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ze : citr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilpgr. 2aT9Th issue TWIN FALLS inAHO TUPfiDAY _ltll Y Ji 1 H i x o r t l e t H a l d e m a n a t4 m e W/ViHINUTONiUl'li I’nviUe fituon 11 H lluldeinan sat alone at hoinf one siiniiijfr,niKt'l listi^rimg ty President Nixon's seirvl tapes wpes lhat Nixon tTHsUPnrt>i( tii-JlicSrnTrrr' Watergate committee. Haldeman's Senate hearint’S Monday tame in llu' »;ike of , — Nixon's Statement last nmrsd;i > tli.it jKine of the tapes o( his conversations "h.is Ik’cii trans(Titx!d or made public and notu' »ill U' ' --Nixon's refusal to respond to siihpiJi'nas tiy the Senate committee anil S(H'i-ial I*! mm'i iilur Archibald C'ox, a refusal that could lead to a historic legislative vs. executive ciuislitiiliiPiial confrontation in U)e Supreme (’(jurt Cox already has filed suit in U.S. District tburt and a show cause hearing has been sct»'- duled for Aug. 7. llie conuiilttee is cxpti teil In file suit Uus week for a declaratory jVulniiu'tTt White tloiLse V>cpiUy Press Secretary Clerald 1,. Warren confirmed that llaldeinan li.nl -llstPnwrniTlw^app.s- nntl'so hnd White Hmisr special counsel T FWd Hii?hardt and , secretary M^vtrtttill "hie kiiowlctljie that Nixon has taped all his conversations u'us gttlfiefl b y a CLiniiniltee investifyityr and Jfiter confu iiicd in testiiiionv lx>fore-riie lOminitt’ee ii> a ri’luclanl uitness. former White llouse Deputy Assistant Alexander 1’ HutterfieKI 'ITiis was not the case'on~'the news of Haldeman's, privati' audience The foriiier White House I'hief of staff and his lawyer, .Icrhn J. Wilson, theuist'lvM.s discUi>L-d that he had lis te n ^ to the tapes And the WtijU* Hoii.ke. through-Huzhardt, told llaldeman that he .could testify alxiut those [wrtiiuis v( tlir l.ip. niadi' of meetings was "Apparently we have one set of r^ll^■^ for everybody in the UiiUed Slates and .mother set of rules the President has decried fur Mr — MHtdeiTTHTrr' Scn~" tJTOTtt-PT’AVt'Trki’ r Jr.. R- Conn., a committee member, told reporters later. Presi^dent has waived any theory of executive privilege, separation of powers and any theory whatsoever by giving this citizen this information and by withlioUling it from other - citizens and [he duly constituted authorltes "In the minds of the ^Vmerican people it's going to spejik for itself," Weaker said Sen. Daiyft K Innuye; D-Hawaii^ another commihee mernbT?!*; also said Nixon "has waiviM his right to the tap<' K o p I in d a rk ' M R. HAEDEMATf, fonner Nixon chief of staff, t.-stlfled today Oiaf he-was kept in the dSrli' throughout 1972 about White House involvinqnt in the Watergate breaii-in and other "horrors.'' f I a i d e 111 a 11 ‘■igiioraiir o f e ritiie s n> WKSI.KY 0. PITPEHT. WAS«lM:i1'i>N ( UHl t — H - ^ H llaldeman disputed John N Mitchell anil John W Dean III and testified today lhat he was\ kept in ttK*. dark throughout 1972alx)ut'’W1nU' Hou.se involve- ment in th>' W.tUi (Vite break-»i or other potiuiti.illy embartass- mu activities ___ powerful man In the White House nsxt tu.the l^esident. (LlPil . Ctiully. willt a IrcuuaU. m n . -Ht)rdt*fnan —once tionhMlerwl the second most powerful man I I oK ji i I o I I aid m a ii, ^l.von u oii't biidgo -WASHHsKiTON-tlJHIf— PrvKidoiil fiJixwi it.' __ stoadiog-b)^-hix relusui tu—luru_iiver-taped-—„ eonversations to Watergate iin estlgators, although H.Il. Haldeman, his fornier chief of staff, and two top aides ha\e.heard rvplil) ----- White House officials report ] - Hatdeman revpatrd In fiis^ opentnE trstrmnny before the Senate Watergate ( oinniltlee Monday he had heard two sei rel prelhdeiitial tape rei' iirHlii|»s relulefi tii Waletgali:.------------- After he was out iif the White Housi-, in brief Goofs Hid Gem surplus — in'th'i' gDv'efntYipf^t ji'iigipni'rt while Ilic.-evenl.s that Miti hiiii rallpd ' Wiite House horrors" were ticked off h(k I .said all had escaped hts attention until this Haldeman ».ald lhat .Nixon also aulhorized him to take home in early July another tape tif a llls dii‘la.> spni* 4 ‘'^% iilk H ou ston i UPI ) - night director.s today delayed the first _ spacewallt of’ihe Sk'ylab 2 jn’'isi6in~n> SaTurcla'y fo give the astronauts time to cu'Te their motion sickness with rest, square Hwals and exercise. _______ tvtisMorrc-nmiiiuintrr Aln'nt. Bean prpdicleamal an easy schedule for the next lew days aboard the big space station, he Nin)ii‘TVpiurriirpliiig Tii wlilch firnn prf vlmiNly . W^iiay plan and rookie xjewiiiatuii Owen K Ciarr^ott ai^d .lack R, l.ousma would be ready to venture outside and proceed with their normar BOISE (UPI) — A member of.the legislative auditor's office says by acjding several rt-ansfers to the book balance of ^ e state's general ftind ihe closing.figure shows a surplus of tS.2 million for the 1972-73 fiscal year. This figure is nearly t2 million higher than that.announced by Qov Cecil D Andrus two .weeks ago iirk, managir legislative auditor's offtco. told membPt^ of tfir legislative Revenue Projection Committee Monday an eddilinnal $1 Snrmion was a^H^ to the 1972-73 fiscal year-cnd bonV traiance from two transfers thaT~weren’t maSe and one that was made and shouki not ttaw l»«?n Kirk said the additions were made up of $600,000 in funds held in the .standing surplus ac- count of the state refund fund, J1 1 million in additional surpluses held in the stale sales tax fund and a $2.17,000 transfer to the puhlu school income fund. Kirk said the Idaho co<ie calls for a standing balance of $400 000 in the state refund fund, but the fund closed out the fiscal year wit'h a $1 million balantv Iiikewise, he said, the .sales tax fund had a surplus of $1.1 million at the dose ~6Pthe year and should have'Been'reduced to $50,000. The $237,000 transfer was made during the fi.scal year, but State Auditor Joe R. Williams told the committee the additional transfer will ^ ansfcrrt^ to thu spring ihe crew-cut . .. former advertising executive told the Senate Watergate Committee tliat when he did l»arn -that— through White House efforts fiinds were channeled to the .sf\cii original Wal,grgate il.-f.-mlHnts, he treated that news as "incidental public -school income fund next vear. Rep William Roberts, R-Buhl, co-chairman of the Joint Finance Appropriations Committee, said today he didn't understand the reason for ' 'breaking the pattern on the transfer uf fundi la the Public School Income Fund 1 think the executive branch was trying m every possible way lhat they could," Roberts said, "to bring the figures out to where they could justify not lifting the entire holdback " Roberts was referring to a | S per cent general fund spending holdback imposed by the governor la.st vear Bellevue cyclist killed SAWTOOTH CITY - James I. Brothwell, 19, Bellevue, was kill^ Monday when his motorcycle collided head-on with a pickup trm k near ■SaB.-tnoth T ily ------------ :— : ------------ -According to Slate Policeman Max I) SimpSOK^l«raflwr of the trnck, Steve J Morrow, 22, Wallace, and a passenger. Thomas A. Cannafoffo, 25, Spokane. Wash . were uninjured Simpson said the accider* occurred about 6 p.m-on U.S Highway 93, 6ne mile north of liawtooth t’ity, about w miles south Of Stanley. negotiate a curve, apparently Because nf WRtr speed, traveled into the southbound lane and collided with the Morniw vehicle, the patrolman . .said... ___ _________ _________ ______ ________________ itliurmaliun received M il- dismi.ssod " He also testified he was told nothmg of the brcak-in into the offid' of Daniel Kllstii'rg's psychiatrist, of the attempt to hide Dila Beard, lobbyist for International Telephone and Telegraph, from senators who wanted to question her. or of attempts to falsify cables from .South Vietnam to unplicate President .Tofih K Kennorty in the a.ssa.ssination of l*remier Ngo Dinh Diem MitchwU-testified bofore the committee that he told Halde- man of the "White Hou.se horrors" with the intent of "keeping tho lid on " Dean .said ~he tQldTTaldcman of the payoffs to the W«tergate burglars Mitchell-wasdirgctor of Nixon's PTt le,uifiL'd Nixiin longratiihili-il him for "coiitaining"lhe Watergate lir4 ‘flk-ifi ease to tlie seven urtginiil defendants. But late Monday evening. Warren said: "The PfesldenI has made his posllioii clear on this mattcrl The Presidenf'has stated his position," in refusing th«> tapes. Pirpils face night controllers decided that rest was the- number onb consideration and put the 3 ‘uhour spcewalk off until Saturday, advancing '.he pilots' first day off to Friday. The astronauts began the fourth day of their research voyage when they were called, at 7:21 _a. m.EDT by' grfiUQi,; communlcatoc Robert L. Crippen. "Good morning down there space fans," answered I.«usina. "Good morning. Jack, you sound mighty chipper this morning." replied Crippen. A mission control spokesman said the revised schedule for the spacemen gave them time "to do as they like" this afternoon with no scheduled activities The mwiing^ ^wes devoted to . catching up on the lagging spacecraft activation work. ■ The spacewalk, to raise » sunshade over Skylab and install film in itssbliB-cam^rHii. Ul IKlnaW? was sm furtl'niuv------------------- longer walk HUPKRT - Minidoka founty students may have to walk a little farther to get home from school next year The Minidoka School B'oard Monday night approved the bid of Standard Oil Co for gasoline for the district's vehicles for me next year ~ but it included an allotment le.s.s than^(ie.rcarr?ht year's. A-ssisUuit superinlendcBU^wyfe f'Owder told, the trustees the company offering the g^ J u r 27 7 cents a gallon, but reserved the right to alter the' price and reduce the amount without notification The bid, Ixiwder .said, was for 155,000 gallons, atiout 90 per cent of the current year 's allotment Superintendent Darrell Hatfield presenled the board with a series of proposals designed to meet the anticipated shortage of gasolina-:^ They-incliiiled - - the possibility of dropping .some children oTf abotrt one half mile from their homes m the aftcrhoon. but continuing to pick hoiA«‘ WASHIN0T0I^5 Sen John C^JSt^finis, D-Miss , wound(t)*^seriously in -a- ^Washington Street holdup last January, was formally dis- charged from Walter Reed Army Medical (’enter Monday Stennis, who said, "This is a happy day for me," does not plan to resume his Senate duties for several weeks -at- Simpson said the youfh died immediately upon imp»Gt^ His motorcycle came to rest 142 feet from the point of impact Morrow told "the investigating officer he altempt&d to avoid the collision by driving into the west Ixirrow pit Simpson said Uiu left front of the Morn ra.<ilBClion ..campaign- time and Dean was counsel to ............... - I did not know of any of the Items that I can rccall reading in the newspapers or hearing Mr Mitchell testify to under the category of White House tiiii I HI s‘ iit tiiis time l.i .^t year: the ihgrp lip at hnmp HI artirp fueling administrstive travel vehiele^ from oommercial tanks, wiLh the district reimbursing the administration for the commercial cost; — fueling driver training vehicles from commercial lank-s, with a similar reimbursement system-------------------- --------- Hatfield also said one other pos.sibility waf to cut back severely on all extra<urricular activities, alt lough he said In^=y th> hoard had rejected that proposal while agreeing that T ru ck noLsc (*urbft a.sK«“d tcj WashlnBlonStar-N£ws _ . .. W ashington - The Environmental Prntertion- Agency proposed today that limits be pul on ihP noi.se thtit uig iniersiale Irucks'can makermarMng the first time the feden4-e«vernm«nl has attempted to control noise. , ------------- David D Dominick, E P A assistant administrator, said the limits would bring down truck noise to the point where it could ror ty-lieard abtive iiuiiiraM rafftr ............... The proposed levels would involve heavy-duty diesel trucks over 10,000 pounds Brothwell, who was northbound, failed to pickup sustained .about J1.500 ‘daijiage llaldeman lold the comrnitt?e the other steps might be neces-sary Solons seek records on Nixon houses ' WASHlNi!iTON rUPI) — ihe chairman ol a House govern- . j n e o t . « i peii'aitur « t -tald=wlay-^be-Wtfl 4 ^--a<g?F _?ubpoena? of cphstriiclion recofds fail' Prestdent Nixon** homes- in Florida and Califorfiia, said to have tetwMn 13.5 3rid Jj7 million in goyemmentfunded improvements. Rep.'Jack Brooks. D-Jexas, said Vhe White House was trying to block the subcotnn»itte«4nvesUg«tibn_. The full Government -Gptrations CbmmlHtfc Will meet 'Hmrsdax »ci«V the request ttfiUlXj uililpil -------- - ----I. ' - ---------- stalirrt'eflrDn construction at ttte t Jonua'and CaUfornla W Mtf rwtlHie ready later this week ------------------------------ Brookg M>id he met over lhejseekeiHt.wiULGSA.jAdmini£trAlor "The White House has now involved itself in this investigation and is seeking to block the subcommittee from carrying out its "cSristiSiifionaJ'obligMlon,’* BrooRTiaid. ^ acrw ofThf sah clarnenTB estate -=?Brinve3ttnent for all th^ property exc«pt^i,a-acres, which Nuon retained. 'Under the settlement, Nixon’s outstandinR loan-froflfVjWjplanBlp- lotalin^ $625,000 was then canceled It will be the third time the administration has attempted to add up outlays for projects at the presidential compounds, which it maintains were r^uested by Ihe Secret Set^’ice. I^rn^^xq^Q5:]^ovgr^V Mw House aoid an a.tim »f d $:n,f»in had Arthur Sampson who promised > 1111(1 all the files (jn construction. ’ Then, Brooks said, Sampson told him on Monday; "pursuant to instructions from the fl^ te House, he could provide no further data until the White House released a comprehensive statement on these matters,” ----- , --------------- • ■ "Vo p a r o l e for lr« inff WA.SHINGTONilfPn - The US Parole-Board has denied' freedom to Qifford Irving, who was sentenced to pri.son for d^ffaudlng-a-pttblwhcr wittv-a- faked biography of billionaire TTie board turned down Irving's application for parole •■Monday, saying tt would be consulered apatn in January of 1974 Brooks slid the government has turned over documents- indicating a total of tl.9jnIUiffn w u spent on Nixon homes at G«n«ral Services Adminlstrafion lOSA), whldiTiaJ stipervlatd the c()nstruction, has indkaied additional improvements were made, but has refused tjj tum'#»cr details. properties at San Clemente. Calif., and Key.BiMayne, Kla.. is' being prepar^ by the <Jeneral Services Administration (GSA). The New'York Times reported Sui^ay the total could reach tl»mUl>on-or more.AdmlnL<itraIiDnjiJffiicial3 said there was ‘Tio^ way” the total could be that v . l^ t they conceded the ^ im a te will be miich higher than $I .9 miillon stst"d S a GSA report June 21. x -' TherCswere indications the White House, at ^ e time the new r^ r t is issued, would clarify the President’s transaction with Tlie new report also Is expected to mention security •of Julie-emf-Bevid-Eisenhower in The GSA said Monday It U pfcparing a new “definitive" _ New Yo^k i^duAtrlalist Robert H. Abplanalp in Qie sale of a nearby Maryland and on Grand Cay in the Bahamas, anjsland .owned by Aljpian^p^ which Nixon has visited 11 tiiues as- President. ——^ TheIwme wherejhe Eisenhowers liveis owned by CharlesTT. ‘•Bebe” Reboaj, a aose WenS of the Fresidebt.--- ~ Officials said the announcement would be "dermitive” and that GSA j^ in il^ a to r Arthul-J.Sammri woiUd provide point- by-point information on the oiitlays. -------- . Hollar Drtails. p/18 Fdrifi,'9^ Living, 10 VaUey, 13 Sp^s, Edhorioli, 4 Markeis, 18 . 2 ^
23

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Page 1: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

z e :

c i t r ,

■ Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvrT g f f i l p g r . 2aT9Th is s u e T W IN F A L L S in A H O T U P fiD A Y _ l t l l Y J i 1

H i x o r t l e t H a l d e m a n

a t 4 i © m e “

W /V iH IN U TO N iU l'li I’ nviUe fituon 11 H lluldeinan sat alone at hoinf one siiniiijfr,niKt'l listi^rimg ty President Nixon's seirvl tapes wpes lhat Nixon tTHsUPnrt>i( tii-JlicSrnTrrr' Watergate committee.

Haldeman's Senate hearint’S Monday tam e in llu' » ; i k e of

, — Nixon 's Statement last nm rsd ; i > tli.it jKine of the tapes o( his conversations "h.is Ik’cii trans(Titx!d or m ade public and notu' » i l l U' '

- -N ixon 's refusal to respond to siihpiJi'nas tiy the Senate comm ittee anil S(H'i-ial I*! mm'i iilur Archibald C'ox, a refusal that could lead to a historic legis lative vs. executive ciuislitiiliiPiial confrontation in U)e Supreme ( ’(jurt

Cox a lready has filed suit in U.S. District tbu rt and a show cause hearing has been sct»'- duled for Aug. 7. l l i e conuiil ttee is cxpt i teil In

file suit Uus week for a declaratory jVulniiu'tTt White tloiLse V>cpiUy Press Secretary Clerald

1,. Warren confirmed that llaldeinan li.nl -llstPnwrniTlw^app.s- nntl'so hnd White Hmisr specia l counsel T FW d Hii?hardt and

, secretary M^vtrtttill "hie kiiowlctljie that Nixon has taped all his

conversations u'us gttlfiefl b y a CLiniiniltee investifyityr and Jfiter confu iiicd in testiiiionv lx>fore-riie lOminitt’ee ii> a ri’luclanl uitness. form er White llouse Deputy Assistant Alexander 1’ HutterfieKI

'ITiis was not the case'on~ 'the news of Haldeman's, privati' audience The foriiier White House I'hief of staff and his lawyer, .Icrhn J. Wilson, theuist'lvM.s discUi>L-d that he had l is te n ^ to the tapes And the WtijU* Hoii.ke. through-Huzhardt, told llaldeman that he .could

testify alxiut those [wrtiiuis v( tlir l.ip. niadi' of meetings was

"Apparently we have one set of r ll ■ for everybody in the UiiUed Slates and .mother set of rules the President has decried fur Mr

— MHtdeiTTHTrr' Scn~" tJTOTtt-PT’AVt'Trki’ r Jr.. R- Conn., a committee member, told reporters later.

— Presi^dent has waived any theory of executive privilege, separation of powers and any theory whatsoever by giving this citizen this information and by withlioUling it from other

- citizens and [he duly constituted authorltes "In the minds of the ^Vmerican people it's

going to spejik for itself," W eaker said Sen. D aiy ft K Innuye; D-Hawaii^ another

commihee mernbT?!*; also said Nixon "has waiviM his right to the tap<'

K o p I

i n d a r k '

M R. HAEDEMATf, fonner Nixon chief of staff, t.-stlfled today Oiaf he-was kept in the dSrli' throughout 1972 about White House involvinqnt in the Watergate breaii-in and other "horrors.''

f I a i d e 111 a 11

‘■igiioraiir o f e r i t i i e s

n> W K S I.K Y 0 . P IT P E H T .W AS«lM :i1 'i>N ( UHl t — H -

H llaldeman disputed John N Mitchell anil John W Dean III and testified today lhat he was\ kept in ttK*. dark throughout 1972alx)ut'’W1nU' Hou.se involve­ment in th>' W.tUi (Vite break-»i or other potiuiti.illy embartass- mu activities ___

powerful man In the White House nsxt tu.the l^esident. (L lP il

. Ctiully. willt a IrcuuaU. m n .-Ht)rdt*fnan —once tionhMlerwl the second most powerful man

I I o K ji i I o I I a i d m a i i , ^ l . v o n u o i i ' t b i i d g o

-W ASHHsKiTON-tlJH If— PrvKidoiil fiJixwi it.'__ stoadiog-b)^-hix relusui tu—luru_iiver-taped-— „

eonversations to W atergate iin estlgators, although H.Il. Haldeman, his fornier chief of staff, and two top aides ha\e.heard rvplil)

• -----White House officials report] - Hatdeman revpatrd In fiis opentnE trstrmnny

before the Senate W atergate ( o inniltlee Monday he had heard two sei rel prelhdeiitialtape rei' iirHlii|»s relulefi tii Waletgali:.------------- —

After he was out iif the White Housi-,

in brief

Goofs Hid Gem surplus— in'th'i' gDv'efntYipf^t ji'iigipni'rt

while Ilic.-evenl.s that Miti hiiii rallpd ' W iite House horrors" were ticked off h(k I .said all had escaped hts attention until this

Haldeman ».ald lhat .Nixon also aulhorized him to take home in early July another tape tif a

l l l s dii‘ la.> spn i*4‘ '% i i l kH o u s to n i UPI ) - n igh t director.s today delayed the first _

spacewallt o f ’ ihe Sk'ylab 2 jn ’ 'isi6in~n> SaTurcla'y fo give the astronauts time to cu'Te their motion sickness with rest, squareHwals and exercise. _______

— tvtisMorrc-nm iiiuintrr Aln'nt. Bean prpdicleam al an easy schedule for the next lew days aboard the big space station, he

N in ) ii‘TVpiurr iirpliiig Tii wlilch f ir nn prf vlmiNly . W^iiay plan

and rookie xjewiiiatuii Owen K Ciarr^ott ai^d .lack R, l.ousma would be ready to venture outside and proceed with their normar

BOISE (U P I) — A member of.the legislative auditor's office says by acjding several rt-ansfers to the book balance of ^ e state's general ftindih e closing.figure shows a surplus of tS.2 million for the 1972-73 fiscal year.

This figure is nearly t2 million higher than that.announced by Qov Cecil D Andrus two

.weeks agoiirk, managir

legislative auditor's offtco. told membPt^ of tfirleg is la tive Revenue P ro jec tion Com m ittee Monday an eddilinnal $1 Snrmion was a^H^ to the 1972-73 fiscal year-cnd bonV traiance from two transfers thaT~weren’t maSe and one that was made and shouki not ttaw l»«?n

Kirk said the additions were made up of $600,000 in funds held in the .standing surplus ac ­count of the state refund fund, J1 1 million in additional surpluses held in the stale sales tax fund and a $2.17,000 transfer to the puhlu school income fund.

Kirk said the Idaho co<ie calls for a standing balance of $400 000 in the state refund fund, but

the fund closed out the fiscal year wit'h a $1 million balantv Iiikewise, he said, the .sales tax fund had a surplus of $1.1 million at the dose

~6Pthe year and should have'Been'reduced to $50,000.

The $237,000 transfer was made during the fi.scal year, but State Auditor Joe R. Williams told the committee the additional transfer will

^ ansfcrrt^ to thu

s p r in gih e crew -cut . .. form er

advertising executive told the Senate Watergate Committee tliat when he did l»a rn -that— through White House efforts fiinds were channeled to the .sf\cii o r ig in a l Wal,grgate il.-f.-mlHnts, he treated that news as "inc iden ta l

public -school income fund next vear.

Rep William Roberts, R-Buhl, co-chairman of the Joint Finance Appropriations Committee, said today he didn't understand the reason for ' 'breaking the pattern on the transfer uf fundi la the Public School Income Fund

1 think the executive branch was trying m every possible way lhat they could," Roberts said, "to bring the figures out to where they could justify not lifting the entire holdback "

Roberts was referring to a | S per cent general fund spending holdback imposed by the governor la.st vear

Bellevue cyclist killedSAWTOOTH C ITY - James I. Brothwell, 19,

Bellevue, was k il l^ Monday when his motorcycle collided head-on with a pickup trm knear ■SaB.-tnoth T ily ------------ :— :------------ -—

According to Slate Policeman Max I) S im p S O K ^ l«ra flw r of the trnck, Steve J Morrow, 22, Wallace, and a passenger. Thomas A. Cannafoffo, 25, Spokane. Wash . were uninjured

Simpson said the accider* occurred about 6 p.m -on U.S Highway 93, 6ne mile north of liawtooth t ’ity, about w miles south Of Stanley.

negotiate a curve, apparently Because nf WRtr speed, traveled into the southbound lane and collided with the M orniw vehicle, the patrolman

. .said... ___ _________ _______________ ________________

itliurm aliun rece iv ed M il- dismi.ssod "

He also testified he was told nothmg of the brcak-in into the o ffid ' of Daniel Kllstii'rg's psychiatrist, of the attempt to hide Dila Beard, lobbyist for

■ International Telephone and Telegraph, from senators who wanted to question her. or of attempts to falsify cables from .South Vietnam to unplicate President .Tofih K Kennorty in the a.ssa.ssination of l*remier Ngo Dinh Diem

MitchwU-testified bofore the committee that he told Halde­man of the "White Hou.se horrors" with the intent of "keeping tho lid on " Dean .said

~he tQldTTaldcman of the payoffs to the W «tergate burglars Mitchell-wasdirgctor of Nixon's

PTtle,uifiL'd Nixiin longratiih ili-il him for "co iita in ing"lhe Watergate lir4‘ flk-ifi ease to tlie seven urtginiil defendants.

But late Monday evening. Warren said: "The PfesldenI has made his posllioii clear on this mattcrl The Presidenf'has stated his position," in refusing th«> tapes.

Pirpils face

n igh t controllers decided that rest was the- number onb consideration and put the 3 ‘uhour spcewalk o ff until Saturday, advancing '.he pilots' first day off to Friday.

The astronauts began the fourth day of their research voyage when they were called, at 7:21 _a. m .ED T by' grfiUQi,; communlcatoc Robert L. Crippen.

"Good morning down there space fans," answered I.«usina."Good morning. Jack, you sound m ighty chipper this

morning." replied Crippen.A mission control spokesman said the revised schedule for the

spacemen gave them time "to do as they lik e " this afternoon with no scheduled activities The mwiing^ ^wes devoted to . catching up on the lagging spacecraft activation work. ■

The spacewalk, to raise » sunshade over Skylab and install film in itssbliB-cam^rHii. Ul IKlnaW? was sm furtl'niuv-------------------

longer walkHUPKRT - Minidoka founty students may have to walk a

little farther to get home from school next year The Minidoka School B'oard Monday night approved the bid of

Standard Oil Co for gasoline for the district's vehicles for me next year ~ but it included an allotment le.s.s than^(ie.rcarr?ht year's.

A-ssisUuit superinlendcBU^wyfe f'Owder told, the trustees the company offering the g ^ J u r 27 7 cents a gallon, but reserved the right to alter the' price and reduce the amount without notification The bid, Ixiwder .said, was for 155,000 gallons, atiout 90 per cent of the current year 's allotment

Superintendent D arrell Hatfield presenled the board with a series of proposals designed to meet the anticipated shortage of gasolina-:^ They-incliiiled -

- the possibility of dropping .some children oTf abotrt one half mile from their homes m the aftcrhoon. but continuing to pick

hoiA«‘

W A S H IN 0 T 0 I^ 5 Sen John C^JSt^finis, D-Miss , w ound (t)*^seriously in -a-

^Washington Street holdup last January, was form ally d is ­charged from W alter Reed Army Medical ( ’enter Monday Stennis, who said, "This is a happy day for m e," does not plan to resume his Senate duties for several weeks

-at-Simpson said the youfh died immediately

upon imp»Gt^ His m otorcycle came to rest 142 feet from the point of impact

Morrow told "the investigating officer he altempt&d to avoid the collision by driving into the west Ixirrow pit

Simpson said Uiu left front of the Morn

ra.<i lBClion ..campaign- time and Dean was counsel to

...............-

I did not know of any of the Ite m s that I can rccall reading in the newspapers or hearing Mr Mitchell testify to under the category of White House tiiii I HI s‘ iit tiiis time l.i . t year:

t h e i h g rp lip a t h n m p H I artirpfueling administrstive travel vehiele^ from oommercial

tanks, wiLh the district reimbursing the administration for the commercial cost;

— fueling driver training vehicles from commercial lank-s,with a similar reimbursement system-------------------- ---------

Hatfield also said one other pos.sibility waf to cut back severely on all extra<urricular activities, alt lough he said In^=y th> hoard had rejected that proposal while agreeing that

T r u c k no Lsc (*urbft a.sK«“d

tcj WashlnBlonStar-N£ws _ . . . W a s h in g t o n - The Environmental Prntertion- Agency

proposed today that limits be pul on ihP noi.se thtit uig iniersiale Irucks'can makermarMng the first time the feden4-e«vernm «nlhas attempted to control noise. , -------------

David D Dominick, E P A assistant administrator, said the limits would bring down truck noise to the point where it couldro r ty - lieard abtive iiui i i raM ra fft r ...............

The proposed levels would involve heavy-duty diesel trucks over 10,000 pounds

Brothwell, who was northbound, failed to pickup sustained .about J1.500 ‘daijiage llaldeman lold the comrnitt?e the other steps might be neces-sary

Solons seek records on Nixon houses' WASHlNi!iTON rU P I) — ihe chairman ol a House govern- . jn e o t . « ipeii'aitur « t -ta ld=w lay-^be-W tfl4 --a<g?F_?ubpoena? of cphstriiclion recofds fail' Prestdent Nixon** homes- in Florida and Califorfiia, said to have te tw M n 13.5 3rid J j7 million in goyemmentfunded improvements.

Rep.'Jack Brooks. D-Jexas, said Vhe White House was trying to block the subcotnn»itte«4nvesUg«tibn_. The full Government

-Gptrations CbmmlHtfc Will meet 'Hmrsdax » c i « V the request’ ttfiUlXj uililpil ■-------- - ----I. ' - ----------

stalirrt'eflrDn construction at ttte t Jonua'and CaUfornla W M tfrwtlH ie ready later this wee k ------------------------------

Brookg M>id he met over lhejseekeiHt.wiULGSA.jAdmini£trAlor

"The White House has now involved itself in this investigation and is seeking to block the subcommittee from carrying out its

"cSristiSiifionaJ'obligMlon,’* BrooRTiaid. ^

acrw o fT h f sah clarnenTB estate-=?Brinve3ttnentfor all th ^ property exc«pt^ i,a -acres, which Nuon retained. 'Under the settlement, N ixon ’s outstandinR loan-froflfVjWjplanBlp- lotalin^ $625,000 was then canceled

It will be the third tim e the administration has attempted to add up outlays for projects at the presidential compounds, which it maintains were r^ u es ted by Ihe Secret Set^’ice.

I ^ r n ^ ^ x q ^ Q 5 : ] ^ o v g r ^ V M w House aoid an a.t im » f d $:n,f»in had

Arthur Sampson who promised >1111(1 all the files (jn construction. ’ Then, Brooks said, Sampson told him on M onday; "pursuant to instructions from the f l^ t e House, he could provide no further data until the White House released a comprehensive statement on these matters,” -----,--------------- • ■

"Vo p a r o le f o r l r « in ffW A.SH ING TO NilfPn - The

U S Parole-Board has denied' freedom to Q ifford Irving, who was sentenced to pri.son for d^ff audlng-a-pttblwhcr wittv-a-faked biography of billionaire

TTie board turned down Irving's application for parole

•■Monday, saying tt would be consulered apatn in January of 1974

Brooks slid the government has turned over documents- indicating a total of tl.9jnIUiffn w u spent on Nixon homes a t

G «n «ra l Services Adminlstrafion lO S A ), whldiTiaJ stipervlatd the c()nstruction, has indkaied additional improvements were made, but has refused tjj tu m '# »cr details.

properties at San Clemente. Calif., and Key.BiM ayne, Kla.. is ' being p rep a r^ by the <Jeneral Services Administration ( GSA).

The New 'York T im es reported Sui^ay the total could reach tl»mUl>on-or more.AdmlnL<itraIiDnjiJffiicial3 said there was ‘Tio ^

■ way” the total could be that v .l ^ t they conceded the ^ im a te w ill be miich higher than $I .9

m iillon stst"d S a GSA report June 21. x -'TherCswere indications the White House, a t ^ e time the new

r ^ r t is issued, would clarify the President’s transaction with

Tlie new report also Is expected to mention security •of Julie-em f-Bevid-Eisenhower in

The GSA said Monday It U pfcparing a new “ defin itive" _ New Yo^k i^duAtrlalist Robert H. Abplanalp in Qie sale of a

nearby Maryland and on Grand Cay in the Bahamas, anjsland .owned by A ljp ian^p^ which Nixon has visited 11 tiiues as- President. ——^

TheIw m e w herejhe Eisenhowers liv e is owned by CharlesTT. ‘•Bebe” Reboaj, a a o s e W en S o f the Fresidebt.--- ~

Officials said the announcement would be "derm itive” and that GSA j ^ i n i l ^ a t o r Arthu l-J .Sam m ri woiUd provide point- by-point information on the oiitlays. -------- .

HollarD r t a i ls . p / 1 8

F d r if i , '9 ^

L iv in g , 1 0

V a U e y , 1 3

S p ^ s ,

E d h o r i o l i , 4

M a r k e i s , 1 8 .

2 ^

Page 2: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

V --------T(c ) WashingtonStar-Newm .

WASHINGTON - President Nixen-Monday opened the first round o f n e i^ personal diplomacy aimed at bolstering his foreign policy agailWt the

ict o f the W atergate

at the United States." he M id In a speech_i(t the National Press Club Monday.

•'When our IntwWts do not coincide and When we disagree With the Unitett -States, we {halt, as a good friend should; iav M t ir m ljr and frankly,- c e r e m o n ia l ly

“ “ pretei'dbto Tii

relationships in the Pacific, ,_poting new relations with

China and North Vietnam.But he added that "w e do not

■ seek them at the expense of old, firm ones." , - T o d a y the - Presdient

alliances in the Far East, despite Nixon's troubles on.the home front.

Unlike Tanaka. ishere on a Short private stop, en route from an official visit in Mexico 'to -a ‘ coromopwealth

W ilco iS S S meeting ffi" Canada; He-had iw ep ted ail' IiivltHtiutrew liei t^ p e a k a f the National Press T luh Monday, but, .it was not

accordina iw hathiairtBf enif- the coolness in relations since Whitlam won power lasj Uecember.

-Whitlam defended his “ new nation a lism .” stating that Australia had no intenMon of breaking its allianco with the United Slates.

" W e do- -not wish to ur noses

WednesttayLNiron and Tanaka a re . expe.cted to talk frankly a h o u f- i jM d F antf" secufTtjT problems in the Pacific.

But the public image of the that the "m ost iip ^ rta h t" of talks with both Whitlam-and Australian relatioq^ips was , Tanaka, U. . S. o ffic ia ls “ the AmeriCaiT (•mnection,'' con fiden tly , pred ict, w ill

relectin tLt objections to the/; , bombing c a m p a ip ; against Nor’tifV ietnam

■ In his ■ speech^,. ;lhe prime minister repeatedly i asserted

He a<?knowled( A iia tra lla ' __ seej

thatnew

draA iatize strength of

Ihethe

enduringAm ericsn

Valtey Obituaries' ..........................; ................ _

I t u U o i i ( ! i r a i g L i n a e m e r I - l o y d I M c L e a n

S o g g y s e a r e l i ^

RESCUE workers search debris of houses destroved^ bv ,Jandslto_ foliowlng i ^ r l s e r a ff iS s S T n BazaUu. Japan. Torrenttal rains lushed southern Japan early today, causing a number of deaths and thousands of homes to be Dooded. (U P I)

TW IN F A L I^ - Friends havp rpreived word of the death of The R ev. Glenn Hutton, 82. a form er minister o(-the First Christian Church, Twin-Falls.

----- ftevT-Hntton^caffie'to TwinFalls in May, 1930. At that lime he was also a 'm em ber of the K iw an is Club arid ~the M in is te r ia l A ssociation . He.

TW IN F A L l^ , , y . Memorial services, for. qr^[e Andrew Undemer, 3-yeatT|ld j son of Major Arthur J. anil Kareii C. Lindem er J r., who died suddenly-Jirfy 22 in Ft. Worth, Tex., will be at 11 a.m. Aug. 6 at the Episcopal Church of the Ascension. ' ■-Jn_i(i}tJili“ n to his parents, he IS survived by two brothers, Kent and Mark lindem er; his

Astros setk motion sickness, cure-then accepted a pastorate with

The— Chelatlanr Church— at- pate fhah^r^ndparen ts , Mr. 'YaKima, W ash-Dur^g a single _ jm,d Mrs. Arthur J. Undemer evangelistio,meetin"g therfe"he J r . , Tw in Fa lls , and his baptized more than SOffpeople. ' rnqternal grandparentsr Mrr

HOUSTON ( U P Il - With their first spacewalk delayed again, the 5kylab astronauts today sough t-* eure for Ihefr motion sickness through exer­cise, rest and square meals.

launch and the other fliers suffered queasy stomachs.

“ If we could just lake it easy for a day or so, I think we

. could completely rft^;Qver .and be ready to go full steam ,”

“ I think were really dcalint' with Individual differences and susceptibilities, "Hawkins said."T h ere ’s no other way to explain 11.1 feel quite.confident. that what we're seeing is very

Bean predicted that with afl easy schedule the n e x t ' ffto days aboard the ir- orbiting spacecraft . he and rookie

all' monient tiniO we got up.

"W e seem to end up with ■^'rewmatea-OufOfi-jC-Garriotl— about as -Drtany, chores Xsl do and Jack R, Lousma would be new as chores we do old, so It ready to venture., iiutaide lends to keep us—tronv-reallyThursday. ....... progressingonlhoaetivalion.lt

Flight director Neil Hutchin- just takes a little bit longer toget going in-u-used spaoeocato

However; if thecrew^sfflotion sickness persists ,a week or longer, Hawkins said. "W e're going to have to talk aboi^t terniinating the mission,”

H uchinson said the astronauts

day of space research work the day after they walk in space

and Mrs. Hansen.

Charles H. Coiner,

' rtav Thgrj-^a-sn 't-a ' advancem en t towarr* adap-inient's hesitation‘^nStR he“ -1gttBh^arwwKhtl«aahess."

Dollar continues its slow climb

son saltfrhowevflT',' surprise' m e” i f tfie spacewalk tn deploy ...nnnther sun,shade

I f wouldn't ------------ --- ."SQ- ■ to” "speakj "thmr"~wH5n HnNDON l U P I) - The dollar evervthinK is right in its proper continued Its Inch-by-tnch climb

over the research ship was put off until FriHny if the crew failed to catch up on housekeep­ing chores vital to the two- month mission.~ "r 'm satisfied that things are

along p re tty _ j| »U ," Hoitchinsdn-said Monday night. 'St's slow but we're certainly making progress. If we don't maKe a lot of progress ( today) on finishing up the activation, we'll probably delay tlj,e EVA another day.”

— QatrioO and Lauami took more anti-nausea pills to ward off the space sickness set off by slow adaptation to weightlessnessr Ix)usma has vomited three times since

place.”

The pilots had been scheduled to make the first spacewalk today but instead take their first turns on a stationary bicycle, The past -Skvlnh crp_w recommended more exercise to make -their readaptation to earth gravity easier after the flight. ■

The Skylab 2 crew also planned to stari full meals from the spaceship's larder of

today, opertlng'm'nrginallyhigh- er in all European money markets,

" I t seems finally people may be reatting positivjely . (q the favorable bala,nce of payments report the U n U e^ ,S tjtg| j^ ed recently, ” a representauve of a

' U:Srbank said in Frankfurt.One Paris money trader said

the dollar was being helped by the current meeting in Wash­ington of the '(4rQ.lipi-ri)f 20” finance ininister.s of the TnteV-

—na tinnal^Monetary - F undr-who-

In I/)ndon, the dollar opened at J2.4980 to the pound in light trading, up fruiii Monday night's close of $2.5028.

In Frankfurt, the dollar rose slightly against the German inarlt, opening at 2 . 440 marks median compared to Monday’s closing of 2.33 median.

In' 1937 multiple .sclerosis treatment ftsirtted in his loss of hearing^and equnibrlum: At that tim e he wrote friends in Twih Falls that he was going to Alaskii to liv e with his daughter, Mrs. Marvin Johnson at Anchorage, "and prepare to

- -d ie ." However . -he~was- .ible W — rega in his strength and constructed a walker which he utilized. It ; enabled him to stand erect and’ fie accepted a

- positipn-iaK custodian _at. Jhe ’ TTlmenrinr f Army Base.

Later lie began givirfs. lectures in. Washington state'and then, in 1955, he accepted mm

- his secona-g m m -n ir a iftKtnnr"-:; w a i . b o r ^ e « , a M y n

H A G in tS IS T r^ Services for IJoyd Charles- McLean, 62, H ageV in an T^ ll be condiicled' at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at Thompson Chapel in Gooding with R ev . Edson G ilm ore, officiating.

In term en t w ill follow at Glenns Ferry Cemetery.

Mr. Mcl^ean was bom Feb. 25, 1911,'arAVest Weber, Utah. He moved to Idaho as a boy, living-ljw41ansen. Twin Falls and JercJfile. In 1956 he moved to King Hill where he has worked fo r the K ing H ill Irrigation Co. since that time. He moved to Bliss in 1968,'

issued” ” art ‘invitation tor , Whitlam to come t<) U)e White “Hodse while here ” '

Seen...;Sheriff Paul Ojrder arriving •

at office half an hour early . ..,U. N. te rry visiting with friend!. . . Cole Watkins driving state police ear down Blue .B.oulevard . . . Katherine Po{-ter-checking : on colorfal— flower garden . . . assistant Scoutmaster Neal Wirsching hferdingtiO- Boy _.Scontsiintp C M per at. police vrolgh ..gta- tion near Coeur d'Alene . . ;Bi|lStevenson com plim enting friend on dirty feet . . . Zell Rutter hanging out washing just before dark .. . ^lae Brown checking on friend;. . . Harold W aggoner guiding- .visitor through museurn . . . Bill Billado busily working on small foreign auto and talking

-aboutA^erinont-winters. . tand overheard on the Holidaji golf COLirse at Ketfchumi took me nine shots just tb get out-of the bar:"

. tana ajj Inn n j " I t

Memorials m a r be m ade ie “ bere i ie has since resided.

the Gr^ig Lindemer Memorial for m ed ica l research into children's diseases with the AMcefMiion Episcopal Church as agenl.

i \ ( | a u i V\ a l t e r s

V a lle yB rie fs

Church iti Twin \ Falls, By . .lilting fin ft kitchen stnnl he was

He was preceded in death by one daughter, one grandson and two brothers.

He is survived by three sons..—Charles McLean, Mountain

— ilom e, and;i-James R...; and Byron M cl^an, both Blissi one brotSer, Bob M cLean, no adclriss; two sisters, Thora Kearney, T em p e .. Ariz., and

I^ P E R T - Adam Walters, j - h e i , „ a Masson, Shoshone;■5T, R upert, died ' M onday t^ re e ' half .'Sisters, Marcellamorni-ng ..... a t ------Minidok-a saballa, Jerome; Arvilla Gott,Memorial Hospital from, an Hansen and Lotie AsleVt, ^,p p . „ n , h . . , l OBdj-n, ■ » "

t ro th e rs r-^ fa ^ ^ ta ng e f. King— ^ -------------------------------^Yale, Cassia County. On March Douglas Stahger,5. 1946, he married Dorothy >;unnyval.y, Oaltf., and :^wO

T W IN F A L L S M agic V a lley T ra il M^chme ASS(Wlatto!rwtlHtatdttsrl9nnual picnic at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Twin Falls Power Plant Park. Members are to brin^ their own lunch and table service and beverage will befur-plshed. The ninlh^ ahmiar FIWA .trail ride is slated Saturday and'

IKN Paris, the dollar-useffby iQUtisla changed hands at 4.1Y5 francs, up from Mondijy’s close of 4.14 francs. The official conmiercial dollar, used in foreign trade, was quoted :in early morning trading at 4.125 francs, compared .with 4.0925.

able to preach from-the pulpit In 1956 he married Mrs

Hazel Wolfe whose son, Phil; was a'’tninister of the Christian Church-at Dallas,-Ore., Rev,

-Hutton la ter accepted the - ptilpit..atr-MyrtlfcrPnint; ■Oceic

grandchildren Friends may

chapel this evening

call at the afternoon and

SUM CRlPTfON ■RATES

TH E TIM E S -N E W SrwiM f A l i i IQAHO

By C o r r (* r P # r M o n th

(O o i ly i S o n d o y

By M o ilP o .d in A d v o n c *

lO o t ly I iu n d o y) M on th

3 Montht * Monthi

,l.X fgr

food. Because of their Illness, they had been eating sparsely from provisions brought aboard . their Apollo ferry.ship.

Dr. Royce Hawkins, the BStronants* ctnef physiciair, .sjild he was confident the space pilots were making a normal

-adapt at ron-to-4he tuttque- jero- ; gravity world and w;Duld recover to carry out the

are Wdi'king bn reform of the internationalcurrency system.

The British pound sterling fell back on' foreign exchanges today, posting losses against

francs Monday In Zurich, the dollar opened

at 2 8575 Swiss Francs against Mondaj’ ‘s closing' price of 2,8263 It opened at at 2 60

and after four years there he retired to Dfljlap. His first w ife died-sRbrtlJ^-after they-were married in 1920.

Services for .Rev Hutton were held today at Dallas, Survivors are Mrs. Hutton, his daughter^antT stepson,

M iiitf in Rupert.'He was a self employed

farmer and a member of the C o n g re g a t io n a l Church- Ebenezer of Paul.

He Is survived by his wife and three sons, Kenneth R.

• Walters. P a ul'; ~keld~ L: arid... .. T O K T K TSteven Jw - W alters , both Page. 79. Burlex*.(li££LlU£fi!lay Rupert; three brothers, Sam, at Cassia Memorial HospiUl. Alvin and Robert' J. Walters, Funeral services will l>e and one sister, Mrs.-JVlmp announced :^ y Payne

B e a t r i t H * P a g e•WTs: PM U Ite

Knott, and his mother, Mrs. Katie Walters, all Rupert.

- -S e r v ic e s -w ill b e .a t 1 0 i 3 0

Mortuary.

HAYEScmsiMicTioiico.

Gin Remodel Vour House, Ymuf .Carafe CSr^ i l d

Port or Out Buildings.

BUHL AREJl CALL: 543-4976

fam ily suggests memorials to Northwest Christian College in Eugene, Ore.

(^nadian,Dutch,Spanish.Itah’ -- guilders in Aro&terdairn, up an and French currencies from Monday's close of 2.59.Dealers said they did not know why a strengthening of the pound which began last Friday and continued Monday had stopped

iJ '5

S3 00 J» 50

JU 00 ,110 M

V a lle y Hospitals

whM o «l » u b » { f< p tio n » o c < « p t « d o n ly

d » ) ' v » r y it n o t m o inr* (O

T IM E S -N E W S .

S U B S C R IB E R S

Coll yOo» Co«»'»'Of ’ h*

♦ o r tp y 1 fu p »r ’

Poul Ookl#v NoflondR<l«f Ro9*'ion HoM.«t»r 3H S37SW»nd»ll

------

\ a l l « ‘ .\ M r i i i o r l n l

. Admitted ■ Mrs Thom.is‘ W ilford and Karl Hagbcrg. both (Voodtng; Mrs Janies V ictor, Mrs Arthur H oover, i l r s John Ford. RDtHrrt Stewart. Karen Riach, Juanita Urie. Steven King. .Mrs William Andre^ws, Charles M atthews, M rs Robert Knight and Ms How ard Myers, all Twin Falls, Mrs Richard Edwards, Mrs EthanWing

communityCORRISPONDENTS

Bu ''

f.>r

Pf qQT C ►'o

VVilfViO I Qi VO'

0Di<S1h«o S io oUm . iL

--jenrmc-----------------.^CtxplJuLU: flcIL.

»ftnq________

------Co^\-o

and Rathryn W il l ia m s ,

all F ile r , W illiam W cig le , J e rp m e r^ o e T ” M cD erm ott, W 'cils. N ev .; AUce Eaton. K im berly . and D avid McBenge, Buhl

Dismissed M rs. John F ran cis and

ria iiph ier, . Mifs—:— Jam es. Brawley, Arch Coiner. Mrs

— JSTTOT'FtaRC.’ MlUte “Mnrrr, Suw n B o ^ m , C lydeBeheu and son, Janice Grant, Steven Bortz, Mrs, Arthur K le in k o ^ "a h ff~ M rs . K e f i l ' Ander^n and daughter, all Tw in F a lls ; M rs. Gordon

— tyncs. Burieyr Farris Tiffney,- H eyb 4 ir^ — Jojstin..^.^Bak£rj_ Oakley; Charles Jordan, Sahte Fe, N. M.; E:aster Barron. Buhl; Buenos Callen. Wendell.

( h s s Ih > l c m » r i n l '

AdVnltted Mrs. Craig Ueiner, Ahdi'ew

Blair. Mrs. fie\-natdo Nevarez and Mrs Alven I js le y , all Burley; Mrs F.lmer Wickel, Declo; Alta Fisher,-Montana: Mrs V irgil Wickel. Albion; Sally Chavez, Heyburn

Dismissed Fatima Steve. Traci Mai,

D arrin Mangum a.nd Mrs Dwain Gochnour, fill Burley;

'G ebrge H arrell, HPyOurn: Simon Price. American Falls; Clark W V d , Elba; and Nick Ourfcc,.Malta.

Blrth.sA daughter was born to Mr,

and Mrs, Virgil Wickel, Albion; and a son was bom to M r. and

Gold in Ixindon opened at $115 20 per ounce, down 30 cents on Monday's closing. The price of gold continued to fall in the face of the strengthening dollar ^

Both the dollar and the pound moved higher Monday and bankers said one big factor was a decline in West German lending rates

V a H e ^

B rie fsKING H IL l. - Mr, and M r ^

Howard Pugm ire were honor5d on their 38th wedding ahriiversary at the home of

_ their daughter and son-in-law, Mr and Mrs Gilbert Comacho,PQcatellii. TTie F ig m irw sw ntthe weekend in Pocatello, with four daughters and three sons and ten grandchildren

ViTW IN FALI.S - WiUiam

Edward Bogard, 80, Payette, former Twin Falls resident, died Sunday in a Payette nursing home

Bom Aug 25, 1892, in .Stewart County, Tennessee, he attended Auburn University in Alabama and graduated from the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa He taught for a year at Christian Brothei College in Tennessee ■He was tn the Coca Q jh t ■

hntllinp hii.sine.s.s fqr 53 yeats________and came to Boise in the late 1920s He married Genevieve

rWrighl-at^WiDnemucca Nev , on Dec, 17, 1942,

In 1951, they moved to Twin Falls and lived here until 1956, when they moved to Payette, where he has since resided.Mrs Bogard died in 1965

-----ona of ttre t in t

a m , Thursday al FFe" Congregationa l Church Eb- enezer with Rev, Ted Meter officiating. Interment w ill bein the Paul Cemetery, ,- ■ Friends-may'eqll from 6 to 9 p m today and from 9 am. to 9 p m W ednesday at M agic Valley Funeral Chapel, and from 9 ,10 a m until time of services Thursday morning at the church

Memorials may, be made to the memorial fund of the C o n g re g a t io n a l C h u rch - t^benezer or the Idaho Heart Fund Envelopes for the

lorial’fund are available at the chapel

F u n e r a l

Declo

squadron commanders for the O v il Air Patrol in Boise during World War II He was active in community affairs tn Boise and In Twin Falls.

Survivors include one son, Charles E. Bogard, Payette;

daughters Mrs. Robert ^ r v ic e s ' t ^ '~ T M argB'nrt^ "GraTrrBbtse, an?

Fdro Ho/eHon

-----------Son HoileyVVood

Compb*M -788-463A'.-Soxmodoic .Comito Btonson 678 2077

and Mry. Dixon DaxisJ^iler. 'B irths •

Adau gh let K f l i bom to Wt Snd Mrs, James Victor, Tw in 4=^lls, and sons to M rten dM rs.

. Glenn Viiuiig. Jer'ome. and Mr. m d Mrs. ThothAS ' W ltfofa,

H r m o r ln T *

.Admitted E ve lyn Peterson, Paul;

Frances Ryan and Chris Uhl. both Rupert.

DKmTssed- - fcisa------K-l tng le r i-------Amji--M u *l8 m «»v ,-S h lia ey -G iiff in , Haiel Patterson, a irR u p ert; and Evglyn-P aterson , Paul.—

BU RLE Y -Henr>-.iy :-B la uf r will -tae^t-8---- Mtst Judith^ GlaUr. CorvalUa,

- t> m. Weancsdav at the Burlev O re.: one sister. E l i i a b ^ F ifth -Seventh W ard Chapel, Buriel in Memorial Gardens,

LDSGem

R U P E R T - Services (or Ida' -lUM. '

Wedne^E^y at Walk Funferal Home Chapel wUh burial in the Rupert COTetery .^

Harris, Springfield, Tenn,, and seven grandchildren.

He was preceded in dea th by one daughter and nine brothers and sisters -

W e i ie ^ a y 'in Payetl

1•Now you k n o w

"~BlJHL^ .Services fo F T I B ^ S, G off w ere held today at II a.m. at Albertson Piclrafd • Chapel with burlaTlh the B u H '' C ^ m e t^ . It .w M errone'ously rc iport^ his funeral would be 'B yUnitedPresslnteniiiUonal ___

Theaverageara inals iipH fa lL-a t- JO a.n i Wedwaitav:^Thi In'ltiWrtiia'lS-MBCtlW...

-News' .......... ..lips

Hestbeck, 85. at her home morning

Born Sept 26, 1887, in Strafvdhy, ©enn-ark . she married August 'lestbeck in

-Strandby Boo. a(V -»006, T^aycame to the United States in 1913.

The m oved to Twin F.alla in 1916 and to Murtaugh in 1927. Her husband died Feb. 12, 1%7.,

, She was « jnem ber of. the- -• Methodist Chur ch,", Surviving are two sons, Orla H e s tb ^ . 'and^ LesljB - H estbeck ,M urtaiigh ; f iv e daughters, M rs. M ax (W an d a ) .Vanausdeln and Mrs. Oval (A d a ) Johnson, both Twin Falls; Mrs. Gerald (U lly )

im »s rN orm a') “ R e s s a , ' ilvftle, Wash -4 a ^ t e r . Marie

U u re l (V iv ian ) Win<fley,'Salf la k e - e it r .—Utah,-and M rs. Tam Col

: ffiS iaSn.__ L ETenmark; ___118grandchUdrefi arid I I great'

■ granilc|JtMnm:T w o s W W d a f r t a t -

grands'oh p receded her in death. '

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: v

it on

IK INSO LV INC Special to the T lin es^ew g

— ^WASHINGTON~,Hie^House of Representatives voted down a prop<^d consideration of a revision o f the controversial Fed^a l Salary Act, 237-156.

■' Monflay — with Idaho’s two Republican Congressm ensplltting-on the i^ue. --------

Rep . Steve Symma told the - Times-News;

" I voted against coTislderatlon o f th is b ill because I don't b e lie ve

raise at this time.”Rep. Orval Hansen voted in

ia v o t— of pnn.sideririg the . branches measure.

_ -Hansen wasnolAvailahle.for comment Monday.

But a spokesnon in his office . - ja ir i thnt'Hnnspn-’.'Has iala.yoi'

of open debate on the b ill.” ‘When asked .about the one

hour debate on the issue — with C o n g re s s io n a l s a la r ie s rumored to be increased from M2,500 to more than $50,000 per year — Congressman Hansen's

spokesman declinedIrpjrunent.The . b ill. ■ S-1989. was

denounced, by a riumbet^-oL Congressmen, Including Iowa's famed "treasury watchdog," Rep. H. R. Gross.

The bill was described as "an effort to get a 'pay raise for m em bers of Congress approved in a non-election year.

The bill provided that the Federal Salaries Commission should m eet every two years instead of every four years, in

for Congress wfell as the execu tive and Judicial

Tuesday, July 31, 1973 Times-News, Twlti- 3

^ans aired

BU Rl.EY - Cassia County the delay to tthe I.EPC at officials met with members of today's meeting and ask for an

------b»>v— -fifv fereetneftt— extcnsitnr-pn "the dTOditnt-for-'Planning Commission (U EPCI presentinjg plans.Tuesday morning to discuss plans for u new city-oounty law enforcement building.

Completed architects plans were to have been presented at th? meeting today for approval .by Ih a -I .KJH; hut^the Burley

The OEPC was meeting at Moonstone today to consider plans and applications for t,Tants for the next year Although presentations were to be m ade today. the

-x oromis&lon-w on.'.X be..

Mitchell said county officials would...-bC- nipptirtf^ urith P i t y

'The President, a fte r coiisuTffffTon with this com m ission , then proposes salary raises, which go into e ffe c t automatically,.unl£§s voted down by either house.

Congressman Hansen's office did issue a sUtement last week that he intends to vole against any proposed pay raise -for members of Congress.

Board buses

JEROM E COUNTY 4-H club members board buses at the Jerome Courthouse Monday as they leave for a week at Cgntr^, 4-H Camp near Stanley. Equipment b e l^ taken to camp by the 4-Hers is loaded In a traler puHrd by the bus. Those attepdlng camp will learn camping skills, crafts and participate In special recreational activities.

ciiy council rejectecTthe-ptans - for the joint venture in a mouting last week.

The council returned the officials "in the next week orplans to the feunb' w itha list of Iq distu§.s chanues in the _____adjustments they felt <lould be plans, necessary before they could put their sienatures-QD-the Imal.plans.

Cassia County Sheriff Ray. Mitchell said Monday that he, a long with the county commissioners, would explain

L A Y A W A Y

h ^ O U R G U N A T

RED'S215 Shothon* Si. S.

» *

J e r o lii c G r sin a n announeom ont set

JEROM E — Winner , of the Jerome County Grassman of the Year Award will b i announced at the VVe^esday aftemodn lunchc^n of the Jerome Chamber of Commerce.

BUI Priests Jerome County agent said Monday (hanH eTw o candldale4,“NonnBir Perking aniT Boyd Bruning, farming operations were toured last week, “ The selection committee has now made their choice and will announce the winner at the weekly chamber luncheoi\,” Priest said. He noted that th » - Xhambcr-^ p o n ^ rS -Jh£^-

. - 1 annual grassman award.Bruning Is sponsored by Volco, Inc. and

Perldhs by Marshall Warehouse.________ Judgeg^ werr~HewnaH~"Stammer]ohn,~1a5t

years winner, Bob Waltbn ttnd Tom Prescott............ Members of the selection committee are Gene

Jerome 4 -H ’ers atten3 annual camping session

JEROME — Jerome County Classes will include a crafts ♦-H members teTtMonday for a ~ d a s r^ o be taught-by K arlaweek long camp at the South Central Idaho 4-H Cam p

' located 17 m iles nofTR' ofKetchum. I . . . ...... .......

Over 100 .4-H members are expected to attend the week long camp. Planned activities include a gel acquainted party Mondaynrght, seav,-Hgep huSlr- and a special carnival pul on by the camp members the final night. A special program is being offered this year by

astrology. ;

Hollifield, firs t aid class , by Barbara Fuller and Chuck •l^Fray' and a nature h ike-' outdoor cookery class Jo be presented by Cail Welhousen, llazclton. ^. Also attending the camp this year are seventeen 4-H

-ex<ihanKe;Clamp manager is Bill Priest,

Jerom e counly agen l. Instructors are Sharon Allred, extension home econom ist,

and Moses ' .................

\

Teen 1 readers are Stephanie A lastrj, Candy Andrus^-Twyla B u lch ir , D ebb ic— Cureton, Jennifer Diehl, Gwenna Harri,K arla H o llifie ld ,----- PattyK incaid , M ike . Peterson, Carolyn Seller?, and Graydon Slandley, all camp counselors' and instructors. Other teen leaders include, Kelly Human,

Randy Socklon.4-H leaders attending include

Mrs I,arry Sellers, Hazelton,M ri. Ed io b e r , Mrs Vernon__Kohntopp and M rs, MaiT)Ie,~alI Jt’ fOmp " ” ‘

TF benefit perform atiruWalton, Vhiee AlberdI, W illard . Weight, Ted Diehl, Chuck Marshall, Melvin Magnelli, Roger Lemkull, Mike Sullivan and Prescott.

I

MV Boy Scouts attend jamboree

slated Aug. 15 at CST

TW IN F A L I^ — This week 74 Boy Scouts from the M agic Valley area are attending’the National Scout Jamboree at Farragut State Park,

Troop 1111 of-the Snaks R iver Area Council, led by

and Troop 65 of the First Christian Church with scoutmaster Keith Jensen, traveled separately to the park

The following is i^IFip report for July 28 and 29 from troop 65 reporter, Brian C lo w a rd jjl^ ,

"Dear Mr. Times News” " We are headed for the

Jamtxiree site. None of us have had a chance to go fishing yet After we left Orangeville we traveled past Coeur d'Alene to « .police weigh station and

camped there for the night,Sunday we went to ctmrch,

then got on the DSnc^wana and ' rode down Couer d'Alene I j k « and into the St Joe R iver. After the boat ride we all loo a swim in the lake ior about an hour and ^en returned to the w eigh station where il sometimes gets a little noisy at night when the trucks stop.

As soon as we gel to the jamboree, we'll set up the camp we will sleep in this week. W ill send p ictures la ter ."

Troop 1111 which left Twin Falls July 24 has now traveled U) Yellowstone Park, Virginia and Nevada Cities, Montana, Banff and Glacier National Parks. . _ ...............

TW IN F A IJ ^ - "Streets of New York ," to-be pres6nted at the CSI Fine Arts Auditorium on Aug. 15 by the Antique F estiva l Thea tre , is an American melcxlrania.

The performance, which is being sponsored by the Twin Falls County -Mental Health Association to ra ise funds

- to w a «l -support of twn Vista

workers coming to the area, fea tu res o lios,-_and short vignettes between the acts.

According to Aldrich Bowler, th reater p rtd u cer-d irec to r , this d ram a tic d ev ice was common in early American melodrama and,vaudeville. All of the olios used by the A F T are hi.storlcal pieces, and one ofthpm “ N an i hty

M en," was the first Aver used, dating back to the IBM’s.

The p la y 's m elodram atic

s receivesBLM honors

TF youth, 16, performs in NY

SHOSHONE - A Bureau'of I,and M anagem ent, Special ach ievem ent aw ard was presented to Hoy Hayes this week at a specia l s ta ff meeting

The special recognition was given for outstanding work he had done as the d istrict engineer, according to O'dell Ffandsen, district manager,

Itill Mathews, state BIJVI director, signed the award. It was pre.sented , by Frandsen.

Frandsen said, "R oy Hayes has consi.stently maintained a superior degree of

performance in the amount of work produced and the quality of p rodu cts" In conjunction with the award and letter of c o m m e n d a t io n , H a y e s received a monetary award of $250

Hayes began hi.si career with the BI.M in June of 1957 in the Boi.se district, where he was the assistant d is tr ic t eng ineering technlclHTi He transferred to Shoshone tn February of 1971, and assumed re.sponsibility for the district's engineering program

aspect Includes.street vendors selling chesthUK” ’ and—sweet potatoes, a Villain, heroine and gay '90s music Mr. Bloodggod^, the villain porlaryed by Peter Marshall, absconds with Mrs. Fairweather’s money. She is

Naugh ty plaved by Anna M arie Boles. _ Ca ldw ell, form er Hansen resident

Tickets^ for the benfit performance are avilabic from l.Tltus Schm ucker, m ental health as.soeialion presienTRoy Slotten. I/)ra>Tie Smith, Rev, John Wallace or Rev Robert Van Nest, directors,

Martin Wright, Murtaugh, is m usical d irec to r of the production— and— sings— in— a

TW IN FAl.l.SM orrison, Twin Falls,' is performing this, evening in Carnegie Hall. New York Qty-

Morrison, 16, the son of Mr, and Mrs. Marvin Morrison,'is a strijig bass player with Uie orchestra of ‘ ‘America's Youth ui Concert,” which is making its concluding perform ance

-tnntght

..Marlell l/tndon.

TF speaker setMorrison was recommended

for the tour, which is sponsored by the .Universal Academy for Music, Princeton, N.J., and by

■4ils music teacher at Twin Falls High School, Del Slaughter,

-=fWIW F A I.IJt -------~Dia~rrall -diri^ctor of

speak to Falls

Warren Rarrv. a member ofManning, Idaho aeronautics, w ill members of the Twin KiwaniS Club Thursday noon at the Turf Oub,_ JOiSLSlate official w ill discuss

M ^ s o n tas advan tages and the

airporUn Jerome

the Idaho board of aeronautics and a local businessman, will introduce Manning. Barry said it is hoped his remarks will aid "p eop le of our a rea in determ in ing the m ost

ptaslRg »European cities, including Rom e, F lorence. Venice, SaUburg, Paris, Brussels and

Civic Symphony, He will be a junior at iSnn Falls High next year.

county. The department which fieT ie ias Is how completmg^ a

statew ideairport system study. He will also discuss current

a ir tra ffic patterns and projections and the role the Twin Falls Qty-County Airport

advantageous coufse -of action

transportation service jn Jhe coming ii'ears." -

barbershop quartet during the m elodram a, M rs Boles is director of the roduction, which is one of three productions in the theater’s summer season

The Antique Festiva l Theatre, Idaho's only para- professiopal repertory theatre company, 1.<! celebrating Its tenth production year with a repeat of its first presentation, M o l i e r e 's ' 'B o u r g e o i s Gentlem an," The other 1973 production is "The Medicine W agon,"

The theatre troupe now consists of 12 p layers, including pro fess iona l s ta ff memljers, semi-professionals ahd stiklciit:^ un' >>cholaiMiips. The group throughout Idaho with appearances- in Washington and Oregon during the summer.

Their gay “ Bamum and “ Bsney” bus enables thiem to be

self^Tontained, carrying props.sets, s tage and lighting equiptnent with-Uwm;-------------

------- OPEN ALL DWX^ S A TU R D A Y S

_ decade.- POCATELi^O— rt lP ty — 7 =— -Archam bault Pocatello School .D istrict 25/ au-eve. w ill work with Idaho— ape-cOrrcnUy-member* o f the

l a i A L 7 3 3 -2 9 1 0

and the Local E (}ucation AssociisU^m tsaBy ag the s e le c t io n :. bf. three

-n n iy e rs ity _ p td ftssora___as.,-factfinders In the d lstrlct- teachens salary dispute.

-jUniverjiityju.of _.ldnl» ;T wff . - . . ------------------t r uC l ^ r a , ^E^-dtm Tr-^r^SsptM .;

State Uh iversity ’ P o lit ica l

ifetennining.wlio is a^faujt *in (teatfocked negbtiatioijs.

Jadcson, il^o an aitpniey, w u 6 mediaioi- in the recent

-Pagaulla■■tiram aii’.B la la r y

Southern , Idaho A irp o rt ApQioinly, wmcB~Sipp6Hs“hew field. Voters of Blaine and-

Falls counties declined to _ Join at a special difcainui o v e r 's " year ago. The Twin Falls field

-it.>. lhp-..lflnii w m nM m ial- j a l —airport In M agic Valley.

« ¥ * ¥ ■ T O O P m M

OF Q UA l i m - PABCO PAINTS

- . whatcvci. ! q p icU y yp .p>e^o»vc Q^d_____p/oloif 'froni (o !tl wrtillitM driinciqc .U) pcfSOnify with cJiMlt.t hvp'rpror i VF GOT + f ' w i l h a Pnbrociucjiity pcnui (it HOI lUKt” . iKtil nu'h thf f ie c z f 'I f /w , y(ju nrt'd, lOo (uul iTtOi>i‘ yiCIv I t o i l Tn

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acrylic Rustic Slain

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•"rDtr,—rtun, snow and soil oif. losts longer, too . . . up 5^-prrrvwf“ (wfgl!^Ftf<on stoins «.venin ifie toaghesi climates

IT TAKES ALL THE STRAIN OUT OF STAINING!

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PABCQ ACRYLIC LATEX HOUSE PAINT

l o n g loUtng, co'iy to oppLy-se lf• primIr>g c**CTiOr latex Cican-up with woTcV.-One coot application in most cuscs Dnc^ in 1 ' 2 hours Over 1,000 colors

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ftlAKONDHo u s e p a in ^HoifTr 1

H r g K e s * Q v d i ' t y b y P d b c o to CKact.ng-spcciticai.onsm a k e , t e s p o c . a l l y d u r a b l e . n t h i s c l i m a t e e x c e l l e n t

h i c J c , e a s y t o u ^ e a l o f ^ g w e a r i n g e v t e r i o r g l o s s ^ o r a l l

re^tdentiat and comn^ercial wood finishes.

“ Rcgulor $9.50

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Page 4: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

EVANS A NOVAK

nomenon. ' V — , - , ,1 —

D e v o t e d T o T h e X ’.itiife n s O J M a g ic V a t le y as the National Committee’s-' “ pfSsS secrftary, ordered- that

O f C )l V ( f nd C o u n t y N ^ w ^ p A p v f ' M r r n t * r r o l A u d < i H u r e d u o ( C> rc u lA t lOn fi trf U P t

~P\ji>iuAn> to S e c fT o n 6 0 I OS T d S h o C o d ^ .- - T h o r t t ja r » / o r ^ .T g n n T r a ' . i * r T n r u a y 'o r T T T { ? — rr* r -6K ';(v h 7< b ~

w.|l| btf;:« > Ti'iTrTiiariu 8Wt

IV IM .♦! I .r oHn

-W-^rd-Sfrr

WASHINGTON The reca it H arris , poIF ^"sH ow In^ ngfnrjjg^ltng wtr^ngth fnr 5Spn

«6hi IM 11. P ere^^ -a tetfa - mrw jj^ _________against Sen. E dw ard — alone.” The memo continlied: T C e i i i g ^ n i l f f v g s a l l r i l ^ ^ “ He tClephasV in tum^will

down. As the W aterga te affidavits could riot be ignored. Ervin then suggested BelUnoh earin gs— progressed -----o n ^ _ Ilanseguently, E rv in and obtain his own a f f i ^ ^ t » ^ - .naUonal telfcvision.. a . Bake^shpwgd BelUno copies Q l. "r e T ^ t ir^ B u ih s rJ ^ ^ -

. ^ w p a,.^.^nf»rnnn«.^^rttwaen- R7iHl?r^(ndaviU. :"B^lllno coc t o t e g ld p ^ neQ e ^ g ^ ~Ervin and B a k e r 'a g r ^ the vieorouslv denied the charges, on Bellino’s rebuttal.

-orifVCIIIICUJf, U1UY^*00**J — ----b y -p o lit ic ia n s and te llow con fe r with the chairman and.

I t <«IK. ld <«ho, U I iO r i<nn« r lh<- ,i< I ij i M.it. r> H IH/V

Sure WeaponHuman psychology being what it

is, th e re ’s a fflo lp roo f way President Nixon could take the wind-out o f the Krvin com m ittee’s sail^, cut the ground from under his

__detractor?} and bury the subject ofW atergate once and for all.- Instead of getting up on his high horse of executive p riv ilege in answer to the com m ittee’s request for tapetr o f W hite House ctrnversatirtltST^ a n d " Certa in ly

' “ rnSTCa'd“0ftakmgTfras-an-aHefnpt4o ‘ ■get ” him personally or politically, he ought to commandeer three hours of prime time on all radio

-land , te lev is ion n e lw rrk s and ■proceed to play the darned tapes — unedited, 4ust as they w ere refcordcd, with all theums, ahs, ughs, hiU"rumphs, coughs, false

starts, pauses, background cTalter of doors open mg a n4-closing, j ^ h c i^ drumming on desks and papers being shuffled.

To be sure, lis ten ing to a president’s private conversations would be a fascinating thing — for a few minutes. But t© endure the long stretches of dullness there must must, in e v ita b ly be, to attempt to make sense of cryptic references in White House verbal

-shopthafld-to-p^^^le-aiM^-things-the— average person never heard of in hopes of hearing something really exciting would require the stamina and dedication of a truly born eavesdropper, _

Most Americans would be asleep before the first hour was up. And there would be no reruns o f-th e . “ W atergate Tapes.”

pollsters, is con vin cin g ly con firm ed bj> our own

- interviewing-in^ i t M a j p r i t y b l n e - c o l l a r neighborhc^.

Liberal Republican Percy not only b «a t Kennedy but ran t>etter than t)oth Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York and form er GoV. John Connally of T exas in . pre s identia l m atchings we conducted

MR. SPECTATOR

The Art Of Travel

Tt*avcling by air or '1srof~coarse; st_by itself but wc feel just a little sorry for the upcoming bOys and car with the huge

Tum^TefserCtQF1Ri5®Bal“tour last week.'^tjuaUy^surpFising-was the_ aw areness of P ercy . A M l d . 'w e s t e r n e r c lo s e H y connected to big business and the liberal elite, Percy was as well known in Jei;sey City as Rockefeller, Connally and Vice president Spiro T. Agnew. Only Agnew did better, against Kennedy than Percy^ but only m arginally,.

The results 9f our Interviews -fw ith -nationahpolislep <Siver- Q u a y lf ) am ong 92 voters, mainly ethnic Democrats who voted Nixon last year:

Agnew 37 voters, Kennedy'34 voters, not sure 21. Percy 36, Kennedy -M r not sure J2.

1 Kennedy 36, Connally 33, not sure 23. Kennedy 39, Rockefeller 29. flot sure 24.

These findings back the widely doubted report of July 16 by pollster I^Uis Harris that Percy was running ahead of Kennedy Dationj!l!i_by 46 per_ cent to 44 per cent I the balance undecided).

:__ -Th»-«xplanatioB-tor—Per.cy-'.^sudden presidentlar popuTaViTy is m'lirky. but its existence should l)t' a loud signal to his party; Chuck Percy must be taken very seriously as a 197G presidential pcDspedL _________

The D em ocratic National Cpminittee-last week on orders of .Chaiiiiiian Hobert. Strausa

his staff, the tmaijce director and his staff, and will reply to_____ _______ T -h e rc^ ^absolutely no need for other staff individuals to respond directly to these .press calls. I f the press contacts you,, courteously refer to them (0 Vince. He will decide on the proper response. And if a more detailed reply is necessary he 'will assign the person to make

-;the reply.''.------ ------- ----------- ^Miss Burg, while refusing to

- iS iw jia the inernp, told us the gag rule is merely intended to keep Glephas informed of what other staffers tell the press.

In truth, Miss Burg’s gag

“ T h e r e ’ S b e e n a S l i g h l R e v i s i u i i

^ i r r t h e r t a t e s t ^ E d i t i o n 1"^ ^

rule was directed by Chairman’ Strauss ( who has always been entirely open with the press) in spontaneous reaction to a young em ploye in the com mittee’s • finance division discussing with us a $10,000 ^•entfibutian-by the m ilk.lobby M iss Burg, a W isconsin Democratic leader, let it be known she wanted no more underling.s talking to the press. Strauss, vacation ing in California, did not see het memo.

Sen. Sam Ervin of North Carolina , though fir/it dismissing charges out of hand that his ch ie f inv£sUgatj)r

..copducled , p.oli.ticiij.-JSLrfi , U-R'ks, is not — corttrary to rumors .being spread By Republicans — blocking an

-onvestigalian. o f the cla im s. ■' At issue, are^ffldvattsr

obtained by private investigators \ hired .. by HepubHcairNJrttona 1 CHia irma n George Bush.-apERing pph t^ •

._campaign. They narne a^chlef spy ’ Cairmine Bellino, chief investigatoi'’ of Ervin's Watergate committee.

Before he unveiled them last

GEORGE C. THOSTESON, M.D.

J 11 TheDear Dr. Tliosteson: I am 77' from you. Am I correct in the You arejumpijng at too n^ny

■:..pprfi. ial impression lhat this is conclusions to begin with.tn m o b H e ------ r e a c h e d l o t M h e m - m the m o m if t g -------- of .Chai.imaa _ t o bert. Strauss ....^ nd------ have - ^uper ti. ia l. .luip reaMon ths l ...this is coirr,TT-.^T4,4-K^r«^onfv4-a<»-new __ .secreUv imposed a gag rule Tuesday . Busn privateiy__ yj,lcbitis^ Thatj;_,wliat-m}L,^parUcularly..pr£YalenL.Jim!aDg------ !

IhP nhsprvation’ ^ ’ lorHdding its" stafrer5=4rom showed the affiaav^"to n.e: Would you truTk drivers” - TT T . l?: coThdn there was th _____.talking to an.Y reporters Sct. -Howard Baker of__ ,.npi,,m n awl Ulc.treittllK-nt.'’___ a painful Cooeyx or: clc»r with the huge swivel bedls, uie outdoinu even the restriGt4ve Tennes.see. the committee s uiillxine." is entireK different C3

Has anyone SUGGESTED a “ connection betwe'cn your

cloudy uxlnc liample and your back pjiiii’’ "

I,e fs take them one at a time.

Back pain, in about 80 per cent o f the cases, isicaused by some muscular problem. And don’t discount your job which rt“qures.so much^itting. It may not have bothered you years ago, but with’ age. our bodies chan)>c and-thlngs that didn't o s e d to bother us begin to.

Now. as to the kPdneys Cloudy Urme is notr unusual

- a t all and doesn't necessarily

girls who w ill never know the thrill of traveling behind the Iron Horse.

And, for Hhe benefit of some of “ these, youngsters, we must point out the Iron Horse was the smoke- b e l c h l n g , s t e a m -h i s^ i n g . locomotives which used to puli the passenger Irairis across this Continent

And the traifis all had hahies — like The Portland Hose, The Continental F iv e r , Th e 20th

V . « l W l l . l l I I I V I t u ^ v . ------

magazines~and newspapers and, sometim es, even a radio. But the observation plalform was the place to be -=_even with the swirhng smoke and cinders.

Just likein:tBe m ovies of the day, the Conductor (who collected your

'ttckets and bossed thertrains was always an- older and very Jcind individual.

Younger, of course, was the brakeman who was working his

outdoing even the restr»ct4ve Haldeman-Ehrlichman White House in trying to close doors.

The gag was ordained last. ^ Tuesday b y M ary-Lou Burg,

.deputy national chairman, in a confidentiaX..meniorandum to staffers. Paying lip service to an "entirely open " policy w4h the press. Miss Burg imfTosed' unprecedented restrictions on reporters.

M i s s Burg, noting the appointment of Vince Clephas

Tennes.sei.'. TFie committee's Republican vice chainnan, a week ea rlie r . E rvin was stunned. He had known Caroline Beliino for 20 years, he told Bush, and he could not ever) consider these ridiculous charges. -

Bush left the meeting with thiMmpTFs'sionTrrm'w'ould dtr nothing, lead ing to GO P innuendos 'that the chairman hail his own cover-up.

However. fc',rvin soon calmed

way up to the conductor post. Hlis job was to see that things mechanical went well and to protect the train from rear-end accidents by dropping- f ar behind - every time the train stopped — armed with a lantern or fuzee or a dynamite cap which attached to the rail to signal the following train through, m eans of m in ia tu re explosions

_ Yes. I feel rather sad lhat today’s boys and girls will never know the thrill of traveling across this- wonderful country on a train pulled by & steam engine.

Mrs Spectator s father grew up with railroads and worked on them all his life, from ’ ‘w iper ” to "locom otive firem an" to “ shop superintendent ' Mr S pecta tor lived beside a railroad for years and years. It was a wonderful experience.

It is a wonderful memory — those days when a railroad was really a railroad!

- M. N Well, you' know what

phlebitis Is, I 'dare say. It's inflammation of tlie walls of a vcui. almost always in the leg.

You h a v e t w o s e t s o f veins in your le g s . One is deep in the ti.ssu e. n e x t to t h e l e g ones. The othgrjsji^l^u n d e r the kin. a n d t h e s e a r e t h e " S u p e r f i c i a l veins." These are the one,s that a r c v i s ib le i f , fbr ej^ample, you tvivi' varicose v e in s .

Tlierp are various ways in -ewi—bofotueV\tlk l l d * ’

onflainoil from an injury; from varicose vein's; snmetinK>h an infection in the fiKJt may U ' a factor

T rca lm en t of • superfic ia l phlebitis ' consists of heat, frequent elevatipn of the leg. avoiding garters or. garments that re.strlct blood flo-w irt the veins; also, anti-inflammatory and rrrrdication as appropriate

P a t ie n t , c o n s e r v a t iv e treatment usually c leart up this type of phlebitis, bfn you must expect it to tiike time If you have varicose veins, they may hilve to 1)0 U'eated ande l i m i n a t e d t u s u a 11 ysurgically)

Hie U.SC of support lio.siery will not cure this type of phlebitis, but may make you m orecom ff^table when you are on your fi'et, especially if the veias are distended or there is swelling of the foot

taillxine." is entirely' different from a pilonidal cyst, except that both occur in about- the same locality,.pe<jr Uie end of tlif spine.

I've discussed pilonidal cysts a number of times. They are a congenital abnorm ality^ and therefore not the p riva te property of truck drivers. Such a cyst is one that contains hair, bits of bone' sometimes, or other odd types of ti.ssue that^ don't Jx;long there Sugical

—ftiiiiouat-ifc-lhR, .snlutliin______Century Limited, The Broadway Limited, the Cannonball Express

Riding in the Pullman" car of those n ever-to -com e-aga ln days y w could, by sighting tmt—the window, make the w ifes on the lioles (which always followed the railroad tracks) appear to wave up and down, up and down.

There^ were the numbered mile posts and by borrowing a watch with a second hand you could timeiOhep^ train’s speed and have the thrill of reporting ‘ to all within hearing distance that they were going 60 miles an hour — imagine, a mile a minute!

The lower Pullman birth was a joy because from the darkened interior, after the small reading lights were turned off, you could raise the curtain and watch the w orld — som etim e ' even moonlighted — speed by And then, coming througlr a town into the station, the deserted but empty streets w ere the source of

3ERRfS WORtOf........

innagiiiations' of -aril kind^ A nd by putting your face close to the window you could read the town ndme on the pnd of the depot and know right where you were.

And the diner! What a wonder of great food and great surroundings.

waiters (w e called scurring to

so that all passengers could Be fed iii a minimum of time And the waiter who went through the train, ringing a hand chime and chanting; ‘ ‘First call for breakfast” or “ Second call fnr Pirpalffa«;t" nr. depending on the

take - the ordet's

t tm e ..... ............................W o«ls ‘ 'L u n c h ^ ” and'DTnneP’ for

: b rK ik fiB tr"?^Call For Dinner” which signaled it Was time fo r the PuUm^n porters to

— sta r t mak ing down the b ir tfe ,

S^Pyew - BhoM in

G IV K A W A Y D E P T s - We want to give away six

puppies, part Labrador and Collie Four are males and two are females. -Please call 734-5464 in Twin Falls and ask for CathyRaiden. _______

V^eTiave a two-months old pup and twoatMut two weeks old, which w e must give away. All a rc -rea f cute-. P lease call 734-2006 in Twin Falls. .

Here are eight puppies needing homes. Mother is a Chesapeake and-falher ofjmkriown nationality

Dear Dr Thosteson; I have a spastic colon I have been to the llultui tjut-TTonder if-yott WrtuId

ibear Dr Thosteson In our .science clas.ses we are learning about ‘ [KeTIrHnaTorynrs-stem Some of the kids t)cllove-that either all or part of your btood IS blue. We would like your answer, - N H

None of your Wood is realjy blue It IS bright red when it i.s pumped from your heart to various parts of the body On iLs trip through tlie bwly, it picks up various waste products, which make it a darker red Call it a bluish red

Then as it -returns' to the heart and is c ir ­culated through the lungs, the carbon d iox ide is e x ­tracted from the blood, fresh the blcKKi becomes brinht red again

1 know dial when you look at veins, they appear to b*> blue, but the blood in them - as you would immediately see if a vein acc iden ta lly becam e puncturi'd - is a dark red

mean the presence of-<hseese.The couldiness can be the

result of the production of phosphate cryjitals tbjit are th^ norm al end -“product —o f- d igestion - of fru its, for ex.'irnple

The phosphate crystals wouldn't necessarily show up in morning urine specimens, but might well show up later in die day If you eat fruit for breakfast, including orange juice. Uien this might be the. reason for the mysterious appearancf and disappearance of tlie cloudiness.

H It was a kidney infection, Uiere would be the presence of pus and other signs of infection ,su( h as a fever

Kmotional stress could bring on symptoms such as t>ack pain, but I suggest you look for more physical cau.ses of your pains before seeking out that elusive culprit.

aaiu f-s— •■•h n lan rr ’ ’— ahmit hmwn soots

"D eT trm " Thostpsmr Could you give me some information

which

run an article on this Is there trouble'’ What can be done to any medication or operaUon correct or overcome it

( l»71 k, MIA

for this’’ Is ma.ssagc helpful’’ — I,, J

M edication, proper diet, control of nerves ( if you are a tense ind iv idual i a ll arc

DrThoste.son's booklet, "Diz?y .Spells. " discusses loss of balance, vertigo and nau-sea. M en iere 's d isease and labyrinthitis. F'or a copy write

- ca»gy-~-tt>— him in— e » r e — o f— thts---- removed

! w eek » o ld^ndvresemble' The _____G eo rg e “ tfanEy hom e” on "Route Three, H igh land D r iv e , at telephone 733-4609.\ ' ....— ' _*- _______

---- ----- TbD A Y ’S CHlJCiCt E :

A ThoughtI know that there is nothing

better for them than to be happy and enjoy themselves as long as thev live: also that it is God’s gift to man that everyiOTie-sfaonW ^^ai^ d r£ ^ and ta k ^ p le a ^ re in a ll his toil. — Eccl. 3:12, 13. '

' hglpl i i t :-Tte~scc r tainsurger^ .can" be used, if newspaper enclosing 25 centsnecessary. >n coin and a long, self-

j 'v e d i*usse3~th is taefore. addressed (u se zip codet,and instead ol going over it stamped envelope again. I'd suggest that yousend 25 cents and along, self- --------addressed, stamped envelope Dear Dr. Thosteson: Quite

- shfaiej ~fw you and wfien y < «___

- Labor, the symbol, o f '

m an 's ’ halppihiess Jam esi-Montgomeryr-Scottish—poeL,.and-*

for a copy of my booklet, frequenUy I will have low twck"C o lit is . and K indred pain and a cloudy urine fo r „a _

6t>uble like yours. ■ , return. ' , •. -------- 1 was to the doctor recently

b ea r Dr. Thosteson: You and gave a c lea r urineanswered an- ii^u iry alxmt specimen in the morning. By pain :tw—the - ' ’ tDHbone3 ‘-

appear in face, arms and hands as one gets older"’ My mother had many of them and called them Uver spots."

Is there a reason for them and IS there any way they can be prevented, or cured or

-Nt &--------- -------It'S more accurate to call

- th em -:a ge spots," as their jappearancfL has absolutely

nothing to do with the liver. As wc get older, the coloring matter (pigment) in the skin tends to gather in small areas and produce these spots.

-Thinrc is -na known way to----prevent themJlve-heen-lold by

patentcFtams fads-the apots tjut I ’ve had others tell me they tried the same remedies with

,no success a t all. '

Tecalfs '^ohrdM cyst, which I and ciondy nrine. What can be imagine is a. rather goiHaUx the cause? A lot of sitting that uiikHovm--:euUty, hiiiI '

spots myself, having-reached the. ag& But since they do not

worthy of some iriTBnfnaUon strain and tension? — 4 . B. them.

____ a..

Page 5: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

orcesB y F R B O V A R N E S

( c ) Wathlngira S ta r^ ew tWASHINGTON — By forcing a legal battle over his taped

conversations. President Nixon Is venturing Into an arena - thetedoral coiirts - w h e r e HTadm lnistration^aa fa redp oorly in

f eCMlt HIBBWiS; ---------- ■■ - ' " -- --------■— mm4n-hi t v» becn-B-virtual-d lia iter area tor theadministration “B claims o f authority to take steps In defiance o f

- ---------- ' of the legislative

' _ • . ■ I.

was v a i f fT f it is, those chaUengCig the m ® * p p o r t increase~ woTTrgei the documents. ; - —------ ----- -— ^

While he has yet to rule on the fundairiental issue of executive privilege. Jones dealt with the White House a setback m erely by demanding to look at the documents. The Wt ilte Hoiiw had

. nttttfnud he shoBldrac j^ t -its claim of executive privilege ' without sw ing them. ________________________'■ ' ' ■ ,

outlaw ini^unJIqlienil u t the Justices fiSyen’t acted on Georgia 's suit.

2. O ffice o f Economic C^portunity Judge Jones, who is h a n d lin g the m ilk support case, blocked the admlnlatratlon

Analysis- **^hSet. th(t oour t . haue heen a .vlrtUftl area --------

BdministraUon's claims o f authority to take steps InC o n g r^ or t^lRSul ihTnspecific^approval ^ ih fr leg! a v «— case of the tape^ecordlnga, the milk Support

‘' l i r t i i e after case fede ra l Judges have taen less t h a h - T ^ T f t e a to - t pit the White House against C on gre «

impressed with the legal arguments prewnted by government the suit,attorneys In defense of acUons by ^ e administration.

Most of the cases didn't involve a c l ^The consUtutional underpinning cited by the President for his refusal to tum over^ape recordings of his conversations to the Special Senate-Watergate Committee and Prosecutor A r c ^ ald

T" ‘_________. . . . . ____ rv_

di.smantllng„p K O whll^ ConyrcM has OTOvidef fimds'for lis ”■ continued exislSh'ce.

Since C k )h gr^ has authorized a id fu n d ^ O.ET.O. sald-^hes— — “' l a s t AprU. "hlstorrcta~prMed^M logic and the, te a -^ fy th e - ~

constitution Itself obligate the admimstratioh to operate' the-—PM

them ."Ij.stmnnth^-thp Judge also ordered Howard J. Phillips out as

Tuesday, July 31. 1973 Times-News. Twin -Falls, Idaho' 5 -

V l e i l ic a c c r-— -— — — r doe

•SAIGON I U P I ) - t h e Vietnam ttternational . peacekeeping team w ill come, to a virtual

______I ___ standg^Ul Tuesday when Canada jtuUt ouL. _acMrding to the chairman of- Its Hungariandelegiatlon

llDtil ' a ‘ replaceraeBi T i 'ieund, 'Fefence' - E8zvrgat]rsatd~Motidtiyri^toveittgatlaiurBnd supervision of prisoner releases by the

- In terna tlon a l-X om m ls fioa -o t Contral—and-----

— but one case did Involve^udge William B. Jones ol U. S. DlaUkt Cuui t here ordcrM in « Whrte House to give him ^cuinenta dealing with tfie d ^ U lon In M irch. 1971, to raise the federal inlik price su p porlley^

J6rtes. who Is handling a suit chaUenging the milk support boost-, said he wanted to read the documents W determine whether the administration’s assertion of execuUve privilege

groups filed the ^ t .But the focus in three major legal disputes In which the

administration suffered setbacks has been the President vs. Congress. Here Is a rundown.

1. Impoundment. In about a dozen Instances this year, federal judges have ruled that the president cannot Impound — or ,,;y(„ge_t0_gpefld----- [unda appr.oprlated hy rnhgrft-m.

Government attorneys have wheeled out a variety- o( tn rfpfanit Imnoundment.. but the administration

‘ h im t won a slngle'court decisloij on the issue this year. ( H woiT - one last y e a r . )-

Now, the administration must decide whether It wants to carry Its contention that Impoundment 1s lawful to the..S«preme Court. The ita te of Georgia already has asked the highest court to

acting director of O.E.O. because the White House hadn’t seht his nomlnationTo Ihe Mnal'CTfor'^conflrmatioTT. ■

3. War. Legal challenges to President Nixon's authority to carry on the war In Vietnam were routinely dismissed by, federal judges, but Nixon's policy of tx)mblng In Cambodia was declared unlawful Wednesday by Judge Orrln G, Judd of U.S, district court In Brooklyn, N. V. •

"There Is no exciting Congressional authority to order m ilitary forces Into combaj ln Cambodia or to release Iwmbs nvpr rHmhodla, ' thp judge ruled In a suit brought bv R eg,-

\o surprise in Greek vote(C) 1973 Washington Star-News

ATHENS — Evea before the Greek, government announced------ MondflytJratGeorge Papadopoulos had received-78: ^ r c e n t ^

the vote, it was a foregone^nclusion that the wily Intelligence officer who clamped tmrPountry under ntarUal law in a military coup six years ago would be the first president of his self- proclaimed republic of Greece.

If there were any surprises In Sunday’s re f8t>endum at all. It was tRe' e'norfnity of Uw electoral count, in view of increasingly vocal anti>Papadopoulos mood, veteran diplomatic sources hadprojectgd-fiapadopoulos’s total vote at something closer to 60 per cent of the count. __■ Burthe'lvay In whl^nHe.cbnte'sl was run, the election of the 54- year-old Papadopoulos was neveLln.®®*^^®^® doubt.

, Some 5.8 million voter^w en t to the "polls to consecrate Papadopoulos’s unopposeoelght-year presidential term. They ■

’ were' £dso“ called -upon — In the "simple ysB'-no contest — to endorse the vice presidency of the country’s armed forces chief,

-Xten^Odyssous. Anflhclls, as-wtall -as th& constitutional change-convertlng Greece from a monarchy to a republic — all this despite the fact that they had been warned well in advance that the June 1st abolition of the monarchy was a fait accompli.

Many Greeks cdnsgquently questioned why they should go to

the polls at all.' Voting Is compulsory In Greece for all citizens between the ages of 21 *»id ^0. Thus most Greeks did vote, and a

-numbcF-votccd open compallnta ._________________ ..~ Scores of reports of voter Intimidation and Irregularities at the polls have reached the offices of citizens committees set up to oppose the vole.'The committees were given no oppportunity to wage th«lr-6 wu Campaign in opposition to the referendum. But In light o f mounting election complaints'the committees, may,

r the n a lio n i- fiu p r^ e

COUtL, _____________ - ‘Branding the election as an insult and a fraud, Greece's 1^1

legitimate prem ier, PanayolUs t^anneipopoulos, charged that the contest-iSiinday was a ‘ ;cIaLsis„case o f a totalltatian regime trying to cover itself with a false mantle of popular support.'i

" An yon e 'read in g ~ the -34 arWeles of the referendum s eonstitutionaJ- draft would have, to agree with the formerpremier. - j - - .................. - ...........

Papadopoulos now rules by decree in the fields of security, rtpfpn«ip and foreign affairs, will command the a r m ^ forces through his appoint^jU. chiefs and, other than in the case of treason or intentional violation of the constitution itself, "bears no responsibility for a c t io s carried out4n-Hhe exercise o f hi* duties.” , . I

Elizabeth Holtzman, D-N.V.Two days later, the 2nd U.S. Court of Appeals blocked the

~~]gagg *r ruling — the flr4it judicial cliallenge tu-the P reaideht-a- war-making pow'ir — from going Into e ffect Immediately, Meanwhile, anbt’.ier^edera l judge dism issed-a.suit. by. eight rniembers of Congress who sought a bombing hdt.

Though the lower federal co.yrts havabeen unsympathetic, the administration can cite a January ruling by the Supreme Court

“ W Bn^lndleatlon ^ B t= th e i«s tic e 8-might-look -favorabljtoorlhe- Presldent’s argument in the case of the tapes.

The court, on a M vote, held that members o f Congress hadTflo right -to get classified documents dealing with the Amchitka Island nuclear test In 1971. Twenty-two members of Congress have brought siilt to see the documents.

If the administration says the documents are classified and not subject toxelease under the freedom of information act, the

them to determine if they arc properly classified.The Januwy decision was on far narrower grounds than the

dispute over the tapes IS likely to be decided on. However, it is expeCte^ that the battle over the tapes will reach the Supreme. Coiii-Uiy late September, g lvlnglhe justices an explosive case to hancDe when they feturn“ln early October fnm rthetr summer recess. ' ‘ - ........ - . -

Supervision (ItC iil Will be luspended.■ __________ The ICCS Monday held Its last regular

’ meetUig with L'aHaaiUU p a it l t lpatlan but —- . pl«nned-a-«peclaljneeting-M'ithj^:Ung Canadlaal

delegation leader V.G. ’Fiimer-Tuesday to wind up business.

Watergate panel termed Sigilantes’~

Jta tjb iB m icJTK orff, 59, of Rehoboth, Mass who gained

NEW YOKK iU P l ) +-■ A.citiifns'C.pmmltteg headed by ________ .a Massachusetts rabbi has Tame in the 1940s for his workstarted a campaign a'gainst the’ in iKeTescue o f Jews from Nazi■'vigilante atmosphere" of the Germany, is the temporarySenate-WatergateHSommitteer— ehalrmatteHhe-nreap:--------- -charging most of its members .arc "hanging judges" trying to destroy FYesident Nixon,

The committee" took out $5,772 advertisement in Sun­day's New York Times headed

RIFLESLarg* S «l«c llo n

HEW I USED GUNS"An Appeal for F a irn ess" Country and W attyrn

8 Track Slerao ,

SWIMMING PObLS" AND SUPPLIESII

e L 0 BE.I,‘iVo.Truck Ion*. Twin Foitt 753^^373

TAPES3/*9“ or*3” Eo.

: 14,17. Klmb«rly Rd. 733-S79&

US ‘lies’ about Vietnam KTtBy LARRV GREEN

(c ) 1973tHlcil_ ■"The U. -S, Senate is just

discovering vvhat almost every

war has been saying all along; Ihe government of the JJiiited States lied about what it was and was not doing in Indochina.

And what hasemerged-in the last lOTlays — more than 3,600

Jxjm.bing ,rai(Js by B-52's in Cambodia during 1969 and 1970 and the death of 103 G l’s.on-spV mi.ssions in Cambodia and !.aos when the Pentagon and- State Department denied either activity was going on - jnay be just the tip of, an ugly iceberg ^

The record of secrecy — that IS, keeping thing’s .secret from the American publR' not the ‘ 'enen>y" who knew what the United States was doing, when and where — says as much about what has happened to Amencan-slylc democracy as

the affair called Watergale in spokesman, )-

Throughout the war lying, various phases of U.S. military d fc e it , understatem ent and oucrations in Indochina over

rather than the exception when it came to matters that might di'aw criticism.

Candor was alm ost an unknown quality in the govern m en t's ' -war nelflted Information policies.

So cavalier-was the military . jibout It. a new top spokesman

for the now defunct U.S. '■'command in Vietnam — a

colonel -- wa.s introduced U) newsmen by the ma'n he succeeded as a "graduate of

ui -jei 1 y of evasion

TWP----- ItUTKnedheim school and obfuscation "

the tmie Zeigler - was H resiiifiit N ixon 's ch ief SprtKesman and is now a top aide to the President and Knedheim was. and still is, the 1’ e n ta U Q .n 's o f f i c i a l

orig inated w ith Z e ig le r or form er - D efense S ecre ta ry Melvin I.aird, inilitary sources in Vietnam said at the time.

l,aird,_lgQ^ is now one of N u on'fc-top-aides.

Addition orders for secrecy originated with the U S, Pacific Command which at times even kept things from the U.S. conunand in,Saigon, •

In one insliinee last year tJie -T'acific command refused to inform the Saigon command of

- dt taila-tnvolv ing damage-tw a

Haiphong in North Vietnam,

described by .some militai , riffh'ial.s, as the moji^

a ir raids In ■■ modern warfare,' S im in ir ly - when Nixon ordered five days of raifc against North V ietnam in ,Decen*tx;r, 1971, the whole operation was kept secret

& pleased with how little was actually learned about that operation, the Pentagon, pinned a decoration on-^hl' 'Air K«ree major who was4hu chief ,sp<iki-sman for the air raids

The last two years are littered with examples of lies

" M OW .YUtJ ~CAN~F I A,D, p h a r m a c ie s in 30 STATES ALL .flR INGING YOU SAFETY, SERVrCC. 8.

- S A V IN G S— ------------ -------------------------

August 1-4 —

MieRlN-PfcUs'PJNew Fof^rnula 4 2 0 2 .

MIg list $1 29

LYSOL ------- SPRAY

PROTEIN 21 M SHAMPOO '

Reg , Oily, O r y r - --------- - ~14 OZMIg iisl $2 “IQ

Disinfectant 21 orMfg list $2 49 _

FLICKER LADIES’ SHAVER

MIg, l.;.t 31,4a

BASIN TU B & I

SILKEN LEGS

Capitalist nation^ support free press

U.S. destroyer , operating off the shore of North Vietnaih When the truth Im alij caiue ll turned out the ship had been hit by m issiles fired from attack ing Am erican figh ter planes

/Vjnong other things kept secret, at least temporarily, fruin both the American public and (,,‘ongress were detjiila of last D ecem b er 's m assive bom bing o f Hanoi and

and deceit A m on a^ ienr

. iJntil qiiestiqrted by tliD press the Navy was routinely not reporting the loss of fighter )cts which happened to fall into the South China Sea while returning to aircraft carriers [rcim combat missions Tlie effect w as to conceal Ute loss of inulti-inillion. dollar aircraft,

_ To convince Congress to appropriate tens of millions of dollars for air raids

Wt.29e a .JOHNSON BABY OIL (

10 OZ )xA(_Mlg list SI 49 •

§ 8 9 *liali\ o i l ■

BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS

W RITE BROS. PENS

CR ESTReg or Mint

M?g list $1,13

8Tea. » g

ByF. J B.ROSF.(Dispatch of the

London i

li3ND0N — Freedom of the press exists only in capitalist countries This is a very broad generalization but it is largely true becau.se it is only where there is an econom ic Infrastructure strong enough to support a competitive press

”lh a t newspapers cease to depend for their existence on the whim nf fnvprnments.

(an be called freedom of in form ation But a mere counting of heads di-sguises the enormity of the situation Over vast areas of the earth 's surface there is no possibility of press freedom, In ltie whole Communist world there is none.

Freedom of the press has disappeared in A-sia, except in Japan and India and possibly in TndOriesia, ll has always ltd a precarious existence in I^tin Am erica and now is to be found

And yet there is a paradox: in capilali.st systems the forces of the market lead to

, concentrations of ownership to mergers and to the creation of monopolies which tehd to e l im in a te in d e p e n d e n t

—edttortal—voices—» n * -m ay- deprive the people of a real

_ choict-ol views^vEven in rapitsltst countries

the preM can pn'fy keep its independence ofgovem m ent if it retains the confidence of the pubhc. Naked commercialisn) or irresponsible tjehavior may

- atrik« a l , th e _ ro o L _o f- fret-Hnm, fnr the public wjll^'

eeo a e - to --sup^ f t a p ress against- Its government if it* sees newspaper ’ owners cynically sacrificing the public Interest to private profit.

In Its lastam roal-w rvei^ lM - ' bitemational Press - Institute

sU ted that barely one-efth of member countr '

the United Nations enjoy what government.

"o?nynnnroIomBIa7"VEn57n5TrCCosta Rica. Puerto Rico and El Salvador, It is non-eidstcnt In the Arab world with the Honorable exception of Lebanon, and there are few countries in independent black A frica where^anjt-iorm of free expression is allowed.

Where then does it exist.? In n on-C om m un ist E u rope cm ata ly , if yon exclude th« d ictatorsh ips in Spain and Portugal and Greece, and you must now also exclude Turkey; in ' North Am erica and Australia; In India, Israel and

-Japan. I t i s a very short IW .

this does not necessarily jpiean that an expression is free, for In some countries, for example F ran ce 'a n d Tnd ia , the gpvermnent strictly, controls all t e o ^ a ^ K television, using the system for its own

B ^ 7 , 2 9

Vaseline Intensive Care

BABY POWDERPaper Mate

FLAIR PENSNEO-SYNEPHRINE

9 Qi.

MIg list 95c Red or Black Felt Tip A/I /Q Q 0

Sptay 'i%Mfg list $1 b? NTZ Spray Mfg list $1 72

DERMASSAGE ifM edicated Skia Lotion J 16 ozMIg list S2 25

CRUEXfor M en ^

II you’re' lo g PIO 10 ^ *

PROTOOTHBRUSHES

Soft, i.lodium. Hard

/ Mfg list 4/$2 7«

4/88'> i

BAND-AIDJohnson & Johnson Refl, Pack 70s 20 Free

Mfg list $1 09

have diaper rash.It must t»g something

ABSORBINE, JR' - ' i -

4 02.Mfg Ust SI 75

1 SAV MOR DRW SAVE-ON DRUG sON THE AftALL" TWIN FALLS

r j

“ Tn ra o ro R FTW IN FALLS B

Page 6: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

n r .■- 1 ■

6‘~Tlme»-Newfc Twln^gall^. Idatio , Tuesday.,. July 3l. 1973

| Q (n'J• a A

........ ... j . . . ■: ' ..../ . /■ . 'Tuesday. July 3.1, 1973 . Tltnes^-^Newt.'TwIn Fall» , ' Ijtoho '' V--

v VTvTyT^rTV1 V T y T V > ^ o n m V i BrTm ra

A l a n s

ih H( v h ' r S ; t > ' r S ' A 6 ;<1 h V . h ' A V h ' A A 6 A f ^ A o J \ Q / h [ \ o ; W j l M S a i i l i ^ y o V J S l J S l A W j t i v j Q V O v o V j Q v J . t m r m

' A X i ! A 1 . ! ! 4 i i ! A ! / i I A A ! i ! l ! i 1 A I A i A A I t\-i a m l^ ^ , -A iA iA J LAiA! yVj ' A l v^Kaayyu

BONELESS

A R M O U R . 1 8 77.

W h o U . 1 0 -1 2 Lb. A v e .

CANNED MEAT SALED A K . O n « l bHAMS

CHOPPEDIAM BACON

3” :D A K . O n * Lb.

D A K . W ith TH ot ■ ^ C o o rd B a c o n A r o m b . . lb.

COME !N AND iWEET OUR . . .B AK ER Y SALESGIRL

A lbertson 's Bakery Sa le sg ir ls ta k e 'P r id e In The ir Job To Bring Y.ou The K in d -O i, SefyjCj^,YatLDes »er>e! Tho lr F rlend ty Sm-ile U Their Special Way Of Saying "We Cd^e About Ybii . ; : Rely On If "

iri^ IB R O W N IE S

Chocolote Fudge. Bakery jFreshl Buy NoV^I

APPLESAUCE CAKEDONUTS

G r^a t "SWackin ! IRENCH^READ^

BONELESS

H A M

A R M O U R ia 77. HALF. 5-7 Lb. Ave!

HORMEL VALUE BRANa

7 m .

B A C O NSWIFTPREMIUMBUTTERBALL

. ___ P E A C H E Sfr e s h f T op Wltti ^ F r e s h C r e a m I Lb.

r-r’.,

R A N D O M I y^£|QHT . • 49‘

ALBERTSON'S MEATS ARE GUARANTEED!UINNERfRftNKS " * N O W O P E N 2 4 H O U R S

7 D A Y S A WEEK!CRAPES. PLUMS OR NECTARINES

OUTDOOB PRODUCE SALE

W a l l a W a M o S w e e t

ONIONS -R ed

m m m

ICE MILK MILK

A L B E R T S O N s. % C o M o n . . . .

A L B E R T S O N S

A t s e i t t ^ o w * . r .2 * . ............... ' I O o l lo n

" 5 Q t . P o l l

, .w ^ .iO Q «J lix R ^ __O n * H o lf G o l lo n - . . ,

BUY BY THE CASfAiBD SAVES

These Items A vailable O n ly W hile Quantities Last!

ITiM

eREAM CORN A lb * r t i o n t ............................

TUNA FISH c« mi Dor. G.oi.d

PORK N BEANS

WHOLE CORN .on.. L..

^ C PAC CORN J a n * t L « «

4 JS E Y O U Rp M A S TER CHARGE59c W EDNESDAY

THRU

LAWRYS DRESSINGA i » o r t * d 8 o i -W U h CoufxaiL.

GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKES

f R I D A Y

4 oZ *1W ith o u t 3 / $ l — E i p i r » t • '4 ^ 73

LIPTON TEA2A 01. Jor.W ith C o u p o n . . . . .

W ith o u t 1 .07 — E i p i r » » B 4 73

92=[r.-ic.-y I •'■iVi

IF YOU’RE GOING TO STORE

NITROGEtl PACKED STORAGE STABILITY

' G reat For Afternoon SnotkslStock.Up N ow !

Iil«. M.

POTftTOEt

c$ 5 9 5

50 tb Bpg

r e - C o t i l

ATERMELOm- l9 9 '

I SFresh S w e e t

CORN . . . . . . .9ea»(of

S e r v e T o n ig I :W ith Y o u r M e a l I ...............Lb.

mTflEDOFOODS f c " ‘ ^

iVKa:HKinL .'£:49“

WZORHIDESA ■ A £ £ S O V ^ ............... - ............................

t o C t. P o c k . W ith C o u p o n ....................................

W ith o u t 65* ~ E « p i r * t § 4/73

TOMATO HIUIETOMATOES*™..-...................... . . . . 6CATSUP i i . . l » » ......................................................3 2 o »

lOMAIO SOUP Alb«r»ton i 10 01. ftLmumomsoup

m m

rOlBERS4n>«af<l. 10 01 . I

- W t fh C o v p o n . . . .................. •

W llh o u l 1 .74 — E > p l r « i • '4 / 7 3 , 1

ia rg * '8 tn e h .^tio y ll TItmk-------You’ve B « « n Baking All D ay! Ed. 1

39

m m m m .

FREE ANNIVERSARYCAKE SAMPLES'.v: ; ; . ‘.",t

- 6 TO A CASE

WHARD RED WHEAT... CRACKED WHEAT.......7“F I n iiR ^

J _ J | J U l J [ | | [ W w h e a t O r W h i l e . C a s e . . . . f

FARINA

I A M A

C O R D IA L C A N T A L O U P E !

, 40 c.lvin I M \ .1 *«'~ n • >1' maiHMiiM il

VKMk A .. . 10S1 •( < ...k\ .1 TtliMliM . . . 4% t(

T W A T Eip LO H S s 7'/? LEMONS 3 °°> 9 BANANAS X ^ - ’-1

CABBAGE

I C e r e a l . C a s e

MU.K APPLES

D r y . C a s e .........................

D r y . C a s e

SHORIENIIirP-HIP-KFM uniuncn

I P E6USOry> Cose

Chunks.jCase . . . . M K S C o s *

098

23”31”5T4 ^

■■ ®LEAF, ROMAINE, BU I (tH“ LETTUCE o’f ’

G rea t Served With Corned Beef..............................

MEET A.WISE WATfRMELON!

*nSc« 1 14 •( ^(ha fM iMrr« 1» (cWin w»4 1 |r«H« •< SO*. •< ifc* oJeb4ii)V tHtmmtmd** «kw«Mt *4 Vi !•••• A 40*. I- C .10*. «f r . atlTManrf i

• ( ''■ IcUi Niacin." 1L _J

I

THIS WEEK

THERM-SERVE SERVING WARE10 oz. MUG 3 FOR n »REG. 39 EACH

RFfiKTFR N O W I d WINNERS EACH STORE!Tin us, SUGAR e lO U l lT ^ STEAKS10" FMNHICEoimis e NRTNDAY CAKE

.................................GOOD DAY PEACHES > ™8~ 3/* 1 :tllAIII«l»qllAIIG£S,.™.». ;

CARAMEL COM W KEEBLER s: 61' u“ ~ 58‘KFFRl FR;rr‘•-" 6(1° S£"'?...58'

~ m m gONNtTU.T.iS s r r : ^

m ONW SHLotion. R*))u lar O r H ard To HoW . . . .

WE ACCEPT USDAFOOD ST AMPS

r r - : 10^ rotAL PBDD|NK .r>. r t If HAND LOTION "A" AmOVtP. inAe.U«j:or«r. . 1 • oirfS®w iiM w h u i T IB ID I CD H H Iw P U It llWWMLLil I

NICE ’N EASYutswuui

■ P E IB E T M Y S niUEIMXID ,

A L B E

THE FOOD PEOPLE W/io tare

'TmS

Page 7: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

ofil- ’T ln i*»‘N*w»,.;Twln Fallt. Idaho . Tu«»day, July 31, 1973

FE)A researches N p r o t e s t e r s^ te n t medicine ^feetiveness -

WASHINGTON ( U P I) - The kers of A lK f l^ j toer have

group's complaint was conduct-

, makers of A lKfi-geltoer have . told the goverrtinent they are Alka-Seltzer with a sllghlly

- — Cep'arag ><< 'otnrf w arn ing- d ltfw w itfo rmuLa than tssold in ronsuniers tiwt the product the United States. It was

’"shSuMTlortjeirten'JUBfto ctM-e— d l f f ^ n e e In fowmthe results of the tes t-th a t

Alka-SelUer people with

made the

upset stomach.At the Same time, however.

Miles Laboratories said it does not believe the government should require labels to warn stomacn ulcers product at all.

The company comments in testimony before a panel of the Food and Drug

ing over-the-counter aspirin v .u u jproducts to determine which Research Group and others had should "fee leH on the marjtet _raiscdquestionsaboutpotentW and ' which ^ e safe ‘ ‘ and— harm from aspirin to users who e ffe c t iv e as c la im ed . The have stomach problems that review is part on ficT^eriC yS— scCTirtikc bqt are-more-serlous lool? - at the entire patent than un up.set stomach,

medicine business. v---Tht* study in question ;licl notM i l e s released the testimony, ^.onclude that Alka-Seltzer

given Monday . lii tfispon^ to a (..msed any significant b lo o d -

prompted Miles not to g ive .the test results to the panel which was considering antacids, he said.

The review panel later

other products are safe and probably effective. M iles sub­mitted the study in question to the FDA after the panel's

said, ijecause ^ e ana i

Fihishing touch— W ORKERS at HIU (> m m b rlli n ea rT g lm y fa r N .V .,m ake adjiistme;^ts In the lighting prior to the annual Mormon pageant. The performances begin today and run through Saturday and are expected to dr^iw 125,000 pMple. (U P I)

new attack on Alka-Seltzer jnade duri.ng the weekend by' the Kalph Nader-backed Health Research Group. The group said Miles deliberately withheld evtdeiwe from sd tfferen t I'D A panel thflfr reviewed antacids bfecaiise the evidence showed that the asplrin in Alka Seltzer produced excessive b.IcedingiD. test subjects.

Adrien Ringuette, secretary and general- counsel for the pharmaceutical firm, told the

• aspirin review pan^ Monday that the Health R esearch ' Group’s charges were categori­cally untruo.

He said the sjudy cited in the

loss; but Dr. Sidney Wolfe, direl'tor of the Health Research Group, said he did his own statistical analysis of the study and found that ^ka-Seltzer causes "significant bleeding in- norftial people.

Kinuuetleaaid M iles believes Alka-SeyUer is safq and effec­tive for upset stomach alone— not ju$t in combination with a

-headachofibiit he said "w e are prepared to modify our label Indicjftions s o ^ S T W fp ro d u cT tsnol recommCTdi^ for antacid use alone, pending the develop­ment of further clinical eviden­ce."

Beef price lid on until Sept. 12W ASHINGTON I U P I) - The situation that prevailed-v«4th-

administration will jiot "cav£__pacltfln ich ic f(en .'’ ----------in " to demands for the liftinjj o f •’■fltite-conceded at a news

-^leeording to Butz, to "spread the overall national price level out the bubble" of post freeze - is well above the levels of a few

beef price ceilings before Sept'.12. Agriculture Secretary Earl I„ Butz'says. ' “ :

• > Butz described as' "exag- Uuratcd" Mt)nday fears of 9 long rango' beef supply crisis.

-.TtP— satd—;then? was arnplc. rea.wn to lift tht price c eilings for [>or]i and cTTicRen GecauBe it was necessary to. stop theliquuiattonofbree<ling'tock.

"T tiis is not true with cajitle,;’Butz said. "Th^ .cattle « r e sUli out there. Therefore,- I'm cynvjncud adrmjiisUation Nijto_n

' ■ TSJ'ttfTtTlBtJPCT

briefing there have been reports of cattlemen holding back suppUes until ceilings come off and some reports indicaliag housewives are buy­ing freezers to stock up on beef in-fear of shortages.

He also concederf tiial 'some "'‘spot shortages" are inevitable but he insisted there was no need for "pan ic buying." He said this could leave meat counters"bare if all families- joined in.

increases in grocery prices. - • The agriculture secretary said he expected food prices to

Zealand couple also agreed to be'flown by Freireh"W crafl to the French armed forces advance base at Hao Atoll, half way between Tahiti and V^uru- roa Atoll, the test site 720 miles southeast of Tahiti for France's controversial 1973 nuclear blast series'.

Moodie told newsmen he will — deeide-at-Hao-wh«ther,ta

zone around Mururoa again or return to New Zealand, tempo- rarv headquarters for the Sausalito. Calif.-registered yacht during the current protest campaign.

Pierere Angelf, governor of tills capital of French Polyne­sia. decided to relurn the Fri's 16 crewmen, who were forcibly removed by a French warship from the danger-zone-a -few days before the first explosion of the nuclear teste on July 21.

Moodie and four other crew­men went on a hunger strike

* ■ -over- the-FrenctUal^fover nf the '■ F r lT T h e fifth ci^ewman said

today he would continue his hunger strike in protest oLthe nuclear series.

The second blast took place Satiif-day and the Paris newSpa

diicard the possibility of taking the Issue to the UJJ. SMurity Council.' The paper saR ftfia t' decision-would have to await- (he return of. Prim e Minister NortiramOrk, who ts attending a commonwealth conference In Ottawa.

bill said illegalWill 7101 cave-in ceilings before Sept. 12;

Butz said ho had told iVcsidenl Nixon the beef price ■frccac wan not cuutiing liquida^

lifted ceiLings, on _ _ „ ^ jinfiuamfi'

years ago.Butz said the American

people currently are eating riyp Tnnrp s l o w l y “through ih^ "" twice BS-ttiueh beef pgr capita rest pf this year than in early as in 1955 and need nof worry 1973, perhaps increasing anoth- ...about.getting, enough food........e i^ to 5 p e rc e n t . - ■■ We're not going to run out , . ,■ But he warned about holding of food," Butz satdr ’ T h a t 's ' per t* -F tga ro said today N err out " f a l s e hopes’ ’ of deep and scarcla lk ." Zealan^ sent a protestwidespread price cuts because _

P . T . A . S U M M E R - [

' V A C A T I O N

M A T I N E E j R I

TU ESD AY &July farm price

SAN BERNARDINO, — A .Superinr.

Calif, the initiative removed from the Court— baltol,— but— the Ca lifornia

^ d g e Monday declared uncon- Situtional a state antibusing Biitiative which was approved t)y a 63 per cent majority iB.t)>o Jlovember e l e c t i o n •• Judge Paul E gly 4>rdered the lah Bernardino Unified School

^District to proceed with plans ' 2io put into effect this fall- a

Tracial-balance plan ithat will require some busing of students

;to schools in' other neighbor-, ■hoods.

E g ly ’s ruling is almost ■ te r ta in to be appealed. 'Another •judge, Joseph Babich in Sac- ■ramento, ruled last February ?that the Initiative did meet Iconstltutional requirements.; Called the Wakefield Amend- ^ e n t after its sponsor, Slate Assembly man Floyd Wakefield,

"R-SouthGate, the measure does «not ban busing, but provides Ithat n,o student can be forced to fatten'd a school unwillingly on ■the sole grounds of achieving racial' propui ttony-

Egly ruled on a suit filed by •he NAACP on behalf of 10 llacK chlidren, The TTAT^CF tried bet y e th^election to have

Murderttial

Court denied theSupreme request.

"The Judge ordered school •atithoritios to proceed with a "cluster p lan ," in which the basic, planning unit is a cluster of threeelem entary schools and one junior high school, picked so th a lth e ’ ’ c luster" as a'wKble represents a balance o f d iffer­ent races, social ^oups and economic leve l}.

tion of breeding cattle and t\iat the situation "therefore ... is sub.stiintlally different Iroin ihe

viMuaiiy all roods: pork and thicken, on July 18 by shifting to a Phase rv system in which increases in raw food

consumers. The President or­dered beef ceilings retained

iW IQNES»ftV~W);10r 12:70: J:10 ■ 4:00

until Sept 12 in order,"

AfC'ident.s upNEW YO RK (U P I ) — Acci^— The —1322 accidcntal" death

dents klllejl a record number of Am ericans last year and cost* the nalioiKan estimated J32.3 billion, aecording to prelim i- ' nary estimates by the National Safety Council. -

total was estimated at 117,OOOr a two per cent increase from 1971. Di.-iabling injuries from all

X y ^ s of accidcpts numbered 11.4 million, including 4120,000 which resulted in some degree o(p<miuui«ntunpairnienL

W ASHINGTON (U P I ) - An Agriculture Department report

all raw farm products re- mained 'mchanae^ in the month ending July 15— the p c : ’ before the start of Phase IV economic controls.

The report said a sharp drop in the price of soybeans, a key raw material in producing livestoclt^aird -pOTltryr- offset higher prices for hogs, potato­es, milk, broiled chickens and corn. This left the farm price indt>* steady at the rw ord level of June IS.

(H era ll, however, average

prices hit a record >44.20 per hundredweight, up 40 cents fron> last year's records.

Hog prices jumped io J4l 4ier hundredweight, up W.80 from Juneand $2.70 above the record set last March.

N A S H V IM .E ,T e H n .(U P n - The cry " I ’ve got it " echoed up the narrow 90-foot shaft from a twn-age cave explorer turned rescue worker.

F iv e Dlinutes later. Mike Mooneyham, 19, emerged from .the hole in the lawn clutching a terrified mongrel puppy that had been trapped for 24 hours

^ eg ins^ SANTA^ € «H f r - tW H

/- Herbert W. MulUn killed 13 persons as Human sacrifices to prevent an earthquake which would destroy California, his defense attorney said Monday.

" I will show that my chcnt is mad— stark raving m «d ," pub-

~n<T'~dcfender James >Ia€fcsoiv p id in opening remarks at Mullin's trial on 10 counts of murder.--Jackson—satd that Mnllin hryniy beK evtd that, an eanhr.. I)uake which would have sent CaUfomia sliding into the Pacific Ocean was averted only because of his intervention in offering up human sacrifices.

H e said MuUin, 2fi, a coUege — dropffot and drug user,

ho a m "telephatlcalliijnstruc"- 10 com lnit the kHJings.-

: ;M «2 H «ld m ted T in i»c en t and

to the slayings o f lO persons In » threg-wiecklpcrifld,

ea rly this yea r 4n the Santa O rin area- H e-has not-been-

"d ian ted w tih the three other n a i l n ^ l i e la n t fa to wBUult-

Corn prices rose 4 cents per bushel to $2.03, breaking the %2

Ismid-1948. Wheat prices moved iin from 12.43 a bushel in June to?2 47 in mid-July, compared w illi$ l :i2 iiy ea ra go

Soybean prices, however, -dropped from last m in th ’s record $10 a bushel to $6.69. Officials attributed this to a temporary lim it on exports-trf-^: soybeans and some related high

. protein livestock feeds.Offictals said the increases

for commodities like hogs, . chickens and beef qattle during the month indicated’^h lghV rt^

-pr-lcas-fnr-consuniers in_____ |tho fU l UFft

The Phase IV economic program allows increases in the raw product'prices of all foods except beef to be passed through to con.sumers. Beef prices will be frozen until Sept.

. 12. ' ^

Puppy rescued from 90-foot wettrshafr

ARTHUR f

using noOdJlgm.'T tned in vatn throughout Sunday afternoon and night to remove the animal Ywo of the volunteers tried_tD descend t^e shaft, but could get no deeper than about lOfeet

The Carneys said they planned to fill up tht hole to prevent similar accidents in the

ju a irc - _________ _________ ..L.

S T A iO IT S

■ U i n ^ N E S D J i y

" I 'v e been in tighter p laces," said Mooneyham, as he Ufted JlimseLf from the hole with mud and bloody scratches on his

I M ' " '

N e w s l i p x

Starts

TOMORROW!^ 01^ G l e n d a ” * ___

I - • Mrlvin f r«nk *

H elcom eCAVE explorer M ike Mboneybani, I I , boldi a

Jo il rescued Ir tm the l o f a near Nariivflle. T cbb.,

— wap M in im i imp an a liee tioM M .Udu ' l » e i M i i ^ (p i9 il over U

J a n m k ------------

puppy, apparently un­hurt. was quickly reunited with his owne'r. Rusty Carney, 15.

Rusty was walking the.ctog about noon Sunday when ,the hole in his front yard opened up. sending the p w p y . VSC§t:i down to the b<5ltom, and leaving Rusty clinging to a

■■tlflh at the edge of theuI

" I t 's fabulous,” the smfllng youngster exclaimed, hugging Spot. " I 'm just glad it wasn't m y^ ljo y down there ," his

, mother said. ' ,A lth o^ h a light tajUb-en

e x le ^ o h cord had been low* ered into the hole, Mooneyham

and groped in the mud and darkness to find the nine-week- old puppy. ~

" I nuist- have hit. him. or stepped on him and I heard him whine," the ^ t h sal^.

wanderedi)S.inihaA.^

STARTS WED. Whodonett

m t i A C T'n C H U D U N J A M N

O 0VAM C ANNO N lA M B C O tU t NlA O u n w tlC M

• LAST DAY

Tmich O f Class

P H S T A R T 5 TO M O R R O W !i l O H N n i l l H f i l E - n l M N ^ H B B R B T

R O D T H E I L O R

---------- M t E M H I W W O B B E B S

|P»navtS iO n* T e c h n c o to r * «» •# »• « I r p t a W »rA «« C«<i*«»w«wcati«A*

r i i E t t » nIS T A R T S r O M O R R O W !

------*r f )p C ♦ :4 5p lu » -------

'HICKEY. C BOGGS

The Friends Of Eddie Coyle"

RoOeri Peter Mrtcmmi Boyle Ttc.-.,rOLO =

Page 8: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

to urgeTuesday, July 3), 1973 Times NewS, T w i n I d a h o .9.

.. •• ■ ____i . . . ■

vetoW A S H W G TO N (U P I ) - - Agricu ltu re

Secretary E arl L. Bute said Monday he \*ould 'm .u iiu iiemi lu H eJUUMlt KUuu <lw » hefarm bill unless Senate-House eonferees-scaled. down provisfons. for grain, cotton and dairy ■supports.

nieasure and if they drop a section which'wouid permanently increase the ^oor under dairy gmjpui'twiw " J .I .... " ■ «

' cent of parity.

XLThis H«; said tlia in view o f ' the importance of controlling living costs, “ it ’s wrong to mandate 80 per Cent for four years.” But he Said he would

___________________________ T O te r ^ e M aHon^ ly - l iM W lW .— _______a compromise draft of the four-yeai: farm , food Bute said today he would accept the planstamp and Food Foi' P eace bill, It dashed holding targets fixed in 1974-75. allowing them to congressiohal ffir~saffitnl5tratlpn-wotail

.accept compromise support terms tentatively approved by the conferees Saturday.__But2„Said h** nv-nmmenri approval ofthe bUl if conferees a g r e ^ to allow support target prices for grains and cotton to rise during only one o f the four yea rs covered by the

The bill Includes fixed support target prices for grains and Oottoa in A87A> Qn_ Saturday the

accepraSenare^prsved-versronunrfferw lirtn - la iA xa te tnrougn iP L m g , jjnpppyia: ^ 1 (0 0 to BO O'er^CBm b n lvTortlie

year whirh i>nils nifyl M a rc t i ls t - -

Bute'also told newsmen he.-would favor "approval Dy the conlerence committee o( a House-passed provision banning distribution of food stamps to most strikers. The conferees,

-jilthoiigh— they— ha-v ;— r^achett- ten ta tiv e - iigreement on all other provisions of th? bill, have not yet settled the stamps-fOr-strikers

^ ts e lrt '1976, bUtlKen hOiatnl> ihem. unchanged again at the 1976 rate in the-final year of the bill, 1977,___

-,.--Ihe ctin ferees.alsn „hajl- accepted a, HniLse p rovis ion uhder which the m inim um government support for milk, now 75 per cent of parity, would be raised permanently to 80 per

Gkav&z sgen era l^gr^ape strikeDElJ^NO, Calif. I U P I) - sU-uggle." Chavez said after

rj-s;ar Chavp?’ llnileji-

in 11 general strike against growers of table grapes.

The strike began when talks collapsed between the union and 29 najor growers who had signed-ago with the union after a . nationwide grape boycott and a~ five-year strike. -

The conlrat-Ui expired at- mldnight, and pickets appeared at m ajor grape ranches at 7 a.III.

■We're fighting to keep what • we got after five years of

recognition and labor ca,mps. He said wages hadn't yet been discussed.

K xp iring UKW con tracts throughout California fam i-

»vc .dwindled Chavez’ union because most growers

-have dropped it in .favor ofTeainster4Jnionpact*v ----- -

From a peak of 180 contracts covering 40',0tl0 members, Cha­vez' organization has shrunk to 40 contracts and 15,500 nicni- befs.-If ho loses the current 29 contracts, the union will be left

wiUi less U\iin 7,000 workers> i.t ju A tg i ttjng

aywork force of 9,000 will bt

porters wore put bohiiul bars last w o t^ m waves ot mass

-the

i i f-.li i -nilr l i ipt^

iostrictod picketing-thot-

v,uin lu m y,, ..... (allure of.Jl growers U) renewnee<Jwl to pick grapes m two (.ontiacls wlUi Uie union in weeks. Uiroo cential counties Most of

-t-’hnvTT-HrarKrd-ihmdny that- thc IVamster.s Union was "in tlif backrooiu " during negolia- tions with the IX'lano and Arvin

More than 2,000 UKW su(>- the arrests were due to area grape prwlucers.

A l i n a n a c

RISING EGG prices shouldn’ t bother John ■Se )Bt‘r o l ^ gy f«r t, -P a., a f lar, d U fn v fr lnR an abnormally large egfi. this week. Raising chickens was a hobby for .Selger who says this one shouldcontalnat least four yolks. It measured nine inches around the long way, compared to., the normal six-lnrh egg. tO P I)

C a l t l o s u r v e y e d— BOISK - The lr iven to?yS l-i«IeT irO em State feeding lots July I was 182,000 head, at cording fo the Idaho Crop and L ivestock Reporting

' Service7 " ■ ^The results of thv suirey shows this number Is

down one percent from July 1, 1972. During the April IJune 20 period placemepts were 32 per cent grater than during the same qiiiaHer last year. Conversely, marketings during this same pt*rlod were 10 per cent less than the same p»'rlod a year ago.' ' ■' -

A review ol the weight groups comprUlng the -------------------182,000 heaii mventgry snows t i ia n -o~rnparcd

with tf yra r ago, 29 tiPr rent m o reT a tt lrw e rr tn r the heavy groups. There were 93,0000 head on feed weighing 900,pounds or m ore this yepr

' ____ compatod-4¥ith-52j)00~head-July-4T-19TO;Of the totaloti feed. 78 per cent were steers, 19

It lielfci!! and three pn

“ U jnnttodPressIn tPrnallonalfix lay IS Tuc-sday, July 31,

Iho 21211) day of 1973 with 153 to follow, -

The moon is iippr^achuix its first quarter, , ' - “ "

The morning stars- are Mercury, Myrs iuul Sjiturn,• Tlio evening stars are Venus

and Jupiter » .Those,born uii thi.'i dalo.„are.

under the sign of r**o.AiiuTu an writer. John Kent

■Wa.-m)m July 31, 17G3.On tins day m history: .In 1792, Director David

Hittenhouse laid_ the corner- ■stono 111 Philadelphia for tlie B,.S, Mint, the first building of the federarguverninent.

In 1948, aSj 900 planes flew overhead, I’re.sident Harry Tru­man dctttrated the New York

.International A iqxirt at ld-_ Tow-nif 'F ield, later io ' be renam ed for assassinated

lYesident JohnF Kennedy, i r r 1953, '.Sehate Majority

Ix'iidor Robert Taft of Ohio (lied in New York '

III 1972, M issouri Sen. 'nu>nias.,Eagleton Withdrew as Domocratic vice-presidential' itoTiTinee, six days after disclos­ing previous hospjtalization and I>syclimlric treatfnent.

R e s e a r c h e r s s e e k

c a l f d i s e a s e ^ x r r e ^

A thought for the day: Ameru an writer Henry Tho- reau said, “ It talcer'lWO" to riprak the truth,-one to speSk-, the other to hear,"

Liz's daughter - H O LLYW Q Q D (U P I ) -

SALM ON H esearchers delving into a devastating calf ilisrasc— known----—'-fra— w

M argaret B lye w ill p lay Elizabeth Taylor’s daughter in

disoa.sc in the ,S;*lmon area Param ount’s "A sh Wed- He said some 1,200 calvo.? Si»,s(lav ”

ti eatwl wltil llie diseasegi)lyarthriti.s w ill m eet in ■Siiiinon Sept, 27 to report results of th c ir-eW orts^ fw d a - cause of the affliction

"pcr-reiothers.

cnt

l)r Kl'oyd Krank, head of the U n iversity , o f Id ah o ’sUepartm ent ol V e te rin a ry Science, adv ised that

Russ made quiet \} S gi^ain offer

Burley man naimed Spud panel aide

— -B y «W ? V - Clarcnce Parr, Burley^ has been ^ p o in ted vice<’hairmari and 'S W fe ta ry of a jo in t com m ittee represen ting the National

B y.lO HN F IA IA A (r ) WashingtonStar-News ~

W ASHINflTON Before they quietly bought- one-fourlh of the United -States wlieat crop from private trading companies last sunmier, the Russians offered to help solve energy problems in. the United States'by trading their natural gas

, for surplus, government owned gramThat offer and other attempts to explore a

_,pn May 9, 1972, by Clarence D Palmby. then an assistant sc<TOtary m charge of foreign trade a the Agriculture Department Palmby resigned a few dnys later to take a job witM C^ontinenUil

^ Grain Co,, Avhich had the largest .share of the sale among the six companies that traded with a Soviet wheat-buying team

Evidence that the Ru.s,sians were interested in — buying directly • -from— th«— UmtetL^ States

government emerged last week during hearing.s . by the permanent Investigations Subcojnmlttee

of the State Government Operations Committee , Operations Committee

_____ • The story of the wheal deal that is qmfl-ging' from senate te.stimony is one of chronic

"misundersLandmgs " by American officials At first, according to the testimony there

t ; was d ifficu lty understanding in form ation

purchase---- Patmby-and Coffman testified that they told7 ATWi*iii6v ijiat” sucli a traJe wrouia Be illegal. |T

view that was repeatedly challertged last w e A by the subcommittee's chairman. Sen Henry M Jackson, D-Wash

■iackson has asked the A gricu ltu re Department for a definitive legal memorandum on the matter

y . when representatives of grain trading companies began to call Palm by's succes,sor, Carroll G runthaver, to report a Russian wheat buying team's offer to buy "la rge " aniountsof wheat for cash, Brunthayer said there was another misunderstanding l)erau.se Agriculture Officials were almost certain the Russians wanted corn and soybeans

" I t could have meant that the USSR was -oheclw*g ^>rices of whe,dt versus corn, or that

"ttrey-wefedtaw ing attention away from the feed grains, or that they were, in fact, interested in .some wheat,” he told the .subcommittee.

On July 5, a hastily requested report from the United States agricultural attache in Moscow tended to confirm theTFiTrH as3urnpti0n. It M id that the Russijux wheat crop would be short 20 million tons

Agricult,mg Secretary Earl Butz told the

■Pototo'Counpll~and thP^Pota<»7-Chip Institute International

Chairman of the new comixiiltee is Ed Weaver, Jr , Uncoln, Neb,, president of the W eaver-Eolata Chip Co. ' -

— The joint group viflll attempt to solve problems common to potato chip manufacturer^-and potato growers

Four areas have been agreed

upon for Imnjiediate consideration:

— + Suggested ^^uideHnes c o v e r in g c o n t r a c t u r a l agreem ents between chip m a n i i f a f t l i r p r V and— potato.

re^carrhcrs wiTI tie lakintt ■ slock of research conducted to

date duriYig a meeting in Mp^ovy .Sept, 24-25,

At tEFMx)Scow meeting plans also will be developed for research to be cojiducted during the 1974 calving season-.

Results of the research and plans w ill be reported to cattlemen and veterinarians

,.-tiere Sept 27,Dr, Krank also advised that

the University of Idaho College of Agriculture h ^ entered.iato->

the past sea.son from l>cmhi and Custer counties

Because o f a high incidence ot loss among three herds in the Ix-adore area the overall recovery rale through use’ ^f Dlood dropped Irom M per cent in 1972 to 70 per cent in 197», he said ~ ^

Dr South said the disease now has been reported in Idaho, Montana, Washington, Colorado. California, Nevada and Utah. ■

riiTTEimm

growers 2 Improved communications

between the two groups 3, Im p roved system s of

, 'quallty_contrQl while the' raw product is in transit,

4 A code of ethics which reeoan m e n d s a p p r o v e d practices in the handling of potatoes.

Lincoln FFAeyes fair competition

SHOSHONE - All Future F a rm ers of A m erica in aosh on e are eligible to enter the livestock judging contest at the county fair Aug, 3.

Each contestant mU5l place one class each of hogs, sheep, dairy cattle and beef cattle,

for placing each ciass. The three high scoring members' will be the team eligible to

economics clubs arc required to enter the home economics Judging contest. Each contestant shall place four classes and shall give written

' reasons for placing one class that corresponds to club project. Ten minutes will be

— allnwed- f o r w riting rea sons, -

a research agreement with the Agricultural Research Service of the U S Department of Agriculture,

He said research now in pr^gri^s n r ' Idaho will be strengthened by tests and experiments to be carried out at the National Animal Disea.se I.aboratory at Ames, Iowa,

Under the agreement, the federal agency will provide the Umversitv research project^ supplemental funding in the amount of J32,000 for a two- year period

The joint research effort bill be directed toward identifying the organisms which cause the disea.se, referred to by the U n ivers ity 's D epartm ent of Veterinary Science as "weak- calf syndrome."

Dr, P, J South, Salmon Veteriniarian, who was-one of the first to successfully treat the disease with whole blood

Winted to buy BARIEY K i t a GRAIN!!Wrth W ashington—xmd AAontana dry and g big demand fo r export g ro in .l o o k s g o o d f o r t h e g r o w e r .

Will BUY your GRAHi or STORE it for you. JWttJiOLllie MMKHJolMJONESnVESTOCK FEEDING CO.BONDED WAREHOUSE

8 2 S > 5 3 2 X

The world 's tallest dam, at 1,017 feet, is the Nurek Dam of

' : «)ii\lh^ lrom ' lTi~ R u s :sTart'r F inally, ttier t! waa- .d if fic u lty com prehend ing news o f the ;;jmt>ending, record-breaking sale from U S ; trading company representatives

Oaude T Coffman, deputy general counsel for the Ag^pultare Department, s a id , the department had decided by April, 1972, that any

T - g ^ sale to th e Russiona hiwH o be carried out ; under regular com mercial credit terms over a •three-year period,

JThe.Rus-sians, he saj^, repea t^ ly balked at paying over 6 per cent jntcixst. But the U, S,

■ negotialiilBteam, led Ijy Palmby. was inflexible during a trip to Moscow,

After one rejection, he said, the question arose, "what do we do ’ We consulted among ourselves. We were led to believe that you can’t

.. alway.skrt»w whether thf! Russians meanLafilQC-

• repui t was r thought it was “ too

subLUiiiim'ttpe ttiat the bccausfc he. and others i pcsstm1.sttr “ \

The clearest mes.sage of the Russianis’ intentions may have come on July 6 when Bernard “ STeinweg. ah executive of are Continental G ra in Co., 'says he ca lled Brunthaver and told him tic had just spld the Russians over 4 million tons of wheat.

Brunthaver said he was not sure whether he had received such a call. If he did, he told the

- subcommittM , he rtiay have fnlsuirferstood it r "Again , it is conceivable thaTAlr. Steinwig

called, made the call and I misinterpreted what he said, misinterpreted to the extent that he Indicated that pursuant to a previous discussion he had in fact made offers or submitted a bid or offer to the Russians: I don’t know."

■tjerted— oompcto o> Ute diaWiot-toig.-----Russiaiv^aklii;!! nivei

not. We said. well, maybe we should go back and g ive them—pne nrwre chance if they a rt

--- mterestedr’ ’- _ _ . ,The Russians, again, said no »

• In May. V ladim ir S. Alkhimov, deputy• m inister for foreign trade, came to Washington

! ■ tD ask Palm by-whethw j l ^ e was any legal wayfor the Soviet Union to buy surplus grai^ or to

-^U4>arter-" hatural gas for it. ---------; At ihP time, the United s ta ta was the oyner *o f 6veF3St) m iU ioir& ^eIs~of'sorpIus.Vrh^t, an

I stighUy 'i ^ 'rt ot » i e husstans’ ^ i ^ V n a

And even Steinwig, ch iif merchandiser for one o f the nation's s h r ^ d ^ . largest trading

—com pan ies » m gv h ave m isunderstood the Russians.

The Russian buyers, he recalled, had promised continental that it would get the “ lions share^i -or abn<)$t a ll Of the Rusnan purchase

' order. T * '' When jCoiJtinental'turned kround and went into the: market to the wheat It had c o D tra c ^ to sell the Russians, he

Ribbons and points will be allowed as for the 4-H judging contest.

School instructor, Gail is in charge o f this area of fair projects.

Mrs. Clifford Slutiman said the 4-H hom e econom ics exhibits should be in the hands of the directors of the fair nolater thim & p .m . Aug. 1. ------

The exh ib its should be i(roperly and neatly labeled with nam e, a g e , address, county p ro jec t d iv is ioo an name of club. Three blue award winners will l>e entered^ at the D ts teT cT tlin u B Fau; mJerome. -

Baked products should be_

taken from cows that ~ had produced polyarthritic calves, said that during loth the 1972 and 1973 calving ■ easons some 830 ualvta well— lost ttr thr-

protected by cellophane.’The style revue at 3 pim.

Aug. 4 w ill feature all members from division 11 arid-ab«V«,

have m ade. iB lu e award- winners will be eiigibie to entar

-U ie « I Dtad< * FSir.

C O -O P H eavy D uty

SISALBALU iOTW INE

IBAHO GRANGE^ t H ^ S H O N E - G O O D I N & n F A I f t m D ^

C A L C JS ffn’R

C o n l a c i the T i m e s - N e w s F a t m i o t e J D e p a r t m e n t for c o m p le te a d v e r t i s in g c o v e r o g e T i f y o u r f a r m ta le h o n d b i l k , n e w v p a p e r c o > ^ g e (o v e r 7 0 0 0 0 r e a d e r s - in M a g ic V o l l e y ) 5 3 V o n « i n g Al l o l o n e . p e t i o l l o w r o l* E v e r y s a le l u t e d in this F a r m C o l e o d o r lot 10 d a y s be fore sale.

A U 6 U S T 4 ____ “A NTIQ UE t HOUSCHOLO A UCTIO N — lE A V R C »ttX S T O « l

Adv»rfis*m *nf: July 30 Auctien*#r: O d i« [IUng*r

AUGUST 4COURT WEST ESTATE. W EN O Ell

________ .________ A«f9«nt 3A w c t i o M r v : W « r t . C lo ff c »

_ A U O U M U I ______________________A N TIQ UE AUCTIO N

AdvM ti>«m *nl; A uguit 3

A uctlonM r; i e « l>irfi«li Sut» M unug a J t y 1 ^ . t M n . C U n ■ogU)) .

A d r « t h a n w « l : A u g v t l S f s : L ) r l « M i f n 1 O m 0 « b <

Page 9: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

' t . . . . . . .

;AA\Agirls revettI ns- A LovtUer You

0&4ewu DyipC jUNE WESBICT- ' iielBhUMliuuU Ui '111 Tilt! tainl—

of the Mbrning” by Harry iWark-PetraW».-Here, fiU le, his daTightef vfrTdowed byBtetnam. -

- a n d - A l « x R i f a W » , 'h o f n e - f r o m —

Twin FalU Public Ubrary. T W IN l i ' A U S — Have you

T e i r J-thouiKls" 11K6 These o f “ J*^ther Naoum?'

“ UnillcgB n i“ p T a y ^ h e re ~ th e ' _ actor— i^as-r:jnbthep Thein H a ’-tt-yftutM#;— confined to the stage, the earth and poetic Iqve affair thajf

players and audience tjaklng par Lin-the sam M tc to diama. One m ight eas ily believeArmageddon was at HandT a

* time when madmen ruled, and the vision of the gun was the most pervasive truth?"

"Was the Rifakia- fpnYily cursed? With the father living and dying like a shadow*"— the

------dnughtep hauntad and Wasted-in her youth — the son whose teetn naa t>een sharpened Dy war and death, the mother

___ burning with _ fl. Jclfld-. OLprimitive and unearthly power. Nothing in the fahiily seemed to balance, all forces and

__ compulsions somehow aw ry.'”Father Naouin is the

shepherd' of the flock in u d i l a p i d a t e d G r e e k

. and renewal.■ The love o f Asamene Rifakis

and Gallos was a sensual, 't e e th in g , rfianiFE ahTl ^Hlt^

consuming, which led to the violent death of Gallos.

One wishes somehow it could have been d iffe ren t; that (iaIIoS could have realized his dream that only love could

-bF*n«-

W H A T D O Y O U K N O W ?J L MUIcr:;.

Readers o f this column have asked the questions below on spol-reducing exercise. V ery good they are. too. And the answers may w e ll solve a, puzzler for other

reducers among us. Take

■ .....................^•V

s- ll-look..JQ. H ow soon n^ay you,,n. J- .1-

Father Naoum stands at the

'C A 'N ^ Y H A R f E R

. . re ve 'o/ s h o t h

P A M E LA M E Y E R — ; . . sets d a ie —

V ELM A R E E D ; p la n s rites'

JU L IE R A M B O. . . e n g a g e d —

take' spot exereise a fte r ^ !fc ui*»~“ r:— an~T3peratmrr?~-Ar-

low ing surgery or p reg- nancy, a decision about exercise — when and \vhiit — rests with your

— m 'lO i ,---------r Q;-Sboul4-a-gir4le-be^

worn during workout? A. No, but a heavy bosom .^nay .^eed. .th e suppost of a stretch bra.

Q. How lone should you woi'k out each day? A, Ten to 20 minutes is

last of the novel, and is “ filled with a sudden poignant vision, hiii___ thouehts wandering

H i n t sSew nylcyi ncl-into one side of

old terry washcloths. Ttier e s u lt in g s c r u b b e r s a r e \ yon Jer-ful for ^1 sorts of quick cielTn- uRS, from bathroom fixTures to viHyl tablecloths, from stained- countor tbps to children’s toys.

>To protect against bursting and release o f h o t'fa ts and ju|c^ inside c;ooking bags, coat

~Tneic le o f the bag or wrap w.lth at;least one tabJespQon pf flour, suggests the consumer panel of National Family Opinion Inc.

through infinity, he understood that the neighborhood below

.-.him,the.small-pravince where “he and hiis people lived, the neighborhood was simply the world in small, its network of treachery and hate and redem ption and love a fascimile of the city, country’ and world beyond its boundaries, its (lissolution and death, which he shared, simply the.embeddingaway of a layer of life in the seiment of rubbl*,- as the stlrata of epochs that had passt^(^____unpressions an3 impflnls br

• -fossils, the shells of lizards and the bones of k ings." — “ He., agairv fe lL .th .i-seedtime and. Springtide. th e~ foo lis fi and corprlcious years swept away so that he stood qnce more on the aoprstonc Of h lslil'e . . . in the land of the morning.'*

This novel will stir your senses and warm your-heart.

TW IN FA l.li> - Mr. and Mrs. Del .Harper. Twin Falls, announce the eftgagemcnt and- forthcoming marribge of their daughter.-Gandy.rto Steven J. Olsen. Fountain Green, Utah.

Olsen is the-son of Mr. and Mrs. Jay I..- 01.sen, Fountain Green

Miss H arper IS“ a 1970 graduate of Twin Falla High Sthool. attended the College of Southern Idaho iuid Brigham Young University.'O lsen is a 49«8 graduate of North Sitnpete High School' and a 1973 graduate o f.Snuw C ollege.

■ OT^n has Tulfined w vl-fiS m ission to K orea and is

.• presently a junior at Brigham . Young University. ^ .

The couple-plans an wedding -in the Manti I.OS Temple. ,

F lIiC R Mr. and. Mrs. Edgar Meyer. F iler, announcethe^- engagem ent------- andforthcoming marriage of their daughter. Pamela Ixjuise. tp Stephen I.ee Taylor^

T-aylor is the son of Mr. -irid Mrs: Donald Taylor. Filer.

Miss Meyer is a graduate of Filer High School and the C om p u ter P r o g r a m m in g C:enter. Spokane. Wa.sh. She is p resen tly em ployed at the MorrisppjKnudsen Co.. Inc.. world headquarters o ffic e . Boise.-where she has been a cdm putor p rogram m er for three yiiars.

— Ta^itor, « ls o a graduate of Filer High School, has attended Idao Slate UnWersity for five year's. He resided ih Boise whttre he is manager of Qualitylnn-an.d V itto r ’s .-----------

The couple plans an August wedding..

HAZELTON - M r. and Mrs. Bert Reed. Hazelton. announce

daughter. Velma Willeen. to Ronald John Wood.

Wood is the son of Mrs. Ruth "Wood. Santa Monica, Calif. He was graduated from Venice High School and served in the l>nited States Army ' in Germany..

Miss Redd is a 4 }raduate of Valley High School.

Both will be seniors at Northwest Nazarene College. Nampa, this fa lU

1'he couple plans a Dec. 8 wedding at the _Twin Falls Nazfltene a u rch ,.

TWIN F A L L S , - Mr. and M r^.-ilohn Ram bo, Boise,

-Twin Falla xesidm ts. announce the engagement of their daughter. Julie Anne, to David Moir Jr.

Moir is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Moir, Ijewisville.

Miss Rambo was graduated from Capital -High School and attended Boise Sate College; She is presently employed by tiathaus Pizza, Boise.

Moir is a graduate of Rigby High School and is employed by Preco Inc., Boise.

Thw coupje plans a Sept. 22 wedding.

b ^ rrarr-takp. -A s -y eu i' stamina increases,_a im . lo r .aL-half- hour. A lw ays stop, though, before strain sets in. Slop, too, if you et’er ijecome d izzy or breathless. , H;ihitM,-il di/ziness or breathlessness should be checked by ^our doctor.

Q. Whiil is the best tim e to exercise? A. Anytim e- that fils in lo your schedule, except im m edialely after ealing. H ow ever, i f exertion stimulates you, avoid it at bedlime.

Q. W hy can't you exprcise on a soft bed instead of a hiird floor? A . Som e routines may be performed in bed. But the fkH)r a lw ays gives the muscles a better " f ig h t ." W ork on ah exerc ise mat of- k ing-size terry towel.

Q, Once trim m ed, do ypu have to continue spot rou- tioe.s to stay trim ? A. Unless you take some form o f exelVi.-ic, muscles lo.se tone and fa tty deposits collect- Any activity from bikmK to brw lm fi, p r-to skiing on water or snow is fine in w in tertim e But what's w rong with the old spot routines?

S P O T R E D U C IN G EXERC ISES

trilu, li.Ml kf\ l.> a piiiporliiinfil (inur*-, K.xi-r. i-i' i« llii- mil) v.j» 1.1 IIMII rlic...- .liiMxiiii liul):.-- , . . Ici lux' inriii-« rxj.llv wln-ri-

I'OT-4tKI)li(;iNC KXKKCISK.S li iir iu in ): ll7 r~ ilj»p * 'r h a rk , a tiii- . i i iu ir i t f , i f f r a l nii*;n*tin*nit‘ nl*' . . . o i Ih t f i j i i i r f -H r i f r In Ma'r> S u i' M iU r r in lart* o ( l l i i »

Uniform abortion

Phones 733-0931>t»U M> H*‘W Irtlfh'l,I ’. i x ) i M i i l i t H - K) I I I a l l f i l l

l i i p H ,

IniMIMMU! •'P'* ^

( O r use o u r t o l l - f r e e l i n e s )r h . l o - i n p ,i h . i i p ■

1 i n 1 o i i i .

-..... . - - r m ; Pnbrts

Ii.itp i;TTrmp»*d mvrlnpr- dtjd •irt

laws introducted ___iHVANNfS , Mass. (U P I ) — wife's abortion flpwever, they

liB'gal draftsmen wrote a engaged in a prolonged discus- uniform abortion act "fbr the sion on who should consent if statH2BisJMfekeii3T)St''w(>Qld the wonvarrts a nitnor. ~ - frlBure women even more The original draft required

"Trppdo'm of rhoicc~tIiair~ tHe~.con.sent of both parenTs except

Abigail Von BurenSupreme Court did in itgsweeping 1973 decision.________

The National Conference ol. Ganunissioners oh Uniform

D K AK -ftBBY.^ iKor my high s^hoOl gra'Iuatipn, my____ ^ ‘

in em ergency but it tentative y was changed to require on^y' the consent of the womeh herseir and a court, regftrdjess o f her

' pari-nia aitvu i 3even tho it's still swollen, I just love ttl •- I-'am going east to college in the fall I will be meeting

lots of new kids, and my mother told ine that I shouldn’t ;^tejl anybody t , had my nose done. I (old her I hadh't planned on wearing a sign saying: ' 'I had my nose done,"

, ' iu t if it comes tip-in a-conversation. J am. not going to lie about It. ' ■ , *

f ~^Sbe-&aid it would be foolish for me to admit it, and she 'asked me to promise her I wouldn't tell anybody.

" 1 I'espect my mother's opinion, and I know she means the best for me, but I Just can't make her that kind of pmmise -Thir ts the first really serious conflict we have

^cver had—Am.I wrong’ Or is she’ NOSE JOB

its revision pf a 1971 proposal that a woman should be allpived to abort her own pregnancy during the first th ree . months by use of a “ mprning a fte r " pill, or s im ilar. drug, upon the advice of a licensed physician.

--------DTTARn^JfKE JO Br MoITiFr usuaTTy nosr best, but not-;lhls time. ~ o -

•A

new nose

DF.Aft ABBY I am very much in love with Steve and 5ie is very much m Ipve with me We plan to he married in ‘ September There is only one problem I am also very ntnch in love with my job

X'm a » ^ e t a r y and have been with the same company for five years I intend to keep on working after we are married. I guess you could say 1 am career minded

Steve says before we get married I must promise that I w ill not work over eight hours a day, and I ’ ll nia.„work-at alT oh Sahi^a'ys. Right now I work more than eight hours many days, and I work ©n-Saturdays, too

Sieve, doesn't think a woman can be married and have a career, too I di.-sagreo Abby, do you think it's fair for a

much to her as my job meaas to me'’ I love Steve and don't want to lose him, but I also love this job PIea.‘M> settle this STEVK 'S G IBL

--------P E AW f . IB lj i » • » » H rtghM or « girt to likf hrr joli. hn«If shr Is "in love” wUh her Job. her tovc life with a real live man Is” In troublr. I don't think St^vr's requests arr ■anMoaablfH-lHit if you do. hold off those wedding bells. I hear a clinker in Ihe bclfrj.

DEAR ABBY Is there a way lor a couple to be as­sured they will get the sex child they want'’ I have heard there is a foolproof method for gettug a boy or a girl, whichever the couple prefers If you know how this can bei>r‘PQmptjc^wvj with pocitivfliy

“ re sp o tid T r o n ^ , and’’ ! wHT send |25 to“ any charity jtju designate FATH E R OF SIX DAUGHTERS

DEAR FATH ER: Ves. ADOPT; Send U S to your local Piaoned Parenthood chapter.

DEAR ABBY: Grandma wrote that ^he was embar- n t s ^ because her g randson bragged so much about hi

“ warTBOTrtTTSVCn Sa'yliigTBat TgrTiad won IT purple liearts. She should use an old Jewish saying next time "Junior"

to boast}' ‘Do M l make yourself so big

' You are not so sm all."A C fATH 0LIC :^ ftAN »M O TH BR, AliAMOGORDO, N M

"Who knows what the m edi­cal develppments may be," said James C. Wilson of- Denver, chairman of the N IX U S L drafting committee— "In drafting the act we are trying' tp look aneaa. TC

- "m pniing-after'- birth control pill has to be developed andmarketed.-’ / _ _______

In its ruling the Supreme Court said for the - fu ^ - th r « » months an abortion is a matter between a woman and her debtor.

The justices left for another day legA>.<)uestiaai>dealing with juveniles and the right pf the husband, and so did the law writers, who avoided rhention of a husband's consent tP his

Wilson rioted that consent myy still t>e obtained in many instances bei'au.se doctirs will not perform abortipns pn

' minprs withoul parental ap­proval -

•‘ M ed ica l eth ics a lw ays appfy?' he said.

Patricia Putnam pf Hpnplulu, pne pf twp women cpiTunissipn- e r s ' o f a total NCCUSL -mcmberahip of 25&.-mpved thal one section be rewxitten to lluKc L tr tu iir that^bOUim is-: may be performcd anywhere at any stage pf pregnancy without anyone's consent if a woman's life is in danger.

N o slate hks y<? adPpted the group's proposed 1971 Uniform Act, although most states confronted the problem when their anti-abortion laws were -Struck down by the Supreme Court. The decision quoted the entire Uniform Act and what The couFT called its' "enllght-' ening" preface

n e w s

a b o u t ^

peoptie _ _ y o u

know

^ t h anniversary open house slated

HUHL — The children of ch ild ren . M rs . Jam esand Mrs. Jerry Palat will bpst an ppen hpuse A t^. 5 in

' Observance of the couple's 46th Wedding Anniversary.

( Bessie Ann) Ficker and Jerr>_ D avid P a la t, both o f Springfield, ni. The couple have three grandchildren.

— M fr-ond- Mrs . -Palat wareinvited to attend the event between 2 and 5-pjn^ at tt;e

Vai/ey&ief,BUHI. The Buhl Art Guild

will meet Thursday at the home of Mrs Leona tVismor, Buhl Qiri.s Bertu.s, Wendell. w ill speak on sketching

. -pcirtraits.__ _________ -____________

-HnUuTri~I!BUfM "OBHimmrity Center, Buhl. There will be a potluck supper at 6 p jn . for those wanting to join the family for the evening.

_ - Mr. and Mrs. Palat have two

married Aug. 6, 1923. Mr, and Mrs. F icker vrtll celebrate

A A o^tc V a H e y -F a Y o r rfesR, W E B B

123 3 rd . R u p e r t

same day.The couple requests no gifts.

Seamed-To-Slim!P_rinted Pattern

: 9 T m -

34-48

RAW A PPLE CAKE

. TW IN F A l.l-S - F.lsie Bender, M o n f-o v ia ,^ ’ a llf . formerly of 'I'w-m Kalis, is visiting friends an<l relatives m Twin Falls this week during her vacation

TW INFAI.I.S The-Salmon ■Social dub w ill meet at 2 p m Thursday at the home pf Mrs. Oliver Steiwarl, 1905 San I-allue A re - Mrs -t jee H ek 'H iter -wiB- present the program

2 eggs 2 cups sugar 2 cups flour

cup vegetable oil 1 cup nuts ,1 teaspppn sail2 teaspoons cinnamon

Jcjcoby The right lead, down 1100

made it As it was. W est dou­bled pne no-triurop.

North passed hopefully He thought -South had some sort of stoppers in the red suit.s and

“ Th a t TnsytJP Trts ctTrbs-woutd produce SIX tricks

If West had led the queen of hearts as many players might have. South would have been a « lHUiiH -bunvniy c s ing lalnn

king wou aria six’quickly afterwards.

West did lead a heart but he saw no reaiion not to start with ^ ace He had plenty of reen­tries for later on and he wanted to hold the first trick

A fte r tha^ s ta rt. East and West had no trouble runnlng o ff 12 tricks for plus I [00 and a top score

(NEWSPAPER CNTtnPRiSt *5SW 1

would win the firs t trick ariTT six’ cfubs wouJd fo llo w

^ P raM en tr M t e r i i y w ge^ U a fl j im t ehtrt.-P «r .a >CT»— I ftp ly . witte to A B B Y : BM No.

. t ta M K i. c m io f r .

O l d l o o k

U p d a t e d

S A D D L E J A C K S f o r -g ir h b y Thom M e A n a re n ew for fall. They fe a tu re thick cushion cre p e soles with so m e u p d a te d sa d d le patterns on to p . In either suede' o r le a iffe T vppers^ sdcldt^ j ticks c o m e 'in severof'^tw o to ne com - binatiorfs plus a n e w aU 'w hite le a th e r

-c i«jct}a fofton n f thm

North's double of one. heart was one o f those m atch point duplicate bids His partner just might have four spades and he wanted to give him a chance to Tjid Uieiii;

South's one no-trump was one of those bids from fr igh t. He d idn 't want to pass one heart doubled and w atch d e ­clarer score overtricks and he didn't want to bid a three-card suit. Of course, the least harm- ftil o r th e varton s b t d r ^ h i s - d isposal would have been one spade.

Had be Old ttut^W est would- ■haw raachcd totif h farta .j rtd

The bidding has been West North East -Sootli

t *JS a u ----- lA---------£ i s

You. South, hold 4 4 1 I 41 V2 « A S « A K J I 7

What do you do now’A —Tbereare an sorts of fancy

seientific bids available bat tke simple call ot foar spades skoold do.

--------TODAY'S QIJESTIONYou bid fonr spades and your

partner bid* five hearts. What do yoa i o i m l - .

JUnftr.ttBwrrasr

Zip into a new slendeme^ in this Seamed-To-Slim. pantsuit and dress. Lean princess curves are accented by fashionable cardigan n eck ., .

P rin ted . Pattern 9116: Women’s Sites 34. 38,40. 4i? 44,46,««. Size 36 ( bust.40) takes 2 4 yards 60inch fabric.

75 cents- ftw—M ch -pattron.- Add 2S cents for each pattern for A irm a il and Special Handling. Send to M arian M arU n, Tirnes-TJews, 395 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th S t, New York. N.Y. 10011. Print name, address, tip, siie^m d style number.

SaveSt! Whip up a new wardrobe from our exciting Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog! Q ip coupon in Catalog — get one pattern FREE. Send v 75 cents. ___________ ______ .

New! & w + Knit Book w ith ' basic tissue pattern $lJ3 i InstantFaahion Book 11.00 Instant Sewing Book . $1.00

Page 10: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

_-W ASHTNGTQNf with annpunce * - « r : ^ n E E g r ~ "t a W vlgorouslyidefend; — tm m ST across the ijoulh VieU

tAHayj «BfrPt hnmhing of namese 'border to clear the areas-of neutral Cambodia in 1969-70 as essential to save American li\^s but M id the.Pentagon (Sifninitted a snafu In giving CoRfress doctored re­p o r t . '

Laird, who as defense secre-tary proposed the bombing and said he got President Nixon's au thorlza tion, insisted tt 'was necessary both to reduce American caaualties at the time andexpediteU.S, withdrawal,

l^ lrd . ndw‘ a counselor to ■ President Nixon, said the raids on so-called sanctuary areas f<tr North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were made secret­ly because of diplomatic sensitivities. -Cambodia was proclaiming ilseTfneutral at the time. But U.S. officials say Prince Nprodom Sihanouk gave tacit approval for the bombing provided they .were not publicly reported. - ,

Since the Vietnam cease-firc, U.S. bombers hav6 attacked Co'nmunlst forces menacing Cembodia. now under the Lon Nol regime that deposed Sihanouk and tilted toward the- United States.'■ The bombing-is haH under^

a congressiotiaJly imposed defadlihe ■ Aug, 15. Supreme Court justice Thurgood Mar­shall. is expected to rule

• shortly, possibly today, on a caseinvolving a federal district judge’s order to halt the raids immediately,’ tJ ird sairf henever-eoftdoned - falsifying records to conceal the bombing that took place prior

-toM ay. 1970, when U.S. forces.

^ m b od ia bornbing 3(3 niSt detail the extent of the pre-1970

-raids^ind l^ird^said "This was a m istake."

"In 1969 and 1970 there was a reasoi>ljiot to disclose the raids publicly)," Laird said, but added " I t was a snafu and a misLuke to send that report to a * congressional committee (ear­lier this year) . " ,

l^ ird said a "separate reporting C h an e l” of the boiabing as it was taking place

. was set'"up. and that key congressional committee chair­men and a few in the administration were kept post­ed. The Air Force secretary at

• the time, ft9bert Seamans, has said he was not one of those who knew about the raids.

Interviewed on the NBC-TV • Today show, I.alrd said that as

W a tch e s b o m b in g

G O VKRNM ENT soldlor^ses binoculars to watch U.S. F-4'Phantom^ot bombers rake line of trees with SOO-pouniTb'SmbiiJicjir Royti; 3.T6 miles soulhwest of Phnom Peeh.'ttmTV ground fighting and U.S. bombing r,oniy^urs today near Phnum Penh while Insider, the cap ita l, aiithorltles arc rounding up men t'' bolster Its defense. (U P I)

Japanesea-Wisronsin-congressm an , he advocated the bombing as early as-4864-and-1965 and was told by then-Befense Secretary Rob­ert S. McNaifiiara that it might cause China to enter the war.

When he became secretary in 1969, he said, “ f fe lt it was’ absolutely essential (to hit) enemy targets in Cambodia. Basically the bombing was

- 8 i r t h O F i a e 4 — s o — u /p / - n n l d r u t

down American casualties and enable us lo withdraw Ameri-

Cambodia security

SAN FRANCISCO (U P I) - Japanese buyprs, free of U.S. economic controls^ are*“quietly paying high prices for Ameri-. can cattip that ranchers are withholding from market b «» cause of the freese . on b ^ f prices. -

The Western State.« Meat Packers Association. I cpresent- ing producers from California to Texa l; fSH I7P1 tHe" Japanese are paying top prices for U.S. b<.‘e f,j«h ich is then sold

^Tn’ JapaneiF'supermarkels~fbr‘ up to ^14 a pound,

No one knows exactly how nuich beef the Japanas§_aj:e,

buying, said Norm M affit, the association's v ice -president, But trade associations Ihrou^h- oul the nation have been aske<l to compile figures on sales to Japan to determine their extent and impact on the U.S. domestic market.

"It 's too early to tell at this stage." he said, "But it certainly doesn't appear the purchases are ehougti' to’ have an effect on our -market, orsales prices." __ _______ __

The association represents. meat packers .in . H states, where 38.5 million pounds of cattle were slaughtered last

year- P r-esen t co n tF o lsU o ^ flo t c o v e r the price at iv h ich farmers can sell c a t t le , but the prtces o f proce.ssed beef are frozen. This means proce.ssors have lo pay more for C a ttle th a n they c a a s e l l them for to supermarkets. As a result, many p la its hav^ .shut down, or slowed down, imtit-the freeze ends. ~T)fie‘ caTlle?nan who is sellThfT

b e e f tu Japan is E)on Cudd,. irianager of SteviiMark^a Ciiilk. C.o.,o( Ziimora, Calif.

The company at present has 12,000 head of cattle on its feedlot that it won’t sell. Cudd

^ ^ ~ ^ -^ € a n a d iu n s ~o

-Siiid. becau.se it would have to take a Toss under'^'President

"Nixon’s FJTiiseTV l^c^orn lc ’ rules that win keep beef prices frozen until Sept. 12.

But while American wholesal­ers and packers-canncSt. raise their prices ^o buj; the cattle^ he .saic, Japanese buyers are plunking down ca.sh for the animals at prices which .arepfofilabloTo' pr"()ducers. ____^• Japanese governm ent res- tfietifln&^ho.wcyef^ljjrnit their total annual imports, to 18,000 tons’ of beef from all sources. The United States, Australia" and South Am erica are the biRgfcsi suppliers.

near Phnom Penh today while inside the capital. auth(jrities rounded— up—more meH to bolster the c ity's d e fe n s ^

Fightiffg raRed 10 mffps frjjjn the City out on Highway .1 and nine miles out on Highway 2. the Cainbodian,high command S i i i d . More fighting was report- JUi =ULmiles.ouctliwcsL-ot the- capital.

U.S. warplanes flew heavy strikes Tn~iiTl three aFe;is. IhT'” concussions of their bombs rumbling through Phnom Penhthroughout the-flight^------------ --

It marked the 146th consecu­tive day of an intensivir American air . war that ends Aiig. 15 under an agreement between Congress, and Presi­dent-Nixon. '

Ohe D.S bomber landed at the Phnom Penh airport after , experiencing mechancial d if­ficulties Newsmen at the airport said the plane, a Navy A7 Corsair; landed without

ll'warpbmps flying over Cambodia arc based in Thailand-and only land on Cafnbodian“ soin in ‘rase of.arl emergency__Field reiwrts .said 18 govern­ment -soldiers were wounded early today at Prek fio, on Highway 2. when insurgents launched a mortar attack F i l l swtng-winptxjmbers swcpt-the a rea . in what - Cambodian

.officia ls described as heavy strikes.^ As" the_ fightinji. continued around Phnom Penh, the

wammmmB U TT R E Y 'S

M E A T D EP T.Q o b l i l y M # a t\

.ernment went ahead with a ' ; plans to strengthen the c ity ’s defenses by recruiting volun--

between the ages of 18 and 35.M ilitary police fanned out

through the city Monday lop id t-" up recruits. During the day, authorities said, about, 1,000 men volunteered' and 2,500 more men were drafted into the army involuntarily.

The government resumed its -xecrm tm j; jc t iv ilie s txxlajvhut ~

newsmen checking re fugee shacks s<iid there was resist-

’'aru'i;" aiiioh'g the re fu se s to'-' induction.

In another developipent, a river convoy-T-the firstto^r-rive in almost two weeks—sailed into Phnom Penh late I^onday after rurming insurgent ftre on tlie Mekong River. Cre^w members, on one of the seven

■fuel tankers said insurgents fired two rockets at them but •Siiid. "they jus| bounced o ff . "

is back

■Bonnie’r

WASHINGTON ( U P I ) - President Nixon repeatedly insisted siich' extremesecurity fgr 1969-1970 bornbing operations in Cambodia that

.m ost of the military and Congress remained in the dark, the Senate Armed Services Committee was told Monday.

Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, fo rm ^ .nhairmaii jr f the Jojnt Chiefs of Staff, acknowledged under ouestioninK that critical ia p e^ . calculations and charts of ground control teams were •routinely destroyed." The

secret missions were errqneous- ,Iy listed In tlie Pentagon’s computer as missions against South Vietnam,Tie added.

"The President, sir, was the one who reiterated many times the necessity for security and secure procedures," Wheeler said in explaining the secret B52 bombingTaias whicti B e p if March 18. 1969, and lasted through May. 1970

A letter from Air Force Chief

of Staff Gen. John -D. Ryan, released by the committee, further revealed that similar s ecrecy surrounded secret Bombing raids over Northern U o s by B52s betweenJ970-1972.

Sen. Stuart Symington. D- Mo., acting chairman of the committee. 'TTeplored in a statement the withholding of this Informationfrom Congress, which is charged with appro- priating the funds for military activities.

"The manner in which these operations were conducted indi • cate that significant portions of t{ie,npnnal cpnimand structure can be left entirely in the dark as to the existence of major operations,

"Furthermore the credibility of the Defense Department has once again l^een seriously undermined and the good faith o r ^he~. Department T I J n t T dealings with Congress must be seriously questioned." Syming­ton said

S A Iop w (U P I ) ■ - Canada withdrew Its truce supervision force from South Vietnam today, ending six months of futile peacekeeping attempts and bringing

the cease-fire,A few bystanders, including

sorne weeping— young Viet­namese women, Watched th'JJ departure ceremony at Tan Son Nhut air base-as .249 -green, beret-clad Canadian soldiers boarded two Boeing 707 jetlin­ers and left for home.

As'Can'&da ’s role in the four- nation International Conmiis- ston of Control and Supervision iICCSl officially enaed, the leader of Hungary's delegation said the commi-ssion will stop checking reports of truce violations and supervising pris- onei releases—its lw 6 mam functions,

Ference Esztergaly, chair­man of the Hungarian delega­

tion, said the commission'would act only "on a consultation basis" until a replacement for Canada was found.

No replacement was in sight,__ilthoughan i i^ fo t^ d sour^;e in"Satgnnsaid-Drari 1 o r IrOT -werR-

rfrong possibilities.The ICCS held its last regular

meeting Monday with th^ Canadians but planned a final official meeting today with acting Canadian chiet delegate V. G Turner, who plans to leave Wednesday,

Turner said another small contingent will stay on for about a week ' to wind up (Tiinada's affairs in Vietnam The South Vietnamese foreign m inistry announced today Canada and South Vietnam have decided to eslal)lish diplomatic relations, meaning

June it was pulling out of the ICCS, citing [he fa ilure.of the truce-team to perform ils . duties. .

When Canada agreed to joih Indonesia, Hungar-yand Poland- on the ICCS under terms of the .Jan. 27 Vietnam cease-fire, It .>w k I it was doing so on the condition that the body operate effectively,

— It - tiiid' nt biller experience with Tndb- china peace-keeping on the old International Supervision and Control Commissign set up by the 1954 Geneva confercnce.

But Canada’s frustrations with the ICC:S began almost immediately after ILs arrival in Vietnam. It lost its fight for open ICCS meetings, the first of a long series o f disagreements

t n e f f i h ^ ^ mat griJUjniiay w ith in thecom m l^ion -rhbyfo fstay on to continue Ottawa's which saw the Indonesians andrepresentation in the country Canadians voting one way.

Canada announced early in Hungary and Poland the other.

Deii|b raps Phase IT

WASHINGTON ( U P I ) - Sen. Philip A, Hart. D-Mich.. said t<i®fry-4he ttdn^iftistfe ^ io p V - proposed Phase IV price guidelinss discriminate against independent gas retailers and could force many of them ojit

— ‘Dftjui.liil'yj,— ---------------------- -Hart, chairman of the Senate

antitrust subcommittee which has been holding hearings on the oil industry, said, the proposed regulations would require dealers to maintain the sdme difference between what they p3 td for and wbatthipy-sokUlfor on Jan. 10.

would be rolled back to the May 15 price which in some cases is 20 per cent higher than

. . the p t ic a j^ the Tjegnning the year. Hart said, >

The Michigan Democrat said -that because the price'margin

” statfens’W rm m yvsas depressed during January , many independently-operated stations will not make enough profit from the sale of gas to remain In business.

___ "T h e proposed tegulationsforpetroleum products appear tb d iscrim inate very sharply against indep<iMlenttMidn«Be« wW d» market these products,"

= ^ la i lw h i ;

n

It.-

'JLJ O U T H V IETN AM ESE Pham Qnoc

‘ Thoan, center Kore^TOUoHTfollowed by MflJ. OCt] ' Dnncan McAIpine and other Canadian.offieers, s h a m hands with 249 member Canadian______1

F a r e w el l ^ e p e m o n ic s -* ^\__

- -CoBtrr t Mid^Siipeiyta<aiH<CCS»-»t Vfatnam^ peace daring farewelf c e ren o iiy 'a t Tan Son

ta Saigon.* Canada ha* otHcjally - ended tnilay lta s l» iN B 3 r fw R Q «]^ ^

Iflctm lm ese peacckeepiagcIIocU -4U PJ) -

CLOSE OUT ONi>ATIO FURWTURE!!BIG^DISCOUNTS!!

R Xlnonc rrrN.v> hammock

l' A

U20KIMBERLYHIDrTWMFXUS

MItEE DELIVEII : •tASY TERMS

Page 11: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

"I? T lm eS 'N »w s« Tw in Fallsr Idaho Tuew iay, July'34# 1973

By P A T R lf tA MCCORMACK U P I Fam ily Editor

G E O R G E T O W N . Conn. (D P I ) — Step right up and leam how to cut your grocery _

. ifertin^to: onty_

nearly ' In half each week. T h a t's -J ik e having a $30 increase in'take-home pay. The author says it can be done- especially if you have been far

Yau 'lt spend more th m -you would from scratch except in th e 'c a s e o f instant mashed ; potatoes’, frozen orange Juice, some.chocolate cake mix,, ice

and b r« id .--------- --------u,HiPr anri h ard 'breadJh r£g___ L.Sti£iidvQcales..5lwcpin&Ju5LL: - J g t J a Ktimh plan:.

E v e n Tn PhasrT.----- onccTa: Week and Irfrls gver' ‘ - Buy, lo'wer-price foods'money wasted when working exclusively. The less tender couples or working singles go cuts of rfieat, the less popular food shopping every day tyP<-*s,' special’ purchases the

. 'Never spend more Dian one- store has made, things the ‘Tialf.an hour in a store,” the store wants to get rid of. On

bill in half. Thejetters inean as follows:

— D o ^ le 'm e a l meat; One- meal ’ iTOaf; Leftover m eal; Oiii^maal meat; Double-meal m eat; O ne«m eal-----tne a l ;

limes a day The Invitation sounds like a

circus sideshow come-on, I know. But D elight Dixop- Omohundro. ■ of Georgetown, ’f:nnn .savs women are anart enough to win what she, call.s ■the grocery giime ”

Ms. Omuhundro has it all down between ttie cover.s of y new book, "How to Win the (iro cery ^ n i e : A I'rov^n SIriitegy for Heating Inflation " Driiki' ---------------------------------

-cost-cOnsclous shopper and nulntion-consciOus cook .said

The GeorKetown m atron .suggests 4!). minutes planning before you shop and al.so, shop more than one store. Her planmng starts with tearing all

-the f ood ' ads out of t)ie p.'tp<‘r, .

fruit, ‘ i ' v e m^de an unwritten law that I won't pay more than

. five centsapiece for fresh fruit. This is a handy rule of thumb. You 'll find yourself buying shorter buoanas and smaller apples •

f<»F lowcF-priccd

l<rftnv<*r rw A double^meal meat Js _pne

that is enough for two meals plus 'lunch sandwiches. A one- meal lineat is just what it sounds like. Leftovers? By planning, you make good nse ofthem.

Battingle a d e rs

iMi(Kirlj' s. 1 to

till' prDcessing or packaging; t(i c(Kjk wiUi the least amount of

T lu '" ‘ iiitislwjiste aiuj iKi'urisKme.nt''

U you follow liiT stralegems,

,_le.ssnns, she 'Itioii make a chart, with the fcxjtl extends ta all manner ofuml and not ' sU >f names anoi> and the f<>od canned uood.s and staples. Hule

Items listi-d down the left side N(j l should be a frame ofDraw lines down and across mind, a shopping way of life. In

various *itores. .Shop the

ran cut a $W) grocery bill

.S|x-cial.s but only vritliiii your mi-A vo k I ronveTiienco foods

Ills book, ‘How KT BJ sr M illionaire,' J.' f'aul (!etty singles out thrift as a secret of

uur supermarket IS

.%iielioiio(‘rJ IM M K S .S K .lt.S M IT H ,

Jerpme, holds plaque received by him lor nine years of service to the National Auctioneers^ ^ssorlutlon. A of the as.<ioelatl<in the aw ard at the 197:) convention In St. I’etersburg, H a ., Juky 17-H). Me Is a m rm b er « lAuction S erv ice and sells wiH-kly for area companies as well as free lanci' auctions.

a s . hoihI a place, a;;. ax>) to st;irt " ■ ;

Klliiiitiiite iiMiirressary ilcnis Don't buy tilings you don't need The more attention soil give to buying es.sentials, ttie more immune you're going to 1)1- to the frivolities

Know wluit things co.st or slmiilil cost A gi'iu’iiil target pi ice fill I’anncil goods' a [x'luiy an ounce is a goiMl l)u\ A li.'irgain A.s the plMi e edges uppast presidenU, '

n’,he was given llliil.Lllcrc s les i barUdin,

Pm ¥ers .in vo lvec l in break-in _

Muy It when it's there. S'inn you will know how to recognize a gemiiiie bargain When you see an iirfredible pnre. I)U> II you've been, following the ads- and know nhat goiH l'roasting chickens run 'aroiinil 4ii cent.s a poynd, iinil you find some for 29 cents, buy.

' ‘ ■ ’ no It your"':..i. Balog’na presliced has figured in thf

____ |inci- aroiiiiil S!) an hour luLjtli'expense of s lic in g and jiiiL lia ilin g .. B uy. the w iia ie p ie t-e .-S am e* wit4» chicken. ■|'ukesalx)Ut fivi;,niinules to cut one up Also make .ste.wfc, home made .soup, pies and cakes, codkies. "SPaahgiti sauce, The

■ WASHINC.TON lUJ’ li ■ In Uie most acrunonious ex­changes of the 10 weeks of the Senate Watergato . hearings, John D Ehrllchman Insisted

■ today that he had a "continuing impression" the break-in aUhe officc ■ of Daniel E llsberg's psychiatrist was within -the President's national security powers. '

As iSe bone-tired committee took stejw tiJ'hurry to'the end of the Watergi(te phase of its investigation into 1972 presiden-

~tlal- campaign activities, the

Da.sh sLiirteil to sas siiine- Uilng, and Thompson iMlerni|>- ted "Kxcu-se me. Mi'. Uasli,' may 1 fm is ii’ U ‘t the witness, answ frthe question and then tf It's inappropriate rir iitu esixi'n- slvc:. "

Dash: "M r. 'I'hompsOn, I don't Want to get into a debate

.with \'0u but so far we'se not had answers, w e 've had .s(K'e< hes and

Thompson: " T h a t ' s y o u r ' elusion. M r Dash, and we're not herefor"your conclusions "

Krvin gavcled again .__J_ijuaU. Moai_tlii±_

sovin^s arc eiionnOiLs You can make a huge pot of spaghetti

stiiri'-biiught sauce;^ .Substitute mgrcilicMl lii.stfad of rxnmnte,use evaporated milk —

• I ’ lan your ineiiiis an live with them ■ •.

Ms Omohundro also j-ecomiiH-nd-S' wt\at she calls w eek ly ' O O l.OD O l.. the aut,omali.c. econom y 'menu guide 'lliis is the cut your food

angry clashes begween Ehrhch- man and Cliief Counsel Sam Dash, and between Dash and Republican counsci h'rod D. Thompson

----Daih— sought— to— question

"t^mnsel to in le rt tre with tlie w i tn i^s f .s' a nsw er "

Ren Howard Baker, H-'renn , then interje^'te<l‘ I think what we re going through right now

. isttv tdv m ^ that th u coiuiiutl'fe -

^WBWoiAfkUkburn!

Ehrllchman on whether Presi­dent Nixon or former White Hou.se chief of ^taff H H Haldeman had been advised that the 1971 brcak-in at the psychiatrist'.s office was clear­ly illegal and constituted tw rg la ry "

Ehrllchman, Nixon s former chief domestic adviser, did not ■directh-. aiisww m e-qircsttOTiT posed several times In several ways Then Dash asked Ehr- lichman- about the St>^'alled Huston plan for torelBn and domestic intelllgence-fjather- tn«.

Thisexchange took place Ehrllchm an "W e ll, Mr

— Dash. 1 just lo o k e d ^ j i i a t yxiu. cont(Tidedyou paraphra.sed and I must strongl\ disagree with your description

Dash said that portions of the ____committee's CODv of the HiLston

is in fa’ct lin 'd "Bi'fore thi; inurning session

sUirted, the commit tee triinnicd Its witness list to seven as it sought to finish the Watergate sometime next week. Among tiiose cut frohi the scheduled list wa.s former White House special coun.sel Charles W C'ol.son

----- HahUMiian whs eV(kVled to'begin reading his lengtli.s testimon.\ at the aflernoon srrsion ' ’

‘K n rtic r, Ehrlichnian had said I understand your question to be wliethei J had a tielief or impression Uial the thing the TYesident_ha<i—as- siL'ncd here m c r i^ in j; this special unit was legal and proper I hail then a pri'^ent impression at that tune that lliis W.1S wt*U wUhin Itiei:rt:2idcnl niiiigniil iit'rtirit'i

W A R E M A R T•FOOD STORES

1708 K IM B ER LY RD. - T W IN FALLSS I C .0 0 M in im u m Purchase R equired

( tX C lU D IN C C IGARETTES & SA IES TAK

ICE CREAAA1 V . IL IM IT : ONE CO UPO N

PER F A M ILY7 7 ‘ Ea. W IT H O U T

C O U P O N10 00 Miniiniiiii

% GALLON

li:l CiijKlWi 1 IjiGOOD A T W A R E M A R T L I M I T - O N E ' 2 G A L.

plan had l>eon excl.sed in the ' interest of national security andi al the advice of the variou.s security agencies

Ehrllfhman "'I dOn'I quarrel with their advice, I quarrel with your paraphrasinfe. Mr Dash "

----M«m«tts-lat£f: _______Ehrllchman. .1 may be able

to shorten this up Apparently what Mr Dash is doing here is charginfi-me wilh somebody's opinion tn this ' 'document.

powers ; ti>benu impression forward '

' Ehrlu hinan ne;u-ed the end of his lestimonv as

The 'WTi'iTe House said f*resident Nixon's position re­mains unchanged against re­lease of tape recortfinga of hts W atergate conver.sations "The

'rPrcsidcnt ha* made his-posi lio n clear on this matter," a TspektMiHian said

—Sen Adlai R Stevenson. I>- nt . a< 'fus«lPrcsldent Nixon in

without first laying the founda­tion that I 've ever seen the promulgation of the opinion. ”

— 43ash: "N tr. Ehrllchman, I iSkiBTySna qBestion:^ - '

N.C., the chairmari,banged his gavel.

Thompson; "E xcusem e, Mr.Chairmanc when the gavel was

-jnst-^nsed^—just— then - Mrr^- -p roceed in gs^ - Ehrlichman was in the-middle

a .Senate speech of placing him.self above the law b\ refusinu to allow investmators to hear tape^ecor'dings of his 'Wafci^aie cofffiersations^nTF" Wlule^iJouse. ^Stcv«nson said this left Con^gress the chol6 ? of “ confessing the bankruptr^^ of the system, doing nothing or of commencing . impeachhicnt

_o tan answer.T doe 't think it'sim fair T a r i e t llfie^WnineSS-

N e w s t ip s

7 3 3 ^ >9 3 -tr

BURNED UP OVER THE SO CALLED • FAST” PRINTING SHOPS TH A T CAN T

HANDLE THE BIG JOBS?

FIRED UP OVER THE PRINTER WHO SAYS RE CAN HANDLE YOUR

ARTW ORK..... TH EN JOBS IT OUTTO HIS BROTHER IN LAW?

Cool off! Call..A C E PR IN T IN G

..... r

S T U D I O G R A P H I C S A g e n c y

for COMPLETE service! PHONE 733-8623 or 734-4884

250 Mtfin Ave. N., tyyjn^aUs

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Comiilex set

ELRHORN - Plans for a 3ft«(jre r^ e a t io n a l condominiumcomplex in Elkhorn have been .announced.

U w ls Douglas. Los Angeles, Calif., has received the Sun - -

plan for 200, one and two-story condominiums. The complex will be located on acrea&e presenUyowned by Elkhorn at Sun ^ Valley,’ one i i itle bouUi uf the Elkhom-VtUage. ■

Elkhorn is a joint venture of subsidiaries of the Johns- . Manville CorJT and Ihe ■Son Valley Co. — . ;■>- Douglas said that the complex will include 16 teiuiis courts, a

clubhouse, a cafeteria and a children’s iJBrmitory " I t ia intended.” ,He said, -that the tennis- facilities will be

franchised by Johnj Gardiner.” ____ .Barring any unforeseen complications in the negotiations,

Dpuglas said,' "the developmenT-Wttl-begtirTininedtalely,- thfr tennis courts will be ready fpr play by the summer of 1974 and

" the first pTl^SS'of L'uiiduininium a wili-be oomplotad in D<*rpmher.— _ 19’n ."

BlainP'"C am as

.CassiaE ln o r e

G o o d in gJ e r o m eL in c o ln

T w in F a lls

MagicValley

b)-M ARIl.VN E LI.IO TT north by 6 0 0 North, on thfcjeasl.: -TIiticS-'News writer ’ . by the present A cequia .

Minidoka- ■bonn(laryrand~on'th<?~smrth^y’- •-S ch on l RoHril ’ appnintpri

Richard Warbiirton as Uie new principal o! East ^linico Junior Hifih School Monday night.

W arburton, cu rren tly i| al Mmico High.School.,

wilt fill the pt)sitiim left open by- Wii.Mie Fugg wlio has accepted

New I'U’ UUTitary school iittoiuliiiKC bounilarie.s drawn u jn iy Supt: Darro^^^Hatfield were adopted b,\ the board to alleviate overi-niwdiiig at the

■TOO North with an extension at ,10Q East'to 200 Nqrti),

Qlen Maiiglm asked the._hQard_ .fo i^ feedbi^ck on p ropp ed .:... ___

■ x4Ynn e!i“irYHtie* SotJ ern" Idaho : Ahletie Conference which will

The other section runs along the Snake River to Highway 30, then to 200 Hast, then North to the pre.sent Aceoiim hoiinilarv

.. Dr. Hatfield presented several alternatives, including

•ninking^mtnchanBeat all. to the board members. Although classes were ava ilab le at Heyburn, hesaid, new^teiu'hers would have to be hired and the

Heyburn .school The change will

budget wouldn'J allow It.

send all do■we'd twitermaTrrsure'w^ it right,” board ineinlHT

be a c te i on i-daay U f tlil? - conference for trustees an ^dministrator»r in Sun Valley.-!*■

Maughn said -Blackfoot, lionneville and Burley high schools had Risked to Join the conference last spring but the teMsion had been delayed until the fall meettng^

These schools have t>econie .so li.irge the smaller schools are reluctant to com pete against them and they have a

Heyburn elementary students Slierrll Stallings said, so me living east of 200 West to studenTs' won I have Rupert schools transferred again in

Students from t <vo sections— yt>ii f ;< curren tly attending Rupert .schools Hill Ix- transferred to Acequia, where class loads are lighter One .sectioif is bounded on the west by 200 West, on the

Dr Hatfield told the board tliat at the current rale of enrollment, "you're going to have to change ” .

Minico High .School principal

ffir in t fTTTm'— srtieatnm jrgam es, lie said Recently

~l',t'm.strin liiiji iiliu) ippU«<t-toc-

expected Mountain Home to a f.so iHipLy.— ^ -----------

B l a f i T e le^tt e r s t o r e m a i n ^ c r e t

B yTE R H V C A M PB E l.l, TlroeS'NcHj; writer-^

T u e s d a y , J o l y 31, tW 3

V .

MV population growth slated

H o i u €»i*k\ cool rcNiill.s

ROOFINS^:I.,\T^ON is TieTngTirieno^lhe topof the Jerome t'diiiity courthouse with a crnne operated by Rex l ytle, l.ytle Sign Co., Twin

---- t'a lls, The Insulntion is belnglnsta lled afr thtfiijal. step ia tlic addition of a new air coiidltioning-heatliii; system a^'-th^Co^thouse.' Mark Oramme^iikholding thc-ro^JChc'iujrkJs-

" 4wmg done by ( lark and Becker, Gooding.

.T 0 r O n i C Oaklc*> rt>sid€*ntsGOODING — The populiiUon of four Magic Valley counties Is

-cxpected to double by the y e ^ 2,tHHr'a^CQi'drhg^~lO a study conducted by the Wood R iver Resoili-ce Area CountUI of governments. ■ ,

ThP tii.dy, which is ha.sed.on Department o f C6m'merce 197gestimates, was developed for the co\«icil of governments by Boise State College, according to Del E. Taylor, planner in

I'councll.

The stud^ ,________5.7Wreported in 1970, thaT'Camas will increase to 2,000 from .24; Gooding will climb to 8,645.and Lincoln will expandto 6,000 from the 3,057 reported in the 1970 census,-

In the 1972 Department of Commerce estimates, published last December, the downward trends, as reported' in the 1970 census, were reversed. In the 1970 census, all of the counties involved but Blaine showed a population decrease.

However, Taylor said, the 1972 estimates made by the Department of Commerce were based upon a growth pattern throughout the state, with Blaine county leading the growth because of resort development The estimate indicated about

'2(K00ftln the tour .county area, up from 1B,179 in the 1970 census.

workers cool off

co iis iflc r lil>rarT=^-...... OAKT.F.Y - Residents wilt air their viewh on

— ihc^Ktablishment uLaaOaJduj: Library DlstrJct. -- In a pulilic hiaring 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Oakley city oflice.

The district, «h irh will tie S(‘ t tip almifTthr-

H A ll.K Y - A motion to publically read all correspondence . addrciiud to the BlaineiCounty SchtK>l-Hoard died for lack of a second during a txiard meeting Monday night.

in making the motion trustee heif Odmark said that all such corre.spondence should btf placed on the agenda and read at

■ ■board-TODPttngs:--------------------- ---------------------During a special meeting July 23, trustee chairman Rgnda

Hunt declined to read pubhcaliy a cover letter from Dean B. J. Chandler, school of i?ducattijn, Northwestern University,

The letter had accompanied a report of progress to dale on the Blame County Plant and Facility Study,-

Hunt S . . U 1 he took :'.exception to some parts” of the letter and Would nut make.it public 'until directed by the board.”■I .Odmark- s lated- during.^ M onday^ meeting that - a ll correSponclPnce "'If good for board or bud tor the . bo4i^d

"t)ni'e we let, other schools in the conference, it will have to be split up,” iithletic director Cary Swan told the bpard.- The long distances involved U) traveling to games, coupled with the fuel shortage, would

^-CijDbabb luakc it necessary to split tlie conference ihlo^“eaSt~

■ nnrt wcKt djvisions, eliminating some of Minlco's competition with |lic Hoisc .schools.

Ttie iKiard did not ndvise Maughan, leaving the matter to school offLcials at theconf^irence _ - __________

A proposed health occupations class for the high- school was rejected by the tXjard becaase uftlie estimated $7,000 cost for the project.

The elasft would requ ire addition of a new teacher, according to Asst. Supt. Diiyle J^^owBder He said, “ We basically don't have anything in the salary schedule" fpr a new instructor.

About $700 irl state funds had "" tjcem rllnrated '■

“ Some of this resort development we feel is going to spill over into eamas,^’ Tayler said, cotnmenting on the upward projection of the current .study, despite the fact the 1972 projection showed Camas had dropped from 728 to 700 for an .8

" per cent decrease.“ Thetrther 1972 projerttens were BlalAc, 16.7 increase. IQ lead the slate's overall 6 per cent growth; 1 Jncoln. up 7,8 and (jooding, up 9 7

These figures will be used in comprehensive land planning by ihe Wood River council, according to Don G Kredericksen, cgurici! chairman . . 1" ____ .

The study, which was contracted by the council to Boise State College, was funded through a Housingand Urbanjkvelopment

grant---- "Everynne may not believe the.se figures,” Taylor said, but

they are what Boise Stale camc up with based upon the 1972" census estimates " -

The Wood R iver Council has 24 governmental units in its membership — each of the 12 incorporated c itie i, four county planning commissions and soil conservaUon districts within each gf the four counties.

JEROM E — Jerome County empdoyes mR— wp^k— ?rr- e/ijoying the comfort of air condrtioning at the Jerome County cOurthou.se,

•Work is expected to be completed this week on the ifislallarton of air conditioning . units in the courthouse, A total of 18 small units and one large unit have been inalalled during the past month by Magic V a lley R e fr ig e ra tio n , Twin Kalis, Workman from Qark and Betiker Building Supply. Gooding. are placing

High>Xay District ifadapted, w iim aln fposK lW r tlf'PWtBtettsJjineiiEEin

'-town, w Meh huii had onni* fur-----

should be r e a d "Hunt stated jhat in cerUiin circumstances the nature of such

correspondenc() woiild dit'fatc that "It ' would be* rcajl^ in an ITxeculiv^essrdhTThf Sf ctrcnmstances, heTmid, would'include when the correspondence c-oncerns persons and personalities ” 1

- dtin'i tliink weshould s et any hartlorfaslrules'.'Huntsaid.Referring tu the July 23 meeting in which i-'atsy Jacoby,

Ki.irhiim ri.niii.slcd that the Cliandlej- letter be 'rca<i, Supt

-■-frtr-the hidf-dily pragram , aadTio.spitai [)ersont>ol had okayed the project. Dr. Hatfield said, V T h e cla.ss was lo btf-run-in con]Tmctron” ’With',' the~Cassta' ■ county ,S<'hool District, ' but Uiey have dropped the plan and

a imriiry fiithe past two years.

F^inds for the llbrary-wnuld>om e from a local mill levy and from Idaho Public l.ibrary Region IV funds.

Young cyclist hurt in Rupert

■wayjTC Pag fr s a t f “U i f f T5f “ personally teit tnai " pruyr o flftiHirp revluiJsly I fuii tiir tetter , " I don't foal you shniiirt

additional insulatioh in the roof of the courthouse

Jerome County Coiiuiii.s.sion chairman Claude Bernard .said today the work Is part of an overall plan to remodel the courthouse ITie units, whicl^ can he controlled in each room, will al.so provide individual heating this winter

fiernard .said the county com m ts^ttm er* • are also looking into the possibility of additions 10 the courthouse " I f the addition I.? done we may combine the Jerome County

RU I’EKT - A Rupert man is li.'Jtecl in tair 'cbt^ flltlnm n- Minidokii Memorial Hospital today followrng a car-motorc'ycle accident Monday evening.

Gary H Holstead. 15, l^upert. driver of the motorcycle, sustained'inJuTiesTo his leflTiFg and was taktrrrtrrthe hospital for- treiitment. _

The accident occurred at the corner ofTTand Eighth S trem Williani Kagerbakke, 56. Hupert, was driving an older sedan north on H .Street. According lo Rupert police Kagerbakke said he stopped a l the stop sign and proceded into the intersection Kagerbakke said he did not see Holstead, police said

Holstead wa.S traveltng west on Eighth Street - Kagerbakke s car sustained $50 damage to the right front Damage tu Holstead's m o to ry cle wa.s estiinat_£d at $100 ^

try to Uk&a poke at the board,;” he sa id ,.Fagg'said “ let old b it te rn ^ disappear," and urged that "w e

g e l together tow ard ,a b*trtf^education system in the couhly .” After the meeting. Hunt verified that he had been quoted

correctly in a July 24 Times-News article concerning the board’s vote to rescind a'contractural agreement with Norlhwestern todirect the plant'and facilities study. '■

The article had stated, "trustee chairman Ronda Hunt said that B, J. Chandler, dean of the .schticd. i l l education. Northwestern, had stated that the district cbuM complete the

■study tovm d a new high school at about one half the Cost by di.scontinuing Northwestern participation and continuing the study with the aid o f persons within the community, the Idaho Department of Education's Needs Assessment Program and University of Idaho personnel" ^" David Knott, Ketchum, Monday night released on,>ebalf of Citizens for Quality Education a telegram from Dean Chandler to the group dated July 30, The telegram read, "C ontrary jo the

"reporrin the Times News I have made no statement regarding the diminished cost o f the Blaine County school study with or without Northwestern pai:llcTpaTion ”

tliere were only seven studtnis registered , for the c la s s in

- M i i i i c i ) HTgh S c h o o l 1 H a t f i e l d -

■State-officials had indicated the money would be avai^b le if the program was set up.at a later date, Hatfield told ' the board. He reguested that they "keep the idfea in m ind" for next, year, '• _. -r”

Canyon

pledged.

2.900 ao.res burn<»dSHOSHONE - W allace Kixsen, fire control officer for the

.Shoshone office of the Bureau of l^nd Management, reported this morning that the fiV ron 'the north side of Wilson Lake is

- r ontamed--------- -------- ■'------------

— WASHINGTON i U P l > — •The- National Park Service has pledged that it will make ava ilab le to Sen Frank Church, I>Idaho. by early SeptciTi'ber draft legislation to protect the Thousand .Springs Btix_Can>m aisuL

sheriff's o fiic f ana tTie J fi uiiir Police Departnwnt under one roof.” Bernard said He said the combination would provide better "taw enforcement for the whale county.^nd city aijd cut down maintenance expen.ses

He said the fire has reached 2,900 acres in size BIJV1 officials expect to be able to take crews off the fire this afternoon, Fixsen

FI1.ER — The second annual North Dakota pot luck picnic will beat 1 p.m Aug 19 at the Twin Fa ll* County fairgrounds Table .service, coffee and pop will be furnished Tlierc will be ganiis and entertarnment for everyone For more information, or to preTeglster. WTlte Box 358, Filer, 83328, or call 713-1472, .326-5470 or 326-5673 A .small registration fee will be charged

s itd,He also reported that the fire northeast of Richfield has been

mapped at 1,600 acres and is contained He said crews will be pulled off the fire during the day as it tKcomes possible to do so,

Fixsen said the other small fires in the district are out and no personnel are left working on them. ..

Tlie Park Service made the pledge in a letter to Sen Alan -HtWe I t f 'thp .Senatein terior subcom m ittee on national parks, afu-r Church had coinpaliiit'd that the park .service has l»'on dragging Its fcrt

Zone hearings slated in TF

TWIN FA1.-I5 — Three pubhc hearings are scheduled for next .week before th^Tw in Falls County commissioners.

All of the hearings deal with zoning requests^-.On Aug, 6, the commissioners will meet at 10 30 a m ttr consider a request by Globe Realty for reaoning a piece of property from agriculture to general commerdaJ The request involves lO'^cres in the vicinity of Tolman Comer east of Twin Falls on U.S, Highway 30

At 11 a jn , the commissioners will consider a request from Regal Homes for a variance on front and rear yard setbacks on one lot in the Southwood Subdivision

On Aug. 7 the commissioners have scheduled a hearing at 11 a jn on the request of Gordon I,.'t3rockett, Max L. Gailey and

_ residential subdivision in Agricultural A-1 zone. The property —I— involves 37 acres and is located on Falls Avetrae, five mifes east

of Blue Lakes Boulevard.A fourth public hearing has been scheduled beforeThe Twin

^^'^T^ttS"Oinnity "P lanniiig anif R mtng OommlsalunT-Jt involves a zoning variance request from E. R.' Seabau|ib- to allow construction of a residence with less than 30 foot rear yard setback. The property is located on the Taylor Orchard Road leading tntOj&ake R i ^ Canyon.

The hearirig will be held at 8:30 pm. Aug. 19 In the Jnadal bailcttng o f the county courthouse. Oral obiections or support may

tlic IJig of 'rtiayTit satiiiiTtti the x«nlAg ^ c e on Addison Avenue West ’in 'the;old

‘LbjdSing.

U N D E R C O N STR U C TIO N , son tbeai^ o f time. The cellar is bdng bnflt lo a i m p o a tw l » ihia miiiton M ck 6oteU> c«Uar Being imUl they are-neeiled-far-proeM itog the-

-4mHt by-tbe J . R* Simpiot Co. Workmen a S S l^ l o t TnHe-

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** ♦ I j ,- ' 1 ^ *

■ -V ■ —: .. ------ -- , _

comprehensive look at history, growth and development of Magic Valley and Southern Idaho. -

^oo| d ipA YOUNG diver rxerutes his own gpeclauty

Sunday o(( (he Sogth Beach fishing pier at the well stocked beaches in M lam) Beach, Fla. bathers have been deli^ed with almost tony thundershowers recently.Iji .the area.

Nixon gift(c ) WashingUin Star-News

W ASHINC.TON - A tax w atchdog ' drjiHnizalicn Is cha llenging ’ the' le nulily ' o f c h o r i t a b le d ed u c a t io n s i-oportedly clu ln ied by President Nixon for a $570,IX)0 gift of His papers . to the NatTonal ArcfiTveiT T"'

Tax analystii and advocates, a "public in terest'Taw ririfi, yesterday released an analysis of -the- case- whlfh tt - htis submrUed lo th e ' In ternal Revenue Service.

Nixon's income tax returns “ sh^d Tiife'aadliearjsrEffBralJte „ by independent auditors, lo

deleritiln^ whether

additional taxes should be assessed, ThoniasF. Field; the o r g a n iz a t io n 's e x e c u t iv e director, said In ' a letter to

T h t e r n a l '■ ■ R e v e n u e Commissioner Donald C. Alexander.

Field estimated that the deductions may have saved the president $285,000 in taxes. Perhaps $75,000 of that amount no longer can be collected because the three-year slatute of limitations has run out, rield

— said:------------------------------

the deductions because he did not make a legal gift of the

■ papers before T:fi"C effective date o f^a tiinitenirtg^ o f Uie rules.

Tannenbaum said he was Hs.suminK the basic correctness of the circum.stance.s described in 'a s e r ie s 'o r ’flTttrtesTifi tlic case by Nick Kolz in - t iw 'W a ^ n g fo n T os r lHSt month. ^

Until Congress enacted the Tax ftc fo rm Law of 1%&, public fig lffes could claim charitable deductions for the fair market value of donated papers. They

not laned omJrelrirreB! in the value,of the papers above

rule so that deductions for such g ifts jnade after ^ l y 25 of that year w ere lim ited to the donor's costs — essentially the cos! of the paper on which the documents were wriMen instead of the higher value for which thie papers could have been sold to collectors.

Tttnnenbaum said 1,217 cubic feet of Nixon's papers, written before he became president, reportedly were transferred lo the National Archives in March

-J569:----------------------------!!-------

actually to be given to the archives was not made until some tim e after the transfer. A. detffltHtlltsrof the papers to be g iven apparen tly was nol

0 w '• cr_sh ip , . prepared until 1970, he said. saiJ. He said A deed to give the papers to

the archives was not s ig n ^ by

later, and perhaps has nol yet l)cen. made

The nrchtves often serves- » s a cii.slodiah of the paper of public figu res . without a c q u ir in r g Tannenbaum Nixqn appai-thtly re ta in ed■‘ •dominton and o<^ntrol"-ov«i:— N ixon ,--w as_nol--ien t„la_lhe

papers after tlie transfer -and could - have taken thew-

biic;k. . . ■TannunbauJii said aselection

of :192 cubic fee l of papers

archives ujitil 1970 and still has not been accepted form ally by the gen ecs j serv ices adminlslriition in behalf- o f-he archives, Tannenbaum said.

Listening meetout

(c ) Chicago D ally News WASHINGTON - The’ two

- t Ap Iflembers of Ihe Senate W atergate C om m ittee have endor.sed a p ro p o ^ -to avoiti-a constitutional high noon with Presiden t Nixon over 'the release of taped conver.sation.f be tw ee in h o chief executive and his aides

Chairman Siuii Ervin i.O- N .C .), and— V4ve— Chairm an--

denying the tn pox.Stevenson noted that the

Senate approved A lly. Gen. E llio t R ichardson fo r the C^bihet post and gave, its blessing to the Cox investiga tion only a fter Richardson assured the Senate judiciary Commlllee that' the special prosecutor would have '•(uU authority . . . . for

docunr

Look bock t o s e e h o w f a r w e ' v e c o m e !

Look f o F w q r d - t o s e e w h e r e w e ' r e -

" g o i n g . O u i s i s a r i j e f j i p i r f e ' o n t h e

m o v e , t h a n k s to p e o p l e c o o p e r a t i n g ,

, u s ing the ir v ision ond-sk i lk fo r-the----betterment of the en tire cbmrrtunity. H istory, growth and development, ' Cu lture , Recreation, Industry,Firrance, Agricu ltu re . You'+I find them a ll in Progress '73. Worth reading. Worth sharing . Worth*saving.

He sent A lexan der an analysis ' by Ira 1. ’Tannenbaum. a d iredsr of the organization, which concluded that Nixon was not entitled lo

This was before the July 23 effecjivt' date of the new law, but Tannenbuuiukjsflisl Ih a lih e reported facts indicate that a legal gift was not made until

Soviet Jews to get perm it

parole authodly will shorten the waiting tune tron months lo 'a ’ matter of days.

Richardson said he acted On the recommendation of Deputy Secretary of State Kenneth Rush and the chairmen of the House and Senate Judiciary C om m ittees have been advised

s n r wrttwul imnueraig.^ ~ Tffter comm ir ig TBg Umted visas lo the United Stales and States as parolees the RuSstaTT have been in Rome several citizens may later apply for

- months after leaving Russia adjustment to permanent sta- ’ with exit permits tu-s -

n m tr r -1071 f n r m p r A t t n m e v

WASHINGTON [U P I I - Al- torney General Elliot 1. Rich- ardsoh said Monday he would use his parole authority under immigration laws lo permit B(X)

^ Soviet Jews, now in Rome, to ' come lo the United States a unthoul the customary long

delayRichardson said most of the

■ « »

In.all tr^sea itrcY ha^t

Howard Baker i H-Tervi say they would w e lcom e the chiince _Ii l _iQin S p e c ia l W H le r g H le P r o s e c u t o r Archibald Cox in listening to’ the-tapesrW th President sconcuprent'c ar^d determining jointly what r e le v ^ l parts,' if any, should be made public

Both Ervin and Baker, in an appearance on CBS' interview p rogram Face the Nation Sunday, said the proposal) first made in a Baltimore Sun editorial, might be a way dut of the inipiisse - over the White

a series of legal maneuvers.M eanw hile. ■ lU ino is Sen.

Adlav- Stevenson charged in a Senate speech today that the President "has breached his contract with the Senate" by

rev ie w ing g l l- d o c umen taryevidenee available from any source, as to which he shall have-fu lfhccess.:'

Stevenson said Nixon has "changed the rules" and "48 be t^a^^ l;— the tmat— of— th «- Senate. of -hi.s own attorney genera l and ■ the spccia l prosecutor who accepted the office upon the assurances of full au thority "

In one of the harshest speeches on W atergate delivered on the Senate floor, Sleveniwn declared:

"I am sickened by the I’ resident's dusdain lor the orderly processes of law. He does nol seem to care about his own .solemn assurances They are made one day and are inoperative the next

m out and mail rniipnn tnriay Times-Mews Circniation Dept., P.O. Box 548 Twin Falls, Uaho 8 3 ^ 1

S e a r ^ f e r g u n m a n

c o n t i n u e s i n w o o d s

r into a wailing time of several monlh.'. The delay in process-

* ing their request lo come lo the - _United States on a conditional _ .'.en tca iice ior refugees is based

on the time it takes to handle ; the great volume of paper work

in .the U S embassy and a shortage of personnel to handle

__ that work.Richardson's exercise o f his

G enera l John N. M itchell announced be would use his parole authority under the immigration laws to bring to

- ^ e-Unitcd S ta tes ffm m iben rf ^ R u ss ia n Jews who had

obtained exit permits from their government. Some 425 Jewish and non^Jewish

SPECU1.AT0R. N .Y. (U P I ) rying a shotgun walked into a — Ij iw officers sptnred b y the cainp.?lle Sunday where three thfcat that 'T i l kill again” young men arfd a young woman combed the campsites and had pitched tents He forced

- woodlands of ttve -Adirondaoks— one o f-the men to tie the othe^rs Monday looking for a gunman to separate trees so they coiild

TIMES-NEWSCirculation Djeporim.ent P .O . Box 548 Tw in Falls, Idaho 83301

(PlEASf PRfMT)

Please eoclcfie

CHECK.

MONEY ORDER,

OR COIN (S ).

PLEASE SEND A COPY OF PROGRESS ’73 TO:

Namewho stabbed to death a camper botmd to a tree.

The search by more than lOd

Cattlemen picni«JBR O M E — The M ag ic well represented.

Russians have since come . t o -^ «> P e r s .6 h e r i fr s deputies and tiie United States. - forast e ^ , with t ^ aid ^Df .

helicopters and Uoodhoiiniu,----------------------------------------------- L’cntered uii the~ QKwr^Oeek*

area, about four miles south of this rural v illage in northern N e w 7 ^

The C o o n i i o e k « ^ became l-pot

held spk n icT or members and '. families Saturday evening at

“ the ■ "Jerom e County----- Fairgrounds^_ _— ^^-JteCo«U »ig ':-to '.the group'JS — -aecr«t»ry4reaaia-cr.' George

not see eal;h other and stabbed one. of the bound campers in thechesf.

Phil DomMewski, 18, of ScheneHaayT»^Y7n«w!TBf*e

7statL3KDonds-—------------ ----------The.gunman then took the

unboui^ roan TiHh him in his c a r ~ but the ' youOf ~ ia te i' m a n a g^ to escape. H ie two

-others .freed-thepMelves from

•c---------

Bave O iadwi cte, HoHisterr-rTaTOrgfftBT^tgircar that m ightserved as m a'sfer o f peremonies and the Charles W alters fa m t^ . ; Jerom e, played western rnusic, l^ te r said.

belong to the suspect was chased by police and the driver

The youth told police that I gunman told him, “ I 've killed

Address

City - State Zip

---- . .. . .

Address

City State __2 ip

' ^ t i T iTi'nrr 'thnn 'm |fi | were giventhe afiair, with both .away The meal was catss^

mskwthihl^i ^ ' iiorflMide

ran, o ff Into the woodSj Police , before and I ’ll kill again. I said the man i^so rnay b i know the slate f » U ^ are after wanted ih conitectiori with a m e.’ ’ ’sim ilar killing o f a Massa- Campers in ttie area were chusetls cam pw m ire than a wamjed that the suspect might

M Y N A M E IS:Address : _Phone_

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no^hitter at Oakland— Tower -

ing^-Jim^ Bibbyr whose career

surgery dnly three., years, ago, fired the first no-hltter In Texiiif Ranger history and the fourth of the'Ainerican League s e ^ n Noonday night when lie.beal Uie ■

A ’8,— 641,— adlll— an; overpowering 13-stril^ut per­formance.

Bibby, in the An)edcan League only six weeks, was never in serious trouble despite giving up six walks. But it took threeexoellent fielding plays to preserve his stunning fio-hit triipions, who were dumped into a virtual first-plate tie In the AL

West with Kansas Qt!y.'Shortstop Jim Pregosi sprint-

„£d.taJbisJefL(«iJred JKubiak!a-..jnd>^cia d third inning grounder to pre- , but Bibby retired Billy Coni- vent what looked like a sure gliaro on a pop foul and th^n hit. Then in the sixth, center- fanned pincn-hitt^r Jay John- fielder V ic Harris made a fine stone. In the ninth, Sal Bando

T unnine— enteh on— annthpr^- walked'.stQle .Second and moVed

-theeighth, defensive shortstop replacement Pete MacKanin grabbed a ^ o r t hop liner^off the bat o ff the bat of speedy Bill North to throw him out.

Oakland got rimners as far as second base twice and once as far as third. In the sixth.

walks to Reggie J a c k in and 13th whiff of the night. Deron ^!ene-Ten ice put a s o ivTIriit 3DhnsDn“ groimded^::oiif“ on Ih e ::

first pitch to second basgman Dave Nelson, anTThen fiibby

in movie about StokesCINCINNATI (U P n - A

movie depicting the compas­sionate relationship between two form er pro basketball stars

---- Jack Tw vmnn nnd the lateMaurice Stokes —prem iered here Monday night with Twy- man arjd Oscar Robertson on hand for ^ e opening.

_ Cincinnati was chosen for the worfd" prem ier of the film "M a u r i^ because it was here that Stokes, a Pittsburgh re s i^ n t, was hospitalized for 12

^ yea rs aslretQUghno overcome a 1958 injury that left him totally paralyied.

T w ^ an I a Cincinnati Royals teammate of Stokes, was the man who made it possible for Stokes’ |100,000-a-year hospital and rehabilitation costs to be paid. Twyman becarrie Stokes’ legal l?uardian and organized

-promotienal-eveftts that raised ..more-than $1 tnttlioa:---------------

points out the humanitarian efforts by Twyman.

Twyman,' now a successful businessmantrf nearby Dayton, said the film was 100 per cent accur.at« in pr^enlinirStDkES^ story.

'■it shows that Maurle was really like —courageous, com­petitive , intelligen.t, perceptive, Just a> tremendous • person,” Twyman said. ’ ’Seeing w h a t, Maurife went through can’t help ■but be an inspiration to people.

"Peop le have talked abour whHl 1 did to help him, but It was' nothing compared with what Maurie did. 1 could walk otrt of the hospital room every day. He coulHn ’ f . He could have given up. But he didn!t. He Inspired m e."

At one point It was consid- • ered a major victory for Stokes -p ara lvzed with a rare type of

-em-ephilitis y t o blmlfrhis-ey^

retired.Stokes was brought to the

introduced to the crowd. Slowly, he began stirring in-his chaic. Ho »loott-up und waved, to the cheet-|ng.fans.

Stokes die^ of a heart attack in 1970, He left over $91,000 to his alma mater, .St.' Francis ( P a . ) -CoUeg» and stated.'that the gift was to ■’commemorate the great seir-sacrifice, devo­tion and encouragement of my dear ' friend7 Jack Twymsm, without whose pcplonged and arduous worji no.festate would be available for me to g iv e .”

The'w in was signed with »a — -

up by Texas in a trade with the . St. Louis Cardinals on June 6,

He threw a one-hitter against the Kansas City Royals on June 29th, as Fran Healy doubled in the sixth inning.

Bibby, the older brother o f forfner UCl.A and current New^ York Knickerbocker player Henry Bibby, throws alhiost all fast balls and has struck out ID

T h a t r e a lly sm a rtsM EXICAN MATADOR Curro Rtvxra, 21. was

hovKed by his second bull at Bullring by the Sea In Tijuana, Meklro. Although not^ored, he was unable to continue. Rivera was awarded both ears and tai) for fine work with first bijjl. (U PI Telephoto I ,

or more In four or.his 10 starts for Texas.

T a y lo r is

re tu rn

to c am p

T^veiiue^are examined in how to become a successful elk hunter in Gem state

" X ” .

T F , B u r le y^ S j o l f e r s -

l.IB K H TY , Mo„ (U P I I Wide receiver OtIs Taylor headed a llst,i)f Kansas City (li ic fs players who returned to training camp Monday froni the Injured list.

-Ihi; return of Taylor, who

The film —reminiscent of the in response to questions. The--award-waomng-television pror climax., o f ,b is ,’ '.rnedlcal come-

gram "B r ian’s Song” —drama- back” was at the Cincinnatitizes the valiant reiRaBililatToh Gardens wh?n Twyman" wasbattle waged" by Stokes and honored shortly before he

post w in shad been out with a groin pull sinfe tast Tue.sday. left only two veterans on, the In'Jured

- M0N'rPBf-,1f?R- -A--Twift - UkU .offensive guard M o Moor - Fa lls team and B urley manjind defensive tackle Buck inriiv irtual Du ine. Ha.smuaaonTl?U'.>1i‘0an,:---------- ---------- :---------

By M A R TK L MOKACUE Conservation Kduratlon SupervTsor Idaho Fish and Game bepartmeni

Elk hunting can be a difficult proposition. In recent years,

_ ..rfltQ u t^elk liun lers oUt Qt*iich 100 persons purchasing an elk lag will bag an elk in a typical hunting year. These are the odds you face before leavmg the house.

With this realization, how can you become one of the

. loriunfHeone

■Jtrpi'i I'liii, 'Diik . are four avenues open. First, there a r t good-com m ercial .auUiUer£_ jneiialuuUL-iO-XlB-- _hunling available. .Secontlly, personal’ con lacl with

commercial outfitter'.’ How do 'i'oa di'ijtniilmi if the ouUitter is good at his profession, has adequate equipment and takes good oare of his hunters’? Willtir-meet your expettatiojit?-----' TIic l ie s l pQ.ftlblc'sotirc^-'of Inforniation is past clientele. If you are considering a pjirtuular outfitter, ask [or a list of his clients from the past se.ison or two. Kit(ier call or wxlte ^ e s e individuals for an* appraisaj of Jhis^j;jj}eratlon and

-'hnntiwgcominoD sense .approach^ to ■protecttnK your-equity lo tiR l». money and effort vou may

Obviously if they consistently get elk every year or so ,they can teach you the rudin\cnts and save you a lot of time and false starts. That is if they will.

~ k in io f a person,who likes to go it alone, start from scratc h and learn on your ow n ’' To begin with, the -selectlOD-of a hunting area Is very impurtant. Ttie main elk populjitlons ape in NorXhcontral Idaho The upper Clearwater drainage and the St. Joe dralnai;c are popular.

that fils the particular habitat. As an example, they may feed on certain hillsides and return lo certain limber pockets to brush up. Knowing this, you ciui-place yowself-in a position to - InlBi'cSpt- iKoiti. Biills- may have favorite . wallow areas. But you'll never know It In time if you don't get out there In August or Early September. ,

Becoming Jamlliar with the life style of any-species . Is ess.sential to' figuring your approach to hiintirtfi the

Rich Glover will play in exhibitionWEST LONG BRANCH, N.J.

( D P I ) — Top draft choice Rich Glover made his first appear­ance at Ihe New York Giants’ training camp Monday and coach Alex Webster, impressed with the newcomer, ^ id the highly-rated middle guard from the TTnTversity prnhahly woiilriSaturday’s exhibition at San Diego.

"The Giants’ defense with a middle guard is just right for m e,” the 6-1, 242-pound Glover Mid after his initial .workQUtJ ’’Sure, I have a tough job In front of me trying to beat out John Mendenhall. He has

experience over me, but 1 feel that just as soon as I get everything down. I ’ll have a good chance”

Defens^e coordinator Jim Garrett was greatjX 'Jjleased with Glovcfr's "ni’st' worteut^ saying: ” He has great quick-

orTJebraska— ffess and picked up everything play In next very quickly. H e ll be_a real

and Stve Hoggan took top honors In a pro-am Monday.

The Twin Falls .squad of pro Jim Packard and amateurs Kevin Packard, I,arry Malone, G ary Duncan and Curt Thomsen p3sled a lSX*-unafer par for the three best_ ball competition. The Highland of Pocatello team was second at 14 while Ogden, Utah,

Coach ' Hank Stram said Moorman’s strained knee was much im p ro v e and hopefully he would be back In the lineup in a week. However, he will miss the Chiefs’ pre-season opener Saturday night at v^rowhead Stadium against the Nfew Orleans Saints.

Buchanan underwent X-rays Monday to check on his kidney

acknow ledged skilled ,e lk hunters is -rfn approach Thirdly, you can learn..the skills peculiar to elk hunting and become a good elk hunter las tly , ybu can roly basically on chance which unfortunately Is the choice of too many elk hunters.

l^et’s look at the options. What about hiring a

have mve.sted in a possible elk hunt Remember vou are hiring

M0 VIng" soutF; rhe^nTram' anlmala. Klk hegm ruUmR--.Salmon K iver cpnynn activities in Sentem ber, Bullsjid jacenljanl’t j betw ^n J;Joj;lh become vocal and start'ForlT'and Riggins are good TH'fTIttmg tramnS“ Cirws’ 'Hlso—bets And the controlled hunt m ove oround m ore. This

Ms elk hunting knowledge, transportation , cap ab ility , camping facilities, and hunting location If he Is conscientious and performs well. It Is a bargain. .

Perhaps y£)jj_ari: lucky to •have friends living in good elk country and know how lo hunt, or frtffUdSjWho have refined their elk hunting sk ills .

uruls..are-cwtalnly worthy ol consideration In fact, eyery unit open to elk hunting is good if you know where the elk hang out. This brings u s to a- htgWy significant point. One of the most important aspects of any ‘ aaylignt are worth all o f tJi

■ m'faTts-WTTTnPTFs-arr-cxposeti - longer before brushing up. This gives you an edge in early season hunting. The earlier you can go in September, the better. The first two hours of '

jelk hunt is,pre-hunt research Once you have settled on an ^^ea, you better get to know it. C T f' gfi»i^fally have a routine

flvesome, headed by pro Dean ^stone. Stram expected his big

addition to our ballclub”’■We’l l . probably use him

Saturday night against the Chargers,” Webster said. ” He impressed me out there today.

sure w e ll be able to get him out of some of the habits he’s in now.”

(^ndland was third at 12)v Hoggan won the 0-11

handicap division net at 65 while Rasmusson look the upper division gro.ss at 81. Utah Stale am ateurJam es B lair and G racken" Webb, Pre.ston, po.sted two- under 70s for the low amateur scores.

Bob B e lly won the pro , ahead of

Mike Renshaw of Pocatello.Rupert Country Club will

host a pro-am Friday

tackle back in practice later this week

Guard" Georg«-D aney, wide receiver Bruce Jankowski, de­fensive ba<‘k ' Kerry Reardon

running back Claxton Welch returned to lull duly

DwighI Stones,. Feuerbach are top L’:S. winners at Helsinki

both of S^onday

College.

mthe club's workouts H E l.S INK l tU P Ii — Jimat Wilham Jewell Boulding, Chuck .Smith, Dwight

- - -Slones and A1 Feuerbach were

rest of the day! IT you, have done your pre-hunt homework, you shoul know where to concentrate your efforts.

The importance of being in position right at day ligh t cannot be overem phasized .Many a good elk-hunt'e>taRe« a1ighr.:sTeep'mg"'B'a r iind~^^---------down relatively-close lo where the elk are using. - '

October hunlina can be

Al.so joining the team was the American winners Mondayrunning back Eugene Thomas, a free agent who played with the Chiefs in 1966-67 and was recently signed by .Stram.

Red^s gun s

fo r set'on (I cilv title

on the flr.st day of A two-day track and field meeting which saw a couple >f New Zealand­ers dominate the distance evenlKr -------

would try and add the world chancy at best The elk pre now record to the 10,000 m e le rm ^ k ^_aware they are being pursued he .set w London recenn>'.’ and have becoinc wary . The

Boulding, of Oklahoma Q ty , took the 400 meter hurdles in a' comfortable :49.2 sec-onds lo win from F'lnland's Ari Salin who clocked 51 4.

.Smith ..of MacKee.sport, Pa won the 100 meter da.sh in :10,4, one-tenth ahead of local sprint­er Raimo Vilen."sto h e s. vvh'(i~!S' t a world

-srittf^ reco rd 4n-Munich in the reccn t

two eyelash victories over match again.sl West Germany, Brehm's Construction, meets won the high jump with a leap ^ cam e fop Wprtnesdav nipht of ' feet ^ inch

. Red's Trading Post, won the wom en's

whichcity

complained of leg pains and finished a disappointing fifth.

Bedford and Viren made all the pace with Quax running comfortably in the pack On the gun lap the Finnish policeman tried to break clear but Quax stayed with him and accelerat­ed away w^h 20 yards to go, Viren was limed in 13:28 8 with Bedford a further 10 seconds bark - -

Another K iw i. ■ R ^ D>xpn, took the 1,500 meters in 3:37 5 to win from world steeplechase record holder Ben Jipcho

rut has past. I jv ing Is still easy in terms of the availability of food and the fact they do not need lo feed often They become almost nocturnal in their habitats, spending nearly all o( the daylight hours; brushed up. They simply are not very vulnerable.

The advent of colder weather and enow- In November works m iavor o f the elk hunter. Ihfi. elk will start moving out of the Widespread summer ranges and start bunching more

lo decide a tic for the regular Feuerbai li, Ifii' wui Id si -season championship

Red's nipped Brehm 18-16 in nine innings and then took the final game of the tourney

tp nt-record-holdcr from 5ian Jose. Calif, never .was extended and won his speciality with a routine toss of 67-feet-4, against

j^inftay.ni|3hi Q-fl in thp hnttnm thc 63-8 of second-placed Finn,of Ihe lasi TruTtng ’ThaL came Matti Yrjoelae after an ump ire reversed The highlight of the d a j ,deci.sion between a fair and n »\ ^ ve r . cartie in the 5,000foul ball, first ruling it fair and m e t ^ when Dick Quax of Newcalling the bailer out. After Zealand upset double Olympic

- " that , Red^ftpui two hltfl npound— rhampinn- — Ykfin— flLan outfield error by Brehms to pull out the victory However, even with that loss. Red's still had the extra game .since it was undefeated.

B reh m ’s dropped R e d ’s Friday night to conclude the regular season-and fashion the first-place tie

-Ttirf-Chrti f in ia M m ini mthe tournament.

Fin land In 13 m inutes 27.2 seconds.

Briton Dave Bedford, who announced before th« race he

TRADINGPOST

. S A H H TIA N C IS C O « e r » ’ olleii*lve line coach IMelr S tn fe l explains drills to tight end Ted Kwalick (82) and tacH c Cas Banastek <79)

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.14. T f f » e » N e w s r ^ T W l n F a l l s , I d a h o . l u e s d a y . j O i y 4 i # W i

Bradford Leads' . 1. -o.

p a s t M i n n e s o t a 9 " 1

S t a n d i n g s y e a r s o C T i

" m M I t r . r n N " I f f , ! B k h n s g B T H y t ^ °.-I4 U PI ) - - — B u dd fca fad forJ j& J i- .................- Chicago'tWhite^Scfic-altack th a t.

included four trieles and two home runs as the Sox whipped ■Minnesota,9-1, Monday behind Stan ^ahnsen's eight hft pitch­ing.

tony Oliva jjroke Bahnsen s shutout bid by hitting his lOtff

two-and-walkwl-teo.^-- ; Bradford.hlt a sokJlfither in the fifth and a run-scorin|_ triple In ‘ the slxlh. Jim Henderson chjpped. In with another solo homer, his sixth, in the Chicago eighth.

Chicago scored once in the

homer of the year ip the eighth.

Ultra innm g r -whw* ljuia-^M-= varado singled, moved to third

t>y c huck HritiRinanr, • and ^ r e d on John Jeter's single.

BraSford^madelt 2^ in the fifth with his seventh home run of the season. -

Chicago broke it. open, in the sixth with four runs to finish o ff Twin s(arter Jiin Kaat (11-10).

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N E W Y O B K lU P IJ . - . You ’r ■ think-by naw. after 17 yeaup in The r in g ,"G e o rg e ' O iuvalo, known to many as boxing's human punching bag, would h^ve lost a little something upstairs.

But Ood has graced this - farute af a nilan, ttie luiigtiiwe

CH f^AC O lU P I l - The Chicago Cubs hopped on Bob Gibson for four singles and

walked to open the game, stole second and scored St. I/)uis’ only run on Tim McCarver's

three runs in the first inning "s ingle .J l was the 600th Stolen Monday and-miMfe-lhew-KiafiJl— -base in 'B iiXk's career,putting

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I>ouls Cardinals behind siit-hit pitching by.HU'k Heil.schel and Dave ijiKoche. .

It was only the fourth victory in the last 17 games for lht‘Cubs and the sixth lo.ss over Uie same span lor the Cardinnls

. The win nuived the Cubs within 1 l-2 (!anies of the piice-setting Cards In the National League s

■Eastern Division race,Gibson, losing for the 10th

time, against 11 wins, gave up nine hits and had a lliree-game winning' streak tjroken, -while Rcuiichel, scoring bi§JUh WJn against: eight lo&ses\ broke a three-ganie losing" streak ' LaRoche, getting the last four outs, earned his fourth save

_ . The only bright spot for the _^Wr4in8l8 vj as Bi'.^k, .w^n ~ ~ . i i .it

him 13th on the all-time ITst, imd he, was presented with second base after the inning ended, ^

Kick Monday singled to open the gam e for the Cubs, advanced on a walk to Jose t;«rdenHl aml-fieoretl-on-Billy W llttaiire ' single,SI L o u t i

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NEW YQBK (U PJ) - John Boccabella's three-run doub.le in the 10th inning gave ^ e Montreal Expos a 5-2 victory over New York in the nightcap Monday' night after the Expos won the opener, 1;^, behind rookTe Steve Rog.ers’ second ■ straight shutout performance.

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PITTSBURGHnTFrrF^Steve Carlton fired a six-hittor and Bob Boone singled home the ganie',s unly.run.Munday-night, leading the Philadelphia Phil­lies to a 1-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

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centgr'_in the ninth inning Monday mglit S ’ored Rico Petrocelll from third and nave

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the Boston Red Sox a 4-3 win over the New York Yankees

The Yankees, trailing 3-1 in the top of the ninth, tied the game on pinch-hitter Jim Ray Hart's two-run |ioroer.

But in the bottom o f the ninth, Rico Petrocelli, who had

off with a single and moved to s^Dnd on a wild pitch by loser Sparky l.yle, and to third on a

H ra v e s topple Houston 7-3

. ' HOUSTON lU W i - Darrell. Evans drove in three runs with

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SIX hits, seven w a lks 'an d

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striking out three. The loss dropped l.yle's mark to 4-6,

Boston, w f t c f has defeated the Yankees nine times in 11 games this season, jumped to a 2-0 lead "In the condH nnlrlg - when Orlando C e p ^ doubled- and came home on Petrocelll's 13th bom ep-Tomm y Harper's homer, his 11th of the season, came in the fifth inning.

New York 's first run'came irf the third inning whep Gene Michael singled, moved to second on Matty Alou's bunt single and to third on Roy VVhite'.s walk Michael scored on Bobby Murcer's grounder to

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Canadian heavyweight''cham ­pion who has taken the best shots of heavyweight champion George Foreman^Joe Frazier, Muhammad All, Floyd Patter­son, and Jerry Quarry and never once been knocked off hisfeet:— '

George Chuvalo still has all his marbles. He's no Joe Palooka, he hasn't turned into a head 'o f cauliflower, and Tie doesn't walk the streets reliving his past f ights and saying- himself, “ I killed da’ t(um."

He has survived all those brutal boxing wars and come away a quick-talklng,'nferate personality who is adding to his already healthy bankroll these days by announcing fighliS from

'ringside a t '^ a d ls f la ^ ^ u a re ^ Garden's Felt Forum.

"I t 's a lot different sitting down there as compared to being in the ring trading punches with a gu y ," said Chuvalo, who is the color man on a new, weekly fight show iplpviseH nHtinnally .nn_Salur^- day afteriiDohS-by the Am eri­can Broadcasting Company:

"B ut this TV thing -isn’t really new to me. 1 .duLrtbe_ Terrell-A li fight from Houston back in 1967, the Frazier-Ellis fight and the Frazier^tander match irt OifialTa, People in Toronto,'where I live, wanted, me to do my own TV show byt 1 was still pretty active fighting then, 1 guess the people at ABC were judging me on what 1 had done at the mike in th i other fights. They must have been

, happy with my work,”th e people at home In their

H ^ g roems .have, E>yi happy.-with Q iuvalo ’s. latest work tw . Letters have poured Into, the

'boxing o ffice at the Garden expressing approval of- the. return of boxing to TV and the work of Big George'. More than 350,000 homes were tuned to the Mike Quai i y Billy KiUy W »gner match last week and that represents a very high rating on the Neilson chart.

Chuvalo, who has 9 70-17^ record with 59 knockouts and is. currently in training to fight for the British Empire title in the

Ttf Uie busin^^ 1965 _ChuvSo lost a 12 round decision to two-time champi6ii~Palter- sOn, and the following year he wound up a gory mess after going 15 rounds .with All In his only try for tjhe world cham­pionship.

■tn 1067 he wa i atopped in four

-^^ishroadcasting is a great-

lall, woiTmost ot his fp t s with" roughhou^ tactics, bulling his bpponSnt atout the ring without letup. He rarely threw combii nations, just roundhouse pun- ches from all angles. He wasn’t

Yet In his color analysis he is an astute observer of the action and -gives the TV viewer an inside to the mechanics and makeup o f a fighter,

“ All I try to do isconunent from a fighter's point of v iew ," said Chuvalo, Who will be 30 ypars old in Septemlwr, "T e ll what's happening in there and try to convey^ what the fighter is feeling,,,is he hurt?.,, is he taking advantage 01 the ope-‘ aiug??. ,,

rounds by Frazier and'ltien in 1970 he. became young Fore­man’s puhclyng bag and was stopped in three rounds.

But Chuvalo has w o n 'l i is ' share, too. Perhaps his biggest win came in NeW YorkTn 1969 when he s to p p 'd '^ a r r y irr seven. But after "his -loss to. Foreman, and others to former W orld Boxing Association champ Jimmy Ellis, and pgain to All last year, Chuvalo went

His last figh^ on Sept 5. 1972, ended in a ^cond round KO over Charlie Boston. H ie bout was held in, of all places, Port- Au-Pr-ince, Haiti.

■ thlhg^fof lme nght"now7’ said ChilvalbT- ” r-kripr7 that Ihia '■ series ends-'-ifl-the fair bu t''.

. th e j’re negotiating now for, a , morepermanerttcontract. ’

" I f fhls show-makes It, I ’d like to stick with it. But I ’m still a fightar. I ’m not ietiiMd; i = :W e’re trying to make a fight with Danny McAllnden foV the British Empire title within the next couple of months. Ijf he doesn’t want the fight then .the British Boxing Board of Control will-strip him and have Bunny

-7lohnson~of Jamaica~and~Rich^

"1 get a lot better look at ^things from ringside. -Whon you're in there throwing pun­ches, trying to take the other guy out, you can’t see what you’re doin^ . wu>ng. You perform by instinct and re flex­es. Describing the fight from ri/)gside you can see ' a lot more. I f f a good education- L sec things now that I never coiild have noticed before."

"That one was unbelievea- b le ," said Geor-ge. " I started growing my mustache the day after the fight and I've been hiding out ever since. The

^promoters, two Arabs, were throv.'n in ja il, ‘ and' about 600 people showed up for the fight.I fold the guy before the fight that-41aiti was the poorest qountry in the western world. But he says.'Don't worry you 'll- get paid.'. "1 -got- my money at the

airport after the fight and ran forth ep lan e .Itw asw lld ." .

It's understandable why Chuvalo missed a lot of what was going on when he was in the ripg. He spent a good deal pf time catching leather from some of the best heavyweights

_Chu5(alD now! is settled back in "Pronto during the week, where he trains lightly every day, easing _his._toiublesQH)e back into sTiape, On Friday night he flies to New York for thejigh t and returns an hour after the final bell rings to get baok^to his wife and_ hve children, " ‘

ard Dunn fight and the winner , “ gets me.

J u n io rg o l f e r ^ ^ -

seek titleSAN DIEGO (U P l ) -^ 'u lu re

professional golf champions teeoff Tuesday when more than 150 junior golfers seek the title in the USGA_Junior Amateur Championships at tlif Singing Hills Country Qub.

th e bulk of the field checked in Monday and most pf the youngsters gvailed~themselyes of a chance to tour the golf” layoutr-

Among those entered in the tourney is California's men am ateur cham pion, M ike Brannan, Salinas, Calif, Brannan, who won the USA

-Jun iof—Cham pioasHips two ,years ago, will try to break San Diego county’s jinx. He has never done well in two Wprld Junior Golf Championships, but is optirnfstic about his chaces in the Junior Amateur Tourney,

!" l 'm a considerably better ^player now ," he said, ' ‘than

. . wjign l.woniti i9 fL ”

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W ; 0 0 0W P I rtf n o n I / 10 A l »

Homo runs lift Delj*oU to win"

B'a I.TIM ORE lU P I ) - Dick McAuliffe, Duke Sims and Jim' Nortbrup. belted - h<>me runs-,. Monday night as tfife Detrolf Tigers .swept a three-game series from the B a ltim ore Orioles with a 4-3 nationally- televised victory which gave Mickey liolich his 10th win pf the season.' • ' ‘D t t r o i t

•6 1 mN O f l n r j p ir ^ 7 J

It s o i l6Bianil BP. I,

Schucler scattered seven hits Monday night to lead the Atlanta Braves to a 7-3 vitrtory ,, over the Houston A.slros.

Evans hit his 29th homer ot the year over the riglitfield wall In the first inning, scoring Ralph Garr, who had singled . Paul Casanova and Schueler h itleadoff singles in the fourth Casanova advanced to third on an infield out and scored ofv E t'ans’ s ing le that gave Atlanta a 5-3 lead

■— EvamtJU.'ared another rtw 1 Dusty Baker'ft -singlg ‘

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BOISE -T Sponsorships . in sports have gone together for many a year and the popular sport of ’drag" racing tis not without big company backing. One of the b iggest non­automotive sponsors in the sport today are the Coca Cola

-SettlingthiscominH Thursday night.

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August 2nd, onc_of.the most fantastic shPws in drag racing, the Coca Cola Cavalcade of Stars,, will be making its first appearance ever in the northwest ' at F ireb ird Raceway

Gates will open at 5:00 p.m, with eliminations beginning at 8 p.m

Heading up the list of stars w ill be the , famous T )oh S c h u m a c h e r P ly m o u th Baracuda that now is also sponsored by the jpeople M Wonder Bread and w ill campaign as the new "Wonder Wagon "

Campaigning in its second year as a Coke car will be the “ .vei BiuUiBli, fUinPUS " 1-, A, H ook er" Mach I M ustang wtnch recently recorded times o f 6,59 e t at 228 milers per hour at U S 30 Dragway in

Power Cushion 7ft VYTACORD Bias Ply TiresM INI A INTE R M E D IA TE C A R S MEDIUM S IZE CARS LARG ER C A R S

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- _ _ _ _ ' ™ P l u l »1 » « t t l f t ' T i r e Wo T r > d f N t e d t d PIUI »2 !IIO »? 60 rtl P ir Tirt, No Trldt Hetdul Plu\ 1? to » UJXl f

Charles Therwhanger will drive "B ig M ike" Burkhart's super strong Vega from Dallas, Texas

Probablf-ptTg O f the best"

O F F E R E N O S A U G . 1

R a in C h * c k • l> ■! M i l owt of r o u ' »<># w « w n 't t u a yo u a fa>n c h » c i i m*Mt m o »«Kh* d * t»v * fv •( tt»« pf*e#

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-tanr-Mad i

known names tn the history funny cars In "C o lo r Me GoBe,"i.a 1973 Dodge Charger that's owned and driven by year old Roger Undamood from X)etroit. Michigun. Team captain for the funny car cavalcade of stars. JJndamood

th r oldest active funny r a r driver in the nation today and continues to be e x trem e ly competitive eBCI; y tB r.

R o u n d i n g out the field will b e

the latest a d d i t i o n to t h e

cavalcade, young 19 y e a r Old B i l l y M e y e r f r o m W a c o , T e x a s ,

w h o was i n v i t e d to J o i n t h e

C o k e t « a m o n l y ( o u r w e e k s

''a^.'Mey'wTsWTyoimater wlio s h o c k e d the f u n n y c a r w o r l d

l a s t N o v e m b e r when h e won the p r e s t i g i o u s m a n u f a c t u r e r s

m e e t a t O r a n g e C o u n t y

I n t e r n a t i o n a l R a c e w a y . B l U y ' a

e h t r y W i l l b e a 7 3 ' M a d i I

M u s t a n g t h a t c r a n k s co^with j o o s i a t e n t l i M ’ s a t o m 2 J 5 .

XOTHER SIZES LOW PRICE TOO

t i nn y

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( 70 - IS 6 Pt, T u b v l c i t ■ m w

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FOR PICKUPS-PANELS-VANS & CAMPERS

Riljfii-IMilerWIDETREADSIZE a o o - ie j^----------- O N IY^ pivt 13 41

l i t

3 W A Y S T O C H A R G E • Our Own Custorrcf Crpdil Pl.in • M.istor Chnrgc • B.mKAmonc.ird

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Page 16: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

J u e s d a y ^ u ty -3 J ^ -1 9 H T lm te .N »w » . T w in P a llt r - td d h o - ->7-

L. M . B oyd

Thu Uraoua CAJaiiuty la n e o i the O ld W est d ie s ie d UJte a n u n C lie n t asks il she w as rom aa lic^ lly in c lin ed tow ard w om en H a id ly H e r hist 11 husbands w e re shot lo death But not ho i tw e li lb H e |us1 hi out one m ght, d id n 't c oq ie back la c id en to lly , t^alam iry lan e 'w as a brunette W h y Lunk Day w as p ick ed lo star m that m ov ie about her rem ains a m ystery

"M o m i^ y . w ill you tell J e ffy to s to p k jym p ing m e w h ile “ Y r n c r a y o n in g ? "

H o i * o ^ t f o p e

(Carroll H ig h le r

-(he- ■ R>ippTtnir Iflhn Kfh iiffhm an wovUd accep t a g u e ft ahot on ’ M iasion I m p oaaib le ' ’ SliU th iiU cC U o LA ine is ih e b e ^ b lo e « a in g e i e v e r W h o w as il described ! Dianey Land da fhfr'qi^ewtest p eo p le trap e v e r boUt bjy A mouse^ Looks as though P eter Falk u |ust Qal out in capab le o ! p la y in g an u n s ym p ath etic 'ch a racter, W h d l wvll restore faith u) the e x ecu t iv e branch-^ A g o o d w om an in the p ies id eb cy , 1ihint

E L E V A T O RY ou n g lady, n ever g e l on an e le v d to r a lon e w ith a man you

d on t know No, doesn I 'm atter w hat he looks like )ust doD t do it S<»y yo n p u sh the button ; thc^doo^s s lid e open , and som e fe llow

T e ll hun ynu fB wAitinq int_L t o h o M ih f t r i r v > f i n f v o n

N A N C Y

F O R J -.C A S r l O R W I D N tS D A Y ,| A U G U S T I,

C L N I R A L r i N D E N C IE S : A d a y and e v c a m c to lake care p f Ih e usual w o rk r t q u ir fd o f y o u

if y o u are lo have surrdundm gs and se lf in Ih e p ink o f c o n d iiio n G e t o u t the Various gadgets and djgrergervtn ih j l m ake a l f spark le, as w e ll as do Ih e various tasks fa c in g y o u in ,i h ig t i jy .e ff ic ie n i m anner H elp those less fo r l jJ j ia t f , t o o

• A R ifc S <M iir J I~ to A p r- l ‘ >) N o ‘ Tnattt:r w h e re y o u m ay he ' tod a y , yo u are abli! to g e l w ork d o n e that is in ip o r la n i lo y o u r

W hateve- wdV jm p ro v e th e s ta te o l ^ o u t ’ ^h ea llh , also' T a k e Ih e right Iroi^ln lents. Retire e a r ly ant) i c t

T A U R U S (A p r ’.0 ;io^M ay 10) M ake y o u rs e lf as a i n j ' - i i " ' as y o ^ can so y o u c ie a le a n .cxce llen t im p tess ion Jo in i;ockI fr iend s at pa rties D o n 'l forget to p ay an im p o r ta n l h ill I h j 'w it ftm p ro v e y o u r 'c r e J it r jim g___

■ (T E M IN I (M a y - I lo June 2 1 ) I 'In d Ihe righ t w ay to g>i you r h om e m o r ? a ttia c t iv c and fu n c t io n ing B e lte r A v o i3 .my a rg u m en ts 'th e ie R id you rse lf n fw h a te v e r stands in Ihe w ay o l your, a d van oe in en t Think a lon g m o w con s tru c tive lines__

M O O N r U lL D R t N U J u n e ' : ; " t o Ju ly 2 1 ) S h o w in g o t la i- . you d o y o u r sh op p ing , e iian d s e f f ic ie n t ly is im p o rta n t n o i» Snarch ou t Ih e J>ook>. period ica ls that have the da ta you n n 'il I 'a k e l l oiisy ton igh t and he happy w ith km ,

LHC) (J u ly ’ 2 ti> A u g .’ I ) V ou w ant lo have a la r g e n n t o ii i i and can n ow find the right m eth od s f o r so d o in g F irst du ..*d f w here y o u t'a ri’ i.u l U,iiWJi„un expen ses.. Sot dow n,-w tlih anil get then a d v ic e , w h ich can p rove v e ty va luab le

V IR G O tA u g _ 2 ^ T O -^ *^ ^ ^ t- - fT ^ ■ ^ u t^ y iy ^ S ^ T r■ '0 e I l ’7iv^^c,•,^^ h ow to im p jrove y o u r appearance and ch arm , and n iijke o i'hci-, respect v o u rn o ie ( i e t in lo Ihe soc ia l ga lherinRs lh a l m ean ih

I r io s t to y o u . M aKC* n ew l i ic niJs.wJiu can .bc vulu a b lo lo y o u in

llie firiure

N O W T H E R E 'S A H O B O W ITH1 C L A S S

M A T C H IN G L U G G A G E

yo iir+ n n b a m iT o -p s r trT h eT s r © n e M ih iiT rtB deiTn an 'o tTh # Prsir-~ d en t 's C o u n c d on Ph ys ica l Fitness is the author o i the lo reg om g a d v ic e W h a t do you tl>iak o l it Joltm g, n o ’

Q ' H ow many a c re s b e fo re it can b e c a l W a (a rm ? ''A A t least th ree O r so the led e ra les c t a c i e e d ^ r many

ye a rs H o w e ve r , sm aller tracts that h ave p rod u ced a larQe do lla r vo lu m e a lso have b een c o n s id e re d (arm s ............. - ----- -------------

O "W h a t country has the h ighest d iv o rc e ra te? ”A That w a s ‘th e S ov ie t Uruon at Iasi report W ith 273 per

1,000 It 's 216 per 1.000,10 the U .S

T H E H A H O E A C IS .

A L L E Y O O P

Pollsters say the a v e ra g e te en a g e g ir l d u h n g summ er va ca ­tion eats rune times a d a y O u r L a n g u ag e m an say* "shan i- poo " com es Irom Ihe H indu w ord ’ ■ ca p o "-H ie «iim g “ ittassage ' "

A su iiic ien t nund>er o l bab ies a re born w o r ld w id e m any 36 hours lo e q u a l Ihe popu la tion ol A la sk a ( ,

W h e n caught in a trap, it's M id .A lyn* wil l jufnp on?e to get loose, but only oncie N o f ^ a t it gives up, e iac t ly A t least the anmiat experts don't thm k so )ujt too proud to struggle

Earliest ol Ihe beauty contests were in old Rome Loveliest ol the ladies competed First prixe was thi honor of ponng ter thegockieasdepicted-QDth»ouTi«nlcom......... _ .

In every 100 treated oysters, thisie will be about three cul- h ir ^ pearls, the lapanesB expert* repoTi ------ —

Addi9%\ m o il to I. M ftoyd, P O flo* 17076. f o f t W o rth fX 76107 C o p Y f g h t I9 7 J I M B o y d

OlioAniw«r lo fraTioui Puul4^

THE BOftN LOSER

L IB R A (S e p I 2 1 1 o O t l .'2 ) Y o u have m any persona l i js k s lo la k e care o T a n J shm ilJ Jn just this and fo rg e t the siu i j l tm

, I(ie t im e b e in g 1 Vy lo help im e w h o is hav ing rou gh 5|cilil m(! S h o w y o u are a tru e hum anitarian '

S C O R l ’ lO (O c t . 'V i o .Nov ’ 1) Spend m o re tim e u .n li i person y o u wa.nt to k n u » b e lte r w h o cou ld p ro v e h e lp lm m yo u m the fu tu re Ciei ou r lo that m e e t ir ig 'w h e ro y o u caji jJ i i to presen t, ros ter o f (iien d s S h ow you are an ex>.eili'n i c o n v ersa lio n a lis l

S A G I T T A R I U S (N o v lo D ec 21 ) T a k in g care o (- a n y publli; m atters is w ise loday and y o u can d o so in a ii.os,) e f f i c i e n t a n d ca re fu l way H an d le that c red it iu jM j '' sa t is fa c to r ily , a lso higher up gives y o u th e .h e lp in g hand

need.C 'A P H K O R N (D e c lo Jan 70) S ru dy n ew projev, i Ii ii

are fasc in a tin g , lo . y o u . you can very lik e ly advan ce ih im ig h them M ak in g c o n u c i w ith persons w hose idjeas arc d itten -n ;

- [w m ^ y o u rs iv ir ine I earn mukIi that w a yA O U A R IU ^ i i f l f i -’ I I " 1'-*' G e t responsiiiiliiic%

-h eh in d y o u '* " l ’ S p fe il lo d jy and m ake sure y o u kno.w i>cH' what y o u i iiiali;,'s e x p e c ia lio n s are. 1 rust y o u r in tu it io n 56 ycni knftw h ow lo gel a lon g ln-ller w ilh Ihe one y o u lo v e I luiik

P I S C I S d e h 20 lo M.1 I 20 ) L is ten w ith ca re -«> ynti k n ow

e x a c t ly w h a t an associa te ex p cc ts o f y o u , then s ta le V o i i l "w n view s c lea r ly S *)m e service you g ive o th ers n o w can In* iiios i h e lp fu l, fa r HK>ie than you lea lw e S h ow g e n e ro s ity

IF Y O U R C I I I I . I ) IS H O R N T O D A Y he or she vm l In- one o f ih ose ile l ig h lfu l young p eo p le w h o w o u ld d o w cl sc ien tific w o rk in laboratories, research , J ie ls , and shou ld k a n early l o c o m m u n ica te w iih o th ers w ise ly Be sure lo >l.in' ih e ed u ca tion a lo n g such lines, and g ive courses in psy ihc iin j:\ also F th ica l i i j in in g ea ity is im p orta n t le a c h w h ile

- not lo ge l b ogged J o * n w ilh d e ta il that is l e l j i i w l y — uniiv iporTan fr 'OT't h r m i t d ' d im in is h jn u c tr n f th e b ig

p o M ib le here"T h e S la ts im p e l they do not c o m p e l " W hat you nuikc

y o u f W-e tt (a r c f ly « p l o \ O U ‘ - - •

‘ ACROSSr 1 P HuiiuiidJ

39 S lccvek is - « « »r

PEANUTS

5iR, IF MfrmiJtraT i ' l l $ M ‘t O u l w a p N 'T ! PON t V r c a n 't 6 0H0ME,MI?,THI5AU.T BeCAl>$E IV 5£ ALL AlONE._

W/ CAP 15 an OF TOliJN, A N P AW /WTHEK 15 AT HER OFFICEd6$ i6 n i n 6 a n e w f r e e u a v ;

cultcf a cup 4 Droops H Alrtrah i

12 Fooil li5h13 Wings14 Ea3t Induo

p«l/n15 Heart (artal T16 PoUssium

nitrate ~18 Scottish jariat20 Beginning21 Hostelry22 Arboreal

home.24 Lo rd 's wi/e26 Most unlikely27 Bird's craw 30 Armed fleet 32 Bndjie

h o l d i n g 34 Thin8umlK)b

tcolU3f) I'onstrui ts 3f» Posscfcs 37 P e r f o r m a

(xrsadv

tQ-ptaces for storage

41 By mearu ol42 Aquatic

manfimal45 Kind of

battery 49 Mementos51 Sm«n child52 Greek war

god53 Son of Seth

O ib .) _54 First woman55 Cooking

utensils5C Feminine

suflix 57 Low haunt

* D O W N

antelope5 Wolfhound •6 Principal ore

of lead7 Coterie8 Concerning9 Insect ova

10 Fencingsword

U S k m (umor _ 17 Placard 19 Manipulate

dough 23 Natural fat 2\ P^ttsU fp^l25 In a bne26 Burdened27 Tormented

28 Deeds29 Direction 31 Caribbean

gulf 33 At no time 38 Acquiescencc40 P^riectfjoy41 Sheriffs

group42 Swathe43 Olympian

goddess44 Prayer ending 46 Horse's salt 4fDonated48 Bibhcal

garden 50 Elnglish nver

60FOEM BOSH! ,eoLiW, I HAuewT SEE*J Qaj s iw ce HI6 H SCMOOL i U)HW uwe

O F

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w id e ly s c a t t e r e d a f t t r n o o n a n d e v en in H th u iu le r s th o w jy s o y e r ttie m o u n t a in s .

I^w s loni(>hl will be in the 50s and 60s with hij;hs Wednesday mostly in the Ms

vvfth ii Tew locations the lower 100s. ;

T lic outlook (pr Thursday holds little change.

Lamas i*rainc, ha llcy fiWT lower Wood R iver Valley:

Mostly fa li- iin d cDnlinued hot Wednesday with widely s ca ttered aftprnoon and evenin|4 thundershowers over the mountains.

..J.OWS tontghMn'the^50s, and _ weekend an d _ i^ v id e a^little hi^hs Wednesday in the 90s. more shower a c lm ty .anit-

U ttle ch.3nKe is predicted for shtiht coolint*.Thursday M onday nifjht some

thuiiUei sh o w er----- ac t i v ity

Raleigh cy Richmond pc St. Ix)uis pc Salt I-ake City c San Francisco c Seattle pc Spokane c . Tampa r

~JSyiiopslsi ^Hot dry conditions continue

over l^ h o with no relief in si^ht. There is possibility a cool front now approaching the northw.’st Pacific coast will reach southern Idaho near the

occ-umrri—m ostly over mountains of central, southern _ and eastern rdaHo with Burld recordinp .06 inches of rain, Pocatello and Id ^ o Falls, U-aces, and West Yellowstone .07 inches

Twin FallsV.

Temperatures

Yesterday l^ s t Y e y Normal

rtigh Low97 56

101 60 92 55

T h a lid o m id e t r a g ' f f i . v » i ‘ i l l o d

B4 7T’ * - J J

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7«0 IH 48 \AU ]H'

LONDON ( U P l I — A Brlltsh high court juitge put the court's seal of approval today on a >52 million Settlement of "one of the grea te r tragedies of our tim e.”

Those words were used by an atlorney for 433 children crlppU-d- ti>r. life by (he UW ^uH ldng-

"drug thalidomide to describe thefr plight.- They, Ihefr parents and guardlafrS' Kir\'t''

fought years of legal and extra-legal battles to recover damages from Distillers Company, thefirm whii H~ itiffdir anfl a istflEuted the l iow:

‘Token efforts’ charged in steel industry recycling

I d 1973 ChicagoSun-TimK-si •CHICAGO - The United

Steel Industry is making merely ’ token e fforts" to use

stet?rrtiorp- sr r a ppL'H smtjl fmm outbade sources, ihn C/inncil on. F^onom ic P rio rities has charged-Tlte—coonH 47-

recycle 15 times as many cans.Th Iron and Steel Institute,

according to the report, has since said, "so lid -w aste

-'t'xper'ts— OTTTstder— ctttreir- cflUeclinn centers a stop-nap at best."-The institute's current

,4 » 4haV-fitool cans c aa-""rPTsrarcti'uruup tliat sci utinizes

Uie jiocial recor(l of United .S tates corporations, a ls o ' decried as specious the. mdustry s slogan, "steel: the recycled ,^ a teria l.''

"Most steel Is recyclable but IS not r e c y c le d ," declared James S. Cannon a Princeton graduate in biochemistry and author of the group's recycling status report.

"Only about 13 per cent of new steel is composed of scrap d iscarded a fter consumer use," he explained "Sixty per cent of the scrap utiliicd by the industry is generated right at the steel mills by internal processes," , -

The council, based in New York City and funded by the R o^ e fe lle r famdy^ W d other

, majbtfoundat'lons, mainlained that recycling by the steel industry lags far behind recycling programs operated by aluminum companiei.

A a press conference on June 23. 1972, in P ittsburgh, according to the cou n cil’ s report. Edwin Crott, chairman of United Slates Steel ^nd the Am erican Iron a n J * ^ e e l

- tesUtot<vannnunred that .seven Companies would open at least 80 recycling centers for citizen- collected cans ' ■

The report quoted Gott as saying, "w e can remelt every I steel I can made ’ ’

"These centers proved to be nothing more than bins at steel m ills ." Cannon said A fter coTIfftlHffTO mttllOTT'cans. less than one tenth of one per cent of all cans produced, during the first year, the f itire program

- has been "a ll h.it ahflndoned."..

ecycled -by—usiRg— by a ctty..Qnly^be better- r magnets to extract them from municipal trash, the report

said Neither Oott nor any other institute spokesman was im m ed iate ly ava ilab le forcomment, . __

Cannon maintained the steel in3u.stry Tias "sRowri'''IimTle(r

. interest in buying cans once the -■hav e been extr^ctcd-and haled^

ont-nf T7B a t h rna JO i BpaI f

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banned dru^. Today’s court lu ling gave court approval to a settlement agreed on out of court.

It provides payment by Distillers of 115.6 million to the co(irt for repayment directly to the children or their pareni^i. and a further $36.4 millimi to bi‘ paid into a trui»t fund which will be

cilie% perating can recyclinj> systems sell to steel'm ills.

mlllimi I devi^W to the childrens’ (uture interests.

Vlutual Funds

US contractor hosts Tjilrnadge

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. Lu

By ROBERT WALTERS ( c ) Washington Star-News

W ASH ING TO N - Sen. 'TTer'man'"E. Ta ln iadege. a Georgia DemOcr,at considered

S C U D O E Q F D S

« ^ r O Br>< 44v«i«-v nvjus 1

( . 4 ) 1 1 1 1110(1 i I a J I u t u re j» I I a.in. 14»<lav

Prev. 11:00Clnsr High tirw nm-

May Idaho ^ ta toes 839 8.74 8.30 8.74May Maine poialSes ■7H5“ *r2S ~ -^^85- ■»;25August live catl]e s a .« 54.42 S3.9S -54.42

______ L DecembGiLUve. qflttle — -S 6 .« 2 - 57 jffi 57.20 - i l 8 2 J.August hogs S5.22 56.72 56.72 S6.72September w heit . — S 4 384 364 384^epteinber corn 278 287 >1, 280Mi 287V4\;Seiiteinber « g g s .823P .8430 x n o .8430

') December ^ v e r 0 8 .7 0 1 JsriM TKJ.iO 295.30JaflDairx y e r coins 2140 2200 2139 -2180

Over The CounterOv«tatton& from N A SD at «p -

proxim attiy noon. All t>idt a rt In- ta rtfta ttr - ftlds. In ft rd c a U r (QuetatiMt d « net m dtKl« r « U i l

- -A A iin rp . m ark donn or cemmi»&ion. Th ««* quotatiMH a rt provided by McRobarts Sturotn 4 Co.

Bid Ask_47a2iiL_

F irst Sec. C. 37.50 38.60 « « IstNat^l. « . 0 0 ' 48.06 Cont. U fe 3.25 3.75 H a. Pwr. Pfd -54.00 57.00 Itmn. Gas M.25 M.62H Kellwood 16.87'^ 17.37H U »g .1NorthnipKlng 42.IX)

T ac .-E n g : - 2 .^ ^ - Pac. S t . « f e — -fcOO^ -

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S E L E C T E O F O l ;

-he added.Meanwhile, Cannon said, the

aluminum industry was able to

one of the most ir members of the Senate, was flown to the Caribbean for a mid-winter vacation early this year by a major Kovernment contl-actor.

The flight took place Feb. 3; they day after Qingress had begun a week-lonK Ijncoln's birthday recess. A l»in -jet Sabreliner — a plane built, owned and operated by Roclowell International - left Dulles International Airport for Bimini

AccordinK to the ' soilri-e, ftot-kweti. 8-ffiiajor ditfense and a e r o s p a c e c o n t r a c t o r , ^angeil ItTF fliKhts-Trrr It.'! executive jets to and from Bunini to meet the schedulinB requ irem ents of mdividual m em bers o( Congress, an handled all arranKcmcTiU for the legislators' stay on the islaijd,

Talmadge, one of -the seven S en a lor i on the Senate committee investigating the Watcfgate scandal, also serves on the select committee on standards and conduct, the Senate 's ' "M ic s — w m m m re

established to prevent- illegal or improper activities on the part of .Senate members and their staffs

The .Senator, approached

month, said. " I 'l l talK'Sbout it when I get .some time ” A request that Talm adge schedule time to di.scuss 4he issue has gone unanswered for mure than 10 days.

Kirst elected to the Senateli)56. Talm adut__ exerciserconsiderable behind-the-scenes power in the .Senate and is highly respected by his colleagues

Talmadge s principal base of power is hi.s chairmanship of the Senate Agricu ltu re Conjimillec, but h? also is the ranking Democrat on the fin.'inoo cominittao. ■ . . _

He is not, how ever, a member ol the armed services or aeronautical and space sciences.commitlaeK, the two panels or principal concern to the firm which acted as host on the trip '

O O P f- <3Solsnrs

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N O T I C E O F S A L EN o 4 i c e <s h e r e b y fl^.weo J h a t

C e n t u r y A u t o m o t i v e A A a c h i n e . 261 A d d « v > n . T w i n F A M s . i d A h o w i l l

i * t t to t h » n*9t o « » t t « d O e r o n e T r i u m p h m o > o r c v c l e . T ^ 3 0 W , m o + o r N o D U T798 3, N o D U 78420,B * d i WfM b e r ^ e i v e d o n t . l A u g u s t 9, 1973 T ^ e a d v e r t . S « r r « e r v e s t n e r* g h ( l e f e t e c i a n y o r a U &>ds

. P u b n s h - J u l y 7 ^ . » , i v A a o q ^ ? . 3. ,5. 6. 7 « . 8. 1973

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4 M 4 a N A T S I C F D S : . CG - l t , i n d 31 w J I 3 3 .1 B . I . . C t . 7 . M O u A t i l - 2 i - ^ 3 ] AO a o o d S r 4 7S S 79 H A M n ^ T O M I j a F : Ov«an , J « A iH

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T O W T T ' 0 5 B I U WC « n « | n < 9 90 10 AS --- ---------i r K O m « > U IS >A K S V & T O N C . '

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N O T I C E O F S A L E N o t i c e i s h e r e b y g i v e n ? h a t K e v m

K e r s e V ' W N o r t h B i r c h . J e r o m e . I d a h o W i l l s e t ! t o t h e h i g h e s t b i d d e r

o n e 19&S H o n d a . I D N o S 9 0 \706SO B ia t VVSil M r K C l V C d t ^ t i l A u g u s t tO. 1973. t h e a d v e r f i W r e i ^ p s

r i o h t t o r e i e c t a n y o r a l l b i d s^ » -------- p O B L tSM - iuty-30.

7 . x S. 8 , 7 . • . 1973

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N O T I C t O F $ A U e N a t i c r i » h e r e b y o i v e n t h a t J a m «

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VANC^^ u t » i o m e n v i s t ^ , j » i f i l AofluM 10. 1973. The ad verlijerl A N O c u S : 4 M 0 U F . r e s a r v w t ^ e r i Q h f f o r e j e c t a n y o r a l l

i n v e s t 1.79 U n C a p « 9 3 ) 10 t1 -

C O M IN GENTERTAIWIKNT!!

l uJuly 30 TJi■\iipiisl n

Aug. 6 thru

© l€ K r K E R «SHOW

Aug. 13 thru August 19

j d E Y S IL V A SH O W

Page 18: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

Announcem entsOt • F lO f i lU 02 4

■ OJ V«nou>^i <U V e > «< rv

—Umuu.^06.Selected 'O ttors

I I a n po u e ro itiT

‘ •BORD," the Massachusetts Institute of T ffhnn lnpy'f ilim ii-Uie-runwoy-at -Hanac-Om- FteW ' near- Bedford,

,Mass. The plane, with 62 foot wings, weighs 126 pounds and Is powered'hy tw o pilots who pedal the craft In a cicyrle for two tandem

arrangements. The designers of the nlanr ar»L- eompeting lor a $128;000 pri^e offered by British 4ndu»*rlallst-Henry'Krem^t-for-the-flrst flight «f- a man-powered plane on a one-mlle figure eighl course. During the taxi tests the craft reached a speed of 14-miles per hour. (UPI1

Cou»cil may calledDeputy FYime Minister Hugh

Watt said Monday New Zealand . niay call for a U N. Securily Council discussion of the Frencff nuclear tes ts ' in ITW South Pacific.

France exploded the second atpmic bomb of a. 1973 series Saturday atJhe Mururoa Atoll testiog {’ rounds in the South Pacihc. The French National Riidio said today the next blast may not be set off- until September.

The next test is expected to involve a hydrogen bomb, but

the blast was not imniinent came Monday when . the F ren c ff rCTeased' JJie. A jnerican protest yacht Fri in the test area.

Watt said Prime Mintst<?f" Norman K irk 'w ill discuss .thAi- French test issue with Com­m onwealth prim e m in isters this week in Ottawa.

Asked if there was any possibility of the tests i^ue being brought before the Security Council t jgjiw-sc of F e n c e ’s defijujce of <i World Court injunction, Watt .said no firm decision has been made.

Heroin shorty mor caina

However, Kirk Will cpnfer with prime ministers from the region in OttaWa and make his dpciston therevWattsaid:--------

D efense MJniater Arthur -s»i<t-th«-amounl-CiL

xadroactivity :neasured on-the New Zealand frigate (!a(iter- bur^ Monday was so insignifi­cant that It took extrasensillve equipment from the national radiation laboratory to detect it.

•‘There was ab.so.lutely no diinger to the personnel on board . they could have taken a thou.sand times as much and still have operated safely," Faulkner .said.

Tt\e.radioaclivfty was detect­ed 21 hours after the French,

"mi<l(^tr test It h,ad disfippeared within 24hours, Faulkner said.

— A~H«ln»ti«n-eifper-t on the -ship, James McMahon, report- • cd today that-the radioaetivity reached the Canterbury so

was malfunctioning.There was al.so no official

comment on whether'the-test sertcstia i^nded, but unofficial reports saying two trigger

—d fiW esh ad btcnlesledxuflde it seem likely that th*y Ffeneh'".

'would prejis ahead with ‘ ‘the ■ big one" (the H-bomb I,

B A R B S

H> r i l l L rA S T O K K T

lu jiesiuhl ih wha.l. hi'Ii'sVvou c o T ik c d

a \V.iUI l ) j l l on Hu- g o lfC -O U f S l *

vdu' i Uiki ' It u'lthInti (I l ittU' j iUiitncii __

r.i f in ll ju s u r i’that ijou ti.un't imi'C to l ean: i citi Jiiiiclt

F i nanjcie rJ[jM?€uLBUENOS AIRKS, Argentina (U P l f - BrItI.sh

businessman Charles A. Lockwood, kidnaped 51 days ago, was freed early Monday, an official of Roberts ■'Finance Company, I^ckw oodV firm, said.

----- |Jnnfficial report said Ms kidnapi rs had askeda record $6 million fur the financier's return hut there was no officjal announoemenrtltat amount

T bad beFn paTff" ......-Jorge Kidd, personnel • manager of the

<-ompany said Lockwood, 63, wos freed “ somewhere in Buenos Aires.”

" I don’t know where he Is ," Kidd told newsmen. " I also don’t know how much was paid for his freedom ."

lx>ckwood, abducted near his home in the smart Buenos Aires suburb of Hurllngham last June 6th.,‘ Ts'0ie'(Iirecl6T of several important companies In Argentina.

(C l WashingtonStar-News W A S H IN (;X O N - Th e

.suppi> of heroin lias tlricd up so iiHu h on till' Ka.st Coa.sl that

■ onl\ (jne or twu per cent of an addict's shot is actually heroin, bul thedem iind for cocaine has increa-sed and so |)as thesupply. ____

That^;- TUc' assfesment of ■lolui R -B artels 'Jr . acting ch ief of the new Drug Knfmvnu'nt Aiiininistration, who has to flevise methods of ineOtlnM. llii'.shift in the illicit drug traffic

— ATcmtrttmirrhc said, cocainc a.s \ or) I’xpcnsu'c but nov\

It .s ( helper and niorc ,^vailiihli' tnatldu Ls Thov don't inject ft like heroin but get high friitii ■ snorting" it

Severa l Latin Am prican countries are major producers and refiners of ciHaiiu; but since,il's u.sed legitimately for niediial purposes, controlling tlie , supply IS not iin easy probU'iii

Bartels hopes, how ever, that the merger (if the form er liu re a ii of N a r i i i t ic s and

_ Dangerijus Driii^ii and the drug- fighting Hiiru;iu of Cu.s'toiiis

give-ukabllitj to deal with foreign ro tm tn p B and o t h r r U . S . agencies uverst'as W't‘ w ill be sp eak in g with one v o ic e instead of two "

TTtc f>K.\ was horn .luK I as

a .lustlce Department agency til brihg .together • all federal anti-drug enforcement effort.s

Bartels said he plans to pul more agents in Uitih A m ew a - to deal with the cocaine traffic. Because of the earlier heroin traffic, the DEA now has agents in every maJor‘ h'c'i"'oln^ produt;iBg.xountr>; and transit country between heroin sources and the United State.s.

But Bartels wants to knoc k out new dope threats before . they reach ep idem ic pfo[K)rtiyns.

“ W e hope lo m a k e —our intelligence group not only into a p ractica l unit to make l'onspl^a^■y cases against m.'ijor traffickers but also to find out where the greatest shifts are occtiring In the drug tra ffic and plan w ays to combat them, ' he explained

■ We re watching a shift in emphasis from narcotics to dangerous drug abuse W e have to develop better in form ation sources so we know the extent of otlier dangerous drugs being

” qulckryTH“cau.se of the low yield of Saturday's explos,ion

New 7/Caland officials+>a'cHn»- coinment on speculation from Pans that the French destroyed the device Sunda>_4>ecau.se K

Nuclear tests rumored failure

K eeping one's spirits up (lejiends on luiw tliirsty the guests, are

■ -li:ir lj'.lss .-iiil in\h.-idlw o giial.s for the new agency - txi get tlie narct>ti<-s itnd-tnistoms'agerrts- intcgrated into one effective force and to restore public confidence in narco tics law enforcement

Twin Falls County Distrjci Court

Divorce decrees tune been granted to l ’aLs\ Stewart and Harr\ S tewart, M arvin

O 'l.c x ry ; Thom as Perez A lapisco and l.lipe Diaz Alapi.sco; Hrent Brocl^ome. and Melocl> Brocksom e; D elores Uae Tucker and

I. CutLs and Donald K Cutts; Alie 1. Olson and Max Olson; W ilm a .lean MorroW and Archie J2ee Morrow

County Clerk’ s Office M arriage licen.ses have been

issuec! to Danell J. Giese. 2;!. liuhl, and Dianne Xonen, 2:i, litjise, .Michael 1) .lohnson. 1!). Twin Falls, and Dons Davis, lB, r n e r Fdd\ n M c n a m ,® ,- and Hita Trautman, 19, bothHa/elton, Jam es H Britigcnian, - 21, «m l Wanda Kraft 18, both Twin Falls; W iillace K Akers. 25, and Connie Martinez. 22, both Twin Falls; James N Castro. 26, and

Janet A llen , 21, both M urtaugh; M ichael Paul Brown, 22. Winneinucca, Nev., and Susan Martin, 18, Twin Falls, fiickie l.jiHae Brown.

T w iiL K ^ h .^ i)il-a F tin d a .lohnson, '17, J iich fieU l; Bill\ra\ (larrett. 20,. Vicki Gentry, 20, both Tw in Falls.

Hobert Keed /Mbiston. 18, Tw in F a lls , and Cheryl Flow-crdew. 18, K im berly ; Harold F T>Tc'e, '20, and Kathleen Bernier, 19, both Buhl; Hodney Wade .Steams. 22, Nam pa, and Sherry Maxwell, 21, Filer

Building permits were issued to Ma> fair Company. 1-19 Mam A ve F. . $5,000, Design B u ilders Association, 1798

■ CUiaJdahi Avc., J18,000;^and (leorge F Spence, 225 Jackson.

-$ ‘2:4ni> ■------------------------------- -

By U nited ll’ ress in ti mational Parls"^Tiewspapers Monday

rai.sed the .,pos.sibility that PYance's scccmtJ nuclear test in the South Pacifi«^m ay have been a techpicihfailure. New Zealand monitors reported the radioactive fallout from the explosion posed no threat to life.

The nuclear device, suspend- , ed from a- balloon over

Mururoa Atoll -in French Polynesia, was exploded Satur­day It was the second-in the 1973 Kerier " f almrnphiT i" tests being conducted by;. France in defiance of worldwide protests and the World Court at The Hague . . ■ _ ,

The conservative Paris news­paper Aurore said that accord­ing to New Zealand officials the explosion produced none of the charactpristit flash and mu.sh- room cloud It added, ‘ Since the .Saturday explosion may in the eyes of critical people be considered as a 'flop,' the Armed Forces ministry is in quite an uncomfortable position in tjeing bound by secrecy ."

French radio news reports ■said the nexL^xplosion may be

miles southeast of Papeete, 'Eaiiitk. . .

D efence M in ister^ Arthur Faulkner said In Wellington, New Zealand, that the amount of r-adioactivity measured on the Canterbury Monday was soinsignificant that it-would have not been detected unless extrasensitive equipment from the National Radiation 1 jibora- tory had not been installed ■aboard the frigate.

"There was absolutely no danger to the personnel on Inard... they^eould have taken a thous^d times as much and still have operated .safely," Faulkner said.

The radioactivity reading was taken 21 hours’ after the

.nuclefir test Saturday and had d isappeared w ithin 24 hours, Faulkner said

Womenhikers

Regular bankruptfy, Gary (lion Jolley and Hobert Ixjuis and Altcf Mae Jeffs, B irtey; and Ben jam in Matthew McTMrWhl. Mupert

delayed until,September.The test Saturday' was

monitored by the New Zealand frigate Canterbury tnstde the danger zone proclaimed by France around Mururoa, 720

swelterFU RNACE CREEK, Calif

(U P I l - Two San Francisco a t y College students began a 140-mile hike across the length

r V « . ‘V T t y t T t f t r t “V O U l t U U J f K / J J I l l f ;

to Income the first women to accomplish the feat in midsum­mer- Jo-AaftXJaMdio-WiWaHWHrai

AbandonedA n R E TAN K E R U y

abandoned alongside the road B e a tSatnrSay when flames from B

and Anita Perrot, 22, both experienced backpackers, ptan to cover 10-15 m iles per -d?y during the early morning hours, when the temperature, which can re fch J35 degrees ai midday, is most bearable.

H ie girls entered the valley at the southeast comer and plan to march to the northeast,

ln-^aK=Oaqf»&vUifc - Canyon area about Aug. 10.

spreading grasr-ftre Jnn ip^ T ^ e y sre equipped withfrom one side to the other. A total loss, the tanker was valued at $20,000. It was left as fire lighters worked to prevent nearby home I p im , being consumed bjjhre^ (UP|)______

baokpacks and a two-way radio. To lighten their Idad, Jo Ann’s husband, Chris Williams, burled large plastic bottles of watec^ « t - ie ea rra n g ed sites along the way.

' N b w s :

ripsT X M H I . J I

Tu e s d a y . J u ly 31. 1973 Tim e s N e w s, Tw in Fallsl'ld^htf .1^

C L A S S I F I E D I N D E Xlt‘t M syto find the solution to vouV'l^ant or need in The TimM N^ws Pecpif Rfflcner Want Ad caiurnn* WijMeflMiQvy to Magic Valleys most diversified Mar ket p4«cr Be sure to Read and Use these columns reguiarly — You'll t>ro(it in so many ways!

M e r c h a n d i s e

*’ «r.'ri'*'* H. J .ly ,

L a w n F a r m fif G a r d e n

Real EsTftTo rijr'SaiT'

;> Ik'. V.X«-A.

}S • V K. K.«.> ' I N

RecreatiXiQdi___IS4>. A . ,«<

» 1 S> . > . ' r.. \

Rentals.Autqmolive

A,..11 sr..

IN \V.I>

lit Hrttl N » N •„/ Ur.>'

rqu.on.wi.

» rtsi . rt.l ' H iW II A Wr,«ihc-« Afl y.vx y,;!! Ucbdpp> lo hriii voi’ »iu<f AiJ (rtf iiif aMhrlO»«.fst io%l .)f rtii Otir <11 tr>f,sr iivll hrt‘ s , 440 -n Hyhi of

a. Hi'rtrr Koprft Orrto Nor Una VJ* .no- Jet orTi** J/6 *11'b ,i~MoUii>f Hoyrr>on

J<si Nrv.tti.i / -^ » Of «ti» f ri I .oi>% Of noi I « rti .Of' Ilf f rf"«*(t Of soifl pir«\r f>otif, inr

f l>fp« t)* V <1 f»' Ar I d n »^ '. i f • trfUMvoi »oiii *of iiiaiUrtyUi iSbi* ^_ Pl<a\r f r«»c1 »ouf a«1 ihr lifv' il v .i rtpt'f.tfs > > cilJ—nln'St nirx'l

.. IC' 'i'lLi£U£/lJ2!lmu* ___ - .T hf> C lAWilifHt Dep«*f op«*«i .vrrhdrt , % t»» * vsrvi' d 00 ,« n- ful \ ID

p Srttuf ilAy S 8 00 a m lo 1 ; iWp t»> C io\r.l Ofint>Adlinr f(X'pla(.in^ u <»o >'"ViiMypr Ofiiv \ I.l Jd .tiii ttiv-tl .

belorr a d to a p p va r'T d f f t d l in r pla< m g a o \ u%‘n g i^ f gi*f t , p r .s tv»o il,i ys t)«-*or r rt'p

" To appear. e»c epj 6H *rm ira rf 10 CTarTOfrrsimff«-or Montrar vifTTK inj>i " placed d«v> pf <0f to m%rfi.o»>

Si Lost & Found

LOS! Spoit^fr (lit bdWbrtU n-iill, H,u r y BtTfv f*dr k, CftcXl m 6331

W r w / T T T J t o r R p t u r n ot flcrys■77"Tncn BiVi* W h i t f w . f h Hlrt cK

H. ts .1 b f p k c n { (jtile rt ild i*> IOt>oij m ^fh Gortf 374 2615J t T o n u -

S y e a r o l d B la < .KAQQihg

y North b.U 4 3888

AdOA.c t i a m ,

f l s l la n d K e n n e i » >Vicmily North

tost Huripy ria'.s rinq losT Tvwin ThCAlr^ f . r o f ' s ^ jm m r r

rotJi*^D'~'^rn3Tf'tjrFv nncr~'wnin»' dt>g iM> (OiUir. at Hdrfnof' P<uK, caJI Ml /38I

03 Annouhc»rti«til*

R E S O R T - l - C M r k M i l l e r G u o s D » „ r H n n i T . IftT r S W r V a t l O P CO *

•• 77 kWTHUm.JJ340

04Sp«clal'Notic*s

l t i s o rt » n ( »• I n v e s l m c f i i C o r p o r i J f i o n T t - i e p h o n e 4AA 4AS1 N r t m p a .I d a h o 8 J6S I

W £ b u y e s c r o w m o r t g a g e irf orAh 'O InveSTrfSwtt

C o r p o f - i l i o n T e l e p h o n e - 4A6 46SI N t i r r t p d . I d a h o 836S1

I a m n o i h o l d r e s p o n s i h i c l o r d e h i s o t h e r t h a n m y o w n W i n s t o n K e n n e d y

THE COVE1 F re e g lo s s o f w in e vyith ch ick en or l in g e r s le o k o rd e r s on Sunday

4-96 A<kJl& on .

os Memorial Noticas

t h e f A M U V o » - J o h n • ( J a r 1< 1 K i i n d e r W i s h r s t o . e » p r e s s A p p r e < i a t i o n to al l th e pf>ople for i h . M f Axv^ o d u r . n q M rK u n c i e r s h o s p . t ai i / at l o n a n d S y m p a t h y to t h e tafr>ily a l t e r h ' S d e a t h W s J o h n W K u n d e r M r <»^d M r s P o l a n d F K i n d e r M r ar id M r s C l a i r e J N o r t o n a n d M f a n d M r s G a r n J K u n d p r

W O U L D l . M - 10 ■nj.'te v e r y o n i - s h e a r t » v i t h o u r t h o u d h t f u l n e s s a n d l o v e t or a l l V o w

>ooK niJfa a r i . A a AA o n l jC T h a n k y o u tQr /O ur

- itrrr-.d a y w e ( an r e t u r n yo ur k i . n d n r S i « » i d h e l p G o d ble ss y o y all P a y r r i o n d E m m a J e a n , T e r e s a M a t R i f h a r d P rr ft* r Jtnrt

•7 - Jobsof int«r«st Male 4 Frm al*

04 Personals-

H O K Y C A R P E T , ♦ w e e f i i ^ g r e a t e s t gift of al l H a z e l Naf uSUl6

A L C O H O l P . t t O B L E M J ’ - O o y o u n e e d h e l p ' ’ (Taii 734 S»80

E X E R C I S E the e a s y w a y - R e n t W a t f o n B e l t V . o r a t o r s , S iP e e d , B i k e s . A c t i o n C y r l e s a n d M a s s a g e R n l l e r y , . a L_n ^n naj —!43J

L O S E w e ig ht wi l t i N e w S h a p e T a b l e f i and H y d r e * W.t ler P i l l % . , M A G iC ^ L L E Y DflU^ an^

“ w r N c r r L i d r u g

N E E D A L A W Y E R ' * |t you d o n 't , t w v t r 7 T t a w y P T a n d n e e d ohV. c a l l t h e I d a h o S t a t e B a r L a w y e r R e f e r r a l Sct 'v ice K o U c c t i 3 4 ? 3 9 ^ 8 F i r s t intert/iPtA.

ALCOHOLICS A N Q N ¥ A A e u S - -

M E E T IN & lMON F IIER 8 00 3?6 5689 .v . . J I 7 6 lh SI ,

TU(5 .RUPtRI, 8 OO11:11(33 4 4 6 1 T r a v e l i n g

M e f l l i n g

WED TWIN.FAiLi,a-.oa^ ___ C o u r t H o u s e B a v o W e n t

THURS G O O D IN G 6 30 • 934 5170 Trovoling Meeting

S A T . i J C j R l E Y 8 0 0 ^ 6 7 0 7 0 7 4 C ' t y Ho l l 2 n d F l o o r

07 J o b 5 o f ln t « r * t tM a le a F e m a l*

A u > o M c f h«^n ic , y ( N o Slow T i m e J ‘

uworkrrtaci : . c o m p e n ! k a i > o r i , i r e e s i h o o i i n q p,<;rj v a ( a f i o n . l a l l ' M o h d r t y S e'l A p p l y Ip pe rso n fo O u ^ n AAo>or C c . m p a a « i .

T W O ppo p t e m a n And w i f e p r» ' i i . * r r e d , c l g a n .oTTico Di/itflTng, l i v e d a y s fl w e e k H o u r s fr o m 6 00 p m w r i t r to Bo* H 10 T i m e i N e w s f o r a p p O ' O t m e n t g » w » n g a d d r f - s v ar^d p h o n e n u m b e r

O E N E W A i W r e K i y S.ll.i

S l l K f i n i S H E R p r e f e r a b l yo l d J T w o n u ^ n w i * n e * p i T i e t K C . w i l ltertch v ^ t t e to Tt m e ^i N e w s Bow

E X P E H i E N C E D s a i c i p e r s o n W ith interior des'y*- a b -D ty for l e a d - n q Tifvn ( a i ls l u r m i u r e s t o r ei«ncueiumc!fl Bp' 2 '.Id a h o B3101

Want Adsj^

07 Job» ol in»«r#tl Male a F*m*le

WANTED .M A N O R W O m A NTO TAKE OVER ESTABLISHED

TIMES-NEWS ROUTE KETCHUM AREA

Good Profit for Time Involved

CA LL CLAUDIA CANTOR -726-3178

WANTEDDRIVER FOR ESTABLISHED MOTOR ROOTT

“ ~ HEYBDRfM u if h av e tm aJI c a r in g o 6& runhTng co n d ilio n .

■ INTERESTED S O N S CALL MORNINGS: TFMES-NEWS CIRCULATION DEPT

678-2552 ■

- I -- V —

Page 19: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

20 Tlme$-Nevl/», Tw in Falls, Idaho n je sd a y . JulV

•7 Jobsof InUrMt

TITLES1. H om e Viftitbr for Horn*

Stort Proiecf of H *od Start 7 C o m m un ity A »s i»to n ) for

Horn* Stort________ S A L A R Y R A N G E ------------------

.........S ^ 0 t r $ 3 3 0 / > ) f '

______ J O B D E S C R I P T I O N• ~ Con obtolned o fg itB e r 5bu>h

-A 9 «n < y .3 6 0 2nd St. E o U ot •> H fo d Stort )3 9 6lK Ave

RESPONSIBJLITIE^W o r k i n g w i t h p r e > c h o o l c h i l d r e n o n d t h e i r p o r e n t i I n t h e i r h o m e ^

-^ ATe CiOSES------------ ‘ - -A u 9 6 1973

— € ’ ---------u F N N i r c r f A N — r r r "

A n (quaJ O pp o rtu nit y FmpJoyer

T l T U t O' t V m to n te i d e c o »o p a r o <

JlQiacia de que esto ro n H o o d Start

dad pora H o m e Siori S U U D O S2 00 J2 JO hr

do jrabajq.Pu0dery o ^ l ^ e r l o x en (\^ol QiJivr do e »to » do\ logares >ou/h Central C om m uoify A rf io n 'A g e n c y 260 2nd f o i l o Ho o d Sfort 139 6fh A v 0 foi<R E R E ^ O N S l B l l D A D e S

— frn b o/ondo fo n ~rvrnot q u ir ---------lodavio no corpfe n io n eicuo/o y f o n l o t p b r / o n f o «

- £<iio..........^Fitcha cej^o ndo p o ro apph rorrion©?[ I d i o 1 0 1 % d e A g u % t o mil n o v e o e n t o t te le n lo y f r o i '

H A B t E N C O N M I K E B P O W N o

D E N N I S D E A N / J 4 5 5 5 0

U n e m p l o o d O ' d e ' o p 6 r t \ j n t d a d

f quoi

-------- r r r t t - " •—S e n l o r ^ C i l i r D n C o o r d i n o -

„ l o r 1

C l o s i n g D o t e :

■ A u gu sr9 , 1973 DUTIES:

W i l l c o o f d m o l o o l t S e n i o r S e r v i c o P f o ^ o n > s o n d o<

* oncf -o rx o iig * — *o*— I s p e < « o i e v e n t V M u » » b e m good health o n d use ow n cor for If a n ^ p o f to iio n Pay is $ 3 2 5 m o n lh a n d . m ile o g o C onioct S C C A A 733 9351 »oi m ore in lo rm a tio n

T IT U IO C o o r d i n e c K J o r p o r a l o s

C i u d o d g n o ^ A n c i o n o s

F e c h a d e l i n :

------A90fct0-^^-lg23 ^-------------D C B E R A & ,

C o o rd i nor c o n lockss p ro g ro m o i de los servicios de

...o n fo n ida ri__y QLll^idadaa-. Y...a r r e g l o r p o r e s p e c t o l s u c e s o s T i e n e » o r u n o p e r s o n o

. e s t o b t e n d e t o l u d y u s o , ^ _ p f O p i d , V u t t m p o r ^ t r g n s p o f t e .

S O e l d o e s $ 3 2 5 m e s y ^ e c o r n d o er^ m i l l o * L l o m o S C C A A 7 3 3 9 3 5 1 p a r o m o s - * n » o fm o c i o n

m ^mploVniwif AtfMidMP E R S O r ^ N E L P L A C E M E N T C E N TE R * . 4J4 Blue L»K es Blvd.

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a u x i l i a r y g a s t a n k s l o r al l p i f k u p s m o t o r h o r r ) ? v _ d D i t . > C n ^ " t r u c k s C o m p l e t e ~ a r i d m s ta l l W d P h o n e D e n m s S o n - u S F a c l o r y R p p r e s e n t r t 11v e f o r S T D e v r i o a i B M t ^ 4 3 785

U S E D M o d e l A , i B M E l e c i r . c l y p c w r a r r . U s e i . l a r b o n R i b b o n . E x c ^ i o n t

b e f o r e 5 00 334 S522 a f t e r S O O T T T 4700

1 1 i i N E X P E h i S l V E ; to C l e a n r u g s a n d u p h o l s t e r y w - t w B lu e I ' b s l r e ’ R e n t E i o f t r . c s h a m p o o e r 41 G R F F N A W A L T ' S

D O I T Y O U R S E L F ' S h a m p o o y o u r o w n c a r p e t , p r o f e ^ i o n a l r e s u l t s R e n i a C i a r k e S h a m p o o e r wTTR corr ipani 'bn' v a c u u m B a o n Y T ' f u r n . t u r e 733 1 4? I

---------- UMtRIWGYOU) H A d 2 b a d r o o m ^ • oi l

•Acl uding # f k Ti ■ i » i i i m m i

• c o r p a t ' e n d d r o p e t • l a u n d r y• l o n d K o p * * g • p o a J * o ir < o o

d i t io n i n g • w a lk to c lO M t t

A i R C O N D I T I O N I N G l o r e n t or b o y , r e t r i g e r . i t . o n o r w a t e r t y p e N o w o r used l a r g e s e l e c t i o n

- B A K I w e p - P U P N I T U H E 730-1431

b e d r o o m h o m e 4125 000

40 A c r e s t h r e e b e d r o o m h o m e , 12 s ’ a n c h i o n b a r n P e a r a p p l e c h e r r y . , a p ^ ' c o t . a n d p e a < h t r e e s V e r y g o o d l o c a t i o n U 2 . 5 0 0

U 6 A < r e s — l o v p i y ^ « m o d « i e d 4 b e d r o o m h o m e f V i w a t e r f » g h t . , n c a v v p r o d u c V i v e so*i. p a s t u r e h a y w h e \ t , a n d b c a n i 468.000 P u r c h a ^ r m a y r e n i n e a r b y f a r m \

' ' T T S T T c T e T ' f W o T > 6 m e . . s e v e ^ T ou » b u i l d i n g s o v i » r 7 m r t ^ of c e m e n t d 'TQ fl ^ ' r c o n d ' ^ ’o n r t j s p u d c e i i i r G o o d t ^ r m s - O w n e r w a n t v to sel l

M i u l ? n l e a st ' w n i i u u t x r t . f f o c l M l 0964 o r 733 7 120

J 7 _ _ A c c e a g c A Lot* J 7 A c rta g t * Lot<

J .r r v IK » , i h I

-7 9 3 8 0 M473 4436 734-3893

D R Y D E N A G E t a C Y402 S o u t h L i n c o l n

D A IR Y F A R M compleie with cows. feea. and equipm ent. Walk thro<>gh b a m , bulk tank. 140 acres m ostly feed and p a ilu rc . Call <«r p r i a and term s

O u t s l o n d i n g c o m ^ n e r c i a l a n d r e s t d e n t i o l p o t e n t i o l : Property. V. Eosl of Tw in Foils on K im berly road.

SEE C H U C K PERKINS: 730-1874

Roger Brow n ty n n D a vis . Fred Bav4Chercafm efl P ru n ty

S36 }«04 324 4440 3747995 374 7 U4

C H U C K P E R K IN S : ^

LAND OFhCE OB IDAHOBranch Office: 733-0715

Twin Falls

C a m e n t \ ^ r k

E X P E R I E N C E D C E M E N T R l W T S H I T l G , f r e e e s t n i x a t e . c a l l 733 4335. 733 6364 a f t e r 1 00

CoAcret* Finilh irK )

A L L kinds d r iv e w a y s , p a tio s . sidewalks, foundations, tiatw ork,. Lo B id C on»tro ct^oTi C o m p a n y Free Estim ates S44 JOM »

------------------------------------------------------

B U T T R E Y ' S M E A T D e p a r t m e n i , h i g h e s t Q u a l i t y m e a t s , l o w b u d g e t o r i c e s . B l u e L a k e s S h o p p i n g C e n t e r

Fo r f a r m , commer'^gpaf. -and industrial uM .^x .fi0 9 ,^H a 4ley. 7B9 ■yrrrror 7?i?S4Tt

Paintinq

R O B I N S O N ' S T H E E S E R V I C C

K O N I C 6 K T H E E S E R V I C E N o w d o i n g M e c h a n i c a l i r e e f0p p it* g a n d r e m o v i n g Aj i h m b s c u t a n d s a l e l y l o w e r e d h y d r a u l . c a i l y . S a v e 44 I n s u r e d 733 6548

va lle y Tree S e rv li^ . full service, also S h r u b tn m m m g . call 733 3331

C on traa ors

Cement' carper^try <wDrk.painting, rem odeling, eic Nq jo b too sm all Phone M3 5t35_or M 3 5077

Outside painting, free estimates Reasonable rates, spray.or brus^ 733 2513 '

Vacuum Cleanerv. Service

C m i o m O r a p e n v r

D ra p e r ie s , S w a g s . C a s c a d e s . A u flriaris . Custom , m ada tocsuft S ® m ^ e t Vtown m horrie 979 5Ji1

interior and E x te rio r, and also root painting Call 733 7313 after 1 00 p m

In ter »or.'~E*Kter »or , R e s id e n tia l P a inf in g . s ta in in g , c ab in et

A uth o roe d S U N B E A M Vaccum Cleaner Service. M A Y Electric 44 Y AAaln A ve East

Wetdinq

P aw son P o rta b le W eldin g Ajum inum and genera* weld*r>g Call L a rry Rawsoo. 3264117. if no an^Mwafr 733-3C 4.

BtiSI^NESS DIRECTORY AS LOW AS *12 MONTH

PHONE 733-0931

R o p m s

R O O M F O R c o l l e g e g i r l , h i l c h e n p r i v i l e g e s . C a l l 734 J267

B O A R D and room for etderly ladies Call for t^terview 733 2S43

25 H o m M

2 e e o f to o w -iw H E W e ^ren t. P a rtly furnished, carpel throughout 979 5713

O lf tc v ft » v s t n « s «

to SOO V fvof» Faat building w ith of^**lrie<T' parking .for 81 cors 511 lyon s A va n u a . Ely. N a vod o Canfrof h ao t o n d a ir c o n d itio n in g , p rasantl^ occupied b y ratoil food stora. Saa your local Raol Estotft broK ar or phona* Raol Estota D ap«.. A -'C 801 36< <3 0 ! .

G L A S S S H O W C A S E S c o u l d DC u ^ p o a ^ f ^ T n a H o s e i s , ca l l 54 3 410?

B L A C K L I G H T S l o r sa le le n g t h s C h e a p 733 4815, o r 733 6261 f l i le r 6 00 P m

G O O D C o a l stoker, can m i M 9 daytim e 733 4B74 evenings.

C O M M E R C IA L tru it p r r t i . bV»- tons, steelyards. Com m ode, bunk beds, antique, and miscellaneous.

il23 HQlHster ■

W E R E B U U .D hydraulic iacks at A B B O T T 'S A U T O S U P P L Y . 305 Shoshone St South ,

l a w n B O Y 7T infn detuxa' demo.with new, warranty^ t o v C -W I L -IW « al-Ca*n^ 7 P J n r

Moving .musi sell com pifTe nouse futi of tu rn * lu re , a n d to m e ant»Quei call 326 4156.

A LU M IN U M m .A T 6 S t 73W " n 3 i" v .oor*90ca n fsa «ch o r IScanH— in ipts of 50 or m ora . Sea W illia m

'ftM enBauTn. 17^#* N W « , - T w l n -------P i r n -------------------------------- -------------------------------

P A I N T I N G — C « M , tn ic k y* tra c to rs , r e l r ig a r a f e r u fa rm e q u ip m e n t. 0*nt% Y * m o y # d economically. Piton*

B R U N S W IC K , Delta .M itf D t lm o tables. SMim and

.^vica^ -naw-Mttf Uitd. -------C lark e 7 )M «0 1 , - ^ 0

Page 21: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

Tlm es-News, Tw in Falls, Idaho Tuesday, July 31, 1973

i T c a s t i b u y e f s ^ p n g o o d ^ f f i

M isctU «n«ous fo r Salt

l i k e n e w . m a n i 2B". l6 s<)ee<J 5< h ^in n ^ike , call 37^ 5237

N E E D L E P O IN T ,y r n . — c j n u ^ > . , X r . . —«tools Hour 10 00a m to 4 OOp.m weekdays. Saturday 10 00 to IJ 00. 733 3604. M rs W ilUam B ru le y. IS3 Vfh Avfrnur E.i^»

TW IN M A T T H E S S 5 S for fra iler rtousp. 3? K 7S. Iikp now , 32 4»03

T T O W ftlW A Y B F D T o r rB n trt^ O O a week BAN N E R F U R N l T UR E733 U 3 )

M U F F L E R S »nVa(led w hile you wall Complete m uffler Service includlr>g cusJom d u a K for c a ri ar>d pickups A B B O T T 'S A U T O S U P P L Y , 305 Shosr>or>e St South

C O L O N IA L drtvcnpori, ma»chir>a chair, color T V , Cu rh s M<»ihis 24 > c/.ecg « -7J37.147___________ ; . ^

T H E - C P V EW irte " s e r v e d b y th e d r in k or b o t t le on Sunday or w in e cock ta ils .

49:6 Addison West

PITTNT TURN IPS N O W TOR HIGHEST Y l t lD SH E fP « C A I I I E W |IL H ARVEST TH fM FOR YOU ■, ,

Globe Seed & Feed T w i n F a l ls

LAND OR -WATER VEHICLE

4SR a d » o , T V a $ t * r » o

13 IN C H color T V ' AA^agnavo* 'TTOTT^ote^— 'recond+l4©ne<f— -*a ^

guaranteed, S70 at Cam 's 733 711 1.

T R U E T O N E C O L O R ’. portable Picture tube good a

30d second set Guaranteed. J135

A D M IR A L Color 23 inch P icture tube . 00.0(1 A good C hassis b e a u tilo l c a b in e t G u a ra n te e d t l ^ f w t p 'Fa lV s ' ^ l ^ b ^ ^ ^ Addison

M O T O R O L A Color. 23 inch New ’ p rc T Iife n G S T "G a a ir in T e c c r^ -$ W : T w in Falls Electronics on Addison Avenue

Fum itur* a C «rp «t

C A R P E T S , 40 per cent Jew thanretar*. e v e r y d a y -—middlemv»n V alley Interiors 423 4044 ■ C i

9“ ? " l f ~ L T N < 5 r E U M R U G S . A S S O R T E D P A T T E R N S . %7 95. B A N N E R F U R N I T U R E . T w »n

S f Cattle S9 Orttlt-

S H D S F T O N F S A X F T A W ^- FRIDAY, JULY 27

225 Holste in Heifers qnd Cows Two - 65 Cow Dairy DispersdTs

tc 100 Heod Open Holstein Heifers

SALE STARTS A T . . 11:00 a.m.- a i i u i o r x i i a a i t Z i i f L WlUmms Jia6:77_4J

B o b W a d d o u p -= 5 2 7 3 3 0 9

5J Plants. Trees & Shrubs

G L A D IO L U S , lor rtit occasions, *h south AAotor V u corne r, I Leon

7M 74 77 ,

21 J|JC H co lo r r v con sole , re c o n d 'f lo n e d and g u a ra n te e d 1199 at C am 's l i X J - l l L

6 wheel dfive ATU, Itke new

PHONE: 423-5669f J Mi/es f o » r 6 f H oni'en

on U S 30)

- n Waraed to Buy

■” W E W O U L D L f t C f i W b u y horse power motor lor a boal 733

. m \ ....... _ - . - ....... - ...... -

W IL L Trade 1977 Vamahflr street bike with 62 actual m iles tor good

— Puf f • c a m p e r r 4pa€e^ i Pioneer Tra ile r C^urt

W A N T E D T O B U Y carrots, peas. mnti rif»^. call 423

4219

W A N T E D U4^d Sleet iraps. any make, any v lie , a ry quantity - especially bear irap ^ 43A 30\4

W A N T E D T O buy clean b a l ^ straw by the Ion Tru c k holsl tlOO Sackets at

L A T E p ro p a n e w all furrHace^AS.OOO B T U . j o O g a Chassis

K) gallon tank, sell Tra ile r AS5 4312 '

H A Y C O N D IT IO N E R - for 201 Internat(on<ir s w a ih e r L a rg e ro lie ron iy Call coueci 702 *52 3488 after 0 p m

A P P W O X I M A T E L Y 50 y a r d s Of l. iKf n o w l o n g s h h g c a r p e l , w i t h r u b b e r w . i f l l e pac/ 734 Si6 2 . t il l 5 00 p m . w t ' e k d a y s

V A I t o ® 6 a t L i i . A m e f i c a ngood condition. S39 95 at Cam s 7337n,iS O F A , good condition, large s ile . Cfean. S8i at C a m 's 733 7 11)

B E D R O D JW -com plete v ^ hnew m a ich ina m fltlress And bo* springs 734 IBAfl after 4 p m

A p p lia n c e s , B ab y .Ih in g i . Antiques We do Upholstering H jy e s F u rn ilu re 733 4gl0

S P O T CA SH For Fu rn itu re ApptiarKes

Th in g s ol Value ffA ^JN ER F U R N IT U R E

27 2nd Avenue West 733 1412

A p p lja jic e s

U s w J S t o v e a n d R e l f i Q e r a t o c 150 F S r R m T D T S ^ •

■t S P E E D O U E E N a u to m a tic w.«kv|%i!r . Al A in ii» st&e L - LuJ:n.<. g u a r ^ le e d 733 2680 or 733 7140.

A U T O M A T IC W A S H E R S We h ^ve 4 M -■n— Inrge '^teefiow •

F n g id a ire lor only 179 50 at M «. Y E le ctric . 4tt M am Avenue East

W R I^N GE R W A S H E R M Uytag now only V59 50 with terms to suit your budget at M 4 v E lectric, 4 ii M am Avl?nue East

R A N G E ' W estin g h ouse ^ 0 " E lectric with 90 day parts and labor w a rra n ty only M 9 ^0 at M 4 Y E le ctric . 41 \ M a in A vrn u e East

H O T P O IN T 9 m onth old range and re lrig e ra to r. Excellent condltjon AvocadOT-*37y 678 7370

S E A R S E lectric range hke r\ew. Avocado 543 5922

' W A N T E D to buy n*ghlcraw lefs

S IL V E R COJNS pay 70 per cent over lace. Com Shop 426 North

'nV C 5m ~7m S 7TnrpC TT F r id a y andSaturtfwT, only

W IL L B U Y direct o fA U c tio n your furniture • appll^nce^ odds and ends Snahe R iver Auction 733 7754 -

C A S H FO R S C R A P m e t a l Copper. Brass. A lu m irx jm .

Radiator. Batteries, Etc F T k ^ P P E L C O

»mlLKti^wn*cMMrTH. •

43 A n tiq u e s

IF Y O U DOf^’j■J^ete 'J b h n s f o n , I t ? -S o u t h Washington (A irp ort R oa d ' H3 ^ 4 5

P E G G Y S a n t i q u e s , now open Just returned wifTi la rge load, jusi off the Ire e w a y fro m W alt s Texaco. Jerome

reff.gef^tor »or sale 733 896S“ alfer S p

F R J G I D A l R E ’ r e f r ig e r a t o r . Ireezer on top. recood't'oned and ^uarant«-ed , t98 af Cain's 733 7 n i

G E C lo th e s d r y e r , e * c e lle n r - condition. « t

---- — —

W A S H E R & d rye r, pair Speed O u e e n . re c o n d itio n e d and

, guar an teed. l?48 a tC a m s 733 M i l

K E N M O t^ e drshwasher. 7old E*celleni condition M akeOffer S43 577?

30 G E ra n g e F n g id a i r e TH utom aiic w a s h e r. F r ig .d a » r cret_r'Qerrtroc^.iUfci*__£Si _ d r aw cf s.bed. sorm os. m a llre ss. brcakfasr tabJe and {h a irs , davtnporr 5 C*hairs ta b le la m p s .C71 iSi ol I an«*ous Call 733 5506

4 f Builtfino M jftr la lt

u s e D AsbiHitos shaK»•^ lor sid-nq Half price 873 3861

4 > 8 P l Y W O O O

R O D G E R S H O M E and Church O rg in s U s W pianos and Organs J Hin-s Studio 733 4400

1895 Ch.Cher-ng pi^no bes* oHef

8 L'»'ooveii { •

5 8T 4 A (

.1 8 C H r b o n - H ' 4

S5 40

- U - 4 S L

♦♦ '?b 58SO os

s : 0 95 ; 30

NEW ELCClSlC &JJITAR. ana h a r m o n v a m p l i f i e r g o o d d e a l tor o n l y 00 l a m p vsrorth t n a ta t o n e ) C a n 543 4754 to r M a r » »

b l o n d e F E N D E R w.lh137? ‘ggipwane qu i i j r ,

1175 • ^ t h S500 733 3011

P i a n o Spmei Console Assorne low monthiv payn^ents, to be so'g m this area Aivo O R G A N w m autdfnalic rh yth m Phone cofiec^ J43 564t 'O r wv^ife- A<ftu%»Or.South Capttoi Bivd . Boise. Idaho 13701

S P IN E T Console Assum e Low ^\>nthlv paym ents, to be sold m this Area fl^one Collect J42 SS^Oor Write Credit ManAger 410 S Capitol Blvd. Bo'se. idar>o 83701

E L E C T R IC bass a m plifier S260 Can 733 S083

N O R T H W E S T — P l Y W O O r J S A ’I F S

73T 5000 f '<• S l ' f p *

f olu idoho Bic.k Qftf K,mh#rl>.

Bel'.nd Ur«.ted O.I Opr- 0 0 to 6 p m V o - ' . l o , *hrt, S o ’ ufcfoy

50 , 0 « r » g « S »IM

N E W Y A M A H A P ianot uSM K L H

sTereo reco'd p iiy e rs W A R N E R M U S IC t3T 5hrrtrn~n^ NCirth

s a l e TrurDpet anci music stand. 733 6776 N o M t u r d a y cal ls

12 strirK) Ventura Q uitar. S7S or bes« « H « f . c a »

' S » * • c la rin e f.-c a ll 733

45 « SterM

B E A U T I F U L P r f n a » o n i c eonipon«nt « * r » o » y i » » m , in c iw m tu rn -t «b le # s te re o t u n e r and a m p im c r, s j M i o f v . m u s i

Pa»fO sale, everythtng »magmab*e Reasonable 284 Hejyburn Avenue West A lx>o s i 2 and 3

G A R A G E s a l e L a rg e Back Ya ro Sate Saturday August 4.

* — F fom ■ 4 00 ♦im— MO- - A v e n u e N o r t h . T W r n P a l l s . I d a h o . C h i l d r e n s c l o t h e s , m e n a c s . d « s h e s , v v ^ . itowef dfr^em e nfsi ef<.

R U M M A G E s a l e tp be held ^ • d i y ar>d ^ T u r d a y m H e n ’ ir>o Butiding, Filer

SI Cootl Things to Eat

P l£ x h e rn e s a i Simpiot O rcn a rd . < a U 733 78S2 evenmgs

;peepound Vance's Stand. Ftier & W ashm gion .

T R A N S P A R E N T A P f t E S Irytn Bcxlenstab T v ^ m ile i We%f of Ace Hansen Chevrolet

A P P U E S , , y H io w t r «n » i» r .e n i. sp rayed . p iC k M liS S015 or *35 4 «M . _ -------

J3

4 8 0 9 0 ^

first <tWlm<)

W A N T E D Hrty tor D a try CatHe Call R elia n ce C orporo lion ’ 733 7202

300 Plus Ions prerffium a lla lla hay, alter 7 00 p n) 324 I ~

H A Y fi-OH i»AX&-OJ4 4356

A P P R O X I M A T E L Y 80 lonS. top ciu^iLy Sttcond Cull ing hay R eady around August 1st Ba led and m the l i e ld 138 per ion 731 4034

G R A S S HO RSE H A Y , Nidgai^a p rm gs Ranch SI Odper brtle 837

20 H ra ’d Holstem O a iry C o w i ^36_____

A R T I F I C I A L - B R E E D I N G to ABS great pro ven nation'^ h*ghasl type production sires Also all

6102, Jerom e, 324 2652, Shoshone, 806 7587. B urley, 678 9253

Spnn^0 6

15 Tons old hay lor sale 82<> 5544

G R A IN B IN S , G ra m A u ge rs. BulK Ta n k s , a ll si/es In s ta lla t io n service ava ilab le Special 6600 6u5riel B in com pletely erected, includes cQncr^le S1995 Chuck

_ H aw kins Phont*'523 288D,. Ucon. Idaho ____ •

H A Y B O U G H T and sold by ,»tu* iru (k load Ptii'5ne 48/ 2445

W AN TEEh - FEED GRAHsIWE CAN PAY COMPETUIVE

; , p R i c f s r i " ..............................

WESTON■ i . S U P £ l J L

330 Sin.Sl. So on truck lono Twin FolU fd o h o

733 6fr9?Soe o/ io for yOur /jveifock needs Med»ccjfion P « » / ( c i f / e i i o / r d a i r y

tupphoi milking equipment in\iallation

$7 Pets A Supplies

' Vacationing ? Do your dog a la vor Le a v e h im with us Bob s Kennels 733 2230

F O R S A L E A K C registered red Dachshund puppies, can 543 5954 .

F O R s a l e A k C . registered 1 '; wear o ld m ;» i« ir «v n F>tcellent hunter, t U 5 733 3727

■-/VKC R e g is te re d ir iS h s e U e r p g p p ie s , S85 a p up 726 ^653

’T W f n o s , 776 5494 •

A p r K ot poocUex. flit Phi

B E A U T I F U L Reg W ill be sm all Phone 875 5611

R E C r s X E R T D A K C D6T>rrm.v>P in sc h e r lor Sale tn<.L*lienlfa m iT v B a fK q ro u n d r v r t trn t m arK.nus o n .^ 7U797B

P O O D L E G R O O M I N G . stud i l i r y iL t . . fiuOUitv. CneCi -M il iA t - Kcnncls West ^K .m b e r i y 423 S1Q4

AK C Roq-sferert poodle puppies v ^ it e a p rrro i sna s 'tvpr -tjncs Also nawc older female pOQdlei. rtnd m altrse feniaie Can 733 8018

AKC Registered Sa-nt Bernard pupp<es for sale 1100 each Call alter 6 00 p m 886 2U7

■PUR^F bred L.»hpuiu> es ne>9249

B U L L S and horses for sale or loan. D ereld Lyons 543 S824. or 543 5934

f OR S A L E 100 150 Holstem heiters w eighing Iro m 1000 1 300' ^ u n d s on hand at all times Also 3 outfits to finance w ilh Eugpne Hughes. Jerom e 324 2415

S E L E C T S IR E IMC All breeds, d a iry beef, W a irc - Leitch F^hone

'543 4658 . . . .

F R E S H " or Sprir^ger cows or heile r^o ju a ra n le e d . Buy or trade for spnncjers or beef Hap or Clyde Huqhes. Buhl. 543 5825 or S43 5969

G O O D B A B Y and pasture calves for sate All kinds Phpne 324 4162 or 324 4028, Jerom e - -

M F »rm ImplAmants

M A S S E Y "H a rr is , self propelled 80

15' beet and g ram bed, rea l good COnflmQi-i i350 phone -733-J97*.

M c'iel A , S400, A lh s- rr riTiTi ” M 7HFF-rrvT70— T33 Dftvy

NEW COMBINES IN S TO C K t? -

SPECIAL DISCOUNT1 ~ N e w ^ o s s e y Forauson

760 diesel w ith cob & oir 16 ft

I N e w Mossoy Ferguson ' '“ 7 5 0 dlesoT w Tttre d V s d lr -

/ 1 6 h

" USED COMBINES------^— M o h f y,Fa<9 u in n S lfi---------

2 R E G I S T E R E t ) purebred Angus bulls h e rd s ire s >Non p a n e l K e v ^ to n c m a rc long b o d y and

Jie ighl. Nan p ar lel B ardoherm ere typical heavy Shouldered and rear quarti*red anq u i. long body Call Frank D rake 423 4014 Delore 8 00 a m Or a lter 6 00 p rti

P O L L E D H E R E F O R D b u ll, registered, 2 years old, S600 934

iO Horsef

Q U E & N S H o rs e . * o k a y for tjeqtnner^. ‘•wrH retr>ed, carr rwn barrels or poi^.. 541 6393

P A L O M I N O M a re SoOnd Well■■Tfaiaod__ but— ?>0if iieo___ W omens

■Horse 324 8297

K A l F A R A B IA 'N J year d d lilly . green broke, genrto. sm all, S225 Ar>d a P O A pony spirited, tjreen broke. 3 years old S50 324 8030

FO R s a l e Horses P O A Typf* See Stevens at C u rry crossing

H or s e s n o c in g . i r im m m g and groom ing 326 4631

FO R S A f E One. ' i Q uarter and ' J A ra l^an M are 6 years old Li*ht sorreil with a face and fourwt>ite sfocT^inqs Gentle 5300 po Also. 1 year old stud coll gentle halter broke D<>cp bay w ilh -black mane and laM Can V irgii Hite E d o n 825 SU7

S M O O T H m u utn m a re , nice easy . r ide good with cattle fl?5 5631

G O O D T A f^D frM Horse Trailer la c io rv b u ilt. i746 Addi:»on AvenueEast 733 7 130

diesel w ith cob 14 It (com plo1o reconditioning)

K M dssey Ferguson 410 , dtosel. 1 4 li 1 Mossoy Fo rg usor ^upor

92 1 4fi

1 N o w K ollond 1282 sell p ropelled llWo now

1 N e w H ollond 76 s e l / ^ N p ropelled ovorho uied

1 Mossoy Forguson 10 tw ine he

1 John D oero 224 Iw inolie .................

I N e w H o flo n d 7 B P IO

74 C im p «r i 74

w_in_2 t«q.

TWIN FALLSt r a C t o O “

IMPLEMENT CO .3030 K f r n b e r l^ d T w in Fb TTi'

733 B687 ,

ATTENTION DA IRY M EN

----- a n d ----F E E D LOT

OPHRATORSf-O r i r W - W b« 9 * « W —gram roller m ill, m good co n d itio n Incluc^es ste am la c k e l, F e e d c o ste am g e n e ra to r . 20 h o rs e p o w e r^ r? c t r ;g— • m'o rgr : — STarprpr necessary drives, bells, and liliin gs Eq uipm ent is rea d y to operate P n ce lor im m ed ia lc s.»le Call 200 934 5382

68 Aviation

D IV O R C E forces sale oi * place Piper T r . P acer, 135. less than 100 hours on coriiptefe overhatil S320Q. 543 5S82 afternoons until 5 30

CLEARANCE SALE!

BELLC a m p e T s r T r a i l e r s ,

a n d Taprpners!i ^ c n r r e n l n T o d a y .

Its A Pleasure __

A C E ^ H A N S E f s hCHEVROLET

1654 Blue Lakes Blv(;J. No. 733-3033

FO R R E N T 20' Motor Hom e. •~r~^t^epT~a7~air^condttto n in yv H O

generator. Stereo Tull »hower S125 a w eekend. 788 3174 e ve n in gs l»riyate party.

Tra ve l Trailers

1955 Lak^ewoc>d C a m p T o ile r ,. > x H3 2692 ' — ^

73

1944 t a ^ e v .14 UOO

T R A I L E R H I T C H E S and brakes i n s t a l l e d , e q u a l i z e r a n d Other F a s l S e r v i c e - 761 A A a i n ' A w e o U C W B 5 T / T w i n F a l l s P h o n e 733 fl261

lv;o Silver S t r e a k 23' T w i n B e d s . H v j i* .Q QQ U $J>Q€!!’ !p n . V<,iOQ. 8d2 3786 o r 863 3294

FO R SAi_E 1966 27' Roadrunner cam per tra ile r, selt'contained. call

•733 2198 ’ ._____________________

YOU REEM O TO R C6 .„

"RejtrBollaaaLVebMBSl—• ■■■<>53 2nd A ve n u e South

f^EATURING:— -rr-A rr t ro tm r T ror,lers—----

A rg o sy(O w n e d by A ir '

U Cam pari

1949 ) Ton O ie v y Truck,* M i l e a g e w i t h 14' j ' R a n c h o E l R a e Ch<)SSiS M o u n t C a m p e r , S le e p s 8, Sel l C o n t a i n s . S I « r e o P h o n e 436 6 8 l 6 ^ H u p e r l .

W I D E B O X p i c k u p c a m p e r , s h e l l , I I S O 324 2467

8 P O O T 2ecuniy"iiTrJraD T a m p e r , e x c e l t e n i c o n d i t i o n 543 5039

9- O V E R S H O T C A M P E R , ' t u r n a c c . € a t t 5 4 5 6 1 4 6 ,

e v e n m g s

? 4 . ..£ a m p «ri

G E M T O P cam p er, tor short wide call SM n i *

T K M P E H S H E L L lor S h o rT W io jr pickup box, 3 rail motor cyclje trailer, \ w rinaer type AAaWag washer Call 473 5489

H O M E m a d e hunfer and (iV ierm a n 's special, 8' lor>g, only SlOO Call 733 66S2.

J U S T A R R IV E D

TRAILER LOADl i P icku p C o ve rs 8

----G om pers---------------G oin g o l 72 PRICES!

-AAAE>RON_- C om per & T ro iU r S o le s

128 Blue lo fce * ' E o ji 5 Polnis Tw in FolU 734 3861

75 Motor Hom M

1973 Dodge 360 m otor h om e , e x c e lle n l ' W o 'u ld ' trad e for property. Call p24 8531

1973 Eldorado M ini Motor H gm e, air Conditioned, complete 733 4394 aMer 5;00 p .m with everything. T.400 mttes '

77 Auto Service —P « r t i A A c ce tio rifi

75 Motor Homes

Boats a; M arine Items

L I T T L E G I A N T p o w e r h a m m e r , n e w c o n d i t i o n . a n d 30 ’ g a s f o r g e , a t>efln b l a d e s p e c l a l . 536 2598. a l t e r 5 p m ancr . w e e k ends*

S w in e

M A L E puppies

T r m - ' ------

r e q i s t e r e d Sa>nT B e r n r t r H i l O O i2S9 a f » e r 4 00

K a M a r K e n n e < 5 W e h a v e e n l a r g e d d n d c a n n o w h a n d l e r n o r e b o a r d e r s C a n 733 9898

g e r m a n S h e p h e r d d o g s top Qua '**y A k C r e g i s t e r e d 5 m o n t h s r e a d v ’ o t r ^ m . c a n 7J3 5904

S<re IS champ>on ch oco ia ’ e

4 F N G L I S H P O I N T E R pupO'es. r*i«<mp*on Dreedinq V50each 436 6dJ8.

Rfc-C»is T e wt-O vorfcshire B(w»rs?00 j>ound«, .124 ?14?

4S Farm A Ranch SuppHes

■ y Q .B. - 5 » A l L c o j i i U t u A l u i n . — . h a r d w o o d u r a i n . a n d s t o c k r a c k

n.} 4077

O R S A l £ _ H - v O r 0 s< r e i - n c lec i r t h e r r i o s s rWid t r r t S h o u t 0* v o u r d ' t c h au iom at ica i t V 423 5fi47

SPfcC i a l o n S lOUX G R A I N B in s

»000 2 600 4 600 B u She i Capac ity Order now and vave 1 b per t er\» ott I s' or K C Z i T l A U M O T O R S C O M P A N Y

53a SIM

F a r m I m p l t m v n t i

C r e i f l t n c r , 35 n o r M o a w e f i c-vm riioe eleotftc std^tr h p r s r p o w ^ r J o h n s o n e n g m o i . w i f h t ip u p t r a ' l e r , a n d c o v e r , 723 2613

U B o a t w « U v . 40H n r s f J o h * h W » M f l l d r Srtfl H,^s t r o M m g p l a t e l o r f . s h i n g L i k e N . ‘ a C iM^cJ.f .on 733 4242

w F - l B E R G L A S S 50 H o r s e J o h n s o n m o t o r a n d t r f l ' t e r 3?^ 5910 G o o d t i s h - n q o r w a t e r s K u n g

15 F iB E R f .U A S S boat, tra.ier, and 35 horse Ev>nrude motor, with

- 0 t<x> ff* m e wrndshrrtd. new T horse Soa/s.-motor, .yUS,-534U20C1. ---- -

SK I B O A T , ifi' hoU w *m 390 F-ord engine , pr iced V3 000 Cal l 726 4615

NOW S H O W IN G here 1973 boalS a n d m o to rs See them at BL»D A N D M A H K s your E v .n r u d e and M ercury D<'aicr 1162 Blue Lakes North 7 3 3 '194

C H « V SL E « B O ATS A N D M O T O R S

S T A W C R A F T BOA T S J E R O M E I M P L E M E N T

& M A R IN A — >fcf»eMe . f OAHQ----------

. Rood Rong e r Tro il e rs C am p e rs & 5th W h e e le rsG onco rd M oto r Homes (O w n e d by CHam pion)

.. C loud N in e P ickup S h e lls

Par^s.A Im ide Service lo Ac commodate a 3f Fool Iroiier See o r CoH T e rry P ie rce

Phone 7 33-6§g 1 Open 0 o III 8 p m Wtjokcioys

Ei«copl SotdrcJoys 1 2 Noon'^o 5 p m Sundoys

BONANZAMOTORS

ifv B o r f e y

74 C am p«ri

B T I L T I N H I L T I N Camper with hycjrauliC lacks SelI contained 7.13 42J2___ .

75 Motor Homat

Sales & Service For

C H A M P I O NM O T O R H O M E S

Coll 678-9486

JOHN D L E R t 55 TbunsGood VSOO V 4 sn s

P f . -I dnq orfX> ’ mg 'Allb» V ' a lH o r >)4i l 77 . viXDil Ac \r . '

T H O S E F E k E a p r o p u p s a g a - n . C u t e s i b u n c h yet ’ 967

S E L L I N G skun-ks. p o o d l e s ,chihuahua and m m ed pupD'**<.7 T O 6 T » r 875 W31 V S43 66 2«

FOR s a l e AK C G rea t Danes, N o rw eg ia n Elk Hounds B r i f tanys Beag les . Samoyeds. G e r m a n Shori H « i r^ . also spiTf, P e e k a poos. C oe^ee flr-»*»T--€ r>o*»v» . Po*n»eKa. a ls o P o o d l e g r o o m - n g M A C 'S K E N N E L S . 536 .2317

P U R E B R E D Beag le ouoo>e& H i

F O R S A L E 2 year old fem ale Dachshund H 4 3U4

A K C R e a is te re d t r » M i ~ ^ t t e rpyp^trs c a l l «37 4>9i___________

'■J Grovwn DirjOd pups, sta rtin g to vNork. also good sa c fm e n o r> «5 T »------------- -----------------------

C a n i *

PO R S A L E ] ' Angus b ulls. 17 months iro m Mon R »p o vs stock 3

'South. 2 W rsT Jn-Ofne J34 5131

F O R S A L E A n gu s Bolt.Wg s t r e j ^ t y p « henl S ire . H o g u «

Tanth- PtionezMi SMX-T-:

Spr .nhier o-P«' ‘ Jtor 1 oai'

V>iV

and8?9

O W A T O N N A svi.atr.rfV parts, A T u L i - c f x i L c . .v.Q‘ » n ? y x

M a < h . n e t y ’ 13 »54?

FO R s a l e Mas'.ev ,H ,» rr .s »0 Spec'a' con^hmc .or>d'i«oncall 733 5«43 *

N E W H O L L -\ N D sell o/ooeUed. J Mfin'fliflifc^Cl Qriief:.-;ifl.QDa Ai,5Q-At0.i9 starker » \ 'r»r- -nnT tt7.t>00- >90 ?8?8 or

l O C k w O O O M a rk VI P o t a t o rorr^h ne usi tl 1 . s ea son s . lom p i^ 'W ' iy '’ e ionct ’ onea and pa o ' t ’ d Sei» p ' ' o p e i ' e a p o t a t op .tr'' Jntm Oer^r 40?0 tractor , Low T L ' l i r Nevw 438 5M0ev en^rrq*

M A S S e v f r * *uson N u m b e r 12 bale' J?4 ■>

(DAmO T R A C T O R S A L V A G E has " t S '-a ’ llOiBliaLiD-

m t l c ^south Cash for tt ac ’ CK i lO w p rtttV on used parts Phorv» 733 g joj

R E A U . J 5 . O O D B U Y , . 275. I M - W in d r o w e r duai a u g e r . , w i th cond>»<or*er good confliTion. C4JI734 3573

M A S S E V H a rris ComtJtne 90. Goo<J »ia p e . f#ew MoTt>r j? « <r3fl

TV80 H a r le y D a vid s o n 900 cc S g o r t w e r ^ 5 W p m .*32*-

M U S T S E L L . 21 May B ^ . 21 Cu rl Spud Bed and 73' Catiie Bad. AAaka Offer Cau s<3 &S62

F O R Sale M a rk v i S po d H a rv e s T o r. Lo ctiw o od G ood c ^ i t i o o . « .0 0 0 «37J939 or S3?

y » “ l*^ sidfcraclL

SKIOR

FISHC o u l k i n % f o l l e f t f o i l o f

197 2 1 15 H P M e r c u r y m o t o r w i t h t i U & t r i m J u ^ t I ' k e n e w o n l y 2 0 hf 4 o n c o m

p l p t p r r g S o ld n p w f o r

1 G o o d usod fisKtn^ boo t & trailer with 25 H P Johnson

$4 9 51 14 A l u m i n u m l o n e ^ t o r

boot & trtJilor 30 H f * olftC trie Slort iot>n>on c leon $ 9 9 5

197jJ V t 7 9 G los tron 30H P cou lk in t tro ilar Brond 0 « w $ 5 2 7 1 Thi9 W ^ e k On ly

$4695

C E N T U R YAU TO M O TIVE M ACHINE

2 6 1 A d d i s o n A v e W .

' T w m Fo fH ~~ ■ 7 33 9070~ '

70 Sp6rtlng Goods

Y f l M H B B M a .We give

y o i H n o r aB O B R E E S E M O T O R C O . has oil four excitingn e w W i n n e b o g o m o t o r h o m e l in e s p lu s t h e f o n lo s t i c

l e w b ig 5 t h W h e e le r

C O M E IN T O D A Y !Now on Display, Ready for Your Inspection!

BOB REESE M O TO R CO.'7 h e :t> ea fe zJ im £ a n .D e p j^ d .Q n "

500 BLOCK 2nd AVE. SO. TWIN FALLS733-5776

2NE\A/ M C R C ^ A Y W H E E L S for sale 825 — 15 5 holes 823 3861

S E T O F S illie r 60 Tires. > -1 0 Inch, 2— 8 Inch mounted on slotted chfom e Wheels. $295 534 3492

•W4S Chevro let - engme, 292 Si* c y linder M 3 <67? a n y - g ~ W '

•0 C y c lti A Suppllat

IW3 Suiuki l?5 Tracker. UCO 733in i'aayfT iartrrff'ariftnrw------

I96V H ond* ISO, . excelle ntoindllioo , call ?.0C,

250 D U C A T S . 3.000 miles, vary goottcondition. t T J i . Call

1970 H O N D A 350 5 24 59U

1969 H O N D A 350 »c r«n 0 1 «r . lu n over hauled, 1350. ca ll JJ4'ST77

1972 V<»man. 125, 19«7 HocUka 90, call a l l e r « :00 p m 324^47

1972 1000-ec.Harley 'tp e ri»K r X L H . 3^1^ m iles Call Jirn or Jodi .954

1973 K A W A S A K I, like i^ew. very fow mileage ^34 5337

1968 H O N D ^ C B <50, 4,400 m ile i M in t co n d itio n M ust see to ^^^reclate w oo w itt deal 934

1970 H O N D A . C L 350. im m aculate condlticr^ 433-4^^4,-------—H A R L E Y D A V ID S O N 74. Custom Ch op pe r. e K ce lle n i c on ditio n , ready to rjde . catl 734-2330

1973. iso. P 9 Kawasaki, lake over paym ents 324 8091. Jerome

1970 S U Z U K I S A V A G E ,, kilted. Knobbies. 21" Ironi wheel, good condition 1350 734 4 405

1972 Y A M A H A UOcc EAduro- Very good condition Can 733 3999

FO R S A L E 1972 Kawasaki. Green Streak. 2S0cc,.B»celleni condition Call after, 6.00. .H4 3730

1972 H O N D A CBIOO Top condition, low mileage. 1275 Helmet me luded a37 6I9S

'1973 Hodaka, 125 CC, Many race eniras. Raced only twice 733 4438 alter 5 00

_J5 A l_ .iu _ u JL L_ 9 Q .. ewcell^nt shape, call 537

1973 Y A M A H A . I ;5 EndurO. S500 .Call 324 2662, after 5 00 p m

■ ^ X C E L L H F T T 1V71. 0 5 Kawasaki, 2.400 miles Call Bruce at 733 9233 days 324 8430 nights

E X C E L L E N T 1971 250 Kawasahi, 3.100 miles. Catl Bruce at 733 9233 days 324 8438 ni9hts

’ ^ T r i u m p h B o n n e v i l l e , A501 ' 1.000 m i l e s m i n t co n d i t i o n $975 733 1704 o r 733 3913

^ Motor Homes

TO G tu ae UVK'ouA, tfiOT* CSTT*•♦ter 3 00 934 4679

P 0 A C K L E Y 30 0 6 r.'le Wlih Mope. CTuger 7M M r tie f

•pow t r >Q?pg .-f3 3 m 5 ~ -

73 Tra v o l T r » i l « r s

K€NSKILL travel ^railer^ i r . stbve. Ele ctric Ice b o « , si»ovw«c« toilet. U5 0 . 733 37d7.

" I T ' i » m p tra ile r , stove.lai:oe :i ..........

Compare? Price— Compare FeaturesA n d T h e n Y o u W i l l D e c i d e O n T H E . . .

TITAN MOTOR HOME28 foot T IT A N

- R u g g e d 1 6 g o u g e c o r b o n

■, 410 CID O o d g * Eogin*P o w » r S l M r r n g

.>v-P($¥v*r Brck**. .* A u lo n 'o lic T ro m m trjio n* ATT i.v .nna.; 97 CSolloo G o « Tonk ;. T ill S iM r in g W h M l 6 D ua l b o tla ry » ir »1« m

A u t o m o t i v e a i f c o n d i t i o n i n g vv S 0 0 0 K W O « n « r a t o r

__ IJ.Q O Q .B lU _R Q flLa iL£ a n d L .,tioning

■r 30 OOO BTU C o U m o n lorcad oIr fgrnoceA M 'F M SteracTrodio bnd tope de<ih It T v t w li io n

* Rec^rcoloting Toilet it Ov6f vani ty in both 'Cl P ow ar botnroom v «n t

Th© NffW Low Cost TITAN

- N O W

c Double itom las-. •' 'kitchan ti’nks

<? 7 ,5 cub k foot Domes­tic ftelrigkroror f ^ i T T e c irlc n o t 13 Volty

c Sleeping o rro n g «m e n ti for 0 S d Te V ^ Td fTT ird tr^ «? Tm te w r- S H «g w4lK pod Out**orto«ng intarior datign Ewecutiva livirtg orao

ti- RV p > u m p la i« Tiras • ------

* 1 5.9001r ] M OTOR CO.^ 3 0 4 4 th A V E . W E ST

733-7365t W I f T F A t t S -

Page 22: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

Dependable services and dquipment to keep your.car running like.new

■3 i ru c k i U Trucks

TRUCKS1962 FORD f-850

T a n d e m d r i v e 5 3 4 c u m m o t o r , 5 s p e e d w t » h 3 ^ p e e d o x l e . c o d d le - t o n k s w iH t a k e 2 0 f t b o d s h o r p o n d c l e o n ^3,000964 DOD7SE T TON

D u o l& V 6 e n g m o 4 s p e e d w i t h s l o c k

— — r—.

T970P4CKUP % TON4 W h e e l d n v e V V - 0 e n g m ^ e n d

- 4 ^ p e e d I f e n fcm . h b . o r i . .[ .................... ......... .............................. ^2,800

H A R B A U G HAAOTOJTCO:

or 934-5522

II T ru c k i1969 Q i e v r o l e l ' L o n g h o r n , lo a d e d , e q u ip p e d to r u p to 12' c ' a m p e r ,t h a n 3 0 ,0 0 0 m f l e s A v e n u e W e s t

169 A d d i& o n

- 1964 £ Q R Q . L j to o 4 S p e e d E K c e l l e r t - c o n d i t i o n 733 4242

M Im port— Sport* C «r*

W 7 2 M A ? D A p JC k u p . i p o r t s k i | . H -O b w m p o r h >t c K . .. to n n e a u_

$ 1 ,9 0 0 o r b e s t o f f e r , 324 2660

V O L K S W A G E N S E D A N ,______ lul cnfline. for m !€: 9^‘nflc o l l e g e , m u s t s e l l P r i c e d fo w /33 4815. o r 7 3 3 6261, a f t e r 6 00 p m

C L A S S I C 1964 A u s t i n H e a l e y 3000, R e B u T T r n T C K e v r o l e f enQ - ine ' G o o d m e c h a n i c a l c o n d i . i o n ’ S9 0 0 733 3903

1 97 0 V W W u T . r e c e n t r e o u i i t e n g in e , 7 t i r e s a n d w n e e l * r - , 25 m i l e r s p e r o a l l o r w B e s t o f f e r m u s t s e l l . C a l l 934 4244..

\970 O p e l 2 d o o r , 4 s p e e d b u c k e ts e a l s . g r f A l e f n n n i T i y /

Jim.~s^^l~?ecfining seaU,

gdilon. R'lifi'b W95. 733^570

A C o r o l l a . 2 d o o f .

•0 C y c le s A S u p p lie s

1973 7so C C K A W A S A K r, S80 m i l e s , p n o n r 733 ?3 » 6

T A K E O V E R p a y m e n t S . - d u e to h c a t i h . I ’m m y A J . S 4^0, C K c e l l e n i L Q O d il 'O n , le s s t h a n 100

1___f p t t c s / h a j c x t r a s : '^ 4 3 iO f ly -----

,1V64 l i t ’ !* r n t i l iO n . J t T r r t v e l r t l l 4 1 . id 'O ciMd guo< l t . f y s V 9 9 i

‘s T f tV ? i*0 H r n n in n d A v t fn u t* Of P»K )iu- n ^ 8474 8 00 «i m ro S 00p fT>

I 1964 F O R D V 8, 4 s p e e d , lo n g w id e b o * , c u & t o m c a b , to o l b o x , s p l i t r i m s , p o s i T r a c t i o n , v e r y c l e a n 423 4454 -------- _ ........

1 97 ? N O R T O N - C o m m a n d o A A o lO f C y c l e . 2 3 1 1 m i l e s H .3 0 0 C a l l b e f o r e b UO /33 7 5 4 7 n f t e r 5 00 326 5325

~9T ~HMvy

1966 W A R N e i l 5 W A S 6 Y H O P T O 500 •‘ 4 y a r d H y d r a o t r r t r a c t m o u n t B a c k h o e , 1 )5 .50 (1 W -^f t r a d e fo r s m a l l e r H o e 324 4 129

P O P S A L E S m a l l C r a w l e r T r a c t o r , w . t h C a b l e D o i e r . J2 2 5 0 L o w E n g i n e t im e 7 3 4 2099

4 D-8 C A T S .-3 D o ie rs and R ip p e rs 1 ■ 28 Y a rd S c ro p e rC o n b e s e e n o l S p / i n g C r e e k

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B u f l o y I d o h o P h o n f . 6 7 0 5 S H 5

BOB HOUSTONS a f e s R e p re ^ i f f> fo ttv < »

H o rr^ o 7 J 3 1 4 0 0

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• - 7 M i c h iQ o n T S A 1 j y a r d w i t h c o bM e l r o e 9 7 0 I . y O fd 1 N e w 1 fl 0 0 0 p o u n d M o

- c+ Tino f r o i t o r

BILL LO U G H M IL LE R 7 3 3 - 5 7 6 1

1973 P I C K U P ^4 to n , p b w e r , r a d io , e ^ t r a b a n k , a u t o m a t i c . 8 0 0 a m . to

y o o p m w e e k d a y s , 733 3193

C L E A N 1968 C h e v y t o n , lo n g w h e e l b e d . V ' B . ' % 1,495 00. b r - b e s t o t t e r . ' B a k e r s M o b i l e H o m e s

I ' j t o n - t r u c k , 18' t la * b e d , 1957. e x r e f l e p t s h a p e , h a s 4 ’ s i ? J e s t h a t g u e s w i l h t t . 734 .4182. -

t 9 7 0 _ C H E V R O L E T . V 8 . 2 to n , d u m p b e d 6 y a r d s . ?2 0 f i f » . .b it lC g a s t a n k , p o w e r s t e e r i n g , b o o s t e r b r a k e , 733 261 3

1964 C H E V Y ’ ; t o n , V 8. 3 s p t * t ‘d , p o > i, l r e c-:— » 4 j i0 — — ■ ■ —

T R 4 63 r e b u i l t , m a k e o f f e r o r t r a d e fo r f o r e i g n s e d a n O n v i e w E l m a« A d d i s o n . 423 5092

M 9 6 9 D A T S U N 2 ,0 0 0 s e r i e s R o a d s t e r , m i n t c o n d i t i o n , 934 5726

1969 V O L K S W A G E N S q u d r ^ b a c k , n o w f t io T o r . n e w s n o c k - s , p c * t t « * d s s l l r e s R e a d y to g o a i t l . ? 9 5 C a l l 513 5487

1959 T R ' J U M P H , in g o o d c o n d i t i o n . \ a l l a f f e r 5 00 p m , « 4 0 ^ 3 4 J

1963 T r i u m p h T R 4 . e * c e l l u n l r y n n r n q c o n d i t i o n R o s s M i l l e r , 324 2024. 733 5377 ' '

1969 F I A T D U N E B U C G I E lo r " . S ^ I e N e e c is r e p a i r s C a l l 537 (^642.

a s k to r O u d e

1971 V O L K S W A & g N S q u a r c b a c K . A V P M . M i c h c t i n s . * l . » 0 0 ? M < 3 9 J

DATSUN1956 10 w r i c f l , 10 y a r d d u fT ip t r uc K, m o t o r r e c f t w i y o v e r h a u l e d , g o o d r u b b e r 886 2297 o r 6B6 i?566

F O R S A L E 1961 S t u d e b a k e - r P i t f e W i - 2f i l C n t v y . V fiL E n g i ^ n r G o o d T i r e s 543 6 ?3 6

196& F O R p F 100 ' > Io n . 37,000 m i l t 's , q o o d c o n d i t . o n . 11500 c a l l

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^R O M N IS S A N W IT H PRIDE B t a t I n l l a t i o n A ( . . .

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1968 D O D G E p o w e r w a g o n , 46,000 m i l e s G o o d c o n d i i i o n B e s t o t t e r o v e r S I6 0 0 543 6 5 4 '

U A m o s F o r S « t «

•3 IriKktt o n .1963 C H E V R O L ^ T P . c k u p

v - ^ :- t s p tr n j , g o o t r< o n d i i . o n V400 326 S 3 H

f O H S A L f 1965 D o d g e V a n C a l l 733 94^2

- f h p y Y p .r h . i nO c o n O 'T .o n C a n 733 7 0 7 j a l t p i *n00 p'«r'

19/1 F O R D P i C k U P A u t o m a t i c t r a n s m i s s i o n P o w e r s i e e r i n g , t d O iO . i . n e w - f i f c i . nffvy. s h o c k s ,

_ lL 9 Q f l _ d c . U ia L L m i l e is . . U e a n ___A o tL .CK>Od 324 4279

O B E C O b o d i e s , b e e * s , g r a m , c a m e c o m b m a f - o n W a g n e r T r a c e r S a l e s J . m R o w e 733 767 1

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t o ^ OC D rn 73^ 3193

1953 in t f> rn a t * o n a i p^^k u p a n d a 1954, 1968 D e l ’ a O id s , m a k e o f f e r

1967 G M C T r u c k T a n o r m w itr^ b e l t s lo n g w h e e l b a s«» D o n W r iQ h t 326 5626

19S4 CHEV®'^' " ' } ton pickup, with cam mechanicallygood Bod b '- ' ' t 1 50 May be seen at Ly» Standard Stationor 714 1487

1967 CHEVROLET to n p - C k u p , l o w m i l e a g e , e * c e i i e n l c o n d '» * o n ,Q o o d , - o a s m t l e a a C _ S e c a t a i M e * » T a d C h e v r g n . W e n d e l l , c a l l S7 S 7 r r $ . t o r tT rfc rr rT T lrm 7 T T 7 '» T n ^ a p p o m t m e n f f o r t e s t d r i v e

1950 Ford Chevy V 8 $300 ■C o l l 734 440 5------------ ^

Chevrolet Condition, 324 50 7

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^ 5 9 r N I E R N A T lO N A L '■> ton p ic k u p , V i . 4 speed franimt%aion. t lT 5 , o r w ill r r »0 e for F o rd V I cr>0 (n t . IM S 1M7tn good condition. 73f31M . after « 00 p m

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excellent cohdifion. 7535517^

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1 9 6 7 V o l k s w a g e n b u g g o o d iran^phrloHon *7871 9 6 8 C h e v r o l j e t M a l i b u 4 rjonr ,«<or. * . 1 0 8 7

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as J * « p * W h « * l D r l v « »

F O R S A L E W 4 5 J e e p w a g o n e e r , F a c t o r s c a r p e t , p o w e r s t e e r i n g $ 1 .2 0 0 iC a l l 4 M 2211 a s k t o r R a n d y o r 654,6331

;»69 CH^VRQL.^T.x,4.!^egl4rive. , ' 7 fo r r p i c k u p , V 6 , T s p ^ e ^ T T u B T T g o o d c o n d i t i o n , n e w p a m t . 3 9 .000 m i l e s . $ 2 ,195 837 4836 H a g e r m a n

196 9 - P O R O B r o n c o , $ > .5 0 0 , • e x c e l le n t c o n d i t i o n o r t r a d e to r V a n 622 5359 S u n V a l i e v

- » « O N C O - - « « a n - - A i r * . _QQod c o n d i t io n 324 4447 o •

1 9 2 0 U n i v e r s a l J e e p . c & c t i l l e r L L _ L d l l . . 324 B 5 3 I

S C O U T 1967. L o c k o u t h u b s . D u a l M n k - s , f d d te^ r > l U X L - « u m i i -733 9381 a f t e r 5 00 p m

C A S H O R la t e m o d e l . 4 x 4 p i c k o p ” G e n e B o s s e r m A t t , j e r o r n ^ -----------

: 4 >4 to n p i c k u p 7331966 C h e v y 4 7402

Autof For $•!•

Aiitoi For &il*

L I K E n e w W 7 2 . 3 s p e e d C h e v y N o v a T q p G a s M i l e a g e T a k e o v e r p a y m e n t s $90 61 54 3 S266 >

W 66P | y f ^ o u t h B a r a c u d a , F o r m u l a S R t i r e M o d e l 733 0793 a f i e r 5 00

196:4 B U I C K E l e c t r a . v e r y g o o d c o r i d l l i o n , c a l l ' 326 5 0 1 3 . f o ra p p o i n t m e n t

1967 F o r d F a i r l a f i e . p o - w c r s t e e r i n g , e n C ^ l l e n t m r t e .g o o d c o n d i t i o n , n e ^ t i r e s , ^33 3 J l

■1964 M a l i b u , S ^ . 3 a ? _ J i y d r o t r a n s m i s s i o n , 4 A P , w i r e m a g w t i e e l s . 326 5055

1964 Co n^ et 202.. 2 d o o r . 6 c y l m d e r S t a n d a r d t r a ' n s n i i s M o n , v e r y g o o d : o n d i t lo n $ 3 0 0 B3 7 J 7 4 2

B E A U T I F U L 196V t - o r d Galrt**** 50iy,' -»-doar-^rtftt-»oPr. c o r ^ d i i i o n m s i d t * a n d o u t . p r e v i o u s l y o w n e d b y a m t K h a n i c d is c brak^t's. p o w e r s t e t ' r m g ' . a i r ,

- O O O d O d S I i u t c a u f . 8735

1968 P l y h i o o t h G T H f o r s a l e 4249 a f t e r 6 p m

543

I

l « 6 4 C H E V R O L E T , B * I A i r 7 4 d o O r . 'V 8. o < ; o n o m i c e i to r u n , 817 4403

1963 T B i r o V e r y fl f tod c o n d i t i o n , p o w e r s i e e r i n g . p o w e r ‘b r a k e s , a i r C o n d * j - ’V i m ^ -> 495 -326 4898

B R I G H T G R E E N 1959 C h e v r i j l e l N e w u p h o i ‘. t l*rv ' a l l 886 249?

1965 S P O R T P U R Y . 2 d o o r , h a r d t o p , n e w 426 w e d g e t o r q u e (H te* st e e l r a d i a l s , n e w p a i n t , $600 733 968' ) a s k ( o r S a m

1968 C O U G A R , >^R 7 G r e e n . 3 s p e e d , 302. M a g i , w t d e t i r e s $1250 733 731& - • T '

T 9 7 T P L Y / W O U T M ' r U K Y t t t , 4 doQjr h a r d t o p , a i r c o n d i M o n i n g , p o w t ' r s t e e r i n g a n d b r a k e s . $1950 7 1 ) 6 ^ 1

1 9 6 4 C O R V E T T E c o n v o r t i b l e h o f d l o p w i t h I 9 6 0 3 ^ 7 . . . h v o d e r i ,4 s p e e d n o w i n t e r i o r 4 ? 3 5 9 7 0

1967 M E R C U R Y S ' T A T I O N W A G O N , 4 n e w t i r e s , n e w b a t t e r y ' , n t r * -c o n d i t T o n t n g " V 1 h~""1W 5 T M — 5462

1972 J B v e l m , A M X , l u l l y p o w e r e d , m a k e o f f e r , c a l l 734 5286

1967 W e d O i d s m o b i l e 442 E * c e l l e n t i C o n d i t i o n . N e w u p t x > i s t e r y , G o o d Ttrvs . y-Ji 1591------------------------

B l U E 1965 O l d s m o b i l e 98 A l l - o n Q d

^ • u n n in g c o n d i t i o n . a* rc o n d i t i o n i n g 733 2 9 9 } $500

J9 71 C a p r j , 2.000 c c . l o w m i l e a g e , n e w steel b e l l e d t i r e s . 4 o n tt ie Moor . 950 516 243ft

1069 F O R D Gt*4aKtV 500. 34.000 , K t o . i l m i l e s a u t o m a t i c , p o w e r

- v i c « / i n g . 4 d o o / . e x c e l l e n t e0(^dit*0«i 73J 2081

1969 O L D S 442, 3 ^ h o r s e . 4 s p e e d , m a g s ’, l o w m i l e a g e 934 5726 >

1970 I M P A L A , 2 d o o r h a r d fo p . p o w e r s t c c r m g . . f l t r , e x c e ’t i e n t

- -c o n d i t i o n . 733 5

1942 C H E V f t O L E T , I d p o r s p » c * a l d e l u K r u n s g o o d . $300 733 9533

1969 C A D I L L A C C O U P E D e V i l l e . F u H p o w e r , ai r c o n d i t i o n i n g . A M F M S t e r e o R a d i O B l a c k v i n y T t o p . 734 329fl a l l o r -6 00 p m

A C t i — L - 351. n i g n n?**, h e a d e r s , p o w e r s t e e r i n g

a n d b r a k e s , w i l l c o n s i d e r t r a d e o n o l d e r t r a i l e r h o u s e 733 1269

_ i 9 6 »m a n i f o l d ,

1972 M a l i b u A i r C o n O i i i o n i n q , onl y10,000 m . l e s , 734 S 7a*

1966 D p D G E C O R O N . E T , 440, 383 V 8. 4 s p e e d , d e a n . $650 C a l l 543 4673. a l t e r 6 00 p m __________________

F O R S A L E 327 C C H n p l e t e O v e r h a u l e d . M u s t BP B r o k e

E n g i n e ;

1969 W H I T E C h e w B r o o k w o o d , 2 s e a t w n q o T T T I mi v M i t e n g r 11 .00 0 423 4493 •

H E L P ^ H E L P ' I ' m o v e r m y h e a d ' M y loss IS y o u r g a i n b y t a k i n g o v e r p a y m e n t s o n ,a 1973 O l d s O m e g a

_.i4alU>bitUvT~2,6«>--mttoirr-AAeietllrtr O r a n g e " . *4 b ro w fn v m y l r o o t . S a d d l e i n t e r i o r , w i t h a u t o m a t i c , s e e at P a u l s G M C S a l e s m B u h l fo r an a d v a n t a g e o u s B a r g a i n , o r c a l l 543 5 366

1962 V A L I A N T . 2 d O o r . S l a n t 6, E « c e l l « * n l c o n d i t i o n , * ^ . G r e A t

" E r & n o n r y : -----------7 T J 4 T 4 7 , -------- $ 0 1 0A u t o f i ' a t ic T r a n s m i s s i o n

F O R S A L E M o d e l T F o r d t o u r m g . o r T q . n a l r o n o i T i o n —541 4 11]

F O R S A L E 19J2 M o d e l T F o r d T o u r i n g C o m p l e t e l y r e s t o r e d $2,400 P h o n e 543 4113

Autos For S«lt1957 C H E V Y , t w o d o o r , 327, 4 1 1 R e a r e n d , s t e r e o , a f t e r 5 00 p m 734 5160

S A v e r - g a r : — »977. B u i c K O p e l . s t a t i o n w a g o n , l i k e n e w . 25 to 30

g a H o n ^ $ 2 . 4 0 0 , - 834.,52A.3

C H E V R O L E T . $700.00 H o n d a S c r a m b l e r , e a r n e r $300 00 Ski O o o . T r a i l e r ^300. 00 A l l 1969 l o o k

g o o d ^ . - r u n ft n e, t a k e $1,300 0 0 f o r ^11 T r a d e SlCl D o o . H o n d a , C o m b i n e d , s e p a r a t e for S L3 5 0 . X L 2 5 ( ^ ^ p ^ » n d t r > g on c o n d i t i o n 326

f o r s a l e , c o n d i t i o n . 1966

g o o din v e r y F o r d L O u n t r y

factnry mr.* ‘g.?.,n,-9 oaascnoLT. idaarv 390 V 0 e n g i n e $795 734 4946

1 9 / a O l d s , 442 W s o 454 C u b i c i n c h e s , m a g s 733 4316 a f t e r 5 30

1964 P l y m o u t h B e l v p d e r e , p o w e r S l c e n n g a n d b r a k e s , a o f o n ^ a t i clIjLO ixn iiiion . . new____llnled*^ ‘^ d s h i e l d G^pod c o n d i t i o n 536

M U S T i c i l 1972 M o n t e C a r l oC TT P v ro i e r , t r t c T ^ y a i r , M I c h l T e n i i r e s . e K t e l l e o l c o A d i t i o n

- 5 4 3 -5064 If n o a n s w e r 543 4919

1963 C h e v y Bel A i r , w i t h 283. V 8, ^ d ^ aut otT^atic tr a n s m i s s i o n . 473

G A S S A V E R 1965 M u s t a n g , r u n s g O Q d. , . $i 0 0 678 2371

F O R S A L E . C h e v r o l e t S e d a n , 4 d o o r B i s c a y n e . 1964, s i i c k s h i tt , g o o d sti<>pi^ c l e a n , $300 c a s h 312 W e s t G , J e r o m e C a l l 324 538^

1967 T h u n d e r b i r d . 4 d o o r , l u l l y e q u T p p tk j. g o o d c o n d i t io n . $ 8 ^ 5 0 0 734 2083

M U S T S E L L 1970 F i r e b i r d . 350, a u l o m a i t c t r « n ^ n ) U ^ t o n . p o w u f s t e e r i n g a n d t j r a k e s . n e w t i r e s , 27.000 fTii ies 475 R o s e S tr e e t N o r t h , a ft er 4 p m 7 3 4 1866

1971 I M P A L A 4 d o o r h O f d t g p . a i r . . p o w i T se a ts a n d w i n d o w s , v i n y l l o p , n e a r l y nt*w t i r e s a n d iTU»ny e n i r a s . C A l r a g o o d c o n d i t i o n B y o w n e r 543 5205 $2695 ’ '

f Q H D . - . M , U S T A N 0 . V fl. a u t o n i a i i f , a i r c o n d i t i o n i n g G o o d c o n d i t i o n P h o n e 543 4702

1967 O l D S To ro f ' f ' t d o, 69,000 OMleS G o o d c o n d i t i o n C a l l 543 6541 Be st D t le r o v e r $1100

Aufoft For Salt

1964 P O N T I A C T e m p e s t - S ta t i o n w a g o n . r u r ( s g o o d . 734 4358

1971 C H E V R O L E T K m ^ j s w o o d i l a f i o n w a g o n ^ l o w m i l e a g e , e x c e l l e n t c o n d t f T o n . g o o d g a s

- S e e -<>♦— A I -C h e v r o n . W e n d e l l , c a l l 536 2716. for i n f o r m a t i o n , a n d a p p o i n t m e n t for lest d r i v e , '

F O R s a l e 1 9 , 3 p - - V T D C o u n l r y S q u t r e , 10 p a s s e n g e r , f a c t o r y a i r M i c h e l i n t i r e s F o r $3195 or b est 0 f f « r 654 d J 2 4 > -

, yQ .Q O O w o r t h ot ,c . ar &. jo ic -b A^ c, 4 u. s l.a d d e d to o u r i n v e n t o r y L o t s ot iov«f m i l e a g e c a r s . 67's 73's C o ^ ^ e out a n d s e e at H u n t e r s 522Add Soh A w »If"'

F O R s a l e 1965 B u u k W i l d c a t * 4 C b o r , -70,0 00 m i l e s , p o w e r , t r a m . a u i o m » 1 f U II n n s m i sston-r -pe^ b r a k i ^ . . a n d s l e e r m g . r a d i o a n d h e a t e r , e x cet ter vt c o n d i t i o n . N e e d s BrAkek— Seat . Cauefbt. C a n b e seett at 580 F i l l m o r e , T w i n F a n s . 733 72 1 4 W i l l A i . c e p t r e a s o n a b l e o t t e r

1969 B u i c k y e c i a l D e l u « e W a g o n , is le w -• T i r e s . S t a n d a f

- T r r t n s m t s s t o n , 350- -V-6 Y t r y C le , * n $895. 324 2762.

1972 f * o n i ia c F i r e b i r d . 8 .000 m i l e s , l i k e n e w . m u s t s e l l . m a k e o f l e r 734 ___ ______ ___

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o u t o m o t i t T f o n i m l v i i o n p o w « r

v t p e ( .n g pOv* cf b r o k « v . l o c t o i y .

■otr - r o n c h t r o n m g — b e l o n g e d ' TO

l o i u l D i ncvw CQf t t o d e u»

1295C o l l M r H o r r i i o n 7 3 3 3 3 3 6

-~H?7 f CA P It tA C -S e d a n D e V i l l e o u t s t a n d i n gm e d i y m i i l u e . . w h i t « v m y i - to p e x i r e m e l y l o w m i l e o g e b l u e f o b r i c i n i e n o f n e w cof tf «H le j n l o c o l 1 o v / n e r os

o c ^ t o » y o u II e v e r f i n d

$ A W— C o U J i i i J » L h e * L ________i 4 3 .4 7 1 9

1 9 6 7 F O R ^G o l o r i e -SO O 4 d a o r t e d o hr e g u lo r l u e l----V 8 — e n g i n e ----------o u t o m o t i c t r o n t m i t t i o n p o w e r s t e e r i n g b l u e in c o l o r i n s i d e o n d o u t

1966 C H E V E U L E M A L I B U . 327. 4 S p e e d , m a g > , g o g d c o n d i t i o n $700 733 471 4

M u s t s a c r i f i c e W 69 B u i c kS k y l a r k , l o w m i T e a g e , g o o d o n g a s . g o o d c o n d i t i o n 733 7934

- $ 7 9 5 -C a n M r A s k e w 536 2511

S A L E ' 1966 B a r a c u d a F o r m u l a S G o o d r o n d * » » « n . 4 M a g v714 5 1 5 i 6 00 p m

P O N T l A C S . B U t C K S . ,

CHEVROLrTS O L D S M O B l l f: S

A TL E O R I C E M O T O K S

G o o ^ n q . I d a h o

WE BUY

1 9 7 0 P L Y M O U T HS o i o l l i t e ^ t o i i o n w o g o n i a c t o i . y - - O i ( ■ £ . o n d t i i o n t a g . . o n o t h e r lo c o l I o w n e r lo w m t t |» o g e o H g<?d o n do u t ' v o c a t i o n r e o d y .

$1990C a / f/ M r Q f lu j j f o i 7 3 4 2 3 2 5

USED CARST h e i s e n M o t o r s

1 9 6 9 P O N T I A CB o n n e v i l l e b e l o n g e d to lo c o l b u M n e s k m o n n o w co r t r a d e in m e d i u i D b r o w n m e t o M i c w h i l e v i n y l t o p f a c t o r y o i r c o n d i t i o n i n g

$1595C o l l M i

7 3 4 4 4 3 3

7.13 7 7 0 0

Total Transportation Center• F l e e t a n d I n d i v l d u o l l e q j e j t a i l o r e d t o y o o r n e e d s

• Rent by the day, week or month.MSi» ma|or credlrcords honored.

RENTACAR

1 9 7 0 F O I DG o l o » i e 5 0 0 4 d o o r h o r d t o p a l l b e ig o w h i f e v i n y l i n t e r i o r , o n c o n d i t i o n i n g m e d i u m s l l ®V 8 e n g i n e o u t o m o l i c t ro n s - n > is \ i^ y u - p o 'w e r s t e e n r ^ g n e w • c m I r o c le in

$1695Ca l l M r Oo'1t)¥

1972 A/v^RlCAN MDTCRS'—

(> » rml i f> c y l m d f f e n g t n e ,

4" i p r r d ■ li a nsmi\\^f>n, b u c k e t

veo lv |i>l.l lik«* fV<*w v « f y l o w

S U M M E R S I 2 Z L E R S A T- — ■

AGE HANSEN CHEVROLET1 9 7 2 P O N T I A C C A T A L I N A

4 D o o r S e d o n S l o c k N b ‘ 3 5 6 7 A V 6 e n q m c * o u t o r T io i t c . f o n s r i i i s M o n p o w e r s t o c f u ' g p o w e r b r a k e s o</ c o r i d i f i o n >ng s p o o d a n d c r u i s e < o n » r n l t w o tO'^O l . n i s h o n d m o n ym o f p p ir t ra s '* * - W o s $ 3 5 9 ^

S U M M E R S P t C l A l

A T O N I Y

1 9 7 1 F O R D C U S T O M4 --D Q Q i- rS< id on . y . S o n ^ a i « . vh«i4w h t t r w o H t i r e % H e i P i o g o o d lo w p r i c e d u n i T t h o t n e e d * , O h o m p ' S t o c k N o 3 ? 4 l A

N O WO N L Y .......................................

> 9 7 .0 M E R C U R Y M O N T E G O2 D o o f H o r d t o p V B e n g i n e o u t o m o t i c t r o n s m j s s t o n r o d io a n d w h i t o w o l l t i r e s V e r y ( l o a n S t O t k N o 3 4 8 6 A

*3275N O W , M675 1)1

1 9 6 9 P O N T IA C F I R E B IR DS to < k N o P 3 7 0 0 V 0 e n g i n e o u t o m o t i c t c o n s m t s M o n p o w e r s t e e r i n g r o d i o > »n ted g lo s s W o s $ 5 1 9 S

N O W • - O N L Y .................................... T975

1S751 9 7 0 F O R D C U S T O M 5 0 0

StoTk fJo 3 642A V 8 engine outomotu i r ofi s >»> i % s • f o d t o o n d w h t t n w o t t Ttt

. 1969 MERCURY COUGARS t o f k N o P 3 70 1 V 0 e n g i n e o u t i T>oti<- f r o i ^ lf T ^ i s s . o n p o w i -r st#»T»<tnq r o d ic i t i r ^ t r d g l o s s o n d b u f k o * s e o » \ A r e a l n i ( o ( loot' r or WosS209S

N O W . n 9 7 5$O N LY . . . , T . ' ; : . — r : .

1 9 6 7 C H E V R O L E T I M P A L A4 .d o o r S e d a n V 8 e f i g m c . a u t o m a t i c I r o n M n j a s i o n . f a o w e r s t e e r i n g & b f o k p s O i ' r o n c j i t i o n . n g r o d iO o n d v i n y l t o p I h . \ IS o g o o d tr o n s p o f * t j i >on t o r ..S ’ O fk N o P 3 ^ 2 4 A

1 9 6 7 P O N T l A C G T PV fl e n q i / w 4 s p o t - d t r o n s m i s s < o n r o d ' O o n d b u f k p t s c o t s S t o r r o S y s 'o r t , ' >■ 1 8 2 6 8

' 2 2 9 5fa ll M« G** tJon 7 3 3 7 0 9 B

1 9 7 0 L I N C O L N- - C o n h n e n i a l t h e b e s t v a l u e

o'^ O u r lo t o i r b e i g e , v i p y l t o p a t f t a b r t r t n t i y r t a r . ‘ (u t t p o w e r o u t o r n o t i c O i r c o n d i t i o n in g v e r y c l e o n in s id e o n d O u t

$2800ni l M r A r h o u q h ^ 7 J 3 4 4 9 7

1 9 7 0 L I N C O L NC o r H i n o n f o l C o u p e a l l l e o t h c f . n t e r i o r p e r f e c . t l y m a t r h c d r t i c d i o m b r o w n

-- vtfVy^--power automotic oir' con dition

$3295C o t t M r A s k p v /

1971 A O J T B 3 0 AAX

T j.,r . l - .| .,| t. i-, b » -» -,t ,tv ,l l,<jht

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rrt)‘ n'tsr>t.. l . . I -^^,T1,^\.or ' p o w ^ '

.............g 4(1 (K-<i (,< *.,o l m ilpv

N O W , 595S A V ^

775 1 9 6 3 P L Y M O U T H S P O R T F U R Y

7 3 3 S 9 9 9

1 9 7 0 M E R C U R YV n q u is 4 d o o r s e d o n lo c a l

h l . i« > m e t o l l i c in otsr mT- -Tir and OoV' ' 15TU®- ,,r>v' t P l o c ’ o f y o i r c o n d *

c n .n g v e r y c l e a n . C o r

Page 23: newspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.orgnewspaper.twinfallspubliclibrary.org/files/Times-News_TF300/PDF/1… · ze: c itr, Idaho's I.arrest h'veninfj \etispnpvr Tgffilp gr. 2aT9Th issue

J4 TIm M .New4, Tvyln Falls;. Idaho ; X o e »d «y , July 31, 1973

. WASHINGTON (U P D - T h e . Environm ental ■ P rotection Agency, (E P A ) « a v e {he Big Three autom obile m akers Monday- an ad(}itional ye<>r.

Tnrtil 1977. ta tu m out cars that -w ill meet tederal a tan dards.^

IS 01 a m ajor piiuiani, nitrogen oxides.

Robert W - FYi.' acting SPA administrator, said me <xien- sion —which he said would not pose ‘ ‘a significant‘ problem"

_4Bith respect-to-.«ir-qualit5i------was granted because the technology would not be availa­ble for the auto companies to produce 1?76 nriodel cars that will meet the federal standards for nitrogen oxides.

The 1970 Clean A ir Act- originally required that 1976 cars g ive o ff 90 per cent less nitrogen oxides and other pollutants. Congress also al-

lowed the E PA to s u i ^ d that ' deadline for- one d, it determ ined , . among ' other things, that the automobile companies did not have the technolog y , ta jneel the_j4ead-

____ .j*. . _______________ ________

siqwUer or anyone e to — presented ■ evidence- ^ t .our hearing Uiat the stand^d could be m et 4n 1976... My tedmical staff independently confirraathis conclusion. _________

1 -JiSincfi-- not, think .

amounC of g ^ U n e as cars turned before 1968 when poUu' tion controls were first im{>osed

.ohcars. .Cars turned out for th e '

current model year have been________ aoJ

As a resuji rVt approvea the request of '<3eneral Motors. Ford and Chrysler to put off

- the nltroewi Quida giandflrfi fnrone year, to 1977.

A lth e same time. F r i did say ■ 197fi mndpl* rars»would have ta

technology is available, T believe substantial disruption would occur if 1 denied' the PYipnsinn . The lm paet.j)f a onj-year susp^nsign 6n air., quality . is not a s ign lflc^ t

lodayif FUNNYr;

Tising considerably more gaso­line, because^ o f antipollution requireirients, I

F r l s«id some states, notobly California, m igh t re<)uest ar| exemption from the suiipen^on

seLnitrogea-ojQde emissions t^vel than allowed by Fri's hew ruling.

meet an interim standard fpr nitrogen oxide pollution of 2.0 grams per mile.

Had Fri not granted the exten.sion, the engines' *ould- have been forced to emit 0.4 grams per-mtle. The currefit federal standard is 3,1 grams per m ile.

Kri tnld a news conference: "N o one -manufacturer or

To meet the.temporary 1976 standard, Fri said, proBably would require automobile com­panies- to use an improved

'E x h a u s t Gas Recirculation ( EG R ) system.

— With- that-Tsystem- others designed to control other poUatant& —Axnay be possible to turn out cars in 1976 and later that will use the same

■ /V\OB II IS M O R P E I

WORK • ^ ^ r o n o d o 1 5 's• O m e g a 1 4 's• S id n e y - S a b o t s

SAILING INSTRUCTION PARTS • SUPPLIES

SAIL HAUS328 Main N , Tw in Fall*

C h a i i i | i i o i i

c a l c a r

A I.OAI^ ofJ>rfad, a block 'of cheese, a b<ittle of wine, salad and three rhl('|^«t>K Is just a syack for > :dd ii‘ (Bo/o| M iller, S5, Oakland, the world’schumpion eali-r. fh i-TU Ie was bestowed on him by the (iuninness Ilook of Records which lists two (if his mure outstanding accomplishments as the downing o( 27 two- pouiid piillets at one sitting and the consumption of 324^ravioli in aiiother. (D P II

Study shows racial attitudes improved

f f TWmihlngton Star-Nrw*- W ASH IN G TO N - Th?

United States Commi.ssion on Civil Rights rep o rt^ lo3 a y that it has found improved attitudes tow ard school desegregation in' ? of the 10 communities it studied.

T h t ■ exception .is the Charlotte-Mecklenburg, N.C.,

- '-sbhool system, one of the la r g e s t c o u r t - o r d e r e d desegregation programs ia the country. There . the com m ission found violent incidents and an "apparent hardening of white r a c ia l altltu'dSs“ irt the face of continuing e ffo rts . . to ehmlnate racial injustice "

Included in the study were five communities previously s t u d i e d ; e h ar^|y 11 e - Mecklenburg; Pontiac, Mich ; A V in s to n -S a le m , N O . ; Pasadena, C a lif , and Hillsborough, F'la

_____In fniir nf the f iv e , JJtl£_com mission found "an atmosphere of com m unity acceptance, or at least resignation . . . though some opposition to busmg remains.”

Five communities studied for the first time w ere ; Union Township, N.J., Gl>-nn County, Ga., Qark County, Nev.. and Dxnard and Riverside. O l i f .

The commission also found reason for optimism in these five but noted that the rwo

Plunge

Callfomta conjmumtrcs^ -voted for - B - s fa te antibusing

-prupositionJa^t November,Tlie comi'li.ssion staff has

been sTuding'lhe desegrenation e ffo rt in P rin ce Clenrges County, Md , adjacent to the District of Columbia, and is expected to issue a report.

Other commission findings in the report Issued today included the following:' P eop le fea r that desegregation will result in a poorer quality of education for their children, though various studies have shown this to Ix- iintriie,

^ Carefu l preparjiticin, i n c lu d in g c o tii ni u n 11 ,v participation, is necessjir.v for succeSsIul desegregation Tlie

-tech n ica l problen is of deSetJregation are les.-. fo rm idab le than previously

lienoved. ........ .................. ..S c h o o l o f f i c ia l s , a .ssu m in g

U ia L - lU a c k -4ia rQ n L s iJtuJld. w e k 'i i ii ie d e .s e g r e g a t io n on a n y t e r m s , h a v e t e n d e d to fa v o r the w is h e s o f th e w h ite c o m m u n it y a lo n e

The national controversy over busing and school de.segregation has, in gome cases, in flam ed local problems.

!N »*w s lip>

METRO INCORPORATEDV cwl 4-i»' •

DURING OURREMmELING SALE!!

— - - e f f ^ t i v ^ Ju ly 1 , 1 ^ 7 2 1 -

THE TWINTALXSIBSNK & TRUST GO:— --------------------------- --- w ill pay; '

o il p a s s b o o k s a v iu g s .

Plus newmaximum rates on all Certificates of Deposit.Certificates under *100,000:

CHF.STERnEI.n . F-ngland I UPI t - A coal ele\-ator taking 28 men to work broke down

and (jrOfipM like a brick," smashing into the tjottom.of a quarter-mile mine shaft. 1

O ffic ia ls at Chesterfie ld Royal Hospiiarf^pofTod TX^T the horrified workers died in the plunge at the Markham Collier)' and the other 15 were serio’iisly Injured.

" I t was terrible, absolutely terrible,’ "sa id one miner who ■witnessed the rescue "Bodies

- W M jd ljM LtO P,^ cn.e another. I thank God. I could have been

-----ooeTrf-them.^’Robert Dunn, area director of

' the National Coal Board, said-----the win«fifig-fnechanism oM he

broke the CSgf phniuneted to the d ia ft floor w ithlhe 28 men trapp*d4nsid«.

D im said m iners already . tndergronnd w e rt the first to

Matching

LOVESiAT

149

T h e L o w e l l P r i c e In T o w n

FURNITURE

6 > / 4 %Over 2 V2 years.

On C crlifico tes o f D eposit o ve r SVOO.OOO - see yoor Twir> Foils Bonk ohd T fosI o tfifePs.

A ll savings accou n ti and C^erfificotos of D eposit insured to $20,000 by ^ h .T e d e ro l DAfWJsIT Insornnco C orp o ioJ lon -

■ V .

TW IP«

Member Insufdnctt-Corpofntion,.^— Member Federal Reserve Board ,

■•rY“ T r ■; ... .