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Magic Valley"s-Home Newspaper

evVn-Jtoilor 68th year, 192nd issue TW IN FALLS, ID A H 6, SUNDAY, KlbVEMBER 21, 1971 2 5 ' c«irrit*"d?r:«crv

roeks Phase II

WASHINGTON (UPI) -P res- without the cooperation of Obviously perturbe'di the they ftit," said acting Press id^t Nixon and tough4alklng organized labor. President cut short his 'pre­ Secretary Gerald L. Warren. un^n boss George Meany are Nixon came on stroffg in a viously scheduled long weekend So bitter was the atm osphere engaged In a power struggle half-hour, hard hitting, off-the- in Florida and flew back to that C,abor Secretary Jam es D. over who will call .the shots on cuff speech after ignoring, the Washington. ' Hodgson', who has been under 'P hase II of the new economic advice of his staff not to take He wa§ touched arid-taken by Me^ny’s withering attack on program . on the cigar-chewing AFlrCIO surprise when he landed by. several bccasiorvs, canceled his The war of words reached 4he . prpntripnt Olhn hnri hnnn cfjnth- ■hrilcuplCT'on the White House sbeecn’bet'ore tne convention. weSi'Chdo level in MismF ing in his attacks on 4 the .grounds and found 100 of his Meany gave i Nixon the ” Beach, Fla .'Friday when Nixon President’s economic policies. top officials, Including several briefest «f introductions, say­ addressed a hostile, sometimes Nixon disregarded the^ advic«!, m em befs~‘oT'' the cabinet, on ing: "l.adies-and gentlemen, acomful,-AEL.CIO-conventlon—-and hl^ words wel:e greeted by. 4iand—toj--wolcomo hiui—wilJv- the President of the United and told the unmoved delegates either stony silence or mocking applause. States." There was only light ' that he would proceed with his laughter from the union lead­ ‘"niey read about the speech applause and many of the wage-price restraints with or ers. and'wanted to show him how delegatffi did not rise when he entered the hall. Word had been passed in advance that there be no demonstrations —be it ■ booing or enthusiastic applause. Nixon ^expected Nixon's remarks clearly were a rebuttal to an attack by»_ Meany when the convention openedThursday. Nixon quoted a statenrent"by— — NORTHERNFfciGHTSTirCanaaijrrGeeise'isw^ iahur^s decisujn the union leader that if the beginning to move Into the Magic .Valley, President "doesn’t want our Hunters have bad good shooting success in the WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White House congratulating Nixon for his "straight from the membership on the Pay Board Hunter’s delight Morman Reservoir area and the Raft River Insisted Satur«iay that President Nixon was not shoulder” speech to the AFLCIO. on our own term s, he knows Area. The photo of this lone goose was taken east angry or upset at the hositlle treatm ent he got at In a statement that was volunteered to what he can do." of Jerome. (Thnes-News photo by Mike the AFL-CIO convention. A topfiepublicmi called reporters. House. Republican leader Gerald K. "V^elJ, you know. President Robertson) - * the reception “crude and insulting." • Ford of Michigan said: "I am amazed by the -Meany is correct," Nixon said. . “He was not surprised at the reactiofn,” 'said crude and insulting actions pf some labor "I know exactly what I can do Achng Press Secretary Gerald L. \Varren. ‘He leaders, particularly George Meany, toward the - ^ n d I am going to do it." He was cool. He completaly urifferstood he was i?#ing President at the AFL-CIO eonventioni It was a went on say 'whether’or Hot into hostile territory.’' shocking display of bad manners." ‘i iie has ylhc parUcipation of Dr. Walter Tkach, the President’s’ physitian, Nixon a s k ^ labor in his s p ^ c h to <6ooperatt‘ labor it wps his duty to stop the said that Nbcon was "calm and unruffled." with his economic program but said that he rise in cost of living. 7-\ Rules cut talk After the speech in Miami Beach, Friday, would proceed "whether we get that par­ Nixon cut off his weekend in Florida and ticipation or not." When he concluded his says.. speech. Meany did not acknow­ returned to Washington. JMany observers In the appearhnce-at the Americana Hotel ledge his presence as Nixon believed that Nbcon w as shocked and miffed at Nixon was denied courtesies that are was led off the platform. When the reception he got. customarily extended to a president and he If Meany reaUy got the tlie President t>egan shaking of court cases The U ^ te House tried- to play down the sur; . appeared nervous, throughout the appearance. pay foisei he'd like ”/o / Jiands with delegates along his prise element of Nixon's return to Washington, Among _ the telegramg .. orarthe White _____ House .rpJboft h'n- WASH^g^lUN (UPlJ -A t- a person is the subject of a “Bxn i*(5ute^ Meany looked peals in New York City who insisting that hp hnrt laff hiL finpnptiirc Hiiin i-^ elKH.'OWl Wflft nnp (rnm Frank Fil7.«iimmnn.aad-y-i_When he had gone from the Bold Red criminal cases. The original guidelines were forbidding Justice Department Charles W. Colson assembled about^OO persons. courtesies that you and your office deserve," Jjall, Meany told the delegates: hi an order published In the promulgated after considerable personnel from: Including some cabinet officers, to welcome Fitzsimmons wired. "We will, now• proceed to Act f * V f fc V Eedecal- any lnfon n a ttqii7 Nbcon’s helidopter when It touched down on .. One HMro, oigncd "llundieds uf Siuux L.ity, 11. 'I’he quip brought the chell also revised the existing General Nicholas DeB. Katzen- subject to specific llmiUtlons suutli luwir And Saturday the White House said it Iowa, Citizens” said "Congratulations on your audience to its feet,-stamping guidelines on what information bach. otherwise Imposed, except the had received more than 1,000 telegrams stand. and whisthng. may be released in crim inal Officials said the revisions accused's name, age, cases. Under the new rule, the were suggested to Mitchell by residence, ewipleyment, ban on discusslhn with — SAIGON (UPI)------A m crican- newsmen begins "from the time 2nd U.S. Circuit Court o* Ap- Big coal Big storm jet warplanes and helicopter background infonnation: the gunships bgrtarad a Nar-th- substance' of the charge or in- a u n t s dlctment; the identity ol tne Victnamese convoy of 'antiair­ arresting agency: scope of the craft guns and trucks moving in pay hike bores down Investigation; and details of the $20,000 raise daylight nine miles below the 100 stand aloof arrest. MIAMI (U PI) - Tropical Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) se­ MIAMI BEACH (U P T )-T he Ai-i ' ’10 con- storm I^aura l»re dfiwn on the parating North and South as child murdered defended vention, in a direct challenge to 1’resident cQflSL nf Rrilish__ Honducas- Viehiani. the- U.S., L'uiiuiiaiid ■ ROCHESTER, N.y. .(UPI)-: At least 100 ____WASHINGTON (UPti— Par Saturday with heavy rains and said Saturday. ■ wage increase guidelines, ha.s appi.'^’ed a 28.5,/ personsjnust Mve seen.a_xuideJityearrold-glrl- Car repair Board Chairman George H. winds gusting up to 75 m.p.h. The attack was disclosed as- per cent $20,000 annual salary lyirease for.. plead for help along a busy freeway before she ^dt j^cted a Democratic hurricane force. the U.S. command began President George Meany. was raped and strangled, Monroe County charge S atu rd ay th a t the The National Hurricane Cen­ pulling out troops of the iOlst cosily iir Without discussion and without dissent, the sheriffs deputies said Saturday. board's approval of a guideline- ter in Miami warned of heavy A|rborpe Division, the Ameri­ nearly l.OOtTTlfelegates to the convention ap­ Carmen Colon’s body was found Thursday in a busting wage irib-ease for tiif rains and dangerous surf along can unit closest to. the DMZ. proved a constitutional amendment Friday field in the town of Riga. John Edlund, county liriy crash nation’s soft coal miners 'the costs of British. Honduras North Vietnamese troops have increasing the salary of the federation’s medical. examiner, said ' the girl’s skull was threatened to torpedo President and Honduras, and advised all been showing increasing president from, $70-,000 to $90,000, and boosting fractured and she had bwn raped and strangled. WASHINGTON (U PI) - I n a Nixon’s post-freeze economic I small craft to seek safe harbor. audacity near the DMZ since the pay of Sccretary-Treasurer Land Kirkland The girl was reported missing in West fibn, a 1972^ autonAobil? was controls. The hurricane center said U.S. troops began _ leaving __ _ the from $45,000 up to $60,000. Rc^hest^ by her parentsarents on Tuesday. Police backed into a barrier at 24 While denying ,ihat the coal _udea-neauhe iw d t^ ■ ’‘We -fidfi’t even consider the Pay BoSrd believe she was ibducted and was trymg to get -miles an hour. - settlement would set a pattern .Uura may riw briefly to thrw cambodia government guidelines^" said - Conununicatlons Workers away from her captor. Riga is about 10 miles Estimated damage was for future permissible pay to rive feet above normal as the Saturday reoccupied President Joseph Bierne, head of the con­ from Rochestel-. ■ $112.60. raises, Bol^t told the House- storm center crosses the coast. with “almost no resistance'’ the stitutional amendment committee that proposed One^epinysilHlhe^l w as^ n tunning nude ThrfUnrwas^showirPriday t<^- Senate economic committee "Heavy rain Is failing over a the salary Increase—the first fbr the two top rail town of Tual Leap, 12 ' along Interstate 490 about 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. a House commerce subcommit­ that anyth^g less than the wide area including most of officers since 1965/ miles from Phnom Penh. Her assailant “apparently t)acked up along the tee by the Insurance Institute board’s virtual ban on retroac­ British' Honduras, northern The town had been the center of Bierne said he Imefv of no plans to notify the— freeway, grabbed her and drove off. for Highway Safety. _ tive wage boosts would be -Guatemala northwestern Hon­ Pay Board of -the increases or to ask for its ap­ Conununlst resistance in 10 ' "At least 100 people must have seen her—at WlUiam Haddon Jr., the in- “Inequitable and unfair.” duras and the souther Yucatan proval. This apparent defiance of the Pay Board days of fighting with Commu­ least 100,” the deputy said. .stitute's president and former Sen. William Proxmire, D- penUistila, posing a serious nist forces outside the Cambo- appeared to increase the chances of a showdown threat of f l ^ flooding In the director of the National Wgh- Wls., the committee chainhan, between the administration and organized labor dian capital. way &fety Bureau, said that ■ charged that tht board was ^unteins,” the hurricane cen- „ 3 command spokesmen over'Nlxon’s Phase U wage.and. price control^ __ te r said. compared, to 1971 models, -1 ^ “very Mft" In permitting a said an army observation passengers cars fared “some . first-year average wage ^d helicopter scouting the jungles bejtw, some worse, some the benefits Increase of abotil 16-per and hlllsr-telow the DMZ Shotgun wounds same'' in tests of the amount of cent —which Boldt conceded ‘/ ’m shoving off without you ’ Friday morning. spotted damage sustained in low-speed was "excessive” —wider a new the convoy of three crashes. th ree -y ear U nited • Mine Communist trucks and three In the film, a Im­ Workers contract signed Just 4 T.F. children 37mm guns; pale - was shown hitting a “ befbre the wage-price freeze lended « w ^ ag o . TWIN FA IO SFour Twin The Cutts child appeyed to ^cnld^-th«%1°*^«- The tettlem eht, said Prox- “Palls children wwe T reateSlir mlre, “puts the whole stabiliza­ “IKent State 7 M«gic Valley Memorial and is beUeved to have'suffered-<>an“ 8e ^ tion setup in tl\e gravest Hospital Saturday for gunshot the loss of one eye hit by a shot P^^ed to $20 for a Ford Galaxie, $96.50 for a Fury, and possible jeopardy” by setting a wounds they received when a gun pellet or |dece of floor tile. charges set $12 for an American Motors precedent for future «age shotgun they were playing with Twin Falls poIRe officers said AmbasMdor all,trashed a t, boosts. RAVENNA, Ohio-(UPI)- accidentally <^scha^g^. tte diiidfen were playing in. the the same speed. ' , , ‘T o r the public m em bers it Is Attorney Gmeral William J. basement of the Sevens home. ’"-not a precedent,” , saiditoldt, Brown paid Saturday his office E lo n C utts,. 4, daughter of Hiex^lOurid the single-barrel ' who-abstaiifealn the K w ote is ready to proceed against 2S Me- and Mrs. Don Cutts, Twin shotgun and were in the process ■ sp i^ y in g the painere* im ^ aie , persons d ia i^ in connectibn' FaD^ and Kyi Wynia, 8, trtw of loading Jt wiien it dia(^arged' Forecast b a t J o in k flie board’s five with the U70 riots iriiidi led to lives with the OiUs family« at eloae.jange into the f£or. CLOUDY ^bUc menjberB in dissentog the iiiOoting of four Kent SUte were listed in good condition. I^e sutfer«4.,^pellet - sttiementi. r -— — . University students National R id ^ Pusdiel, 9, who lives with wounds on his chest.and legs, ' Bat Pnmidre, waving his Guardsilien. ' Oie 'John Stevehs family, and Ridgr Puachd rewived a pd{t vmt.'abatback; ‘Tlieftict Oiat . Hie first trlal,.of 2»-yearold Lany Gier, 10, son of Mr. and wound in his right side ai^ — y«iiM4ti« tprecedent;.;. and — JenyrR upeof- Ravenna^- Is- tt's gaing to be mndi, much sd i^ e d to'oiMirManaiBy in Fans,, weiy treated antf peneb j^abW eIlls waistline, D e t a i l s ^ hutlBr to rolst in the fiiture,” ^rtage County Court here. idMsed. onhisritfhtside. . ------— t w in f a l l s — The Magic rtiaiming''bity police, railio ' Valiey Memorial Hospital telephones ... Anna Hansen Auxilliary regular sewing Hayra chatting with admirers T wmmittKn mill itiHBt . In- th e ■ fliirJnm m tngrafaiiny^piiWly , aUxffiiary room Tuesday for Liiella Kins^, Shoshone, ex< .. sewing. All members are plainii^ .'She first ctune to welcome. Shoshone in 1909 .. Norman Herriett planning tb entertain HATLEY — The Blaine large number of Pocatello Ck)unty School District Board of Students^... Buddy Desve^ TViistiies h as scheduled a public explafiaiBg^how to s p ^ te ' " Information meeting for 7 p.m. name in code ... Jim Munn Monday at the school ad­ catching footi)all tossed at him ministration office, Hailey. unexpectedly ... Mr. and Mrs.

are invited.to attend. .Tohn B. Henderson I TWIN FALLS. - DUncan Anna Hansen Hayes Showers, Route 1, Filer, told Joe doon talking about holiday Twin FaUs city police Saturday for trash haulers ... Reed that someone took a pair of Coulam explaining why he can’t ' Westem-style boots from' his enforce new ordinance on old CHrwhiie'ifwas parkednn' FalU. Cunningham asking for mechanical assistance from court clerks .. . Jim Kistler THESE BUSY ly^SICIANS, pictured during Church Society reaching through window to get the Fourth District music clinic Friday at the mail ... Eddis Lammers of­ CiSI gymnasium, worked long and hard und<^ the has fellowship - fering to sell a news story for a Woodwinds practice quarter ... and overheard, strict baton of Melvin Shelton, music director for . SHOSHONE - The BapUst “Weil, it looks lite snowrrand tt Boise State College. Church Mission Society met -ThiifgHay Qt thp hnm e nf Mrs. feels like snow; wljy doesn’t it Busy drummer Omer Sho5k. M rs. L. M. H atm ak er, A thought for today: Scottish A YOUNG DRUMMEI^ concentrates on his . ___J program chairman, also gave writer l^omas Carlyle said, fast-moving .music during the Fourth District the devotional. A social hour “Music is well said to be the music clinic held Friday and Saturday In Twin ]Hagi<^ Valley Obituaries Tfollowed:------speech of^ngels:^*------•------Falls. Band members met In the CSI gymnasium under the baton of Mel Shelton, BSC director, to Funeral Services Nellie Jenkins Claud Strain prepare for Saturday evening’s conceri. Magic Valley Hospitals JEROME — Graveside WENDELL - Claud Dean / CASTLEFORD — Services Strain, 36, of WendeU, died services for Mrs. Nellie IVlagic V allfy .M emorial C.assia IV Ieinorial for J. Frank Clark wijl be held Jenkins, 81, were conducted W ed n e i^ y in a traffic ac­ at 2 p.m. Monday at Reynolds Saturday at the Jerome cident. Admitted Admitted Funeral Chapel. Final rites will Cemetery, witii the Rev. He was bOm Dec. 15, 1934, at O bituaries Mrs. Gary Loggan, Mrs. Frank Redfield, Laura Greco, follow in the Twin Fails William L. Barrett officiating:- Clark Ridge, Ark., and moved Domingo Jimenez, Jr., Peter Trent Robinson, Jerry Lane, Cemetery. Mrs. Jenkins was bom Feb. to tiie Eden area in 1942, to Gerald Bean F.S. Winter Johnson. Mrs. Lowell Wilson, Mrs.' Francis Carter. Mrs • 23. 1890, in Niotaze, Kan., and Jerome, in 1944, where he at- Mrs. Brent Bunderson, Steven Darius Gilman. Mrs. Druey Gaggett. Lowell D ayley. and -TWIN-F. “ came~to~Idairo *ffs~a young tended schoolr~He‘Tvorked In^ ^HEYBURN'— Gefaia Cleve ..... SHOSHONE - Funeral ThreikeW, Mrs. Don Collier. Mrs. Bemhardina Dudley will Hugh Allen, all Burley; Mrs. woman. The family settled in construction in Montana, Bean, 29, died Thursday in a services for Frederick S. Jr., Karen Riaeh, Esther be -€0- conducted-at aifton Bailey, Zula Roberts, the Glenns Ferry area. California, Wasliington and traffic accident 17 miles west of Winter, 75. a Gooding area Harry, and Mae Fuller, all Twin Monday at Twin Falls Mortuary Mrs. Donald Stark, all Heybum. She was married to Fermin Oregon,'moving back to Idaho Burley on Interstate 80N7 pioneer and former Shoshone Falls; Mrs. Ira Lancaster, Mrs. Chapel. Final rites will follow in Dismissed Clyde Jenkins in Glenns Ferry four years ago from California. He w as born Dec. 27, 1941, in resident who died Thursday in Mildred Reichert and Gary Sunset Memorial Park. Mrs.- W. Oleon Dummer, in 1915. They,came to Jerome in Mr. Strain farmed In ttie Rupert and had lived in •Boise, will be conducted at 11 Allen, all Filer; Mrs. Robert William Markt, Mrs. Max 1929. He died in 1940. WendeU area for the Hohnhorst, Minidoka all his life. In 1961 he a.m. Monday at the Thompson Stewart and Janice Abshire, Bruce and daughter^ all Burlej^; Since his death she had lived - Blick - Reese farm s. m arried Carol "Amen and they Chapel, Gooding, by Rev. • Buhl; Mrs. Lloyd Moore, Roscoe Jasper and Linda in Fort Smith, Ark., Honolulu. He married Betty Jean were later divorced. On Dec. 22, Wesley Johnson of the Shoshone' HMley; Ada Wilson and Mrs.- Chavez, both Paul; Mrs. Bruce W. Ohlinger^ Hawaii, and San Francisco. She R ow berfy'on July 27, 1960, at 1969, he married Marie Murphy Assembly of God Church. Willard D. Allpn, both J|erome; Tegan and son, Heybum, and returned to Jerome last Elko, Nev. in Nevada. The Rosary will be recited at and Bette J. Strain, Wendell, Patty Amold, Rupert. GOODING — Funeral se r­ February. He married Betty Jean Mr. Bean served in the Air 8 pjn. today at the Thompson Dismissed Bhths vices for William Ohlinger, 89, -Surviving are one son, L.H. Rowberry on July 2ff, 1960, at Force National Guard for seven Chapel by Rev. Fr. James Harora~Whlte, Mrs. Charles A son was bom to Mr, and of Gooding, who died Thursday, (Whitey) Jenkins, Honolulu; a Elko, Nev. years and was discharged Feb. Shinnick. Final rites, will follow Brown, Mrs, Vern Barnes, Mrs. Keith Franks, Oakley. wlU be conducted a t 2 p.m. Harley Williams sister, Mrs. Eva DeLap, Survivors include his wife', 9, 1970, with the rank of at Elmwood Cemetery. William Rustln Crawford, Monday at the First Christian TWllij FAl.LS - Harley Stockton, Calif.; one grandchild Wendell; five dau'ghters, sergeant and was a jet Gooding, with services by Ralph Harris, Dale Bigelow, Churcl) by Rev. Harold Hake. iVlinidoka Memorial Williams, 78, a pioneer (arm and one great-grandchild. Teresa, Peg©' and Barbara m echanic. Gooding Veterah.s of World War Augusta . Scherrupp, Mrs. Final rites will .follow at Admitted implement dealer in Twin Kails, Services were under direction Strain, all of Eden; and Brenda He belonged to the LDS 1 Barracks members^ Richard Tulnlnga and son, Jane Elmwood Cemetery, Gooding. Lillian Packer, Mrs. Darrell died Thursday niKht at his hume of Hove Funeral Chapel. and Becky Strain, both Wen­ Church, was a former member Mr. Winter was born Jan. 4. Bromley, Charles O-Dell, Mrs. Mr. Ohlinger was bom June 8, Miller, Mary Pfnister, Bertha of a short illness. dell; one stepdaughter, Karen of the Cassia County Sheriff’s 1896. in Minidoka, and moved to Anthony Bull, Judith Ann 1BB2,~ at ' Jewel, Kaii;,~"and~g> ew Mont, Mildred Hyde and Bom Aug. 29. 1893, in Mt. Ljiui Wuod s, Marysville , Calif.; Mounted KosSig. T m f " WHS" "Hn~ 4^Gnopahr4»ow-GoodingT^ln-190a^- ParroHT-W illiam^^oranrHarry up in Kansas, later operating a H arin® Cook, allTlupert. Vernon, Mo,, he came to Idaho dartMice .Vston two sons, Robert and Bruce avid sportsman and an ex- with his parents. Merrick, Rudolph Loder, Henry meat market In his home town Dismissed in 1919 and had resided hero KUPEHT - Clarence Aston, Strain, both Wendell'; two celient water skier. He married Beulah Jones on Bonie, Mrs, Brady Jackson, of Jewel. James Kaser, Lois Teeter, ssince. 77. a Fiupert apartment house stepsons, Michael and David For the past six years he had Jan . 28, 1928, In Pocatello. The Shane Patterson, Robert Mc­ He married Viola Krogh in VIrgle Gowey, Donna Jean He was a m em ber of the Twin owner, died Saturday at his McKay, both Wendell; and his been employed by the Kloepfer couple came to the Shoshone Cracken, Sr., Pamela Revai, 1908 at Jewel. They moved to Long and John McGravey, all Falls Elks Lodge 1183 and a parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Concrete Co., Paul. i area, where Mr. Winter ^served Mrs. Nellie Briggs, Mrs. Edna Gooding in 1919, where Mr. home. „ . ... Rupert. ^ member of the Baptist Church He was bom Aug.J20,,1894, Eden. He w as ^preceded------Survivors indlude bi«-widow. 15 years as Lincoln County Hoss, all Twin Falls; Brian Ohlinger fanned. in Missouri. Bancroft, and married'LeVera rfeath by twQjdaughters and Heybumr one son, Daron Bean, weed-control supervisor. He Keith Hansen, Mrs. Je^ In- Blaine County — His wife preceded him in Mr. Williams owned the Allen on June 17, 1917’, in the one son. Heybum; one step-son. Dean also workecf on construcUon of chausti, Stephanie Votroubek, Admitted — death.ln-1958.-He-married-E thel __ the Goodine-Mllner Canal, and Williams Tractor Co.rund-was tx g air— tnatr—CX>S—TempltfT — Eu n e ra l Harold Ottlev. Brooks Stover ___l.inrla .Taynffs, R Iphflpldi. Nelson on Oct. 2,' 1960, at for many years did custom in the farm implement business They came to the Jerome area conducted at 2 p.m. T^iesday at Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Bean, and Adam Watson, all Buhl; Sandra I vie, Hailey; and Mary Payette. threshing in the Shoshone area. 42 years before retiring. He was from Payette, where Mr.'Aston the LMper Mortuary by Rev. Rupert; four brothers, Dennis Derek Jom Soderblom, KimbaU, Holger Albrethsen and _ Survivors include his wife. For the past two years Mr. .a Case dealer for 27 years. He had tiperated fumlture stores Alvin Stone, Eden. Final rites Lee Bean, Duane R. Bean, Gooding; Michael Prouty, Ann Dilworth, ail Carey. Gooding; two daughters, Mrs. Wint«r had b ^ living In Boise. had worked with machinery and ran the Nash Garage for a will follow at Sunset Memorial Garth Bean and Max Loren Hagerman; Tonia MiUspaugh Dismissed He w as a m em ber df the ler of years. After working Park. Twin Falls.______Bean, all—Ruperts—and—one. and Mitchell Moffitt,' both David Kitchen. Ketchum.______Lois Bartram, Richmond, Shoshone Veterans ol h oreign the business in 1966. in the insurance field in Jerome, Friends may call, at Leeper sister, Mrs. John (Marilyn) Burley; William Shell and Janet Births Calif.; a son, ' Clurence Wars, the Magic Grange, and He m arrie d Ethel H. Conant -Mr. A.stnn Jiinvetl tn Rupert___ Mortuary'on Monday and until Rnicpr CHartaiton. Wash.______Bollsh. bQthJiler: Mrs. Robert:. - A son -was -bom-to-Mr,- and- Ohlinge r ,— 9 o o d ing :--^^thr'fete the American Legion. in Elko, Nev., Dec. 21, 1950. His first wife preceded him in time of services on Tuesday, Funeral services will be Watts and son, Eden, and Jack Mrs. Charles Jaynes, Richfield. stepdaughters. Mrs. J^an" Survivors include two sons, H. Surviving are his wife. Twm death on Aug. 19. 1945, He conducted at 2 p.m . Monday in Towt. Ephriam, Utah. Hamilton and Mrs. Blanche Wayne Winter, Boise, and Plon to attend . . . Falls; a step-son, Ralph Conant, married Winifred Mitchell theiFourth Ward LDS Chapel by ^ Births ' Shupe, both Goodmg, and Mrs. K. Devaney Norman (Skid) Winter. Casper, Jr., Twin Falls; two sisters, Smith in the Idaho Falls IX)S Bishop Lund Christensen. Daughters were bom to Mr. IDAHO CAPITOL ANGUS Marie Clark, Scotia, Neb.; two Wyo.; two daughters, Winifred Opal Debuse, Huntington Temple on May 31, 1946. SHOSHONE - Edward Concluding.Tites will follow In and Mrs. Don Collier, Jr., Mr. .■itfp.snna lj»igh NpUr^n 'WUIIams, Shoshone, and Btiaoh, Calif., a iid M is. "En n u -0«vanay,-73, Shost»n8, diod at -the-Rupcri'Cfihctery, and Mrs. Gary Ixggan, Mr. and FEMALE SALE Jerome, and G.T. Nelson, — H i uwnal and upt-rated .tlw Carolyn Bates, Bliss; two Andrus, Carson City,"Nev.; and Aston Apartments In Rupert. the Wood River Convalescent Friends may call at the Walk Mrs. David Armstrong, Mr. and err SeatUe, Wash.; fiv.e g'rand^ brothers, John Winter, Lyn- (Ennittf UvfttMk Cm in i. S«l«f«rd) - two-to>thetSr-J.,-Ed—William ,------Survivors^ include^ 4iis^-^wifc, Center Friday, where he had Mortuary Sunday afternoon and Mrs. Domingo Jimenez, Jr., children. ' - 15 great­ chbnrgjJ/a., and Arch Winter, 4ST0PQIUUTYMIGUFI1UUS Woodburn, Ore.) and Hansford Rupert; tiU'ee daughters. Eva been a patient fgr several years. evening and Monday until time Mr. and Mrs. Brent Bunderson grandchildren. 13 step- G boding; a siste r, Mr.s. and Karen Riach, all Twin Out of top br««ding ifock in Ida* LMike) W llliamsi Bonanza, Ore. He was bom April 25, 1898 at of Services. ho and Wothington Angut herdt . grandchildren afid lO' step- Marie Aston. Rupert; Mrs, Charlotte Atkinson, Boise, 16 Seven brothers and sisters Tonopah, which is now Gooding. Falls, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Excellent 4 H & FFA pro|ect\ great-grandchildren. He was Richard ( Doris i Ryalle. Twin grai^hildren and one great­ preceded him in death. Falls, and Mrs. Raymond He was the son of one Of tiie Ailen.Jerome, and sons to Mr. Sponsored by the' Boiie Vollry preceded in death by a sister grandchild. His wife preceded A n g u i C lu b Funeral services for Mr oldest pioneers of the district, (’.hurch plans and Mrs. David Reynolds, Twin and two brothers, in addition to' I Joyce r Heidt. Lqgan, Utah; him in'death in 1949, as well as Robert W. Mert«y Williams will be conducted the late James Devaney. Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd So)« C hafrm on his firet wife. two sons. Willard ASton. four brothers and a sister. Monday at 2 p.m. m the White He attended the old Red revival fete Moore, Hailey. ” ■' EogI*. Idobe Friends may call at the Terrell. Texas, and James A. Friends may call at the Mortuary Chapel by Hev House School near Gooding, and Thompson Chapel, Gooding. Aston, Ephraim, Utah; two _____. SHOSHONE — Members of ThompsofL Chanel this af­ ilobccL Scbreckenbccg__ t'in a i ------tliis afivi riuuii and evenlnp airU tfl«pdaugh(«rs,—Mr»7- Ipwin ternoon and evening and until rltes will follow in Sun.sel Nevada, where he worked as a s. SfiihonrA^ly s G«r until noon on Monday. iI>eI.ovel Durfee, Nyssa, Ore.. congregation will participate In tim e of services on Monday. Memorial Park. miner. The family suggests con­ and Mrs. Richard ilxila Jeani the annual “Revivaltlme” ’ Friends may call toUlay and He returned to Idaho. about tributions^- the-Jdaho-.V-outh Orchard. Jerome; one stepson. World Prayer meeting at 8 p.m. Mondiiy until 1 p m at the ten years agi. He was a Ranch. Rupert, i Bumette Smith, Brigham City. today. member of the Catholic Church. Now you know While M ortuary. UUih; one brother, I.«o Aston, Rev. Wesley Johnson said the Survivors Jnclude two Boise, 43 grandchildren and two local congregation will be By U nited P ress International brothers, WTIlfam Devaney, gi-eat-grandchildren. joining 60,000 persons around The European fire salaman­ Vtill iani .Vrne Funeral services will be Calif., and Com Devaney, SUBSCRIPTION HATES the world in the service. der, salamandra salamandra. Is Boise; one sister, Mrs. Marie .TWIN F A L I^ - WiUiam Bell conducted at II a.m. Wed­ •Revivaltlme” can be heard so named because ancient THE tlMES-NEWS-^ Burton, Shoshone; several Arness, 70. died Thursday j n nesday in the P'ourth Ward LDS at 9 a.m. each Sunday over alchemists believed it could Twin Falls. idAho Chapel by Bi^hot) William nieces and nephews. withstand fire. By Carrier. Magic Valley Memorial KTFI radio. ' Per MontV Hospital ofinjuries suffCTed in a Qttigley.-Fmal-ritcs Wffl follow was preceded in death by (Daily & Sunday) S3 50 traffic 'accident earlier In the at Pocatello. five brothers and two sisters. B y M a il The RosaryTWU-^ recited at P*ld In Advance day on U.S. Highway 93. Friends may call at-Walk, TWO GENERATIONS (D«lly & Sunday) Mr. Amess was born May 18, Mortuao’ Tuesday afternoon 8 p.m. Monday at' the Bergin lAtoilh *3 75 Funeral Chapel, ^oshone. .'A TO SERVt YOU . . . J«e a t the SUBSCRIBERS. He married Vera E.' nwood Cemetery, Gooding. tarserv^on DeLamater who survives in Fhends may call at the chapel Pipef Odlvery in Shoshone Monday and < Twin Fall?. Other survivors are a son, William D. Amess, SanU TWIN FALLS — Twin Falls Tuesday imtil time of services. C*n your carrier dara,.'Calif.; two daughters. County sheriff’s officers I. or 733-093.1 . Mrs. Louise Poussaint,. Los received a report Wednesday , F u n c r s I S crV IC C S B*tort«p.m. d ally^ Angeres, Mr^. Alan afternoon that a rural Twin M fo r* lOa.m. on FUNERAL CHAEEi (Ann) Drover; Pleasant Hill, Falls resident Ka<) lost about 40 BURLEY — rTM RoSary for. I . ADDISiON AVENUE EAST ' Calif.; two brokers, Leonard .diifckens when they*wen at- Maw—iw Mimia Jr. will he TWIN Fails, idaho PHONE 733-0931 Amess, and Allen Amess, both tacked by a dog. recited at S:30 p.m. iaday at PHONE 733 4900 ' in'M «rylan d ) ^ -.«i8tert Mrs. Cariy-Grab9rt,-wfao-4ivea-at—Payn e ■ Mortutiy— Chapel.— B u h lX M M b r t Ruth Arhott, Minneapolis, Route 3, .Fi& Avenue, told Reqaieni— tiuiss'- w ui-^be Minn., and four grandchildren.'' officers a dog entereda ddcken celebrated at 10:30. PrijatOunettUjeryitf^f!^pA_atJj|a^ -Monday St,—l ^ r w w Mr. Amen win be conducted th« birds. The-

Sunday, November » , 1971 Ttmes-News. TtwlikPMiii. a . '

p i c k u p s election Dec. 6 TWIN FALLS — Holiday operations for the TWIN PA U S--A n election .polling places. The polling Twin Palls icity laiutfill and pickups by the city district*are elegibleito vote in for the one cbnunissioner’s post places are: twin Falls prednct the election. Registration wills sanitation- contract^' were annoui(tced for the for Subdistrict number three of number one, court house;, Twin coming week. b e^n eat the polls at the time the Twin FalU'Highway district Falls precinct number two, cltj- of v o t i n g . ______• Joe Coon, Twin Falls sanitation officer, said will be held Dec. 6; according to hall; Twin Falls pr^inct The- Twin Falls Highway— Arlene urose, district numtwr three. Highway district district Includes most of Twin closed. Pick ups by the contractor will be one day secretery. ^ office, 1234 Highland Ave. East; late on Thursday an3 Friday. Falls county, part of Bel Ora W. Jones, Hollister, now Rogerson precinc^ Rogerson’ He said the lah(] fill will also cloge qn Friday Rapids, Roseworth and goes holds the seat.on the three man post office; Hollister precinct, around the Buhl at ' iver Canal Comranv way- distrlcta to the Oyh^ee • to’ ha w tiiBtf tn~tnr ■Mfflce..In' -H ollister;...B # g e r County line, _ election so far. Precinct, Soyal I^Teighbors holidays later. The other two seats held by Gang Names Conmiunlty fclub b u i j^ ^ n e ar Gangs around the world Coon said no trash pick ups a re anticipated on Commission president Ralph E. Berger; Kimberly ^Precinct, the day l>efore C hristm as but the New Y ears day include the ted d j boys of Olmstea^ subdistrict number Kimberly Village Clerk’s of­ England, Italy's ragaz^i di holiday for collection crews has not yet been two and Kennedt H. Poe, sub­ fice; Hansen Precinct. Hansen via, the dogies and widgier determined. TRASH C(MiLECTIONS such as these may be district number one are not up Village Hall: Rock Ccfiek_ I girls) of A ustralia, m am bo disappearing from roadsides and alleys In Magic for re-election. Precinct, Pleasant Valley "boys and girls in Japan and Tra»fi The polls will be open from I Grance Hal|. hooligans in Poland and the Valley. Twin Falls Jaycm plan to coUf^ such Soviet Union, according to p.m. to 7 p.m. at nine precinct. All voters In - the Highway Items lor recycling Into raw materials when they Encyclopaedia Britannica, flisappears are able to find a location for a recycling center here. waste MArrELVnseHTs collections slated in TiF

TWIN FALLS^^ni^onvertlng Valley, Old cahs, either steel or few days. some of the solid waste aluminum, paper products and There Is only one other such collections in Magic Valley Into possibly glass will be collected recycling operation in the usable products through a by the Jaycees and.run through nation, DeFord said, and it is ON EARTH recycling center is planried by the center to return to a raw located in Phoenbc, Ariz, Twin Falls Jaycees. material state, Jaycees hope the operation Gary DeFord, JaycM, said DeFord said the only problem will prove a success and can b r the organization h u approved at this time is finding a site for used as an exam ple In .other plans for establishing the the cisnter. Once the location Is areas to dispose of some of the recycling operation in Twin determined, he said, the center solid waste collections through Falls to serve the entire Magic can be put in operation within a a useful means.

SPIN-BUMYS^ SPINBUQCyS"- rSQUAItCV*—Tee Pit ■0«|T>^Tee WIM to rtd» trMU »iew>e< to WlX-X-lOrn* tfkchl Sewered to WUl-IClHr 1 0 ,0 0 0 m a F c h in T okyo’s Ueiw te me enel** lhi(«A |« tK« eAtM* r«er< Still I Am Dr. Stuu SEE 'ft SAY* street protesting U.S. Clown-ln.Thc-Mu>lc Boi $ ^ 9 9 9 9 Nmm'm fe.n.rC.l'' . 'aji..'------TOKYO .(U P I)-M o re than opposition party officials without the 88 U.S. military lO,QO0 persons marched peace- agreed to accept a compromise bases and m ore than S0,l)00-man 4 9 19 fuUy through Tokyo s tr e & offer made by the lower house force. The agreement permits Saturday to protest continued speaker. the United States to maintain U,S. presence on Okinawa as The Diet session was sus­ the bases and keep the force on outlined in the .agreement for pended Wednesday when the the Islkid. FASHION CLOTHES FOR BARBIE, kfeN,fRANCIE AND SKIPPER! returning Okinawa to Japanese Liberal Democrats rammed the Two million workers went on rule. reversion treaty through a strike and more than 500,000 The peaceful demonstrations special committee of the lower persons took part in street sharply contrasted the violent house and threatened to present demonstrations Friday protest­ confrontations Friday in which it to a plenary session 'over ing against the treaty provi­ inore than 1,800 persons were prot^iaJM iL opposition lead: s i o n a l arrested and nearly 70 Injured. ers. One ^ n died of a heart attack According to the proposal Police termed Friday’s de­ while guarding a restaurant In made Saturday, opposition Diet monstrations one of the largest the city's small Hibiya park m em bers would be allowed to in the history of modern Japan. which w as burned to the ground question Prime Minister Eisaku The massive strike action and at the height of the Friday Sato and members of his huge protest rallies were the de'mqn^trations. cabinet on the bill in a special worst since I960 when the . The' Japanese Diet (parll- meeting Monday. United States and Japan signed .jSment) Saturday averted a Critics of the treaty demand a security pact. T he. jarrests crisis over the treaty when the that the U nl^^tates give back among the student radicals also ruling Liberal Democratic and the small western Pacific Island set a one-day record.

• BOISE (UPI) - Idaho's bri^ch of state government. "It Is Inconceivable that League of Women Voters came Mrs. Joy Buersmeyer. Boise, Idaho needs its 260 boards, out strongly Satirday for Gov. league president, said the agencies and commissions,"'she Cecil D. Andrus' proposal to organization "believes that this said In a statement on behalf of -lim a the niimhflr of .itate flgen- proposed amendment to Idaho's the league. ______cies to 20 by constitutional outdat^ constitution would be a Mrs. Buersmeyer pointed out amendment. first step in reorganizing state the league reached a consensus Andrus announced the propo­ govennnent to make govern­ more-than five y ears a g o after a sal at a news conference Thurs­ ment more accessible to the study of the execuUve branch of day, saying it was the key to his citizens." the Idaho Constitution. plans to reorganize the con­ stantly-growing- executive

Vlexicd A fn iifv CALIFORNIA/8" Race Set HOT WHEELS advises Competition course for SIZZLERS electric cars! Portable JUICE MACHINE'" for 90-second re­ PRINTING charge, SPEED BRAKE" to test drivers skill plus on hair Lap Counter! --

TWIN FALLS - Malts with . ^ "L long hair,were advised by the Idaho State Automobile Assn. for business today they maty run into dlf- flculty if planning a' visit to or personal AND Mexico. M 2 *’ Arnold Cross, Twin Falls AAA SIZZLER representative, said an hoKdoy greetings '^ 6 5 1 4 '91971 M.tlel. Inc association news letter reports i-SETS the traveling public should be advised of a policy they may find enforced at the border Now 'f ihe' t^m# lo order HERE! For SIZZLERS* owners! Extra-wide speedway! when-planning to dnter Mexico. JUto>,RtfraM K Race ’em . . . ^ss ’eifi. . . squeeze ’em out • The Mexican consulates have thoM penonalixed Chriil- CAUFORNIA 500* Race Set;^ on the wide-open oval! ©1971 me , issued orders any “Uppie type” mo* greetings for bofi- tourist be denied a tourist card Extra-wide speedVii3»|oi:‘real race actiortf' t() enter Mexico and many male na«i gstocialet and Two cars, JUICE MA'CHINF” individuals are being turned LAP COMPUTER away at the boMer because friend*. Choete frorS^ & SCRAMBLE- they-arewearing long hair, the hundrech of tard desight directiw sta t^ START™! Determination • of what' conrtitiites “Uppie type” Is ■ being lett to the Jodgement of IndMdaaMibnla' or consnUite ofljci^ Tbs AAA.bordoLoi^_ at Laredo, Tol, rtports m « ■rtm Irniy -lia lr TIMES-NEWS — “iadiae«iBnw n jBprdoOiiig- «m«y" be allowed entry to ACEPRINTINGT ' M o^bntitandetiemisootlB 250 Main A w . North - 7 3 3 ^ 2 3 , vfewi of the dSkial on dniy.

, .i , . t6p Repiiblioon leaders. and ^end of pKarmaceuticai • opinion of the siate'sT top statewide Presidential cam­ igic Valle^y *8 H om e N ew spaper WASfflNGTON A last- minute appeal'io the White UntU that intorvention,------, the— ciar Elmei' Bobst, one of RepubUcan hierarchy he e n d ^ paigns, It »as the tone and- ‘ Hoii38Tliar " 8tymieU~ tlie ap^ ‘ro w w r i e r uoiiaafcratiiirtuT nir P- w atdc -- iit ' NiiLIUIH ■ 'iJ '■ JilUUUSft liy m u r — r 'Iiliidi'auiTr — ------h e lp r 01, leciures inejr heard , Sunday, Novembpr 21, 1971 Al WMterdren, Publisher PHONt7330931 pblntment of Nbcon cam paign CitlMra for Nbcon in Hie crucial , friends. Skidmore had ihat With New Jersey'the only big from ^udi high-level .White, chaiiinah In New Jersey who is state of New Jersey was James same priestigious assignment In state In the E ast carried by Mr. House pols As Harry Flemming;. ' Official cityaiiilCounty Na«v*pap«r , A»»nib«r6(Au«tlt Buraauof CIrculatlonand.UPI Nbcon (with a plurality, not a and Jeb S. Magruder,; now . P ursuant lo Sacftoi » .1 0 i Idaho Cod#, T hurK tay l i (i»T*by dM lonatad a t tha day o f th a vMek on which anathema to the state’s A. Skidmore, a. businessman' the 1968 campaign, but in the lagal notlca* will b t puMltfiad. Publlihad dallV and Sunday, axcapt Saturday, at 132 Tl)ird Straat Wait, m ajority; of ther three-party running the Commit^ for ^ Twin Falli, Idaho, m o i, by AAa«lc Vallay Nawijlapart, inc. Erttarad a t taeond class inall maMar April I, vntfil- the m ere discovery that Reelection of Uie Pn»«lriant lflS ,a tlh a p o ito fflc a ln TWIn FalU, Idaho, 13301,u n d a rth a a c tiif M arch «, U7*. White House political from a suite of offices at 1701 operatives had even considered li'ennsyiyanla Avenue.. ^Idmore for the number one Thus, at a long Friday break- 1972 campaign spot both In- fa?t sesplop, Magruder and Streamline Agencies furiated and terrified New ' F^emmUk tUUUid'Expansively Republicans. alwut the ^onge-like functions at4ho“gtijions’ Committees In Tdaho’s Governor Andrus at last for example, suppose s a wor­ ~t»re last weekend In a series of each state, their planned net­ is trying to come to grips with the thwhile program is submiitted- to hush“hush meetings between work of subcotnmittees for fundamental mis-organizatipn of the legislature for funding,' but the political aides of Atty, Gen. youth, aged and farmers and the state’s executive branch of legislators know the program's John Mitchell, who will be over- the fact that each Citizens’ 1-year, gbverniherit. administrator is incompetent. ch airm a n wou ld -h a va- to ta l The only recourse may be either ~and Republican state chairmen control over budget, payroll, JThe-Jjrovernoi: has proposed a ~and national committee volunteers and campaign. constitutional amendment to to fund the program knowing that members from the' Nor­ One state chairman bluntly permit consolidation of the 262 the funds will be misused or theastern region — Maine to demurred. If th? party’s state agencies into no more than 20 withhold funding altogether. In Pennsylvania. regular state chairmen did not units. either case, executive remedy of Moreover, the Sltidmore have over-ail control, he said, His plan deserves support, the situation by removal of the aide Incident only added to the the "conflicts" would be deadly despite its serious weaknesses. is the proper solution. A good already bleak mood that left and endless. Flenuning simply program should not be permitted to many of the party’s grass roots replirt "no, no" without b t . Executive branch reorganization high command In such states as pianation. can be ail important step to hold be scuttled by a poor ad­ NeWjV^jrk, Pennsylvania, New Turning to his seat mattf, New state governmental costs to a ministrator. Jersey and Connfectlcut in York state chairm an Charles T. minimum while providing needed ' B. C m ’ZEN-BEWILDERMENT: anguish -over -eampoign plans- ■lanlgan miiHgrgH In pnlH fiirj, services. -If a citizen has a problem, where being worked out by operative? "This Is nothing but troiifc, the,Gpvernor’s plan calls should he turn? of Mitchell (S t ill tied down at" trouble and more troubler” - ^ r/ an amentoen^-to-^ 4o Ju stice)------— -Connectlcuts-TinaHarrower__ Constitution to permit the con­ untangle the maze of red tape For example, the' Thursday- decided then and there to end implicit in 262 governmental units. through-Saturday sessions at her seven years of hard work as solidation. The plan would not the Mayflower Hotel had been national committeewoman at affect offices designated in the " The result in too many cases is. lack billed as the first unveiling of the next committee meeting In constitution. of citizen involvement, or as bad, organizational charts showing December, six months before Should the legislature and the citizen, involvement in the wrong just how the campaign would be her term expires, A Republican Idaho voters approve the amend­ place at the wrong time — while run and where the state leaders liberal, Mrs, Harrower’s ment, then the legislature would decisions -are being made would fit into it. They never decision was based not on have the responsibility to enact elsewhere. were produced. Some state ideology but on practical This bewilderment is ' closely chairmen had also arrived politics, '’If they don't recognice laws, to determine the number and armed with sj)eciflc suggestions youi- existence," she told a functions of the new agencies. linked wiUi^ lack of public con­ for the top post of chairm an of friend," you can’t work -your Andrus says he will not propose a fidence iti governm ent airiff Citizens for Nixon in their heart out," specific restructuring plan, leaving reluctance by many citizens to states. They had been asked to that politically hot potato to the participate in governmental discuss various prospects with At issu^ere is the age-old Republican-controlled legislature. decision-making processes. Nixon aides. cleavage between the inner and For no more than two“ years, An agency without angry tax­ But despite the fact that this always overprotective political payers occasionally camped on its method of choosing a campaign palace guard around every interim boards could be created to chairman in each state came President and the party’s high . provide necessary continuity doorstep is one that has little in­ I - from White House Aides at the conrunand in the. field. That is during the period of transition. centive to improve service. Such Denver Republican ’ National avoidable was the brash- The new structure would be agencies often are tempted to serve ART BUCHWALD Committee meeting last*'July, way Mr, Nixon’s youth­ operational by the beginning of special interests in the apparent the White House was not ready. ful, super-confident opera­ 1975. lack of public concern for the The whole process has now been tives lectured the party's agency’s public functions. Consumers Of The World postponed. regular chairmen. The price What really disturbed the could be higb in battleground Until the fin^l .organizational WASHINGTON - Tho new and selling them to their own "That's correct. Kor 25 years state party leaders here last states like New Jersey, Penn­ Despite its good features, there bitterness toward the United th'art for the .slate’s executive people who do not need them, now most countries have weeks was not so much missed sylvania and Connecticut. States being voiced around the branch is approved by the are serious shortcomings in the "We must have a new Mar­ assumed that the only suckers deadlines or the tentative (Copyright 1971, world has to do with economics. -Legislature, nothing definite can be Andrus plan that threaten its shall Plan and .send out quallty- in the world are Americans, selection of second-raters to rUn Field Enterprises, Inc.) said al)ojjt whether or not the success. This country, by putting on a 10 control experts to teach They have to change* their First, th^ plan does nothing to per cent surcharge, has everyone the secrets of built-in thinking and realize that thetr restructuring will work well. alienated every nation except obsolescence. We must instruct -Certainly-it-is possible that a new_ reorganize constitutionalJv created ' own peopl&r -with the right — Albania,-ivludi—as^ fat,^as we uUiej^coun tries ta m ake fur­ adveWsing campaign, can be GEORGE C. THOSTESON. M.D. organization might be no better agencies such as those that govern know is the only country that niture that won’t hold up, cars made to be ju§t as gullible than the existing system. the state's educational program refuses to trade with us for that break down, refrigerators "The world’s economic But it safely can~be'said that Andrus deliberately exempted ideological reasons. that won't freeze, television sets survival depends on everyone Breast Cysts t h e r e Are so m any built-in disad­ elective executive officers from his While the United States'hsTs th'fft blow th eir tubes and acknowledging that we have much to answer for, the rest of vantages to the existing plan — including the superin­ washing machines that miss Carried the constuner burden on the world is not blameless for their cycles," our shoulders since 1945, and It Dear Dr, Thosteson: I have uAurs then in hormone Organizational chaos that much tendent of public instruction. fibrocystic disease of the production, And because his • proposed the sad state of economic af­ "If they did this, it would Is no'iv lime for other countries ODDortunitv does exist for i m - ' fairs. . certainly take the burden off to start absorbing'most of the breast. Is this a. precursor' pf ^ While fibrocystic disease and _provgment. Amendment does not repeal other Prof. Ebexhardt Clold- us," I said. junk they make," cancer?' Will this condition ' cancer of the breast can exist at -- Among the most serious existing sections of the constitution settmg standard, who wrote the improve after' defects that the reorganization up executive agencies, these will definitive book on the world's Would it be safe to take that fibrocystic disease Is NOT could affect are these; not be affected. economy entitled "Evil, the hormones for menopause with a precursor of cancer. Thus,.foe example, the overlap in Koot of All Money ' told me PAUL HARVEY this condition? — E.M.M. The coexistence of fibrocystic 1. DUPLICATION and GAPS: "The problem is that the -With 262 executive units-----nmny- -the-responsibility -for- educat ion' is- disease and cahcer is greater in - left seranrijbl^. The superintendent- -Kibfocygtic digcaser— -persons h^ np a familyJilsttax. — with—ntitnerous—administrative m ajor ?(5tisnm?r*oTthFTesT o f If I W ere A Jew rnatioh of cysts in the breast,.is of cancer, a ' useful point to subdivisions — the opportunity for of public ins^Tlction, the board of the world's products Every a very common complaint. remember even'" though the unnecessary duplication is large. education, the University of Idaho country 's economy Is geared lo About 25 per cent of women "why" of it is-not understood. Hawks and Doves must surelyi "No, not again!" and the board of , land com­ what they can sell to America have it, but the degree is quite Often duplication is costly. agree that we should learn from If I were a Jew. Anyway, the mere presence But there is just so much stuff variable, sometimes severe, Often gaps appear in which no missioners have duties that Vietnam That however we got Now, how are we going to of fibrocystic disease of the Americans can consume. Our sometimes trifling. one has responsibility for- a directly affect public education. in and whenever we get out, we keep this psychologically breast is not a contradiction to citizens can atisorb only so Since the breast is a secreting the use - of hormones for -problem ar t About 70 per cent of general fund ~many carving knive^'; fuckuu mu.st never mnkp' this mistake traumatic situation from set- again. -organ------ita purpose being to -m annpnmn| fiymptnmiT'_TTifly 2. FRAGMENTATION OF spending this year is spent by these clocks, tablecloths, stuffed ting the world on fire? Vet the Middle East remains produce milk — it contains may be used, in other words. POLICY: Multiplicy of agencies agencies, This large segment of animals, tape recorders, Our government has tried to another yawning trap for our countless tiny, glands which are state responsiblity is ignored in weather vanes, music boxes, m aintain »' delicate power can result in multiplicity of policy. good intentions. And have you influenced by hormone levels. If 'Dear l!)r, Thosteson, Our salt and papper shakers and balance, providing defensive In rare cases, two governmental Andrus' plan. noticed how many of those some of these glands become daughter, 25, formed a habit of back scratchers. weapons for both sides and units pursue opposite policy. Again A second shortcoming is the fellows who are Doves in In­ cysts, there will be sucking a lemon with salt on it. "We have reached what could offensive weapons for neither. unnecessarily political framework dochina are Hawks In the varying discomfort because of^ Is this bad for her health? - this is costly. be described as a consutner State Secretary Rogers tried Middle East — and this includes varying hormone levels in the Mrs. R. C. 3. LACK OF AC- in which the Goverrtbr presented watershed, and unless other to explain this policy to the some politicians now running menstrual cvcle. Bv the Same Won't harm her general 'COUNTABILITY: Many of the his plan, countries find new markets for United Nations and to ikraeU for President. , token, fibrocystic disease tonds health, but the concentrated state's Executive agencies for all -The real crunch in executive their products, we're all Romg Foreign Minister - Abba- Eban iii>-y're all out to get out of to improve after the.menopause acid in the lemon can ruin her ''to go down the •drain." when he held off sending Israel . practical purposes are accountable reorganization is not in a stateme^it Indochina yet Insistent that wt because of the decline ' that teeth. Prof. Goldstandard blames any more Phantom F-4 fighter to no one. The only executive of the heed to reorganize — whFch must piotect Israel in any World War II for the world's planes.'Hsrael woutd'like us to control over many boards is alK)ut everyone agrees is a good showdown along Suez. economy problems. supply two a month. This Ad-_ through the process of ap­ idea — but in the specific plan to be Unless you're all for one side "With the exception of the ministration is unwilling to . in this Arab-Israeli thing, the pointment. followed. The State' bureaucracy United States most ^ make such a conunitment. BERRy’S WORLD 4. A WEAK GOVERI'^OR: As a holds a maze of interest groups and who parlicujated in World W arJ- ^ ^ Newspapers In Israel —_6jd some in the United States^N result of agency independence, backwash fiefdoms that are II. had to suffer great fortunate it is un­ promptly accused us of taking Idaho’s G o^rnor can be said to be resisfant to change. deprivation. There were derstandable, y sides with Egypt. Israel then shortages of everything, and the stripped (Jf much of the power that It may be politically expedient If I were an Arab I’d be angry threatened to develop her own people in Europe wd Japan is usually associated with a chief for the Goyernor to propose change as all gel-out about th^lteous nuclear missile, - executive. A U.S. President" aifHl^-net' say whal he waiits the haven’t forgstten It, niey still plight of displaced Palestinian save string and paper, they Our State Department’s 'Arabs, I'd still be smarting Middle E ast specialist, Joe phooses his own cabinet members changes to be. He throws the hoard boxes and they never and is responsible for their actions. •problem in the laps of the from the humiliation of the ^Iscor believes both sides want throw away clothes, shoes or hundred hours war and the real But the Idaho Governor has, say, Republican legislatbrs, who surely cigarette tinfoil. Suez reopened and that .estate it cost. I'd be frightened "common intecest might ma|ie no control over and no respon­ wil^not be pleased. "^ericans, on the other by the energies and the gung-ho, possible at least an interim hand, dispose of everything. sibility for decisions made by the When the Governor refuses to let's-go dedication of Jewish agreement." They buy something and two Bbard of Education. face the issue squarely by offering trf'-'p:. dug in on my soil just An interim agreement Is the weeks later dump it in the trash When the people vote for a new a specific plan, he is ~ killing the ^yond ___ : — -mpst-we-eaiv-expect;----- can. It isn'tour buying;'bul our U I were an Arab. Israel’s founder and elder Governor every four years, they possibility of making -the dumping that has made us the And if I were an Israeli Jew Statesman, David Ben-Gurion, vote for a figfirehead without moT’ement to strearnline the greaj«t consumers of all time. I’d be fed up with Arab says the situaUoD “calls mostly enough power to carry out.jJhe_ executive branch-__a_g^uine "But now,” -Prof. Gold- paranoia, with senseless border for P A tlE people’s mandate. bipartisan effort. standard said, “wei.±ave no raids, and.-howeyer I might -U 5. EXECUTIVE ROLE THRUST The issue will become heavily ^ c e left to dttmp what we buy. wtnprebend and allow for her Arab neighbors will co- ON LEGISLATURE:. In the ab- political ^ a Democratic governor sense. of executive control^ often vs. a R ^ b lio a n legislature ^ and miMnB education, poUtics - but not “Tthe prodiiction, ' thq^are —!■ jrorlnlmg, fcn.miui **I am ready to ■ ■ ■ ^ ill^ be a things taster. ■ sacrifiL-e a miUion pebi for He says, “We’ve waited controlis the l^islaliire — Osually streamlined executive branch. States ctm tlm rr them away, the liberation, of ^ Jt Nakamura and his associates and ylgpr and his eves were intense.' He relished his plans to visit Red China. revolutionary activities bMhls superiors are not men to rest. He took me out on moment'witir a foreign visitor.' The plea appears in the form country and around the world, a new expanse of land reclainftd from Tokyo Ticking off the nations on his charts, he flashed of a four-page “Protest Letter" and that, despite claims to the Bay. Atop a man-made ridge, he flailed his arms with pride when he said his own country's name; to the president, with spaces at contrary. Red China is still the about, indicating wfhere m ore big furnaces would Nippon. When we had left, it rang in my ears: the end for five signatures. leading producer and exporter ROBERT ALLEN & JOHN GOLDSMITH go and where larger, deeper-idraft oree the solution friends. I have material & n d i plpys all its home gam es back in perspective. retained a friendly feeling for os porary obliteration of psychic pain.” They can’t many had hoped ? If the drug user can’t stand the experience In W s regard? ^deflce to attest what-I’m- --m Bronra Stadium, I believe . AsaauUerolrecord, (liviein because wedid not,-a»Englandr stand the mental angv^ lheyW gotnf through psychic emotional pain he’s facing and uses^tlie Eighteen years as principal of saying. France and Germany, move In that most people (with the Bonn«ville“Saib6l District W. even though it may- be the same type of drugs to m eet that pain or believes he roust have Jr. High schools with 22 years Mr. H an ^, you and others on them; establish “^ e re s of ppssibie exception of Borah have no peraonalaze to grind, frustration or shock many people take for the drugs to meet that pain, then education may over all teaching in Idaho and hfly^ fione tb** rtarnAgi* now but iifin pfi tn .skim gfanled -him^ Utah convinces me that prayer this question of prayer in our the cream from the Industry of .agree with me. that ‘‘>1® Same . puouc scDOOu. is a viuu This suggests to some specialists that To stop a person Of this typer from turning to in the public schools is a vital. public schools will come up a starving population. It is not ^hnnld he played at a noutrnr^^tefl^m s^andH ^ ^ (of tactor to aid In the education of psycholo^cal dependence on drugs may be more drugs or getting him off (faiigs m uns finding again. surprising that these three site preferably at 'IVln Falls ^ < * ^ o n e ) andresidenUof .tudents. As the seasons come important than physiological addiction. other ways for him to handlrf-hls mental or- ARNOLD G. HOLLAND quarters of a billion patient emotional pain. Thus, .treatments which depend Both t^anis and fans could ^thls area. and go there is always a song Dr. Robert A. Savitt of New .York has been Twhi Falls, Idaho workers should finally tire of heavily on “successful" physical withdrawal as travel Uhttjdistance with very Ben McKinley that cai) be used; Thanksgiving, attempting of late to test this theory. As one little effort expense. Idaho Falls being pushed around; so they example, he reported, at length at an American “the” solution may haVe little hope of success got mad. It is no little thing- to Psychoanalytic Assn. Session on a 22-year-old over the long pUll, incur the enmity of that n ^ y

nothing to Uame but the foggy, PRAYER FOR’TODAY confused thinking of an ovtf- Help me to be- thankful, deiar staffed, overpaid, over- j Golden Rule bearing.smug State Deuart- Thie A lm anac -God, reaUy-thiankftil! -Th g -Bible^ m ent. ----- ^—Editor. TUH»Wew»r -m_d inyite ^sayst ‘!Let_everytbing that has is not fbr the By United Press lotematioiial On this «£&y in history: living in those areas (Smnan- X fia that our paper boy or The card for ttiem to record brrath praise the Lord.” 1 Imve a TSfay Is girl *ould be treated as we payment and y«i get tlie nibdqr feeling that saying'it isn’t enough. I propaganda to the coitfrary, it is the 32 ^ day of 1971. announced the invention of In 196S President and Mrs. would want to be treated.’Itaey you have in reserve or .out of? ^ow my gratitude by the way obvio^y working for China;, Ihelmooa is between its new what he called “the talking John Kennedy were greeted liy hoi o r your -podut. 'nM -ana -who iTgreet each day , the way I do my they are eating regidarly. It I s '' phiMwid first quarter'. . , m achine." cheering crowds in S n Antonio. a n t ^ cokL“l 36BriBe" w iy^ treat ever^ne f '* where ivife knows wiiere it secoid tiine is inattSikdy to Mpum dignity dh an empty V.:_____ j' meiet Bvatbe'w ay I walk and talk ilie iv e n in g sta rs a re M ercu­ played his last varsity football • Is to p i^ i fo r’toe Ttanes-News _gripe . if tliey . -.are missed------■ttimadi^ D Oomnrahism is the'. ry. Venus. IMars andJupiier. gam e toe the University 'of irtioi our cwrtof cames tp sonytfane. Have payment and smile ^QUld.say, “Thank you. ciily anriri nr«W that hi»p -nUac A thomht for today; Ameri- — dftw i n B ttt.me IM MM « God. i ’m alive!” ~ -ttrfygofaig; tiitn mot^ liuwer to- ewIhte'dSv^-are' CWago^Baw. ------rtiruap atotesman-P aniel WM e t r ; = = any other u n w« nast pay so Uletta Martin tm d ir the sijgn ot:ScotTl6. 6i 1988 Getmimvoccniied the saM»'' *l

_u_; ;; .6 ^ TlmeaJ

C avett guests Jail ConsDltant Servicds d^^ yribed 64 per cent of them •'poOT** or ‘‘very poor." ' HOLWfWOOD (U.PI) -N otes Biimett serle?. to watch television by: . A couple of veteran perfor- Thei headliners: Daimy Kaye mersr June Allywn and Eddie is the sole guest on' Dick Albert, . are featured . with MCMEFVOINQS C avett’s ABC-TV sbow Nov. 24, Robert Ciilp and Angie Dickin­ ra n Fy\REiNrpsi^D Thanksgivlngtr Eve ... on son Dec. 11 in ABC-TV’s 00- YDUNOPEOPUE TJianiBgiwug— HigHt;— cavBir ■Tmnutersatutfaay mghi "Mavis oOlfCtita Ol ifti fUng$ tt to •n/o/"* offers a special program) with of the Weekend," which con-. mo.-« confni toi br ch.ia>9ty the muppets of non-commercial cems an ingenious actor who television’s “Sesame Sti’eet,” casts himself as middleman in ALL AC(S AOMl4tiO the noted children’s series ... a kidnap plot ABC-TV says Aufl tACe\ the Dec. 1 Cavfett outing offers the show, entitled “See The writers Norman Mailer, Gore Man Run,-” is Miss Ailyson’s AOUlItIO Vidal and-Janet Planner, of the first motion picture role in 12 GP G«,(}4Pt» S^qqr-,1.-. New Yor ker Magaainfr------youro' ...-^ ia a Ally sen , famous ' ' Kext Friday, 'meanwliile, for her girl-next-door parts, form er heavyweight t»xing became a major star in such K{UR1CI(0 ACTRESS Rarjiara Stanwyck chamfiton Miihamad^Ali timed movies as "The Glenn Mllfcr. R up for a Cavctt outing All's Story" and "The Strike.” had ruptured kidiaey removed in fight of sevei'Bl ru(irl I.. D aH a us D M rerti.r "Wide World of Sports, " witti because of severe cold and pufM- rotrlfvcs it fruin '.tr^c ! I)i.vls, iornuT broadcastpr Huward CnscU ;:t A PAUPER exhaustion. (UPli ' N('trc Diinit' h.ilfh.'ict',. !■ ■ :ii,ii iicl!iii lie , Ringside. . ______I 1 5 A - P O O R Inriijfiit Miw! jMjMM'fl-pi;( s.ii .1 .(tuu’s. Hr Carroll O'Connor, tho superb ^^p*iEBQti|3M£*!fiOQCSncZa2JaiHe* 1*11 rso dropped^ h c lll lu'l until pillll f ll«MLT Ilf |lll!M ’ U'(t actor wtiu portrays the bigot Archie BunKer un yiijiio’s "All '.(•enr ultlioul (jhillt; h'r or ^/.tr-'liiiiiK to B.5H WITHOUT KiMttKiT ftoks i, u tr ik a o M • NONt rs«t«oo press rh iiri’.e.-,. ^ll■tu^^•^ .»ere iinWiiin serii-s|. in the Family, " will be the Uilmi by J.iinis It l.vh,f;ruphy featured guest Dec. 13 on NBC- Continuous Today from 12 Moon student, viliii luippi'iii-it !,eeiie. (I’l’Il . 'I’V's 'I-augh-In, " with Bing C'TOby and .iHiifrl I^MKh in - cameo appearances .. accord­ ing to NBC-TV. O'Cxinrior will ~ T-O-D-A-Y play "Santa, a Yule tree 'Something Big" at 1:00-3. l0-5i20-7:20-|9:?0 P.M. sale.sm an and Kb<-riczer M COME PBADV TO R-E-L-A.X fo r .. . - i r l i n g Ni.xon in 'A Qiristnias Carol’ .spoof." Dof»ih. HLlbotrfff M SWINGING WESTERN Judv Carnt. fortnerlv the Bo»»nno S c r e a k s ■ .sock-it-lo-nie" nirl on Ijiugh- In," stars with Chri.stopher COMPLETE LINE OF George Doc. 17 in CBS-TV’s s on tine HViday night movie, a 90- ADVANCE BRAND niinute originjil entitled "Dead ! ' ■ V'.VC,)1)| Victor Men Tell No Tales,!' about a FLOOR .vvi'.ii-e, .1 man tor whom they young man pursued by kijltffs cuineil tir^ term "beefcake" to MACHINES who have mistaken him for ALL TYPes OFsenvice '(le.-,f ribf Mis barrel chest and .someone else . Shecky Greene, S o e u s io i Ch.'iries Atl.is phy.sique, lias Demonsltaftons the Great l.as Vegas comedian I i.'iiie <omi/y‘i lunny boneM whci,' v. r I'.e ■ iu>» ^v(lrkln^; in MC.M\ I vei-A Litlle l.'ouk and " H i c t Nann' M,iliir>- III h ill' accepted hi.s ii'le ause he tllull^!hI the C a ll M e w >.>T ('-HiH.y . U itliio breaks It's not too early- T r in it y '^ ...... hi'.;;'iiiitine 'f. was never crazy about plan that'Special actinuT“ >Ilature Saul, "1 had a AN AVCO IMBAS8Y, RELEASE "MS ...... t'lifnpitlsloii to earn money, not a<.So I Worked, as an actor ^HOLIDAY PARTY!! ^ uii;i! 1 ( uuld afford to retire. I Televisioji Schedule wanti‘il ti. quit while I could ^Party Reservations are now made for the® SundAy. Nov 2). 1971 4 JO , , . ulill enjoy life ^Trophy Room or Barton's 9 3 Convention C e n te r. AJ 8pm on chflnfici M o A S ’ b B N D r Nfv<.s ______l-',ni.i\ lite he. does .Mature E m ™ r M 0 T O R .v ’"'HorfTBre"------'Greed~Vnd survival ri I ■ ' — .1. ()’■ e a d y to r rurw.'f.'jj fh f 1B9(H W ith P a u l N ew m an rts M K inqoo't tnak'‘^ hi> hi.'ine in T^hl*)r Mofninq 'n;»Ti' iirr^'irnifTfronf' 6 Si 1 .‘.(V j I s.'. 1 T i Pm* for V.-.l I a' i» . iri 'fu .trea,*' said ; 00 ■»: " n’’»‘ r ■ Aii'l I pla> jv'U Al iC.ftM,- r Aqr.ii •. Mo,w-.' ** » r I-.' 3 11 I O'’ '' r»n cl . t'f ' T E Venin^ It a.'':’. '.'0 a inoM’.h N» I'm S-—Lamp ur''u My ^ •••'' * 00 vi'i > hiHppv doun there. ® C A S I I \ 0 7b Ag'f 'CuJUit o w 1- •'k .ti J ^ ‘ j & B ’g Pi( tur*' ' * N.V',i»' a r j fr,i’ ^»’ nt \\v i.s iil.Mi sini^U', four 7^0 & )0 i:iarr: • • .1, ______I 4.;t) iM.tn l.ii —i x J-J------. .. ■ >!(' plt'j.sr^ i M O T E L I > (\< r*. .^rf I .itop up and down the coast

7 ooi"” N [I'l.iv i;Mf and f.vi- fncnd.s," a n Hiir a n /a * S K ]. -,i'hT 'T also have a T.IfTlf' CAFE IN THE NE)^FOUR WEEKS WE WILL PRESENT A) ^^Ov i M " FOun OF THE MOST spectacular f il m s of a l l t im e \ l . - s - A'V, t^r t rtn S« y ? Cv !i-.i, ilr ItMin ilowrr south We *^l V V S.r '.V m th" prnr:;int la.s’l year Tins SHOWN IN the magnificence 7 10 OF WIDE SCREEN'COtOftii^ST^EOPHONIC SOL'ND_ .... V I , . I .; r' f . ' ■ :iI ir in .M’rund 8 oc \.-.ki'! '.»lu hi.' quit in mid- A i A. \ — th ■>1 r*f.fS .Malure Uirew bark his 1 WINNER OF 6 J < H *'> .Id ,ind ldu,;h(‘; ' a. Or U, ,1 l>;i( kuard child ------11 r.bt>.rt •S ••• “I*. ■ ' |,\Vho \so u H liif’ he askfd DOCTOR .0 JO " . .1 X . s . A:, ,n :r>. ■ r- A ' , ' -0 Cri' I likr to loaf 1 love it. I , 9 00 STV.N , wot.v'*'. x-> C .Ijlo ^ ( 1-) .,nt .Mature s first tnn move brrak Z H ilA G O 3 t ac r i •' ' *..u»isrr»,i>Kf iva.s in 'im e .Million, B ( '" in » 1 ' V .1 »• e t' 4 M o V 0 '0»". rtu* .. . E«iting Co-Hit . . 1C • JO which he played a cave man * 't T aCHTnac !«• ( hcv' —Ma5t»^p oce T^^ratrr MGM presents .1 Jerry Gcr^hwin-Elliott Kaslnor picture st.in.nR i'-.. •‘r ■JnrgT*' .._ '7T- '/ V..' ,\f ' r irtfh thr lafr Carole I .andis S Wr f.‘r 5$ 9 .V.,- .J. s T : r \ : m S K m R ichard B urton ■ Clint E astw ood Mary ure > ^ahprnv^c 0 Cjicu-- >. 1 Ni>w^ ' Suvn I had to UKh' m y way i Or.1i Rc.r.^i-s 10 00 73J-557a . Ihioii^h that picture.' he "W here Eaole-s D are” ( ^ < ago ~rei-alle71 . That was back in~ ' ■ I »v' ' JJ.i . 10 15 IH.IB .Sometimes I wonder how I 10 )C V o . 1* T on V 0 e LAST i PAYS!!!! 7 .** ’ s 8, 1 I, v.-o* •• »• p- fs* survived .some of those pic- »0 25 FOR FAME, FORTUNE.... STARTS WEDNESDAY - ?i' ■ * ace fhf O'- Vov 0 Dear Qf Q r»c ttires But what the hell, tliey 1 WINNER OF 1 0 i jr y s ,h - 10 M ABC N i paid me for them ’ AND BROKEN BON^S! ACADEMY AWARDS! V SoSD«*n^^ s'. irs ghf '.'•Ar foQ’ Cw SDorts. f . ------. “T— Drofl'r ! ^ <..Ovs T H E w n m r U ^ a;p Sai'C'- 11 JO' J 1 00 23,3.1 1 N F L Pre (5a'-^'<; w * ABC STARTS WED. DEC. 1 ' *>^isues ana Ar»s^rrs ’b ^^Ov'e The Pia,8» -P ro P00»t>aM aron< os S f aco to Pace v s c h i e f s 1115 - P ro FoQih^ti----- w<^aT^er. Soort^ ______Bears . nTif 4-^oilege Footbaii Mighi.ghrs » M o v . f f/jtry M a r y ' t:00 11:15 4“ FHm S , M o v ie - o» F v t l" 1:X Modday, Nov. i t , 1171 < l^fpom - - 1 p 7n: 8rr cfiiWneT J iT -- Mov; -gtapj-: ----WTT- -nuMinivl...... ---- -m y ypgCTJT f - 4 9 en ,J0,3.I1—Pro FootOall — vs '•>*' *W ’ •■ToDruk - a R a m i p l967 0y:MhomlnaTion 0«f a rerun in 4.S—Hion School Challeno* ■ mu World war It yam. Th» action n it-'Mwr

4 - ^ o iv le : 'R id e B»yond • B rliiih ramrnandos wtTo’aM raH ? — 'y tig * 0«rm»n BOn* It Tttbruk: 7t>^Jimior v«r*irv OuU Richard .Burton it»r». . , ' •r-M ^la: "Cunppinf" ' Bvanlna 1 : X \» » A h > -N 8 C Nrw* S0M|ial — N«Wi. w c a m ^ Spon't

•1-- - . s a c ■ -Sun'dav /J JnwBmhftr ? i.M071 tiiriM .M..'i.,» ' 4 Hi cil ts ’ ... Servicemen j^._MMieSiJ«Jah0XUPlL-:=_a>Lar-ea..iego, 1S1 Austin Av«. 793-1523 units marked to bring them to JOHN LARRIBEAU Calif. ■ 7? 1,6036 Twin Foils, Idaho > ■V'-r the detective division for m arking. Qualls said the units 'art marKed -ana recorded m 'tne ow ner’s nam e. If their Istereo is stol'en tihe police have a way of S U p y & MONDAY ONLYH or traded. aiUt1.AKES ■---- • iio im A --- : --- —------^ , The detective chief 'em­ shoppinS center store HOURS > Sunday 12 Noon to 5 P.M. phasized the' service is per-

stereo owners must remove their units' and bring them into BOXED the police station to have them . m arked. U CHRISTMAS He said so far more than 20ff CARDS have be'Cn ^fnarked, a factor C'*/ ' which ' has eyidently ✓ Reltyioov Cords discouraged wuuid-l)e thieves. V - V a r ie ty He said if anyone rt'ceive.s a • stereo * tapr— pluvL'i ‘as a ’ W in te r Christmas gift, he should briny it in and have it marked. Sce.rifii Qualls said there are other iteiiia which arie frequent targets' of car and house r DfSTECl IVK w m ie A. Davts of tlic Twin FalU YOUR burglars which also can be Pollci' Dfp.-irtmcnt marks a car .stomi unit. The m arked. The.se include radiu.s, CHOICE. departmcm Is requesting ail stereo owners to' box television sets, guns or elec­ have their units registered to facilitate Iden­ trical appliance.s. ' tifying them If th.ey jire stolen. While m pny of these items do carry serial numbers the owner often does 'not have the number ------^ t^corded - or--U»e-number' is lA G O F ea.sily rerrioved. Tlie police NEW YORK lU P Il-T h e department marking is an extra humble egg-crate. designed to precaution in recovering stolen By Frank Schell I protect its ihm-shelled cargo iJrtlcles, Qualls said, BOWS from farm to' superm arket to Tlie police. departirient also From D. A., Burley, Idaho: 1 .iiuiind I t t h e wurds kitchen, can ;ilso become a has had brochures prepared have a beautiful old medal "W ilhelm ina KoiiiMgin Der work ol art On view in the which show home owners which has been around a )pn)^ Nederlandcn." On tlie oth^r HailjTiark G allery exhibit, precaution? which can be taken time, and I camiot find' out .side is a shield with n lion on jl, "Garbage' Tlie Need lo Re­ again.st house burglaries. anything about it, Perhaps you and n crown above it The words cycle,” i.s a 'decorative white 'I'liese, loo, can be obtained fret can tell me. on this side "Munt Van pillar m ade entirely of u.sed of chaise at the police depart- Curacaos” There is a large 2“^ It is larger than a silver dollar’ egg-<’ontamers. jnent detective division. Brighten every package! and made, I belitve, from . on one side of the shield, arid a aluminum. On one side is a "G" on the other ..Underneath is Assorted colors Bag of 25 picture of a 'nice' looking the date 1944. Please ^ell-about woman, dressed in old this coin and its Valu?. fastlioned clothes and'above her Answer: Your coin is from the words "Ada Rehan 1893." Curacao, an island in the Underneath In small letters. Netherlands. Antilles group In Copyright 1893 by R. H, Park. the West Indies, near the coast MEN'S On the other side of the medal is of Venezuela. the woman hol(Ung a. sword and The denomination (G ) is 2 and -m ales and -standing—on—tbs. one half guilders - equal to world, which in turn i s . sup­ about seventy five cents in ported by an'eagle. Around this, American money. The 1944 the words: '"nie Silver Statue coinage was struck at the ilack, fleece lined Justice”^ d of the State of Denver Mint, and you will find a Sizes .s,m,l,XI Montana." I would like to kpow small D on the coin Indicating more about this. I think it is this. Present collector value on aluminum, but do not know this coin, in new condition, is whether we had aluminum this about $8. Circulated coinage Compare early or not. Can you help me brings less money. with this question: Fruiii D. D., Twin Falls, Idaho: 1 have a large silver Answer: From the 1870’s up to com, which has a m an's head on 2ND RIVERSIDE' about 1900, a great many actors. one side. Around the head are and actresses toured the west the words Gegrgius Sexlua Rex. POWER GRIP POLYEJJER' and gave U'9 lepk-like V-'s. The other gold-boom towns. Among these side has a ship, with sails, and Regular 67c — Save 17% touring companies was one around it it says, Suid Afrika WOMEN'S which featured an actress 1652-1952 South Afrika. At the named Ada Rehan. She was bottom, "5S". What can you tell bom in Ireland in 1880 pnd me about this? Is it valuable? SNOWMOBILE OIL became“a^eil-known American Answer: Your coin is a SKIRT & actress in Shakespearean roles, commemorative issued in 1862 ae. toured the West between by South—Africa—to—com­ ta s tr o t. 1879 and 1899, performing with m em o rate the founding of SWEATERSET an important Shakespearean Capetown.'. Tho vidue is &- MadiiriB'ViashaWe, roO%^AcTyJic^Bonderf1o actor named Augustine ‘Daly. QUART ’ shillings, equivalent to about 50 W H E N Y O U BUY THE MRST 100% Acetate Tricot Mode in America, ' Tills particular medal was cents. United States Exchange. TIRE REGULAB p r ic e struck in Montana to com­ The coin was minted under the sizes 8 fo TA Castrol 2-cycle oil memorate her appearances reign of George VI, father of the rec6m m ended by there. It is listed in Hibler- present Queen EUizabeth, of 0 0 most makers. 4*7)ly polyester cord body Reg. Kappen’s book, "So-Called E>igland. Collector value -4s. TIIAD WlAB^X^fCTANCr Dollars", as No. 767, and Is about If In new condition. Deep-biting cleaned tread $ 1 2 .9 7 ...... Full 36'monfh treod-wear worth about 112, If iij new The Roman "V" Is used for S' ' expectancy . .. condition. IncidentiaHy. yV ” In striking a great .many aluminum pre-dated this medal coins. Our own "Peace" by a number of years. Dollars, use the "V" In the ‘Aluminum canteens saw some motto, "In God We Trust." Regular 33c — Save 33% War. (Questions '-on coins and From , 'B. 1 ^ Twin Falls, currency should be sent to "The PANTY HOSE •idahibo: 1 hove a large sDvef colrT Money Box", c-o The Times ^SNOVIM as follows: ft A woman's head. News, Twin Falls, Idaho 83301.) WOMEN'S JR. MISS Sheer tupporl ■ - Fits 7 to 14* Petite & Medium ■Ctnamin T o o\t & Toupe

Uwer U»el or V«n Enfcelen* 1308 0»erl«iiilv Burle, MONTGOMEktY-WARD AGENCY • 10 a.in. to 10 p.m. tp SLsatnNaj 11 p.llT. tO 7 pJW. S i r t i f CiuKomur$ Bring Their Frifttdt ■ 22rMAIN AVE. E., TWIN FALLS 7~^33-340S 'C ■■ I. Boise-bci^m d T s t r r c t

p o n d e re d BOISE (UPI> - Fourth irtienhci appeared before Hagan District JudgeAmed CIHagah- :^Novrl2:^— "— ' has sentenced Qralg T. Rooke, After Hagan pronouncMI sen­ :;;b01Ste (UPD ^ a three- 23, Boise, to 10 years In prison tence Friday, AdaOounty Prose-' member board of federal fbr trying to Uow up the car cutbr James E. Risch said he .Judges took under advisement ; Of a police harcotic^nndenraver was-, "disappointed” the Judge Friday a case challenging a g e n t last M arch 20: ...... : ^did not, give him the m axim um ■Idaho's—1971—Icgislktlve-reap-- Rooke pleadSS guilty to the 14^year terih.. portlonment" plan after one' charge njf- attempted -murder Judge turned down a plaintiff's request that the court remap the legislature itself. CLOSED U. S. District Judge Fred Ika DAY M0NMY^ Taylor of Boise, said the request F & G enters suit was too' much to expect of the BOKE (UPI) - A second debilitatlve effect on resident for Memorial state agency has petitioned fed­ migratqry game birds. services in eral court to intervene in a law- hi addition, the conunlssTon suit to halt construction of the. jaid. construction of the dam honor of Mrs^ Lower Teton Dam pro/etMiut would inundate 17 miles of wild its stand is opposite the other’s. and scenic canyon. C. C, Berna TTje State Fish and Game Ion asKed to enter the Earlier, the State Water Dudley Judge M. Oliver Koelsch of San s^t as a friend of the court, Resources Board asked permis­ Fra«:isM ^ d U. .S.-District contending construction of the sion to enter the suit In support Judge R{ay'McNicholsof Boise, eastern Idaho project would of the dam . Board dii«ector Rob­ Dudley Studio ' are hearing the case. destroy a valuable cutthrpat ert Lee said in his petition that At. one point. Judge Taylor^ trout fishery, eliminate a siz­ the board’s position was the ;lltliE.t Blue takes even hinted he would like to see able big game herd and have “official” one of the state. the leglslatui'e reapi^rtioned — along county lines but into a smaller house and Senate. When plaintiffs in the case I j^nn w. Young nae m their mooa rover during asKed the court to throw out the ^SHOP l>ENN e ¥ ^ Practice ride ‘fehearsal at China Lake, Calif., for their Jan. 3 new reapportionment law and mooiMnlsaloiir tUPI)------— ------

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Regular TonTliirlceys GradeiHFiyers Smoked Hams GrouncTBeef Bar-S Bacon U.S.D.A. G rade A - 18 to 22 Lbs. U.S.D.A. Inspected And Morrell Pride—Shank Portion (5 to 7 Lbs.) Buy A n y Size Package You Need Cudahy Slob Bacon Norbest or Manor House U.S.D.A. Graded A At This Low Discount Price By The Piece W hole

I'lHViiUl I, lb. 4 0 — x y lb. 3 9 lb. 3 5 Butt Portion (5 to 6 lbs.) - lb. 58c) ^ lb. Ib. 4 9 U s o A Grad* A M b : jHeit Turkeys N o rb v it 10 14 L bi Lb. Fryer Breasts wht «.□, u. 76" wo f 43" Canned Hams 'T ’:.. "5 . t 4.78 Top Round Steaks u. 1.39 Sliced Bacon W ic k lo w Pkg. 59" S.D A- Grade A M b . •Hen Turkeys Monorm Houiv 10-M Lbt lb. Cornish Hens " o " ..* ”B ”' ird 86" Pork Party Roast lb . 79" Skinless Wieners 59" 43" Sliced Boion PllQ. 69" nor H o uie S.D A l- lb . Lbt Lb. 68" Boneless Pot Roast aC hoice Lb. 98" Round Steaks Fu ll C u t " u. 1.19 Grade A Ducks,"'" Chunk Bologna ^;'T*h7L. ib 59" Sliced Bacon ^irc:' PUg. 72" S.D.A. Choice -H-ott- Leg 0' Lamb W h o le Of H o lf . 1.19 Short Ribs of Beef C hoice 49" ' Boneleti & Rolled u. 1.35 Turbot Fish Fillet ° : z r tb 59" Link Sausage":;:!,., PUfl. U S.D.A C hoice Choice Lb Blod* Cut Lb. 69" New York Steaks C hoice Brown 'n Serve lamb Rib Chops 1.29 u. 2.39 Fish Sticks tr:"n Lb. 64" P o rk Chops L b .. 68"

everyday discount prices Lucerne Egg Nog everyday discount prices 2B.OI. Mr*. W righri Stuffing 3 4« oi. . Mince Meat^’' N o ne''" Such * J o r All Stores 67" “ Q O Non Seotoned Bread Loof 33" Bake Shop 18-01. 1-lb. Mince Meat Rr.'.:!,, J o r 58" Quart Closed All Day Raisin Nut Bread Sliced Loof 39" Thanksgiving D el M onte 2 2< oi. Carton M o lt O 3 4> oi. Dill Pickles Whole Picklei 49" (H a lf-G a llo n - 88c) Skylark Bread W h e a t Loo? 39" " 15-o». 'Mrt. W r ig h t't 10-01. Layer Cakes THANKSGIVING Dill Pickles “t n J o r 54" Maple Roils S w eet RolU n g . 43" Two Moist Layers Covered .4-01. M r*. W ith Buttercream Icing &• 1 Thursday, November 25 Dream Whip PI.O. 48" SUPER SAVERS Crunib Doughnuts W r ig h f’i Pkg. 41" Topped With A Sugar P|ggtiA tso^t. ■ H u t 2 L a y e r 8-Inch Gala Paper Towels — m l Canned Biscui t i' ,_i B u tte blioc- rm ilk Lucerne Sour Creunr Ctn. cTr. TXT Half- ^ C 0 Purex Liquid Bleach P la ttic 61 Canned Biscuits coun.Ts^. 10" FROZEN FOODS Lucerne Sour Cream P in t 35" Sweetheart Soap r 14" Soft 14b. C |c Gold'n Soft Margarine 32" 1 . 4 8 Imperial Margarine Spreod Pkg. c At Discount Prices Glazed Doughnuts E a c ir V SOS^ Soap Pads 56" Sweet Relish Jo r 36" Canned Chicken w tl Cp r 99" C{ Treiid Liquid Detergent 66" Sugar Doughnuts Each y Lucerne Kellogg's Pop Tarts ”pT,-: 44" 49> et. Detergent i:;:::;;! Phn B & B..3-«i-“ ^a[j|nr Chopped Mushrooms Brahd Con vO “SkybrlrBF^ Pumpkin or Mince Pies S herbet Lifebuoy Bath Soap 23" Green Giant Green Peas ' c*tn 26t Crushed Wheat — Sliced ; ' P arty .(^cide O ron§e, P ineapple, c 13-ox. Lime or Triple Treat everyday discount prices Niblet Corn C mh

Fem inine 3.5-01. Whole Green Beans ol.*" ’Von 26"“ H c lf- Vespre Spray D e od o ro nt C on 1.19 G o ilo n 5 8 Breck Basic st:;. 1.34 9-01. 7-01. Birds Eye Awake C on 37" Breck Creme Rinse B o ttle 89" Green Giant In Cheeve ;>ouce Alka Seltzer Plus THWeTt-----B oHIo •• t » Green Giant In mi ? |ancy. Broccoli Cbuie Soutc ’^•:43" ,S&W Harvard Beets ------C nn 14" 1 8 count 7 * 'i-o i. popsicles Pack Each 82" S&W Minced Clams C an 44" Ifr-oi. 10-01. lucerne Cake Rolls ^ Ptg 77" Whole Oysters C an 72" is . . ’ l ^ x 3S>oi. Bel-air Orange Juice C o n 56" S&W Oven Baked Beans J o r 42" I 6-01. Apple Juice^".:L.d C o n 22" 6nit. This Advertisement Effective M.C.P. Fruit Drinks C a n 10" 30-01. At Safeway Discount Strawberries wn';:', Pkg. 68" Grapefruit Fancy Bananas Idaho Po^toes 31 -01 . In All Of\These Russets * U.S Nn ?'t- Cut Green BeansS.O.. PliB- 68" TexaSweet Ruby Red Safeway Produce . . . Alwoys Best! 16-or ♦Boise ^Jerome Blackfoot Be^oiir^reeH Peas M g . 30" 13-01, ‘ Payette * Pocatello ‘ Idaho Falls B-lb. 20-lb. Bel-air Candied Yams Fkg. 42" W e is e r Gop^jng Montpelier Bag 9 8 Ib. 1 2 Bag Rupert ‘ Caldwell ‘ Twin Falls E « tro 58" Fancy Apples tit 98" Red Delicious ApplesI Fancy Lb. 22" Jumbo Walnuts oZ everyday discount prices Burley *Nampa ‘ Mtn. Home Sooion't 8-lb. QO0 Golden Ctirrots°,^.h*" California Oranges Finest Bog Brazil Nuts or Almonds a 58" And ‘ Ontario, Oregon 2^.28" Lipton Onion Soup Mix 40" New Crop Filberts ^ 58" ‘ These Stores Ope|n Sunday Green Cabbage Lb. 8" TexaSweet GrapefruH;.? ..^10" l^awaiian Punch 57" Yellow Qniorts n;^ , 4^38" Fancy Apples ’„:Zcr: 98" Fancy Pecans c'.p c. 78" *1 Q4 ■ Prtcn A ltam» Effortive Monctoy^ -ffiuw iiiiaii^runbn ju]^Juiqr R«dRed b BoNlo^hET n w Oct. 18 Thru Sunday, Oef. 24, 1971 Fimcf GoldeirYiiiiis — u, 15“ -FreslrBroccolf^lr*" u.:28^ Intlont 10^x.*4 JM Geiger's Coffee CrytfoU Jor I •14 4) CO^TIIGHT IMO SArtWAY STOIES INCOIPOUTID Idaho® Potajoes SrN,.. 10.2^^8" Red Radishes *«h 8" !ss Raisins 2 ±78" vlQovemter ,21, l * H — sc^ii as §enate^wiH-v»te c o n f l i c t - ^ b n WASHINGTON (UPI) -E arl was nuule in Minn'eai^lls April “p a rti^ political harassment^ L. Butz’ nomination as agricul­ 28 before the National AgricuJ-" of a presidential selection.” ' WASHINGTON (UPI) —The amendmentJto.the Pastoro ture secretary has matured into ture Advertising and Marketing ' •Govs. Ronald'-Aelgan of ^nate has ^reed to vote plan. All but bnewere'defealed. a major .issue,with Republican Ass^latlon. California and Nelson Rodcefel' ~ Monday on a plan to finance Democratic presidential’ governors ;5Wporting President In releasing excerpts from ler of New York Initiated tM^^ presidential eteqtlon campaigns hopefuls quit the camiuign trail Nbton’s choice and one GOP Wough tax~a6nai=s~^~vote to—bBr'here--t0--bIoclr--the- senator reporting ttot some “could be a far more serious "potential |>residentlal.^andf-' whlch Democrats believe could Republican amendments, Democrats openly against Butz threat to the environment than dates" critical of Butz. determine the outcome of next Sen. Henry M. Jackson of are for him in secret. the family farni." The-^nator AndSen. Robert Dole, R-Kan.,' ‘ year’s race for the White House. Washington, who earlto in. the As hearings recessed Friday dted the Miniiieapo^s ^eech' in sa|d some Itemoq-ats secretly After 13 hours of debate, the day had announced his candida- until Monday, Sen. William. which Butz also defended the a w t Butz ti) be confirmed to Bred RepubHcami— cy fur tliirPeiiiucrat^wriiliii^-* Proxmire, i>wis., disclosed a use of chemicals and'anUblotlcs m ^e him a scapegoat in the agreed late Friday night to tion, scrubbed long-laid plans to speech made by Butz in which in farming. * 1^2 campaign, permit the Issue to come tp a fly to Florida, which has a the I Purdue University dean • At' French Lick, .Ind., the vote. priinary he feels he_must do criti^^ized the food stainp Republican Governors COnfer- But a, condition for the vote well in to stay in ths race. .prtigram at^ Nixon’s welfare ence adopted a resolution' COMPtETf LINE OF was made by the Republicans reform proposal. The speech backing Butz and attacking ADVANCE-Brand whoasked that consideration be At issue in Monday’s vote is a given to w prnnn.sal bv Sen plan to provide <20.4 million to COMMERCIAL Charles McC. Mathias. R-Md., each major party for the that taxpayers be able to presidential campaign, if the VACUUM designate which party would candidate agrees to accept no Board recommends CLEANERS receive the funds. private campaign contributions See Us For and wage his campaign solely “You can sell it to the Indiahs Demonsfration*. —but ypu can't sell - it to with that sum. jpo i&mmercial plan Pastdreir shouted-fiery Sen. Taxpayers would be given a GEM STATE 1 ^ ca John O .^store, D-R.I., when chancy to check a box on their TWIN FALLS - Members of approved streets as dedicated 733-608 V : Twin FFall* they first offered the deal at the tax returns earmafklng $1 of the Twin Falls Planning and the project planr"- end of a long day's wrangling. their taxes to a. fund which Zoning Commission have ■ — Soa Ruaacll B, Long, D Lo., wnulil he split among the xaMiewed -th e student housiag bolted from his seat; ^ran to candidates. development north of th'e Pastore and in an animated Democrats are confident that College of Southern Idaho and conversation convinced him to enough taxpayers would exer­ voted to recommend no com- take the Republican offer. cise that right to provide $47 mercial development within the TWIN FALLS CEMETERY Throughout the day, tH ^ million, tfi^20.41riniion for the project. Republicans had stalled a vote m ajor pid'tjes. and $6.3 million F red Frazier, developer of 2 ADULT by forcing votes on amendment for Georgs Wallace If he runs. the housing project has requested the city furnish water and sewer services to the area, which Is located outside of the COMPANION Spaces city limits. Commission W ith Pefpefual Cafe ^ed^eral doctor members felt since the project ■A FIREBALL of oil burning under pressure borders the city, certain and the accompatiying opaque smoke is demands should be made of the reflected in a man-made pond surrounding the developer such as piptilbltlng »190.00 corps phased out F ire oil well east of Altanlont, Utah. Iftavy equip­ commercial development Select a companion lot whife you are togeth­ ment at right moves In to remove superstructure within the housing project. er. We offer a choice o ijla t marker, raised after explosion and flames destroyed drilling rig WASHINGTON (UPI) -The promotion within the corps will 'Commission members also marker or private above-ground bupioi. nation's health secretary said continue. at the Shell Oil Co. managed Held. No injuries Saturday he will take steps to U.S. Surgeon General Jesse were reported and the extent of the dam ages was f itshuti phase out the quasimilitary L. Steinfeld, who heads' the not known. (UPII Twin Falls Cemetery Ass'n I’lC I I RK I HA\1I\(, federal doctor corps which corps now, was In Latin A.W. ''Bill" Madland, Pres, anrd Mgr. serves Indians,, seamen and I tiUr\ America when Richardson’s 435 Main Avenue E. Twin Falls other groups and replace it with decisions was announced, but CHHI.STI\> SLITI.^ a civilian corps.- he' has called the committM~ Secretary Elliot L. R ichard­ report "destructive to the corps son of Health, Education and ... to morale, to recruitment and Welfare said he was adopting a to retention" of officers in the BANNING, Calif. (UPII - special committee’s fecom- crops. Smiling and with arms linked, menAoljn that the Public Richardson said the changes, two blonde youngsters and their Health Service Commissioned which he will seek through American foster parents cinie Corps, whose 5,500 officers are whatever legislation is needed, out of hiding Fflday after an ONCE MORE IT'S supplied mainly by Selective "are designed to assure the appeal court judge the Service, be replaced by a maintenance of such vital children need not return lo thclr dvlllan system. health services as those to m other ,ln Czechoslovakia. Richardson nottd In announc- Indians and' other federal "We're Just ecstatic," said author— ~fuster mother Mrs. Roy Smith. draft system may cease In the Ized under the Emergency whose eyes brimmed as she and summer of 1973 a^nd that plans Health Personnel Act of 1970." her husband stepped into their had to be made now to assure a The act, still not fully im­ home again with their foster corps will continue after that plemented, provides for as­ boy and girl. date. signment of government medi­ Vlasta Gabriel, 8, and her Until then, however, tlygfiorps. cal teams to big city slums atid brother, Flrtz, 7, still confused would continue to rely .■on rural poverty areas in addition^ at their role in an International conscrfptioh for ita doctors alid to its former duties'of serviijg^ AT CAIN’S custody struggle, .hgye been dentists until the transition Is merchant seamen. Indians. l iving- for two y ears with Mr completed, Richardson said. lepers, narcotics addicts and and Mrs Roy Smith in this He said he would m ake two conducting health research. community south Jil .Los- An­ exceptions to the committee The committee r^ommend- geles. recommendations. No specific Ing the changes ^ a s headed by • Upon the death of the date will be set for halting new Dr, John A. Perkins of Nor- voung.sters' father. Frederick. a(j(niliiljiieiils' tu Uie loi ps oiid thw estem UnlVersit'y they were declared wards of Jhe court. But thoir mothBr, sov^iral months ago, brought custody action through the Czech fin- Leader of German iaassy. She wanted to have her children back after nearly four years. right wing quits — The la.St Fritz and Vlasta recall of their homeland wa.s a HOLZMINDEN. Germany his orders. L®'" (UPb-Adolf Von Thadden. ■ Von Thadden has refused to German border .as CommuntsT head of the right wing West admit membership In the N a ^ 8“a^ Saturday as party leader. Sept. 1, 1939—the day Hitler's cowered beneath blankets Vqn Thadden told a shocked armies invaded Poland and The mother wished to h(j convention of his- National touched off World W ar II. along but was forced to remain Democratic party (NPD) his t>ehind. Reportedly, she wa.s tho decision not run-again- was— - iVews-Of- _ daughter oLa hiiih Comiiiumil "final and irrevocable." official near Prague, » The baldlsh,' 50-year-old Six months after Cabrmi and Pomeranian Junker cited disa­ Servicemen his two children emigrated lo greements with his deputies and ' BURLEY -Army Pfc. Boyde America, settled in the .Siin party unwieldiness as reasons R. Kiught, 20, Burley, has beep Bernardino County to\^n of forlils' refusal (o seek another assigned to duty tn Vietnam in Yucaipa, the father died, feut by term. ' - the KQst Division Airmobile. He this time the SmitRs af­ He had been leader of the is a clerk in the headquarters fectionately kntw the children ^PD since 1967 and influential company of the 30ttv brigade of ' from enrollment in their day-> in its leadership since the party the division. „ .. care center, FO R MANY YEARS... ' was founded in November, 1967. Knight's wife, CaroL lives In Thursday an appeal was At its zenith, the NPD won B url^ His father, C. R. Knlghtr -denied which would have stayed representaUon in six of West resideajt 714 Sjxth SL, Rupert a lower court ruling ordering —Gerfntray's 11 sjtate parli­ the youngsters' return. The TURKEY DAYSHEANS LOW, LOW, aments, although no NPD TWIN /PAULS — ij.r m y , san^aftemoon the family went j " ■ ■■ ' liitohiding'at a relative's home. deputy ever entered the federal private William D. Bonawitz, V parliament in Bonn. ■ 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy *W. Upon learning of .the appeal ^ n B u t In the past two years the Bonawitz, Twin Falls, has court's decision, attorney David party lost its appeal wiUi voters completed the first' phase of Leavitt telephoned the Smiths AT OUR BIG STORE!! and began losina its places in training undef the modern Friday afternoon to tell them state parliam ents under WesV T© as2ure l?oomiTl^"d^ity“ sqtes during this Germany's electoral system perlment at FL Ord, CaBf. "Go o n h o m e ^ rs. Sm ith," he which requires a party to have, said. Pre-Thanksgiving period. Come In — See for at least five per cent ofjthe total , ■ voWto bp’seated; ...... ^ Fatal Night’s Play Vourself. You'll love what you see.,:Big, Big ThgWPn wnavntPdniitnf the TVym F A m — QUptelr^No. ^ '.'Our A'merlcan Cousin," a Bremm parliiment last Easterif Star, willi ,lh<-^ct comedy i by Tom Savings on Brand New Crisp Fdll Merchan­ liavinit Itwith seats only (he •«««* « P-™- Tuesday at theA Taylor, s t n g Laura d ise*. PLUS: A big family sizexJ Turkey with RaJlt-ii W iirttgiiiburu------sta te — ------K eene,* wa s Dcigg pejriorm ea. oaaen-wur»emDu K .rw . at Ford's Theatre In Wash- parlian^t. ^ FAU5 -- TlHs^Jwif.-nrgton the night. President each sate over $100. Also Special Terms with Von—Thadden tokt approxi-' Falla County Republican , Lincoln was shot. m ately < 600 delegates a t Uie W oram wfll m eet a t 1 p jn . I payments delayed 'til March 19^2. . (hree-day convention, '" ^ e Monday In the Rogenon Hotel / NPD can no longer be led or' Roundup Room. Phil Wen- ffYWfUNTITORfEEDrr organted^ ~ :«*rai>d and Dick 'PiidnlnCT wHl FREE POPCORN & PUNCH ^,je_(M ld_;i)ro:«ncrarparly„be G I O B E ^ heads-iptaliciilariy. those from totarMted li Invited to a tte ^ . HIEriMVEm!!! Bavaria land North Rhine- «ccordlng to Sue D a^,.. ffvdUeiw, Twin Itelik .1^ Wesi^ialia-;^taed to noflflcatiflo.chair

- S«n(toy,, November 2V, ^971 TImes-New*,. Twin Falls F Idaho. 11 t l l T t l O W

Bo i s e (UPD—'num federal the U.S. Constitution. - says the s^ months residency U.S. Circuit Judge M. Oliver dent students Is a inatter that ffwlk .ynffftr iwiirfgAmAnt His suit asksiaixennanenLin- inuiiedlatdy prior to a persons Koelsch ahd U.S. D istrict Judge m ust'be-argued on Uie facte of l e g a l NOTICE Friday a case diallenging.con'' junction abainst the regents Md ■ OTtryce into the University and JiijU l-.Taylor. Boise. each indi^^duarl^se because NOTICE TO Ei DDRRS . ' stitutionality'df a statelaw gov- univ^^ty officials from apply- that therefore It would not apply The State Pureliailna Aaent will Additionally Hyder,,said-.he there are too many individual. at till otnce. eming non*resident tuition at ing the •felt tlie lawsuit was nirt-pn>per facts involJfved: jB—.n teiw " .:" M i atelellB u n . bbiw BuUT7------. iMnB7 Idaho state universities and col* against h im a n d o t h ^ sim ilar­ Hyder contended that Orwick w tll November 30, >971 «t ttmes • BOK^ (UPl.) - The as a “class action" and[Tthat the Fawcett disa'gree3~that Or­ yeclfied below, lor the lollowing: ly situated and for payment to had failed to e^aiist his admin- plaintiff has failed to show he wick had not exhausted his ad- Requliltlon No. GPW3 for Projeei: Idktw. W ater Resource Bobrd Life Program for Sctiool for ttie Deaf ____ m r i th e N i At issue "durinfc oral argu- sald -«ners System and that the 17- -HobertKroushrOtticec-asslgned- mile stretch in the lower Teton to this area. project never was considered, .Kroush said Ray Stewart Is fo^inclusiom one of seven new officers, hired Se said optimum use of this In the state. arfla “dictates construction of Stewart, who Is living in th&i project, for Increased rec- Jerome, was with the Monerey I regtionai and other benefits.” Park, Calif., Police Department 4 tte reservoir company told the past'ei^t years. The last the court It would suffer' a three years of his -employment measurable total loss of $1,518,- I with the department at the I OSSr a year if the dam Is not outskirts of Los Angeles were bifflt. ,v. spent as a detective. Stewart has an associate' degree in police science and has Vy^stinghouse Travel a year and a half of upper 39« Value (!!hild division police science Christmas Gift Wrap . i. education. CLOCK RADIO He is originally from Texas, INSTANT REPLAY but has lived in California since Thirst Quenching ipeeting being discharged from the armed torces. ^ Kroush said he and Stewart RLA LEVERAGE MIX planned will combine forces in.covering 1 0 8 2 A all four counties. Makes }Vi TWIN FA LLS - An He said since there Is a $ 2 9 9 5 m organizational meeting for the substantial Increase In case' q u a rts Magic Valley Association for loads and with court reform, his Value O ra n g e R etted Children is planned office must supervise and or for ‘ 8 p jn .;,^ o v . 30 In the conduct pre-sentence In­ O C itrus Re^onal Child Development vestigations on misdemeanor as CeAer, Twin Falls. well as felony cases. TWs '4 ' ^ '{///(■>////// A'pro^am will be presented nmke? the addition to his staff

pai^l will-Include Mark Litvin, The Best Selection, The Lowest Price Vo'«atlonal Rehabilitation Service, and Lois Darnell, today s F U N N Y Vo«ational Development COCDRTrEPRINTS Ceifler, Inc. 'Hiere wilL be a, From Kodak Nagolivet display of workshop items. With Coupon Refreshments and a get- General O NLY . acq|ainted hour will precede 1 0 < SI Electric This new organization will include not only Twin Falls iLlmif 6 par Cudomer * County, but also the surroun­ BLENDER Coupott Good Nov. 21, 22 & 23rd ding counties, and anyone in- Redeemable Cash Value 1 '20 of One Cent ter^sted In ! the futures of "sptclal” children and han- dic^)ped adults is invited to Model BL-3 att^d this meeting, a spo|esman for the association sal(). CHRISTMAS TIm iii to S VQchlgan leads the states In Mark Voik« a - salt; production. Hferittff, Me. GIFT ■■Ajpr S05AM Sunday ceram ic Special BOWS SATINY, COlORFUl, TAI10R-Mi»! Get more home for P a rty S e t $”5% BOWS. SEIF-STICK kACK ' your money... with WIDE CHOICE OF COLORS. A rv in ^m4loitse^^ w a h F ilm & A Diyisicti of Evans Products Company HEATER Flash Bulb Model 29H90 Xoropore . \ ^cope dtM4.95 M o u m

«nri :•! eiuM w skiiitd uifciitm Lew lelarett CempMe ptumWng, d< IIm h u v ;

i^OWI Enjoy the kind of home that thousands of happy 4>eop.le have enjoyed for 25 years—a Capp Home, Jsnd save money! We deliver and erect on your lot, en- ^ 2 . 0 0 rtlose the home, furnisliell finishing materials. instde= -Chicken of The Sea 60 MINUTE CASSETtE . and out — at the price we quote.' Just do the easy | Value ■ finishing or su b -co n tract, an d SAVE. SAVE, SAVE! I TAJPIS ! The Mornlna star 24'jc48' : PENNY-WISE G O O D BUY /■ ' ; rUNA '60 m in u t e c a s s e t t e JAPE 45^ yq R j§ -^re r *1 .4 9 V A lU E v ^ ■■■■AIL niisicour ^ c«pr-Noiin,-nsi------t.«. ttriMr tif*. . j■ -

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BONTWTROUN^N KATTHYbUTLER CONNIE WINTERHOLLER Jl/LIESIMIS MARILYN BICKFORD JOYSTANDAL SHARI KOOPMAN ANNEHAGERMAN;

G ooding^s J u iiio i: M i s s

GOODING — Gooding body trepsurer,—QOiicaptain of feet 6 Inches tall. Her activities plans to a tte n d college In National Honor Society, student awards in ski racing. M iss Jaycees will sponsor the 10th drill teaid, homecoming queen, Include Pep band. Concert Spokane, Wash., Texas Tech, or body secretary and senior class Trounson plans to enter the annual G66dine Junior Miss honoreiflUMnraf'Bethel No. 15, band, FHA,' Job’s Daughters, Pocatello to become a secretary. medical field, either as a Pageant at 8 p.m. Nov. 27 in th ^ Goo3Ing7Girls Stat^ delegate. 1970 state i-H hortibultuw registered nurse. She lists art as She lists track, skiing 4-H and therapist or dietician. Frahm Junior High School-. Ski Club, Pep club and French winner and 1970 regional winner a talent. cooking as her interests. She Shari KOopman, 17, daughter Eleven girls are cortipeting club. She is iiiterestedln skiing, In National Junior Horticulture Anne Hagerman, 17, daughter plans to attend the University of of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Koop- for the title of Gooding Junior reading and cooking. She plans Association. of Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Idaho to become a legal man, Hagerman, is one of the JiHgg, 1972. P at Scheel is serving to attend the University of Hpr intecests include sewing, Hagerman, Wendell, has brown- secretary. She plays the treble td le r contestants. She is 5 feet-,' as Goodhig. Junior Miss for 1971. Idaho majoring in languages. cookihg, decorating, skiing and hair and eyes and is 5 feet 6 clef ii^ lto n e. 10 inches Tall with Hght brown rnnnip JSflfilethbJler ■Shp will p layea-piano se lection flwlnHniHgr-6h^-plnns-lo-att«nd - -Inchps In height Her n K l v t t l B S - :- Nj»nc y------Matthowsi — Vi^ Jialr'amj^hr-mPT^yaii .«!hp hn« dau^ter o j^ , and Mrs. Henry for heif talei^t presentation. Bolse State College majoring in include Pep band, high school daughter of Mr,' and Mrs. won the outstanding aWard in ^terholler, Wendell, has ash '-Kathy Butler, daughter of Mr. inedlcal-JeChnology. & e lists choir accompanist. Annual, Donald Matthews, Gooding, has vocal music and the outstandin8 blonde hair, hazel eyes and is 5 /and Mrs. Dale Butler, Gooding, sewing as Tier talent. MENG^All Northwest Choir, brown hair and blue green eyes aw ard In geometry for feet 1 inch in height. is S feet iB inches in height, has D eborah J o C u tter. 17. JtenOT-SQciety treasu rer. 1971-72 and Is 5 feet fi lnphp«i She is active in drill team , pep brown hair and eyes and Is 17 daughter of "Robert C. Cutter Idaho Syrlnga Girl’s state active In National Honor math award In 1970 as well as band, band, speech, junior class years old. She Is active in Girls and Mrs. Mary Carolyn Bates, governor. Society, Twirlers, District 4 the 1971 Honor Society award. play, Junior high drill team I.reague, Pep Club, Ski Club and Her Interests include skiing, FHA, Job’s Daughters, 4-H and DEBORAH CUTJER has dark brown hair, hazel eyes She participates In the mar- NANCY MA’TTHEWS adviser and FHA. She also lists drill team. and is S feet 6 Inches In height. swimming, hiking and cooking. FHA. ' chlng band and is active In drill a number of church activities, Her Interests Include art, Her activities include Miss Her college plans are un­ She lists sewing, cooking, team , volleyball, FHA and Is student body secretary and hobbles and an Interest In skiing, horseback riding and Spirit at Valley High School, decided, but she wants to enter knitting, crocheting, writing, senior class secretary. class secretuTr and treasurer music. She plans to attend Boise swinuning. She plans to attend Pep club, annual staff, Girl’s the music field. Her talent is swimming, baseball and girl’s for four years of high school. State College, majoring in either the University of Idaho or Athletic Association, 4-H Honor listed as music. intramural flag football as Miss Kbopman Is oti the She received the'^ltizenshlp history. Boise State College majoring In Student award at Bliss, senior Bewy Kevan, 17, daughter of Interests. She plans to attend school aiinual staff and is Pep “commercial” award and Ijas Julie Slmls, ll, daughter of art. Her talent presentation will class president, co-ohalrmari of' Mr. and Mrs. James E. Kevan, University of Utah or Montana chib representative. She has been on the honor roll for Mr. and Mrs. Don Slmls, be art. '• Junior Prom ,. teache/r’s aide, has light brown hair and blue State majoring in nursing. Her played as accompanist for the several years. She plans to Gooding, is S feet 7 Inches tall Marilyn. Bickford, 17, track, church youth club, 4-H eyes and Is 5 feet 5 Inches tall. talent presentation will be school ’chorus the past two attend the College of Southern and has brown hair and eyes. daughtier of Mr. and Mrs. Junior leader. Her activities Include varsity baton. . years. She plans, to attend the Idaho. She plays piano and Her activities Include I^Roy Bickford, Gooding, has Her Interests include people, cheerleader,, annual editor, C Bonnie Sue Trounson, 17, University of Redlands, Calif., accordion. National Honor Society, student red hair and blue eyes and is 5 sports, church and drawing. She club, band, pep club, drlllleam. daughter of Wes Trounson and and hopes to teach elementary the late Bonnie Trounson, has or junior high school. brown hair and eyes and is 5 . Joy Standal, 17, Is the feet 4 Inches tall. She has been a daughter of Mr.’ and Mrs. 'snouimoniES 24 airline chiefs reach agreement member of the National Honor Norman Standal. Bliss. She is < Society for several years, has blonde with green eyes and is 5 COME IN AND SEE years, has been cheerleader feet, 3 inches tall. 1 THE NEW 1972 CATS! and active in Job's Dadghters, Miss Standal -^ s been on lower transatlantic air fares the ski club. Future a ctiv e in 4-H p ro g ram s 4he Homemakers of America, past five years, is a HONOLULU (UPl l-Chief ex­ for l6 hours over two days, decidej^n a three-tiered price London round trip, the winter Foreign I^anguage Club and in member of Job’s Daughters B E W Y KEVAN D& ecutives of 24 airlines, meeting hammering out an agreement structure. Lowest fares will be fare will be $200, $72 less than 4-H work. and was a Girl Stater this year. In an unprecedented two-day their subordinates had failed to charged from Nov. 1 to Mikrch at present; the middle fare will She served as homecoming 9ie was homecoming queen for AUTOMOTIVE session, reached basic agree­ reach in three previous tries. 31V highest fares during the be $220, with no comparable princess her high school. She has served *. sophomore 138 2nd AVE. S., Exams set ment Thursday,, night on a set The agreem ent, which is sum m er months of June 1 to rate now. class and has won several u Pep Gub president and of lower transatlantic air fares subject to ratification by all Aug. 31, and middle-level fares for next year airlines and approval of the in between. for stale The basic price for a Now governments involved, will For a normal New York- York-London round trip of avert a cut-rate price war by Ivondon economy class ticket between 22 and )15 days during me carriers, it will k° into with no special conditions, positions the off season will be $200, $72 effect next year—an exact date winter round-trip fare will be less than at present. The to be decided later. $400, $52 less than at present. com parable rate to Paris will No fares in "the basic routes ------Idaho Per- During the peak season, the BpIS be $210 and to Frankfurt, $220. between New York and London, sonrtelonAel Commission has an- fare jvill remain at the current The announcement came Paris and Frankfurt were xiouhced competltlve $552. after presidents and , board raised. Many were lowered In e x ^ ln a tio n s for a numl^er of It w iai In the popular £ t - i5 chairman of all the'scheduled an effort to meet competition 'Slate positions, ranging from day exciralon fares where the airlines flying the Atlantic sat from charter airlines. storekeeper at Boise State most significant reductions liege to agricultural pestlclt Investigator.' Applications fo> the positions must be postmarked no later than Dec. 10 to be eligible.

-addition-io the storekeeper, a parking control officer at BSC; clerks in all departments of state government; investigator for the Department of Agriculture; data-processlng analyst. Idaho State University, and finance exflimner; loan examiner and bank examiner for the Department of Finance. Applications may be obtained from the ,,Idaho Personnel Commission, Capitol Building, Boise 83707, or by calling the commission at 384-2263 in.Boise.

Hailey eyes new iarmory HAILEY - A new National -- .f Guard Armory was discussed J^eaiilifu t Thursday by members of the Blaine County CommissioiiTThe Stn M trco Hflil«f,pty Council and M-Sgt. - weneman-of-the Hailey Qifi m it oi the ivfational Guard. % \ J r a p p i n g Breheman said the guard hopes to proceed-srith the first CHOOSE FROM phase, involving retainjpg an THE MANY PATTERNS ' architect and drawing plans, Slone Chip. IN STOCK during the present flscal year. The arm ory will be located on a ^ to w AS four-acre site north of the Hailey Airport which is one- third owiied by the city and two- the toanty.. th e project can start as soon Ctpe Cod a s ^ h e c ity »HJ=ooiBity deed the site to the state 0^ Idaho for use by the Jiatbnal Guard. In ad- the city and cmmty must Jd^tly provide 10_p« cent of the eatiinated tl60.0M cost of the F t G O R S fa d lity . Die National Guard is OF IDAHO . pnrrwitly rwitiny a stmriure in JIOMCOWNED:AND:^OPeHATEp — 6em i^anning~ 0 < it-m in u l« M t f o l Shalby’t to boOd an HrinoTy for over 10 ofi'Addi^n Ava. Ead'. - yeara,'Breaemao s^d. gas station

said, and demanded the money had been seen on the Interstate 18 vwrs of age. ^ Their {rom the cash register. traveUng east. , -tlescrlpUbns and a desoription Peterson said there wa& a Officers said they believed of the vehicle were broadcast little over >100 in the cash :tb«-j'Qilng_ meiL^descrlbed by throughout the Southem part-of- register in bills and he gave.it to Peterson were between 17 and Idaho and into adjoining states the robber ^ o then left the building. The attendant was not harmed. When last seen the vehicle was going east from Burley, officers reported. Roadblocks B l a i n o were immediately set up by C a m a fs state police. Minidoka and Cassia'County, Heburn, Burley and Rupert city officers. They E l m o were called off at 9'.30 a.m. when a report was received indicating the two men and the -colored— bldcr— medel - t i i n c o l n vehicle described by Peterson M i n i d o k a T w i n F a i l s V a l l e y Resource parley Sunday, November 21, 1971 elated in Burley-,planning THE GRAND CRAMPION heifer of Jhe Idaho Polled Hereford Association’s fall show and sale BURLEY - Speakers for a , Bill M einers will serve as- held at the Twin Falls County Fairgrounds Natural Resource Conference chairman of the event witn ^he irinnerf Saturday was DS Miss Silver 514, owned by Dee here Dec, 3 and 4 wiU include others assisting in maldng calls meeting Summers, Idaho Fall*. Shown with the prize Dr. l,«s Pengelly, University of arrangements including Dale whining animal are Summers and his son, Kirk Montana; Joe Greenly, Idaho Tumipseed, Jerom e, _Fish and TWIN FALLS - Two public the two other aut<) sales and .Sum mers. Fish - and ■ Game Department Game Department; Bill Price, hearings will be held- Monday garage establishments are director and Jack Pierce, Malta, U, S,Forest Service; night by the Twin Falls City located and would allow a Malta^. president of the Idaho . Robert Brock, Bureau of Land Planning and Zoning Com­ sim ilar type of operation. Cattlemen, Management, In addition to mission and a discussion held on The other public hearing Speakers were announced these groups, sponsors of the Idaho Falls breeder captures the city’s “workable program,” covers the proposed *nlng following a meeting to complete two day session Jnclude the The meeting willsed Satur­ Twin Falls attorney highway. study commlttee_^coipprised of day to proposed strip mining by representing the Idaho Water The zone would be sim ilar to representatiorT From such a Jefferson County firm near Users Assn, Members of the that given property on which citizen organizations as the to restore '^^REAP^^ funding the Snake River in Arapaho Na­ panel will discuss “Implications Community Action Agency. tional Forest due to probable of the Erivironmental and environmental damage. Refuse Act," Hugh Harper, WASHINGTON —• restore the full $195.5 million In a letter to George P. practices which have, been The Forest Service’s stand, Boise, BLM official,’'will serve Congressman Oryal Hansen (R- approved by.Congress for the Schultz, director of the Office of approved by local and state contained in a ref>ert to be sub- as moderator. Idaho) asked the ad- 1972 , Rural Environmental Malnagement and Budget, officials. Iona man ^anal flow m itted to the JBureau of Land Jack Pierce will addi-ess the -minlstratiun— &aturija7-----to— Asaistaiiue Prugiuii’i7 Hansen expnraiitHl l'uiivbi ii uvei "How can we be 'saving' $35,5 Management (BLM), claimed group during the afternoon T OMB's recent Innpoiindment of million by cutting it from the the proposed ‘‘strip mining... sessions, A banquet is planned $55.5 million in R EA P's funds, t w lie e p will end ^ on these highly fragile lands for the first evening with Dr, REAP, formerly known as the budget when these farmers are ready to match it with their own would result in epttremely seri­ Pengelly, Missoula, as featured Agricultural Conservation Hailey sheriff money to bring about a better ous and irreversible environ­ speaker. OMrge Forschler will FR^seat on Monday P rogram , was created in 1936 to mental damage.” be master of ceremonies. go into partnership with far­ environment?" Hansen asked Schultz, Montezuma Iron and Pigment During tlie second day’s BURLEY - W. Pale Rock- mers throughout the country SHOSHONE - Stock water Co. of Jeffferson County had business sessions, the resource wood, Iona, was re-elected to will be turned off a t the head of working to improve and The Congressman pointed out tops state group planned to mine 19 claims near representatives will discusB another two-year term as t h e ‘MUn'er-Gooding canal on - preserve 4he nation’s-W ll and ih at—“ The na tion's—water—is_ “ W ebster Frida y a s the. Tdahn -Monday for- the winter .siwson, w ater. polluted a great many times HAILEY' — Blaine County Sheriff’s Association during forest. It planned to strip mine deer migration across In­ Farm Bureau Federation ended Leon Grieve, manager of the Hansen noted that more than more by soil runoff than by all Sheriff Orville Drexler was their meeting Friday in Boise, 796 acres near the Continental terstate 80; crested wheatgrass its three day convention in Big Wood Canal Co., said w ater a million farmers in all 50 states the sewage we dump into the elected president of the Idaho Dre^ler said the group Divide for Iroa oxide. management; timber sale Burley. in the canal dampges flumes have shown an interest in im- streams. We should take .steps ___ discusses and takes action on The Forest Servic^ Study said surveys by use of snowmobile; Duane Jacobson^ Caldwell, when ice pressure' bi^eaks the provin^ the ecology bv offering I 2___in crease the__ am o u n t ------m atters lo-w w bte-the sheriff’s- ~a sam plini y Mou 21^ to match their Federal authorized by Congress to departments aroundtthe state to the acreage showed no valuable’ bighorn; clear cutting problems p re sid e n t. New b o a rd of U ttlf W ood.River wiU be Government’s funds in carrying correct the problems, rather better serve the public as law minerals sufficient to.support a in Wyoming forests; balloon director members include-Tora- drUd up if possible at Tunupa, out soil and water conservation than cut the budget.” enforcement agencies. mining claim which enabled it logging, greater sand hill crane. Geary, Biurley, Dean Fullmer, east of Gooding, for some pipe The term of office is one year. to avoid the Mining Iiaw^bf Magic bum rehabilitation, R o b e rts '' and Oscar Fields, to be laid across the river in the The group meets three times 1872, pollution in high elevatiqns and G rand View, bottom for the new Gooding The law said minerals on fed­ the Brush Chain M ytholmarlcle. Re-elected to two-year High School. “Sm<™i.E■>«<..,Cassia historical eral land could be extracted if Art displays, tours and style directorship terms were Water will be left on the North Hailey-Police Chief Roy Bvan y Ti' pussible piofit was expected shnw nrft among plans—for -Stanton-Hawkps, Franklin, F7(l Gooding and North Shoshone attended a joint m eeting of the from gold, silver and other valu­ women attending the con­ Gunning, Wendell and Don De tracts until shortly' £(fter S heriffs Association and the society marks date able minerals. ference. Armond, GrangevUle. Thanksgiving, I ALTAMONT (UPI) - Fire­ Idaho Chiefs Of Police fighters today stepped up ef­ Association. BURLEY Cassia County. limited lime and money with forts to stifle a massive oil " Capt, Richard Bum s of the Historical'Society Members which to help train such per­ well blazb that senV flames 75 State Criminal Identification were advised by speakers for sons, feet Into the sky ifofted a black Division, Boise, discussed the their first anniversary meeting Dr^ Sw anson w arned the pall of dense smoke across the criminal justice teletype Saturday to make application museunvdircctor must be most Uintah Basin, wid may cai^ systfem. He said presently 31 for state funds available ‘fo. selective jn what_hc chooses for Shell Oil C6; $1 million in dam- telTninats are on the Idaho line assist in manning their the museum, ages, , with more b ei^ added. He said proposed museum, “It is easy Jo create a "She's still burning out there by the end of November police Robert Saxvik, state senator warehouse rather than a real nice,” one oil field worker agencies in the state will have from Cassia-County, and Dr, museum of worthwhile and said of the blaie, which smoul­ access through the system to E arl Swanton, director of the historical items," he said, ‘‘if dered all ofj- Thursday nil^t the crfminal Jiistory files Idaho State University M use^', THe director accepts every old «id expldded Friday mormng, ' located in Washington. D^C. , explained funds._are available Jtem offereil,' demolishing the well’s derrick. under the Arts and Humanities Other suggpstiona offered No one was injured. program in Idaho, suggesting- included museum building Shell Oil Co. officials have in­ tlie Cassia organization apply plans to Include area for vited the Red Adair Co. of B u r g l a r s as soon as possible. colfectioii, Tepbj^ and holding Houston, Te4. oil fire special- Sen. Saxvik who addressed a ists, to advise on how t)est to strik e vnr luncheon meeting Saturday in system of recording each item stop the burning, ' the Ponderosd Inn dini^ room, an(l preserving informaition jp ie operated by Shell said the funds are allocated on a about its part in the area for a consortlimi of fim s, is B e l l e v u e priority basis and are available history. four miles cast oL the site of only for IlSfsdnnel, hot for 1 Dr, Swanson also spoke on the a fire in Septem ber -which cost BELLEVU e ' - Police buildirtg purchase, construction history qf thff^hoshone Indian. the company $1 million. reporte'd ~^ey had three or acquiring of museum items. He said evidence has been “It looks about the 'same as suspects in the early morning Dr. Swanson said local uncovered indjcating the Indian Hie last one." a aeP spokes- HieR S aturfay of SO cases of m atdllhg fiinri.*! nf nhniit livBd nn the Snake Rivei^^latns man Jolm Richard said. beer from tlje Silver DoUv Bar would be-fleeded to qualify for and in surrounding hills and I Hie Texas fireflghters are ex­ and Cafe; ' - as^stanc^ He alao explained mountisdns as long as 12,000 pected to advise reducing the ^llevue aty M ai^all Duane cowity commissioners can levy yem ago. pressure in the well shaft. Dudley said no a ire sts had been up to $2,500 to assist in operation Three directors. Mrs. Ada Richards said the cause of the made, however. , , "Of the museum once it Is Parks. Malta; Gladys Barker, fire has stW not been deter- The owner of ({le bar, Boyd established. Elba, and Bennie Chatb’.im, ' mined. "It may h^ve been that Jones, set .the loas a t |H0. A! Dawson, diainhfln of the Albion, were rc-clected. a rock in the debris pouring Dudley said fte robbery took county organization, introduced out of tbMren struck the metal place between 2 a.m. andSa.m. speakers.cDriSwanaon spoke tb' d ^ d c , causing a spark,” he The he saia, first at- somfe. i:$5 persons gathered in Meet set —ja id .- —^------— ------tcn^rtedto ciit-a screeR^oor oft ~the PiiiiereUe RttOU'fodowii^ ■ “We don’t know when, well the aouth-^ide bWhe-bufldtag, the hinclieon. He told the new BOISE (UPI)- - The Idaho . be able to confront.; , Whfen Hiey were unable to get organizaUon they must provi(ie Judicial ■■Hlnht we’re trying to thmngh hiride _ a full uiue caretaker ^ or Nov. 30 to d ^ e on names to deaf away the debria troni the broke a large adjacent,window manager who is qualified to reconunend to' fiU Uw Idaho. Price, Malta, Robert BredE^.Bariey, froen _wdUiwd-to-get^aJoAiat:It. -and.enteted^tfae-liaikHig. . caused left; staiadUta(iiaBd'€le«rge-RMntcUer,HB^^ ^detim e. Joday should No other merchandise was and display in tbe,

■a- '■y- I iC r 't-: ,iV:- 14 TImM-Sews, fw )n ^liri* h o SundayTl^ewber.21, m i JLdfdni Temperature^'' Temperatiiires- rafVIEWOFHOAA NATIONAL WCX^IHEIt SERVICE TO 7:00 P.M. EST li r z i - H Boise ' SO 32 SHPWIRS. Andiorage Burley 40 38' T. Blgniprck.! 41 86 Gooding 41 30 Chicago ■ "49 -41 T. Grwgeville 47 34 Cindnnatti. ‘45 -33 .05 Many who raised .their owii' haffof It to extend' above the insides means bacterial soft rot, Idaho Falls 35 30 g w eland 42 38_,Q2 Oiinese Chestnuts (or even-the-vsoBrWaterU-once, adding very a common cause of “sUp- Lewiston 48 33r CQ pL Columbus, Ohio 43 3l ,01 American Chestnut) t ^ us that little extra water until growth peryiiess” of onion. Not m u^ M alad 44 31I*- dfenve'r 60 '32 are, so hard and starts. After Jeavea or flower you can do now, tot next year Pocatelln___ -3 6 - JO—T Des Moines JLJS- bo;iy It's almost impossible to buds begin to show; resume delay harvest until the tpps.are Salmon (m lssing) Detroit 44 34 eat ttiem, w ater. ' completely died down. Also W. Yellowstone 30 19 T. SAN fRANCISCO Honolulu 81 68 T. nils i^ a conomon complaint NOTE: Do not keep,bulbs- too spray with maneb during the 7 0 Indianapolis 45 35 m and I’ll try to explain what warm during the forcing period latter half of the growing Las Vegas 61 31 happens. This may ex ^ln why (72( degs.) or the leaves will season. Lds Angeles 73 4» you have such poor luck star­ become long and floppy. Flower 'Sprouting prematurely in­ ^ w a u k e e 44 36 .01 ting new plants from chestnut stems will also become ^indly dicates- early variety or poor Mpls.-St.Paul 39 30 keeper, or temperature Is too . seed^.-QilnP-ie rhestnnts ay _ and wRwk,______l_ - U Pl WCATHEH FOTOC«»T$? Plttgburgh ^ - 31 -rOa- qtan^y, and very different After new growth begins, warm. Mumr Portland, Me. 50 43 .01- froni other nuts. They contain grow; plants in a bright but NOT QUESTION OF THE W EEK Portland, Ore. 52 39 about 45 |>er cent starch, S per sunny window, and water them D. F . of Twin Falls: “ I bought Chilly seeiie, indeed! Reno ’ 5 1 ^ 6 St. Lbiiis------moisture, nils means the nuts week with a liquid plant food. years it didn't have a single Salt Lake Qty -^3 23 are highly perishable, more so When flowering has finished, flower bud. My husband was San Diego 72 52 than apples, and must be cut the stem back and leave the ready to cut It down but I San Francisco ,62 49 harvested properly u you want plants in & tM-lght hlm.nDrtn‘.T orthe first Holiday forecast looks hopeful ■’S ittir'— ^ l a ------to start them for new plants. spring, watering regularly. time It bloomed, and w hat a Spokane 48 41 .02 • ( , ■ In shirtsleeve weather move beautiful sight. Now I have a Unless properly handled, and Twin Falls and vicinity; Monday. Little temperature remained relatively stable Upper'Snake River Valley and Washington 51 38 plant outdoors in garden or couple shoots coming up the quiddy placed in cold storage, North Side; Burley-Rupert change vyith high to^y and S a tu rd a y o ver m uch 'Of In the lower 40s In some parts of Wlfchlta 85 31 under a bush. Continue to water bottom of the trunk. Can I take the nuts dry out and become area; Mnday of 35 to 45; low tonight 15 Southem Idaho and Utah, with Magic Valley. them as It Is esseotlal to keep the these shoots and root them?” hard as a bone. Variable clouds. Increasing to . ^ 2 5 r some moisture present in Low temperatures Saturday While it's too late now, keep in foliage healthy and vigorous. Not if the shoots originate jnostly cloudy by tpplght and Central Idaho mountains, Southern Idaho and con­ monilng ranged from 20 at Soda One reason why the amaryllis from the area where the plant mind that Chinese chestnuts Monday, with a chance of south of the Salmon Riven siderable cloudiness reported In Springs to 33 at Twin Falls and does not bloom is Itilacks the was budded. “Wild" shoots should be harvested at least showers on Monday. Little Variable cloudiness today, Eastern Idaho. However, by 35 a^ JerOme. everKOther day so they will not strengt)strength to jjroduce four to six (those coming from the parent or temperature change with high with diance of snow flunpies in early Saturday afternoon, T w i n ' F a l l s leaves In. spring and seedling plant) should be V be onthe ground m(|re than two— bealUui tem p « ra tu r.a8— today-----aad^ =tho Eaatern aections- early - cioud-eover in Eastern Oregon The Inne-ranae forecast for______l_ sum m er. yanked off. If allowed'to grow, days at a time. ^ pis is Monday in the 40s_)and low Monday; increasing clouds and Southwestern rldaho had the period Tuesday througii— efnoerotures Many gardeners not repot they-wotild take oyer the especially so where Uiere's a lot .'tonight in the 20s to low 30s. from _the Southwest again moved south and considerable Thursday calls .for variable , th e amarylHsrIt*»^good id’ea of bright sunshine. Hot weather “ cultivated’* o r “ tam e’’ ■variety Chance of precipitation near tonight and Monday with a drying was reported. Cloudiness an4 mild tem­ not to, since this bulb does not and crowd It out. Many of our Saturday causes rapid deterioration of zero today. Increasing to 10 per chance of showers on Monday. Early afternoon tem­ peratures through Thursday, 42 33 like to have Its roots disturbed. budded fruit trees and or­ Year Ago Ae meat or kernel. A tem­ cent by Monday. Little temperature change with peratures were In the uj>per 40s with a chance of showery In the 42 26 Every two or three years you perature of 32 degrees with BS namentals throw out sucker Camas Prairie; Hailey and high today and Monday in the and low 50s in Eastern Oregon mountains on Tuesday and Precipitation can scrape off the top Inch of growth from the base, and these Saturday per cent relative humidity Lower Wood River Valley: lower 30s to lower 40s, and low and'" Southwestern Idaho again , by Thursday. Tem­ None soil' when growth begins and shoots must come off. It’s better fine for storing chesmuts.Jf you Partly cloudy today; increasing tonight mid-teens to mid-20s. Saturday afternoon, with low perature's will remain in the 40s Noveniber .54in. put them in a plastic bag and replace it with fresh soil; to yank them than to cut them clouds tonight and Monday with Weather synopsis: clouds holding nlidday tem­ during the days and in the low Year total ll.OOin. “CORN PLANTS" or with a knife. keep the nuts in the crisper a chance of snow showers on Surface high pressure peratures down In the 30s In the 20s a t n j^ t. L ^ t year 11.43 in. draw er^ the refrigerator, DRACAENA; One of the most Incidentally, it's seldom that T _you!lh'Tlnd they’ll keep for common foliage plants Is the trees or slirubs fail to flower IS . months there. “com plant'' sold by florists. sooner or later. Sometimes it Moldy meats means the The leaves are more or less takes a dormant shrub a year to humidity is too h ig h rif n uts’Ife shaped like com leaves, hence fin^y decide to break dor­ on the ground in rain they get the name "com plant.O ne of mancy and send out a bud. We T moldy. Small nuts can be due to the best dracaenas Is the one planted a Rose of Sharon In • dry weather in summer. False called gtxlsefflana. It doesn’t May and it appeared to be dor­ or blank nuts can be due to dry have com leaves. Rather, the mant or dead for seven months. weather in summer. foliage Is leathery and After that it started to send out merry FLOWEPING AMARYLLIS: . crossbanded with pale green or buds. The “skln-the-bark" test is Y O U A R E Everyone has difftfent ideas white. Foliage appears to have very reliable In determining If for growing this spectacular gold dust on It. a plant Is alive or not. With your pet bulb. Some say it's easy to Dracaena' (pronounced lingemail, scrape or skin back force, others say it's. stubtorn. “Druh-seen-uh”) has another the outer bark an inch or so. If Here are a few facts that might interesting m em ber, D, san- you see a mint-green color (Question: My Siamese kitten helpjTQU^ ^ ^ deriana, a smell plant that under the lurk, you can be has shredded my curtains and Is \ can buy bull^ now really resembles a miniature pretty sure the plant Is alive. now working over my best ttat'C an be forced UTBloom In com stalk.-'It has long narrow However, If the bark Is hard and chair. .What about January or F ebruary, and some green leaves with white underneath Is gray or White, specially treated bulbs are margins. D. marginata, has you know the plant Is dead. "declaw ing?" Will It leave her defenseless? available . for Christmas reddish veins and margins. It C. F. of Bellevue: “I 'had a Answer: Declawing, or flowering. Amaryllis lield over has become one of the most wisteria vine that didn't have a from last year should be given a popular foliage plant. single blossom on in 22 years. I onyxectomy, has been the dormant period prior to forcing. CULTURE: All dracaenas took your advice and trimmed it answer to many a homeowner's dilemma. While the claws of all Amaryllis do^ not need the like a moist soil, one that's well down quite heavily, tern and cool-warm temperature cycle drained. Best temperature Is behold — this year It haU 2 big four feet may be removed, I reojiiuiiaia taking onlyttipsc of miMt bulbs need. R ather It must arotind 72 degrees. If you want fat clusters of bloosoms and to attend a the front feet. Kittens arfr-best —have a wet-dry cycle. Dry off their'best color efllect, grow even our neighbors'adhiii-ed it. declawed at three months of age your foliage now (by them In a bright Sr sunny I think that stubborn withholding wate^) and let it die window. Good soil mixture wisterias can be forced to and never seem to realize their claws are missing. They will down gradually. After fte plant consists of equal parts sand, blossom if you trim them back BUSINESSMEN & EMPLOYEES readies this dormant period, peat and loam. Avoid a glazed severely. still “sharpen those claws” on allow it to remain in the pot, container as these plants need I want to tell you that pine your liest chair with a spiteful look — but you'll be able to take stored jfhere temperaturb. Is plenty of air around the roots. needles make a wonderful it with aplomb. around SO to 96 degrees. Syringe foliage with soapy mulch ^ ^ d mums and other ------No WAier is needed during the~ waier once a monih or so u) perennW)^ it s clean and —Thoy arfr-not-defcnsolcss dormant period. If you buy new discourage red spider mites, the weed-free. since, the hind claws are ac­ tually the ones used In climbing bulbs, they'll also be dormant. only pest of tills handsome You might tell your rea^rs. CtlMIC Just cut off the dead roots, family. who want to grow a plant under and any serious "In-fighting.'' leaving on all live ones. Set new StORING ONIONS: So your a pine or other evergreen to use (Cats in a serious fight Jockey ON — bulbs In a pot of sand, peat and~~ ^onions “are a ie eilliei lo tting xrr- ciee piiig- m yr tir T ir - Vinca: It ~ ■for the under pasltion and rip a t loam' (equal parts) allowing sprouting in storage? Brown spreads fast and is neat." the opponent's abdomen with the hind-claws or bite al the jugular vein in the neck). Bad Checks Occasionally, if all of the growing area of the claw is not Vlind Your Money removed, a claw may grow back and later have to t>e Wjfh the holiday season just sumer Reports rates several tobacco taxation for a list of removed, hutthlsisnota common a ro w d the com er, it's a good American jug wines above the wmery names and addresses. occurrence. One word of tim e to lay In a stock of wine. likes of Gevrey-Chambertin By accident I discovered a caution; a cat that is declawed Connoisseurs claim you don't Gos-St. Jacquef 1962, a French small winery near my home in may not be shown In a cat show. have to pay a lot for good wine wine which cc^ts four times the Maryland' which produces an Question: Our little boy came these days. Price is not a prtcc of its ‘American com­ excellent,- white wine called home from our M, D.- with a reliable ^ide to quality. For petitors. "Seidel." The winery is run by diagnosis of "pinworms." We example, some excellent ^ Gounterfeiting Most American jug wines G. Hamilton Mowbray, re­ thnk he must have gotten them bargains can be found in the so- iiave been given special filter search psychologist at John Hop­ from our dog. How siiould we called "American jug-wines" processing wliieh ^t^s their kins University and regional treat the dog? sold in gallon or half-gallon ability to age or "develop." This vice president of the American Answer: Treat the dog to a bottles. m eans they can last longer after Wine Society. good dog biscuit because dogs In the wine industry o p tin g but you still have to After discovering a tasty cannot have or give pinworms. TUESDAY, N0VEMBER 23 magazine, "Wines and Vines " • U4IU * SlUlstore C UlClil them withWIUI C«UC. care. /\U All I red CU American wine bargain, it's fun Children most often contract Harry Waugh, author of m any^ jug wines should be decanted to try it out on your friends with pinworms from other children. book about wine, says after they're opened. Be sure to a tasting party. Give them a This time ypur dog is liihocent. American jug wines "have a fill bottles right up. leaving as . blindfold test and see how many Question: Our dog l^eps quality value that are littleair spaceas possible. White can td i which^is^ the expensive - sittin^down aniTscooting onlils The fir^t starts Outstanding." Here are some of jugf'wines should stay In the import and which is the tail. He seems nervous. Does a.m. Tuesday rrrorning and the second at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday Waugh's taste-test evaluations: refrigerator. American jug-slze barg£!in. that mean He has worms? Guild Tavola White ("fuU and evening.______You ran nl.sn find some gnod- — how- AnswefrTWiUe it is possible fairly sweet"), Italian Swiss premium American wines. many are fooled. that your dog has worms, the Col(Dlony Premium Chablis Connoisseurs claim * the A "Wine Study Course" can most common' cause of (“P‘p le a sa n t. mediuin dry American wine that’s' cohi-' be obtained free, by writing: “scooting" is impacted anal flavor’^), GaUo Chablis Blanc parable-to some of thelbest W ine A dvisory B oard; 717 glands. The dog has two small (''reminisceot to the style of Imports is the red California Market St.; San Fran­ AMERICAN LEGION HALL glands located in the lateral Johannisberg RieslingV)'. Cabernet Sauvi^on which is cisco,O^^if. 94103. It goes in­ wall ,of the rectum between Almaden Mountain White- 205 Third Avenue East Twin Falls, Idaho bottled by a number of top to wine taste-testing, serving, muscle Uyers. These glands Chablis (“fresh. rather wineries. If California has the storing and defines all the correspond to the scent glands dtoUnctive flavor’'>. Franiia e,--the—teeimicai-temM.' of the skunk and increte a Californfa Chablis experts claim Eastern wineries Copyright 1971, -f-\ flocculent unpleasant smelling SIX OUTSTANDING SPECIALIStS WILL TAKE ("astonishing value” ), Paul have the best premium white. Los Angeles Times fluid, .- Masson Cbal& (“good flavor One E astern white w ^ e that's PART IN THE DISCUSSIONS. Dogs normally express these land qtdtedry finish”).— often, mention^ j** ® glan# for themselves daring Among-the red wines, Waugh .X^ardonnay 'prMuced by Spots typhoon deration. Some dogs, rated- Italian Swiss Colony Konstantiij Frank. Some 6f the howev«, may have trouUe Burgundy (“qmte a powerful , bettit^ American chaypa^s, MANILA (UPI) -T he PhiUp- expressing them, the Quid fruit nose ... easy to taste”), 'such asG rSSi'W estem and Gold pine Weather Bureau has This Clinic Is Spensered By: becomes Wdc-bacterlal growth Paul Masson Burgundy (“on Seal, come from Eastern revived a Sl.S million loan can b e ^ , and abeesuticn may tb«~1ight side and mildlyiiuiuiy 'v nnwraros. in ^ a rd s. i *** Import and Ex------, «weeV")5-^G«na Hearty T'ACtoansc-SdwrT«aily“ g W '**'^^"'‘ ‘ department 6f alcohol and 3F ...... A, . ;■ > . . ' ' " V ___November 21. 1971 Tlmej-News, Twin Fall*. Idaho

WASmNGTON (U P I)^ agriculture, Butz says he’s noihination, has not satisfied controversial agricultuji^ idlg,—or "set aiside” —,afixed tliB 1950’s ,' w^en former , his omi man in a new situation. fqnn bloc.critics such as Sens. secretary-designate said he number of cppltmd acres. .‘Rira A ^cuiture secretary E tral^ft He says he favors cotinued farm Hubert H. , Humphrey, D- thinks exisQhg programs offer they are fri^e.to plaht mbfe or Benton and his ( toi^support price support and product&'n Minn/|George S. McGovern, D- fapners a considerable degree less what they cihoose on the fann policies were fitting control to aq -far ahead as he S.D., to d 'I^ to n R. Young, R- of freedom. rest of their farm while wordsto much of the fanin btoc, can'see. N.D. They chaVge Butz's "My basic philosophy hasn’t collecting supports on their E arl L. Butz was a Benson mim. This assertion, delivered phUosphy offers little orno hope dianged,” Butz satd, in a basic crops. But_l;oday. as..President. .dudng_a_Senate—Agriculture- he will be willing to take strong ^ te m e n t summjipg up his fi This differs from' earlier, Nixon’s nominee for secretary Committed hearing on the enough measures to lift farm policy credo. “I want maximum tighter control systems w ^i^ income to higher levels. farm Income and. a farm put a fixed limit on the’acreage - t - TT "I think It's clear the prlnr program with a minimum of of eadi supported crop, and dpal concern of this committee stralghtjacket controls for manjyjfJ^utz’ critics claim the Is your economic philosophy . . farmers, . “set aside" system is too loose w hatW nd 6f program s you will "Now w e’ve got to have some to permit effectlw control of -flgfit^or,” McGovern told Butz (controls). In the current surpluses. at 'Hiursday’s hearing. situation, and'in the foreseeable Butzlhas annBrentlv falleri tn “Is it fair to say you generally . future, we must have a farm convince many Farm Belt share the agricultural program. Our capacity to Senators and several farm philosophy of Elzra Taft Ben- produce i s - to o - 'g r e a t (foi^ * groups that iie can or will

“I suspect I did at the time.” reasonable' prices) and that program effectively enough to Amalgamated firm said Butz, who was an assistant means, we must have some kind reverse the slump in grain CLOSE-UP SHOWS a giant African snail secretary of agriculture for of restraint on production," prices. "D an rag esr whlcli ecologisU fear may dauu tge h South three ygars under Bephun: Butz said.- But UiK fun n er Purdue dferin~ Florida plant life: The siuU was found recently B^nson would not have wanted Through two days of said flatly Thursday that if the In several areas of Miami and bad to be attacked lists new income him on the staff otherwise,. Butz. questioning before the Senate "set aside” plan proves too p la |it s by Department of Agriculture agents with In- said. I ; Agriculture ''5)mmittee,' Butz weak to keep supplies ef­ secUcides. (UPI) OODEN — Amalgamated for the year amounting to $104.2 But in the 1950’s, Buzt added, delivered repeated en­ fectively in line, he will go back Sugar Co. today reported net million. Sales for 1970 totaled he. favored the Benson dorsements of the “set aside" to Congress to discuss tighter .-income of $5,649 million, eqiifl, 1107.3 million. programs because he saw them farm program adopted in 1970. measin-es. ' to |2.73 per, common share for Stephen H, Anderson, a as offering farmers more This combines a hew, looser And, he added, if it takes the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, partner of the Salt Lake Qty freedom frpm “straight jacket” acreage control plan i^th price biggef spending to make the Stevenson joins fight 19(71, • . law firm of Ray, Qulnney and controls than previous, support loans and sup|riemental •'set aside” plan work ef- This compares with earnings Nebeker, was appointed to the programs of rigid hljgi pride direct payments------to farmers. fectlvely ^ in 1972. he Will not of tS:2AT mffllon- ui-^ S per boa r d - of d irectoi s of the supports. In the 1970’s, the Under the new plan, farmers hesitate,to fight foi'Ht. share in fiscal 1970. The 1971 company Nov. 18, Chairman over agriclilture dicte ibamings were based on sales Marriner S.-Eccles announced.' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Beach, Fla., to join In opposing was opposed to the type of ‘Profumo affair’ ends Adlai E. Stevenson III, D-ni., Butz. An AFL-CIO s)f)okesman "effective supply management Joined a growing number of had said earlier in the week the program s” needed to Improve Potato growers in LONDON (Upi)-The queen alcoholics. Much of the $500,000 having an affair with the war Democrats Friday in fighting subject had not been considered the fapn economy. smiled, held out her hand and for the new building was raised nUnister she simultaneously confirmation of Earl L. Butz as yet, but that he "wouldn't be "I haven’t seen so much said how nice It w u to see him. by Profumo's efforts. was seeing Capt. Eugene agriculture secretary. Other surprised'’ to see organized unrest hi rural areas In a long, John Profumo, her former war The occasion was a far cry Ivanov, a Soviet naval attache. critics of President Nixon's labor come out against Butz." Burley set confab long time,” Dechant said. minister, bowed. from some descriptions In The Russian was soon re­ nominee charged that rural A Republican source predicts But John W. Scott, master oi BURLEY — Potato Growers Jerry Twiggs, Blackfoot, . With that, at long last, came playgirl Christine Keeler’s.me­ called to Moscow and nothing, unrest over low farm prices ed on Capitol Hill that Butz the National Grange, endorsed of Idaho from D i^icts 5 and 6, state bargaming chairman, also the end of Profumo's ekile in the moirs—how she met Profumo ever came of rumors that state had reached the highest pitch in would win confirmation despite Butz_ani5en, Jack. Miller. R- will m«et-at-7.pjn, Monday at will speak. social, -wilderness. The 1963 while sw im m ing nude at Lord secrets might have many years. ’ claims by his critics that they Iowa, questioned whether De­ the Ponderosa Inn conference "Profumo Affair,” Britain’s Astor's Cliveden estate and how revealed. ' In prepared testimony for could ah'eady count a "substan­ chant was giving unbiased room. All m em bers are urged to Scandal of the century,.was laid they later became lovers. Senate Agriculture Conmilttee tial’’ number of Senate votes Top attraction testimony. Miller not^ that attend. to rest> I against confirmation. hearings on the nomination, Dechant is a member of a Discussion will include an SHELBURNE, Vt. (UPI) - It happened Thursday night Profumo's circle of friends Stevenson assailed the Butz Tony T. Dechant, president of national Democratic party poli­ interim study report by Dell The Shelboume Museum, Ver­ In the heart of London’s shabby widened after that meeting. HIGHEST appointment as a possible the National Farmers Union, cy committee. Raybould, president, and a mont’s top single summer east end. The queen went there There was Christine's room­ "death warrant for the remains preceded Stevenson at today’s ; ____ report from the Idaho Potato tourist attraction, often Is to open Attlee House, a mate, Mwdy Rlce-Davles, and "CASH PitlCES hearing wlbi what he termed of rural America” because Butz . ] ’ ” 'Commission by Jack Allred, called “a collection of coUec- residence for youngsters from Dr. Stephen Ward, later con­ FOR Y O U R allegedly favors corporation- an unprecedented call for tip» Murtaugh, chairman. Nelson dons.” The museum is located broken homes, named after victed by a court of living off rejection of Butz. .Dechant, Driving DEER OR ELK owned ov[p family-operated Howard will talk on the outcome on a' 45-acre site near Lake former Prime Minister Clement the prostitution earnings of saying the NFU has never in its farm s. NEW YORK (UPI) -The of the area plant representative Champlain and features a 220- Attlee. ■ Christine and Mandy. The controversy over the 70-year history opposed a HIDES National ■ Highway Safety' system. foot sidewheeler, the S.S. It adjoins Toynbee Hall, The society ost^na^ eventu­ nomination spread beyond camnet nominee, charged Butz Bureau cautions tire buyers Ticonderoga. plus 35 buildings, where Profumo has been ally committed smclde'tecause Washington- as Serf. George S, against installing snow tires each with its own display working for the. past seven of the revelations. IDAHO McGovern, D-S.D., asked the that ace constructed differently Child labor theme, including a former years as a volunteer social Not only' seji but a hint of AFIr ituOy. Hvd winter no quote children under 15 rarely _aiy nioh cholci and primt ilMrt 1S.;I ]7 SO; Oom 52.S1^S3.M -million new cars have been p»tt-nf the—work force, ar-. 009d ».00 3333. 2S; high chctct and Com, e.w. 49.59■ laroa »wr>Jtt3S37. medi nations, and from 2 to 10 percent -O ats-no-bid------urns stafHl^rds mostly M______~22S lbs 20.75; 1D&-240 lbs 19.75- Prices to retailers (grade A, in cartons in much of Latin America and Barley 49.00 delivered) extra large 45' J large 20.50; 230-240 lbs 19.50-20.50; 240 40^4 43' mediums 35 U' ? parts of asla. to 2S5 lbs 19.25-20.00; 24(V ^ lbs 17.00-19.50. Sows 500 lbs and Produce Prices under steady to 25 lower; over CHICAOO lu^lt — PnOiKt — Ctieeie i lb piw.vsseU loaf I brie It 59^ 70'M. muenster 70. c^eddar 15.25-17.00. »ir>gle daisies 63>< 70. longhorns 6)' i Mil. 40 lb blocks S9'7«5''4. swiss blocks (io BURLEY LIVESTOCK COMM. CO. Cattle 1,400. Calves 1,500. Not 100 lb ) grade A 70'-, 76'}. B C enough steeps and heifers on of­ open high low latest sales M arket report for Novgmber 18, 1971 fer for a market. Arfew loads Live Cattle Dec 33.05 07 35 17 34 8 5 34 90 403 o2905CMl> oS)3N«gt otTSiM p oJHwus heifers steady; cows' steady. Feb 33 70 75 33 77 33 S5 33 d? 390 FOR A TOTAL OF 3SS8 HEAD OF IIVFSTOCK Apr 32 45 50 32 57 32 40 32 45 47 Few loads diolce S2&-975 lb Jun 31 97 33 00 32 02 31 92 31 97 124 Weaner Pigi . .'...... $150tS$14.S0' heifers 33.50^.75; utility and Freten>5 3i 0:Pork Bellies FatHogt...... com m er cial cows 80.00-21.00; rr.t n AAay 32.20 17 32.35 32.17 32 35b 70 Sows f im s m T T Scanner and cutter 13.00-20.00. Potatoes Total shipments 171. Sy or track; 37 arrivals, dema«d.4air, market F*«der Lam bt...... 21.00ta$22J0 Sheep 50. Not enough for a doth tor russets; for rountf reds demancf was moderate, market steady FdVlambt ...... market test. Track tales (100 lb. US. 1A); idahO’ russets 5 %0. Mlnneiota North Dakota Red K ilU r E w a t...... DENVER (UPI)— Uvestock: RTirtrvAlTey round fM ' one car a.aO; Minnesota North Dakota rus Bracing Ewet (by the Head) IllMtonSM Hogs 500. Barrows and gilts sets ? 5-*' Onlont Total shipments 54. on track Baby Caivai ...... $2S.00t» $37.50 ptrhnd digs and loads silage steady to 50 lower; 1-2 20.00 to I ; 5 arrivals, demartd good, market Light Holstein Steer Colvei . 20.75; 1-3 19.50-20.00; 2-4 17.00- steady $115.00 Hr Track sales 50s ldat>o yellow spanish Light Heltlein Heifer <^lve« . 19.25. Sows scarce. 3 10 3.30; extra large 3 25 $125.00 tt$ U 5 M Light WhitefoM Steer ^ Iv e t $43J0ta$4SJ0 up to one ton per minute W hltefoc* Heifer Calves . . . $34J0t»i3«.7i Whiteface Feeder Heifers . . $30i0ti$32.40i CemmeA Feeder Heifers . $2T:50tt $30.40 Unmatched (^r speed and efficiency. There's no ENSILOADER. Mounting and dismounting takes WhitefOce Feedtr Steers . . . ■ tooling around ' when the ENSILOADER goes only a few minutes $l3iO ts $35.40 Cemmen Feeder Steers. . . . to work in a trer^ch silo. The secret is in the $30.40 ft $3110 ENSILOADER Is ui\condltlonalf;' guaranteed rugged. ^excUjsive. patenl^d-xeal that d*gs right Holstein Feeder Steers .... tOMU to do tlije work for which it is desioned. For more ^ I Hols. M ilk C ow i & Heifs. IswImO -in-and-fefnov96 Bevaret lons^of^^age wUh each ^ complete details, write us at: Oswalt Divf^ion, $32040 t*$410Ji cut. The loose material caught by the hopper is *.O Ider S t^ k Cows by ih« hwid . Butler Manufacturing Company. Garden City. then WPldlv tranafflrrad-tQ-thq^cQPveyQf beJL TCoiws CT Calvis~...... -Kansas 67846.— ------— ------Ihal depends on ymir iilliliideS';indicxpcriencc end frorr» there to discharge into the feed box. Feeder C ow s...... $lSJOtf$lUO| IVrhapsthc l.and Hank can help by provjd|.'ng1ong- Conner and Cutler Cows...... $i7J0it$ir All of th'le takes only second*! And with just one li-rni lin.incini! l.iilorcd 111 \inir .siliiSlion. U tility and Commenciol Cows . . llJ O t* operator. No hand^oading, no extra labor cost. LESUE DAVIS ^ou■|l liliC i>iir /trfpinmcnl meaning you Whitefoce Heiferettes ...... $22iOla$2SiO Better quality and more palatable feed is c.ui rcpii> in acc or rclinantc w ith ou l-iiny F^er.Bulls ...... $25i0to$27J0 delivered to the feed box. due to trie tested action pcnall). Killer B ulls ...... $27iOI»$2UO of the ENSILOADER ^eel and loading system. AND SON SAIE THIS WiCK ONLY—SAT. NOV. 77 T)iere's a minimum of compaction end lumping. «RIMHi MM nioiic) will \ary as condilions warrani. That's Rugged, all-steel construction means less M A M IT TM N D : H<>^ .teody to last malntenancer ENSILOADER Is built to stand rcall\ iniporianl now. when mosi folks ihink wc’rc Week. All dattet of feeder cattle In streno oe- Sales and Service Far: h'eavy feedlot dutyr-yet is precise,ly engineered on ihc liigli vide ,>('ll\c rate cyclc. mond. to give flawless performai^ce. and HlgTiest FOX CHOPPERS Early Cen^nm enl* for Sal. Nev. 27, 1971 efficiency In moving roughage from silo to feed FREEMAN BULERS 130YearfRcH«fm 130 WeiMr Pigs box. 'There's a size and model of. ENSILOAbER FEDE^L LAND BANK IjSSYMifitStMn BiDTeelerLinbs for every feedloL . WISCONSM MOTORS ASSOCIATION OF; CNSILOADER IS deslgtied to mount on many 690MwimiCaiff«s 7il Packer Caws different makes and ttu>dels of farm tractore, I 198SEUZilBETHrmilfftLkS S S A irlM U i. _BeniLfQC6(Kix.QlbMesL(rama4iivesLaxcfillantj(lsion _ BURLEY TWIN CALLS ^ Sakrwm Sot. Nw/. 37 fnt^ocf el in alP directions. Frame is bolted directly to the JOHNI..OIAV ; W.ILMrrtINO tractor, and carries ihe enlite weight of the^ For Moricat liifMrmation contact: OO0DIN& ^ liuPEiir •*»i| ItlDivision A.NMOMU ' KMnTLMUH Jim 678>8319. i r .1 U Tlnie»-Ne^« Twin Fall*. Idaho Sunday, November 21,j 1971

tiiieolM -eounty PORTLAND,jQr«^^;kp^ter^^bution and; foreign and have been even .rioter" exM pr a depressed ' agricm t^'al domestic marketing for oyer M for an unusiially wet qxtog in .economy in the Pacific'Nor- local cooperatives in Oregbh,. 1971 th ^ t red u ced fe rtiliz er vote thweM, sales and net Waailngton and Idaho, had net s d e s. of ftdB c liipply Cooperative earnings 0! |l,b01,lW for the Pacific’s maricetlng depart­ IncreaseddiuinKtHeconiDany’s 'yB ^i Snd increase of $300,716 ment enjoyed the most silcr SHOSHONE - It's now time Ernest Boesiger, Elden 1970-71 fiscal year, President ov» tlje previous Hsc|il w an c ^ u l year in its history, with for. Uocoln County farmers U Guthrie, Vernon Hall, George Foye M. Troute ^aid FH day.. Sales volume was $53,610,590 sales exceeding $17 million, vote^ their , choice lo r ASC Horn and Clifford Stutzman. P a c if ic ,. a ' re S io n al as against $51,173,931 likl96M0, lyoiite said. Peas, beans and conmiunity committeemen, DIETRICH-KIMAMA: % lih agr^cultival cooperative that '^ u te reported, adding that tefitUs made up mo^t of the gays Eugene Alexander, Apdersbn, W alter W. Bowman, Jfolland-sales, chairm ^ of the CQUnty A ^ XReed Crystal, Charles Hisaw, committee. Jerry Nance and Monte Ballots were mailed Nov. 17, Sorensen. and they must be properly voted Each fa n n e r may vote for not and returned to the couiity more than Xhree candidates office by Dec. 1, in order to be listed, or he may write in his counted, Alexander said. choices on the lines provided at __ Vntea' will be 'tabulated the bottom of the bal|pt publicly by the county com­ In e a ^ of the three ASC m ittee at l:3 0 p jn . 0ec. 2, at the communjtiM in the ooimty, county office. Any person, three community com-

sexornational origin may view wiU be elected. Ihe canclidate tfie cbuhtlng. receiving the highest number of -" n S b h ASC community will votes becomes chairman; the W t6 to r Its own slate of second highest, vice-chainiian; nonflnees. Following are the thir(J-hlgh regular member and slat^ of nominees for the three fourth and fifth highest become communities in the county; first and second alternates who COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS r|CHFIELD: Forrest Arm- serve on the community ^ffong, Charles (Jerry) committee If regular m em bers Johnston, Lloyd Lee, Fred are absent or If a permanent 3 PC. MNHER 9 PIECE Peterson, Tim- Sanders and vacancy dccurs. All election ties W ith Potatoes $ io o $ Glen R6as. will be settled By lot. -V. & Gravy, 2 ^ 5 SHOSHQNE; Paul Bancroft, ASC , community com- Salaeconstniction project that $089 With potatoes $ 4 9 9 munity committee posts. These W ith rolls ' ; health and advancing age, T.S. w o r k will change the appearance of the front lobby a & Gravy Nicholson, director on the board conunUnlty committees elect bit. The gravel-floored enclosure just Inside the and gravy .... and ro lls ...... of the Filer Mutual Telephone the county committee and lobby doors will be floored over as a part of the Co. since 1949, announces his choose its officers. They also project to enclose the motel’s gift shop.______Also Available ■ . . Salads, resignation, effective , im­ help keep farm ers in their communities' Informed on How Pies, Rolls, Soft Drinks, Cold CLOSED MONDAY ... m ediately. Beerll Nicholson has retiuested that individual farm operations will OPEN TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY!! Duane Ramseyer finish out his be affected by farm programs State bar official iJirges . unexpired term and the board admlnlst^ed by the county has consented to his request. committee. CALL ORDERS IN - 733-2111 & THEY’LL BE READY FOR YOU! The annual election and Any farm owner, tenant, or 2082 4th AVE. EAST business m eeting will be held in sharecropper, or legal voting auto ihsurance reform January, W72. age, may vote in the election if his farm is eligible to paj- BOISE (UPI) — The chair­ state bar. • ' ticipate In dny of the ,ASCS man of the Idaho State Bar "We sincerely submit that programs administered In his committee on auto liability any recommended plan must community. Insurance said today there is a meet the test of better serving L i v e s t o c k Others who may vote are: need for ‘‘significant reform” to the people of the state of spouses of eligitde voters; a increase effectiveness of such Idaho,” Ryan said. ^IliA H O FALLS - Market minor who supervises or con­ insurance. report for the Idaho Livestock ducts the farming operation of Harold L. Ryan told the “We reject any plan that' AuaHOh Nov. 15-17 at Idaho an entire farm; a legal guar­ legislative councU committee would only better serve the Falls. dian wtM manages a,,farm_for a on auto liability insurance a lawyer or the insurance in­ . .In an estimate of 5,200 lambs, child and a person represmtlng group of Idaho attorneys in­ dustry or which would raise the fat lamb prices were .50 lower, a legal entity such as a part­ tends- to put into bill form the costs of obtaining effective feeders wei\e steady and ewes nership or corporation. recommendations of the Idaho insurance coverage," w ere .50 higher. Fat lambs, 24.5(£2^0; feeder lam bs, 22.50-25.00; odd feeder lam bs, 22.50 and down; light fat ewes, 5.00-6.20; canner ewes and bucks, 3.00-6.00. In an estlintUe uf- 2«ar tmga, COLOR extrem e top, 18.60; bulk 180-220 Ibe., IS.00-1B.50, 220-240 lbs., PHOTO CAkDS 17.50-18.00; 240-260 lbs., 17.00- 17.50; 260-280 lbs., 16.00-17.00; 2 8 0 ^ lbs., 15.00-16.00; sows MADE FRO/jfl YOUR Wider 300 lbs., 12.50; 30(V330 FAVORITE COLQR. lbs., 11.00-12.00; 330^00 lbs., SLIDE OR NEGATIVE BARREL OF MONKEYS SLINKY TOY 11.00-12.00; over 450 lbs., 10.00- # IIST4IITIIS«IITY__ 11.00; stags, 9.00-15,00; ■ boar- mm # PAINT BY NUMBERS* s.8.00-11.00. In m estimate of 4250 head*oT FOUR STYLES cattle, choice grain fed steers, H iCTe TO CHOOSE 31.0(M2.00; good steers, 29.00- send 30.«>rcommercial steers. 27.0» ^'t l t O M -...— 28.00; choice fat heifers, 30.00- p h 0 t c r 3Ree:i 'in g c a r d s 31.00; good fat heifers, 28.00- 29.00; com m ercial cows, 21.50- 22.50; utUity cows; 20.00-21.00; cutter cows, J9.00-20.00; can- ners, 16.00-19.00; bulls. 26.00- 28.50; veal calves. 35.00^.00; COLOR p xxl feeder steers. 33.00-34.00: medium feeder steers, 30.00- SLIMLINE 31.00; Jfclsteln ste ^ s , 26^00- r __1 ZBISOT good^nfeedlng hetfers, iS'cardTs ...... 1 r r ^ - i : ' .. '-j 30.00-32.00; medium feeding >• Ijelfers. 28.00-30,00; feeding^ 50 card*....;.... oows. 19.00-21.50; stock steer calves, 36.00-41.00; stock heifer 100 cards...... 23‘* calves. 34.00-36.00; dairy type calves. 34.00-37.00. COLOR TRIMLINE iS^iards...... 5“ 5b carJi 1 0 « ■ ' 100 cards . 1.. 1...... 19”

I BUICKaWHITl* TRIMLINE & slimline THE PERSONAL --35 corJ»-. 1*5 WArTOSAT SO c a rd t. MERRY CHRISTMAS 100 cords... FROMOSCO

M E ^ JACK HAYS BlocktrV Applionc* and fu rn i- LOCATED W ITH BUTTREYS |yr* it pfOvd to onncK/AC* tSeir 'otsedorioA iocli Hoyt.’ 1 I N T H E -iw viy fiH inony fiitiHli'unrf~w»w~ CUfteWkvn to drop by ond toy ILUE LAKES M Io. ofid Wt him th ^ you tlw. iO lPPIN 0 CENTER way to ibvt wImni ivioki^ mfr« diOM tforflW lhM iio., AD EFFECTiyE:. SUNtTMRIMUESt -C5ffrcN'er NOV. 23rd inrilda , Sunday, Novembfer .Jl, ;l,9q,Tlm«^-Newi, Twin Falls, Idaho .'I? ] | B ^ ^ :ers r By United PreM,Infenutloiul She ^dU.S>. “appeasement"' to >ppanntly toeing a I?raeli PW^ie MnlsteJ-(Solda of Egyptian President Anwar period of four; M six months Mefe said FUday In Tel Aviv Sadat made the present ^an^iRussisn absents irera:: By PHIL NEWSOM Common Market 12 billion |n vroiild ‘idemandV m ore t%an- strained rc^tiora between |^ col^ddered'“moderate.” ' ' UPI Forel^News Analyst foreign^ trade, annuallyrand^t tom. Jet fighler>t]ombers from States' Israeli riewspapeis said Mrs. When President Nixon iset in half thfe^rate^of growth of (tie United States to correct 1 ' Msir, and not Defeiise Minister about in mid-August to cure C^mmonJlarket exports. the military imbalance in the J-j us Moshe Davan: would go to I'todayrbut Washington for talks at the notice upon .Japan and the rich . message abroad, the last to be shipment, of. more we h«yiPtoo choice but to get highest level on Israel’s request trading nations of Europe ihat visited were the Japanese. they would be expected to help, bombers to Egypt. into an argument vrith the tor more H.S. F4 Fliantom ]et Japanese foreign currency ' ■ he had definite goals In mind. “We think it is essential for United States," she said. flghteiUiombers to restore tte holdings stood at )14.1 blllic^. He told Europe that to meet us to demand the Phantoms for She spoke after Washington balance of power to Israel. highest in the world except for , global obligations, the United our fsiirvival, and therefof« our • reported Russia had sent jnore Mrs. Meir, addressing the , West Germany, and in • the States must convert a projected duty is to demwd themtnow," medium range TU16 Israel Bar Association, said Mrs. Meir said. thh, United billion trade deficit Into an $8 could well afford to help out. billion surplus. States and Isra^ are strained But Ihe Japanese cried poor. The largest deficit with any and that American policy made They anticipated' a-^lump of one country was with Japan, U an argument between the two^ their own. They—could not came to $3 billion and he wanted __EHaJlSBEilEML —countrles~inevitai»le7~'~^^^~^^ revalue the yen upward and it reversed. Secretary of State William P. thus make m ^e expensive their M icrophone Perm its Rogers said recently Israel did And through Secretly of the exports to the United States FATnir i iCTryiunv’ not need more Phantoms Uy- he— until they - cuuld see what tfie~ tojd the trading because Soviet military aid to nations he nations of Europe did. ocpected these remedial steps E^ypt had easM off and that Suppresses backgrpundlioisesl to b6 taken right now, not next the A rabs did 'not hold~ the In its broad outlines, theJJ.S. week or year or some other power balance. However, re­ proposal was sim(iliclty Itself: vague time in the future. , ports in Israel said he^sas not An easing of the Common HEAR WHAT YOU WANT TO HEAR! Neither Japan nor the trading aware the new Badgers had Market’s agricultural policy. nations of Europe could say w ith been sent to Egypt when he Increased access to European they had not been wamedT^ markets for Japanese goo^ to made the statement. European members of NATO help ease the- pressure on the iiSSiilOO ‘‘Today we heard for the first had been asked repeatedly to United States, e x c lUsivelv a t time slnce Mr. Rogers made tak e over a fuii-er sliure~Df^ toaster access to Japanese his stetem eninn Nnv l.s, thara. USINC. HU StUUP with the precision of a~ European defense costs. The markets for the United States, MAfGe nSs^beaia change for the surgeon, shovel operator Rick Fox, dt controls, European Common Market had including direct investments. worse in the military balance," works carefully to uncover a utility pipe without HEABING AIR . been warned the United States To gain its way the United' Mrs. Meir said. Moves earth r breaking It in the alley behind Main Avenue CINfER could not stand idly by as a States counted heavily on the North.'Clawson Construction Co. Is continuing 135 Main W„ I34E.-I3lh ERNEST Today they have announced tariff wan lerased more than $1 lure of its huge consumer Twin Folli BurUy c a r e fu lly trenching for Installation of storm sewers and MICHENER in the name of the State bHlion in. an n u al sa le s of m arket. It further counted on 733-7330 678-9312 utility lines in the second phase of the downtown Department Uiat not all is well. agricultural-goods to Europe. the fact that its own economy reconstruction project But when action did qome, its depended to a far lesser degrw severity aroused both shock and on exports than did tffi anger. ^ economies of either Europe or WFRE The commission which guides Japan. VALUE the fortunes o^ the- European Its position is that it is Common Market declared U;S.' demanding of Europe and IN SELECTION doUaiv^Hs had begun at home Japan only reforms which long and ^ e medicine should be are overdue. IN SERVICE administered first at home. It And there the matter stands. blamed the U.S. defldt primari­ Until a solution can be found, IN PRICE ly on excessive military spend­ he greatest sufferers will be o s c o ing abroad, especially in he under-developed nations Vietnam, and to a U.S. reluc­ oaught between. No one wants SHOP OSCO-BUTTREY'S FAMILY VALUE CENTER!! tance to restrict the outflow of the disaster of a world trade U.S. investment capital, war but In this global game of It estimated the'U. S. sur­ chicken someone must tilFH SUI DAY charge on imports would cost the aside first. BLUE LAKES SHOPPING CENTER Japan protests bomb OPEN 9-9 MON. - SAT. - 10-7 SUN. DAY PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., MON., ONLY!! MO TOKYO (UPI) - Japan Republic of China, it will raise government Friday protested the hope that such tests will not ‘China’s nuclear explosion, be repeated In the future." OSCO BARGAIN! apd said It posed the threat of OSCO BARGAIN! contamination -of- the earth's WHITE LINEN HERSHEY atmosphere. ^dioactive fallout from the W h o a f t s-I- arriving In Japan Saturday. BALTIMORE (UPI) --Plan- However scientists did not ners have discovered that, ;a n d e x ^ t that debris from the unless plans are change_4-an CRACKER relatively small explosion would interstote.hlghway tuitnel under pose a. hetdth hazard. Baltimore's inner harbor and Towels G rea t i BARS “This test once again re­ the tunnel for the southern leg fo r JACKS sumes the contamination of the of the dty subway system will C ooking ^per atmosphere,” the Japa- rtm into each other under South 5 For ^ 3 for Baltimore. Reg. 3 pkgs. 3pkgs. NOW j fear exists that it may directly The proposed solution, lower­ affect the livelihood of our ing the subway tunnel an AT people.” additional 14 feet, will add at f j o p i "Along with provoking a least >11 m llllnn nf thP 1 9 « SUNDAY • MONbAY ONLY SUNDAY - MONDAY ONLY FUNNY BUSINESS By Roter flofled

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l^ C O BARGAIN! j OSCO BARGAIN! 1' ^ I OSCO BARGAIN! PRESTONE 9 Lb. Fowl -1 2 1 b ^ Rpo i ONLY ^ M 3 * * per Monlh Pl»SiS"nSHOUlDEBS Rent May Be Applied m i i r w i u to the Purchase JPrice T ROASTER r -V, •ANTVREEZE SHAMPOO - f T w o 0 Z . tu b e s NMEY#143- •CLEANER e / a u A B u m s REG; j b i o m MUSie-FUtNITURt SUNDAY 4MONDWOMIY SUNDAY>IWOWDAY OWIY 1-43 Miain Avig. East— ft >Twin Foil* . .'I 19’ TlrtesrNews, TWri Falls, Idaho Sunday, November 21. 1971 ' I - SoriagvT ^bvem ber t i. *yfi T im eS 'N e ^/ Twin rails# Idaho .19. isLon stumblel^

on inG rease in Latin lands ,-■1 ^NEW. YORK (UPI)-The Authoritative estimates set problem of the baUered child in^ incMence at 3i)p cases per NDcon administration has economic aijd political systems had no more luck than its America is ‘‘completely and' oUe ' nm oif ’popuiatiwi^ Th^ for theWselves ”______^___L_ predecessors in setting up a Faced with the problem of growini',” an .officiar of the believed to near the-2,’000 mark workable policy toward Latin Vietnam, the dollar crisis, the American Academy of Pedia- annually, but Dr. Allen said America. ‘ Middle East crisis and relatlpns i m m I The last attempt at establish­ with the Communist world,'the tries reported Friday. that figure "is just the tip of the Dr. John E. Allen, chairman iceberg." BUDGETWISE ing over-all policy was made by Nixon administration has not of ^e acf^demy’s subcommittee Because of ‘‘slippage’’— the President Kennedy in his been’^ucky in its relations with on the battered child, said losing control" of the child AlltHncie for Progress — a 420 l.atln America. billion program to further l.atin It scarcely was in office able to cope with the problem, and elsewhere--many battered U.S.D.A.In3pect- American democracy throljgh before having to face up to For this reason the academy is children, thougU mended when education and economic aid. Peru’s expropriation of the drawing up a threepoint released, soon return, battered ed. Grade C. both by U.S. loans and grants American-owned International national program aimed at again. —7 - Meaty! an'd'by private pnvkstmenT*.' aiding the children and their "I liave seen two dead bat- It failed signalijr-in its at- familj.es and calling for: lered children from the same 4 tem pt to-divcr t l j >tin -(Vmerit;a — A network of coordinated, family at~different times, said from its traditional practice of diagnostic and treatment cen- Allen, who is pediatrics meeting social problems with A na ly sis ters to help shapejthe destiny of professor at Ihe State Universi- military dictatorships. the battered ctiild.'J'hese would ty . of New York’s Downstate SELF- BASTING SMAtl FRESH Currently on a tour of six be set up in such a'way-that at Medical Center, Brooklyn, Latin A m m t^ countries is Petroleum Company and its no point do responsible agencies „ ...... R obert H. W ic jv form er ‘‘loL control’‘ of U,e child. In ‘^e battered chi d secretary of heOTth/ education refusal to pay indemnification. hundre.is of c^es where a child P^^blea. most frequently is welfare, as a representa­ It seemed a clear-cut case for ik allowed to return-tt)-a.e en- a problem of r social programs such a.s housing must be estab- ment of fancy iced Holiday seem to be bursting with human chopsticks on his first trip to tliat because of ttio lack of sub­ Flaky crust! Cookies, Fruit Cokes, Pies STARTS RlQHT H ERE! JUMBOYAMS lislied Uh the> would l)e for oth­ interest tidbits about their Pekiii(f5* K issin g er p rep ared poena power any cornplaint.s un­ apd Cakes baked fresh er problem ;irea.>> if the ends are FRESH! Try them baked, mashed, or candied. journey last month to Com- himself for fils second gourmet der the law jjinnot be given (c daily specially for your hol­ to U 're a liz e d . -munfst-Ghina^------the stato for first examinatmn iday meals! But for fear of rockin’g the course In the a r t of chopsticks at but mu.st L’o dirertlv to the fud-. diplomatic boat, they are under . a Washington Chinese eral agency.. ity problems,appear to Ix- most- wraps to remain mum. restaurant. He. practiced on a He said Idaho official.^ have ttRfiffeeS^rPitted OLIVES l> in the future, bul he called MEDIUM YAMS The traveling party of Henry 10-course dinner. already been mfoniied of the Delicious aiid Nutritious! LB. (or planning now to solve the Kissinger, President Nixon’s deficiency. - -■1 problems in advance. POTATO national security affairs ad­ ^m e of the members of the 'M orning Fresh. Large ■ 'M Family $iie.. visor, are now an exclusive party quickly grewTlTBd of the AA. A must for Holi­ Far Eastern fare—particular Alrqditional holiday club. iTiey have seen with their day cooking. own eves the Red China isolated the ag^ eggs and eels. But ROLLS i s t r “ VANS SOPHISTICATED Light ond fluffy!___ from the Westeni world for 22 ------DOZ7 ITR ESH PEANUTS years. dishes, is a m an of the cookery. Although they remained close SALTED^OR PLAIN Altluugh they were attired in FOR -mouthed, some insights have Westtfn dress and obvloiisly been gleaned. Por example. ONLY wprp *VTPa, ttip Whltp Hnnqg Premier Chou En-lai perspnauy rip e strangers moved easily through Brifnmlng full of 2 "V 89^ : the streets of Peking. Some­ mince meat fillV for Thanksgiving. times they were applauded and ing in a flaky Buttercrust 1 lb . p k g ...... URGEST SECTION they responded with applause. c ru s t! THiANBERRY PUMPKIN U ttie children in the parks EA. ORANGE JUICE WALL broke into laughter. BREAD Pure. Full of Vitaminm ln Cl em ad

' i ' .:.j ■ T - -^.20_ in in 6f-Newsi Twin Falls* = Idahcy • Sundayi Npyernber_ Il_i_ .. -i------• -7“ • ■ ■ ■ '.

liOS ANCELES,,yjPIl — froni the one yard line alter accept Mary itindridcs pbw ^^ . Nbuifired M o rn aet up the score 'from the seven yard liite in the . with, -a 57-yard ^nin from’ third period' Saturday to bring sQrinimage, longest o f. the bid to iheet Alabama the UCLA'Bruins a 7-7 tie >«th game. the University of iSouthem The game started out as a LINCOLN, Neb. (UPD-Hie 'Hianksgiviiig Day against, se- bid . to meet fourth-ranked^ Califbri^ In. their traditional punting duel with neither, t e ^ top-rankea J^ebraska Comhus- cond-ratedOklahoma, Saturday Alabama U the. Orange Bowl c n ^ tb im classic p la y ^ before able to gain an advant^e in it'accBptBd~arrOrange Bowl -Jan . 1.— ------at-thei^eollamm the Brat period. TTie acceptance wag. an-_ It was only the sixth Ue in 41 ThXTftpailB gained posses- /Hounced by sports information meetings between the two Los^^on of their 11. early in the Kimberly loo^s for director Don Bryant, who Angeles schools. UCLA went quarter when Eddie relayed to newsmen the com­ into the game a two touchdoWn Johnson intercepted- a pass. Jt ment of head coach and athletic underdog but nullified the odds was the first of four Intercep- better hoop record- ■ director Bob Djvaney:------Vlth a doggfed detense that Uons fur Uw Tiujans. ^ d e up for Its lack of passing Southern California moved at Kimberly; Dec. 11, Kimberly “This Is a great honor for us KIMBERLY — Some height, offense. the ball to their 40. Ihen Moore a t C astlefo rd ; Dec. 16-17, to be selected to play in the “ return of two starters and a .The Trojans tallied their broke over left tackle tor the holiday toumameht at Hansen; Orange Bowl for the second-, transfer add up to things that touchdo wn in the second period S7-yard run to the UCLA three. Ja.n. 4, Castleford at Kimberly; straight y^a r ,'~BinS~vie are all could let the Kimberly Bulldogs when LouTlarris plunged over On the second play, Harris Jan. 7, Shoshone at KimbCTly; very happy to be going, to and n w coach Dick Rees easily Miami to play a great-Alabnma dived In from the one. Jan. 8, Kimberly at^aHflS': Jan. ■ Improve on the 4-16 record of team .'______Tn qiinrti>r Fred McNelU abnost blocl K im ^ rly ; jijan. 21, ■While we are certainly ' The Bulldogs w|U have the looking forward to the Orange Schilling Dave Boulware's punt from the tallest man in the Little Five Kimberly at Hansen; Jan. 22, 13 and UCLA fielded the baU on Glenns Ferry at Kimberly; Jart. iBowl when the tim e comes, we Conference in 6-8 Jim 0roWn, are concentrating, at the the 30. It tobk the Bruins only 29, Wendell at Kimberly; Feb. and the junior class has con­ moment on our No. 1 objective four .plays to score with ' 1, Kimberly at Murtaugh; Feb. leadsO SU tributed M Ernie Monroe and —the^am e with Oklahoma on Kendrlc(cs carrying three times % Kimberly at Shoshone, Feb. 5. John Burman, M transfer from 'nianksglving Day>" ^ Including the last one for the Valley at Kimberly; Feb. U, Laramie, Wyo., who probably The Cornhuskers had reason touchdown from seven yards Kimberly at Filer; Feb. 12, will be with the Bulldogs for just for downplaying the Orange to winr , out. ^ this year slhce his father is orf— Kimberly at Oakley, and F e . 19, fiowl bid in the face of > their EUGENE, Ore. (UPI)-FuU- Both teams tried desperately sabbatical leave ..from Kin>ber^W endgU. meet^g-—Thursday w ith aii-- W ^aOMB- 'pracflde**-fai6BleBmBi back Davo Schillings Oregon' ■for a score In the final period University of Wyoming. 6l»-foot Oklahoma team which has blowing linder watchf^ eyes of coach Weeb State's alltime ground-gainer, without success. produced the nation's to;S Joe I\aitiath Ewbanks Is'l/ew.^Dili Jets' star quarterback Joe plunged over for thre.e touch­ The tie left USC with a 6-t-l Bing offensive performance of the Namath as he joins team’s oflfenslve units for downs Saliu-day to lead the record and-rUCLA with a 2-7-1 Tom Sapp, 6-2. ^ year to match the Cornhuskers' tries w orkout workout Namath worked out for more than an Beavers to their eighth straight m ark. V eterans in the guard line will may return No. 1 defense. -hour and said he still Isn’t healthy enough to win over Intra-state rival be Rick Lee, M senior; Lindsy A Big Eight conference rptVrn^to action. (UPI telephoto). Oregon” 30-29. Posey, 5-10 senior; Kent Collins, championship w d pl& l/3m LNorth l!ewis, the University of would not predict wheh the 26- last‘summer as a nation-f arm), defensive end Lyle ofCaitUfard Over In the AFC, San Diego Is five years. This season he was ah ead 7-3. Houston basketball coach, said year-old guard would be able to ally televised ■ 133-F«b<>unda while put'hls uniform baeicoh.------Friday his Cbugars should be attraction. Cleveland, Houston at Cin­ questionable for Denver, ahd averaging 9.5 points per game. Bing was poked In the eye by among the top 10 in the nation cinnati, Denver at Kansas City Washington played for the former teammate Happy and his freshman team could Miami at Baltimore and the Hawks In 1965 but went to the Haristoii in an Oct. 5 exhlblttbn compete with the Southwest New Yorl( Jets at Buffalo. (Griffith will (Drcago Bulls In the expansion TROPIQUARIUM game against the Los Angeles Conference Varisty teams. PitlsbuTRh plavs._hoat to the. draft In 1966. He was traded In -Lakers: He cuntinued tu play Fullback Lewis, appearing at a news New York Giants in an inter- TTgbTTeacTief 1969 to Philadelphia and last ^1WH(TSt*RGESrPErST0RE^ but his vision deterioraied u^til ■ coiilerence, "also—diided“ -the- conference game. year with the 76ers took down the operation. leads team University of Maryland fOr Prothro's Hams, who began NEW YORK I UPI) - EmU 747 rebounds'and averaged 13.0 Now Open 9 to 9 Mon. thru Fri refusing to play Houston this the sea.son with *a revamped Griffith, the former welter and points per game. Sat. & Sun. 9-6 year. Both Houston and over rival lifK'backlng crew, a rookie middleweight champion and Hawk Coach Richie Guerin Maryland are expected 16 have and a semi- veteran of«2 professional bouts, said he “hated to lose a player powerful teams. Stanford of Bridges' caliber" but he SEATTLE, Wash. (UPIl,^ revi.sed receiving corps, were will fight his 23rd ma^n event at “Maryland must be oroud of fhnt Wq

ht they, could handle the a c c I n c N c W W U r lP I derson dived in from the otie^ iv/ie/i )'0(/ \ook ,il ,-)// ^ty schedule if something for an Insurance score. to the varsity, the WANDS... BY MARINEL4ND Cal p enetrated Stanford terri­ replied: • tory only three times, on^pe o aa OF THE PACIFIC! NOW we were playing..iii the pair of penalties. The Golden s k i - [ l o o 7 2 Southwest Conference,- they APPUANCt & Bears, 13-point underdogsr' I).IS m o r e g o in g lor yo u IN STOCK IN ALL S IZ E S |^ could.” rolled to the Stanford 24 tn the STEREO Tlien he cauj^ biniself and -third quarter but HARDY, HEALTHY ju Jd , ‘‘Oh, It shouldn’t have said ^ R L MANUFACTURING COMPANY, iN c 9M9nd B«t • l« M ItoMl IhaL Ibat’s going to get tne in drive aid the __ OZARK GROWN... "troable;'* ; came clow again. BECd SKI-DOOSAU^T Houston was admitted to the brown waiiunned l«S MmiHwmi SUM) .. t. /Soufln^Conference last May. leading offensive GOLiyFISH! batawbaskBtbanteiundoesnot aive honors*^t SAWTOOTH VAUL^ ENTERPRISES ■. .'start playing for. the ■SWC^defensiTOlbadc.^R__ . baskeBiall Utle iiidO the 197S-76 t)|^ best game of the Slacker SUMER'SPORTS Ecf; " season. both players. -V1

•1 / „ '. Sunday, November Jl, WVTlrnM;New», Twin Falls, Idaho 2l‘ ■ '::iM Lecii Pttroeher wasn^t worrwrl Borah to victory about job £or-nftxt season ... BOISE (UPir- Jeff Hickey for the ganie, the; .-.ilippiEid for ontf touchdown and final ohe stalling a grizzly drivtf CHICAGO (UPI)-y-All the "I don’t say we didn’t have a speed on the team,- help '.'set up two more with pass, in­ that had reached , the Lion Iff. hullabaloo gyer who would problem in the clubhouse at one' bullpen, and that "I’il.be:. terceptions as the Borah Lions Skyltoe, 8-3 for the year, . manage the Chicago Cubs in tiime last summer,- and there lookini; for deals.’’ ’ ' ‘ ^ H thrashed Skyline 42-14 to win a scored its only other score on a ' • . 1972 neyer affected Leo Duroch- was one individuai/tiall player ^ '^.ipostrsdason trip to Hawa&. 20 y a rd p a ss fro m ' G reg er—^he had the job safe by a that I may have had words with. ' rl Borah, now aiiainst the Thompson to Don Eberle. mile. But-foF—a—managep^to—have— P t-IT lO U -i-tl BiMh-'J tinfil- toucT “Nobody ev' ■ Thanksgiving day gatne as the came on a one-yard run by was dismissed as manager of. hothing new. wins ' * representative of the. Southern Reserve running back Bob the Cubs," he told' a news 1...... don't think’- you can please “'Idaho Conference. The Lions Johnson. conference after club 'owner everyTwdy, and most of the tjnie PUINCETON, N.J. (UPD- jiand Skyline had finished PhUip K. Wrigle'y had am- you can’t please anybody, but 1 Junior quarterback Steve Stet- ■'liBaOlucked.fui Uie SIC TiUe nounced-ha was keeping Ihir- don'44hink thoro'o a manogor in— !»n .Siiturdav euided n.irtmouth— ' ' -with 7-1 records. ocher, following a short meet- baseball who iias 25 ball players to a 33-7 romp over Princeton ^ But Hickey, a two-w^y, per- Sayers is* ing. that like. him. But I've never and a tie with Cornell for the “former, .broke the . de^dlQ^ \ He had no doubt, he said, "for had a player who didn't play Ivy le a g u e crown •Nearly in playoff game by pit- the simple reason that 1 have a hard for me. ” in his second start of the -ching five yards to Jeff Bl^nk sidelined contract. There wasn’t any • Durocher said lie couldn’t season. Stetson, who engineered ^■for the first score and setting up oj thR nfiiL two with intyceW o^ for s e a s o n upset about it because I-hadn't prospects fur 197"2, and that last week over Cornell, passed th at gave the Lions, 10-1 overall, h eard . 1 just ,sat back uhlil there may or may not be some -rfoi one tuucliduwii, “Tan— for ' a 21-0 halftimp lead. CHICAOO (Upi)-Gale &y- somebody tells me." deaKs, Bui he said lie would like another, and set up a third with ■" Fullback Monte White went 25 ers, the .Chicago Bear’s injury- • Durocher was told Thursda> one of his many lon^ gaining y ard s and M ike Holton 30 for the riddled running back, is out for night that it was his club for passes ' scores. the rest of the season.due tq a a n o th er y e a r, an o th er vote of IVinceton was able tu score Holton added two more touch- festering knee inji^y, the Bears confidence from Wrigley who lloo.siors lakt‘ only once on a 10-yard pass -downs in the second half on runs announced Friday. last summer tx>ught newspaper from quarterback Kod Plumi)er "of 31 and five yards as Borah Sayers strained his left knee ads to express his displeasure I upset to fiJlback Doug Blake with ^'opened, up a 35'! lead early in while favoring , an injured left ' with reports of dissatisfaction four seconds left in the game thelourth period. foot during a game with San by some of the Cubs.players and j The iiiost spectacukiir play of Kr-^ncisco,—Monday to reveal his confidence in BI.OOM1NGTON, Iifti: I the game came, when Dart- Skyline's only-counter w a s a — Uiiiierdug iiia developed on the irijuj-ed Taiee Durochef. ' inaiuiia, iiKlUth halitracK Brendan U Neii “ two-yeard run by Mark Masson tt; own b reak s, upset F^jrd,ue and Sayers was hosp^fieS for "I felt good about the ad," took the seTOHd hiif^ ... early in the third period that ' tu rd ay , 38-31, in their tratii- observation. Durocher said. . - e hiiown 11 and weaved 89 yarda_^ ' tulminated an 80 yard drive. tional season-ending' finale to ' Friday the Imee-was placed in Wrigley, lft.bis ads, made itf through the Tiger defense for a Hickey ended up with three regain possession of the "old a cast to protect _ the heaiing clear that he intended to stick touchdown. oaken bucket" —the top prize process, the Bear^ said, rind the bj-‘Durocher, for 1971 at least. Dartmouth has now won or in Indiana football rivalry. s^mingly-jinxed-running 4)aek BuLhe left 1972 uncertain when shared tiie Ivy l,eguc title eight The Hoosiers, winning frorii was placed‘on the reserve list he said that after the 1971 tim es since 1956, wirihing i t l h e ...... the Boilermakers for the first Bulls trip for the remainder of the season. season ended, he'woiild "take a last^ two years.. time in four years, took charge ' Sayers, who has played in just look" at the Cubs. in the second half to finish the two games this season, has His “look" resulted in the new season 3-8 and 2-6 in the Big Celtics carri^ the ball 13 times for 38 contract, Durocher said, "there Ten. Purdue lost its fifth . CHICAGO (yPD -The Chica­ yarrfs! . weren't too many difficulties to consecutive league game' to go go Bulls, trailing throughc^ut the The “Bears also announced t)e ironed out" in his conference 3-5 in the conference and 3-7 first period, poured in 41 points tight lend Earl Thomas was with Wrigley. “They just over-all. in the second period Saturday activated Friday replacing Ray weren't there." Indiana scored three touch­ ..night, to outscorc the Boston Ogden who w as placeU' ofi the It was certain though that his downs after a pass interception Celtics by 20 points in the 12 m ove list. relations With the players was and two fumble recoveries and giinutes and coast to a 123-106 one subject covered. But added a field goal afteranother victory in a National Basketball D u ro c h e r s a id '"1 s e e no pass interception. The Hoosiers Association game. BasebalK problem there at all with the Bob l>ovc dropped 38 points to players myself personally." dominated play virtually throughout the second half, ^park .the Bulls to their fifth "I think we do .assemble, I although Purdue's Otis Arm­ straight win and strengthen is schedulc'd will sit down with a few in­ strong crashed for ' three their hold on second place in the dividuals and talk with thern. 1 PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) touchdow ns. -■ ' 1 minute eost of Shelby's Western Coriference's Midwest don't see any problem there. 11 T he 1971 w in te r b a s e b a ll Fullback Ken St. Rerre Division. don't believe there's that big a on Additon Ave E. meetings will open Monday, No v. gained 144 yards in 26 carries "‘The win gave the Bulls a 12-5 lloekv*y sia r communications gap with the 29, and the first item on the for the Hoosiers and scored two season record and cijt Boston's players..Maybe there is in their 733-5424 agenda is tlie annual major is reeovcrJng touchdowns. record to 11-7, although the league draft. m ind. Celtics held the lead in the Hank Peters is’scheduled to Atlantic Division.. be installed as the new RECUPERATING AT Jewish Hospital in St. Boston never came closer president ^f the National Louis from a spv" ..«>t fracture is veteran than 12 pbTiitsTn th e ' last half Association- on Wednesday defenseman N'—l Plcartl of the St. Louis Blues AMERICAN DEALERS despite John Havlicek's 23 succeeding retiring PBil hockey team! Picard was riding a horse when the points, in th« -34 m in u te s . Piton. Peters was elected to the, .horse reared and the horse’s nunp fell on HflvlicelUed the, Boston scorers Minors' numlyr ono opot loctj- Picard’s foot He suffered a compound fracture > i th 32. of the right foot, ankle and heel. (UPI telephoto). GET ACQUAINTED sum iper. OFFER TO YOU! 11 PIECE OLD VILLAGE

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129 JMorth-Brpadway 301 West Main [AMERICAN] BUHL, IDAHO JEROME, IDAHO m vf I » MONDAY u WISS’S AMERICAN ' LAMMl’SAMEIUCAN NOV. 22 1105 Kimb«rly Road 341 Shoshon# Sh-Mt North -«i^NfAtiSr«>AHp= TWIN FAU^rlPAH% TUESDAY N O V .^ 3 ^ ^ WEDNESDAY lOHfrSAipiCAN BtUEUKESAMERKiM JJIJ.MKRICAN ..SI'S Main Av«nu« North 3 0 6 BliMr l0k«s- 1841 Addlion Avenue East NOV. 24 JEWINPAIIS^IDAHO— ■ 23 Tlmes-N^ws, Twin Falls, Idaho. Sunday, Novaniber J1, 1971

Utah State p^kstTdaho

Penn State iMQSCOW,idaho (.UM) -4 1 ^-' Utalj State scored once in the Adjuns threw his thin! TD prd^tting tlt^ State quarter- second quarts on a 36-yard run t pass of the game early the back Tony Adams passed, for-^iy fullback Ed GUes andiwent final quarteclwhen he hit run­ three touchdowfiS Saturday as into the locker room with a 21-7 ning back John Strycula on an r o u t s P i t t the Aggies bombed Idaho, 42-13. lead. * ' eigM-yard scoring strike. in-a non-conference football thib -Ap p Ips n..t tn Tnhn finnlly,.arnrfid. agaln-aL — p r r r S B im G H C C PD -^LydeU-r -Moyerr-tmd-a^thre»^>^ -ithe midpoint oif the quarter on IVQtchell • ran Wr U\ree touch­ from Havem to Les Block. Adams Completed 22 of S3 less than a minute and one half a 77-yard punt return by Rod downs, extending his own TOe Panthers were in the’ passing attempts to break ca- Of of the third quarter with Maynard. The Aggies wound up NCAA record, and John Hufna- game only briefly, trailing 7-0 reer-passli)gmarkssetj^ former Adams clicking to Wicks ^ a in , their scoring with a 62-yard pass gel passed for two others to late in the first quarter when Aggie quarterback John Pappas this time for 46 yards: That was interception by comerback Bob power undefeated Penn ^ t e to they moved to Penn State’s 29 in the'niid-lfl60s. 1. the only score for tha_third Bloom. AU4old Utah State a 55-18 rout of Pitt Saturday yard.line on a 40-yard run by Utah gtate caine .out throw- quarter as the Aggleis kept Ida- picked oft seven Idaho passes and assure the Lions a bid to completed most, of ho mired deep in its own terri- during the game, the Cotton Bowl. his 10 first half pass successes in tocy while the Vaiidal defense 'Rie two teams wound up the Mitchell gained 181' yards the Aggies’ first two drives contained Utah State near mid- season with identical ft-3 rec- rushing in 21 carries and :h resulted in touchdowns. field. • ords. Huftiagel completed eight of 12 J3ie_Aggies-scoFed-theiF-fiF8t~ passes for 168 yards to help the touchdown midway through the sijpth-ranked Lions roll to a 48-0 first quarter when running back id- in from 3 ^^ard fieldgoal through the third period. pass to Parsons and Tom ~the one to cap, a -three-play 42- It was Penn State’s 15th Donchez burst 26 yards up the yard drive highlighted by a 40- ‘ straight victory, 10 this season, middle to ^ark {the drive, yard pass play frpm Adanu to lets Utah nip BYU and its sixth consecutive which ended when Donchez split end Bob Wicks. lopsided win ovfer its intra-state fumbled an eight-yard comple­ Thesecond Aggiescoring drive PROVO, Utah ( UPI) - Marv the Cougar 15 In nine plays and rival. tion from Hufnagel at the goal came the next time they got the Bateman’s last-minute 32-yard Bateman booted the three- Bob Parsons and Chuck Herd line and Parsons recovered the ball and went 39 yards in eight fieldgoal overcam e an NCAA pbinter to give Utah the final caught 52 and 49-yard scoring bal| In the end zone.' - plays with Adams hitting Wicks season record fourth punt victory margin withi 1;05 passes from Hubiagel, and Penn State out gained Pitt, on a seven-yard scoring strike. retupi- for a , Jouchdowi by remaining. -■ . - ' Parsons scored, another touch- .T7S yards to 90 and 18 first The second q uarter was near- Brigham Voting’s Golden Van Galder, replabUig injflrCd" ' d6wtt Wheft he recovered dorwns to two by the Panthers ~ ly -an laalKr witn "tBB-V andals RlUiw Ja III U tuliV 17;l!i w n r Scooter Longntire, connected on ^TOnWeq Tn the end zone. in its most producyse, first half scbrfng once and nearly punch­ over BYU Saturday. *-21 of 37 passes for 200 yards and Mitchell, whose 28. touch­ ' of the y ear, .which ended wizh ing in twice more. The Vandals Richards took Bateman’s ran three yards for Utahe ui interest 'oown by large num­ Owls. the WUdcats. came with only 2:40 left In the discussions wiUi c'lnc leaders in Boise this .spring and suroiner bers of people from this area Both teams seemingly hiid Gooding and fad'eWay personnel and will bring in many of the top attending the races in Boise. Anderson’s touchdowns came game when Jack Demlng the game wrapped up ^ but decided not to open the featured dra^ cars in the United on a run of two yards'and twice Intercepted a Mike Rasmussen different times in the final five raceway this year. Reason for .States, Three of the races will on runs of one yard --all in the pass and returned 16 yards Into minutes, before Simmons postponement of the Gooding bo m ajor d rag racing events firsthalf when the Wildcats ran the end zone. -kicked the go-ahead points thaP rarrw-ny involved Nc\v's plans When ronstrufted the Tennessee up a 2Wriea(l as a crackerjack The win gave Northv*es