe gaming Nevada casino. Gov. Robertjrt List's dorslng List byy Nevada’s I pc^ular capitallz I Sen. Paul l^axallcalt have, started to Listt Is opposed by the Nevadala Bryan calls this a polltoliUcal move board meml*mber8 to encourage a — re^ectlon-caitqMilgo-bas-c “ invol ved~in unanlmous~visv o te on a casino license----- 0 late to nin.ButLaxaltbIt himself took olf 00 State Education AssoclatiottTir~tKat“ sbould“not-be“ii (Ire — but it may be too h 1 feels he has not treated themm control of Nevada'sI ggaming In- for singerWayne Wi Newton, a friend recover all his eariy losses.1 a Junket lo Africs1ca to the chagrin of which fe< id dustry. of lhe govememor’s. “The momehlum is withti us and “ me Republican:an leaders, who fig- fair inn contractc negollations. And Dwnwanl ured he shouldI pereonallyp< help oul the Slat>tate of Nevada Employeest& my opponent is on a dowr n. spiral," says lhe governoror in an in the final days'soflhecan^gn. o Associal:lallon has endorsed Bryan, with At- Stale Senatee Majority Leader complaii.lainlng thai List never nego-0- assessment o! his battle wlt 1 with them for a pay andtd tomey General Rldiard BryBrvari a Jam es Gibson,I, ai Deriiocral. has Ualed w * sided wilh thehe governor over benefit[It packagep Iniaai. I)emocral. w With less Ihan two weeksJes lo go Bryan In a ocontroversy over a chorus cho of boos greets the /an con- whether Nevad/ada's lax plan. . govemoimor Mi»en he sets foot onjn before the election, Bryan ersity of Nevada campuseses cedes his margin of 22 percetcenlsix enacted lnl98l.I. Uis beneficial to thc Universi weeks ago has shrank. state. Gibson is also a rcspected because'use' of his decision askinglg- >1 officials to take a IS percenlnl Bryan soys, however, ■‘we “wi feel leader in thei IMormon Church, school ol ays that whose membersjrs oflen vote in blocs culinsp1 sp r i n g . comfortable.” and he says Is Job performance rating isIs nobody ever"lbougsn*~woitvould'be— and—iean_tawfliwanLconservative »Hls 1 - abletopUeupthal.blgofavicvictory, candldnlcs.- ^ very iow?'"Bryanlov sayBr“And Uicf c ------• _ — — - ____ llWheneier_j5u:reagalrialnst o "The last tvTOVDwecks;*"Ust-5aysr- naUonalnal economy is working in myly well-financed incumbent, > — ‘‘has been Itkealia huge waveAi------favor.— iceTte HelsshaklngJg 2.000 lo 3,000 hands Theef-thc^bove drive,i. says, - "List and Bryan hawu ve so thoroughly muddled the iss of "taxes and utilities thatat It Is If y o u ththink that the authoriorlty to evaluate .. doubtful anything.they.coul»uidnow.. andassesess property shoul.dd rremain with the say would help people ded foi> whom to vote." c o u n ty a!assessor and county/ commissioners,c In tbe primary. 19 percentent of the n o t th e1 statei legislature &i !state tax com- Republicans cfaoee to mark of the above" In the List ra 1 . r . T h e n V o (e For . iheDemocratlcprimary.bw only 4.4 percent reiectedxl aUt the DD can d id al^ In the last two weeks., U st bas DllMICE NEWIrCOMB been buoyed by a visit by dent Reagan, who heip^S i ’^ S SStcife i S en ato r - DisiIstrict 26 ------money and who may hawlave con- Pord Pol.1. A d b y Bruc* N vw cotnb A P u b lic Sk c srv r ice o f th c N a tio n a l ^Association M H R vinced some of the waywaiward Re- '------— ofSecretaria r ic s o f S ta te , t h is P u b licoicationand teV ll publicans to rejoin thelhe fold, th c A d v e rtisining g Council C o in a Another visit by the presicesident is . . .Suj^y.jiy,pctot>er24.1082 nmea-frs-News, Twin Falls, Idaho 23 ■ ■ ''^ E Ulection atinalysis" - M o ­ Govr>Hgfg-sIsJThere-alBO-was n-report - havehr stopped its publication. Craig-may. havcbevn nei^Iped by over the-summcr ______Rntt nisn has rappippedEvaostfor.refusing-^-~~ -Rntt - nothlrijpfl .V. - -'^WhUa.Ci ncr-that-hisnvife. Connicr • • fWRfo^lfi-the—wmpathylysupport’and by lho dead enden tfie borrowed money}y fifrom Nelson Bunker Hunt ^------toTTieet-htm'In'dcbicbales sponsor^'byihe political pc committee that aiauthored the justice De Idaho Press CJub) arond League of Women co apartm ent hil in its invcsllgligation and used the biliiciliionairc financier’s advice comic book. Bul he has dcdefended thal of the confingrcssional sex case, he rec•eccntly • lo make Ihousandsnds in silver futures. E c o n o> i m y =IDAHO^^EOONWIHY^BENErtfS^ r e i s s u ee ” w i t h I \TE TREASURER i n O r e cg o n maf^RJORlE i NOY SALEM (UPI) -*- 1 Here’s an , analysis of the ^bemaimotorial ra c c ______RUTH l^n Oregon, providedd byi United ' m m 4 Gov. Vic Atiych, aI Republican,R ■ V l " C an d id ate for and who is seeidng)g a second < , S T A T E four-year term. Is In a1 tighttij contest M Qiking n , Money with his Democraticc challenger,c f . EPRESENTATIVE, Sen. Ted Kulongosid.J. The over- • • /Cfor YOU! ______District 24 riding isstin IS ihceconoTi The racc Is about cvieven, but as S 5'“ lolcT raaturarM ariorl* Rulh MeeiAeen h a t •orn«d m ore r e pu b l ic a n many as' 20 pcrccnt of the voters tnonay lnv*ftm«nt lnl«r««t for Ideho'i toxfidysrt HHB appear to be lindccided.. than all oth»r Slot* Tr*Qtur«r« In hihiilory centblnad — ______ovrS9QMIUlOND0L30LIARSI______I w ish fo thank th tho voters of Distristrict 24 for thoir post Kulongosid, a 41-yeafear-old June- - support andd confldoncoc and hope I wiwill continue to rnorit___ tion City labor lawyeryer. has're-— ------INTEREST EAS ...... your sopporfirt"ih“ th‘b"fb'rthcom ing oloh- —-----primary,------compareared------to— ------~ — “ lom s. ------Kulon^)ski!s.$ll3.CWl,______Rovonuo_st:.shor.tago^which-oppoors Kulongoskl hammers ors-to-boHocingTfur----- oTroasuror AAarjorto RuthRu Moon says ,.. stato at thoo prosont time, will protrobably be tho most theme lhat the econranomy pressing prol “ T h e m o r e m o n e y I m i roblom facing tho noxtxt legislature. Somo worsened under Atiych.fch. He soys m ake in interest s o rlo u s q uostlstlo n s w ill hov o to bo ansM Oregon’s cconomy is in iswerod, such os: in the worst nm e a n s th a t m u c h l ess s s of the cost of 1. W hatt s.sorvices will bo absolutelytely essential? shape sincc the GreatI DtDepression, governmentn has to cor: o m e o u t o f y o u r 2 . SbouidId so m o so rv ices b o c u rtata il ile d o r e lim in a te d ? and prom ises that he: cacon provide _ pookets and mine in• theth form of taxes. " 3. ShouldId ta x e s l?o ra is e d o r shoul3 uld w e a tte m p t to ‘ the leadership necessarsory to pull find othather sources of Incomo? the state out of Its slump.np. M O B B I Mr T E l R E S i : = ______^ ______i iJ f J a x:os o s areto boroisedrinwha'hartorm ’sh'ouia Atiyeh, 58, says hee^ is^ i not re- ______fhoy bo r a is e d ? ------sponsH3le""for federal'rol housing L E S S T A\x 3 is = — Thoso, andid many othor questions policies lhat have hurt 3 ns. w ill ro q u ire in* jft Oregon's M O»RE I DOLLARS INI ^YOUR POCKETII fo rm e d judgn-gmont — the kind thotot comes from long tim lw r Industry. logislatlvooxpixporienco. The governor says he has1 made I fool that I - f bled times. . lican todm ropopresot^ting our oroo whc Atiyeh says he may it vho are capobio and y lose some MOC BN inlormod logisjislators with the abilityy fot< solvo tho states' ground with voters bccai i c a u s e h e i s ------problems. I arram oroud to bo o port ofdf tthat team and will from the same party asJS IPresident S lfY A T E T R E i l o x to n d o vo ryY eo ffo rt to b e o w in n er, Reagan. But he has critii ASURER ritlclzcd the I oarnostlyy ;solicit your support ond on will opprociato Reagan administrationn o]openly for DEMOCR.RAT you voto. the federal budget deficl ficlt and - Be s u r o lo rregister o and voto on Novoivembor2. 1982. before they came down1 — for high . Poldforbped access to WormaUon Uui by icized ListJst for making a late-night player riding a winning str ^ to one of the gaming obert Ust's go'slne bjby Nevada’s pc^ulor capita!iltailze on List’s record. the attorneys from BBiyan's b office. phone call —Nevada caslno._Gov._RolK ,lsl-l8-opposed-by-lhe-Nevadada ------Bryancails ihiraptrpolltlcalTnove—boardTnernembers™to~encouroge a rejection campaign has caii^t "Sen. Paui'Laxjucalt-have-started-to ----- Llst- too late to nm . But Laxallcalt himself took off on Statetc Education AssociatlotIon. thal should not be>e involved ii^ unanimousCHis vole on a casino license lire — but il nray be too tem control of Nevada’st’s gaming In- for singer)cr Wayne Newton, a friend recover all his eariy losses. 0 Junket to AfrlIfrica to the chagrin of whichich feels he has not treated thei r in contract ncgotlaltons. An\nd dustry. • ofthegovei)vemor’s. ..“The momentum is withritli us. and “ me Republicillcan leaders, fig- fair in torowaul ^tieslwuldJd personally help out the State St of Nevada- Employe*^ my opponent is on a do im. spiral,” says the eoveroo■roor In an Intherlnaldayiays of the campaign. AssocIioclation has endorsed Bryai le wllll Al- Stntc ^ tlate < Majority Leader compl:nplalnlng that List never negiJgo- assessment of his battle i :ed with them for a pay and an lorney General Richardd BBryan, a -1“™=“ G">sonon, a Democrat, has Uated ^ sided with lhe U governor over benefliKflt package In 1931. . Democrat. ttie Wllh less than two weel a controversy over AI'Chorus -c of boos greets tt fcefcitos" Nevada's “ tax plan, goven;emor when he sets foot on c ------before the-election; Bry:Sryan con- ‘'>'l>e>j!!f, ses cedes his margin of 22 pcrcentper six 981, Is beneficial to the UnlveiIverslty of Nevada campus< State. Gibsonin :is also a respected becau:ause of his decision askir(lng weeks ago has shrunk. renl Bryan says, however,r "we' feel leatJer In theIhe Mormon Church, schooltool officials lo lake a 15 percei says Uial wlWMmemtobers oflen vote in blocs cut.in Ini ^lending. comfortable," and he sa Jm u a rrt— fftiM orvntlve «»H|f‘His lob per^nfmnqo«» r«iHng_g-Is— ------— e would be nobody ever thought he v, ■y low," B ^an Mys. "And theU ______— able to Pile UP that blgofaiI a victory...... f f . 'S ------— - v e ^ l ■‘Whenever you're ag ke a huge wave." favor,Tjr." well-financed Incumbent,»r'J?u’rc “'Vf‘*3;''';'^ing 2.000 to 3.000 bands Phe m s economic slump forced Ll going to have a tough m reducc government budgets I says. ^ to red Both candidates will s; ’ I've not pleased is percent.pen a ' ^ a i ^ everybody, but now that the voters Inn some si Instances, the campalj million, a rccord In a iown to the nitty-gritty 5 has deteriorated into pel gubernatorial campaign.„ are getting dov Ll NCDTVOI TING choice, they arare moving my way.” blckeiikering. Tbe Llsl admlnlstratii s -ordered-flve-deputies are similar. Bolh arcE 445; they ^e-lcirme'that-Bryan—has-' same law 1>“ "O "ncWxkbone.” says the gov- Bryaryan’s office cul from tl graduated from thc sai yrolls, saying they are r -each has--® ^^ ------j—___ , ____ _ payro DHN& school‘a year apartr-ej 1 BL lOwever, has a 16-11 ncedceded by state agcnqics. A m m devoted his life to politi)llllcs: and Bryan, how I both are criticized foifor “ fllp- flopping" on issues durliurlng their fORtlHEO OTHER careers.. The governor, accordln■ding to his crlllcs.-has-been-on-both-}th sides of such things as locuung ' I w • • • — CiANDffi .missllo ln.Nevada, favorinJring a plan D I X V similar to CalUomia's ta>tax-cutting Proposition 13 and in cncreating a _____ V o t e . _ consumer-affalrs divisionilon to help _lbepubUciishtd8lng4»UlitHlj^y rolfvc ______W G p f e ------Bryan, says the govcmemor. firsl i -s the death H | o p p o ^ and now favors L I t h e b o t h ee i r . penalty. List says thc ottomcyey general. while a state leglslatoiator, voted , “ agalnst~a "proposed "use-a-gun, ”uj ' go-to-Jaii" law and was3 opposedop to a bill strengthening chllirhlld pomo-______H “ graphy penalties, Igs he now i ______^supports.-_j------Thc similarity of thcI candidatesco —and. thclt-negative. campanpaigns.has------prompted one disgusted advcrtis- i - • ing executive In Reno) to start a drive encouraging votersers to matlc “ none of the above" onn tlithc ballot. Billboards are startingg U to appear urging voters to reject1 b both can- ' didates. -----^Andy-BartjanorvilWBta-Btarted-the------H i i a none-of-the-above drive,Ive, soys, '(■M “List and Bryan have h so ^ thoroughly muddled the1» Iissues of oitd utilities Uulhat it Is l> y o uJ think that the authcIhority to evaluate doubtful anything tl^K couldy Bruc# N «w com b A Public: aService of the National1 AssociationA 9 money and- who mayayward hi Ro- ■— __I ofS ecretaftaries of State, this PubHiblicationand' I vinced some of tbe wayvtbe fold, th e A dvcrtisirising Council U in d president is , I publicans to rejoin tl .1.1 Another visit by the pre ; SurtdayJay, October 24, lOttZ Timoanes-News, Twin Falla, Idaho 2323

    I n- - f i >4- 9 i r i s ' T a l k ii n g t a > n ■ * ,■ rarfi'i'• • • ;i D istrict;t 25 R epresis e n t a t i v e ------3f------>c ^ ------= = - !In d e p e n d ej r r r t ^ = “ ------^ ------) f • Jf- J f : - ->c ■ - H-Jis Reconrdls J f : -K — > f - - 5 . -H positive ■ J f ^ -K J f . _ScLar^hi7 /'.9 J f ■n ____ ------j F " m zrz* ------— J T — -K ...... QUaliTi^ic t ons. r- J f -K J f J f ...... : ->t J f J f ' -» t______^ w S'even vearsoran Twfin F alls^CilyX:X:ouncil, m anagegismeot ' ■ ■— = E 3 t p e r i e3 i n c e ^ = = ___ pf'$9 mllllon;btiiUdgeC1'6% reducjctionincity,vyorkfo : f o r c e ...... = ^ f r = ■jfh'-...... -♦t since 1978,imin plem entation of litterli control progrej r a n i ^ utiiizing privatete donations and h;handicapped workek e r s , *■ J f f + ____ M a y o r o f Tw^inI Falls, I D irector- AAssociation of * ^ L e a d e r s h l f M - - — ---- 3 f----- ' + l a a n o C i t i e s , uDirector l ot KiwanlsIs Club. P ast Comnrm a n d e r o f A n n e r i c a n L e J f ♦ eglon'Post 7, Past5t C hairm an of T.F.F . S e n i o r J f Citizen FederalJtion, Region IV DeJ e v e l o p m e n t A s s o□elation c . * - Jf...... * Chairm an, Diststrict 5 M agistrateB (Com m ission, Masa s t e r s of Public Adm irinistrgtion D egree.e . ______■ J f — ___ *______---- >f----- ______* ______— J f ------♦ ------J f * ■ ■ ~ -----J f ------★ CITris consistenifffly works for fair,r, conservative f n d e p e nn d e n c e — • governm ent op' J f * pen to the public,.H h e kngw( Individuajals _ _ _ ) f - - ' - have sound opii5inions, and has*th(h e p r o v e n - - n J f ♦ capability to usise those ideas, amnd put governm entn t . to work In a posisltive direction. J f * ■ J f ------_ J f ♦ J f * — J f ' - ♦ J f + J f ■k C h r i s5 T a l k i i n g t o n I - When youIU vote for J f J f J f -K the personin, he’s the m;ian to vote foior. J f . . + f J f -K V P old fo r b y ToiTalkington forRepr«»enta

    I 24 Tlmes-News,, TwTwin Falls. kUho Sundayjiy;bctobor24.1982